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PAGE FOUR
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Lord who shall abide
thy tabernacle? whe shall
dwell in thy holy hill?
He that walketh wup
rightly, and worketh
' righteousmess and speaketh the truth in his
' heart—Psalm 15:1-2,
ee e e e e
Have you = favorite Bible verse? Mail to
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel.
»
Public Works Shelf Stocked
~ Against Possible Lean Years
‘ ‘ BY PETER EDSON
h NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON.— (NEA) —As unemployment
hangs around the 3,000,000 figure, doggedly re
fusing to drop, demands for an increase in gov
ernment public works spending get louder and
more insistent.
Nobody in his right mind believes any more
that leaf-raking or public works spending will
cure a depression. The construction industry
accounts for only about 4 percent of present U. S.
unemployment. But it 1s one of the least stable
segments of the economy. When it starts slipping,
other industries are apt to follow, It slipped badly
in 1928, for instance, Look wh.t happened in 1929.
From this has grown some belief that if the
eonstruction industry can be stabilized, it will help
avert slumps in other lines,
Another lesson learned from the last depression
is that it takes time to get a construction program
going. Public Works Administration had $3,000,-
000,000 to spend on useful projects in the 1930'5.
But it took PWA 18 months to plan and start
enough work to get 100,000 men on the job.
Fearing that @ serious depression might follow
the last war, Congress made $65,000,000 available
to the Public Works Administration to aid state
and local governments in planning schoels, city
halls, sewers, auditoriums and so on, Loans from
this fund were made repayable when actual con
struction was started,
LOAN AUTHORITY HAS EXPIRED
Authority to make these loans expired in July,
1947, Of the $2,500,000,000 worth of projects plan=
ned, over $1,500,000,000 worth have been built.
The others are still on i..e shelf,
The theory that public construction should be
curtailed in boom times and expanded in times of
depression makes good economic sense, Doing it
that way helps stabilize employment at high lev=
els. Also it reduces the cost of government con=
struction projects.
Several bills bave been introduced in this ses
sion of Congress to start planning again. Demo
cratic Senators Pepper of Frorida and Green of
Rhode Island have one to provide $50,000,000 a
year non-interest-bearing loans to state and local
¢ governments for planning.
' Senator James E. Murray of Montana and six
other Democrats have in preparation a bill which
would make $7,000,000 a year available to Federal
Works Agency to finance planning of a 10-year,
$15,000,000,600 sheli oi public works,
One bill which Congress has passed and the
President has signed provides for federal goveri=
ment planning and site acquisition. It was spon
sored by Senator Dennis Chavez of New Mexico.,
It authorizes $40,000,000 expenditures for planning
new government buildings determined necessary
by Postmaster Jesse M. Donaldson and the Federal
‘Works Administrator Jess Larson, In addition,
$30,000,000 would be made available to Public
Buildings Commissioner W. E, Reynolds for repair
and modernization of existing federal buildings.
There dre now more than 4,000 new federal
Yuildings proposed. Individual congressmen have
troduced hundreds of bills for construction of
pew post offices in their distri:t:, The Chavez bill
will provide plans for 450, or something less than
$0 percent of what are considered necessary, No
money has yet been appropriated to do any actual
sonstruction, however,
®THER MEASURES PENDING
Other measures now before Congress would of
yourse increase federal construction funds if
ssed. The puolic housing and slum clearance
E.l. Columbia Valley Authority plan, a proposed
600,000,000 military construction program, flood
gontrol, rivers and harbors, reclamation and pub-
Yic roads appropriations will step up expenditures
materially. But it is doubtful if the effects of any
of this will be felt before 1850,
Estimates on construction activity for 1949 put
she total volume at over $18,000,000,000. Over $5,-
$00,000,000 of this is public construction—Federal
ptate and local. It is diviged rougnly as rollows:
Mighways, $1,725,000,000; conservation, SBOO,OOO,
800; schools, $800,000,000; sewers and waterworks,
$575,000,000; hospitals, $425,000,000; nmilitary,
$100,000,000; miscellaneous $825,000,000,
Private construction is divided roughly $6,000,«
000,000 residential, $3,000,000,000 for utilities, sl,=
900,000,000 industrial, %1,000,000,000 commercial,
$2,000,000.00¢0 miscellaneous,
At present labor rates and materials prices,
with about 2,000,000 workers employed in the $lB,~
©00,000,000-a-year construction industry, it takes
about SO,OOO expenditures to provide one man
year of work.
Another way of estimating it is that about one
third of all construction costs go to on-site labor.
But for every worker employe don-site, two others
are employed off-site,
Accord Looks Hopeful
The four-power accorl reached at Paris resem
bles the first shaky steps of the hospital patient
arising from a long siege in bed. No one can be
sure whether he’ll soon be walking more steadily
or whether he'll flop back into bed in a state of
collapse. <
In other words, it is impossible to put down at
this tinre the real value of the agreements, They
hinge on the good faith of the Russians. They can
mean a firm stride toward peace, or nothing,
The western diplomats and their peoples can be
forgiven for viewing the results with tongue in
cheek until they see how the Soviet Union per
forms. The memory of broken agreements ig still
vivid.
The most promising feature of the accord is that
relating to the proposed Austrian peace treaty, If
such a treaty could be signed, it would mean re
moval of Russian troops nut only from Austria but
from Hungary and Rumania, where they are sup
posedly guarding lines to Austria,
In the present tentative advance, we plainly
owe much to Russia’s feud with Marshal Tito of
Yugoslavia. A major barrier to agreement was re
moved when the Soviet Union withdrew its sup
port of Tito’s territorial clainys against Austria.
Russia also showed a somewhat more co-opera
tive spirit in the knotty matter of German assets
in Austria. The Kremlin yielded its former sweep
ing demand in this field and agreed to accept
$150,000,000 from Austria In seitlement of its
claims,
Beyond this, however, the western powers stip
ulated that the final settlement would give Russia
all the assets of the Danube Shipping Company in
Austria, Hungary, Rumania and Bulgaria; and
substantial extraction and prospecting rights in oil
fields in eastern Austria.
The assets problem, furthermore, is still left
open. And last-minute Russian maneuvering at
Paris raises the question of whether Moscow may
not yet find a way to fasten a stranglehold on
Austria’s econony. -
The deputy foreign ministers and regular diplo
matic channels will try to settle remaining provis
ions of the Austrian treaty by September 1, Mean-~
time, we can perhaps gauge Russian sincerity by
watching the Soviets’ behavior in Germany.
The Paris agreement frankly conceded the four
powers’ inability to get anywhere on German
unity and a peace treaty, But all pledged them
selves to go on trying for those goals.
As interim steps, they reaffirmed the New York
agreement on lifting of the Berlin blockade,
agreed to work further for restoration of mormal
traffic and communications, to return at least in
part to four-power control of Germany, and to
seek expansion of trade and other economic rela
tions between the eastern and western zones,
Western officials aren’t putting much stock in
these features. The general reaction is that in Ger
nrany we are about where we were before the
Paris conference began a month ago. But they are
willing to be shown,
Possibly the chief gain in ail this is none of the
specific proposals but simpily the evidence that
Russia appears to desire of lessening of cold war
tensions—at least for the moment,
Without knowing for sure why Russia wants
this breathing spell, we can welcome it. So long
as we do not relax our vigilance against a quick
Soviet turnabout toward new cold war aggres
sions.
.
Small Farms And Fishponds
Neaay all fardis, large. or dSuuas, p...w w uave
fishponds. Nearly all farms in Georgia nhave on
them springs, small or large, that could furnish
the water., The expense of throwing up a small
dam is relatively small.
A little fish pond adds to the beauty and attrag
tiveness of a farm. It furnishes amusement for
the little children. Properly stocked with fish, it
can be made so yield at least a modest amount of
fish for the table.
It will not, of course, allow one to manufacture
big fish tales that can be brought back from va
cation trips and peddled around through the
neighborhood, but the small boy can use his im
agination in telling his experience with rod and
line, and sometimes they get up some quite fabu
lous stories. :
For the amount of money necessary to provide
a small fishpond on a farm the yield in beauty,
relaxation and enjoyment, the yield is large and
significant,
If this is allowed to stand, if the whitewash (of
the Malmedy Massacre trials) succeeds, the United
States can never protest the use of these methods
by tectalitarian countries. If the United States
condones these actions by a few men, all the world
can critivize and forever after question our mo
tives.—Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (R) of Wis
consin.
Wherever you turn your eyes you see the ugly
spectacle of Britons being hurt or imsulted in
some parts of the world. . . . The sooner the pres
ent ministers are dismissed from office the sooner
we shaall regain our self respect and command
the respect of others.—Winston Churchill.
New York state, especially Suffolk county, on
Long Island, i the largest producer of ducks in
the United States.
THE BANMER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA,
Athenians Will
Attend NEA Meet
Two Athenians, Miss Ruby Anderson and Mrs, Freddie
Haggard, will attend the annual convention of the Nat
ional Education Association in Boston, Mass., July 3-8.
Mrs. Haggard will repr nt the
local unit of the Georgia Educa
tion Association. Fred Ayres, su
perintendent of schools, will be
elected the delegate from the local
unit of the GEA but is ur-ble to
attend the conv.ntion un account
of being engage” in plans for the
bi school building program here.
Mrs. Haggard was designated to
attend as the local delegate when
Mr. Ayres found he could not
make the trip.
Miss Anderson : a member of
the Educational Policies Commis
sion.
Ziccording to an announcement
from Boston, postwar fears and
tensions which have intensified
interest in public education during
recent months will provide the
background for the Convention of
the NEA. Pre-convention sessions
start Friday w~hen the NE£ - -
cutive committee meets at Hotel
Statler. |
Three thousand delegates from
all parts of the United States and
its territories will ‘ake part in the
corvention as representatives of
the 8231900 members in state and
local education associations affil
iated with the NEA, the teachers’
national professional organization.
Threatened Probes
Threatened iuvestigations of
school and college textbooks by
the House Committee on Un-
American Activities, legislation in
various states requiring loyalty
oaths of teachers and policies cor
cerning of teachers who are mem
bers of the comraunist party have
focused attertion on two reports
which will be presented at the
convention.
The NEA Committee on Tenure
and Academic Freedom, headed
by Martin Essex, superintendent
of schools, Lakewood, Ohio, will
present the results of a nation
wide study of legislative davelop
n euts on teach irs’ oaths and rela
ted state requirements.
Delegates also will receive the
report, “American Education and
International Tension,” published
} on June 8 by the Educational Pol
icies Commission. Oue of the mo:’
’ influential policy-making groups
of the NEA, this commission of 20
leading educators — including
President Couant co Harvard and
President Eisenhower of Colum
bia University — has taken the
stand that (1) communism should
be taught, but not advocated, in
the nation’s schools; and (2) mem
bers of the com . ‘nist party of
th United States are unfit to dis
charge the duties ~f a teacher in
this country. S i
Other important problems
which will come before the teach
ers are cited by the Educational
Policies Commission in its report.
“The educational crisis that was
predicted by responsible educa
tional leaders as much as ten
years ago and that has been grow
ing all through the years of the
depression and war,” the commis
sio. asserts, “is now full upon us.
The supply of teachers is inade
quate; the buildings are not avail
able; the school population is rap=
idly increasing, p-rticularly in the
elementary grades. Only the most
heroic efforts will n eet the situa
tion.”
The commission points out that
security measures will continue to
make heavy economi¢ demands on
the American people. Payment for
past wars, operations in the cold
war, overseas aid, the mainten
ance of the occupution forces, the
conduct of our information serv
ices abroad, and many other inter
national activities point tot-ard
c.ntinued high incomes taxes and
prices, in the view of the commis
sion, as compared with prewar
levels.
Closely Related
“This situation,” the e¢ommis-
y v o . ~ e
You've got to drive it to believe it R
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economy. And in the Futuramic “88,” g \o7 TN 4«“"} faP B o ‘ f”>
all these features of the future com!ine i ‘ T e g 55 " ) s Ay ¥ }-Q\ e
for a sparkling new spirit—a nic:'le 3 L /oo T PSR (L Q 7 s ey
eagerness—"The New Thrill” You've e 4 40 f 8 G
got to try it to belicve itl So— e s N LU S’ ' F“TuR AM ' c
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. PROCKET" demonatre:- - WITH "ROCKET" ENGINE
\ Contact your Olda R T SHydra-Matic Drive standard equipment om Series
\ ) dler. Ao - e e
" - tion to a Fuiura..ic
JEz oLPSMOBIL
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date with the *'88! _ A GENERAL MOTORS VALUX
Pl 1606, CITY MO TORS, INC. Or Visit 127 E. Broad Street
lone 1000, L MO 10O1nS, lING. Ur vVisit . broad Stree
sio~ declares, “presents a series
of closely related problems that
demand action by teachers, school
administrators, school boards,
state legislatures and the federal
government.
“The inflation nf the costs of
education affects all aspects of
school finance. Salaries, already
too low before the war, have con
tinued to lag substantially behind
the incomes of other gainfully oc
cupied workers.
“Public schools ar~ now suppor
ted primarily from state and ‘ocal
revenues. These, in turn, ar< to a
large lg:free derived from taxes
upon property. Such revenues
do not respond s: flexibly to rap
idly rising costs as do other sourc
es. This is one reason why the
f ceral government should pro
vide funds to hel, the states to
adjust school expenditures to the
‘new high levels. Whatever the
costs of security ma; be, our pres
_ent financial arrangements cannot
rnderwrite the recuired educa
tional program.”
The commission asserts that t'.e
nation, “having neglected the or
dinary replacement of both build
ings and personnel for a decade,
m- t now pay the penalty in the
form of higher state, local and
federal support. Th only alterna
tive is gravely inadequate educa
tional opportunitie:, with accom-
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GRIFFIN LIQUID WAX
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Supper every Thurs
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ph:ny‘i'ng peril to the nation’s fu-
IS,
The commission predicts that
the existence of unusual tensions
will continue to produce “violent
attacks by some sections of the
public on the schools and the
teaching staff.”
Most common of these attacks,
according to the commission, is the
charge that the schools and teach
ers are “subversive” or “leftist.”
Other voices, the commission says,
call the school system “reaction
ary” or “a tool of capitalism ”
The commission points ouf that
“educators are accustomed to this
attack from all sides and recog
nize that a certain amount of it
is a necessary hazard of their oc
cupation. However if such charg
es, with their usual accompani
ment of investigac.ons, book ban
ning, and efforts at intimidation,
become too violen!, frequent and
widespread, they can seriously im
pair the efficiency of the school
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BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
ATHENS COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
© 1949, The Coca-Cola Company
system in' dischar, .ag its essential
functions in Amswicar lile. The
edncational profession will need,
i:. the time of growing and some
times irrational public apprehen
sions, to explain and defend the
STRIKE I ouo
Serious l(l)ent: are ro'vnled b{rreoent medical
reports. out of ew: three persons ex
amined was & victim olm;in-Wonnn .+« Often
without suspecting it. And this ugl{ infec
tion spreads npliy through whole families,
can cause serious trouble if neglected.
Watch for warning signs—especially the
aggravating rectal itch, Get Jayne's P-W
Vermituge right away. P-W's vital ingredient i
a medically-approved drug that scientifically
kills Pin-Worins and removes them from the
body. The small, un{-to-uke P-W_tablets
were perfected by the famous Jayne Co., spe
cialists in worm remedies for over 100 y«ni
Ask your druggist: P-W ® for Pin-Worms
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1848,
m’mh of education fu American
Early-day surgeons were also
barbers.
SERVICE
YOUR CAR NOW,
SAVE ANNOYING
DELAY AND COSTLY
TROUBLES ON YOUR
VACATION.
SAFETY IS
IMPORTANT DURING
VACATION TIME.
J. Swanson vy, Inc.