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Pttmittgtott &tar North Carolina's Oldest Daily Newspaper Published Daily Except Sunday Bv The Wilmington Star-News R. B. Page, Owner and Publisher Entered as Second Class Matter at filming ton. N. C., Postoffice Under Act of Congres ' • of March 3, 1879.__ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER IN NEW HANOVER COUNTY Payable Weekly or In Advance Combi Time . Star News natioi 1 Week -$,-30 1-25 * » 1 Month - 1-30 1-10 2.1| 3 Month. 3.90 3.25 «.« a Mnntha _..... 7.80 6.00 *o.w 1 Year ".. 15.60 13.00 26.0C (Above"rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-News)_ By Mail: Payable Strictly in Advance 3 Months .t 2.50 $ 2.00 * 3.8. 5 io°oo tS AS (Above rates entitle subscriber to Sunday issue of Star-Newsi _ -WILMINGTON STAR (Daily Without Sunday) 3 Months-$l.85 6 Months-$3.70 1 Yr.-$7.40 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.______ vrFMRFR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ANDALSO SERVED BY THE UNITED 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. THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1945._ THOUGHT FOR TODAY The future toward which we are marching across bloody fields and frightful manifesta tions of destruction, must be based upon broad and simple virtues, and upon the nobility of mankind. Winston Churchill. -V Just Beyond Bolton Because Americans generally are unfamiliar with the geography of eastern Germany and contiguous countries they are having a hard time understanding the advance of the Russian forces steadily advancing on the Reich capital. But if we substitute Washington for Berlin and Baltimore for the nearest enemy concen tration point with spearheads some seven miles closer the American seat of government, Ber lin’s plight becomes more apparent. Baltimore is approximately forty miles from Washington. The Russians have sent advance units to within thirty - three miles of Berlin, the Germans declared. We can well imagine the feeling of Washingtonians, and all Ameri cans for that matter, if an enemy had its skir mishers that close. Or, to make it strictly local, imagine Wil mington the chief objective, with the foe's spearhead just two miles beyond Bolton and still coming closer. With enemy planes over head and the thump of his artillery thunder ing in all ears, Wilmingtonians would be far from calm. With this comparison in mind, and with the American and British forces plunging ahead east of the Rhine it is more and more diffi cult to understand the power that holds the German civilian population in line. Truly, the gesiapo must have complete dominance over the people, despite reports that its members never appear alone on the streets, lest a panicky populace slay them out of hand. -V Winners All The nine lieutenant generals nominated by President Roosevelt to be four - star generals have won their right to the proposed promo tion. Without disrespect to the others it may be pointed out that Generals McNarney, Brad ley, Spaatz, Kenney, Clark and Keueger have been in command of combat forces whereas the other: have had office assignments. Un doubtedly the others would have proved as capable in field commands as they have in their less spectacular roles. Nor i: .u disrespectful to any Allied military leader to note that General Eisenhower has declared Field Marshal Montgomery the great est field officer in the Allied armies on any front. This has been the popular estimate of the little beret - wearing Scotchman ever since he started Rommel back - tracking in Egypt when the Allied cause seemed all but hope less. By indirect reasoning, it may well be that Eisenhower himself has had something to do with Montgomery’s great success. At least he was a party to the decision that gave him his big chance. ■-V Laugh This Off It was revealed recently that only five per cent of the 11,672 tuberculosis cases dis charged from Veterans’ Administration hos pitals during the last fiscal year were listed as medically rehabilitated—that is “arrested,” •apparently arrested,” or “quiescent.” It is reported that this rate “compares very un favorably” with the considerably higher re habilitation rates in the better sanitoriums run by state, municipal or private agencies. About half of the total number of cases dis charged were World War II veterans. Government authorities said that worry feeling too well to finish treatment, seekin" more favorable climate, desire to go to work and other similar reasons accounted for the shocking number of “irregular discharges.” However, such reasons are pretty feeble. They arfe encountered wherever tuberculosis pa tterns are under treatment. Actually, the above is one of the strongest' illustrations of what happens when that inti mate something which medical men call doc tor-patient relationship, is destroyed by im personal government administration of medi cal care. Advocates of state medicine laugh at doctor* who claim that the personal ip tereit of the physician in his patient, which is characteristic of the private practice ci medicine, contributes substantially to speed of recovery. And yet many who have been ill will recall the relief that came with the knowledge that their doctor would personally stand by them night and day if the need 1 Half the battle in the long climb up out of the shadows of tuberculosis is the capacity of the doctor to instill in his patient, month after month, the moral courage to go on. Absence of this personal relationship can J break the strongest heart. -V Food and Supply Problem When the United States went into the wai and with the customary national predisposi tion to succor the world, programs for feeding, clothing, arming everybody outside the Axis countries came into being overnight. Wh-ere ever there was need, wherever any commod ity of war material was lacking, there wa$ where we were to pour out our substance. If not by Lend-Lease or other promise to pay, then by gratuity, the United States should act as the anti-Axis world’s most liberal Samari tan, and, at the same time and for the dura tion, make provision for the needs- of its own civilian and military population. There could be but one outcome to such planning—insufficiency in all supplies and quarreling among the bureaus set up to ad minister the preposterous programs. Here is this wrangling between the War Food Admin istration and the Foreign Economic Adminis tration, for example. They cannot agree on what foodstuffs are to go where and what shall be placed in the domestic market, with result that a meat crisis faces this country and the Army, which has a strong propensity to over buy in everything but is nevertheless doing its job with credit in Europe and the Pacific, is expected to cut down on meat ra tions for the soldiers as well as reductions in general military supplies. The whole problem of food, which has been muddled from the start, is more confused and unsatisfactory than ever, both at home and with respect of foreign commitments which must be met even though in large part they were unjustifiable, and there appears to be no prosp;ct of a solution. War Food Adminis trator Marvin Jones and Foreign Economic Administrator Leo T. Crowley are polles apart and somewhere in the space between is War Mobilizer and Deputy President James F. Byrnes, with no hope even of a truce. The only outlook is that the whole matter will have to be referred to President Roosevelt for settlement, and in all seriousness it is difficult to foresee any improvement through appeal to the White House. Mr. Roosevelt is not a genius for detail nor given to consideration of costs. The Army, the domestic civilian population, and foreign peoples to whom supplies have been pledged, face worse conditions, and all because experts in the business at hand have been passed over in the selection of our chief bureaucrats. -V ressimism Unjustified In connection with the Security conference set to assemble in San Francisco on April 25, it may be noted that pessimists are already forecasting that no group set up for perpetu ating peace in the world can be more success ful than was the ill-starred League of Nations. Those holding this view fail to consider the reasons for the League’s failure, chief of which was that the United States w’as not a member. Having played a fine role in the defeat of Germany in the former World war, the Senate, for strictly political reasons, and probably be cause President Wilson failed to include Sena tor Lodge among the American delegates to the Versailles peace conference, rejected membership in the League, left it to stumble through its inefficient existence and so did the spade work of its failure. This time the situation is reversed. The United States is determined to do its full sharp in maintaining peace. There are those among the aforesaid pessimists who declare that President Roosevelt, with the hope of becoming the chieftain of whatever peace group is established, has allowed himself to become -the henchman of Winston Churchill, and that Churchill himself is under Stalin’s thumb, but facts supporting this view are lacking. It is true that Mr. Roosevelt’s ambi tions are exhaustless and that Stalin, because of the magnificent accomplishments of his armies, hafc won the right to speak lustily at the peace table and sit above the salt in any postwar organization for peace, and that Churchill is displaying the proverbial trade instincts of the British; but there has been unprecedented harmony at all conferences among the Big Three. It is reasonable to think that, with the errors of the League of Nations in mind and the known warlike pre disposition of the Prussians as a guide, the trio will find ground for united action after the war. A little optimism for world peace for more than a quarter century is more justified than the pessimism of the irreconcilables. -v Hull May Attend The course of events is often shaped by the opportune presence of this man or that when they are being shaped. Because this is so, news from Washington that Cordell Hull is recovering from his long illness so rapidly and satisfactorily that he may be able to attend the United Nations conference in San Francisco toward the end of April is heart ening. His presence, when representatives of the governments upon whom will fall the burden of drafting fundamental principles for the world of tomorrow, could not fail to bear fruit. His deep sense of the responsibility rest ing upon the democracies, his clear vision of the needs of a reborn world and his judg ment of men would be invaluable. Not only Americans but citizens of all na tions to be represented at this vital gathering hope that recent progress in his convalescense will continue and that he may take on the task of attendance without imperiling his re turning health. Fair Enough (Editor’s note.—The Star and the News accept no responsibility for the personal views of Mri Pegler, and often disagree with them as much as many of his read ers. His articles serve the good purpose of making people think.) By WESTBROOK PEGLER (Copyright, 1945, by King Features Syndicate.) In writing some time ago of the use of radio by a Russian born war contractor to har rangue the Americans with propaganda con sistent with the communist line, I made the mistake of declaring that our standard Amer ican press would not sell advertising space for editorial matter. It was a careless obser vation and incorrect because, periodically, since 1939, the International Latex company of Playtex Park, Dover, Del., has been run ning political arguments as paid advertise ments. These have been new deal preach ments, and anti-Nazi but, as far as my read ing of them reveals, never anti-communist, nor hostile to totalitarianism, as such. The company which took to the air with the party line propaganda over a local sta tion of the Blue Network in New York was Electronic Corporation of America. As relat ed before in these dispatches, its news ‘inter preter” is a renegade rabbi, born Margolis, who changd his name to Gailmor to conceal his identity as a convicted thief, and deceived the Blue Network regarding his true person ality and police record in the interview which preceded his engagement. After the expose, he was invited to the White House alone with many others of like mind and purposes for the inauguration festivities. The president of electronic is a native Rus sian. naturalized American, named Samuel Novick who manufactures secret electrical equipment for the Army and also has inter ests in a company of similar activities in Mexico, the center of the communist conspir acy in Latin America. Novick hired for his press agent in New York a prominent and aggressive communist who, like Gailmor, al so uses an alias. Novick, moreover, is aso ciated with a group of conspicuous commun ists and fellow-travelers in a new corporation which is preparing a strong campaign by ra dio voice and television to begin immediately after the war. In Gailmor s propaganda conscious example of pro-communist bias were denunciations of Great Britain for resisting the communist coup in Greece after the liberation and lauda tions of the Quisling Polish government set up by Soviet Russia in Poland under the title of the Lublin committee. This matter was presented in the guise of news interpretation and, under ordinary practice, the cost of the program, more than $50,000 a year, would be deductible from the profits of electonic as legitimate advertising expense, in the prep aration of its tax returns. Thus, in final ef fect, the American people, the actual tax-pay ers, would bear the cost of their own indoc trination, subtly administered as explanation of news developments. Even though it were not deducted but paid out of the company’s own profits, they would still pay for it be cause, after all, it is the tax-payers who pay the profits, too. A communist organization having the form of an American business cor poration might desire profits only to be able to use them to promote the'cause of com munism. There are points of similarity between No vick of electronic and the president of in ternational Latex, whose name is Abraham N. Spanel. Like Novick, Spanel was born in Russia and, like Novick, he is diligently en gaged in war production and would appear to have prospered enormously. His advertise ments run two or three columns wide, the length of the page, in a national list of news papers, a campaign suggesting a huge op propriation for political propaganda, and he is a rapturous advocate of Henry Wallace as an American political prophet. To this end he has published at advertising rates on a national scale several eulogies of Wallace, os tensible as “a public service,” including one by the ineffable Senator Joe Guffey, of Penn sylvania, the artful tax dodger, who for many years owed the treasury an item of $4,000 and, finally, after much publicity, persuaded himself to pay it, but without the usual im post- of accrued interest. ‘‘No wonder the forward looking people of the United States and the common people of the tt'orld believe, in Mr. Wallace,” said Sena tor Guffey in one of Mr. Spanel’s ads, neglect ing, however, to mention Wallace’s disparage ment of the American constitutional Bill of Rights or his plan to build a highway, wheth er of eight lanes or one, and whether of concrete or platinum, from New York to Paris by way of Alaska and Siberia. Another of Mr. Spanel’s rhapsodies was a reprint of a column by a member of the Roosevelt newspaper following in Washington, which described Wallace as a champion and symbol of the “aspiration of the common man and the under dog.” This was a poetic con struction well expressing the attitude of some demagogues of the extreme left who regard the American citizen as a soulless lump to be fed, quartered, ordered and disciplined even as a dog. A native of Russia and an admirer of the Soviet system might be par doned in the error. coiner s recently published a laudatory per sonal history of Mr. Spanel, praising him for his invention and manufacture of pneumatic boats foj gungle warfare and a pneumatic stretcher for the recovery of casualties and for his foresight in laying up, before Pearl Harbor, a reserve supply of liquid late*, or pure rubber. He formerly had manufactured girdles for women and baby pants. Collie’s tells us that like Gailmor, Spanel studied for the clergy. He is said to have returned voluntarily jjq. 500,000 of his profits to the Treasury but we are not told whether he might have had to do this anyway, as many manufacturers must, under the renegotiation process. A war con tractor thus could make patriotic virtue of ■ legal necessity. We do know, however, that the advertising : matter is entirely political and ideological, ! with no mention of any commercial product, : and that it represents a lavish outlay 0f - money by a corporation *or P0^t’csl propa ganda in the guise of public service, financed ! by an immigrant from Russia, who seems to < admire Russia as a trustworthy national com_ rade of the United States, without reference to the record of Russia’s past Performances t or examination of the communist system. f “After Us the Deluge” Your War—With Ernie Pyle IN THE MARIANAS ISLANDS. — (Delayed)—One thing that might help you visualize what life is like out here, is to realize that even a little island is lots bigger than you think. There are many, many thousands of Americans scattered in camps and at airfields and in training centers and harbors over the three islands which we occupy. Rarely does a man know many people outside his own spe cial unit. Even though the islands are small by our standards, they’re big enough that the indi vidual doesn’t encompass them by any means. It would be as im possible for one man to see or know everybody on one of these islands as it would to know every body in Indianapolis. You could live and work in your section, and never visit an other section for weeks or months at a time. And that’s exactly what does happen. For one thing,* transportation is short. We are still building furiously here, such fast and fan tastic building as you never dreamed of. Everything that runs is being used, and there’s little left over just to run around in for fun. And anyhow, there’s no place to go. What towns there were have been destroyed. There is nothing even resembling a town or city on these islands now. The natives have been set up in improvised camps, but they offer no “city life’’ attraction*. as we drove around one oi me islands on my first day here, we went tl«:ough one of the Marianas towns that had been destroyed by bombing and shelling. It had been a good-sized place, quite modern too in a tropical way. It had a city plaza and municipal buildings and paved streets, and many of the buildings were of stone or mortar. In destruction, it looked exact ly as destroyed cities all over Europe look. The same jagged half-smnding walls, the stacks of rubble, the empty houses you could see through, the roofless homes, the deep craters in the gardens. There was just one difference. Out here tropical vegetation is lush. And Nature thrusts up her greenery so swiftly through rub ble and destruction that the ruins are festooned with vines and green leaves, and it gives them a look of being very old and time worn ruins, instead of fresh mod ern ones, which they are. * » * An American soldier in Europe, even though the towns may be “off limits" to him or destroyed completely, still has a sense of aeing near a civilization that is ike his own. But out here there is nothing , ike that. You are on an island, he natives are strange people, ■ <mu no piace to go. !f you had a three-day pass you’d irobably spend it lying on your sot. Eventually, boredom and the ‘island complex” starts to take lold. For that reason the diversions lupplied by the Army are even nore important out here than in Europe. Before I left America heard that one island out here lad more than 200 outdoor movies in it. I thought whoever told hat must be crazy, for in Europe he average soldier didn’t get a nance to see a movie very often. •But t*1® suy wasn’t crazy. These hree Marianas islands have a otal of 233 outdoor movies on them. And they show every night. Even if it isn’t a good movie, it kills the timp between supper and bedtime. The theaters are usually on the slope of a hill, forming a natural ampitheater. The men sit on the ground, or bring their own boxes, or in some of them the ends of metal bomb crates are used for chairs. You can drive along and some times you’ll pass three movies not more than 300 yards apart. That’s mainly because there is not enough transportation to haul the men any distance, so the movie has to come to them. There is lots of other stuff pro vided besides movies, too. On one island there are 65 theater stages, where soldiers themselves put on “live” shows, or where USO troupes can perform. Forty pianos have been scattered around at these places. In Europe it was a lucky bunch of soldiers who got their hands on a radio. Over here in these small islands, the Army has dis tributed 3,509 radios, and they have a regular station broadcast ing all the time, with music, news, shows and everything. .The sports program is big. On one island there are 95 softball diamonds, 35 regular diamonds, 225 volleyball courts and 30 bas ketball courts. Also there are 35 boxing arenas. Boxing is very popular. They’ve had as high as 18,000 men watching a boxing match. In addition to all this program, which is deliberate and super vised, the boys do a lot to amuse themselves. The American is adept at fixing up any old place in the world to look like home, with little picket fences and all kinds of Rube Goldberg contrap tions inside to make it more liva ble. All this uses up time. Just as an example, the coral Sea bottom inside the reef around these islands abounds with fan tastic miniature marine life, weird and colorful. Soldiers make glass-bottomed boxes for them selves, and wade out and just look at the beautiful sea bottom. I’ve seen them out there like that for hours, just staring at the ser bottom. At home they wouldn't have gone to an aquarium if you’d built it in their backyard. Pleasures are all relative. Joy is proportional. Why don’t I shut up? WITH THE AEF: Ambulances, Footballs BY ROBERT C. WILSON (Substituting for Kenneth L. Dixon) ON THE WESTERN FRONT (J»—This is a story of ambulances and footballs. It involves the American Field Service and took place in Alsace. Paris and London. C. B. Alexan der of Baltimore, Md., needed ten ambuances for his volunteer dri vers attached to the First French Army. Alexander and Mark Ethridge. Jr., of Louisville. Ky., went to see Gen. Jean de Lattre de Tassingy about getting those ambulances. The general had a shortage too— of footballs. He needed 100 pigskins for his officers candidate school. "And so it is a deal’’ said the general. "I’ll give you one new ambulance for every ten footballs you give me.” It sounded like an easy deal and Melvin Braunstein. son of a Pitts burgh, Pa., sporting goods dealer, ivas assigned the task of getting ,he footballs. Armed with letters from the gen eral requesting the footballs. Bra jnstein flew to Paris. First he went :o Supreme Allied Headquarters, rhen to French Special Series headquarters Then to American ;upply officials and finally to the French commissariat of sports. Yanks Capture Robot Bomb Launching Site WITH THE FOURTH ARMOR ED DIVISION, Germany, March 14.—(JP)—Troops of the Fourth Ar mored Division today captured a V-l launching site near Buchel and learned from the irate resi dents that the range of some of early “vengeance” robombs was no farther than their owip roof, trops. Buildings and trees in the vi cinity showed damage from some V-l bombs which plunged to earth after going only a mile and a half. “Sorry, no footballs are kicking around here,” was the story he got at each place. Braunstein recalled that before the war a sporting goods firm in London had exported footballs to his father's firm. So he hitch-hiked across the chan nel in an RAF plane, only to find the company tied up with Army orders. But finally the American Special Services in London said they could take care of him. The otner day Braunstein return ed to Tassigny s headquarters with 108 footballs, 24 pair of football shoes and 12 football pumps. The ten ambulances will be turn ing up anv day now. -V The inner or sensory wall of the eyeball is the retina. By kirke l. bimpsov 8 Assoc,ated Press War Anal,, ' Invasion jitters sweeping , home islands may be \ as> mature. There is much t0 „ Pre' the other side of the ,1 k°, Cj fuU power can be con 1 against the Japanese end??1 disintegrating Nazi-Ninpone,?.? but thin does not necessarily elude early Allied steps to sJ?. footholds on continental As a * That is exactly what ‘toW fears. It explains Japanese? carding of the "protection used m 1941 to cover seizu? French Indo-China. On Tokyo ders, Japanese trooos are ing to disarm or' destroy ? French and native forces 'n for defense against expected AiJ American incursions from aer? the South China Sea into Fren-! Indo-China that could cut of* is! whole southern end of the colk? sing Japanese "greater East Asi co-prosperity sphere * by land , well as sea. It remains to be seen wheth,. that is the purpose that underlie! creation of the powerful British Pacific Fleet, American occur, tion of Palawan Islands in the wen central Philippines, just ofer 6a miles from the eaestern bulge 0f Indo-China and seizure ol the Zar boar.ga peninsula of Mindanao dominating the Sulu Sea gatew to the South China Sea from the Pacific. Disclosure from Bombav that a French military mission has been in consultation with Al lied authorities for months and now is attached to Lord Lous Mountbatten’s Southeast Asia Co~. mand will do nothing to ease Nip. ponese apprehensions. American Naval Task Forces re cently have operated close of* the Indo-China coast. American air power has been steadily blast mg at Japanese shipping in Indo. China and at the narrow gauge railroad that hugs the coast line all the way from Hanoi to Saigon, connecting central and eastern China and Burma and the Malay peninsula. Announcement that a French military mission is attached to the Allied Southeast Asia Com mand carries a suggestion that at some moment a combined squeeze might develop from east and west to split off Japanese garrisons in Malaya and the Dutch Indies for annihilation, wdth establishment of air and sea bases in French Indo-China as a necessary pre liminary. Once air and sea control of the Gulf of Thailand were secur ed, simultaneous blows from the Bay of Bengal and the South China Sea to gain positions on the Ion;, narrow upper end of the Malay peninsula would seem possible. That would isolate Singapore. B TT 'll Daily Prayer FOR SIMPLE FAITH To all creation Thou art a sov erign God; but to us Thou art Fath er; so we come to Thee in childlike confidence, sure of Thy love, Thy wisdom and Thy power. We don : understand all Thy ways with us, but we know they are Father ways. We are but children; Thou art our Father. Now as we undergo sore trials and testings we pray that Thou wilt increase our faith in Thee Give us, we reverently plead, utter childlike confidence in Thee and in Thy purposes for us. Bewildered by war, burdened by grief, af frighted by perils to our dear ones and to the world, we cling to Toy Fatherly care; for Thou carest for us. May our trustful dependence upon Thee impart courage an patience and peace to our heart;. Forgive us that we have so on ■ been disobedient children: an make us worthier of our Divm inheritance. Amen.—W.T.E. -V DEAN OF ENGINEERING ATLANTA, March 14.—iMP1 pointment of Cherry Logan Em' son, vice president of Robert j Co., Atlanta engmeeis, .0 be of engineering at Georgia was approved today by ,nc "V of regents of the Georgia sity system. ^ CONSULTANT WASHINGTON, March ’ -Mason P. Thomas. Silver U, N. C., has been appointed a sultant to the cotton yarn bran _ of the War Production Board, • was announced today. He ■;> P ident of the Hadley-Peoples » ufocturing Co., cotton 1 ners of Silver City.___* The Literary Guidepost I BY W. G. ROGERS “Report on the Russians,” by W. L. White (Harcourt, Brace: $2.50), A condensation of this White pa per on Russia by the author of the excellent “They Were Expendable” appeared recently in a magazine and was criticized heartedly. In the introduction to the book. White admits there were some er rors. “Some of these mistakes were favorable to the Russians,” he writes; “some were unfavor able and these last of course I regret. He gives the Russians their due in passing. Stalin is “a great man;” Russian artillery “excel lent;” the Red army, “good.” The Soviet Union handles the race prob lem intelligently. All the youths are at war. The Russians don’t tiave enough fruit and vegetables. But he has more fault to find than praise to bestow. From the rery first page, where he notes s Soviet vice-consul's “creaky schoolboy English,” to the last paragraph, he voices suspicion of and complains about the Russians. The bulk of his book, wrik- ■ after a trip with Eric Jo:v- I interpreters, is compose- 01 K ings like these1 j I Russia is run by vor.o>^“, B city manager-Little Coo - r B The country is like a pc..k|r-.“kJ B The army is as bedraz-ifQ as ■ Mexican army. There arete*.' ■ ed highways. Stalingrad 1S 0 I little place compared t0Jr°^B The factories are dirty. B skva hotel is like a barn, ".as | sin drains don’t drui* . , .. B To continue: Red fl don’t smile; they wear baw ■ suits of shoddy material rne__':• B resentative of the commas . ■ which was official hos: rcm>-;; ■ him of a pail of cold lar“’. - K women have bad comr,e- 1,, B The actresses have gold or f' ’ & less-steel teeth. > B Does he find nothing :o B his enthusiasm? Yes. He ao!.-^ ■ very much some old palaces I czars, various architectural 1 j B tures in pre-Soviet villages. j,( ■ the Bolshoi ballet. . .which * B explains is a hold-over from P- ■ revolutionary days. H
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 15, 1945, edition 1
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