Newspaper Page Text
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1949
Rob Thamas Says:
Eieanor Powell May
Extend Film Return :
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 27—(AP)
_Fleanor Powell,” who tapped
er way through many & musical
few years back, may make a
ermanent thing of her film re
irn.
The long-stemmed tapster is set
or a guest appearance in “Duch
ss ofldaho” -ith Esther Williams,
jer old home lot also wants her
o sign on for one picture a year
yr the future.
This information. comes from
er husband, Glenn Ford, on “The
vhite Tawer” set. He next returns
> his old alma mater, Columbia.
enn turned down a ‘chance to
o-star with Lana Turner in “A
ife of Her Own;” he didn’t like
e role. That’s getting to be a
\R-oblem picture, what with Lana
cportedly balking at doing it, too.
GARFIELD SHOW
John Garfield will t¢kip doing a
roadway show this scason. He'll
e on another picture after “The
ic Fall” and produce his own
iiniian Story” in Haly next sum
el.
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DRIVEIN
4107
oy THEATRE
WEDNESDAY
Buster Crabbe — Al SBt. John
in “PAN HANDLE”
LAST DAY :
John Wayne in
“FIGHTING SEABEES”
~rg"
STRAND
Cooled by Refrigeration
WEDNESDAY
M h dI s "
A Paramount Picture siarring d
BOROTHY DAN STERLING
Lamour - Duryea - Hayden
— LAST DAY =
“AMAZON QUEREE*
Air - Conditioned TOMORROW
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X ..Oa. TR i Directed by Produced by
i i ANDRE de TOTH - WILLIAM PERLBERG
& g Screen Piay by Herman Wouk and R a M . an Wous
;4; LAST TIMES TONITE:
) § =». Bing Crosby - Ann Blyth
) B SIS O inTOP 0) THE EIORVING"
GEORGIA
AIR . CONDITIONED !
._ TGH'I’ “THE PALEFACE" WAS FUNNY
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A FEATURE STARTS: 142, 3:97, §:32, 7227, 9:22 §
e e et ettt
bad The Banner-Herald Want Ads
*
Warners has refistered a bevy
of “Beach” titles. It plans a series
along the lines of “The Girl from
Jones Beach.”
Richard Conte is the latest to
feature male cheesecake in ads
for his latest picture. He joins Vie
Mature, Alan Ladd, Dougla: Fair
banks, jr., and other bare-chested
stars. If this trent keeps up, young
actors won't be asked “can you
act?” but ”let’s see your chest.”
Celeste Holm, free from: her stu
dio con.ract and glad of it, heads
for New York after “Champagne
for Caesar.” She has a couple of
play deals cooking and if ane iells,
she’ll give movies the go-by for a
year.
Red Skelton must ve training for
his future film, “Watch the
Birdie.” He was taking flash pho
tos all over the Chanteclair party
following Ed Wynn’s {elecast.
Vie Mature was . sked about re
ports of trouble at home. “Nothing
unusual for a guy like me,” he
repiied. “I'll say it was par for the
course,”
RI'TZ
WEDNESDAY — THURSDAY
JACK CARSON
DORIS DAY
"MY DREAM"
IS YOURS™
~ LAST DAY —
“MAN FROM COLORADO”
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HERE'S A ROAD WITH EXTRA BOUNCE—Cars shouid really bounce along this strip of
roadway in Columbus, O. It's one of two streets where the Ohio Highway Department is laying
a 300-foot exnarimentsl patch of rubberized pavementi. The sample sirips, 12 feet wide, will each
include more than 400 pounds of rubber. The rubber roads will be studied as to durability and
non-skid qualities. The projeet is expensive, and it will take years of testing to determine whether
rubber roads are practicable.
ol o
The Poor Man’s Philosopher
Hawaiian Police Beat
NEW YORK— (AP; -— There
is an Eskimo patrolman among
the pineapples of the paradise of
the Pacific.
And that doesn’t seem at all un
‘usuql to the top rop oi Honolulu
—Big Dan Liu, 40, a six-foot-one
inch Chinese.
| “We have at leat a dozen na
‘tionalities on our police force,” he
Jaughed. “And don't think we're
without Irish cops. I don’t know
where the Eskimo came from —
just drifted in from scmrewhere I
suppose. Now he’s walking a beat
‘for us. No, he does’t have a dog
sied. “I don’t believe he even has
a dog.” .
Liu is proud of the fact hs him
self worked up through every rank
to become the first Chinese chief
of police of an Amarican city. His
force reflects the polyglot popu
lation of the island melting pot.
Love to Be Cops
“One third are Hawaiians—they
really love to bc policemen,” said
Dan. 3
The other two th.rds are cauca
sians, Japanese, Chinese Samoans
and Filipinos. ;
Liu came to the mainland to at
tend an International Cop Caucus
at which he reported en Honolu
lu’s measures to avoid ‘‘another
Pearl Harbor.” Fai o
“We were the first pclice force
to organize for atomic defense,” he
said. “If an atom bomb falls on
our city we’ll be ready to dis
charge our responsibility to the
community.”
Then he smled as he added:
“Of course if our police are
within a two-mile range of the
explosion — well, they’ll be out.”
Dan iooks neither as inysterious
as Charlie Chan nor as stolid as
the average police chief who
worked his way up from a beat
pounder. He belongs to the newer
generation of cops who think that
preventing crime is as important
a police function as catching erim
inals.
His force has a full program of
sports, hobby training and recrea
tional activities for Honolulu
youngsters, and it mixes the kids
of all races together at an early
age.
Youth Holds Key
“youth holds the key to our fu
ture demccracy,” said Dan. “It is
for that reason vve try to work
along the young so much — to
teach them the Ameri an tradition
of good will and tolerance.”
Liu sets his police officers a
good example by his owa off-duty
civic work. He is a 'eader in the
Jocal Council of Churches, the
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REE-JET BOMBER IS UNVEILED oW
: \ —One of th st ¢ y a
underway for the U. S. Air Force has been the new ‘:t :ofllf’mmlt e siiy o(e
Martin XB-51, The XB-51 is the Air Force’s first three- mber above, so far identified only as the
specifically desi A g : st three-jet airplane, and the first postws lan
specifically esigned to give high-speed support to ground troops i " combat. T e Skove
point out unusual characier stics of the bomber ('1'1"»' ding :S Soh & si i e
mounted in the rear of the fuselage (71&:!55".(("1‘*1(‘(;:}‘uo‘;' ‘12“‘3\((25 ‘;xvthh L(W gt
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THE BAN
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
YMCA and Boy Scout activities.
The racial harmony that pre
vails in the Hawaiian Isles is the
envy of other areas where differ
ences in color, politics or religion
cause violence. X
“Our crime rate is lower than
many other cities of the same pop
ulation group,” said Dan, who be
lieves this is true iargeiv because
of the islands’ rodiserimination
policy. He is married to a girl
rom Mississippi. §
“Two things make cur islands
what they are. One is the brother
hood of Aloha, which simply
means love from the heart with
out anything held back.” The other
spirit that prevails is Kokua, it is
hard to translate, but ilt means to
lift up to help out the other fel-
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BRICKLAYING MADE EASY-The “first real improvement in
five centuries in the method of laying bricks” is demonstrated in
Montgomery, Ala., by coed Kitty McGlynn. The device, invenied
by engineers Paul H. Sommers and John S. Hodgson, is said to
speed bricklaying four times the normal pace. Acceptance by the
building industry could mean great savings in construction costs—
especially in the bailding of low-cost homes.
iow."”
Dan said a policeman’s lot under
a tropic moon isn't particularly
glamorous, as peoy.e everywhere
commit erimes much in the same
manner.
“Mostly burglaries anrd traffic
violations,” he remarked. ‘Not
much imagination.”
University
ROTC Names
Cadet Colonel
Harold C. Walraven, Birming
ham, Ala., has been appointed ca
det colonel of the University of
Georgia R. 0. T. C. regiment for
the 1949-50 school year, according
to Col. James V. V. Shufelt, mili
tary department head.
Other officer .appointments on
the regimental staff are Cadet Lt.
CGol. J. F. Paulsen, Savannah, exe
cutive officer; Cadet Capt. E. P.
Boland, Columbus, adjutant; Ca
det Capt. C. H. Lively, Rome, $-3;
and Cadet M-Sgt. H. L. Chiches~
ter, Macon, sergeant major.
Battalion commanders are Ca
det Lt. Colonel Lamar Clifton, Al
bany, armored cavalry, and Cadet
v WEEKLY BIBLE COMMENT
True Religion Sings of God
By WILLIAM E. GILROY, D.D.-
During coming weeks many‘
Sunday Schools will be stqdying‘
lessons in the Prophets, particu- |
larly in Isaiah and Jeremiah. Many
readers of this eolumn are not in
Sunday Schools, and the comment
offered here will not be directed to
particular lessons, but rather with
the purpose of making the pro
phecies intelligible and helpful,
through presenting their setting
and background, their significancei
for their own time. and their per
manent val and teaching for us
Such background preparation isJ
esgential for intelligent study. This
comment may therefore be help-1
ful for teachers and scholars, as
well as for general readers of the
Bible. |
No one can read much in the
ancient prophecies of Israel with
out realizing that they present\
many diffieulties in understanding
and interpretation. This is not
surprising, for many eminent
scholars have spent lifetimes in
the most meticulous examination
of every word and reference, and
the widely varied and conflicting
conclusions to which they have
come only emphasize the difficul
ties of the average reader.
It would be impossible to deal
here to any extent with these con
clusions and disputations, but in
the midst of obscurities and con
troversial matters, many clear and
outstanding things appear. It is
these, after all, that are most im
portant, and because of these that
the prophecies have lived; and it
is with these that we shall chiefly
deal.
A prevalent view of the pro
phets has been that they were
foretellers, or predicters, of things
to come. More widely today is the
tendency to think of them as forth-
Lt. Colonel L. T. Torrance, Mil
ledgeville, infantry.
The appointments of these ca
det officers are based on superior
attainment in several fields, in
cluding scholastic rating, ability to
command troops, and activity
while at summer camp.
Cadet Col. Walraven was win
ner of the outstanding cadet award
at the Ft. Benning ROTC camp
this summer, an honor he received
while competing with more than
600 other cadets. A senior in the
College of Arts and Sciences, he is
president of Scabbard and Blade,
honorary military society, and a
member of Pi Kappa Alpha social
fraternity.
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tellers, as preachers to their own
age and time. It is my own view
that they were foretellers, as well
as forthtellers, but I disagree with
those who see in the Hebrew pro
phecies a plan of all the ages, a
foretélling of what has been in
history and of what is yet to be.
It is questionable whether the
prophets had any such miraculous
foreknowledge, or revelation, into
the far distant future. What they
possessed, rather, was an under
standing of cause and effect in the
moral and spiritual realm, and in
the affaire of men and naticns,
akin to the scientist’s appraisal of
causes and forces in the physical
world.
When they saw Israel neglecting
God’s call, turning to ways of
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PAGE FIVE
idolatry, permitting and practicing
soginl swils and iniustices, sheroo
knew that disaster and judgmen;
were sure to follow. And thse
were bold and courageous in raiz
ing their voices in warning and (%
exhortation, though their messais ;
was not popular, and too oftéc
brought upon them persecutios,
imprisonment and death. o
No people at any time, inclui
ing people of today, have evie
been willing to face unpleasant
facts. It is easier to gloss them
over with easy and pretentious 0= -
timism. It is here that the grea:
prophets have still for today their
messages of warning and judg?=
ment. I hope to bring somethinz
of this to bear upon the issues ard
problems of our own time, and ¢- ©
modern democraciag.
The prophets of Israel dealt.
with the situations, issues, ari
probiems that in some form -
other beset all nations and peop!:2
of every time.