Yanks smash Ruhr rail center
RAF fliers follow up with pre-dawn raid on 7th day on blitz
By Walter Cronkite, United Press staff writer
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RAF fliers follow up with pre-dawn raid on 7th day on blitz
By Walter Cronkite, United Press staff writer
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Governor Bricker may be his running mate
By Thomas L. Stokes, Scripps-Howard staff writer
Washington – (April 22)
Every so often an oracle speaks and you know what’s coming.
Such was the statement of Col. R. B. Creager, long-time Republican National Committeeman from Texas, that he could not see how Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York could fail to win the Republican presidential nomination on the first ballot.
He made the remark in Chicago after the meeting of the Arrangements Committee of the Republican National Committee. It was generally overlooked. It should not have been.
It meant, for one thing, that Governor John W. Bricker’s campaign for the nomination is washed up, if this was not apparent already.
It meant, for another, that not only Texas but the rest of the South will drop into the Dewey basket, for Col. Creager is a kingpin among Southern bosses of what are sometimes known as “the kept delegations.”
For Taft in 1940
It meant, further and most important, that there will be no “Stop-Dewey” movement at Chicago.
Col. Creager has long been identified with the Republican Old Guard, and in recent years with the Taft forces in the South. He was floor manager for Senator Robert A. Taft at the 1940 Republican convention when the Ohio Senator lost to Wendell L. Willkie.
This year, the Taft forces were turned over, lock, stock and barrel, to the Bricker candidacy, and it was presumed that Col. Creager was cooperating.
Others agree
But he has seen the light gleaming from the watchtower at Albany, New York, and has submitted to the course of events.
The colonel went further and said the Dewey candidacy had gone so far that nothing should be allowed to interfere with it. An inquiry here today disclosed that leaders of other Southern delegations are of the same mind. This means no “Stop-Dewey” movement.
For if there were such a movement it would come from the Old Guard group in which Col. Creager is included, and which revolves about Senator Taft. The Senator, himself, is resigned to the Dewey nomination.
Not entirely satisfied
This is not to say that some of the Old Guarders are entirely satisfied with the New York governor. Some would prefer some fellow more tractable, less inclined to make up his own mind. But events have gone beyond them.
Nothing more than the Creager word is necessary to indicate a first ballot nomination.
It was learned here that Republican leaders have decided upon this, to do it quickly and unanimously, if possible, for the effect that will have upon party unity and party morale.
This early surrender of the Taft forces, as made public by Col. Creager, would indicate that they will now turn to promoting Governor Bricker for the vice-presidential nomination.
‘Deal’ expected
They will expect some consideration for steeping out of the way of the Dewey bandwagon, and catching on as it went by. Something of this sort may have been arranged already.
There was a big crop of “Dewey-Bricker” ticket rumors when California Governor Earl Warren, hitherto considered almost surefire for second place on the ticket, was selected as the keynote speaker by the Arrangements Committee, a position usually regarded as a bar to candidacy for either first or second place.
Enemy counting on breach for victory
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London, England – (April 22)
Lt. John E. G. Brands, 30, USNR, of Wapakoneta, Ohio, was awarded the Medal of the British Empire last night for helping to clear and recover mines off the Harbor of Halifax, Nova Scotia, the U.S. Navy announced today. Lt. Brands is the third U.S. naval officer to receive the medal in this war.
By Capt. Don Gentile (as told to Ira Wolfert)
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German planes also attack shipping
By Reynolds Packard, United Press staff writer
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MacArthur’s fliers hit Wewak, Aitope
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Thrust into India called failure
By Frank Hewlett, United Press staff writer
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Beneš: Foe will crack wide open
By John A. Parris, United Press staff writer
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Even enemy has good time until Luftwaffe sends over two fighters in Italy
By James Roper, United Press staff writer
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Jimmy hates night bombing; he’d rather be able to see fighters coming in at him
By L. S. B. Shapiro, North American Newspaper Alliance
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By Newbold Noyes Jr., North American Newspaper Alliance
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British leader loves publicity and feeds it to his men to make them cocky, confident
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