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PAGE FOUR
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
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*
Washington News Notebook
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON, The ways of a prophet in gov
ernment are hard, particularly when his predictions
are wrong. Office of War Mobilization and Reconver
sion economists have taken considerable ribbing
over their 1945 assurances that unempioyment in
the spring of 1946 wou}d reach eight million—only
to have the number turn out to be three million.
But now the OWMR boys are being' asked to
swallow some more words. In a report which Di
rector John W. Snyder sent to the Senate Small
Business. Committee just betore Congress went home
for the Christmas holidays, there was a prediction
that, “Food is almost the only item in which we
can see an early l;kelihood of supply balancing de
mand.” With that on the record, up pops the world
food shortage. ¢
When Interior Secretary J. A. Krug was asked
if government orders had been prepared to seize the
coal mines for government operation and so end the
coal strike, he said they hadn’t. But he went on to
explain that, “Those orders have been prepared so
many times that we've got people around here who
could write them in their sleep.”
McCORMACK WAS UNPOPULAR IN
WASHINGTON
The resignation of Col. Alfred McCormack as
head of the State Department’s new intelligence
branch was not entirely due to his difficulties with
Congress on the employment of so-called Com
munists, nor to his argument within the State De
partment over whether his intelligence agents
wounld report to and be under the “geographical
desks,” which are presided over by Foreign Service
aareer men. The fully story is that people all over
town were gunning for McCormack.
Other intelligence units—Army, Navy, Treasury’s
Secret Service, Customs, and T-men, Border Patrol,
FBI, and even the new Central Intelligence Group—
all had the idea that McCormack was trying to take
over supervision of their jobs. And they helped
grease the skids under him. i
The new man who takes his place is William L.
Langer Harvard history professor who served in the
Office of Strategic Services during the war.
Recent rains throughout the farm belt, giving as
surances of another bumper crop year, have de
lighted but surprised agricultural experts. They say
it’s an unusual run of luck. On the average, the U.
S. has had one drought or bad crop year for every
seven good years. It isn’t at all regular. Sometimes
there have been two bad years in a row, or they
have been three or five years apart. Good crops
in 1946, however, will make this the tenth year in
a row that this country nas had bumper yields. Such
luck can’t last, say the experts.
OPA AMENDMENTS WOULD BOOM PRICES,
EXPERTS SAY
Office of Economic Stabilization and Office of
Price Administration analysts have now had time
to study carefully the eight amendments which the
House tacked onto price renewal legislation. If the
Senate passes the bill in the form in which it was
approved by the House, the effects are expected to
be something like these:
1. Over half the price ceilings now in force
would be removed immediately.
2. Knowledge that prices were rising would
cause many business firms and individuals to try to
hedge against inflation by buying additional stocks,
and under this inventory hoarding prices might be
expected to go still higher.
3. Under all these pressures of rising costs, it
wou}d be impossible to keep rents under control.
The Civil Aeronautics Board now believes it has
a formula to end conflict between State and Federal
governments over regulation of domestic air traffic.
But it will take an act of Congress to put it over.
Under the new plan, CAB would set up a full code
of civil air traffic regulations for safe flying. In
case of wviolations or accidents, local authorities
within the state where the offense was committed
‘would make the investigation and enforce penalties.
The plan has been approved by the. National As
sociation of State Aviation Officials. Its advantage
Jis that it would establish uniformity of flying re
_gulations throughout the U. S, yet let the states do
Start Toward a New Era
The personal aircraft industry today is about
! where the automobile industry was 30 years ago,
y|and for the same reason. Inexpensive, mass-pro
duced cars had to wait upon the construction of
' improved highways throughout the country. The
personal plane has been waiting for numerous,
convenient airports to be buiit. And now, with the
; signing of the billion-dollar Federal Airport Act,
the era of private flying seems really to have
dawned. . |
| About 3500 of the country’s 16,750 incorporated
| urban areas already have landing fields. The new
airport appropriation (which municipalities must
match on a 50-50 basis) will add 3,000 more over
a seven-year period, besides improving 1,300 exist
ing fields. 4
This is only a start, of course. But it should en
courage the resumption of activity by aircraft
manufacturers which was drastically curtailed by
the cutback in military orders. It should stimulate
competition, and thus start the price of personal
planes downward toward a point where they will
be within reach of a mass market.
l As the market grows, volume production and
continued competition should give rise to further
]research and a resulting advance in safety, sim
plicity, efficiency, and comfort.
But the market probably cannot grow to a point
where all these things can be realized until the
plane owner is no more limited in his choice of
places to go than is the car owner today.
That brings up the problem of the 10,000 com
munities which will still be without federal aid for
an airport after the Civil Aeronautics Administra
tion has chosen the site of 3,000 new fields on the
basis of need and, probably, considerations of na
tional security. What can the 10,000 do?
Well, many of them could do what the town of
Eldon, Mo., has done. Eldon built an airpark—a
name coined to designate a small, simple landing
field sufficient to the need of small planes—which
will be dedicated next month. It was financed by
a $25,000 municipal bond issue which costs the,
Eldon taxpayer about one extra mill on every tax
‘dollar. ‘
Such an investment would seem to be a sound|
one. An airpark in a smaller community will at-|
tract business to the field just as an airport does
in a big city. It will help provide jobs for the many
air-minded and air-trained veterans who desire
to remain in aviation. It will bring new money and
new people to town.
And, in a small way, it should help to speed the
day of safer, cheaper private flying for the many
who are eagerly looking forward to a plane of
their own.
)
Message to Stalin !
The spirit of May Day in Moscow seemed some
what . militaristic. Generalissimo Stalin’s order of]
the day cautioned the people that “we must con
stantly be alert to look after the armed forces in
defense of our country.” One of the’day’s mottoes
was: “Let’s not permit the instigators of new wars
to threaten the peaceful existence of nations!”
But the spirit of Ilya Ehrenburg, famous Russian
journalist, seemed pacifistic on May Day, when he
was interviewed in New York. Said Mr. Ehrenburg,
“In my country the people have not much antipathy
toward your country. They suffered so that now
the war is over, they want their families, books,
peace. To speak of war against the Americans is
Idiotic.” .
Since Mr. Ehrenburg often expresses the official
Russiar view, and since he is being permitted to
travel here on a non-military mission— which is
quite unusual—it may be assumed that his state
ment was not a contradiction of Soviet policy.
Yet Generalissimo Stalin on several occasions has
planted the fear of war in the minds of his people.
He has spoken of “capitalistic encirclement” and of
“preparing for any eventuality.” But from whom
does he fear attack? It must be the United States, for
no other country would dare challenge Russia alone,
nor would any other country make such a challenge
without American support.
} Therefore, we hope that Mr. Ehrenburg will talk
ito enough Americans, plain citizens as well as of
ificials, to be able to take back to Premier Stalin 2
true account of American feeling, which might be
lexpressed in a message paraphrasing Mr. Ehren
\ burg’swords: ;
| “In our country the people do not have much anti
’pathy toward your people. We did not sufer as the
‘Russians did. But now that the war is over, we too
‘want our families, books, peace. To speak of war a
‘gainst the Russians is idiotic.”
The builders of this country all recognize that
the lower the price, the wicer the market and the
greater is the demand- over a long period of time.
—Joseph Meyerhoff of Baltimore, Bd., president
National Association of Home Builders.
Fat, rich, gooey pastry in these times! What we
need here is a pastry holiday.—Fiorello H. La-
Guardia, UNRRA director.
We are glutting ourselves in homes, hotels and
restaurants, our complacency all the while being
fostered and drugged by an unrealistic program. Had
we been that complacent in war, we never would
have won it—Herbert H. Lehman, ex-director of
UNRRA. .
Fully half of the hospitaf beds of the United States
—over 570,000—are in mental hospitals. Over a
quarter million persons are admitted annually, and
it is reliably estimated that one adult out of every
20 may expect to become a mental hospital patient
during his life.—Dr. Winfred Overholser, superin
tendent St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, Washington.
In‘spite of the fact that iodized salt can help pre
vent Asimple goiter, the American Medical Associa
tion warns that “persons over 30 years of age with
any swelling of the throat that might indicate goiter
should not use iodized salt unless they do so under
the direction of a physician.”
Potatoes were not know im North America until
after the middle of the 16th century, when they
were brought to Virginia from Peru.
The glfaifa plant has a long tap root system which
penetrates deeply into the soil, and enables the plant
to secure nourishment and moisture beyond the
reach of other crops. : e
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
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By WI LL'AM MAI ER i e :{Copyrighl by William Maier;
e “Z Distributed by NEA SERVICE, INC.
DISAPPOINTMENT
XX l
She blushed and took oif her
coat and hung it on the hook out
side the booth. Just then some
body started the machine again,
and Jouel came out and said, Let’s
dance.” He gave the order to thel
waiter, and then they started to
dance, and he held her dil‘ferent!
from the way the high school boys
used to hoid her, and the steps he
did were all different. She was
rigid in his arms, and the first
rcouple of times around the floor
they seemed to do nothing but
stumble over each other’s ieet. I
Gradually it got a little retter,
bu‘ what with being so keyed up
and it being so hot, Debby got to
sweating more and more, and the!
collar of her dress kept slipping
back and forth across her shoul-|
ders. And she couldn’t seem to!
kuow ahead of time which wayl
Joel was going to turn or what he
was going to do with his feet. She!
knew he wasn’t having a good
time, and that made her so nerv
ous she was almost panicky, and
by the time they got back to the
both she was ready to cry.
1 She must have looked it, be-‘
cause suddenly he smiled across
the table at her and put his hand
over hers and squeezed it. It was
like a straw to a drowning man;
she smiled up at him, although
!his face was just a blur and she
squeezed his hand and then left
her hand in his. :
} They sat like that, sipping theiri
drink with one hand and holding
hands with the other. Their handsl
go: hot and moist and it
wasn’t much fun, but isl
he wanted to hold hands Debby
wasn't going o stop. Finally he!
took his hand away and tossed
of the rest of his drink and]
wiped his hand.
'hey tried to dance once more,
and sometimes later they had an
‘ther highball. Debby kept wait- |
ling for the drinks to make her
'fee] gay, but all they did was!
'make her hoter than ever, until
‘her face and neck felt as thougb
\they were bursting. And after a
!couple of hours she began to
fel awfu] dopey and faraway, and
the only other thing she felt was
‘a bit dizzy and weak in the stom
‘ach when they went out to the car
to go home.
|* % ;
She never could remember af
terwards what they had talked
about that evening except when
they talked aobut Joel's coming
back.
It had started when he an
nounced, looking off into space the
way he had so much of the time
that night, “This is my last night
here.”
Debby had felt that she should
say something romantic and
meaningful, but all she said was.
“Your last night?” |
He nodded. “Start work Monday
morning,” he said. “In Chicago..
That means I leave here tomor
new.” |
‘Worry of ;
Slipping or lrritating?
Don't be embarrassed by loose
false teeth slipping, @ropping or
wabbling when you eat. talk or
laugh. Just sprinkle a little EAS
TEETH on your plates. This
pleasant powder gives a remark
able sense of added comfort and
security by holding plates more
firmly. No gummy, gooey, pasty
taste or feeiing. it's aikaiine (non
acid). Get FASTEETH at any
“] wish you didn’t have to,"]
saxd Debby. ;
a 0 do 1"
“When will you be back,”
“Back?”
LSure. You'll] be coming back,
won’t you?”
. He smiled vaguely. “Oh, I sup
pose sometime. But God knows
when. I'm going to be a working
mat, you know.”
“But you’ll have vacations.”
“Two weeks a year—if I'm
licky. And there’ll be plenty of
things I'll want to do with those
two weeks.”
Debby stared at him blankly.
“Things you’d rather do than
'come—come back to the Cape?”
- He was toying with his cigaret,
|looking down at the ash tray.
“Well, I'll tel] you.” He looked up
lav her, and she thought he was
!embarrassed. “What you probab~
t;ly don’t realize is how much ot
the Cape I managed io see last
!svmmer. I was here nearly three
'weeks, you know.”
[* * -
Debby was all confused in her
mird. She shook her head.
“‘Don’t you like it here?” she
lasked feebly.
. ““Oh, sure. But with only two
weeks a year and so many thinsg
I want to try, and so many placeg
‘I want to see—"
She was beginning to se what
he was driving at. “Is that all you
care about? Seeing things?” She
ilooked at him as she had never
looked at him before.
l “Oh no. No. But when you're
yveung I think you ought—"
' “Don’t you care anything about
people? About havin’ friends and
!seeing Jthem again?” Now she
knew exactly what he was driv
ing atand, suddenly she was feelin
terribly hollow and wesk. “Don’t
‘anything else mean anything to
ycu except seein’ things?”
‘ He was staring glumly into her
face, and she looked straight back
into her eyes. Slowly she shook
her head, and she was ashamed of
him. It was as sudden as that. But
it hurt something fierce. A]] in
one short moment she was know
ing that never again in her whole
life would she feel toward any
‘bedy the way she had felt toward
him during the past week. Not
even toward him, If he should
someday come back to her. She
‘might still be in love with him
but she wouid arways know there
was something about him way
inside that wasn’t quite the way
sine had dreamed it.
He paid the check and *hey got
out and drove home. As they
drcve into the yard he said, “No
lights. I guess they’'ve all gone to
bed ”
And she said. “Yes, the animals
won’t be on display again until
tomorrow mornmg.” |
He said, “I'm sorry, Debby,”‘
and she got out of the car and
ran into the house and she might
not have cried if the hourse hadn’t
smelled so bad of fue] oil. She
ran up the stairs, sobbing, and
tore off her graduation dress and
stamped on it. Then she fell on the
bed, still sobbing. She hadn’t
cried like that since she was a
little girl. » :
(To Be Continue)
For that Sluggish Feeling
Due 1o CONSTIPATION
Cleanse upper and Jower intestines
thoroughly with gentle acting
RLOK-LAX vaeucrs
"
Weather Recording
. .
Equipment Received
) ¥ .
Here At University
D:. Merle Prunty, professor of
geograrhy at the University of
Georgia announcdd the arrival
of two weather recording in
struments that will aid in keep
'ing a permanent record cf Ata
ens weather ang serve as re
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Carmichael And Rivers Open Campaion
o
James V. Carmichae! of Marietta ecandidate for Governor of
Georgia, speaks before the courthouse at Moultrie as he formally
opened his campaign. Former Governor E. D. Rivers of Lakeland,
oPpciiiig liis campaisn sor cilection again as Governsor of Ceorgia,
speaks at Waycross. (AP Photo), :
AT
‘M
o, ._-:“V ' ot T FAY W
Ll FAVORITE
. ""LO“,‘?M '
- Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N.Y. '
Franchised Bottler: PEPSI-COLA BOTTLIN G CO., Athens, Ga.
search equipment for geography
students. One of the instruments,
a hygro-thermograph, registers
relative humidity and air ter
meratue; the other a barograpa,
records atmosphere pressure.
Dr. E. S. Sell, also of the geo
¢raphy department, will keep tae
records at his home. He will re
cord rainfall, and daily maxi
mum and minimum tempera
tures, thus enabling the Unive:-
city to keep complete and con
tinuous weather records. These
records, Idr. Prunty believes,
will be of value not only to the
geography department but also
tc the College of. Agriculture
«nd tae School of Foresiry. In
time, he hopes the use of the in
siruments will helo to c¢xplain
Georgia’s unpredictable summer
drouths. and the predict frosts.
ELECT MEMBERS
Sigma Delta Chi, national hon
orary journalistic fraternity at
the University of Georgia, elect
ed the following students to mem
bership recently: Bill Bowick,
Albany; William H. Burson,
Thomaston; * Charles Warnock,
Garnett, S. C.; Don Downs, New
nan; Joseph Mahan, | Kydal;
Chandler Lanier, Macon.
Honorary members named to
the group included Harold Tyler,
assistant city editor of the At
lanta Journal; Tom Ham, staff
writer for the Atlanta Journal;
Jimmy Jones, director bf the Uni
versity News Bureau; Al Sharp,
of Liller, Neal and Battle adver
tising firm of Atlanta; and Bob
Collins of “the Atlanta Journal
staff.
Saber-tooth tigers, with tusks
six to eight inches long, once
roamed over the entire United
States. o~
MONDAY, MAY 13, 1946,
Scholastic Average
Veteran students at the Uni
versity of Geovgia lead the non
veteran students in scholastic
average by 1.4 points, J. Ralph
Thaxton, registrar, made public
thic week. The average grade of
veterans is 72.3; that of non
veterans, 70.9.
In the report made by WMr.
Thaxton a brealidown according
to percentage was made by the
different grades given by the
Upiversity. Taese grades and
the percentage of veterans and
nor-veterans having an average
vepresented by one of tne letters
are.
A plus—veterans, 3.94, non
veterans, 2.6 A-—veterans,
'2541; non-veterans 10.24; B
plus—veterans, 13.41; non-vete
rans, 12.50; B-—veterans, 15.56,
non-veterans, 1663; C plus—
'veld:ans, 12.67, mon-veterans
12:56; C—wveterans, 14.30, non
veterans, 15.60; D plus—veterans,
499, non-veterans, 6.16: D—ve
terans, 6.39, non-veterans, 7.50;
E—veterans, .48, ‘non-veterans,
.84, F—veterans, 7.62, non-vete~
"ans, 8.42; Incompiete—veterans,
148, non-veterans, 1.75: With
drawn—veterans). 4.47, non-ve
terans, 3.30; anda Withdrawn
Failure—veterans, 2.09, non-ve
terans, 1.71.
MOVIE PROGRAMS
FOR THF WEFK
“—-——“
e ee N —
PALACE—
~ Mon.-Tues.—“Breakfast in Hol
lywood,” starring Tom Breneman,
Bonita Granville, Edward Ryan,
Beulah Bondi. Hockey Homicide,
Community Sing. News/’
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat., — “Won
der Man,” starring Danny Kaye,
Virginia Mayo, Vera-Ellen. Fin'n
Feathers. Bargain Counter At
tack. News.
GEORGIA—
! Mon.-Tues. — “Shock,” starring
Vincent Price, Lynn Bari. Chimp
on tHe Loose. Art Mooney and
'Band. News.
~ Wed.-Thurs. — “Frontier Girl,”
starring Yvonne de Carlo, Rod
Cameron, Hare Conditioned.
-News.
Fri.-Sat. . — “Swing Parade of
1946,” starring Phil Regan, Gale
Storm, 3 Stooges, Connee Bos
well. Black Ducks and Broad
Bills. News.
STRAND—
Mon.-Tues. “—Gay Caballero,”
starring Gilbert Roland, Martin
Garralaga. Mighty Mouse in Kra
katoa. Gem of the Ocean.
Wed. — “Flying Serpent,” star=
ring Ralph Lewis, George Zucco.
Movieland Magic. Ski Master. .
Thurs.—“ Too Young to Know,
starring Joan Leslie, Robert Hut
ton. Testing the Experts. : o
Fri.-Sat. — Guns and Guitars,
starring Gene Autry. Get Along
Little Zombie. Purple Monster
Strikes, No. 13.
RITZ—
Mon.-Tues. — “House on 92nd
Street,” starring William Eythe,
Signe Hasso. Post War Era. For
est Commendos. .
Wed.-Thurs. — “Hit the Hay,
Judy Canova, Ross ‘Hunter. Bad
Bill Bunion. Law of the Bad
lands.
Fri.-Sat—"Navajo Kid,” star
ring Bob Steele. High Blood Ill“t.-“]'
sure. Royal Mounted Rides Agalll,
No. 9. ‘@ b
CONDUCT SERVICES i
A deputation team from Cl(":_
son College will donduct the Vt,{
per service Tuesday, May 14, “/‘er_
p. m., sponsored by the Ur;{l e
sity of Georgia Voltntary He't
ious Association. The service W
be held in the Strahan House.
ENTER the EXCITING
CONTEST
Prive 50029 casH
41 other valuable prizes
: tors
el OAk
P hIICo P joS
TS ekl
H
S
Mail a B-B wrapper or recs
onable facsimile, with 25 words of
less on "'l prefer B-B because—" 10
B-B Headache Powder, Atlanta, Go.