Library, Simpreme Co
DONALD DUCK
OKAY ILL GIVE YO TO CLEAN HOUSE WHILE 'IM GONE! BUT, REMEMBER...
BE THOROUGH, SEE? THOROUGH!
OKAY,
UNCA DONALD
THAT'S
A DEAL!
GRIN AND BEAR IT
| Car 1941, Wish Dancy Productions"
| Work! Urban Howrsed
Tuesday,
HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
April 22, 1941.
By Walt Disney
By Lichty The
TANG 1911, Arago Times, Inc.
"It may be all right to make him happy. Ethel, but the first thing you know, he'll be taking it for granted."
Crossword Puzzle
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Job Ideal Summer Undies
Strangest The Cabinet
An interview with Mr Arthur Greenwood, the Minister concerned with the study of after-war
-reconstruction-problems, by..
HENRY LONGHURST.
WHEN, as Mr Churchill put
it in describing the end of · the last war, "the lever is pulled Full Steam Astern," and the vast war machine comes at last to a halt, what then?
Economic ehnos, poverty, slump, unemployment? Or a better, greater democracy with security and a fair chance for every man?
We cannot settle comfort- ably down to solve these pro- plems on Armistice Day. They have to be tackled now.
The man appointed by the Prime Minister. to make the first survey of how, having won the war, we may win the peace, is Mr Arthur Green- wood, Minister Without Port- folio.
Officially
his title is "Chairman of the Ministerial Committee charged with the study of post-war reconstruc- tion problems." But he does not expect to see that re- construction completed in his lifetime. Thirty, even flfty, years he thinks it may take.
MOBILISE BRAINS.
"If we win the war in a military sense," he says, "and then can't show that wo can make democracy work, we've as good as lost the war."...
Mr Greenwood, all his life, has been a good "Party" man. But he will have no question of mero partisanship in his pre- sent work.
He emphasised, as did tho Prime Minister recently, that noither honor any State Ministry can build a new heaven and a new 'barth. “We must build the kind of country
the people want and are them-. selves willing to build.
And so he has begun by. becoming a kind of clearing house for ideas, as expressed by "responsible" shades of opinion.
He will listen not only to trade unions and employers' federations, but also to bodies like the Institute of Inter- national Affairs, the Workers' Educational Association, and the 1940 Council, consisting of scientists, doctors, lawyers, business men and women, pre- sided over by Lord Balfour of Burleigh,
cx-
"My business will be to
brains, mobilise the perience, insight, imagination of all the people who can be of real use," said Mr Greenwood. "This job has got to be à vast. co-operative enterprise.
"I've got no department here at the moment-just a man and a boy, as you might'
departmental say-and limitations; and, believe me, I understand something about those!
по
"There is no. Minister of Reconstruction yet. What we shall see after the war is successivo Governments of Reconstruction!”
Mr Churchill, incidentally, has hinted that he will set up a Ministry of Reconstruction, After the last war this Ministry was a failure. It is common political knowledge. though Mr Greenwood himself did not say so, that it falled because the other Ministries. each wished to do their own "reconstructing
selves..
for them
"I shall work with the other Ministries," said Mr Green- Wood. "No singlo man's brain
can hold all the complications of a problem like this. What we achieve will be the work of many minds, the result of co- operation.'
While we were talking, his secretary asked what should be done with certain docu- ment. "All right, put. it in my homework," he said.
I asked him whether he en- visaged huge unemployment after the war. "Did you go to the People's Convention?" he replied. "No? Nor did 1, though I think we might have had a comic afternoon. Well, one of those present, I think it was, Pritt, said that I had declared that we should have seven million unemployed after the war.
"What I have said is that If we don't organise our re- sources, there will be vast unemployment on that scale after the war. I belleve we have huge untapped -re- sources that will help to bring the world out of post- war poverty. I don't say easily, but I think it can he done.
"There will be jobs of every kind to be done all over the world. Buildings to be built, people to be clothed and shod
and that great task, develop- ing the resources of the Dominions and Colonies.”
The Prime Minister sug- gested last August that we should accumulate at our dis- posal, not necessarily in Eng- land, stocks of food-and-raw materials with which to help in the economic restoration of the freed people of Europe after the war. "You can say that we're getting down to that problem at this present time." Mr Greenwood told me.
PLANNED INDUSTRY
So we passed, naturally, to the question of controlled- Compulsory if you like-plan- ning of industry after the 'war. How long would it last?
This is a question I have put to many Ministers. It is a question that makes them shy like a horse at a traction engine. Mr Greenwood was no exception.
So I report off my own bat, as it were, that the im- pression I have gained from these Ministers, irrespective of party, is that they all be- lieve that the control of in- dustry exercised through emergency must be con- tinued long, long after the war is over.
"I'll say this, though," said Mr Greenwood. "Go to the blitzed industrial areas, as I have done, and you will sco that the war has broken down a devil of a lot of frontiers..
•
"You will ace Whitehall, trade unions, employers, local government man-all pulling together. That's the spirit I want to see go on after the
war"
Broadly speaking, he hopes to see the general principles of reconstruction announced before the end of the war, and to have plans comploted for the "sword-into-plough- "shares" period · immediately
following the peace.
But he promise no ready
The. made "Now:"Order.”... pooplo, ho saya, must make that for themselves."
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