Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1950,
'X-GEORGIA
'ROFESSOR AT
ALIF, COLLEGE
WORCESTER, Mass., June 29—
T'ruce C. Ogilvie of West Sterling,
¢ graduate of Clark University
" 'ith the degree of master of arts
' 1 geography, has been appointed
- ssistant professor of geography at
le Chico State College, Chico,
‘ alif,, and will assume his* new
< uties September 1.
. Mr. Ogilvie, a native of Avon,
-1.-Y.,, and son of Mr. and Mrs.
' eorge R, Ogilvie of 127 Harriet
- .reet, South Portland, Maine, was
rmerly - assistant professor of
- 2ography at the University of
{ reorgia, Athens, Ga., and has just
+ smpleted residence requirements
2 b Clark University Graduate
- chool of Geography for his doc
r of philosophy degree in geo
- raphy,
_ A graduate of the Cony High
i chool at Augusta, Maine, he re
+2lved the degree of bachelor of
« ducation from the Rhode Island
¢ ‘ollege of Education in Providence
‘1 1938, transferring to that col
>ge after studying at the Farm
- Igton, Maine, State Teachers Col
ige.
He served for more than three
“ears in the United States Naval
-eserve, being a lieutenant when
ischarged from the service, after’
‘aving been in the European
~'heater of Operations,
A former resident of Olathe,
"“ans., Batavia, N. Y., Slatersville,
% I, and Chesuncook, Maine, To
onto, Canada, and Longmeadow,
%. I, Mr, Ogilvie is married to the
>rmer Miss Martha M. Campbell,
ormrer resident of Chicago and
eattle, and a graduate of North
v7estern University, with the de
. ree of bachelor of science in geo
_raphy.
He formerly worked with Trans
“Vorld Airlines at Kansas City,
. To., taught in the Warwick, R. 1.,
‘~ubiic schools, was principal of
1e Kendall-Dean School in Sla
arsville, and taught at one time
t the Chesuncook, Maine, school.
Mr. Ogilvie was formerly a
riember of the staff of the Office
¢ [ Strategic Services, Research and
.inalysis Branch, and also of the
[ydrographic Office of the United
_tates Navy in Washington, D. C.
He is a brother-in-law of Mrs.
" [arshall Holmes, Kennebec Jour
- al reporter, at Jefferson, Maine;
nd brother of Mrs. Louise O.
‘hompson of Norfolk, Va., a grad
ate of the Rhode Island College
« f Education; of Mrs, Ralph Wet
-lore of the United States Army
Adr Force Base at Stephensville,
Tewfoundland; and of Miss Mamn
orie B. Ogilvie, Providence, R. 1.,
hurch organist. His wife, who
ormerly taught in the Berwyn,
:11., public schools, is the daugh
ar of the late Mr, and Mrs. Tho
-128 Campbell of Seattle and Chi
. ago and granddaughter of the late
Ir, and Mrs. Herbert Campbell of
‘he Dalles, Ore., and Richmond
iTighlands, Wash. -
The Clark geographer formerly
~egided in Rochester, N, Y, His
nother, Mrs. Belle E. Ogilvie, who
"vas graduated from Mechanics In
.titute, receivin ga domestic
cience diplorma and teacher certi
icate, is at present teaching in the
>ortland and South Portland,
i Taine, public schools.
Governor’s Son Good
OMAHA, June 29—(AP)—The
*ieutenant Governor of Missouri
as a son who can hit a golf ball,
s they say in these parts, a “coun
ry mile.”
Actually, young Jim Blair 111,
:oesn’t hit them that far. He has
een & bit short of 400 yards on
.. couple of his tee blasts in the
'rans-Mississippi Golf Tourna-
Jent.
Jim, who'll be 19 July 11, isn't
ragging when he says: |
«T can hit the ball farther, but
: don’t so I can stay accurate.”
Accurate he is, too. And those
.ooming woods are complimented
y a steady iron game that has
arried him into the third round
£ the Trans-Mississippi Tourna
qent along with 31 other econ
{anders.
Blair, 6 feet even and 210
+ounds, had a rugged assignment
1 the third round out of which
sould come 16 players for the
fternoan’s fourth round.. Jim’s
‘oe was Herb Durham of Dallas,
“ex., a quarter finalist in the
Vestern Amateur this year.
Durham was two under par in
-liminating Stewart Carroll, a 16-
ear-old from Dallas, 6 and 4, and
3lair was one under par in stop=
ying Don Pegler of Lincoln, Neb.,
; and 4 in second round matches.
i SR
The U . 8. Geological Survey
-ays electronically controlled aer
al photography will speed the
napping of many inaccesible
ireas.
Gainel el
Western land irrigated by the
17. S. Bureau of Reclamation pro=-
luced more than a half-billion
lollars’ worth of crops a year from
1946 through 1949,
To The Volers of Clarke County
{ want all the people of Clarke County to know that
1 appreciate the confidence bestowed in me yesterday
when you elected me as one of your Representatives in
the General Assembly. 1 reiterate my promise to be
impartial and fair and to vote on measures according
$o the way 1 either know or believe you want me to
vote. I am, at all times and to all of you, available for
Msoussion and counsel, and promise that I shall do my
wtmost to serve you well.
My sincere thanks.
Grady Pittard, Jr.
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PAKISTAN SPECIAL DELIV E R Y—_A native driver loads CARE packages of food
on his camel cart at Karachi for delivery tfo recipients as gifts from American donors,
BOYLE SAYS SEND JAPANESE
TROOPS TO FIGHT IN KOREA
BY HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK— (AP) —lt may
take longer to drive northern
Communist invaders out of south
ern Korea than most Americans
think., Why?
Because the United States so
far has limited its assistance to the
shipment of war supplies and bat
tle aid by ship and plane.
These factors are hardly as im
mediately decisive in warfare as
most civilians like to believe.
Their weight takes time to make
itself felt.
: This will be particularly true
in a mountainous land such as
Korea if the Soviet-trained Com
munist armies have built up a
hard core of well-disciplined
troops. And there is reason to feel
sure they have, since they have
hal almost five years in which to
do it.
Well Equipped
. Reports from the fighting front
indicate the invaders are well
equipped with modern Russian
type armor. Undoubtedly they also
have great stores of weapons and
ammunition left behind by the
Japanese.
The next few days should give
strong indications whether the
Communist Koreans are only mak
ing a great test foray in force of
the south’s defenses — or wheth
er they are gambling on a surprise
knockout.
If they do choose to fight to the
bitter end, then they may be as
difficult to drive back as the north
ern Communists were in Greece.
Bombing cities they have taken
is certain to annoy.the southern
Koreans who live there, but it is
doubtful that this will really dis
lodge the invading troops. They
'won’t stay in the cities. They will
move like hordes of locusts across
the rugged countryside, just as
the Russians, wearing tattered
clothing but carrying brightly
polished machine pistols, swept
across Germany to the Elbe.
And guerrilla troops like these
are almost as hard to destroy by
airpower as if they really were
locusts. They can camouflage their
positions by day, and move by
night. They can live off the land,
scrounging as they do. They can
take almost endless bombing and
strafing so long as they are go
ing forward — and morale is high.
The best and quickest way to
halt them, of course, would be to
pour in trained ground troops—
infantry and artilleary — to lock
with them on the land. A regi
ment of_ Marines, a battalion or
two of U. S.paratroopers starte
gically dropped and supported,
might turn the tide at once. .
Gov't Reluctant
Naturally, however, the Amer
ican government is reluctant to
make this measure. For ground
fighting means heavy casualties,
‘and the hope is that the Korean
situation may be held to an inter
national incident rather than al
lowed to ripen into full-scale
bloody. war. 3 .
But, should the ® invasion con=
tinue long, there is another possi
ble source of manpower. In 1945
I saw the last of some 100,000
Japanese troops being ferried from
Korea back to their homeland.
Couldn’t the United Nations au
thorize the recruiting of a force
of volunteer Japanese troops to
fight in Korea under international
military leadership? This would
be going only one step farther
tharr hte United Nations already
has done in the matter.
And certainly it is the body that
should organize the world’s first
mercenaries for peace. It is also
simple justice that the Japanese
should take part in keeping free
now the country they held in sub
jection themselves for almost 40
years. And I think they’d volun
teer—if the pay were right.
It’s an idea.
1
Teachers Get
.
Glimpse Of New
: e
Education Trend
School teachers attending sum
mer school at the University of
Georgia got a glimpse of one of
the nation’s newest -educational
trends this week on a tour through
the Atlanta Municipal Airport.
The tour, sponsored by the U.
S. Civil Aeronautics Administra
tion, was conducted to foster avia
tion education in the local schools.
On the tour the teachers were
shown every phase of activity
characteristic of large airports in=-,
cluding the control tower opera
tions, weather reporting service,
airway traffic conrtol, and radio
and teletype communications sys
tem.
As guests of Delta Airlines they
were shown all phases of that
company’s operations in their
home plant at the airport. The tour |
also included a flight over Atlanta |
and vicinity in one of the compa- |
ny’s airliners. |
Prof. L. J. Nachtrab, head of
the University’s aviation depart
ment, Sam Wood, principal of |
Athens High School, and work
shop leaders from the College of |
Education, accompanied the group |
on the tour. :
The U. S. Geological Survey
says only two states — Massa
chusetts and Rhode Island—can
be considered adequately mapped.
The first western irrigation pro
ject built by the U. S. Bureeau of
Reclamation was completed in
1906.
Reclamation of swamp land got
under wawin Hollanc in the ear-)
ly 17th Century.
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CHOW HOUND OR GENTLEMAN?—A Cleveland, 0., court
must determine if Laddie, a 35-pound dog of uncertain ancestry,
owned by Bernard O'Sickey, is a well-behaved mongrel or if he
wreaked havoc in the garden of O’Sickey’s neighbor. The neigh
bor, Mrs. Anna Stoffa, is suing for S2OOO, charging that Laddie
suprooted, chewed and tossed tomatoes, beets, cabbages, lettuce,
eelery and parsley planted by her,” and “rolled over and over” in
her flower bed, His owner said Laddie—seen above with a neiga
borhood pal—is “the gentlest dog we ever owned.”
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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DIAPERED DAMSEL — Play
time is diaper time, according to
Parisian designer Jacques Heim.
The scanty shorts, draped di=
aper-style and knotted at the
front, are of vividly-striped cot
ton. The loose-fitting, boat
necklined blouse is of bright
green cotton. (Photo by NEA-
Acme staff correspondent Rene
Henrv.) ;
o '
Two Athenians
.
Reenlist For
= :
Naval Service
Charles Wesley Hunt, 111, son
of Mrs. Oma F. Hunt of Athens,
and John Isaac Cox, son of Mrs.
Elizabeth A. Cox of Athens, were
accepted for reenlistment in the
U. S. Navy on June 26, 1950, at
the Navy Recruiting Station, Ath
ens, according to an dnnounce
ment by Irest E. Mathis, BTC,
USN, Chief in Charge.
Hunt and Cox are both veterans
of Naval service and after reinlist
ment were transferred to the
Naval Receiving Station, Charles
ton, South Carolina, to await their
permanent assignment.
LET'S GIVE TEACHERS CREDIT ,
IF THEY DO THER JOB WELL ¥
Did Johnny or Sue have an es
pecially good teacher this past
year—one who was genuinely in
terested in her students, whose
fairness could be counted on, one
who had the enthusiasm to make
school work interesting?
If so, have you let her know
just how much that meant to John
or Sue and to you as a parent?
If not, why not send her a let
ter expressing your appreciation?
Let’s make it Good Teachers Week
—with written thanks from grate
ful parents whose children were
fortunate these past years to be
in the hands of capable, likable
teachers.
We parents know full well that
what our children get out of a
school depends to a large extent
on the kind of teachers they have.
A good teacher can make a chilk
like school, make him want to
learn, help him &0 get along with
his classmates and feel secure in
the belief that in his school world
he can count on justice from the
highest authority—his teacher.
Appreciation Means a Great
Deal
We parents know who the good
teacher are. Then shouldn’t we
let the good teachers know how
fine a job we think they are do
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o » -
The South’s Largest Home Furnishers”
ing?
The experts tell us that appre
ciation is an important considera
tion in any job. People don’t work |
just for pay checks. They work for |
appreciation, too. |
So if we want to keep the good |
teachers we have, as parents we |
would be wise to let them know]
they are appreciated. '
And what better time of the |
year to do this than at the end |
of school when our words of ap- |
preciation could not possibly be{
construed as “apple polishing.” |
Let’s make it Good Teachers |
Week all over the country.
o *
Poor Vision Is
s |
Chief Cause Of !
.
School Failure |
|
According to a reecnt survey atf
Purdue University, 31 percent ofi
|a group of high school studentsi
had eyesight that was below the |
basic requirements o one or more |
visual tests. !
I Among 100 students who failed |
| in their school work, it was dis-l
! covered that 78 were below the |
: | accepted standards of visual skills. |
This left only 28 who failed for
other reasons. Failures due to
seeing difficulties were 3%z times
as numerous as failures due to
other causes.
It is true, the Better Vision In
stitute remarks, that some students
‘who have faulty vision neverthe
less make good school grades. They
A Word of Thanks:
I want to thank the many people who
voted for me in the race for the State
Senate on Wednesday.
~ Robert G. Stephens, Jr.
PAGE FIVE
do sO, however, by Wuch
harder and under far ner
| vous strain than would Be® the
case if their vision were eorrected
under the guidance of an eyesight
specialist.
The Sye Polder dike at Haar=~
lem is one of Holland’s oldest.