America at war! (1941–) – Part 4

U.S. Navy Department (January 22, 1945)

Communiqué No. 569

Atlantic Area.
The LST 359 has been lost in the Atlantic Area as the result of enemy action.

The next of kin of casualties have been informed.


CINCPAC Communiqué No. 240

On January 20 (West Longitude Date), carrier aircraft of the Pacific Fleet attacked the enemy air force, shipping and. installations in Formosa. Forty-three Japanese aircraft were destroyed in aerial combat, 97 were destroyed on the ground, and approximately 100 more were damaged in attacks on the airdromes at Heito, Choshu, Matsuyama, Eiko, Kuputsua, Giran, Koshum and Taien. Intense anti-aircraft fire was encountered at Takao. Reports of damage to enemy shipping are as yet incomplete, but at Takao two large ships and the docks and industrial area were left burning furiously. Considerable damage was inflicted on shipping at Keelung, Toshien and Nan Wan in Formosa, at Mako in the Pescadores and in the Sakishima Islands.

During this operation, one of our major ships was damaged. Our aircraft losses were relatively light.

Eleventh Army Air Force planes attacked Kataoka Wan on the island of Shumushu in the northernmost Kurils on the same day.

Docks and buildings on Yap were bombed and small craft at Babelthuap were destroyed by planes of Fleet Air Wing One on the same day.

Fourth Marine Aircraft Wing aircraft made neutralization raids on islands in the Marshall group.

The Pittsburgh Press (January 22, 1945)

U.S. FLIERS RIP 800 NAZI VEHICLES
Dive bombers blast columns fleeing bulge

British drive ahead on northern flank

Luzon invaders near key airfields

MacArthur 60 miles from Manila

Jones quits Commerce job but calls Wallace unfit

Roosevelt rewards his former Vice President – Senator wants RFC set up independently
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer

Aubrey Williams named REA head

parry3

I DARE SAY —
Inauguration

By Florence Fisher Parry

“What are all these flags up for?” I asked different persons as I came in to town Saturday.

No one seemed to know. No one. I think I questioned a pretty fair cross-section. It didn’t dawn on one of them that it was Inauguration Day.

I found myself remembering what that day used to mean to us – to what great lengths the rank and file of Americans would go to be able to attend an inaugural ceremony. Those days were something like our World’s Fairs – they satisfied the American appetite for celebration.

Besides, the day was important. It was a great historical occasion: A new President of the United States was to be sworn in to the highest office on earth. And the American people wanted to take a look at their man.

So it was, 12 years ago; eight years ago. Four years ago, the thing began to happen; the change, I mean. The dying down of a great American tradition.

Let us not go into all the reasons for this. But, perversely enough, I am thinking of one little, perhaps unimportant, reason. But it somehow symbolizes the general breakdown, all along the line, of our American pride in the institution of the White House.

We have been reading these last few days about Fala’s “honeymoon” trip and Blaze’s “priority” trip.

Dislocated

The American home has been rudely and tragically dislocated by the war. Family emotions have been strained too the uttermost. Precipitate marriages, violent separations, suspense, dread, death and mourning, have been the portion of the American family.

Millions of middle-aged parents who had approached the realization of their fondest dreams – the dream of spending as quiet and pleasurable life together, now that their children were grown and dispersed – have had to start all over again, opening their doors to their daughters and daughters-in-law and their little babies and children.

No sacrifice has been too great for American parents to accept. Family ties have indeed bound together the destinies of millions! Compromise, sacrifice, patience, understanding – these homely virtues have been put to the severest test.

There have been few American families who have been able to indulge themselves with selfish pleasures; and whatever may be said in criticism of the home front spirit, certainly as regards family relationships, the American family has behaved magnificently. Men and women have relinquished their dreams of leisure, have gladly given up vacations, travel, and all the innocent luxuries they earned over faithful years of providence and planning; and uncomplainingly have held together under the family roof, not only one, but several of their children’s families disrupted by the war.

Disfavor

The priority incident of the White House’s latest canine pet, the recent disgust over Fala’s “honeymoon trip,” these items in themselves, unfortunate as they are, have attained their prominence in the press as a result of accumulated pent-up disfavor of a whole nation, especially of family men and women of America.

Where we have looked for dignity, we have found only self-indulgence; where we have looked for reticence and manners, we have found an easy flouting of the conventions we hold most dear.

GOP chairman offers 8-point victory plan

Brownell may face battle to keep job


Vandenberg is hero in absentia

Senator’s peace plan gets support
By Daniel M. Kidney, Scripps-Howard staff writer

Guffey: Fight assured ‘liberal’ State Department

Senator tells PAC labor was decisive factor in Roosevelt victory, entitled to program


Full employment bill submitted

Measure designed to give jobs to all

Labor draftee exempt from closed shop

House group votes may bill amendment


Labor wasted at Navy Yard, investigator tells Senate

Loafing enforced, Sen. Mead charges – conditions at Norfolk called disturbing

All nonessential workers to be drafted in Japan

Premier admits nation is on dividing line between survival and death

Wallace pledges job program

Outlines his plan as Commerce chief


Jones worries about future of RFC under Wallace

By Henry J. Taylor, Scripps-Howard special writer

Mrs. Luce shuns race for Senate

Simms: Next two weeks may decide war in Europe

Turn might come as Big Three meet
By William Philip Simms, Scripps-Howard foreign editor

‘Terrible 20’ laughs, kills Germans for seven hours

Score of battle in Belgian village is 100 Nazis and one Yank dead, one G.I. wounded
By J. Edward Murray, United Press staff writer

New Third Fleet strikes reported

Formosa and Okinawa hit by carrier planes


Allied armies open Ledo-Burma Road

British invade isle off Arakan coast

Lenient armistice terms imposed upon Hungarians

Germany’s defeated satellite must pay $300 million over six-year period

Japs’ fuel oil supply hard hit

MacArthur’s advances blockade sources

Cities asked to aid dim-out enforcement


Liberal job insurance requested by CIO

Allied convoy moves toward Dardanelles

Editorial: We pay for ‘the ticket’