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mUmingtott §tar North Carolina's Oldest Daily Newspaper Published Daily Except Sunday By The Wilmington Star-News R. B. Page, Owner and Publisher Entered as Second Class Matter at Wilming ;on, N. C., Pcstoffice Under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER IN NEW HANOVER COUNTY Payable Weekly or In Advance Combi Time Star News nation l Week__$ .30 S .25 $ .50 l Month _ 1.30 1.10 2.15 3 Months _ 3.90 3.25 6.50 S Months_...._-_ 7.80 6.50 13.00 l Year . 15.60 13.00 26.00 News rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News BY MAID Payable Strictly in Advance I Months.$ 2.50 $2.00 $ 3 85 g Months ..... 5.00 4.00 7.70 1 Year—V-"-_ 10.00 8.00 15.40 News Rates Entitle Subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News_ MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS With confidence in our armed forces with the unbounding determination of our people _ we will gain the Inevitable triumph — so help us God. —Roosevelt’s War Message. SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1944._ Our Chief Aim To aid in every way the prosecution of the war to complete Victory.__ TOP O’ THE MORNING O waiting soul, be still, be strong, And though God tarry, trust and wait; Doubt not, He will not wait too long, Fear not, He will not come too late. Quoted by Cowman. \T_ Case For Arbitration The hope was that the meeting of the James Walker Memorial Hospital Board of Managers, the medical staff and the hurses association would find the solution of problems still un solved concerning a nursing staff with suffi cient members to meet all needs, and it does seem to have cleared away some points of difference. But a complete settlement was not achieved. When the meeting adjourned the sit uation was still in a stalemate. This seems to leave no course open but re sort to arbitration, as was suggested in a let ter to this newspaper a few' days ago. At that time the correspondent proposed 1hat the doc tors name two members to an arbitration board, the nurses name two more and that doctors and nurses select a fifth satisfactory to both groups. There should be no delay in taking this step. In the meantime, it is gratifying to learn >flrat nine private nurses have signified their intention of reporting to the hosp.tal for gen eral duty. Patton’s Great Chance The Senate Military Committee has refused to accord General Patton the permanent rank of Major General due to the soldier-slapping episode in a Sicilian hospital. Without condoning General Patton’s action there we believe the publicity given the case and the rebuke administered by General Eisen hower, together with General Patton’s apology and obvious contriteness, have been sufficient punishment, and because of his proved mili tary prowess he deserves promotion instead of further castigation. The fact that he has been denied deserved promotion show's how hard it is for any offend er, particularly against rules governing the relationship of a commanding officer with his soldiers, to live down his offense and restore himself to the esteem of his fellowmen. However, Patton’s summons to London, after eo long a time of inactivity, indicates the in tention of the high command to give him something to do in the lorthcmmg invasin ef Europe, and as he is a great fighter and Intrepid leader he will have opportunity to prove his worth in combat, as he did in Africa and Sicily. Failure of the Senate committee to give him the promotion recommended for him ought to spur him to extraordinary effort in the campaign ahead and at the same time af ford him opportunity to prove that he has at last learned to control a temper that has go ten him into trouble time and time again since he was a boy on his father’s San Gabriel estate in southern California. -V Blame Rests On Badgolio With the Allied attack in Italy rolling on ward with the precision and invincibility that characterized Hitler’s initial invasion of Rus sia, with the fall of Rome and all German defenses to the north inevitable, hearts throughout the United Nations are stirred with thankfulness and gratitude to the armies that have attained the strength to administer the greatest defeat to the Axis save only for the Victories over the same foe in Russia. But it should not be overlooked that the long stalemate in Italy and the tremendous concentrations of troops and supplies for the ghowdown there need never have happened ii the Italian prime minsiter Badgolio had no1 held back his decision to surrender to the Allies until the Germans had time to poui troops into the country in a steady stream anc defend strategic heights against invasionar; forces. The futile destruction of Cassino and th< Benedictine monestary overlooking the city the months of ineffectual attack, the costl; capture of Naples and equally costly defe'ns' of the Anzio beachhead, the taking of the Gus tav line and now the breakthrough at the Hit ler line and advance on the Rome defenses would not have been necessary save for Bad golio’s indecision. It is not too much to lay the loss of every Allied soldier’s life since General Montgom ery’s forces landed on Italy’s mainland al Badgolio's door. The peace-makers would do well to have this in mind when time comes to decide Italy's government between the close of the war and the holding of an election in which the Italian people will themselves decidi what form of government they prefer. -V When Rules Don’t Fit What is it that makes members of the Ameri can Air Forces so efficient in action? Accord ing to a psychiatrist who rode a plane in com bat as an observer, they are cool under fire, obey orders implicitly and have pefected their team work. The Medical Society of the County of New York recently heard Col. Walter S. Jensen, deputy air surgeon, present a report of the psychiatrist, Capt. David G. Wright, who was aboard a Flying Fortress on a mission “dur ing which the plane and the crew received such severe damage that survival seemed im possible.’’ Captain Wright’s analysis of the mental as well as the physical processes of an American plane crew is so interesting and encouraging that we quote from it at length. “During the violent combat and in the acute emergencies that arose during it,’’ the report said, “the crew were all quietly precise on the inter-phone and decisive in action. The tail severely wounded early in the fight, but all three kept at their duties efficiently and with out cessation until the combat was over, their guns were destroyed, or, in the case of the navigator, the home station was in sight. “The burden of emergency work with the controls, oxygen, wounded men and reparable battle damage fell on the pilot, engineer and ball turret gunner, and all functioned with rapidity, skillful effectiveness and with no lost motion. “The burden of the decisions, during, but particularly after the combat, rested essential ly on the pilot and, in secondary details, on the co-pilot and bombardier. The decisions, arrived at with care and speed, were' unques tioned once they were made, and proved ex cellent. “In the period when disaster was momen tarily expected, the alternative plans of action were made clearly and with no thought other than for the safety of the entire crew. All at this point were quiet, unobtrusively cheerful and ready for anything. There was at no time paralysis, panic, unclear thinking, faulty or confused judgment or self-seeking in any one of them. “It appeared strikingly that the emergency did not tend to increase the difference in the reaction pattern of the differing personalities; rather they came to act in much more similar fashion than usual. “One could not possibly have inferred from behavior that this one was a man of unstable moods and that that one was a shy, quiet, introspective man. They all become out wardly calm, precise in thought and rapid in action.” It is not revealed where this particular ac tion took place, whether in Europe or the Orient. But it serves, in either case, to illus trate what it is that has given the American Air Forces such an advantage over the Japa nese and accounts in part for the six-to-one odds our airmen hold in planes destroyed in the Pacific war theater. It has been a notable condition of all air engagements in the far East that whereas Japanese fliers are well trained in the routine of their business they have consistently failed to meet any situation not covered by the rule book; they have no ingenuity and lose their heads when called upon to make instant decisions. They learn their lessons well but cannot deviate from them. We recall a kitchen incident years ago in San Francisco which establishes this point as conclusively as anything that has transpired in the air over the Pacific. A housewife was teaching a Japanese cook to make a cake re quiring six eggs. When she borke the fifth egg and found it bad she threw it away arid broke two more to get the necessary half dozen for the cake. To her amazement, when she watch ed the Japanese cook make the same kind of cake at a later date, he broke a fifth egg and threw it away though it was perfectly good. When she inquired why, the cook replied: “I do what you do.” When it comes to combat flying the Japa nese aviator does what the rule book says— and can’t do anything else. -V As It Was Before Archibald MacLeish, poet, librarian of Con gress former director of the late Office of Facts and Figures, recently made a speech on “the Power of the Spoken Word.” The subject is right down his alley, for words are the tools of the poet’s trade, and in no trade are theii power and weight and flavor and evocative quality so important. But Mr. MacLeish is impatient of words without action*, as many of us are. He is dis tressed that words like freedom, liberty, de mocracy and equality are used so often mere • ly to arouse emotion. He is equally distressec at efforts to escape their use in such phrase: . as “the American way of life” or “America the way it was before.” r When Mr. MacLeish undertakes to clear thi • air of ambiguous symbolism, however, h makes some equally ambiguous statements of his own. Thus he says that “freedom, liberty, democracy, equality. ..are revolutionary words always and whenever used. They can not be employed to arouse men’s minds to fight defensive wars for the protection of the status quo or the preservation of a society ‘the way it was’ without destroying their vital ity and meaning.” But what sort of revolution is implicit in Mr. MacLeish’s four words — national, world-wide, social, political, or all of them? And what of society "the way it was”—the way it was in 1929, 1933, 1940, 1944? Is the status quo that of an overseas soldier lonesome for the farm, or an Old Guard Republican lonesome for the Coolidge administration? Apparently the an swer lies in freezing these ambiguous sym bols in a pattern of Mr. MacLeish’s or some one’s else devising. Of course, the vague or intemperate use of “revolutionary” words is distressing when it departs from our own definition of them. But that does not seem to justify Mr. MacLeish’s exceeding pessimism when he views the pros pect of peace. As things are going now, he foresees a peace of arrangements, adjust ments, facts, trades and balances, a peace of oil, gold, and transportation. Well, that unfortunately is the way all peaces have been made. All war is disrupt ing, and subsequent life and trade must be adjusted to its results. The idealistic aims outlined in the Atlantic Charter, and at Mos cow, Cairo, and Teheran must be given prac tical application. That practical application is beginning. Perhaps Mr. McLeish and others are dis satisfied with some of those beginnings. But at least all the Allied powers are on record as aiming high. The final blueprint may not be the brave new world of Mr. MacLeish’s dreaming. But "America—the way it was be fore” and the way it is today is over-whelm ingly in favor of those high aims of peace. It seems a little early to despair. Fair Enough (Xdiotr't Note.—The Suu end the Newi accept no responsibility for the personal views of Mr. Pegler, and often disagree with them as much as many of his readers. His articles serve the good purpose of making people think. By WESTBROOK PEGLER NEW YORK. — An interesting development has occurred in the case of Joe Fay, the hoodlum vice president of the operating en gineers’ union who has been under indictment for a year in New York county on charges of extorting $405,000 from contractors in the Del aware aqueduct construction job, the most colossal shakedown of labor and the public treasury in the smelly history of public works. In the ordinary course of events, Fay would have been tried in the Court of General Ses sions, which has ample jurisdiction and tries cases of first degree murder involving the penalty of death. Fay, however, has obtained an order from Justice Denis O’Leary Cohalan, of the Su preme Court, transferring the trial to that tribunal. The Supreme Court also has juris diction in criminal cases but in New York county, in practice almost exclusive a civil court. Fay obviously thought that he would have an advantage in the Supreme Court, otherwise he would not have applied for the transfer. He reckoned on the possible rustiness and un familiarity of Supreme Court judges in hand ling criminal cases, and a great possibility of error, reversal and ultimate dismissal. Fay, being a powerful politician of the Frank Hague machine in New Jersey and well connected in Washington, may have hoped that politics would work to his advantage. At any rate, although the law gives Justice Cohalan authority to transfer the case “for good cause shown, ” the papers on file reveal no substantial reason. Among the "good causes” advanced by Fay was the fact that his value to the union depends on his “reputation for honesty and integrity.” Aside from the fact that he has no such repu tation but is a notorious thug and associate of gangsters, and once was kicked out of his own union for acting as contractor and employer in the heavy construction field, this still would be no “good cause.” Fay said further that conviction would destroy his “usefulness to rM'rfonivorl loKnv” 4Vin rk fore, are important both to him and to 1|%is 1 union. This is a loaded statement, for Fay has never been useful to labor but a parasite on labor. That the charges are important to Fay and the union may be instantly admitted, but not in the sense suggested. Conviction would discredit Fay and might remove him, although many convicted crooks and traitors to labor have continued to hold union office and draw pay and graft. But it might start a reform and liberate the workers from the dictatorship of greedy racketeers who have ex ploited them for years. Still no “good cause” has been offered ex cept as the justice has legal authority to de termine in his own mind that anything con stitutes “good cause.” Fay said that every effort must be made to prevent prejudice against him, but offered no argument that prejudice would exist in general sessions. And to his statement that it would be necessary to examine the jurors carefully as to their views toward him and organized labor, Frank S. Hogan, the district attorney, argued in reply that the system of selecting and exam inging jurors would be the same in general' sessions and that they would be drawn from exactly the same sources. Justice Cohalan said in his order that be cause some newspaper comments had roundly condemned Fay, his organization, his associ ates and their practices, “in that sense, labor itself will be on trial.” The fact is that if Fay were convicted he, not labor, would be con demned and labor would be a winner. And his statement that the reprecussions of the trial may affect both labor and capital in New York and New Jersey is pointless, because these relations will be no less affected in the same way by a trial in the supreme Court. This is an extremely important prosecution in which labor and the public generally have a tremendous stake. Politicians are involved, including some republicans of Westcherter county who received money from some of Fay’s ■ associates in the aqueduct job. It will bear close attention. ! A worker bee travels 40,000 miles to make ; a pound of honey* Mighty sweet of her. “CHINATOWN, WHERE LIGHTS ARE LOW” | f TAKE A MICE ION 6 VACATION WENRV With Ernie Pyle A B-26 BASE IN ENGLAJND May 26 —(by wireless)— Every pilot and enlisted combat crew man on this bomber station has an English bicycle, for the dis tances are long on a big airdrome. The boys in my hut have to go about a mile to the flying line and about a quarter of a mile to eat. Breakfact ends at 8 o’clock, and like human beings the world over those not flying get up just in time to run fast and beat the break fast deadline by five seconds. They eat at long wooden tables, sitting on benches. But they have white tablecloths, and soldiers to serve ;hem. At supper they have to wear necktie? and their dress blouses. The officers’ club bar opens half an hour before supper and some of the boys go and have a couple of drinks before eating. As everywhere else in England, the whisky and gin are all gone a few minutes after the bar opens. The enlisted crewmen eat in a big room adjoining the officers' me?s. They eat exactly the same food, but they eat it a little differ ently. They line up and pass through a chow line. White pro celain plates are furnished them, but they have to bring their own fork, knife and canteen cup. Their tables are not covered. When they are through they carry out their own dishes and empty anything left over into a garbage pail, but they don’t have to wash their dishes. The enlisted men don’t have to dress up, even for supper. Everybody feel? that the food is exceptionally good. Since I’ve been here we've had real eggs for break fast, and for other meals such things as pork chops, hamburger steak, chocolate cake and ice cream Of course both of these messes are for combat crews only. Ground personnel eat at a different mees. They don’t have quite as fine a choice as the fliers, but I guess nobody begrudges them a little ex tra. In various clubrooms on the air drome, and even in some of the huts, there are numerous paint ings on the walls of beautiful girls, colored mayo of Europe, and so on. One hut has been beautifully deco rated by one of the occupants— Lieutenant C. V. Cripe, a bombar diei from Elkhart, Ind. He also paints insignia on planes. This same hut has a tiny little garden walk leading up to the door. On a high post flanking the walk there hangs white wooden boards with the name of each flier in the hut painted in green letters, and under the name rows of little green bombs representing the number of missions he has been on. All the names are of officers except for the bottom board, which says “Pfc. Gin Fizz,” and under it are painted five little puppy dogs marching along in a row with their tails up. Pfc Gin Fizz is a little white dog with a face like a gagoyl’e, and altogether the mort ratty and re pulsive-looking animal I’ve ever seen. But she produces beautiful pups practically like an assembly line, and the station is covered with her offspring. Dogs are rampant on this station. They have everything from fat fuz zy little puppies with eyes barely open to a gigantic Great Dane. This one maginficent beast is own ed by Lieutenant Richard Light fine, of Garden City, L. I., and goes by the name of Tray; The gunner sergeants in the bar racks where I’ve been living have a dreedless but lovable cur named Omer. It came by its name in a peculiar fashion. Some months ago the squadron made a raid on a town in France named St. Omer. One plane got shot up over the target, and back in England had to make a forced landing at a strange field. While waiting for the crippled plane to be patched up the crew acquired this puppy. In celebration of their return from the dead they named him Omer. Omer sleeps impartial ly on anybody’s cot, and the boys bring him scraps from the mess hall in their canteen cups. Omer doesn’t even know he’s1 at war, and he has a wonderful time. This station has a glee club too, and a very good one. They gave a concert for the people of the near est village and I went along to hear it. The club has 28 men in it, most ly ground men but some fliers. The director is Corp. Frank Parisi, of Bedford, O. He taught music in junior high school there. The club has already given 10 concert:?, and they are so good they are booked for three concerts weekly for the next six weeks and slated to sing in London. So you see lots of things besides shooting and dying can go along with a war. Daily Prayer FOR LITTLE CHILDREN Our hearts go out in yearning. O Heavenly Father, for the little children who suffer deep wounds of the spirit in this war. The loss of father’s oversight, and often of mother’s daily care; the restric tions upon care-free and happy living; the overshadowing pres erise of bloody strife — all these and many more penalties are im posed upon innocent childhood. O Christ, blessed lover of little child ren. save their souls from mortal hurt. Spur society to new measures of care for them. Enable them to learn the nobler side of war, and to inherit ideals of patriotism, courage and endurance. Even in this terrible cchool of experience, do Thou train them for the su preme task of carrying on a bet ter world. From impairment of BANKERS HONOR WARREN JOHNSON Warren Johnson, president of th< People’s Savings Bank and Trus company of Wilmington since 193' was named third vice president ol the North Carolina Bankers Asso '■’"tion at the annual meeting he'd early this month in Raleigh. Two other Wilmington bank ex ecutives, Robert H. Tate, assis tant vice president of the People’s Bank and James K. Paul, assis tant vice president of the Security National bank, also were named to executive posts with the state organization. Mr. Tate was appointed a mem ber of the executive committee oi the trust section and Mr. Paul was chosen by Group Six as a member of the executive committee of the association, which is divided into 10 groups representing geographi cal sections. Mr. Johnson’s election will by custom and unwritten law of the association make him state presi dent three years from now. His name was the only one submitted to the convention and he was un animously elected. Although he has served on various committees in cluding the research, executive and clearing house, this is the firsl time he has been persuaded to al low his name to be used for an executive office, it was learned. Mr. Johnson, a native of 7^55 mington, is a long time member ol the state association, which was founded 48 years ago. He became associated with the People’s bank in 1927. REALTYTRANSFERS Realty transfers listed yesterday by Register of Deeds Rhodes were: John Crosland Co. to E. J. Hale, Jr., 21-3, Colonial Village. Wm. C. Cummings to Elliden Da vis, Pt. 4-469, City. A. A. Brown to T. M. Ross, 1-2 3-4-5-6 Burton, Cape Fear. Thomas Wright to Karabambas Keayate, Pt. 4, 5-305, City. BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS body, and from twisting of souls, deliver the little children of our time, O. Father in Heaven. Amen. —W. T. E. The Literary Guidepost BY JOHN SELBY A miscellany— Fishermen have something ready for them on the book shelves. It is a narrative about two men who modestly consider themselves duf fers, but who manage to have a lot of fun fighting through Algon quin Park in Ontario. This is new territory to most-stay-at-home fish ermen, and John D. Robin? de scribes the country and the fishing with a good deal of humor. He in cludes much information as well, The title is “The Incomplete Ang lers.” (Duell, Sloan Pearce; $3) The book by Sir Osbert Sitwell from which excerpts have been taken for recent issues of the At latic Monthly is ready under the title, “Left Hand, Right Hand!” It is in theory autobiography, al though actually it is mostly gene alogy. The Sitwells have been liv ing in and around Reinshaw Hall since 1625, and Sir Osbert con sults the great number of ances tors who have been sacrificed to produce himself, his sister Edith, and his brother of the unpronounce able name, Sacheverell. He con sults these in extenso, so much so that I bogged down long before I found any explanation of the Sit well lit’ry triplets. The writing is stiff and oddly selfconscious. (Little, Brown; $3). “Speaking of Jane Austen” is the joint product of two well known British women; G. B. Stern and Sheila Kaye-Smith — two writers as dissimilar as could readily be found. It is based on one of most extraordinary concepts imagine able, which is that Jane Austen’s characters lived a life “so logical and so normal that it makes a nourishing antidote to our incom prehensible world of war.” But the book has charm in a literary way, a kind of gentle irreverence at times, and a good deal to offer the many admirers of ‘Pride and Pre judice” and all the others. (Har per?; $2.75) This department dislikes selfhelp books, and therefore is probably unfair to such performances as Harold Sherman’s “Your Key to Married Happiness.” Perhaps there are people who need to read romanticized treatises on the pit fall? of married life, and if so, Mr. Sherman’s book is their meat. Unrationed, too. (Putnam; $1.50). Interpreting The War By KIRKE L. SIMPSON AP War Analyst Desperate Nazi attemp s tn "3. cape a closing Allied trap south of Rome are disclosed in surrender of massive Mount Cairo, just no: tn of Canssino. That 6.000-foot peak was the dominant central fac; ,r in the whole German trans-p sular front in Italy. Its loss ;m. plies that the enemy nrav have abandoned hope of further de.y.:Se of Rome. The cutting edge of the Ailed attack, however, is the l;!a army lunge beyond captured cis tern a on the left center of he to within gun range of main N.\® road and rail communicat: n the Sacco valley. American c p ture of Cori on the crest 0f , low saddle between the Alba hills on the north and the Le. ■* to the south has rendered the p ,t tion of all enemy forces bel v that point eritical. German broadcasts tell „ swarms of Allied tanks p a, ■, . through the Cisterna gap tn bl its defenders. The blow if driver home to Valmontone, less tVr eight miles distant, would cut the Via Asilina and main Rome Naples railway at that point 4(1 rniles in the rear of German d v sions still guarding the entrance to the Sacco valley. There are -0 natural obstacles to balk art ;,n. mediate Allied armored sweep through the gap. And there 3 every evidence that the Germans have failed to muster reinforce ments to meet the grave dan-e* and of being cut in two. Enemy Pays Price Thp £npmv 1C noirimr. 1_ and increasing price for his r ure to block a Fifth army junc tion across the 'Pontine piin,. Press advices give eye witness evidence that the Germans left in such haste that road demolitions were inadequate even to delay seriously concentration of Film army armor and troops for the deadly thrust across the Cistern gap. It seems obvious that its commander, General Mark Clark, has mustered all the power at hi. command in that section with well warranted hope of ending ire battle for Rome in the upper Sac. co valley into which his forces are now deploying. For it is now only German ; troops south of the Cisterna break 1 through that are threatened by that Allied forward surge. The last potential enemy defense line below Rome keyed to the Alban i hills less than 15 miles from the city is menaced by Allied encircle ment from the southeast to patch the drive up the coastal flank by British Fifth army elements. A Fifth army turn northward once it reaches the center o: the Sacco valley in the Valmontone area would set it on the way either to Rome direct or to by-pass it to the east and strike at Tivoli on the Rome-Pescara highway. Small Chance For Nazis There would be small chance of a German stand anywhere south of Rome. General Alexander, Allied field commander, apparently is rush ing northward across the Pontine plain to redouble the power of his attack in the most critical Cis terna-Valmontone sector as well as to deal with a possible German despera+e counter attack attempt when — and if — reinforcements from the north reach the scene. Allied air scouts, however, re port “Chaotic” conditions along all Nazi communication lines, harass ed by Allied massed air power. There has been no certain indi cation yet of a general German rout in Itally. The escape from the Pontine plain was made skill fully. The danger of a compel* disaster is still present, however. -V 25 Years Ago Today (From the file* of the Star-News) IVtAY 27, 1919 Judge Harriss’ quiet but positw* refusal to hold juvenile court until all issues involved are threshed out and a working bapis established, served to further complicate mar* ters today and the police depart* ment finds itself with two jure* piles on its hands that can rei* ther be tried nor locked up b*« cause of the failure of the city to provide facilities for detaining them. Mrs. C. L. Meister has gone '» | Asheville to attend the biennial meeting of the woman’s club. PARIS. — Major General Jarr.ss G. Harbord, head of the pervice of supply of the American Expedi tionary forces, has been relieved and detailed as chief of staff of the American Expeditionary forces. The dirigible U. S. A-l. is tht first in America to dock at a land ing platform on the roof of a skv scraper. The platform. 30 feet square, was built on the rool of the Hotel Statler in Cleveland. Th* ship carried Akron men to Cle”* land for a dinner and left them *t the hotel. ---y WESTBROOK SPEAKS Information concerning German prison camps was given by Nor wood S. Westbrook, commander of the Wilmington Post No. 10. in ai address last night over station WMFD following the drama ‘'Es cape”, the third in the series ol “War Town”
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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May 27, 1944, edition 1
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