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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 6

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mm ww mi Washington, D. C. Corner Bethel and Hotel Sts. Phone 2284 I St HOO OF BACIGf Kalakaua Ave. (Opposite South Seas) 9:30 A.M.

to 7 P.M. Hours: 1923 Letters From Readers SIDE GLANCES IN THE CAPITAL by Peter Edson By GalbraltK Tuesday, June 3, 1947 SAFETY AT OUR BEACHES How many lives are lost at our public beaches through lack of adequate safeguards? This question is raised each time there is a fatality. But it has never been adequately studied and answered. MANY RESPOND TO CHEST TESTING OFFER Editor The Star-Bulletin: It may seem unbelievable that 80.000 persons in the city of Honolulu would voluntarily report to the two mobile X-ray units in the past 19 weeks to get their chests X-rayed, but Hawaii's Greatest Newspaper Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday 125 Merchant Honolulu 2, Territory of Hawaii, U. S.

A. Three recent drownings bring it up again. TOO MANY ORANGES WASHINGTON-Theyre making yeast, molasses salad oil. powdered juice and livestock feed out of oranges now. and there's no telling what next Let the department of agriculture's Dr.

L. F. Martin of the (.11 U1U. One was the death of a youth at Manner's 1 EiShty thousand people, however, represent less beach, not far from Nanakuli, in peculiarly Seofanddter P00 cit, distressing Circumstances because it appears We are anxious to give as many persons who have he had a chance for life if all tho not had their chests X-raved in the nrrn uxcauui umuMiiai cnemisiry ten you about it i ur" is charge of government research laboratories at New Orleans. and Winter Haven.

RILEY H. ALLEN EDITOR labora- 4v i i i i anu i r- out vet 'el v. "Mt i resources known to first-aid experts had Hpph chanee to get in on the survey before the 20 week At. stations and at other orange av-oilM, tu Aiu period closes. tones in Wes aco, Los Anceles and 4 hnvt J.

I Were 0f small! -Accordingly we are leaving one unit on Union St the government is Irving to new use boys at Kuhio beach, Waikiki. hehinH Krea' (h nihr imnrnvcri moihnrfc Albany. i a nrf ff ci 2i ear ine 1 citrus iruns ana tneir fish markets for a whole week, June 8-7. byproducts. Here are some of the points which need to be studied: know we can depend, on the facilities of your Canners take 40 oer cent nf all I paper to continue informing the public concerning the progress of our survey.

I trust you will wish per cent of the grapefruit now. But after they get' the luice in cans tliev havP tof int i I WASHINGTON BUREAU-1299 National Press Buildine. Washington. D. C.

Radford Mobley. bureau chief NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES O'Mara Ormsbee New York 270 Madison Chicago 230 N. Michi fan Detroit 640 New Center A. 403 tenth Bldg MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Asso ciated Press is exclusively entitled to the use ot republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. A.

B. Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation. 1 What rrren1 i r. 1... 4 1 J.

I tfi rPminH tho nonnlfl 1 1. uy iidintiu lifeguards is avail-i i ims is ineir able, and where is it available? last chance to get in on one of the most worthwhile skin and seeds that are an awful nuisance If they're clumped in streams or lakes, they kill off the fish it mere are no nteguards at the beach, is there projects ever launched in this city. Yours for a healthier city. a oeacn or park caretaker who has been trained in life-saving, in first-aid methods? 3. In case a doctor or an ambulance or both must be called, where is there a public telephone handy' If there is no public phone, has the use of a private phone been arranged? If it has not been arranged it should be, at once.

4. Are the addresses and Dhone ELMER J. ANDERSON. Chief Office of Health Education. 'Hawaiian Standard Time'' oo oo for a time they were pumped underground through' reverse wells.

Trouble was that the waste waters seeped through the ground and spouted out as sprint a couple of counties away, causing all sorts of damage mme f2 the idea of Srina'n? the peel and making it into livestock feed was tried, and it worked Ninety per cent of all the Florida cannery peel. 70 fnS Texas PeeI- is now in cattle; U. P. -The Star-Bulletin receives the standard dajr report the united Press. A Thought for Today is an accepted law of ethics that punishment in the court of conscience, unlike that in courts of law, lessens with each repeated and unrebuked offense.

-Joseph S. Auerbach. Mcaicsi. uwwr, ine nearest nospital, the nearest fire1 Is. lA'lf if "5.

a station with first aid equipment, and other important tSOW Be JO Minutes Earlier data, ready for instant use? Or must the person hurried and anxious to get a doctor and an ambulance I B' EE LAND D. COX and a resuscitator, hunt hurriedly, frantically through i and Dean, Hawaii Institute of Technology a telephone book for the information? (Note: The territorial legislature of 1947 enacted nearest fire station carry adequate law advancing Hawaiian Standard Time bv 30 equipment for first-aid? Are tha men m. Thic 0 n.nn an5 processing the skin and pulp however there a certain amount of liquid that creates a problem. Because there is a considerable5 sugar content, somebody got the idea of trvirg to make it into low grade molasses. During the war, when there was a sugar and! 4, wiiu uiusi 6.

iuiu cncti juue as me clock oS 'Wi but kePt UP ove from midnight June 7 to morning June 8 The to their highest skill by frequent practices? Star-Bulletin asked President Cox to exnlain Jl akZT iCitT'. lV1! was a Protitabie enterprise third Jhe canery" waste liquors gets user) this n-av nni- 6cli5 e3uipm.erV Ke.pt Perfect condition? Is it of the basic causes for and effects of the time change rrTioir me supply oi Dlackst HE DIED A PATRIOT'S DEATH A man valuable to Korea and to the United States died in an air crash in Japan last Friday. J. Kyuang Dunn was born in Korea in the fading years of the Korean monarchy. The fierce, bitter intrigues of Japan.

Russia and China already were tearing aoart the ancient kingdom whose culture had enriched all the lands about it. The "'Land of the Morning Calm1' was calm no longer. Here is his interesting comment.) Standard time zones in the moiasses trom the cane sugar rpfineHoc: frequently tested? Is it adequate for large emergencies as, for instance, where several people, taken trom the water need simultaneous aid, or where oxygen is needed over a Ions Olasses wnn't orange -i vumpeie in price OO now thev re trvincr tr. States and elsewhere in the world have not been determined entirely upon the basis of mean solar time an cmuie moiasses out (This question above is based not on theory but nor the sidereal day. Also lookins' ahraH la lh, Regional convenience enters into ihp arroo tuoi experience wun a resuscitator whose oxygen supply failed at a critical moment.) 7.

If no OUblic or nrivato 1 mini ine oranee 0 JfPS business might fold up. chemists have Prcs for converting the waste liquors iniS veast. has a hixh nPn'oin considerably. For instance, each time zone should be 15 degrees wide to appropriate the one hour required for earth-turn within the zone. But the central standard time zone between Atlanta.

Ga and El Paso, is 22 degrees wide. cofn mt bv mm RViCt, mc. t. m. ma u.

mt. om. makes good cattle feeH rZl ctvdiiaoie. is mere an army or navv cost nearbv with Dunns parents emigrated to Hawaii, found ambulance facilities that could be called on' Or is it here peace, haven, modest prosneritv for them- as was done in a recent case, that the in this business on a commercial basis. ambulance from such a post would not pick up selves and their children 'I tell you, Harvey, I didn't know how much I'd miss the office till I retired!" It II-'lC nannc-r-r-.

standard jTODAY and TOMORROW time ror two reasons: in DiocKing ine hour time ziinoc nf ih ou, by Walter Lippmann our old time did not fit in with its odd half-hour Also, we were out of standard with the mainland system of time zoning, which became a more serious matter while we continued to advance toward i i i i iai i These are only some of the questions that should be asked, some of the information that should be procured. Under the stress of war, this community was excellently organized (after December 7, 1941) for instant action in case of enemy bombing, invasion or other disaster. NEW YORK Of the bill (S. 758) for a national fheKltl.ossH.t 2 may be that now ine nest possible bill because it has been agreed to Sift LJi0 anairS'who WASHINGTON MERRY-CO-ROUND 6 Drew Pearson, Noted Capital Columnist Senator Vandenberq 'Ribbed' by GOP; no hntaT, "V-: 300 m3ke This IS The adoption of the new "Hawaiian Standard lime will give Hawaii its correct relationship geographically with the continental United States apparently moving the islands seven and one half degrees nearer the coast by correcting a long standing error in relative time calculation based upon Pacific Coast and Mountain time zones. bv the fond parents nmm ay think knw better than the bride and Hospital, fire, police, gas wardens, anti-bomb squads and other protections and safeguards were enrolled, trained and drilled in detail.

Fortunately they did not have to he rallpH But in their veins ran the red blood of revolt and independence for their unhappy countrv. Like many another Korean family which settled in Hawaii, their children, though good Americans by training in the new environment, carried forever the desire to serve Korea in her long years of travail when the shaking off of the iron Japanese yoke often seemed impossible. Jacob Kyuang Dunn was brought up in that atmosphere. Born in Korea, he could not become a naturalized American. But he was as much American in principle as he was Korean.

World War II shook and broke Japan's greedy grip on Korea. And Jacob Kyuang Dunn went back to Korea mature, experienced, wise in the complex game of Korean politics. One thing he realized Korea's hope is largely in the younger generation the generation still malleable, the generation still learning, still open-minded. And so. early, he took a special interest in youth movements, in national recreation and mass culture.

Patent History Again Repeating Itself ine correction is arrived at in a somewhat similar on. tsut tney were there and all residents who manne.r me Clvi1 engineer finds his starting noint i i rnr a onrt cmim were laminar with their extent and precision) of detail felt some measure of security because1 Beginning at the Oregon-Idaho state line which Of their presence. forms the western boundary of Mountain Standard I Zmey ad m0vmL westward with our calculations. It is no scheme which is to be imposed UDon th armed forces by outside "efficiency exnertV' nr hi gS? aake: Nor is it a scheme Invented "the military politicians of one branch of the armed forces It is the product of prolonged debate bv our nrnvpn military leaders. The debate has ended'Tn an Pagree- The fact that the war department and the navv anhHatattierSOn and ForrestalEisJnhower thev SaatZnre agreed that this is the bill! bill compelling reason for favoring this This community can and probably will lose i ude" wnSkTof Allowing 15 degrees for Alaska Standard Time he eastern boundary line of Hawaiian Standard Time will be 157 degrees longitude west There is no use passing another bill, even if some- Honolulu is located at 158 one prerers it, that they do not all agree to For the ot the legislation is to In else Cp livo uu uui ucdunts in me next tew years than the total of all civilians killed here on December 7, 1941 unless more adequate measures are taken to provide the safeguards suggested in the series of questions listed above It is obvious that there is needed a continuously active beach safety group, just as we have and Hilo approximately at 155 degrees, the two cities i CD- vx.

i ft 1L I IT I SI i "Tl occupying me middle portion of the new time zone. d.rm,s- ine lac1 they have WASHINGTON If Senator Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan werent blessed with a wholesome sense of humor, some of the ribbing he has been getting from GOP colleagues about his foreign policy "collaboration" might cause him to forget his dignity as No. 1 senator. gets the needle coming and going, both on and off th floor. But he takes it in stride.

Recently, the Chicago Tribune published a below the belt cartoon, depicting Van as a "Benedict Arnold" to his party. With him it grouped George Aiken of Vermont. Charles Tobey of New Hampshire, and Wayne Morse of Oregon, all hard hitting, independent Republicans. "Some people think. Van." remarked Aiken, after the cartoon was first published, "that the worst knock that cartoon gave you was to associate you with Tobey, Morse and me." Later Vandenberg was passing Aiken.

Tobey and Morse all seated together in the senate cloakroom. The trio chorused: "Come over and sit down with us. Van. This is where you belong "We Republicans have got to stick together." added Morse, cheerily. With a hearty laugh, Van sat down with the rebels.

Aiken then told the Michigan senator of a letter he had received from a Vermont constituent denouncing Vandenberg and himself as "radicals." Vandenberg seemed disturbed. "But don't let it worry you." grinned Aiken. "Once in a while I get a letter calling Bob Taft a radical, too." CONTROL OF PATENTS FOR NEXT WAR In the hurly-burly of congress a lot of things slip by that some news which fAieuas in ioz neprppt? nno- tnHo uc on this bill lie agreea eving that the -1 1 1U! Ul bill will promote harmonv. The astronomical and geographical effect of the change on June 8 is that Hilo will be approximately eight minutes "fast" of mean solar time, and Honolulu warn a continuously active traffic safety commission mi vuiiinjiomuu. this group should include renresontativoc nf approximately 20 minutes "fast.

Both will be exactlv in hours -a The reason that they have been brought to aeree-mlnl lsihat they succeeded in thinking out clSrTv what is the real issue. It is that in and war at- commander-in-chiePfemust of neces-sity unify the armed forces The question is not whether thev shall be "unified President is to be enabled to know hen as commander-in-chief This time and five hours behind New York and Eastern Standard Time, instead of five and one half hours. there will be only two hours difference between Honolulu and the three Pacific coast states Dawn and dusk will come 30 minutes later the vear around. 3 puonc ana private departments, bureaus and agencies. It should determine over-all and down-the-hne responsibility.

It should survey the entire island and see where additional safeguards are needed. It should clearly delineate, for instance the duties of lifeguards, park caretakers, police of the neighborhood, the firemen of the district bill Din a more is in essence a bill to make the president JethIVe commander-in-chief. is not a bfl thT nrT the air' corp. ho hovv the navv. the mar no mmc Lawyer Clifford Is Neiv Poi ver in White House luuiuicu UIVIS KJ11S ThO mflH no papers don't catch and the public doesn't know about.

But sometimes pcpcis uun i udiui. dnu uie )UHUC uu It was on a mission to Sweden to enroll Korea in the next Olympic games that his plane crashed and he died in the burning wreckage. He died a patriot's death. Not on the battlefield, not in the roar of a sea engagement. But a patriot's death nevertheless, tor he died on a mission for the country to whose liberation his life had been devoted.

PUT SCIENCE ON THE TRAIL! Honolulu is host to a strange killer. He or it strikes down apparently well Filipino men as they sleep, with no warning, giving them no time to call for aid. City officials have no reason to suspect the deaths are caused by a criminal except that they can't find the natural cause, whatever it may be. They can't, in fact, find any cause. Most but not all of the men have suffered from acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis, a digestive system disturbance.

But, in turn, there is no evidence as to what caused the pancreatitis no known bad foods, no known poisons in short nothing. This is truly a mystery, and it is worth getting to the bottom. i A 1 1 ii i services and what nnt I recruited, trained officered nairt ii. 3UIpped' they affect the of the natlon for years to come' It is in the last analvsis Ta hil ahrmi ne such vote occurred in the senate recently. It affected the futurt dent In the White House is to makeX control of patents from government paid scientific development, which as president anrt i-- ecisions Control of vital Datents is one reason whv the American nennU Our beaches are among our greatest assets.

They contribute directly to the recreation, health, happiness of tens of thousands of people Most nf tha Ar.r; i i 1 1 -1 ni''! np mucT hmkp annnt i. i- .1 'uimiSs at ine oeaches are complicated business of national defense. (North American Newspaper Alliance) WASHINGTON Clark McAdams Clifford a youthful, handsome lawyer who is President Truman's usual press conference shadow, is credited here with being the legal "brain" behind the White House battle to destroy the prestige and power of John L. Lewis. Clifford operates in much the ump rsiiin TTi.

llosl coulcl nave been averted Most of the sorrowing families could have been spared their bitter tragedy. Could have been those are sad words. We should see that everv nrprautinn walked part of the time during the war instead of having ample tires. Standard Oil of New Jersey had conspired with the Germans before the war to withhold precious patents on synthetic rubber. A similar control of patents was one reason why we couldn't ship enough planes to the Philippines to help Gen.

MacArthur after Pearl Harbor. The Aluminum Corp. of America had a deal with the Germans to bottle up the use of magnesium in this country and magnesium is vital to airplane manufacture. What's the Origin of the Ke Kali Nei An Symbolism? iU.i 1 mivcil i 1 Ml tuuiuu 1U1 Uldl- nereaner needless drowning shall as did ham Rosenman, the late President not be! JVritin -and legal Manyneonle have asked The Star-Bulletin "v-w Immediately after World war I there was considerable discussion of uviati. 1WUVHUII IVOOSeVPll Path Mr Truman it.

to said that Rosenman would give a day or so a week Ke Kali Nei AiMdhVm'Irr-sil116 Hawaiian sonS I German patents and the importance of not letting Germany get a GOAL FOR THE VFW IN EDUCATION monopoly on war processes. Then, gradually, the public forgot, and hp tuine nouse, out mere has been no evidence The aupstinn; rn of late that the New Yorker has been called upon." Kelf NetTu hbecome3' 'Zl vur veterans of Foreign Wars uvai ueduv mere nave been threp rtimc iki i i i nave just r- There have been otSe iSSk 23! a well-attended. spirited, successful have just L'e bM" oth- trough SrritoriS and organ selection during the marital rite. con From an obscure life in St. Louis as a CP inn nf a the past several years.

Ke Kali Nei wealthy and highly regarded family. Clifford has "wv. All U'3G 11 i 1 1 Two themes ran uppermost: TU rr- i kh4 it 1 dui 4u years asn xiic jwniis oince. the coroners and the viilan Prominence in a very few years. one of Hawaii's most famous and police should be supplied with whatever funds KlJXf Eternal 10 ine pi ice oi continued -u everywnere witn the president and alwavc composers.

i and and directives they need to make a thorough on nand when Mr. Truman meets newspapermen or b-v profession. Mr. King in later attends public functions. devoted himself entirely to music wri in Let us return to the normal lifp nf "-unipicit; nivesiigation.

i K-uv. ao Clifford is 39 years old. married and the father of ni a.nd has been success- ful commerciallv The records of the deaths should hp aiIulIy' as Possible but make it a better 'Uy three daughters. 6. 12 and 14 as he has been artistically New York looking after He is now i er his musical his" i catalogued and studied more rounded life.

rln ii interests Before becoming legal counsel to Mr. Truman i years later certain big companies arranged monopoly pools with Germany by which vital processes such as synthetic robber wera withheld from use. So today it is important that the public doesn't forget a second tima, and that history doesn't repeat. ATOMIC PATENT OWNER COULD MAKE MILLIONS To illustrate how important scientific patents are, perhaps the most potentially wealthy man in the USA is Dr. Leo Szilard, the Hungarian born scientist who made some of the basic discoveries on atomis energy.

He has turned use of these patents over to the United States, but if he wanted to profit from 1hem he could make millions. Certain U. S. corporations, however, have not been so public spirited. During the war the U.

S. government spent the huge sum of twa billion dollars on scientific research (not including atomic research) and about one half of this will go to the permanent profit of big corporations. Several companies received S5.000.000 or more from the government for research. They were: American Telephone and Telegraph, Victor EmanueFs Aviation Corp. and his Republic Steel.

Bell Aircraft, Boeing, Chrysler. General Electric. Curtiss-Wright. Douglas Aicraft. Du Pont, Eastman Kodak, General Motors.

Goodyear, Grumman Aircraft, Lock- A TT 1A 1 A AA T1 A The records if anv-of similar dpathc Tlduei Lnene- VFW national corn- v. iiora served as assistant naval aide and then as There ha other islands anrf OUIS K- tarr acting aide, following the anoointment nf uhMhr as to has some pertinent -1 in I JiixiFi7uica snouio oe (ideas: u-. i ---u an ancient jr. to ine leaeral reserve board. Clifford OHH1K anceni Hawaiian melody.

Ke Kali Nei Au means "Waiting for Thee" and is comparable, when sung at a wedding ceremony with I Love You Truly or Oh Promise Me emnj' lth or Moa.aimaurria;e symbolism as has the Lohen-rin or Mendelssohn or any other music which bv tra dihon is played or sung at wedding ceremonies 1. We as American citizens, lay great stress universal education, because it permits person, to great variety of topi? Ton the Sorr education limjts ability to form an 2. Opinion is what makes democracy work Where opinions can not be formed freely and Xre thev are arrived at under compulsion and without free interchange of Mpat tho-I luul rue irom a lieutenant, junior grade, in 1944 to captain in the naval reserve, the high temporary rank befitting a White House aide, in 1946. He received hi? training at Washington university in bt.L.ouis. He completed his schooling in 1938 and folowing graduation, joined the law firm of Lashly' Lashly Miller and Clifford as a partner.

In 1944 he asked for and received a commission in the naval reserve. As many weddings in Hawaii are carried out with H1? 'sland theme," including torchS H'lS i uu uti apv ic rnrniifTh uiivutii ruui itnn ro i i 11. flnM-crc xr xt 's luicnes. Hawaiian "unmup Anuidii. unuea Aircraii.

ntfl, u. a. ateei, to a wedding withan "island suitable Standard OH of New Jrsey and Westinghouse. Clifford's first navy assignment, in April of that Mainland aid from the Harvard university medical school has alreadv been requested in one case. It should be asked in more and more cases if the solution is not found.

Modern science should be called in to find and reveaJ facts and end any possibility of increasing alarm and widespread morbid fear. 'DABBLING' WITH DYNAMITE An International News dispatch from Tokyo unidentified Japanese leaders are 'dabbling with the idea of asking the Allies to permit the country to establish a 100 000 man home army "similar to the one Germany was granted by the Versailles treaty This appears to be both stupidity and a total disregard of the lessons that should have been learned from the two World wars. rJs controversy over the origin of 01 Actmiral Royal I. Ingersoll, kWtl a uu- 1S education that can remove nf from the world make it a better who then was stationed on the wt ua lThP Sfar.RiiM; "7ii i- Ot course i- siaa who k-nrmr "um readers: 1 a i A Y- navai suPPiy offices. By Julv.

1945, Of the first 12.000 research contracts written by the war department, only 37 provided that the public generally should benefit from tha research results. The others permitted the companies to keep tha benefit of their research for their exclusive use after the war, even though they were using the taxpayers' money to pay for the research. The navy followed the same general policy, as did the office of scientific research and development under Dr. Vannevar Bush. "-neve uie.y Know something definite concerning the origin of Ke Kali Nei Au bucn writers are asked to limit their letters tn nn more than 200 words.

The Star-Bulletin win as many of these letters as possible publlsh education Ti reauuze. 311 is not we wh education The greatest obstacle to the establishment of educational opportunity is public indifference There appears to be a lack of understanding of edu- neceTsftv boJfeCteS- The. is difference8 to the necessity of raisin? nrnfp mni i. A "aa Decome lieutenant commander, and was attached to the White House staff. In June, 1946.

he was named special counsel to the president. He first attracted public attention when he went A with m- Truman, to attend Winston Lhurchills discussion of international affairs at Westminster college, in Fulton. Mo. Since then Mr Truman is seldom seen without his aide, who out- MAW TO MAN By Harold L. Ickes teacheis by offering proper compensation and inducements to attract qualified young teachers.

Education is the fundam Soviet Radio Distorts acts of American Life anv nation nr a iT. WASHINGTON. D. June 2 The Daughters of the American Revolution concluded their 56th continental congress in Constitution s-u-uas me ciotnes conscious president in natty NEW YORK The kind of i nau- vvashington. last week.

A number of resolutions were unani- Ifha adopted. I mousi Clifford is tall and huskv and tstaiin feeds the Russians: is-. t- It is disturbing further because it reveals that some Japanese leaders do not consider their new constitution as binding or to be a statement of their national policy. If there is any considerable evidence of this attitude. Allied occupation WW have to change its very generous policy.

Chapter 2 of the new constitution under the heading Renunciation of War reads: is revealed in Look magazine. Permitted acces U. S. government ran just as it is true mat a society creates its schools, so it is equally true that the schools are instrumental in molding society, Education of the masses is more essential in a democracy than in any other form of government own -r an fnlined People are capabTe of governing themselves. Therefore, democracy places responsibility on the schools to produce the kind of individuals who can think logically, analyze fr a y- and inteHigently in the interests of the nation as a whole.

radio broadcasts Look made an exhaustive study of bv which thfehr misstatements wnich the Communist Hirtr. i. consider his good looks as a drawback to his career Mr. Truman, obviously fond of Clifford, is known to lean heavily on the youthful adviser in his speech writing efforts, and during the last few months Washington has become aware of Cliff ord influence in other presidential activities. Across his desk at the White House, for instance, go all ihe problems requiring legal opinions.

He is credited with being the first to uphold J. A. Krug when the secretary of the interior insisted that Lewis did not have the right to breach the coal agreement. Clifford so advised Mr. Truman, in thP ordinary Russian citizen accept his' owr lot nnnnIASilUTmer the radio spoke about as unemployed, when the fact that millions of jobs were going begging.

World war II revealed manv weaknesses in education. For example, one out of every seven young Some of these were good: but some, this organization which is supposed to live in the spirit of our liberty loving and freedom seeking first settlers, ought to be ashamed of. A American citizens are proud of the Statue of Liberty that, thanks to French generosity and fine French sentiment, stands in New York harbor, with right arm upholding a glowing beacon to light the way for those people of Europe who want to enjoy American liberty. On the base of this statue are engraved these inspiring words: "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free. The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.

Send these, the homeless, tempest tossed, ta met I lift my lamp beside the golden door." Probably no delegate attending the convention has ever read theM words, either on the base of the statue itself or in any book. No could any have heard them spoken. CONTINUANCE OF IMMIGRATION BARRIERS ASKED For among the resolutions adopted, without dissent, was on maintain our present immigration and naturalization barriers and to oy forces tne LmRed St 5, an Tom Claris atioVney v- va-j vjvvvm uctauot scuciaii taiKca oi -long breadlines" in October and of "turning solSs unable 2lmlACUally' th? SES rePrts that of for work veterans- only 5 per cent are looking Similarly, they claim that a Russian. Alexander Mazovsky, invented the airplane 20 years before the Wright brothers The Encyclopedia Britannica doesn't even mention Mazovsky's name. The Russian radio declares America Is buildinr a colossal war machine, ignoring the fact that our armv has shrunk from a wartime high of 8.300,000 men to and the thieat or use of force, is forever renounced as a means of settling disputes with other nations The maintenance of land, sea and air forces as well as other war potential, will never be authorised The right of belligerency of the state iwW no be recognized.

Another news item reports that Japanese have stoned railroad cars in which Allied forces and civilian employes were riding. Perhaps the provocation is great. Yet this indicates a change of attitude by some Japanese toward the occupying U. S. forces.

It is to be hoped that these instances, and a few others reported, are exceptional and do not represent a general change. Allied authorities ne iauea to measure up to minimum educational requirements. A total of 1,767.000 were rejected for mental or emotional disabilities. Many were discharged after induction, because of inability to understand and execute the simplest orders. This is an indictment of the slipshod manner in which we have applied our education.

Barbs and Brickbats By HAL COCHRAN The agriculture department has perfected a wav to make alcohol out of milk. Now watch the old gent come home bossy. A smile on your face always will get you pleasant reflections in the mirror. oar tonstitution hall, dedicated to that great instrument upon which pracn size or a mile over 1,000,000 On the other hand tn Z'll IL. "fA1" any except wnite artists, no matter how flirts I sucn artists may be.

in Japan should, however take such incidents. Sourness spoils milk and has the same effect on people. xidgdsctKi oy tne atom bomb could have been done by ordinary air force bombs. Zn6y neglect t0 say would take 80.000 bombs of 1.000 pounds each to equal the two atomic missiles It is this coloring and misstatement, savs Look that may make it difficult for the common man of America and Russia ever to meet on friendly terms. It is a credit to the armed forces that they, taught 900,000 illiterates the rudiments of reading, writing and simple calculation in a mass teaching program which made it possible to reclaim these men for militaiy service and more intelligent citizenship.

The Veterans of Foreign Wars' organization is alarmed by the large amounts of mnnev into account and not proceed along lines which will repeat the mistakes made with Germany after World war I. If anybody is "dabbling" with the idea of letting Japan establish a home army of 100.000 or any other nunjber, dabbling with dynamite. A California man raises worms for a living. That's starting below the bottom of the ladder. Soon sonny will go swimming without permission and the satin slipper will be felt i A Book A Day When you're willing to sit and take things as they spent annually to combat crime in comparison come- that's why the good ones don't a Except as to sex, I happen to be in the same boat as the Daughter of the American Revolution.

Through no fault of my own. toe, eoma of Revolutionary ancestry. I am a member of the Sons of the American Revolution. For my part. I am not ashamed of being a descendant of immigrant.

The many racial strains that have united in me have produced, for better or for worse, what I am. WE CAN STILL GAIN MUCH FROM CULTURE OF WORLD And if it was true then that out of the various European cultures a great new American culture could be built, it is true today that out ot the diverse cultures of the world, there is still a great store of human virtues upon which we could draw for the improvement of our own civilization. The Daughters of the American Revolution should have realized long before this that he who constantly looks into the past shrinks into the past, just as he who looks with confidence into the future thereby uplifts his spirit and gives purpose to hie life. They should have learned long ago that genius knows no nationahtr and that true artistry has nothins to do with the pigmentation af tho skin. THE Rnnv rr rBlrvnciim a SO THEY SAY Horn io me amount expended on education almost I J.

eight times as much for curbing crime as for: on your bankroll PS 1USt 3 htU more butter "mptiea ov ma- tof nnbllshpd Houghton Mifflin Boston. 1947. 496 pages. euueanng iuture citizens. A 14 per cent reduc in -f u4i, cir i Senator Alexander Wiley A president can create an emergency and thus create reasons for his continuance in office.

Leadins un to a Pirl rn now JZZ5Zm2m verses irom many tion in crime would pay for all the costs of Of COmDOSltion in orri i vv a 1 1 en- wcuiuim sagement ring in a voice. i.u-.;- 4i "i-oiiaic nei education throughout the countrv. lJ'" inenasnip is the one bond bv which (mankind can be bound together National Commander Starr has given the Veterans of Foreign Wars a sound program for Gen. MacArthur By renouncing war in her new --c(ihiinn JaDan has thrown herself at the merrv If you don't think these are sober days, ask the man in the liquor store. M.

A The numerous poems provide a series of beautiful tributes by some of the best known writers from i A Mirhiaan man limrw-rf eK u. Pa.rt world including the Orient of the Ames. a a m.iai i cspunsioiuty i euutauon. to protect the Japanese people from aggression. And it is applicable to Hawaii.

111 Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Tuesday, June 3, 1947 7 Saving Hawaii's Natural Resources .1 PINE ISLAND High School Student News BIG ISLAND NEWS NOTES NEWS NOTES oo Oo0 oo Greedy Ants Battle Collector of Parasites.

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
1,993,314
Years Available:
1912-2010