Newspaper Page Text
TAURSDAY, MAY 19, 1949.
BY LEON DRISKELL
Athens High School Journalism Student
«Athens, Georgia—center of education for the entire state.
Hiome of the University of Georgia.”
yes, Athens is almost synonymous with education and all the
pigher things that are associated with it.
The state of Georgia has maintained a college in Athens since
1801 when Josiah Meigs let a contract for actual construction on
pranklin College.
But did you know that Athens has never built a high school?
For 35 years the college-preparatory school of our town—the
center of education in Georgia—has been housed in a former
courthouse.
We of Athens are lucky to live in a college town and to have
the opportunity to attend college while living at home. But is that
opportunity being used to its fullest by the masses of Athens young
yeople?
: l:) a school that occupies a former courthouse fit for Athens
voung people? Can a foundation suitable for college entrance be
obtained under the present A. H. S. conditions?
For 35 years, even with an outmoded building, the city of Ath
ens with the cooperation of the Board of Education has kept the
<andards of Athens High at the top.'But without a really modern
educational plant, this fine work cannot now continue.
Athens can have an educational plan equal to any in the state.
Bonds will do it.
Wwe. the youth of Athens, have no doubt as to the outcome of
Tuesday’s election. Athens will not fail us! s
Chi Omega Plan
Lawn Dance
For Saturday
“On the Chi Omega lawn
next Saturday night
The setting for fun will be
just right.
Over the walks and under
the trees
Chinese lanterns will swing
in the breeze.
From 8 tili 12 we’ll dance
and play
So won’t you come down
Chi O way? .
P. S. Should snow or hail
or raindrops fall,
We'll find a roof to shelter
gl
Thus reads the invitation to the
annual Chi Omega lawn dance
Saturday night from 8 to 12 at
the Chi Omega House.
It is tradition to hold the rush
party on the lawn of the Chi
Omega House, with decorations to
suit the occasion. Members, guests
and their dates will dance in the
setting of, white picket fences,
RADRO CHOCK
WG A U -CBS
THURSDAY EVENING
6:oo—Eric Sevareid and News
(CBB), .
6:ls—Counter Spy.
6:4s—Lowell Thomas and News
(CBS).
7:00-—Beulah (CBS).
7:ls—School Bongd Issue,
T:3o~Chub- 15 (CBS Jaweertomapons
7:4s—Edward R. Murrow
(CBS).
8:00—F. B. I. in Peace and War
(CBS).
8:30-—Mr. Keen, Traver of Lost
Perscns (CBS).
9:oo—Suspense (CBS).
9:3o—Crime Photographer
(CBS).
10:00—Hallmark Playhouse
(CBS). :
10:30—Here’s to Veterans.
10:45—Naval Air Reserve
Program.
11:00—Georgia News.
11:05—Dancing in the Dark.
12:00—News.
12:05—Sign OffL.
FRIDAY MORNING
6:SS—AP News.
7:00—Good Morning Circle,
T:3o—~Weita News Briefs,
up (CBS).
I:3s—Good Morning Circle,
I:4s—Songs From the Old
Hymnal.
8:00—CBS World News Round
-8:15—Good Morning Circle.
B:3o—~Music Shop Parade. ’
9:OO—CBS News of America
(CBS). !
9:ls—Strength for the Day.
).30—Salute to Music,
9:45—01d Ceoerral. .
10:00—Rich’s Radio School.
10:15—Mid-Morning News,
10:30—-Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Ring the Bell.
11:45—Rosemary (CBS).
12:00—~Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
FRIDAY AFTERNOON ’
12:1 s—Hillbilly Matinee,
12:45—Farm Flashes.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—~Young Dr. Malone (CBS)
I:l4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Feminine Footnotes.
2:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
mi Afin% 1 \H g "“g :‘
D .. (8 V"
“"’“r\\\gz., %
&w&\‘ Wl Dress Up
‘\“o } Your o
5 "‘V, 1 ' . e
Living Room
€
Select from our hundreds of creations by Schu
macher . . . gorgeous new ORIGINALS,
Thr o . . 5] !
Thetma eI e il s S‘\
your pieces new again. & :
_{ Upholstering
NORRIS HARDWARE willes 8
e = e
P /
“Yote 26?052:63730::55” ? Q,iJ
covered with vines and red and
white roses, arches also covered
with roses, and Chinese lanterns
swinging over the lawn.
Ben Shorter and his orchestra
will furnish the musie, both fast
and sweet, intermingled with
waltzes appropriate for the set
ting.
Chaperones include Miss Daisy
McDonald, Dr. and Mrs. Tom
Whitehead, Dr. and Mrs. M. C.
Prunty, Dr. and Mrs. B. O. Will
iams, Mr. and Mrs. Morton Hodg
son, and Dr. and Mrs. Claude
Chance.
* * &
The Pentagon, the world’s larg
est office building, is only five sto
ries high, but consists of five rings
of buildings connected by 10 cor
ridors.
l.t YOUR CHILD
UALLL Y ~DESERVES
{‘,” Easy to give—
~Y ho breaking of ST JOSEPH
tablets. Assures accu- .
rate dosage — tablets B * ASPIRIN +
are Y adult dose. RFOR CHILDREN
Orange flavored. 35c.
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake
(CBS).
2:4s—What Makes you Tick
(CBS). ’
3:00—1340 Platter Party.
3:2s—News.
3:30—1340 Platter Party.
4:00—To Be Announced,
4:2S—CBS News.
4:3o—Get Acquainted Hour.
s:oo—~Voice of the Army.
s:ls—Sleepy Joe.
s:3o+~Sports Parade.
“s'Bs—Herb Shriner Time,
FRIDAY
6:oo—Sign On.
6:oo—Reveilie Roundup.
6:4s—Blackwood Brothers
Quartet.
7:OO—UP News.
7:os—The Blessed Hope.
7:3o—Reeville Rowndup.
7:4S—WRFC Tracmng Post,
7:ss—Daseball Scores,
8:00—Holder News.
B:ls—The Musical Clock.
B:SS—UP News.
9:oo—Morning Devotional.
9:3o—Show Tune Time.
9:4s—The Femvinine Agenda.
10:00—WRFC Telephone Party.
10:30—Athens High School Bond
Issue.
10:30—Novelty Tune Time,
10:45—Vocal Time.
11:00—Chuck Wagon.
12:00—Hillbilly Review.
12:15—Holder News.
12:30—Eddy Arnold Show.
12:45—Farm News and Market
Summary. 2
1:00—UP News.
I:os—Luncheon Parade.
2:oo—Pat O’Brien.
2:ls—Vocal Varieties.
2:3o—Closing Market
Quotations.
2:3s—Vocal Varieties.
3:oo—Hive of Jive.
3:3o—Rhett’s Record Room.
2:ss—University of Georgia-
Georgia Tech.
6:oo—Dave Dennis._
6:ls—Tomorrow’s Headlines.
6:3o—Sports Roundup.
6:4s—Sammy Kaye Showroom.
7:oo—Athens High Schpol Bond
Issue.
7:ls—Candlelight ‘and Silver,
7:3o—Sign Off.
Here's What Big Four, WillkArgdiefAbout
Soviet Union hopes that a unified DENMARK s i ! West wants return of most of
Germany will block formation of oy 2 7 ‘ . feostern Geemany to Germans.
West German State, enable Com- SR This area was given to Poland by
munists to spread their doctrine e 5 \ - Russia to compensate for eastern
‘ beyond limits of Soviet zone and ; ( \ i Poland, amnexed by USSR in 1939.
block participation of western Do CB R, sy
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iU. S. Britai 4 /////4/ / ¢ ; : § Waestern diplomats will insist
i ritain und Z (VY ZQNE di g on Russia’s willingness to
: tmncc are e’ép‘i’;'te / (o § gront German people certain |
B (: propose abolition / g basic freedoms, which do|
4of zones and a uni- 1 //// / e 1 i not exist in Russi
fied Germany with / i B ssia. i
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withdrawal of occu- /ZO; B R . AR
pation troops when a// // “ 0 ERussia is expected to demand a voice |,
| German peace can // . 7 4 ; i Qiand vetvin Ruhr industry, a plebiscite 1\
! be arranged. N @ . 4on Gerinan unity and immediate with
i T g N A LN d;ow':flrof all occupation forces. Any
; { : Gz Ros thise moves would, pave way for
SWITZERLAND ¢ USTR'A i} eventual Red control of all Germany.
(EA.O i $ geEE T ’ 8
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‘ This map highlights the'mg}nr proposals and problems facing the Bi& Four foreign ministers at
| their Paris conference. Ifyis the first attempt to settle Germany’s frfure since ti» “2ilure of tha
Billie Burke Plans Tour
Introducing Autobiography
BY 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, May 19—(AP) !
Billie Burke is hitting the road |
again — this time with a differ- |
enltJ)roduction.
‘ter she finished “Baby Is
Here” the actress leaves on a tour
to-help introduce . her autobio
graphy, “With a Feather an My‘
Nose,” which she wrote with Cam- l
eron Shipp. She’ll autograpn |
books in San Francisco, Chicago,
Philadelphia, Washington, ~New |
York*and other cities. l
June Lockhart still hasn’t work
ed in picture after being called
back from her Broadway sensa
tion over a year ago. She is still
under contract to Eagle-Lion,
which has been embroiled in fi
nancial troubles.
5 iy Tough Guy '~
- James--Cagney ~will - give mew
comer Richard Widmark a few
lessons in how to be a film tough
JUST RECEIVED!
TWO FAVORITES FOR THE |
WOMEN WHO SEW..!.. o -
36”7 COTTON CORD
® A fine cotton fabric you'll find only at Pen- S
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® Sanforized sturdily woven in colors of blue, 98C
grey and black!
® Penney value at a thrifty - low price! y&.
For Thrift - Wise Sew At Homes!
WAFFLE PIQUE
Onc of the leading fabrics of the season, so Kk
popular because of its crisp, cloan good fooks, ~ loday At
You'll appreciate how easy they are to care for. 79C
In colors of lilac, blue, pink, white and maize.
All 36" wide. J d'
P NNEY 'S
London confurcnce in Docember, 1847,
guy. In “White Heat,” Jimmy
'clocks a dozen or more Kkillings.
'ln one scene he bumps off Steve
Cochran, then kicks the corpse
downstairs to other gangsters,
muttering, “Catch!”
Looks like old time at War
ners, with Cagney, Bogart and
{Bette Davis back working on the
lot.
| S
Capsule Review: “The Judge
‘Steps Out” (RGO) is an evently
paced study of a Boston jurist who
tries to get away from it all. It’s
done with thought and taste, but
not too much excitement. Ann
Sothern shines in a too-brief role.
Alexander Knox, who also co-.
authored, manages to be polish«
ed and dull at the same time.
There were more than eight
milion volumes-and pamphlets in
the Library of Congress at the
close of 1947.
+iF. BANNER-ITERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
Trim Old Gloves
To New Lengths
Bob off those last year’s cotton
gloves which may be too long to
look chic with this summer’s in
formal clothes.
You can perform this surgery
very successfully by snipping off
tops of too-long gloves to “shortie”
or twist-hand length. Gloves of
double-woven cotton may not
event have to be hemmed after the
operation.
If you do want to hem glove
tops after you mark the new
length with a pencil and follow
the marking with your scissors,
use a whip stitch over the raw
edge that you turn in and finish
off.
To make your revamped white
gloves more resistant to soil—and
this goes for the other cotton’
gloves in your wardrobe — dip
them in a very light starch bath
after laundering. Then press. This
iextra step is worth the effort it
takes if you -want a longer lease
on the immaculate look of white
gloves.
Can Mother Show Interest In
Child And Still Allow Privacy?
“Can you tell me what's so ter
rible about asking an 18-year-old
daughter what boy she was talk-*
ing to on the telephone and if he
asked her for a date?” a bewild
ered mother asks.
It seems she answered the tele
phone for her daughter and when
the girl finished her conversation‘
she asked interestedly, “Who was
it, dear?” When the daughter told
her the boy’s name the mother
said: “Did he ask you for a date?”
With that, says the mother, her
daughter lost her temper, and said
it was “impossible to have any
privacy at home.”
Undoubtedly the innocent
sounding questions that caused
the flare-up were just the straws
that broke the camel’s back.
It isn't likely any daughter
would have become to upset over
such an incident unless for a long
time she had felt that her mother
wasn’t allowing her any privacy
at home. R
May Appear to be Prying
Many mothers who are natural
ly 'interested in all the details of
their children’s lives fail to see
that what they consider only “nor
mal interest” may seem like pry
ing to their children.
Actually, whether the interest is
issitating or not depends on how
it is shown. Continual questioning
is almost certain to seem like pry
e\ 1949 Summer
s Dress
AR (O :
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Si G 59 . ) Carnlval
= 24 w 0 P
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‘N g rarit -
Yours ... The Cool \3 oo N R
Crispness Of it j<
TUB AGAIN AND AGAIN... |
WORK HARD ALL SUMMER!
Cottons have picked up party manners, too -
. .. go anywhere, nowadays. Still the prac
tical tubbables they've always been, of
course, or better . . . many of these are pre- 2
shrunk, all will keep their good looks after
many a sudsing! Lots to choose from at a '
comfortable price, in junior, misses’ half
sizes. : :
BE SMART — BUY TWO
ing. But a mother who is more
diplomatic usually learns just as
much about a teen-ager’s doing by
being ready to listen when the
daughter seems to want to talk
and by being interested in what
the daughter confides of her own
free will.
Quick, Long-Lasting
*"‘fl HEADACHE
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&/ CAPUDINE
7 USE ONLY AS DIRECTED
Light Weight
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ATHENS CONCRETE PRODUCTS (CO.
College Ave. at Seaboard Depol.
PAGE ONE-A
Teen-agers may be overly sen
sitive about having their private'
lives forever open to family dis«
cussion. But everyone likes to
have some privacy.
Parents should reemmber that
as their children grow older, so
that home is a place that pro
vides some privacy for . every
member of the family.
KIDNEYS
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feel like & new person. Base for childrem iw
bod wetting, Olip this ad as s reminder W
got WEF-TEX Tablets at yeur drug stemn, J
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