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MAN .of thé YEAR. SCIENCE ENTERTAINMENT : i PUBLIC AFFAIRS v AP
‘ Harry S. Truman J. Robert Oppenheimer * Sir Laurence Olivier + Herbert Hoover and Paul Hoffman &
Truman Named Man Of Year
In Associated Press Survey
By SHERRY BOWEN
AP Newsfeatures Writer
Harry S. Truman, President of
the United States of America, was
of the year in 1948. He was
%n almost unanimously by vote
of the editors of Associated Press
newspapers.
‘ The farm boy from Missouri who
prayerfully took over as chief ex
ecutive when President Roosevelt
died in 1945, waged a fighting
campaign and won an upset vic
tory in 1948. He said he often
geamed for his old seat in the U.
. Senate. But when the chips
were down, he ignored the experts.
He told his party leaders he would
win—and he did.
He had traveled a long and
twisted road to the Presidency. In
1906 he went into partnership
with his father and worked long
hours to keep the family farm
going. Eleven years later he was
1 Sporting Peer
" HORIZONTAL
1,7 Pictured
SBritish peer
14 School book
15 Ruled
16 Dry
17 Bacchanals’ cry
19 Birds
20 Be seated
21 Possessors
23 Craft
24 Boy's
_nickname
25 Hebrew deity
26 Hypothetical
force
§ g Compass point
) Twilled fabric
+ 31 Outcast |
383 Constellation
84 Dehydrated
35 Principle
87 Black wood
40 Half an em
41 Tellurium
{symbol)
42 Railway (ab.)
43 Eye (Scot.)
44 Consumed
}; Emits vapor
British
account money
82 Window part
84 Italian islend
85 Hebrew
' ... measure
56 Weasels
58 Keep
60 T'ype of poem
#) Musical sounds
“* VERTICAL
«» 4 Removes
. 2Ridicule -
3 Delay
4 Augment
5 Concerning
6 Pulled
7 Blackthorn
8 Row
y 9 One
10 National
Education
Association
(ab.)
11 Molten rock
12 Everlasting
(poet.)
13 Preceding day
(prefix)
, 18 Verb neuter
' (ab.)
21 Oleic acid
esters :
22 Joins
HELNS# F OB INI 5
AP
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’ g COPR. 1949 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REC. U. S PAT. OFF. % e
h *“Why buy anything as good as that? All our friends are
K aying too much for things and it fo.,“_lgdfl.'.t,_i_'_“f’"e,_sfi,fh_e,"l_!j,'h
‘in World War I. He went to
lFrance as a captain in the Mis
| souri national guard and was pro
moted to major before the war
ended,
Failed In Business
After the war he failed in busi
ness and was long years paying off
the resulting debt. But in 1922,
with the help of the Pendergast
machine in Missouri, he went into
‘politics as a member of the county
{ government in Jackson county.
e was first elected to the U. S.
'Senatc in 1934, When the Pender
| gast machine faced charges of dis
honesty, Truman was nearly de
feated in the 1040 election. But
imés.:tigators said suspicion never
| onc?® pointed at him. Truman said
Tom Pendergast aever asked him
to do a dishonest thing,
In the early part of the war he
headed the Truman Committee
whic hsaved the nation millions
. Answer to Previous Puezle
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B IEING[T P IEELE[D]
25 Heron
27 He is 18th
Earl of ———
30 Operated
32 Suppuration
(comb, form)
35 Torments
36 Whole
38 Sea nymph
39 Longs
45 Trees
47 Year between
12 and 20
48 Girl's name
49 Bachelor
of Arts (ab.)
50 Refuse from
grapes
51 Persian poet
53 Ignited
55 Ear (comb.
form)
57 Nickel
(symbol)
59 Exclamation
of inquiry
of dollars by checking on war con
tracts. In 1944 he took the nomi
nation as vice president, which he
did not want, in a compromise deal
at the convention:
His committee was formed at his
suggestion after he had been
turned down when he sought to
reactivate his commission in the
Army reserve. So, instead of be
ing a colonel in the Army during
the war, he finally became c¢om
mander in chief of all the U, S.
forces as President of the United
States.
Control Both Houses
In the 1946 elections, the Re
publicans gained control of bhoth
houses of Congress. Faced with
hostility from the legislators, he
hammered at a program which in
clided long range housing, in
creased legal minimum wages, a
civil rights program, government
backed health insurance, federal
aid for education and other things.
He denounced the Taft-Hartley
law and income tax cuts. On this
program, he won the 1948 election.
In other fields The AP editors
chose the following men: George
C. Marshall, foreign affairs; J.
Robert Oppenheimer, science;
Philip Murray, labor; Henry Ford
11, industry; Herbert Hoover and
Paul Hoffman in public service;
Norman Mailer, literature; and Sir
Laurence Oliver, entertainment.
Marshall now is recovering
from an operation in Washington.
Fo ranother year, he had headed
the U. S. State Department. He
was the general in charge of U. S.
operations in the cold war just as
he had been chief of staff for the
U. S. Army in World War 11. He
had ruled himself out of the race!
for President and spent the year
meeting the tough problems of a
divided world. In 1947, The AP.
editors chose him man of the yearw‘
for his work. ¥ |
Oppenheimer is director of the:
Institute for Advanced Study at
Princeton. He also continued work
‘with U. 8. and world groups which
seek to control the atom bomb. Re
turning from Europe Oct. 30, he
said, “Men of our times will never.
have a sense of security again.” He.
was wartime director of the Los
Alamos, N. M,, laboratory where
the first atom bombs were built.
He feels that education, espe
cially in universities, will be of
great help. In his latest trip to,
Europe he found fears not so much
of atomic war but of “occupation,
enslavément, civil war and de
struction.” He also found a feel
ing that the universities must take
their place in the days dhead as
the counterpart of the monasteries
of the early Middle Ages.
‘Murray was again elected head
of the CIO in November. His
union won a wage boost in the
steel industry in July. Through the
year he kept up a running fight
OUT OUR WAY —With ]. R. WILVLIAMS
EGAD,JASON, THE}/Z' TIM INNITED % FUST T HEARED, MISTAR 7.7
THREADS ARE <] US ONER~A MATCR, WAS KNOCKIN' 27
SNARLED/ -WE 124 FEW TOASTS~~ }# ONTH TOOR ~ YOU GAY, |7
WERE AT ELSP\\ESF’Q, LASTONE T <) "OPEN DP -~ DIS YERE (74 ’
e COMPOSING A X7l RECALLWAS /77 1S WILLIAM JENKINS
M SONG UM ! TITLED ATO FLOOD BRYAN! "+« S 0 I OPEN LP
pMY SWEET OLD |ol CONTROL -~ 3\ <« DEN NOSAY, "APRIL § —
AMERICAN HOME fl(ITHEN WHAT ¢ FOOL LIS ’GQOBER’/ \J
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WoF B Uism WITH ADAM
,‘s>"';?f"“~' & B coea 1945 BY NEA ‘).'A"‘.F' - PAY o.;f,(?fi-", AND ENE = ¢
' with the left wing in the CIO. He
backed Truman and denounced
Wallace for his third party bid.
Action of the November conven
tion showed full victory for Mur
ray’s right wing forces. The labor
leader who came to this country
as an immigrant coal miner sur
nrised delegates with the vigor of
his attack on Red elements.
Auto Empire
Ford continued to direct the au
to empire founded by his grana
father. During 1948 he toured
Europe, visiting Ford plants there.
He also accepted the post of chair
man of national community chests.
Votes of the editors were evenly
| divided between Hoover and Hoff
man in the public service field.
' Hoover, the only U. S. ex-Presi-
Ident. has worked hard on his
government reorganization com
mission. Hoffman was head of
the Studebaker Corp. but left to
direct the U, S. program for aid to
Europe.
’ Mailer, a Brooklyn boy who
went to Harvard and then to the
war in the Pacific, rocketed to
fame when “The Naked and the
Dead” was published. It was on
best seller lists for many weeks.
Reviewers hailed the book as a
rough and tough piece of realism
about war. Mailer says it is really‘
a highly symbolic work on the con
flict between the beast and the
seer in man. |
Oliver headed the entertain
ment vote because of the release of
his “Hamlet,” a motion picture, in
the United States. Oliver himself
spent nine months of 1948 in Aus
tralia with members of his London
“Old Vic¢” company. His tour was
hailed as a smashing success. He
is now back in London where “Old
Vie” will feature his acting again
after the first of the year.
If you are buying several dif
ferent items in a large department
store, an efficient and time-saving
way to shop is to start with the’
items that are sold on the upper
floors and work your w~: daw- ‘4
the street floor,. By doing this,
you eliminate unnecessa., . ... _
and down elevators and are less
likely to forget items or lose
wrapped-up packages. y
NOTICE
AN i e b T
. TREASURY DEP AR TMENT,
Office of District Supervisor, Al
cohol Tax Unit, Bureau of Inter
nal Revenue, Atlanta, Georgia.
Date of first publication, Decem
ber 27, 1948. Notice is hereby
given that on December 8, 1948,
cne 1935 Chevrolet Coach, Motor
No. 5374127, with accessories, was
seized in Clarke County, Georgia,
for wviolation of the Internal
Revenue Laws, to-wit: Section
3321, Internal Revenue Code.
Any person claiming an interest
in said property must appear at
the office 'of the Investigator in
Charge, Alcohol Tax Unit, 508
Ten Forsyth Street Building. At
lanta, Georgia, and file claim
and cost bond as provided by
Section 3724, Internal Revenue
Code, on or before January 26,
1949, otherwise the property will
be disposed of according to law.
‘W. D. Hearington, District Sup
ervisor. d 27, 33-10
IT'S A NEW YEAR, HAZEL! AND m WALDO! WHY, OF COURSE HAVEN'T 1-BEEN SAYING (T |
BEFORE THIS ONE IS OVER WE',L F 7 | IF ONLY I I REALLY MEAN IT! YEAR AFTER YEAR?
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WASH TUBBS BY LESLIE TURWER
M 55 BURKE 15 / MATTER U'TAC T H‘ULK& ‘ THE WATERFRONT, b MAY T o THIS WAY, le:v.‘;". WE'LL I,‘l:Tfi:‘—h')";:‘mm~«
HERE TO IDENTIFY \ INGPECTOR..WE AINT |\ Zndl | TRANSPORTATION LINES, \ QUESTION |BB OUT FROM AMONG SEVERAL OTHER PRISONERS
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CONSTABLE. AND I| [ e||} i A 4 | WATCHED! 'E WON'T SOU HAVE (B -
CAME ALOMG TO /f! {| i I|| GET OUT O' PENTAGEL! IN CUSTODY, |
QUESTION CAPTAIN /F~ AR BPus 1!I/ | i ¥ D . CONSTABLE i e
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ALLEY OOP , ; BY V. T. HAMLIN
HERE! WHATS THIS? | 1 FOUND HES : ST W (e —— —ry ——
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VIC FLINT . BY MICHAEL O’'MALLEY and RALPH “ANE
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( 1 LOVED YOU Y HOW I'VE MISSED WELL, MY FAMILY'S pQOf’)fl‘ s "o | ) DU'. Y, WE'RE bu.f-.:f,:u';:r' \,ul 2ok
ALL ALONG, YOU SINCE YOU WENT ) PECTS ARE LOOKING UP, THAH = = @ednwh.l \. PARIS FO!E2, THE MQ:-)IAA\éALUé:LI:
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ; BY EDCAR MARTIN -
Lot o THIS \S ROSIE LDO You WELL , 1 JUST CAWNED TO g
REALZE ANOTHRER HORRWO ) WISH YOU A RNAPPY —
O YEAR \S HERE YO NEW NEAR ,YOQ POOR
STRUGELE THROUGH L\T5 ki TRING | ]
J (" S 0 HOPE\ESS . : | | R |
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