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The Sunday Star-News j Published Every Sunday \ By The Wilmington Star-New* R. B. Page. Owner and Publisher Fntered as Second Class Matter at Wilming '»• x- <=■• "S'gSJ’Tim gr"‘ ^^PEW™ASOTESBBCyoSNf?IER Payable Weekly or In Advance ComW Tima star News nation J Week ._• * * * $ J! » Month*:::::::::: ^ s* mo 6 Months -- -- -- 13;00 26.00 (Above*rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News)__ -~By-pi: payabfe strictly in Advance ; Year1118..:::"::'-" ££ «S iS (Above rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-Newsi _ -- WILMINGTON STAR (Daily Without Sunday) g Months-$1.85 6 Months-$3.70 1 Yr.-$(.40 When remitting by mail please use check or U S* P O money order. The Star News can not be responsible for currency sent through the mails.___ k/ifmrfr OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS andalso sfkved by the united prlss With confidence in our armed forces with the unbounding determination of °“r P®°P'®7~ we will gain the inevitable triumph so help US G°d‘ Roosevelt’s War Message. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1945 TOP O’ MORNING (Psalm 115:3 “Our God is in the heavens”) They cannot cause Him panic, Nor cut off his supplies ... Though all the world be shattered His truth remains the same . . . Though we face war and struggle, And feel their goad and rod, We know above confusion, There always will be god. Albert L. Murray, D. D. And Then To Die Death of Billy Southworth, Jr., in the wreck of a Superfortress that crashed and exploded at New York is similar to that of many who survived war only to die in mishap at home. Unscathed in 25 bombing missions In the war zone, he met death at home. Oth ers have done the same. Some flyers with many missions back of them are killed In car wrecks in the United States. Soldiers on furlough die in accidents. WTien the total of those who were killed et camp or other places In the United States is compiled, the count made of the victims in plane accidents at home and other listings recorded, the amount will be found very large. Perhaps it is “unavoidable”, a description so often made at coroner’s Inquests, but it does seem such a waste. Soldiers meet their greatest hazards in bat tle, of course, but many come home though only to die. It is one of the things due to the haste, the waste of war. _v_ Servicemen And Strikes The views oi American soldiers and sailors on industrial' strikes are pretty well-known. They’ve been expressed often but seldom as well as in the following story and poem which appeared recently in the Seattle Post-Intelli gencer: Eight after Pearl Harbor, two buddies in navy blues out there in the South Pacific saw only “Strikes, Strikes, Strikes for more pay, shorter hours or some darn thing” when they read the newspapers from home. One of the buddies—Ship’s Cook 2/c Fred E. Truman, of somewhere in Wyom'ng—in one of his free moments, dashed off a poem that told his reaction. The other buddy—CCS C. Lotti of San Ber nardino, Calif.—who felt the same way about the' strikes “back home in the States” folded the clipping (after the poem was printed) in his wallet. A year later—in 1942—Truman, the author cf the poem, was killed in action—on a de stroyer when he was mannnig a gun. Yesterday, Lotti, who is temporarily sta tioned in Seattle, read of the shipyard strike. “It made me mad!” he said last night, when.he brought the copy of his buddy’s poem to The Post-Intelligencer. “Out there in the Pacific, we didn’t have time to think about wages or hours. We had ether things to worry about. Our lives, for instance, and the lives of those around us. We were lucky, sometimes, if we could find time to eat.” He tenderly refolded the clipping and plac ed it back in his wallet. "Thank you for reading it,” he said, "I Just had to bring it in.” FOR THOSE WHO STRIKE It seems so childish and so cruel, too, To call a strike, while life’s blood drains away From veins of some young boy, whose lips turn blue Along red fringes of an acrid day. Who are these puny gnats with twisted souls, That drop their tools of toil, while some lad bleeds Upon a reef of Jagged eoral shoals, Or in a jungle muck among tall reeds. Our boys are dying there, yet human worms, Who shape the destiny of toiling hands, Dictate a strike, while in some fox-hole squirms The lad who keeps war distant from our lands. A safe and well-fed picket walks the Street Unfit to kiss some boy’s war-shattered feet. -FRED E. TRUMAN Sidney Lanier This month is the 103rd anniversary of the birth of Sidney Lanier, one of the most original and talented of American poets, a true southerner in the most patriotic sense of the word and a highly accomplished musi cian. Despite the mark Lanier left on the liter ary life of the South, there was little observ ance of the anniversary. Only a comparative few remembered him. paused to recall his contributions — gifts from a genius soaring high above the sectionalism of his day—to American literature. Why? Because Lanier has never received the rec ognition deserved for his works from the public as a whole. He was not a sensationalist. Ke was not promoted. Rather, the early re ception of his poetry suffered because it came in an environment, improvished by a great war, too busy trying to reconstruct itself to extend the name of any worthy man of letters. Every phase of life in the South was destined to struggle for existence after the War Between the States. Therefore, its liter ary men enjoyed little of the assistance free ly accorded those of other sections of the reborn nation. It is noticeable in his biogra phy that his most fruitful years were in Bal timore, a city whose people had more time for the arts than other southern communities. His career too, was a comparatively short one, handicapped by health broken by his ser vice from 1861 to 1865 in the war. In his memorial to Lanier, William Hayes Ward summed it up with: "But how short was his day, and how slend er his opportunity! From the time he was of age he waged a constant, courageous, hope less fight against adverse circumstances for room to live and write. Much very dear, and sweet, the most sympathetic helpfulness he met in the city of his adoption, and from friends elsewhere, but he could not command the time and leisure which might have length ened his life and given him opportunity to write the music and the verse with which his soul was teeming. Yet short as was his literary life, and hindered though it were, its fruit will fill a large space in the gar nering of the poetic art of our country." All familiar with his life know that he was a Georgian. However, he visited North Caro lina many times, both during and after the war, and it is a fact little known to many Wilmingtonians that his career as a private soldier included service here. The greater part of his time in this state was in the west ern section, always seeking to regain his health with failure coming with his death at Lynn, near Tryon, on Sept. 7, 1881. The house in which he died has become a shrine, visited by thousands each year.Tryon itself has done much to honor and perpetuate the memory of Lanier. Its library bears his name and the Lanier club, now more than 50 years old, has sponsored many of that community’s leading public projects. Because of his love for the state’s moun tain country, it was appropriate that Secre tary of the Interior Ickes, at the request of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, named a peak on Hannah mountain in the Great Smoky Mountain National park for Lanier. This is but one of the several means of remembering Lanier achieved through the good and persistent efforts of the U. D. C. in recent years. Today, its members are engaged in their greatest Lanier undertaking: Presentation of his name for election to the Hall of Fame of New York University. This work is being carried out well by Mrs. W. D. Lamar, of Macon, Ga., Chairman of the Sidney Lapier committee, and Mrs. T. L. Cau dle, of Wadesboro, Chairman of the commit tee of the North Carolina division of the U. D. C. It is interesting to note that this state was awarded the prize at the general convention of the organization in 1942 and 1943 for having done most to advance the name of Lanier. All U. D. C. members who have participated, either in major or minor roles, are to be congratulated for a real service to the south and literature. Their efforts are so worthy that they deserve any assistance from outside their organization that will bring greater recognition of this outstanding poet. The goal is much too important for failure now. He deserves a place in the Hall of Fame and it is time, belatedly so,- that he “take his final rank with the first princes of Amer ican song.” _IT_ Proper Place France has put 48,000 German prisoners to work at repairing the war damage they wrecked. That’s justice, but that’s just a few compared with the thousands upon thousands of French war prisoners and French civilians doing forced labor in Germany. The French want more, expecting to get 60,000 prisoners captured by Americans. It seems a good idea. The Germans wrecked the country; let them help rebuild it. Let them sweat over it. It might take some of the meanness out of them. Those who would say that war prisoners who are taken by Amer ican soldiers should be sent over here to work should remember that we could get too many of them over here. Some of them escape and a few determined Nazis could do a lot of sabotage before caught. They are experts with torch and bomb. We could get topheavy with war prisoners. There are already reports of their arrogance in pris on camps in some parts of tile country and reports of resentment among people at their being so well fed and treated with such con sideration. ■--, Washington Calling BY MARQUIS CHILDS U. S. NINTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, IN HOLLAND—One’s first close-up glimpse of this war is bound to be a surprise and shock. First of all, you are not prepared for the enormous complexity of even a small section of the front. The preconveived picture ycu have of lines and advances is dimmed out in the face of the mass movement that seems to be going on in all directions at once. Apart from the GI himself and his easy, good-natured self-discipline which makes you enormously proud of being an American, the thing that has impressed me most in my brief stay up here is the scale and diversity of transport on the roads leading toward the front. It looks like a cross between a pre war week-end traffic jam and the kind of industrial upheaval that would result if vou were to try to move half of Pittsburgh a hundred miles by motor transport over pitted, broken roads. In less than fifteen minutes on a highway to the front in Germany, I counted 33 different kinds of vehicles carrying men or guns or supplies essential to the fighting. Tank carriers, equipped to go onto a battle field, pick up damaged tanks and bring them back, roar along the road looking like dino saurs. They tower above the ubiquitous jeeps that flash past them on every kind of errand. Some of the tanks lined along the highway have steel blades in front like huge snow plows, which make it possible to sweep earth over enemy pillboxes. Every kind of gun is being pulled, pushed or carried. Some are moving forward and some to the rear for overhaul. Trucks seem to vary infinitely in size and type. The variety of vehicles with the Red Cross symbol is also astonishing. Besides several types of ambulances, there are special half-tracks and jeeps flying the Red Cross flag—all weaving in and out of the traffic as fast as possible. I AI 1. U1 IHACUUIO The men driving the mud-spattered vehicles that make up this unending stream look as though they were moulded into the drivers’ seats, a part of the machine itself. Their set, weary faces, many grimy and unshaven, are seen briefly in the high truck cabs as our jeep swings past. It is one of the monotonous, boring, wearing jobs of the war, this pushing of transport back and forth over broken, miry roads. The drivers must even charge places with th# GI road gangs working waist deep in mud and water trying to patch the worst holes. The driver of our jeep, Private Herman E Smith of Washington, D. C., is fairly typical. He Isis been in the European theater, at tached to a tactical air force, for eighteen months. For eighteen months, seven days a week, he has sat behind the wheel of a jeep or staff car and he’s damned sick of it. For one thing, it has become, apart from highway hazards, such a safe job. Thanks to the work of the Ninth Air Force, the German Luftwaffe is almost never seen over the Amer ican lines. The monotony of a driver’s job is nowadays rarely broken by enemy strafing Aerial observers over the front lines have one sure way of telling where enemy territory begins On our side of the lines, you can see motor transport strung out along all roais. On the enemy side, the highways are almost empty, and with good reason. Because the attacks of our Tactical Air Forces are main tained whenever even minimum weather con ditions permit, the Germans can move on the roads only at night. So the brown tide of our transport ebbs back and forth through shattered villages and towns of Germany. Seeing it, you understand why no modern army can carry on without fuel pipelines that follow the advance. The huge volume of gasoline necessary to support this movement simply could not be hauled over road and rail. Moreover, two pipelines are necessary—one for gasoline for road trans port and the other for aviation gasoline. You begin to understand, too, why the Allied armies were held up when, after their sweep across France, supply lines were stretched almost to the breaking point. An army today travels on those cans of gasoline you see iff dumps along the highways. And the source of supply must be never-ending. The stream of traffic moves on through ruined Aachen. The skeleton of a gutted apartment house has fallen across the main thoroughfare. An MP motions us onto a de tour. At a depot in the outskirts of the town, trucks carrying reconditioned tires are being unloaded. Out of a heavy tank, which has stopped off the highway, come the heads of a Negro repair crew. 4 Back somewhere—in Paris or maybe in Washington—the military have all this swirling movement fitted into the vast pattern of war. They have it all recorded on paper. But being an infinitely small part of it for a moment, you feel like a hit of flotsam tossed on a flood that moves with a blind rush, without purpose or reason. (Copyright 1945, by Unit|d Feature Syndicate, Inc.) XT SO THEY SAY We took 500 prisoners, including a 12-year-old rifleman who was shivering in his civilian pants and shirt, and we took a 58-year-o’d man so dumb he didn’t even know what bat talion he belonged to.—S-Sgt. John F. Lasky of Pittsburgh, Pa., at Schmidt, Germany, * * * The Luzon battle is fought for very high stakes. If Japan is to survive and play a lead ing role in world affairs, she must snatch victory in this war.—Tokyo broadcast. * * * Typical of America, the Red Cross does not serve only those who contribute to its work. It serves all, without distinction of race, creed, or color.—Gen. Joseph Stilwell. * • * If we let the Japs negotiate a peace now and do not demand absolute and unconditional surrender we will be committing the greatest crime in the history of our country.Adml. Wil liam F. Halsey, Jr. • • * War criminals must be dealt with because they are proved to be war criminals, not be cause they belong to a race led by a maniac into war.-Henry Ward Beer, president Fed eral Bar Association of New York. • * • The surest way to guarantee a full supply of fruit and vegetables for home use is „ oarripn and do as much home can ning as possible.-WFA Administrator Marvin Jones. * A ___TALE OF TWO CITIES _| - 1 WITH THE AEF: France ’sPurgeSlowsDown By LOUIS P. LOCHNER (Substituting for Kenneth L. Dixon) PARIS —UP)— Epuration, that ominous French word meaning purge which only a month ago screamed from every Parisian newspaper, virtually has become obsolete. Yet no one expects it will remain thus. When I left Paris Feb. 1 for a visit to sections of Germany now occupied by the Allies, "epura tion” seemed to have reached a climax. Such a dramatic figure as 76-year-old fighting Editor Charles Maurras, or such an erudite man of letters as 35-year-old Robert Erasillach had supplied plenty of readable material to the French press. Crowded though the French one sheet dailies are for space, their editors nevertheless reserved plen ty of room for items to bear out the one word headline, "epura tion.” On my return to the French cap ital I looked in vain for the fa miliar headline. The fact is that the government apparently grew tired of prosecuting over 70.000 cases and decided that all those dealing with central administra tive officials must be finished by Feb. 15, all affecting local admin istrations by March 15, and all charging treason, collusion with the enemy and others involving the possibility of the death penalty by May 1. That decision satisfied exactly nobody, it seems, unless it was the government itself. But even the cabinet seems to have had tongue in cheek when it passed the decree for speeding up and thereafter dropping all purging. The government, as well as everybody else, cannot answer the fundamental question: What will be the attitude of the millions of Frei^hmen, who are either prison, ers of war in Germany or else have been dragged Hie Reich as conscripted laborers? As of Jan. 31, l..., ,,._,t5 of over 70,000 cases had been tried, in cluding 471 with the death penal ty. These figures show how tm possible is the task of completin all cases under indictment within the alloted time. The innate feeling of justice in the average Frenchman rebels against the solution decreed by the government even though it is rec ognized that judicial machinery was being clogged by the inces sant purge trials. Why should those go scot free—so the average Parisian asks — who either by chance, or because they knew le gal tricks, escaped being tried in the first wave of purge fever? Others go far/her and point out that no really rich people have been placed on trial and it seems justifiable for them to deduce that such persons were in a better po sition than the poor in engaging clever counsel, if not actually making money talk to judges. Dropping the purge of govern mental apparatus entirely by March 15 arouses grave fears in the Leftist political parties lest the spirit of Vichy rather than that of reborn democracy will animate France's vast governmental ma chinery. One thing seems demonstrated by the course of the purge trials so far: the worst off defendants were the wielders of the pen. They had no alibis. They were commit ted in writing, their signatures af fixed to editorial expressions which left no doubt about their attitude. The average Frenchman now is probably so preoccupied with daily v#brries about food, shelter and a job that he is ready to accept the cabinet’s decision to end the purges quickly. It's another ques tion, however, what will happen when French war prisoners and conscripted laborers reach home again and see men holding jobs who they knew to be Vichy col laborators, who perhaps even helped in selecting conscripts for Hitler’s war effort. Many thoughtful Frenchmen in private conversation shudder at the thought of possible clashes ahead when these forced absen tees rejoin their native communi ties. MINERS PREPARING New pay demands WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.— CP) — The possibility of a coal mine shut down, aggravating an already dire steel shortage, heightened official tension today as John L. Lewis’ United Mine Workers made their opening moves toward new coal wage demands. A plea for an early pay settle ment—Lewis’ present contract with bituminous operators expires on April 1—was voiced by War Pro duction Board Chairman J. A. Krug. “Work stoppages in the bitumin ous fields would seriously and im mediately impair steel production,” Krug said in a statement evidently aimed at members of Lewis’ Policy committee gathering here for their opening deliberations Monday on wage demands. UMW negotiations with mine operators will open Thursday. The contract deadline will find still mills with 3,000,000 tons of un filled first-quarter orders—tonnage which must get priority over second-quarter request of the arm ed forces and other claimants. The second-quarter demands then selves exceed estimated supply by about 3,000,000 tons, byt are being slashed deeply by WPB. Meanwhile the government gave back to private owners 72 soft coal miles which feed steel mills in West Virginia, Pennsylvania and Kentucky. Solid Fuels Adminis tration officials said the return should not be construed as a con ciliatory gesture by the govern ment in connection with the wage negotiations. SFA Administrator Harold L. Ickes said federal control was ended, after five months, be cause a UMW union of supervisory employes which threatened to strike last fall had now given as surance of continued work if pri vate operation were resumed. Krug disclosed new steps to deal with the steel problem. He ap pointed an emergency committee headed by his chief of operations, H. G. Batcheller, and made up of representatives of the Army, Navy, SFA and War Manpower Commission. Norman W. Foy, former WPB steel director, has agreed to return from private af fairs to serve on the panel also. -V Victory gardeners of Omaha, Neb., reaped an extra food har vest when an overflow of the Mis souri River, in 1943, receded and left a crop of fish in the furrows and rows of the newly planted plots. LETTER BOX LIEUT. JAMES B. LYNCH TO THE EDITOR: The name of Lieut. James B. Lynch, of Wilmington, has been added to the list of those who have died for their country, a list which holds the names of so many of our young men. In mentioning one name there is no intent to place this above other son the im mortal list. This soldier typifiest the finest things of youth—youth which we are realizing as never before is so very fine. What we say about the one young soldier comes from knowing him from infancy, let it be said for every home from whence a loved one has gone never to return. That home will ever bear the scar that lcve has suffered, a scar made deep because the life that went was young. Though quiet and mild, James Lynch had courage in his heart and was chosen student Command ing Officer of the High School R. O. T. C. Though the leading soldier of his contemporaries, he was chosen by the young people of his church to represent them in gatherings national in scope. He gave his life when this life filled with the love of life. May it be consoling that the draught of life can never grow stale and sour. Have they died in vain? “The universe will not make sense if they have died in vain.” Whether they have died in vain or not depends upon those for whom they died. If self is placed ahead of all that can be fine in this world, then they have died in vain. If like they, we lift up an ideal above self—an ideal that was given us some two thousand years ago—then they will not have died in vain. “If ye break faith with us who die, we shall not sleep . . .” ROBERT STRANGE Wilmington. N. C. Feb. 24, 1945 -V PLEA FOR UMTY To The Editor: The writer, as one of the oldest living alumni of the University, de plores the disunity among its friends which has come into the open during recent discussion in reference to titles. The purpose of this comment is to allay any feel ing that has been generated in the discussion and to plead for unity of thought and purpose by all friends of the University every where. To divide is to destroy. There must be no division. Every friend of the University should rejoice over the narrow es cape from the serious blunder it would have been to provide for three presidents of a unit, a con solidated University. This would have done violence not only to the law of unity, but would have dis regarded the meaning of words, which no university can afford to do. The dictionary defines a presi dent as one chosen “to preside” and defines preside as “to exer cise the chief direction and over sight, to act as head.” A consoli dated university with three “heads” would have occasioned much merriment among the edu cators of the country who insist upon the observance of the exact meaning of words. There was general agreement that there was no intent or desire to disturb the consolidated set-up. This being so, was a heated dis cussion of titles a profitable oc cupation for the friend of the Uni versity? Old William Shakespeare knew what he was saying when he posed the question, “What’s in a name?” What difference does it make what the assistant to a pres ident is called so long as his re sponsibilities are clearly defined By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Associated Press IV.,r Analst The answer to Nazi ab,l‘ , maintain any organized del* around within the roofless S, that lies between the Rhi". And it it is. the duration o[ a war in Europe can be arsl5) with some reasonable deer!, accuracy. s et ol Germany was face to face *itk another supreme test. 4 There was no question but that the final phase of a coordinate Russian-Allied winter drive crush the Wehrmacht was on a* though the full scope and directs™ of simultaneous massive grow, attacks from east and west hJ yet to develop. hsl Undercover of a sustained Al'iel air bombardment that blackened German skies day and night r-‘ bombers the big push began. '* In an anniversary order to Rej armies issued while Allied bombe, were ripping at every vital N«j communication key in preparatio, for the culminating break-throw ground attacks. Premier Stalk, again defined the joint objective as annihilation of the German at. my. For the first time, too, ht disclosed officially that the j-* sian-AUied offensives were now intimately coordinated, fitted to, QUU latutdl ps;. tern. Whether that was the direct first result in a military way o( th* momentous Churchill - Roosevelt. Stalin conference at Yalta or had been previously worked out is not yet clear. It seems certain, how! ever, that further aggressive moves to tighten the screw on the totter, ing last segment of Hitler's onct sweeping Axis hold on continental Europe were in the making. Further evidence of the impend, ing German collapse came during the week from Turkey. In desper ate haste to join in the United Nations victory march, Turkey formally entered the war. Her ac tion came too belatedly to influ ence greatly the military situation except that it exposed die-hard Nazi garrisons' on the islands of the Aegean to immediate close range attack. The complete clear ance of that sea for Allied use with Allied naval and sir ?■ 1 seems apt to be the first war mis sion of Turkish forces. There were further indications during the week also that a Nazi withdrawal from Italy might be impending. It will involve terrible risks for Nazi divisions pulling back out of the Estruscan line across the head of the Italian pen insula if and when it conies. They must make their way somehow across the wide open sweep of the Po valley to reach Alpine noccoc filmoflv imHpr cuctainwj A!. lied air attack that lead into Ger many or Austria. There were in dications of softening of the de fense of long stubbornly German held heights on the Italian front which suggested the retreat in the south had begun. There are no recent official Al lied or Russian estimates of re- - maining German divisoinal strength either on the east or west fronts by which to measure imme diate probabilities. But east as well as west the Wehrrr.acht faces crushing odds as the most decisive moment of the war draws near, while overhead it stands naked to ceaseless Allied airattack. There can be no doubt as to the end, only as the just when and how it will come. LUFTWAFFE MAY TRYCOMEBACK LONDON, Feb. 24 —GPi-Alled airforce spokesmen warned today that the German Luftwaffe pro ably will make a desperate conn back attempt—possibly the last one. , The Luftwaffe has failed to chal lenge during the last three dayl terrific pounding of the Keicn. At present, the enemy apparen'f has given defense gestures a?a-^ ( the western air blows and - as -- his plans into tactical attacks the eastern front. The best, opinion here ts the Luftwaffe, as it has done P^' odically, is again nursing itself condition to stage anothei a However, it appears that German commanders re; the Luftwaffe, in the lo!-S> , ,. » 11, j OKS - V,CliIIlUL IlCUL ■- - . the west and that attempt so will be at an almost P". five cost. _ ,, Moreover, fuel suppl es a E the lowest ebl# of the war * the unique scattering r:f •’>* " lied air forces on Thursday a Friday posed new deft blems against which the (,e‘£ (commanders may not havi able to react, A year ago, low-level raids like those a gar _ * railroads this week w d cost the Allies 300 bomber and he discharges then, ly and faithfully? » There woulfl seem to be ten*' valuable lessons to be h* friends of the University cent experience: , 1. The importance of r the exact meaning of vr 2. The folly of appealing to n Legislature over the hear; o. t-^ tees appointed by it. »n.o frightful danger of such proce .‘at 3. Unity is more impoirant titles. ,;rj, Let unity come first in ■■■-• . h versity matters, and let it ■ ously guarded always. A. W. McALISTE* Greensboro, N. C. Feb. 24. 1945 A
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Feb. 25, 1945, edition 1
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