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Show ibeen authorized as step towards( combatting crime offenses. Despite the glamor of his role, however, Scalise said he preferred the plain, everyday assurance of a policeman's badge to any permanent perm-anent career along the skyways. "I wanted to be a policeman before be-fore I went into the service," he : I said simply. "It appealed to me I a career ... and I still feei that way . . ." ATOM BOMB FLYER WANTS TO BE A POLICEMAN Atomic impressions of exploding explod-ing worlds and cosmos had sifted down into a single star recently as James F. Scalise of Chicago, a crewman in the air wing which delivered the first atom bomb attack at-tack on Japan, sought a policeman's police-man's job. Back from the wars and fading memories of an actor' role in one of the greatest dramatic episodes of history, Scalise was one of more than 4,000 veterans who had applied for temporary patrolmen's jobs in Chicago. Applications had |