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PAGE FOUR
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FOR-ALPS SIGHTSEERS —Damaged during the
| war, this glass sightseeing train, seating 72, Is back In service
agsin en route to Garmisch-Partenkirchen in the Bavarian Alps.
.Athenians To Attend
GEA Workshop Meeting
Miss Flo Ouida Williamson and
Miss Magdalene Glenn, President
and Publie Relations Chairman,
espectively, of the GEA Unit, and
Dr. O. C. Aderhold, president of
‘he Georgla Education Association,
Miss Ruby Anderson, Athens High
School; and Guy Cabe, president
of Clarke eounty GEA local unit
will attend the three-day Work
shop to be held at Jekyll Island,
August 14-17. Those attending
will be Presidents of GEA Local
Units and Public Relations Chair
men flncluding more than 400
Classroom Teachers, Principals,
Superintendents, members of State
Department of Education and Uni
veisity System.
The Workshop will be presided
over by GEA President, Dr. O. C.
Aderhold and J. Harold Saxon,
GEA Executive Secretary will
erve as Director of the Workshop,
wssisted by the GEA Central Of
lice Staff.
Major emphasis will be placed
s Public Relations, Educators
Ire recognizing the importance of
teeping the public, both at the
State and local levels informed as
‘0 the progress and needs of their
schoois. Dr, Ralph McDonald, Ex
acutive Director of the National
Commission on Teacher Education
and Professional Standards and
Jr. George Kerry Smith, of the U.
3. Office of Education, will attend
‘he Workshop as out-of-state Con
sultants.
Serving as Discussion Leaders
will be 8. H. Shearouse, Teacher
“ducation-and Professional Stand
wrds: Dr. O, C, Aderhold, Minimum
"oundation Program of Education;
or. Mark Smith, Publie Relations;
Or, J. L. Yaden, Teachers’ Retire
nent; Mrs. Mary Dan Coleman,
safgty Education; Miss Reba Burn
wam, Resource Agencies; Mrs.
vella K, Mills, Local Unit Presi
ients at Work; Dr. Ralph Mc-
Donald, Local GEA Unit and NEA.
Those invited to serve as con
sultants are L .M. Lester, Mary
3rooks, W. E. Pafford, Ruby An
derson, Rufus Pulliam, John Med
‘in, Teacher Education and Pro
‘essional Standards: Dr. M. D. Col
‘ins, Dr, J. 1. Allman, Mrs. Lucille
Zonoly, Claude Purcell, Joe Wil
jiams, John BSims, Minimum
foundation Program of Education;
Or. Raymond R, Paty, J. C
Haynes, Dr. George Rerry Simmiih,
Jr. M. D. Mobley, Mr. Fred Slygh,
Public Redations; Mrs. Elsie Hol
iday, Teachers’ Retirement; Mrs.
ONE RACK
Summer Dresses
DARK COTTONS AN N
10.95 to 12.95 Values J“ y 5
Summer Skirts
Sheer Batiste
BLOUSES
REDUCED TO —— 3‘95
ALL SALES FINAL, PLEASE
The Fashion Shop
Fred Knight, Ernest B. Smith, Jim
(‘.;oodmi Safety Education; Mrs.
Ralph Hobbs, Dr. T. F. Sellars,
Ears H. Lindsey, H. L. Wingate,
Mrs. Joe Ray, Dr. Walter Brown,
C. 8. Hubbard, Sarah Jones, Lu-~
cille Nix, Elizabeth Donovan, Bev~
erly Wheaterroft, Garland Bagley,
Eleanor Pryor, J. M. Prance and
Pendleton Mitchell, Resourece
Agencies.
Love Begins
At Forty—
Or Does It?
BY CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Newufeatures Writer
There is considerable talk—one
might almost say propaganda—
about how mistaken we all are in
assuming that life stops abruptly
around the 40th birthday.
The opinion, however, is held
in sonre pretty important places—
like employers who want to hire
new hands. Almost any want-ad
section you read is studded with
job notations bearing age require
ments, most of which place 35 as
the maximum, A Mr. Pitkin wrote
a book about life beginning at 40
which several years ago put a lit
tle fire into the idea that wisdom
and experience counted for some
thing too.
But no one seems to have done
much to disabuse the general pub
lic idea that there can be fun,
even glamor, on the long side of
the 40th birthday. And for this
little notion, I think we can thank
heartily not only the movies but
our popular fiction mayazines,
Miss Isobel Moore, wjpo writes
stories and sells them to these
aforementioned magazines, came
right out on a radio broadcast 1
happened to be listening to on=z
day and adnritted there was a
magazine cabal against permit
ting any female of such advanced
years becoming, of all things, a
heroine.
“If you want to sell your story,”
said Miss Moore with some bit
terness, “you have to keep your
heroine under 40, and she must
be slim, Oh, she might have 2a
few gray hairs, but only a very
iew.”
This situation, she continued
offers some preity problems to
authors who have evolved a plot
Marines To
Hold Meets
For Velerans
Philadelphia will be host to the
reunion of the fighting Fifth Ma
rine Division on August 5-7
while veterans of the famous
First Marine Division will, assem
ble in New York on August 6-8
Marines and Marine veterans
are expected to pour into the two
large eastern cities. However,
there will be one guest at the
First Division reunion that won't
“pour” or “be poured”—at least
anytime soon, we hope. That
guest will be a bottle of rare old
Cognac.
The Cognac is a gift from
Ralph McGill editor of the Aft
lanta Constitution and a former
Marine.
After hearing a group of men
from the First Division discuss
ing plans to form a club that
would nveet on August 7th each
year to commemoraie the landing
on Guadalcanal and to drink a
toast to their departed buddies,
Mr. McGill offered the bottle and
suggested that it be keygt and pre
sented to the last surviving mem
ber of the club,
Thus, the “Last of the First”
club was started. &
Membership in the organiza
ticn i= spen to all men who have
actually participated in combat
during World War II with the
First Marine Division (Rein
forced) and, if discharged, have
been separated under honorable
conditions,
The club is pledged te perform
acts of charity ot the members
widows and dependents of mem
bers of the First Marine Divis
ion (Reinforced).
This year the Cognac will be
taken from its resting place in
the vault of the First National
Bank, Atlanta, Gs., and flown
through courtesy of Eastern Air
lines, to the New York reunion
It will remain there during the
three-day get-together and will
then be returned to Atlanta ‘o
await succeeding anniversaries,
until finally it will be claimed—
by the last surviving member of
this proud organization
Church Is
Housed In
Barracks
By NEA Service
PLEASANT HILL, Calif. —
(NEA) — Into a converted army
officers’ barracks building, origi
nally designed for 20 men, 150
children and their teachers disap
pear every Sunday in a prime
example of the crowded living that
is part of California’s new popula
tion boom,
The barracks building has be
come, with the addition of a tiny
steeple, the Pleasant Hill com
munity Baptist Church. And like
the rest of California, it is burst
ing at the seams to serve about 300
families in this little town 16 miles
from Oakland.
The magician who managed to
crowd so many people into the 38-
by-20-foot main building, plus two
added rooms 12-by-20 and five
by-ten feet is Pastor William L.
Reid. He utilizes even the space
between organ and pulpit for one
of the 12 different classes going on
at the same time, and the Sunday
School is growing so fast he soon
expects to put it on a “double
shift” basis.
Outside, he has begun utilizing
automobiles in which parents have
brought their children to conduct
outdoor adult class sessions.
Pastor Reid’s little church bulges
the same nearly every weekday as
it does on Sundays. Daytimes, it's
the community kindergarten.
There are evening meetings of
various groups every night.
about a married woman (the he
roine) who has adult children,
This plot occasionally, very oc
casionally occurs jin magazines |
just to break up the monotony of
a steady diet of young-love, boy
meets-girl romances.
“And it's a real problem,” said
Miss Moore. “You constantly find
yourself in the position of hav.
ing a heroine who must have
mrarried when she was 13, 14 or
15 years old. Or else you have to
be uncomfortably vague about
her current vears or the passuge
of time.” :
We all know that in the movies,
attractive mothers always look
in their early 30s.
Both the magazines and motion
pictures are aesthetically inter
ested in keeping older heroines
on the painfully thin side. The
magazines have their glamor il
lustrations to think about, too l
The result of this campaign-—
it’s probably unintentional nndl
oconcerned with popularity — has
been unfortunate. The great Am- |
erican reading and movie-going |
public has gradually absorbed the |
idea that (a) once a woman ic’
40, she's ready for knitting and
the rocking chair, brother and}
that’s it and (b) nothing inter- |
esting or exciting can possibly
happen to a woman a bit over
the weight limit.
Obviously, that can't be true
Remember, the Duchess of Wind
sor was 40 when she became a
Duchess. Remember, the number
one hobby of American woman is
dieting, as a look at the adver
tisements and article in those
same offending magazines will
tell you. If you took out of circu
lation all the plump girls and
women in the country, more than
the nation’s economy would be
upset. The nation's menfolk
would be, too, and there certain
ly wouldn't be anywhere near |
enough women to go around
There has been a notahle in
~rease in heroines' ages recently
in the magazine stories Seems to
me now that the ideal are is ’
round 29 for unmarried he -« ines |
Yhe masvied enog aan enon T By ','
the trirfins and still hang on to |
Tomance and glanror.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
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SERVES 1,798 IN TOWN OF 7,00 O—secashore Pool, in Lebanon, Ind., (population 7,000) can accommodate
1,798 persons daily. Censer is 10 feet deep, with shallow water next, sloping up from 44 feet o a sand beach and greensward.
t Sfepcks s $1 DELIVERS
ised i While They Last!
Exactly as Advertised in LIFE and LOOK—for August 0n1y—549.95 . ... Whiie They Last
o 4 N SOAR INTO THE CLOUD OF ROMANCE WITH A LANE
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palented automatic tray. 88 § ¥ .
curisTAAS GBS s ! )X/
Sweethearts! Look Ahead! Now, dur- priced especially {or this August event. '
ing August, is the thrifty time to buy Our August special L.ane Chest has all o
her Lane Christmas gift and save. Take Lane’sexclusive qflahty gmd moth pro
from now until Christmas to pay. See tection featuz.'eSwmclud!ng free moth - :
this amazing Lamne value, and others, insurance policy. Come in today. -
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SUNDAY, JULY 31. 1249,
LCO,S : Spree
A 85,000
Give-Away
CLEVELAND,—-(NEA,RFO, 2”
years, Le. Bruneiii worked, ¢,
ed and saved for one big splyrge
For 18 of those years, he Wwas
‘tree trimmer. The othe; fiy, Vears
‘he worked as a dock laborer”
Altogether he haveq up SSOOO
That, he and h.s wife fe); Was
erough. The time was ripe for
their long awaited spree,
What they did was, literally
give it away. :
The Brunettis went ¢, their
native Italy. Leo hadn't Laep
there is 28 years, but he'g been
reading about the conditions, He'g
heard of the poverty Bripping the
Italian peasani.
So Leo and his wife bought
bought S2OOO worth of clothing
and took it along with thom He
gave all of it away to relatives and
old friends that he tried to locate,
They were a shabby lot, “dregs
ed like gvnsias ™ T.an ranalls oy
were all tearfully gratetul for the
gift of a decent coat or a dress,
When the supply of glothing
was exhausted, ‘he Brunettis
found that the supply of needy
persons was still big. So they pe.
gan to give away thoir own warg.
robe.
By the time they wer. ready to
come back, all they had wit,
them was the clothes they were
wearing.
Leoc Brunetti is b~k on his jop
as dock laborer for a big indys.
trial firm here. His bank account
is slim again, but his smile i
broader than it’s ever been, Ang,
may be in another 23 year:, there
may be another spree.