America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

USO to get half of war fund receipts

$28 million to go for operation of 2,500 service units

Völkischer Beobachter (January 26, 1944)

Von London und Washington aus –
Pressehetze gegen Spanien und Portugal

U.S. Navy Department (January 26, 1944)

CINCPAC Press Release No. 239

For Immediate Release
January 26, 1944

Seventh Army Air Force and Fleet Air Wing Two aircraft attacked four Marshall Island atolls on January 24 (West Longitude Date). Three of the atolls were raided twice during the day.

Army fighters and dive-bombers made a low-altitude morning attack on Mille, striking shore installations with bombs and machine-gun fire. No enemy fighters were encountered, and we lost no aircraft. A small-scale attack was made on Mille in the evening by heavy bombers. We suffered no losses.

Wotje was attacked by Army Mitchell bombers in the afternoon, with bomb hits on gun emplacements, airfield facilities, and living areas. All planes returned to their base. There was no enemy fighter opposition. A small-scale heavy bomber attack was also made on Wotje in the evening, with no fighter opposition and no losses to our forces.

Army medium bombers attacked Taroa, in the Maloelap Atoll, bombing airdrome facilities and destroying one fighter on the ground. A total of thirty enemy fighters were encountered, of which at least one was shot down. All of our planes escaped. Army heavy bombers raided Taroa in the evening, dropping over 20 tons of bombs on shore installations. This time there was no fighter opposition, and none of our planes was lost.

A Navy search Liberator encountered three small enemy warships with air cover of five fighters near Ailinglapalap, and shot down three of the fighters.

Message to Congress by President Roosevelt
January 26, 1944, 12:30 p.m. ET

Rooseveltsicily

The Speaker laid before the House the following message from the President of the United States, which was read by the clerk and, together with the accompanying papers, referred to the Committee on Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress, and ordered to be printed:

To the Congress of the United States:

The American people are very much concerned over the fact that the vast majority of the 11 million members of the Armed Forces of the United States are going to be deprived of their right to vote in the important national election this fall, unless the Congress promptly enacts adequate legislation. The men and women who are in the Armed Forces are rightfully indignant about it. They have left their homes and jobs and schools to meet and defeat the enemies who would destroy all our democratic institutions including our right to vote. Our men cannot understand why the fact that they are fighting should disqualify them from voting.

It has been clear for some time that practical difficulties and the element of time make it virtually impossible for soldiers and sailors and Marines spread all over the world to comply with the different voting laws of 48 states and that unless something is done about it, they will be denied the right to vote. For example, the statutes of four of the states permit no absentee voting at all in general elections. Eleven other states require registration in person in order to be able to vote. Others permit absentee registration; but in some instances the procedure is so complicated and the time is so limited, that soldiers and sailors in distant parts of the world cannot practically comply with the state requirements.

But even if the registration requirements were met, there are still innumerable difficulties involved. For example, Pvt. John Smith in Australia and his brother Joe who is on a destroyer off the coast of Italy, who think they are entitled to vote as well as to fight, find that they have to write in and ask the appropriate public official in their own state for absentee ballots. In every state those ballots cannot even be printed until after the primary elections – and in 14 states the primaries do not take place until September. In due time the ballots are printed – but they cannot always be sent out immediately, since in about half the states the absentee ballots cannot be mailed until 30 days or less before the election. Weeks after they are mailed out, they reach John Smith in Australia and Joe aboard his destroyer. Even assuming that John and Joe, in the meantime, have not been transferred to another station or ship, or have not been wounded and sent to a hospital, it is doubtful whether the ballots will get back in time to be counted. If they have been moved, as is very likely, the ballots may not even reach them before election day.

In 14 states the procedure is even more time-consuming and cumbersome – for instead of writing for an official ballot, John and Joe must first obtain special application forms for official ballots, which must be received and filled out and returned, before the ballots themselves are even mailed to them.

The Congress in September 1942 took cognizance of this intolerable situation facing millions of our citizens, and passed a federal absentee-balloting statute (Public Law 712). That law did three things: It provided for a federal ballot to be prepared by the states; it abrogated state requirements for registration and poll-tax payments, insofar as they apply to members of the Armed Forces; and it required the War and Navy Departments to distribute postal cards to members of the Armed Forces with which they might request federal absentee ballots from their state election officials.

The federal law was a slight improvement, in that it provided absentee-voting procedures in those cases where there had been no action by the states. It also eliminated some of the strict procedural requirements contained in many of the state laws. The great defect in that statute, however, was that it still involved a time lag, so that the voter might not receive his ballot in time to return it to be counted. This defect is inherent, and cannot be avoided, in any statute under which the forwarding of ballots for distribution must wait until the candidates have been selected in the primaries, or which requires correspondence between the local election officials and soldiers and sailors who may be transferred or moved at any minute. If any proof were necessary to show how ineffective this federal statute was – the fact is that out of 5,700,000 men in our Armed Forces at the time of the general elections of 1942, only 28,000 servicemen’s votes were counted under the federal statute.

The need for new legislation is evident if we are really sincere – and not merely rendering lip service to our soldiers and sailors.

By the 1944 elections there will be more than five million Americans outside the limits of the United States in our Armed Forces and Merchant Marine. They, and the millions more who will be stationed within the United States waiting the day to join their comrades on the battlefronts, will all be subject to frequent, rapid, and unpredictable transfer to other points outside and inside the United States. This is particularly true in the case of the Navy and merchant marine, components of which are at sea for weeks at a time and are constantly changing their ports of entry and debarkation.

Some people – I am sure with their tongues in their cheeks – say that the solution to this problem is simply that the respective states improve their own absentee-ballot machinery. In fact, there is now pending before the House of Representatives a meaningless bill, passed by the Senate December 3, 1943, which presumes to meet this complicated and difficult situation by some futile language which:

…recommends to the several states the immediate enactment of appropriate legislation to enable each person absent from his place of residence and serving in the armed services of the United States . . . who is eligible to vote in any election district or precinct, to vote by absentee ballot in any general election held in his election district or precinct in time of war.

This recommendation is itself proof of the unworkability of existing state laws.

I consider such proposed legislation a fraud on the soldiers and sailors and Marines now training and fighting for us and for our sacred rights. It is a fraud upon the American people. It would not enable any soldier to vote with any greater facility than was provided by Public Law 712, under which only a negligible number of soldiers’ votes were cast.

This recommendation contained in this piece of legislation may be heeded by a few states but will not, in fact, cannot, be carried out by all the states. Two states would require a constitutional amendment in order to adopt a practical method of absentee voting, which is obviously impossible to do before the November elections. Only a handful of the states, nine, will have legislatures regularly in session this year; and, to date, only eight other states have called special sessions of their legislatures for this purpose.

Besides, the Secretary of War, who will have the bulk of the administrative responsibility for distributing and collecting the ballots, has stated:

No procedure for offering the vote to servicemen can be effectively administered by the War and Navy Departments in time of war unless it is uniform and as simple as possible. Especially is this true with regard to the voting of persons outside the United States… An Army engaged in waging war cannot accommodate that primary function to multiple differences in the requirements of the 48 states as to voting procedure.

I am convinced that even if all the states tried to carry out the recommendations contained in this bill, the most that could be accomplished practically would be to authorize the Army and Navy to distribute and collect ballots prepared by the states in response to postcard requests from servicemen – the very procedure set forth in Public Law 712, which has been such a failure.

What is needed is a complete change of machinery for absentee balloting, which will give the members of our Armed Forces and Merchant Marine all over the world an opportunity to cast their ballots without time-consuming correspondence and without waiting for each separate state to hold its primary, print its ballots, and send them out for voting.

The recent bills proposed by Senators Green and Lucas and by Congressman Worley, S. 1612, HR 3982, seem to me to do this job. They set up proper and efficient machinery for absentee balloting. These bills propose that blank ballots on special paper suitable for air delivery be sent by the War and Navy Departments to all the fronts and camps and stations out in the field, well in advance of election day. Immediately after primary elections are held, the names of the various candidates would be radioed or wired to the various military, naval, and Merchant Marine units throughout the world – on the high seas, on every front, and at every training station. The lists of candidates would then be made available to the voters, and the ballots would be distributed for marking in secrecy. But even if the candidates’ names had not been made available in an area in time to allow the ballots to be sent back to the United States, the voters could cast their votes by designating merely the name of the party of the candidates they desired to vote for. The voting date would be fixed in each area in sufficient time to get the ballots back home before election day, even if the actual names of the candidates had not been received in that particular area. The ballots would be collected and transmitted back to the United States by the quickest method of delivery, for forwarding to the appropriate state election officials.

Each state, under these bills, would determine for itself whether or not the voter is qualified to vote under the laws of his state. Each state would count the ballots in the same way in which it counts the other ballots that are cast in the state. The sole exceptions would be those conditions of registration and payment of poll tax which could not be satisfied because of the absence of a voter from his state of residence by reason of the war. Those conditions were abrogated by the Congress when it passed the existing federal absentee-balloting law (Public Law 712).

There is nothing in such a proposed statute which violates the rights of the states. The federal government merely provides quick machinery for getting the ballots to the troops and back again. Certainly it does not violate states’ rights any more than Public Law 712 which was passed by a substantial majority of the Congress in September 1942, and which specifically provided that no member of the Armed Forces had to register or pay a poll tax in order to vote in a federal election. It is no more violative of states’ rights than the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act, which the Congress passed in October 1940 – more than a year before the war began.

It is true that these bills do not provide a simplified method of voting for state and local officials. The Congress has not the same authority to provide a simplified voting procedure for the thousands of state and local candidates that it has for federal candidates. Nor would it be practicable to do so. The inclusion of all the state and local candidates would increase the size and weight of the ballot so as to make air delivery a physical impossibility. Furthermore, the transmission and distribution of names of the many thousands of state and local candidates throughout the United States to each voter in every military and naval unit and merchant ship raise insuperable difficulties.

Since these bills provide that if any voter wishes, he may use the procedure of his own state for absentee balloting, he is given, to the extent that there is any possibility of doing so, an opportunity to vote for state and local candidates. In fact, since they provide for a postcard system to implement the state laws, each voter is given at least as great an opportunity to vote for state and local candidates as he would have under any legislation.

The inclusion of other groups of voters who are engaged abroad in war work of various kinds would be desirable. But as to members of our Armed Forces and Merchant Marine, I deem the legislation imperative.

Our millions of fighting men do not have any lobby or pressure group on Capitol Hill to see that justice is done for them. They are not ordinarily permitted to write their Congressman on pending legislation; nor do they put ads in the papers or stimulate editorial writers or columnists to make special appeals for them. It certainly would appear unnecessary that our soldiers and sailors and Merchant Marine have to make a special effort to retain their right to vote.

As their Commander-in-Chief, I am sure that I can express their wishes in this matter and their resentment against the discrimination which is being practiced against them.

The American people cannot believe that the Congress will permit those who are fighting for political freedom to be deprived of a voice in choosing the personnel of their own federal government.

I have been informed that it would be possible, under the rules of the Congress, for a soldiers’ vote bill to be rejected or passed without any roll call, thus making it impossible for the voters of the country – military or civilian – to be able to determine just how their own Representative or Senator had voted on such a bill.

I have hesitated to say anything to the Congress on this matter for the simple reason that the making of these rules is solely within the discretion of the two Houses of the legislative branch of the government. I realize that the Executive as such has nothing to do with the making or the enforcement of these rules. Nevertheless, there are times, I think, when the President can speak as an interested citizen.

I think that there would be widespread resentment on the part of the people of the nation if they were unable to find out how their individual Representatives had expressed themselves on this legislation – which goes to the root of the right of citizenship.

As I have said, this is solely a legislative matter but I think most Americans will agree with me that every member of the two Houses of Congress ought to be willing in justice “to stand up and be counted.”

The Pittsburgh Press (January 26, 1944)

SHOWDOWN FOR ROME NEARS
Allies facing hard battle for capital

Crucial battle within 48 hours predicted by London experts
By Edward W. Beattie, United Press staff writer

americavotes1944

ROOSEVELT URGES FEDERAL SERVICE VOTE
State ballot called fraud by President

Special message demands Congressmen stand up, be counted

Washington –
President Roosevelt today assailed as a “fraud” on service personnel the so-called states’ rights soldier-vote legislation. He called upon Congress to provide a single federal ballot, which he said would enable all members of the Armed Forces to vote for federal officials this November.

In a special message to Congress, the President specifically endorsed a compromise bill now pending in the Senate which would provide for distribution of federal ballots to servicemen and women, with states retaining the right to determine whether the voters are qualified and whether their votes are valid.

Wants a record vote

Mr. Roosevelt also noted that Congress might act on the matter without a record vote.

That, he said, is entirely a legislative matter, but he added that:

I think that most Americans will agree with me that every member of the two Houses of Congress ought to be willing in justice “to stand up and be counted”!

The bill passed by the Senate on Dec. 3, Mr. Roosevelt said, was a “fraud on the soldiers and sailors and Marines now training and fighting.”

Senator Robert A. Taft (R-OH) arose immediately after the President’s message was read in the Senate to protest against what he termed the Chief Executive’s “insult.”

Senator Taft objects

Senator Taft said:

It is most unfortunate that the President should again see fit to inject himself into legislative matters. It is an insult to the members of Congress.

The existing soldier-vote law enacted in 1942 would permit soldiers to vote, Senator Taft said, and the Senate-approved bill pending in the House would enable soldiers to vote.

He introduced a substitute bill which would retain state ballots but set up federal machinery for their distribution and collection, and promised that he would later discuss the President’s message on the grounds that Mr. Roosevelt’s arguments were “untrue and unsound.”

Mr. Roosevelt in his message said the bill passed by the Senate was a fraud upon the people as well as on service personnel.

He continued:

It would not enable any soldier to vote with any greater facility than was provided by Public Law 712 under which only a negligible number of soldier’s votes were cast.

The bill condemned by Mr. Roosevelt called upon the states to enact legislation to facilitate absentee balloting by members of the Armed Forces.

On House calendar

It was adopted by the Senate in place of a bill which had been approved by the Senate Privileges and Elections Committee and which would have provided for voting by members of the Armed Forces on federal ballots under direction of a War Ballot Commission.

The bill is now on the House calendar, after being slightly revised by the House Elections Committee.

The Senate, meanwhile, is considering the soldier vote issue anew. Pending on the floor is a compromise bill sponsored by Senators Scott Lucas (D-IL) and Theodore F. Green (D-RI), which would provide for distribution of federal ballots on which service personnel would write in the name of their choices for President, Vice President, Senator and Representative.

Lucas bill favored

Mr. Roosevelt endorsed the pending Lucas-Green Senate bill – which has been introduced in the House by Elections Committee Chairman Eugene Worley (D-TX) – because, he said, it “seems to me” that it would furnish to service personnel an opportunity to vote.

The new Lucas-Green and Worley bills set up proper and efficient machinery for absentee balloting, Mr. Roosevelt said.

Each state, under the bills, would determine for itself whether or not the voter is qualified to vote under the laws of his state.

The President said:

There is nothing in such a proposed statute which violates the rights of the states. The federal government merely provides quick machinery for getting the ballots to the troops and back again.

He said that he spoke as the Commander-in-Chief of the men in the armed services and that:

I am sure that I can express their wishes in this matter and their resentment against the discrimination which is being practiced against them.

The nation’s fighting men, Mr. Roosevelt asserted, do not have a lobby or pressure group on Capitol Hill “to see that justice is done for them.”

Can’t use ads

He added:

They are not ordinarily permitted to write their Congressman on pending legislation, nor do they put ads in the papers or stimulate editorial writers or columnists to make special appeals for them.

It certainly would appear unnecessary that our soldiers and sailors and Merchant Marine have to make a special effort to retain their right to vote.

The President said that he has been informed that it would be possible, under Congressional parliamentary rules, for a soldier’s vote bill to be rejected or passed without a roll call. He said he had hesitated to say anything to the Congress on this matter because the making of these rules is closely within the discretion of the two Houses.

But he added:

I think that there would be widespread resentment on the part of the people of the nation if they were unable to find out how their individual representatives had expressed themselves on this legislation – which goes to the root of citizenship.

The President said there will be more than five million Americans outside the United States in our Armed Forces and Merchant Marine when the 194 elections are held. He noted that they, and millions more who will be stationed within the country awaiting shipment overseas, will be subject to frequent, rapid and unpredictable transfer to other points outside the inside the United States.

‘Tongues in cheek’

The President said:

Some people – I am sure with their tongues in their cheeks – say that the solution to this problem is simply that the respective states improve their own absentee ballot machinery.

In fact, there is now pending before the House of Representatives a meaningless bill, passed by the Senate Dec. 3, 1943, which presumes to meet this complicated and difficult situation by some futile language which recommends to the several states the immediate enactment of appropriate legislation…

This recommendation is itself a proof of the unworkability of existing state laws. I consider such proposed legislation a fraud on the soldiers and sailors and Marines now training and fighting for us and for our sacred rights.

The recommendation in that bill, Mr. Roosevelt said, may be heeded by a few states but will not and cannot be carried out by all the states.

The President said that he was convinced that if all the states tried to carry out the recommendations contained in the bill passed by the Senate, the most practical method would be to authorize the Army and Navy to distribute and collect ballots prepared by the states in response to post card requests from servicemen.

But this very procedure, he added, is set forth in Public Law 712 which he said “has been such a failure.”

The law to which he referred was enacted in 1942 to facilitate absentee voting by servicemen, but even opponents of federal balloting legislation have conceded that it was adequate.

Germans abandon Cassino

5th Army drives forward from beachhead despite growing resistance
By C. R. Cunningham, United Press staff writer

Bodies exhumed near Smolensk –
Proof of Polish slaughter by Nazis found by Reds

Atrocity commission shows Katyń Forest graves to American, Allied newspapermen
By Harrison Salisbury, United Press staff writer

Smolensk, USSR – (Jan. 22, delayed)
A special Soviet atrocity commission formally charged the German Army tonight with the mass slaughter of approximately 11,000 Polish war prisoners in the Katyń Forest near Smolensk.

The commission announced its findings after six days of exhuming bodies and questioning witnesses. The conclusions regarding the slaughter in 1941 were announced in the presence of 17 American, British and Canadian correspondents and two representatives of the U.S. Office of War Information – Kathleen Harriman, daughter of the Ambassador to Russia, and John Melby, acting Moscow chief of the OWI.

The charges countered Nazi claims that the Russians killed the Poles – a moot point in the troubled relations between Russia and the Polish government-in-exile climaxed by a rupture of relations.

For the first time since the Red Army recaptured Smolensk last Sept. 25, foreign correspondents were brought here aboard a special train.

The atrocity commission in the last six days has exhumed about 700 bodies from the mass graves. Its evidence fell into three categories – medical, documentary, and testimony.

The correspondents were taken slightly less than 10 miles west of Smolensk to the Katyń hills, rolling slopes above the Dnieper River. The region is known locally as “Goat’s Hill” because goats grazed there in peacetime.

Four Red Army field and medical tents stood in a clearing. A few yards distant were huge excavations in which squads were digging out frozen corpses with picks and spades. Just beyond the graves was what appeared at first glance to be a cornfield strewn with tattered scarecrows and small pumpkins. They were Polish corpses and skulls.

From the pits and the field came the odor of many bodies.

In charge of the proceedings was Dr. V. I. Prozorovsky, director of the Moscow Institute of Criminal Medical Research. The goateed doctor was garbed in white medical cap, an orange rubber apron reaching to his knees, red rubber gloves and black leather boots.

In some of the graves, bodies were oiled haphazardly. In others they were laid out in neat rows. Dr. Prozorovsky said he believed the neat graves were those opened by the Germans when they broke the Katyń story last March.

In one grave, the Russians found three layers of bodies; in another, eight; six in a third. The bodies were buried about six feet deep, the total depth of the pits depending on the number of layers.

Each Pole had been shot individually, apparently with a revolver placed close to the base of the skull. Every skull seen by the correspondents had a neat round hole at the base and usually a slightly larger one in the forehead where the bullet emerged.

The corpses were garbed in mildewed field gray-blue Polish uniforms with Polish eager buttons. One unexhumed pit looked like a field of boots – black officers’ boots protruding at crazy angles from the frozen sand.

While the tour of the pits was in progress, stolid Red Army squads carried on the task of hacking the frozen bodies from the ground. The bodies retained a considerable amount of flesh.

The commission’s 42-page report, published by the Soviet government, cited eyewitnesses and the fact that documents on the bodies bore dates later than March 1940 – the date given by the Germans for the slayings – for authority that the Poles were alive when the Germans captured Smolensk in July 1941.

Medical testimony also showed that the bodies could not have been in the graves for more than about two years, the report said. It estimated that the Poles were slain in August and September 1941. The Katyń area was recovered when the Red Army liberated the Smolensk area last year.

The Germans issued sensational reports about the “discovery” of the mass graves early last year while the area was still in Nazi hands.

The propaganda reports so impressed the Polish government-in-exile in London that it asked the International Red Cross to investigate the charges. This provoked Russian wrath and led the Russians to break off relations with the government-in-exile April 26.

Soviet-Polish relations have never been restored.

The Polish prisoners were those officers and men who opposed the Russian occupation of eastern Poland in September 1939, when Germany seized the western half of the country.

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Germans sink hospital ship

Two other mercy vessels attacked off Italy

U.S. fliers rip 80 Jap planes

Five cargo ships also hit in Southwest Pacific
By Don Caswell, United Press staff writer

Russia rejects offer of Hull

Says conditions aren’t ripe for Polish settlement

MacArthur gets medal on birthday

Roosevelt lauds general for distinguished duty in Southwest Pacific
By the United Press

15 million caught in vise –
Red tape cut urged as way to raise white-collar pay

Abandoning wage controls below certain pay level may help solve problem
By Fred W. Perkins, Pittsburgh Press staff writer

I DARE SAY —
Time is the cure-all

By Florence Fisher Parry

Judge impeachment vote due in House


Jury resumes study of Joan Berry case

Briggs blames on all counts in letter trial

Jury absolves Ickes, Hopkins of any knowledge of party plot

House group says WLB aids labor unrest

Maintenance of union memberships policy is defended by board

‘Duck’ goes to town –
Rocket holocaust mows down Japs

Mighty secret weapon – rows of firing tubes on amphibious trucks, boats – used in Southwest Pacific
By Ralph Teatsorth, United Press staff writer

Yanks strike from Gilberts

Islands built into powerful offensive bases
By Malcolm R. Johnson, United Press staff writer

14-man patrol finds Cassino almost empty

But Nazi guns on hilltop open up on Yanks in Italian town
By James E. Roper, United Press staff writer