Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 12, 1945, edition 1 / Page 9
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If here ’ll Be A Lot More On This Foreign Policy „ FREDERICK C. OTHMAN i Bf ' press Staff Correspondent I ln^SHINGTON, Jan. ll-(UP) I An the Senate press gallery 'VVhmntv that's a sign that the A,my below is ditto. When the or„. " is full of correspondents ’A soft pencils and wads of yel paper, you can be certain that s0?f five" minutes after noon yes i .plday, the gallery was jammed; f many pencils were. scrlbblln3 furously you could bear ,’em' j;ade a kind of purring noise. In the well stood Sen. Arthur H Vandenberg, Michigan Repub |ican opening this Congress’ first full-dress debate on President Roosevelt's foreign policy. Vice President Henry A. Wallace fid dled silently with his gavel with eut-a-handle. Senators on both fides of the chamber listened in tently- Citizens overfolwed t h e public gallery; a row of them leaned against the back wall. Vandenberg stood at his mahog any desk (a piece of furniture modeled after the one you used in the eighth grade) and unbut toned his doublebreasted blue coat. His vest was wrinkled. His modestly speckled tie went askew. He said he'd appreciate it if no body interrupted him and nobody did. He read from a script, with important phrases underlined so lie wouldn't forget to emphasize (hem. His speech was peppered with phrases like "stupid and sin ger folly of ulterior ambitions. . . such bickering is water on the Axis wheel ... a great American illusion. . . honest candor. . . in ceniivc to Axis peoples to desert •their own tottering tyrannies.” Ii was a sober speech, received with sober respect. After 10 min utes of it. Vandenberg's voice got hoarse; it cracked a couple of times. He ignored the glass of water which a knickerbockered page boy brought to him. j What he wanted, in language more diplomatic than this, was for Russia. Britain, and the U. S. A. to tell each other the truth and quit trying to give each other the business. Sen. Warren R. Austin of Ver mom, also a Republican, jumped up to say he believed Vanden berg's address to be one of the most impor'ant in the Senate yet. Sen. Tom Connally, Texas Demo cratic chairman of the Foreign Relations Committe, straightened his black bow tie and harumphed. Ke wanted to answer Vandenberg. Connally, the only senator who Foks like a senator is supposed o look, said he didn’t believe man- international political prob lem* could be solved until the war is won. He said it would be a good idea not to talk too much until the fighting ends. He grew red in the face. He gestured with both arms. His fore lock curled down over his right eye. As for those people who want to know what is America’s foreign policy, he said, let them read the brilliant pages of Amer ica’s past. He said he’d have more to say when the time came. By now it was after 2 p. m. and Sen. Alex ander Wiley of Wisconsin, gray haired and grayish-faced, took up the debate from the Republican viewpoint. I couldn’t help feeling sorry for him; the other senators were more interested in lunch than in his speeph. When he’d spoken 15 minutes there were 11 men on the floor listening to him. That left him what must have seemed like an acre of red leather chairs for an audience and I snaked out to lunch, feeling embarrassed. More later, muc!*, more, on for-' eign policy. highway Workers Termed tssenlial To War Effort RALEIGH, Jan. 11—'■?)—Charles Ross, acting chairman of the North Carolina State Highway Commission, said today he had been assured by the War Man power Commission, that Highway Department workers are consider ed to be engaged in work essential to the war effort, and would not be reclassified under new “work or fight" regulations announced from Washington Ross said he contacted the WMC alter he was informed that 15 maintenance workers connected with the Hignway Department's Asheville branch planned to quit their j./js there to go into what they considered more essential employment. He added that he understood two of the workers had already quit their Highway Department jobs because they be 'eved they would be reclassified by their drag boards. EXHAUSTION leads Headache Don’t let headache double the mis ery of exhaustion. At the first sign of pain take Capudine. 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Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Jan. 12, 1945, edition 1
9
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