Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
They're On Warpath Over The
Indian; Think He's Been Scalped
BY RICHARD KLEINER
~ NEA Staff Correspondent
"NEW YORK—(NEA)—A group
of Americans are on the warpath
@bout the Indians. They think the
American Indian has been scalp
#d by Hollywood.
. The National Film Committee
th e Association on American
ian Affairs has been formed
sae that forthcoming Hollywood
zstem epics do right by the red
n,
With the active cooperation of
wany Hollywood officials, they
s checking seripts of motion pic~
ures. And they are recommend
g that the hackneyed movie In
an — a villianous, half-naked
[ cter who is always ready to
hoot flaming arrows at anything
and enjoys nothing more than a
%cy scalping — be permanently
discarded.
_“They’re already chalked up suc
psses, too. Some soon-to-be-re
feased big budget westerns will
Don't Forget, YOU Are One Of The
~ Owners 0f The Business ! !
. If you are one of the owners of a concern, doing busi
ness in the millions and millions of dollars yearly, you
would not agree to hire somebody without experience to
have an active and important part in running that busi
ness, would you? ;
You would demand that such an important post be
filled by a person whe knew something about how the
business should be conducted, who knew the problems
of that business, who understood something about the
financial end of it. That would not only be good, sound
common sense, but would be necessary for the protection
of your share in the business.
On June 28 the people of Clarke County will face ex
actly that same situation. Among the various officials to
be nominated in the State Democratic Primary are two
Representatives to the State General Assembly. The
Representatives you elct will have a direct and import
ant part in conducting the business of the State—a busi
' ness that runs into many millions of dollars each year.
Remember, YOU are one of the owners of that vast
business!
I am a candidate for one of those two Representative
posts.
I have served three terms of two years each as a
Clarke Representative in the State General Assembly. I
have had six years of experience that should prove
highly beneficial to our county. I have already been
through the “training course’”’—a Representative’s first
‘term—and my other two terms have given me added ex
perience. I am the only candidate in the race for the seat
formerly held by C. O. Baker who has ever served in the
General Assembly.
During my entire six years in the House of Represen
tatives I served as Vice-Chairman of the University of
Georgia Committee; on the Banking Committee; the
Rules Committee; the Appropriations Committeee; and
others. There are many members, friends of mine, who
will be in the next (and vitally important) General As
sembly, who served with me during those six years. [
have many other friends in the various departments and
agencies of the State.
I am familiar with the problems that confront our
State at the present time and I want to help solve them.
I believe I can be of genuine service to you because of my
years of experience and my knowledge of the workings
of government, And I will not have to devote a term to a
“training course.”
Investment in a “training course” in the Legislature is
something the people of our county cannot afford in this
critical period of our State’s history.
I promise if you elect me I will use to the utmost my
experience, my wide contacts and my knowledge of gov
ernment to serve you and I will devote every particle of
my energy and time to carry out your wishes and do the
kind of job you want done.
Respectfully,
KENT A. HILL
There is no substitute for EXPERIENCE.
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B »* = ghoose one of 650 sparkling new family-size Villas at Ellinor Village!
& - ONLY eservations include membership in the famed Ormond Beach Country
E s 50 Club where you may play a championship seaside golf course for greens
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-l ates begin at only $49.50 for a 3-room Villa, 2 and 38 bedroom Villas
P slightly higher.
b o Barly summer 1850 reservations advised. ($25 deposit required,) For
Vfi 4 complete details write P. O. Box 1471,
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B e Uinon~Ue
Telephone .
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8 CTHE W ORLD 'S LARGEST FTAMTLY RESORY
‘ - -DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA
show such revolutionary things as
good Indians and authentic In
dian culture,
. ¢ &
The committee is made up of
leading authorities on Indians, in
ciuding Pulitzer Prize novelist A,
B. Guthrie, jr... ballerina Maria
Tallchief, herself an Indian; radio
commentator Quincy #Howe; and
?ther authors, professors and ar
ists.
Any script that comes in is sent
to a member of an advisory board
of anthropologists. If the propos
ed film deals with the Cheyennes,
for example, it goes to a Cheyenne
authority. He checks it over, makes
his suggestions and back it goes
to Hollywood. Although there can
be nothing mandatory about the
suggestions, they are usually acted
upon,
The committee objects, partic
ularly, to the “another redskin bit
the dust” type of script. It has
gently suggested that such lines
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AR e How
NUN AND KING MEE T—sister Marie Therese, of Annecy, France, talks to King Gnag-,
ban of Nigeria, before entering St. Peter’s Basilica for aHoly ¥Year audicace with Pope Pius XIL
as “Shootin’ Pawnees is like
shootin’ rabbits” should be de
leted. Indians, after all, they say,
are America’s fastest growing
minority-——at the present rate of
increase, they’ll be back at their
pre-Columbus figure by 1986 —
| and they deserve respect.
| The committee experts work
| over the script page by page, scene
by scene. In one script, they found
such boners as an Indian chief
losing his temper (wrong—they
are self-controlled); Sioux Indians
reported grave-robbing (wrong—
Indian grave-robbing is “an an
cient canard”); a Cheyenne chief
naked to the waist (wrong—only
youths stripped; chiefs never did);
plus numerous errors of costume
and habit. *
* * =
One of the committee’s chief
targets is scalping. Many tribes
never went in for scalping, the
experts have found. And, primari
ly, it was the white man—with
}lhis “scalp bounty”—who first in
| troduced the process in most sec
| tions. '
l The committee also disipproves
'of the ~conventionai portrayal of
the Indian man as lazy, with the
| squaws doing all the work. They
point out that Indians believed in
division of labor. Men and women
+had their distinct jobs. Women
| tended to the children, cooking,
raising food and sewing, and the
men had their tasks, too, like
hunting warfare, and painting
Ithe tepee’s.
The “drunken Indian” is anoth
er type that is overdone. Indians
drank, of course, but they were
no more susceptible to alcohol
than any other race. The Commit
tee also finds Hollywood sticking
feathered headdresses on all In
dians, when, actually, they were
just found in’ the plains region,
and then only worn by chiefs.
All these misconceptions about
the Indians, the committee says,
have been used by the films. Even
some Indians have been taken in
by the Hollywoodized version of
history. :
One of the committee members,
visiting an Iroquois reservation in
| New York, heard about a six
year-old Indian who went to a
movie and came home to tell his
father: .
“Be mad, Daddy. Act like the
| real Indians in the movies.”
SARDINE SHORTAGE STUDIED
SAN FRANCISCO. — (AP) —
What hits the sardine population?
Dr. Yoshi Hiyama doesn’t know,
but he is looking for a link be
tween the wartime decline in the
Japanese sardine haul and the one
that struck California fishermen
in 1946 and 1947.
One reason is that last year the
sardine catch increased both here
and in Japanese waters. Dr, Hiya
ma is professor of fisheries at
Tokyo Imperial University. He is
here to study American commer
ciak fishing methods — and like
many experts, he is looking for an
explanation of why sardine runs
vary so much.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATBENS. GEORG&?
Crime Syndicates Face Toughest Foe
In New Senate Investigafing Group
By DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON — (NEA) — The
big gambling and vice syndicates
which have developed crime in the
U. S. into a tightly controlled, mul
ti-million dollar business face a
brand new foe in the special Sen
ate committee headed by Sen.
Estes Kefauver (D.-Tenn.).
Kefauver’s group has a weapon
the syndicate big wigs never have
faced before, llt’s the authority to
weld into one anti-crime task
force all of the law enforcing and
regulatory agencies of the U, S.
government.
Up until now the- shocking sucs |
cess of syndicate activities has re~
sulted from the exploitation of a'
legal no-man’s land. Operating
across state line, state officials
have found themselves powerless
to nail the top syndicate men in
any clean-up drives. Local offi
cials have been even more frus
trated.
* % %
Appeals to federal agencies for
help have been just as fruitless.
The FBI, for instance, has no au
thority to investigate gambling.
The only thing Treasury agents ean
do about slot machines is collect
a tax on them.
The Kefauver committee, how
ever, has the unique authority to
borrow any of the personnel and
facilities of any of the federal
agencies to help it in accomplish=
ing its mission—to expose organ
‘ized crime in the U. 8. ' :
Under its able chief counsel,
Rudolph Halley—veteran of the
famed Truman war investigating
committee——the committee is be
ginning to make full use of Uncle
Sam’s law enforcers. In addition
to its own staff of about 10 ex
ipert investigators, the committee
will have use of FBI agents, Secret
Service men, postal inspectors,
narcotics agents, Bureau of Inter
nal Revenue agents and even the
intelligence officers of the armed
services. .
® % &
The experts who have been fol
lowing the growth of the syndi
cates have said all along that only
this array of law enforcement tal-
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A W
BY SUE BURNETT
“Dear Miss B, writes Mrs. Henry
Jamison of Ohio, I'mr a little on
the stout side and have trouble
finding dresses that I feel com
fortable in, so I make my own.
Will you show seme pretty after
noon styles for summer, in a
large size range?”
The two frocks {llustrated today
are the perfect answer to Mrs.
J's request. Designed especially
for the larger figure, they have
flattering detail, slimming lines,
Pattern No. 8579 is a sew-rite
perforated pattern in sizes 86, 38,
40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size
38, 3% yards of 89-inch; 7 yard
contrast,
ent, coordinated into a single ef
fort, would be powerful enough to
lay bare the facts on the syndi
cates’ operations. The protection,
through political corruption, which
the syndicates have bought have
made them that impregnable.
Halley reveals that his group
will not operate from any master
plan or master timetable. During
the first week of operation he re
ceived hundreds of tips, hunches
and offers of information on vari
ous criminal activities around the
country. He will begin investigat
ing what looks ilke the hottest
leads: first, wherever they happen
to point.
Investigations in the warious
cities will be quiet, fast and sure,
he promises. All sources, news
paper reporters, local police, in
formers, public officials and pri
vate citizens who have informa
tion will be given an attentive ear.
His men will use the element of
surprise whenever possible.
Members of the committee them
selves might hold-open hearings in
various cities. And that most pow
erful of all congressional probe
weapons, the subpeena, will be
used to bring any persons in
volved straight to Washington for
hearings.
Two U. S. agencies have already
taken big steps to aid Kefauver’s
group. The Federal Communica
tions Commission has requested all
telephone companies to keep a
permanent record of the details of
all long distange calls. This is
aimed at exposing those who use
the long distance lines for gamb
ling operations. “The telephone is
a very necessary instrument in the
bookie business and numbers
racket. : :
te * % %
The Department of Justice has
asked its attorneys all over the
U. S. to start collecting all avail
able information on a list of 150
underworld characters, for use by
the committee. The full list has
been kept a secret but it has been
revealed that the names on it in
clude Frank Costello, Joe Adonis,
Ralph Capone, brother of Al, Mic
key Cohen of Hollywood, Marty
Krompier, Joey Rao, Meyer
Pattern No. 8570 is a sew-rite
perforated pattern for sizes 36, 38,
40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size
38, sfiort sleeve, 4 yards of 39-
inch,
Two separate patterns, 25 cents
each.
For these patterns, send 25
cents, in COINS, for EACH pat
tern ordered, your name, address,
sizes desired, and the PATTERN
NUMBER to Sue Burnett (The
Banner-Herald), 1150 Avenue
Americas, New York 19, N. Y.
Send 25 cents now for the
Spring and Summer FASHION.
48 pages of mnew styles, fabric
| *> - snecial features, Free pat
| ‘ed inside the book. 4
(Socks) Lansky and his brother
Jake, Waxie Gordon, Charles Fis~
chetti of Chicago, “Trigger Mike”
Coppolo and Anthony Garfano.
Other members of the commit
tee are Sen. Charles Tobey (R., N.
H.); Sen. Herbert O’Connor (D,
Md.); Sen, Lester Hunt (D., Wyo.);
and Sen. Alexander Wiley (R.-
Wis.). Chief investigator for the
committee is Harold G. Robinson,
recognized as an outstanding pro
ber for his work on the California
Crime Commission.
; Yyour
¢ FIRE
RS
CHIEF
Sew . says:
BY CHIEF W. C. THOMPSON
Every fire chief in the country
gets his share of inquiries on
where and how to locate authori
tative material on fire safety —
meaning both fire prevention and
fire protection. Most of these in
quiries — from clubs, schools,
civic organizations and others —
come in the fall, usually just be=
fore Fire Prevention Week. But
we get a number at other times
too, particularly in connection
with “Clean-Up” drives.
Just to anticipate our next batch
of requests for information, here’s
a quick summary of some of the
major sources of this type of ma
terial. o
The National Board of Fire Un
derwriters, at 85 John Street, New
York City, ¢an provide (free) pos
ters, leaflets, radio scripts, play
lets for school use and a number
of sound motion pictures on fire
safety. The Board, financed by
most of the capital stock insurance
companies in the country, carries
on a continuing program to keep
fire losses down.
In Boston, the National Fire
Protection Association, 60 Battery
march Street, supported by more
than 13,000 companies and indi
vidual members, including many
fire department people, is noted
for its statistics on fire loses, its
training manuals and its technical
handbooks and reports on fire
safety specifications. For nominal
charges, the N. F. P. A, also pro
vides posters, leaflets and other
material.
Fire Protection Institute, 670
Fifth Avenue, New York City, pre
pares special articles and scripts
emphasizing the importance of
fire protection in fire safety. The
F. P. I. developed the famous
“Fiery Felix Campaign for Com=-
munity Fire Safety” which was
reported in LIFE magazine and
promotes establishment of private
fire brigades in schools, factories,
stores, institutions and other
“places of public assembly.”
Associated Fastory Mutuals,
184 High Street, Boston, Mass,,
founded by mutual insurance com
panies, also has excellent source
material for schools and other
groups in the community. The Na
tional Association of Insurance
Agents, 80 Maiden Lane, New
York City, also supports national
and local fire safety programs.
Your local department, of
course, is always willing to help
you promote fire safety. But we
"»’, e s -‘
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SPECIALLY DESIGNED ; | @ ’"lh I ‘
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FOR YOUR COAL-FIRED [N ff I I 77— m,fluui m |
HEATING PLANT .\ O\ | G @q i m""m
A product of over 25 years of exs. L - E"l
perience in combustion engineers U s
ing, the Iron Fireman Radiant Gas . /| % LISTED by American Gas
Burner — like a coal fire — releases Its heas Association Laboratories
above grate line directly to the crown and side’ # INSTALLED and SERVICED by
walls of your furnace or boiler. It eonverts factory-trained men
your coal-fired plant into a clean and mors R
| esonomical, automatic gas heating system, % SAS FURNACES AND BOILERS
| |
'RADIART COMBUSTION CHAMBER: B fov.iomes 0 for mpacng Sy
+ + « an exclusive Iron Fireman featurs , , | ta;?ef }i,‘fi‘i?,%;;’::;? ;,,?;.";.‘{‘jfl A
changes the non-radiant gas flame into quicks) ot h\it of the highly efficlent fron i I
geting radiant heat, which is absorbed mueh) { o b%‘i‘f;‘x‘.’hgf:“gf“g i B
f‘as‘;fl;’ by] thse fixm;ce.or:ioi}cr. C:;; f\in;lace:d um.:;; léor:n Fiar:tnfi; lß:fl,igt %:.. '*, §
oilers are designed for radian eaf’ Burner. Comp: !
rads'am gas heating gets more hgas out of the in smooth baked enamel. ity '
PR Oe el e FREE HEATING SURVEY
QUICK INSTALLATION g&&“&&z‘fiéfimfi‘&:éfltm}%&
foyour present furagos or balegie, by our ’E?E&’féfi: Chils today. Ak o oey
!7% get plan. o
| ({ x : Estimates By Registered Professional Engineer
7o THERS™ SONS
! -'.” e } - . _
R /
N 375 Pulaski Street Phone 264
can't escape the fact that our re
sources for literature and other
printed materialg are limited. In
many cases, you will get the ma
terials you need a lot faster by
writing direct to one of the or
ganizations we have listed.
" In future columns we plan to
'go into more detail on the fine
work that these and other groups
are doing to help reduce fire
waste in this country.
Vacationßible
School To Open
Here On Monday
Vacation Bible School opens
Monday morning at the First
Christian Church and will last
through Friday, it was announced
today.
The school will be made up of
five departments — Nursery, Be
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Mrs. W. J, Martin reveals secret of planning for future,
*“There’s really no secret,”says
schoolteacher Mrs. W. James
Martin, “about planning for your
own future. All you have to do is
put a little aside out of every
thing you earn. It’s as simple as
ABC.
“What I mean is this. I deposit
as much as I can in a compound
interest account, and while my
money’s earning interesf another
wonderful thing happens. The
bank lends or invests my money
to stimulate business, and this
makes more jobs for the whole
community. My banker tells me
the loans he makes are carefully
looked info first. That’s because
-i‘ SUNDAY, JUNE 11,1454, |
gioner, Primary, Junlez, and In.
termediate. Mrs. Lamar Laßoon
is superintendent of the Bihle
school, and Rev. Howle will give
general direction,
The week-long Bible school will
be a program of Bible training,
fellowship, and recreation,
A new feature of the vacation
Bible school this year will be moy=
ing pictures of the program. Move
ies will be taken during the weelk
and will be shown later to the
church.
The Bible school is primarily fop
the Christian Church Sunday
School, but children from other
churches will be welcomed, No
tuition will be charged for the Bi
ble school.
VARIETY, THE SPICE OF LIFE
DANVILLE, Ill.—(AP)—Mem
bers of the Danville Rotary Cluh
are men of elastic interests, Sub.
jects of a recent luncheon forum:
The best location for a new Dan
ville City Hall; The occupation of
Berlin,
Boulder, Colo., is known as the
“gateway to the glaciers.”
Simple As ABC
banking, like teaching, has a big
public responsibility.
“I like my bank. I like the peos
ple in it. I’m sure the whole com
munity benefits because my bank
is run by local people.
“From the time the first one
was started in America, our banks
have put money to work, That’s
a fine tradition, because where
‘money works, there’s always work
for men and women.”’
. This is another in a series of
workaday stories about peogle and
their banks as told to the + 4 4354
This is ome in & series of stories
of people as 10ld 20 he ..o
CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK
(Mambor Podoval Deporit Imsurance Corps))