America at war! (1941–) – Part 4

New appointees face inquiries

Senate postpones confirmation action


U.S., Japs exchange prisoner supplies

British advance above Ravenna

To the top of the world –
Tibet’s Dalai Lama viewed as incarnation of deity

Boy priest-king commands more devotion from people than any other ruler
By A. T. Steele

Britain hits at Stettinius, London hears

But Times assails England’s policy


Pearl Harbor trial time extended

Senate group backs security tax ‘freeze’

Editorial: Three years and–

On this third anniversary of Pearl Harbor, the European war is in its final phase and the Pacific enemy has been driven back to his intermediate defenses. We have come a long way. But the victory road ahead is hard and bloody.

It is just six months since Gen. Eisenhower did the “impossible” in the cross-Channel invasion. Hitler has lost Western Europe, much equipment and a million and a quarter of his best troops. The Allies are advancing inside Germany.

When victory will come depends partly on the ability of our Russian allies, who have carried the heaviest load to date, to break the long stalemate on the Vistula. Though the Russian advance on Budapest and Vienna is important, like our Italian campaign, only a drive across Poland can bring speedy victory. For that is the short road to Berlin and also to Silesia, Hitler’s second industrial center. Gen. Eisenhower will knock out the Ruhr, as he is now smashing the Saar, and thus stop German production, if a Russian offensive takes Silesia and prevents Hitler from shifting more reinforcements from east to west.

In the Pacific, despite a temporary delay in Gen. MacArthur’s Philippine campaign, we are ahead of schedule. From Saipan and other bases, our naval and air forces are cutting Jap lines and bombing Tokyo. Only in China is the enemy winning.

We go into the fourth year of war with great strength, but also some weakness.

Most important, neither enemy intrigue nor internal stress has weakened the grand alliance. Our own country has remained united despite a hard-fought political campaign. Allied military power and productive capacity are vastly superior. Allied military leadership is tops. The fighting quality and spirit of our men is superb.

Allied weakness includes imperialist policies of European powers, which increase political divisions in liberated European countries behind Allied military lines – and which prevent most Asiatic peoples from fighting for the Allies, as are the Filipinos. A second Allied weakness is that destruction in Allied European countries, and the long strain in Britain, will leave the United States – after German defeat – the only relatively fresh power to finish Japan.

The worst weakness is in long-suffering China. That is partly caused by Jap strategy, by China’s years of travail, by internal Chinese politics and inefficiency, and by American-British failure to establish supply routes. Now that Americans bases in eastern China have been lost, and the enemy is within striking distance of Chungking and of Kunming, our last hope of an interior supply base, the Generalissimo and President Roosevelt are frantically trying to save the situation – with some success. Unless we can regain Chinese bases for the knockout blow against Japan, our military chiefs agree the war will be much prolonged.

But the Allied weakness which should worry us most – because it is the only one we at home can do much about – is the American letdown. While many of us think the war is won and act accordingly, the blood banks are low, War Bond sales to individuals are slow, and the production shortage extends to 40 percent of all military items.

The Germans and Japs only count on an American letdown preventing Allied victory. Of course, they are wrong. But until we get our second wind, until the home front is able to keep up with the heroic fighting front, we shall delay victory. For every ally and every front depends on American production.

Editorial: Mr. Wallace on Russia

Edson: Steel ruling gives CIO edge over AFL

By Peter Edson

Ferguson: Peace organizations

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

Background of news –
Veterans and employment

By Frank P. Huddle

New clashes between U.S., Lewis hinted

Miners’ contract expires in March

Perkins: New union urging reform is spurned by the AFL

Head of watch workers rei9terates stand that labor must clean up its own house
By Fred W. Perkins, Pittsburgh Press staff writer

Aviation Award presented to Scripps-Howard papers

President of enterprise says credit goes to all air-minded editors, reporters


Aid of consumers urged in job task

Johnson: Spasmodic buying harmful

Swords before plowshares –
Industrial leaders pledge vast munitions program

Army, war production planners meet with business heads to discuss vital war needs
By Charles T. Lucey, Scripps-Howard staff writer


Byrnes moves to step up production of munitions

Manpower crisis laid to Congress

Robot hits pub, Yanks killed

Poll: Family of four needs weekly wage of $48

Occupational groups’ estimates vary
By George Gallup, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion

Stokes: Probe in order

By Thomas L. Stokes

Love: Wartime customs

By Gilbert Love

Strike halts St. Louis papers