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The Gazette and Daily from York, Pennsylvania • Page 26

Location:
York, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Gazette and Daily, -Friday; Morning, December 14, 1945 26 them "stepping stones to peace." She felt that we are going in the right direction in the face of great obstacles but that "we must care and have faith if we want a peaceful world." The talk was sponsored by the Public Affairs committee of the YWCA, and was well attended. Miss Dingman lectured at the Woman's club Tuesday -evening on "Learning World Cooperation." Cooperation Key To World Peace All-India conference. Rotarians heard Miss Dingman through the cooperation of Miss Katherine Mundorf of the Family Service Bureau. Guests of the club were Morgan Gipe, Rev. William H.

Fitzpatrick; Attorney George H. Kain, Dr. Martin, Mrs. P. Ness, Mrs.

Shaw, Mrs. Wentzler, A. E. Chapin, G. C.

Brenizer, R. P. Scott, Henry I. Stahr and Nevin Smith. Speaking later at the YWCA, Miss Dingman declared that international regulation and supervision of the atomic bomb must result from the meeting of foreign ministers in Moscow to keep the world from destruction.

"If the atomic bomb can be regulated then we are on the way-to world government," she said, "never forgetting that the United Nations organization must serve as the bridge." "The white curse of superiority is an arrogance akin to fascism," she stated, "and the white man minority unless he learns the lesson of race tolerance." Reviewing the international con-may find himself an unwanted ferences that have taken place since 1943, Miss Dingman called The range Car Just received another shipment of: Oranges Satsumas Seedless Grapefruit Guava Jelly Orange Marmalade Orange Blossom Honey Our fruits are not artificially colored. They are picked and shipped direct from our own groves. They are rich in Vitamins and B. For your health's sake, keep a supply on hand at all times. Please help us with our paper bag shortage by bringing your own containers when possible.

Open evenings until 9 o'clock. PLACE' YOUR ORDERS NOW FOR CHRISTMAS Located at 210 Roosevelt Avenue In York Opposite York Ice Mach. Co. and the Western Maryland R. R.

dead world," she said. "We live in a twilight' between a dead world and a world not yet born." She listed labor management relationships and race relationships as two in which geniuses are needed to work out compromises and to do straight thinking. Pointing to congressional "dilly-dal lying" over appropriating monies due the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, she said: "I am humiliated that we have cared more about reducing our taxes than about feeding starving peoples. I don't see how we can escape a terrible feeling of guilt." She described the United Nations as a new attempt to fit living for the new "neighborhood" world. There are two basic aims in the organization, she said, the first being to restrain violence.

Another war, she declared, would not be "an" atomic war, but "the" atomic war. In the climate created, she said, the next step and the most important step is to eliminate the frustrations that lead nations to war. These, she stated, were economic and racial. "No nation can be safe alone from war," she declared. "World trade is one of the fundamentals." Miss Dingman has worked among women of Europe, China and India, served with the League of Nations in Geneva where she lived for nine years, and in 1938 was a special guest at the Delhi Miss Mary Dingman, in two addresses here, says we haven't learned laws of human relationships.

Asserts "we care more about reducing our taxes than about feeding starving peoples." Pleads for racial tolerance. "We haven't yet learned the lawi of human relationships, declared Mary E. Dingman, twice cited by the French government as a good-will ambassador, at a luncheon meeting of the Rotary club at Hotel Yorktown. "Only together can we find the way to lasting peace," she said, deploring that in a nation gifted in scientific research and material production the people are what she termed "dummies" in the study of relationships. Miss Dingman is a field representative of the' Women's Action Committee for Victory and Lasting Peace and has been associated with the International Executive Service of the YWCA.

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About The Gazette and Daily Archive

Pages Available:
359,182
Years Available:
1933-1970