Lack of manpower may send movie producer to Mexico
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Dumping of dispute within WLB on White House doorstep by representatives of labor follows usual pattern
By Fred W. Perkins, Pittsburgh Press staff writer
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By Ernie Pyle
In Italy – (by wireless)
The company commander said to me:
Every man in this company deserves the Silver Star.
We walked around in the olive grove where the men of the company were sitting on the edges of their foxholes, talking or cleaning their gear.
He said:
Let’s go over here. I want to introduce you to my personal hero.
I figured that the lieutenant’s own “personal hero,” out of a whole company of men who deserved the Silver Star, must be a real soldier indeed.
Then the company commander introduced me to Sgt. Frank Eversole, who shook hands sort of timidly and said, “Pleased to meet you,” and then didn’t say any more.
I could tell by his eyes and by his slow and courteous speech when he did talk that he was a Westerner. Conversation with him was sort of hard, but I didn’t mind his reticence for I know how Westerners like to size people up first.
The sergeant wore a brown stocking cap on the back of his head. His eyes were the piercing kind. I noticed his hands – they were outdoor hands, strong and rough.
Later in the afternoon, I came past his foxhole again, and we sat and talked a little while alone. We didn’t talk about the war, but mainly about our West, and just sat and made figures on the ground with sticks as we talked.
We got started that way, and in the days that followed I came to know him well. He is to me, and to all those with whom he serves, one of the great men of the war.
Cowboy before the war
Frank Eversole’s nickname is “Buck.” The other boys in the company sometimes call him “Buck Overshoes,” simply because Eversole sounds a bit like “overshoes.”
Buck was a cowboy before the war. He was born in the little town of Missouri Valley, Iowa, and his mother still lives there. But Buck went West on his own before he was 16, and ever since has worked as a ranch hand. He is 38, and unmarried.
He worked a long time around Twin Falls, Idaho, and then later down in Nevada. Like so many cowboys, he made the rodeos in season. He was never a star or anything. Usually, he just rode the broncs out of the chute for pay - $7.50 a ride. Once he did win a fine saddle. He has ridden at Cheyenne and the other big rodeos.
Like any cowboy, he loves animals. Here in Italy one afternoon Buck and some other boys were pinned down inside a one-room stone shed by terrific German shellfire. As they sat there, a frightened mule came charging through the door. There simply wasn’t room inside for men and mule both, so Buck got up and shooed him out the door. Thirty feet from the door, a direct hit killed the mule. Buck has always felt guilty about it.
Another time Buck ran onto a mule that was down and crying in pain from a bad shell wound. Buck took his .45 and out a bullet through its head. Buck says:
I wouldn’t have shot him except he was hurtin’ so.
Cold, deliberate in battle
Buck Eversole has the Purple Heart and two Silver Stars for bravery. He is cold and deliberate in battle. His commanders depend more on him than any other man. He has been wounded once, and had countless narrow escapes. He has killed many Germans.
He is the kind of man you instinctively feel safer with then with other people. He is not helpless like most of us. He is practical. He can improvise, patch things, fix things.
His grammar is the unschooled grammar of the plains and the soil. He uses profanity, but never violently. Even in the familiarity of his own group his voice is always low. He is such a confirmed soldier by now that he always says “sir” to any stranger. It is impossible to conceive of his doing anything dishonest.
After the war, Buck will go back West to the land he loves. He wants to get a little place and feed a few head of cattle, and be independent.
He says:
I don’t want to be just a ranch hand no more. It’s all right and I like it all right, but it’s a rough life and it don’t get you anywhere. When you get a little older you kinda like a place of your own.
Buck Eversole has no hatred for Germans. He kills because he’s trying to keep alive himself. The years roll over him and the war becomes his only world, and battle his only profession. He armors himself with a philosophy of acceptance of what may happen.
He says very quietly:
I’m mighty sick of it all, but there ain’t no use to complain. I just figure it this way, that I’ve been given a job to do and I’ve got to do it. And if I don’t like through it, there’s nothing I can do about it.
Ex-Governor Ely of Massachusetts seeks nomination in home state
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer
Washington –
Moving boldly in Massachusetts against President Roosevelt’s renomination, anti-New Deal Democrats are out in the open today with their threat to bolt the party if necessary to block a fourth term.
Success of this anti-fourth-term strategy would inevitably obtain election of a Republican President next November.
The Democrats who hope to het Mr. Roosevelt out of the White House are reconciled to that., they seek, primarily. To eliminate the President as party leader and to regain control of the organization foe regular Democrats.
The movement was formally launched in Boston last night with announcement that former Governor Joseph B. Ely was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in that state only. His name will not be entered in other states.
The maneuver frankly was acknowledged to be designed to block a fourth term. The Massachusetts presidential preference primary is on April 25.
Third party planned
The pattern sketched by Mr. Ely’s manager envisages a conservative Democratic bolt, organization of a third party and nomination of a Jeffersonian Democratic presidential and vice-presidential ticket if Mr. Roosevelt is nominated against at Chicago next July.
Mr. Ely led the Alfred E. Smith Stop-Roosevelt movement at the 1932 convention. He participated in the futile 1936 convention of Jeffersonian Democrats in Detroit. He opposed a third term.
Most significantly, the 1944 Stop-Roosevelt movement has cemented roots. Senator David I. Walsh (D-MA) is reliably reported to be backing Mr. Ely. It is in the Senate that any national conservative Democratic movement probably have to be originated.
Somewhat the same strategy has been tried before in half-hearted fashion. Mr. Smith “took a walk” in 1936. It got nowhere.
To succeed this year, it would require bold cooperation in other states and so far, the Stop-Roosevelt movement has been more word than action throughout the country. It is known, however, that former Postmaster General James A. Farley has been hopeful that several Southern and other states would put up favorite-son candidates who would withhold delegate votes from Mr. Roosevelt at the Chicago convention.
Difficult job faced
If enough did so, considerable shine would be removed from the Draft-Roosevelt movement begun here last month by the Democratic National Committee.
To make the plan work, the difficult business of setting up a third party would have to be undertaken in the event of Mr. Roosevelt’s renomination and it should present a ticket which would allay the fears of Southern Democrats at the idea of a bolt.
Senator Ellison D. Smith (D-SC) has already proposed Senator Harry F. Byrd (D-VA) as the ideal candidate of the south for the presidential nomination. Senator Edwin C. Johnson (D-CO) recently proposed that Mr. Roosevelt retire and that the Democrats nominate Gen. George C. Marshall.
There is bitter feeling in the South against the administration on some issues, notably those raised by the President’s Committee on Fair Employment Practices which is endeavoring to give Negroes a better position in industry.
Unrest in North
And there is conservative Democratic unrest in the North and, generally, throughout the country. Vice President Henry A. Wallace, who feels sure Mr. Roosevelt will be reelected this year, has just returned to Washington acknowledging that the Midwest is inclined to be off the reservation.
But against these factors is the unanimous action of the Democratic National Committee last month in urging Mr. Roosevelt to run again. Likewise, the great Democratic political machines in Chicago, New Jersey and New York are whooping it up for a fourth term.
Furthermore, the Democrats have no other candidate who would have a chance to be elected, according to the best judgment of most observers hereabouts.
The opening of the anti-fourth-term campaign, for those reasons, does not throw any great shadow over Mr. Roosevelt’s prospects.
How serious the threat may actually be depends on developments and, for instance, how Mr. Ely and any other anti-Roosevelt candidates run in their own states. It also depends on how real is the threat to form a third party if the President is renominated.
Charles H. McGlue, Mr. Ely’s campaign manager:
It is entirely possible that if Mr. Roosevelt is nominated, the Ely forces would join with other “Jeffersonian Democrats” in the country to nominate a separate slate for President and Vice President.
Chicago, Illinois (UP) –
Gerald L. K. Smith, head of the America First Party, today offered to debate with Vice President Henry A. Wallace on the necessity of the United States taking “suggestions of philosophical help from Communist Russia” on its post-war problems.
Mr. Smith issued the challenge in a telegram to Mr. Wallace last night and said he would meet Mr. Wallace at St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh or Philadelphia.
Mr. Smith said in the telegram:
You are quoted as praising the Communist regime of Stalin’s Russia. You represent a substantial number of American people who are pro-Communist and in agreement with your philosophies. I represent several million Americans whom you are now attacking. Because we are America Firsters and because we recruit our followers from the right and center you call us Fascists.
A national America First rally is scheduled to be held at St. Louis March 30.
Nelson: But reconversion must wait until Nazis are defeated
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12 inmates of U.S. medical center say they were attacked
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Indicates government believed border dispute should be mediated
By Robert Taylor, Press Washington correspondent
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Völkischer Beobachter (February 22, 1944)
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tc. Tokio, 21. Februar –
Das Kaiserliche Hauptquartier gibt folgendes Kommuniqué heraus: Der schnelle feindliche Verband, der einen Angriff gegen die Insel Truk ausführte, ist dank der Leistungen der japanischen Armee- und Marinekräfte zurückgeschlagen worden. In diesen Kämpfen wurden zwei amerikanische Kreuzer, ein weiteres Schiff (es kann ein Schlachtschiff gewesen sein) versenkt, ein Flugzeugträger und ein Kriegsschiff unbekannten Typs wurden beschädigt.
The Pittsburgh Press (February 22, 1944)
Bombers smash at plane factories and other key war plants
By Walter Cronkite, United Press staff writer
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Fighting peters out along entire Italian front
By Robert Vermillion, United Press staff writer
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But Knox warns nation to except another enemy ‘sneak attack’
By Sandor S. Klein, United Press staff writer
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Attack on Marshalls Atoll enters final phase
By William F. Tyree, United Press staff writer
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii –
The speedy American conquest of Eniwetok Atoll, Jap naval and air base 750 miles northeast of Truk, entered its final phase today with an assault on Parry, the last enemy-held island in the Northwestern Marshalls.
Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, commander of the Pacific Fleet, announced in a communiqué last night that powerful naval forces and swarms of aircraft had begun a crushing bombardment of Parry and it was possible that Marine and Army invasion troops have already driven ashore.
The capture of Parry, and with it, complete occupation of Eniwetok Atoll, was expected within the next 24 hours, giving the United States another stepping stone along the invasion route to Tokyo, 2,200 miles to the northwest.
While U.S. ground forces battered down resistance in the Marshalls, twin-engined Navy Ventura search planes from the Aleutians dropped slightly more than five tons of bombs on Paramushiru, 1,200 miles above Tokyo at the northern end of Japan’s home islands, and adjacent Shumushu.
Anti-aircraft fire was encountered at all targets, but all the raiders returned safely to their bases. The mission was believed largely reconnaissance to photograph repair of damage inflicted during the Feb. 4 naval bombardment and survey enemy shipping in the area.
Elements of the Army 106th Infantry Regiment and 22nd Marine Regiment seized 5,000-yard-long Eniwetok Island at the southern end of the circular atoll of the same name in a little more than 24 hours, Adm. Nimitz reported, leaving Parry the only island in the atoll remaining in enemy hands.
The Japs on Eniwetok, as on conquered Engebi to the north, fought fanatically to the death despite overwhelming odds. Nearly entire garrisons of some 2,000 on the two islands were believed to have been slaughtered.
Few pockets remain
A few small pockets of Japs remained to be mopped up on Eniwetok, last night’s communiqué said, but it was presumed these now have been wiped out. U.S. casualties continued light, totaling only 150 dead and 350 wounded for the entire first five days of fighting on the atoll through Sunday night.
Army Warhawk fighter-bombers and Mitchell medium bombers, along with Navy Venturas, again attacked outflanked, isolated Jap-held islands in the Marshalls east and southeast of Eniwetok Saturday, dropping 24 tons of explosives on three atolls. Airfields were damaged and ground installations hit.
U.S. warships, presumably cruisers and destroyers, joined in the campaign to keep the remaining enemy islands neutralized with naval bombardments Saturday.