America at war! (1941–) – Part 5

I DARE SAY —
What is freedom of the press?

By Florence Fisher Parry

AWOL 15 years ‘model’ man held

Britain pays bill of returning G.I.’s

Destroyer launched

QUINCY, Massachusetts – The 2,300-ton destroyer USS Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. was launched yesterday at the Bethlehem Steel Co.’s Quincy shipyard in honor of a Navy flier and son of the former Ambassador to Great Britain. The ship was sponsored by the hero’s sister, Miss Jean Kennedy, while his parents looked on.

War correspondents in China curbed

Big Three ready to resume its sessions

Churchill not going back

Barkley asks Saturday vote on Charter

Republican raps speed-up plans

Film office union votes against joining 19-week movie strike

International officers, however, threaten to expel members crossing picket line

Paper drivers petition WLB

Ask private arbitrator or 3-man panel

Pittsburgh carrier officer reveals –
Jap suicide pilots don’t always volunteer to die for Emperor

One frankly admits he was assigned

Perkins: Labor victory encourages PAC

By Fred W. Perkins, Pittsburgh Press staff writer

1,001 Yanks die in sinking of Japanese hospital ship

Germans gain much in drive to win peace

People making impression on Yanks
By Paul Ghali

British Laborite victory cheers G.I.’s in Germany

Not that they don’t admire Churchill’s war job, but election campaign was eye-opener
By Judy Barden, North American Newspaper Alliance

Rumbles of trouble rise from hunger of Berliners

They don’t feel any sense of guilt for war, but condemn Allied rationing system
By Nat A. Barrows

Jap ambassador reported suicide

Editorial: Last chance for Japan

Editorial: The British election

Editorial: Morgenthau’s report

Edson: U.S. turns up average of one war fraud a day

By Peter Edson