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OCR Page 1 of 3UNITED STATES DELEGATION TO THX
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE UNITED NATIONS
London, January 12, 1946.
Dear Mr. President,
I want to thank you very much for the opportunity
you have given me be being part of this Delegation. It is
a great privilege and by only fear is that I shall not be
able to make enough of a contribution. I do feal, however,
that you were very wise in thinking that anyone connected
with ay husband could, perhaps, by their presence here keep
the level of his ideals. Just being here, perhape, is a
good reminder, which I think is what you had in =ind.
I feel that the meeting is starting off with good
feeling though there was a little difference of opinion
over the election of the President of the Assembly.
I an sending a little note to General Eisenhower
about a group of men who came to see me, representing the
soldiers in this ares. They were very well behaved and,
I thought, very logical. They said that the men with
points below 45 realized that they had to stay here and
were entirely reconciled; those with more than 60 had gone
home; but those in betareen were very anxious to have a
definite policy announced. A great many of them feel that
more men are kept in the area than are really needed for
the work and that this is done by officers who find their
jobs not too unpleasant and like to have a good number of
men under then. One boy said he would give anything to do
one good day's work. I have had that said to de by a num-
ber of men, and written to me by 8 number of them; and of
course their living conditions are not as pleasant as the
officers'. I think, however, if it is possible for the
Mar Department to give them some kind of & definite answer
as to the plans made for bringing them home, it would make
years
being in a longer great the in than Army; difference. the that Pacific, he had and volunteered One was but now boy he told had anxious for been me a he to here year, had get a here, home. been great six after They deal
do
feel that there is some injustice in the way people are
sent home and that I know is difficult to eliminate in any
great big undertaking. But certainly a clear and definite
policy could now be formulated, and therefore in my note to
General Eisenhower I an giving him the same information I
- giving you in this letter. They are good boys but if
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