Newspaper Page Text
ls{ NDAY, JULY 36, 1950.
F,;g,a Gay Suggests Attack As
1 Solution For Doubt In Batfle
By HAL BOYLE
An Advanced Command Post In
\ . (AP)—The pulling mk
K : s merican line in Kerea this
" . under intense Communist
U v galled many a young
~rted States soldier,
" it galled none more than
oW o-star commander of the
Lt Cavalry Division, which took
f ":(,/k\k‘\\st blows.
the B the 35 years he has spent
UY™ o cervice and actions on
in &Y. ents, Maj. Gen. Hobart
1 (.‘f‘,,‘ never had to fight a de-
R % pattle until a few days
#cAnd T don’t like it at all,” he
orimly.
s 8y postle of Attack
Gay is an apostle of attack. He
spark-plugged some of the great
“rensives made by American arms
;’y;the Second World War. As chief
of Staff for Gen. George Patton,
Gay coordinated successful drives
in North Africa and Sicily and
the famous Third Army sweep
a;v‘o\s France and Germany.
Memories of those days must
pave been much in the_mmd of
this lean, balding, hard-bitten vet
eran as he menc_ulously plotted on
a big command ‘post map a sloy:
and stubborn wlt’hdrawal of his
division. It wasn’t the fact that
he faced between two and three
enemy divisions on his front that
worried him so much as the fact
the American forces have been |
spread SO thin that flank prOteC'l
(;u!'i 1S \::t’ficult. ‘
Gay, son of a Northport, 111.,j
tarmer, still speaks with a dry
mid-western twang. ;
“We have been heavll§ en
saoed.” he said. “I know we have
hurt them—and they've hurt us
«ome. We have had a knockdown
drag out fight and we are going
on and fight it all the way out. So
far the men have fought beautiful
i lhey have fought like vet
e
Guerrilla Infiltration
Gav said he felt “the whole sit
pation is summed up by refugees.”
Thousands cross the American
line daily and amidst this mass ot
terror - stricken humanity are
armed North Korean guerrillas
seeking to get through in order to
disrupt United States - positions
from the rear. So far no way
has been found to cope with this
situation.
“The American soldier—thank
God—doesn’t want to kill people
ruthlessly,” said Gay soberly. “But
we must find a means so hold
these refugees in place. They are
endangering our men’s lives.”
Hunting bandits is nothing new
to the General, although he never
took part in a “police action” on
this scale before,
“T once commanded a troop in
the old Seventh Cavalry when we
were chasing bandits along the
Mexican border,” he said. He was
a lieutenant then and later served
i‘:' France during the First World
ar,
Methodical Planner -
Gay is known as one of the most
Young Father Learns Facts
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One thing surprised me,” says Kevin Kennedy.
"When our son arrived,” says
Kevin Kennedy, “we were kind
of stuck for space.
"W Clara and I decided we had
% 844 on another room, and I
went down to the bank for a loan.
One thing surprised me quite
8 bit. All my life I had a notion
bankers were kind of close-fisted
and cold. Well, I found out that’s
et true, Faot is, they like to lend
money. Making loans is the way
they earn g living,
“The banker I talked to said he
has o operate that way. If he
doesn’t give all his customers the
right kind of consideration there
are other banks that will. As he
explained it, that kind of compe
Serve Benson’s Breads And Rolis Every Day For One Week
If It Is Not The Best You Ever Tasted, We Will Give You
Double Your Money Back. It's The Finest Money Can Buy
methodical planners in the Army.
He makes daily tours of advanced
frontline positions to check his
operations. The other day when
he found vehicles massing on one
battlefront road—making a perfect
target for any enemy aircraft—he
dismounted from his jeep and per
sonally broke up the traffic jam.
He is anxious to open an offen
sive as soon as the American bat
the line has formed.
“Marshal Foch once made the
statement that there comes a time
in every battle when both com
manders think they have lost—
and he who attacks wins,” said
Gay. “I am going to attack.”
He praised the performance of
the new 3.5 super-bazookas and
said they are powerful enough to
blow up a building.
“There is a report going around
here that I promised the bazooka
men a bottle of whisky for each
enemy tank they knock out,” Gay
said with a grin. “That isn’t true.
I promised them a bottle of cham
pagne for each one. '
“And I hope it costs me $500.”
LOTS OF FOOD FOR ATHLETES
IN COMING OLYMPICS
AP Newsfeatures
TEL AVIV, Israel — Athletes
coming to Israel for the Third
Maccabiah (All - Jewish World
Olympics) are going to eat well.
The ministry of supply and ra
tioning says participants in the
games opening here and in nearby
Ramat Gan on Sept. 27 will get
“special rations.”
These will inciude two meat
meals per day per person. Under
Israel’s “austerity” program, citi
zens get only two meat meals per
week. Tourists are allowed five
meat meals weekly.
Most of the Olympic entrants,
their trainers, and foreign guests
will be housed in an Olympic Vil
lage. :
The organizing committee for
the games is temporarily taking
over a military camp situated be
tween the municipalities of Tel
Aviv, Ramat Gan and Petah Tik
va. It’s only a 10-minute automo
bile ride to the Olympic stadiums
in Tel Aviv and Raman Gan.
The Olympic events are slated
to continue through Oct. 8. Or
ganizers expect 2,000 entrants and
5,000 visitors from 30 countries.
About 100 participants, are ex
pected from the United States and
Great Britain,
MOUSE GROWS OLD
WITHOUT WATER
BERKELEY, Calif— (AP)— A
pocket mouse which never drank
water or other liquid has died here
at the age of six years. That is a
fabulous age for such a mouse
which usually lives only about a
year in its natural desert home.
Dr. Seth B. Benson, who caught
the mouse near San Diego, says
it consumed only small amounts
of bird seed. Apparently it got all
the water it needed from the dry
seed. He says many desert animais
have body processes which use
very small amounts of water.
tition is what keeps the American
banking system on its toes to
serve the people.
. “It’s easy to see why it’s a good
thing that the banks in this coun
try are competitive, independent
businesses, and not just local
branches of some federal bureau.
“I'm glad that’s so, because
their way of doing business helps
me get mighty good banking serv
ice any time I need it.”’ .
This is one 1w a series of stories
of people as told to the...
CITIZENS & SOUTHERN
NATIONAL BANK
(Member Federal Deposii Insurance Corp.}
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IT'S ON THE BAG—Hoarders will be marked men if they run
afoul of Ernest L, Murphy’s one-man, anti-hoarding campaign.
Murphy’s plan, proposed in Detroit, Mich., is to make the hoarder
carry his goods in a specially-marked shopping bag, similar to the
one above. This, thinks Murphy, would keep stores from being
. sacked by war-scared buyers. EAN L e
Inodnesia Endeavors To Become
World's Most Neutral Nation
BY KENNETH LIKES
JAKATA —(AP)—The world’s
youngest republic —the TUnited
States of Indonesia—is trying for
a second distinction. She would
like to be the world’s most neu
tral nation. According to the
stands they have taken on the Ko
rean war, all other Asian countries
can be sorted roughly as either
Russian or American sympathiz
ers.
Indonesia has carefully avoided
lining up on either side. Govern
ment officials sighed with relief
that the six-month-old republic
never became a member of the
United Nations. If we had joined
the U. N,, they reasoned, we might
have been forced to take sides in
Korea.
Indonesia was led into her neu
tral position by Indian Prime Min
ister Jawaharlal Nehru. On a
state visit here in June, he plead
ed in a dozen speeches for a “third
neutral force” as a balancing
power in the growing struggle be
tween Communists and non-Com
munists. . ¢
” Striet Neutrality o
By strict neutrality, India and
Indonesia nmright show the way to
ward peace, Nehru said. He ad
vised the Indonesians to concen
trate on their own internal prob
lems and avoid mixing in outside
conflicts. Indonesians heeded
Nehru’s words, and no opposition
was heard when Premier Moham
med XHatta laid down a policy of
tight isolationism in regard to
Korea’s war. The press and most
political parties rallied behind the
government standpoint. Even
Communist leaders, usually criti
cal of Hatta’s policies, agreed that
Indonesians must concentrate on
“puilding a strong national front
to safeguard the country’s neutral
ity.”
Indonesian leaders got a jolt
when India suddenly abandoned
her policy of rigid neutrality and
supported U. N. military measures
to halt the Commmunist invasion of
South Korea.
It was admitted here that In
dia’s move caught the U. S. I, by
surprise and left her alone on her
neutral pinnacle. But we still can
afford to be aloof, one top official
explained, because we are far
from the centers of trouble. India
had to act, he said, because the
Chinese Communists are close on
her flanks.
Urion Partnership
Indonesia’s union partnership
with the Dutch will not influence
her toward the Allied side, U, S.
1. officials have been quick to ex
plain, pointing out that each party
in the Netherlands-Indonesia un=
ion can determine its own foregin
policy. It was carefully explained
that Java’'s big naval base at Soer
abaja must not be looked on as a
base of operations in the Korean
war simply because a Dutch de
stroyer departed from there in
early July to join Allied forces off
Korea. A government spokesman
stressed that the Dutch -warship
left Indonesian waters as a friend=
ly foreign vessel in strict accord
ance with international law and
custom.
No foreign nation has discussed
the use of military bases in Indc
nesia, .according to a recent offi
cial announcement. The Indies’
chief Allied bases in World War
II were Biak and Hollandia in
Western New. Guinea. Future sta
tus of Western New Guinea was
not settled last year at the time
independence was granted to the
rest of Indonesia. The area was
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
left in Dutch hands, and Holland
and Indonesia were to negotiate a
settlement before the end of 1950.
As neither has given up claim
to Western New Guinea, the next
round of negotiations in Holland
next August are almost certain to
end in a deadlock. Then it is like
ly that the problem will be thrown
to the U. N. for solution.
Traffic Deaths
In Georgia
Top 1949 Mark
ATLANTA.—The Safety Educa
tion Division of the Georgia State
Patrol has called the attention of
the public to the fact that traffic
deaths through June 30, 1950,
were about 92 ahead of the cor
responding period of 1949.
At the Governor’s Highway
Safety Conference in Atlanta last
March a definite program was set
forth by the seven or eight hun
dred delegates that attended the
conference. The program consists
of a forming of a Georgia State
Safety Council, which is an organ
ization on the state level that will
and can act as a guiding hand, to
ward the organization of safety
councils on the county and city
level.
Many counties and cities have
taken advantage of this help from
the State Council and have already
begun the organization within
their loyalty. The Polk County
Safety Council has been organized
at Cedartown; Cobb County Safety
Council in Marietta; Bartow Safe
ty Coumcil at Cartersville; Hall
ch)lunty Safety Council at Gaines
ville.
The State Patrol is very proud
of the people in these counties who
have seen fit to begin something
right down at the grass roots that
should have been begun twenty
years ago. These councils have
eight committees: one on Acci
dent Records; Driver Licensing;
Education; Enforcement; Legisla
tion; Organized Public Support
and Public information.
The membership of these com
mittees on the state and local level
are comprised of lay people who
are civic minded and who have
become concerned with the seven
or eight hundred traffic deaths nn
Georgia each year and with the
thirty-five to' forty millions es
dollars that it is costing the peo
ple of tihs state for the privilege
of killing each other with motor
vehicles, 1
The State Patrol is sincerely
hoping that the safety councils on
the local levels will spread rap
idly, for after all we have learned
that organized public support on
the local level is the motivating
force that will make for Dbetter
law enforcement and for surer
punishitent and move severe pun
ishment on our courts.
The week-end of July 4th,
which was an unusually long
week-end, counted 16 people kill
ed in motor vehicle accidents in
Georgia. The following week-end
counted seven. The next week-end
eight. .
Georgia has made nrore pro
gress in the Driver Training Field
in the high schools in the past two
years than any other state in the
nation. The members of the De- |
partment of Public Safety are ex
tremaely proud of the fact that they
‘were- very -instrumental in begine
ning this type of training in our
schools. Last school counted 139
schools teaching the course. More
than one hundred new teachers
have been trained and certified
during the present summer, and it
i§ hoped that more than 200 high
schools will be teaching Driver
Education and Training as a reg
ular part of their curriculum dur
ing the next school term,
SAYS SQUARE LIPS
AID SINGERS = ,
INDIANAPOLIS —(AP)-—Want
to learn to sing? Then be a
“square lipper,” says William
Ernest Ross, associate professor of
voice at Indiana University. Form
your lips into a square, throw
back your shoulders and burst in-
VIC FLINT
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to song. And don’t be afraid to
show your upper and lower front
teeth, either, he says. ! ;s
Other pointers thrown out by
the professor are: Don’t smile
when you sing. You're more likely
to yell than sing if you do. Don’t
sing with “lazy lips.” If your lips
are relaxed, they will tend to mus«
fle your volice, .
POLICE ON THE JUMP
CHICAGO «——(AP)— The police
received a telephone report that a
nude woman was about to jump
off the roof of a hotel on Michigan
avenue, A squad rushed to the
scene and found a woman in a
flesh colored bathing suit taking
a sun bath.
“Somebody,” the officers con~
cluded, “jumped to the wrong con
elusion.”
STAGE ?HESINCN Sl
CHICAGO.—(AP)—~The 'l‘lt-‘
house, a theater out on the north
shore, has a low, circular stage.
Members of the audience some~
| times eut across the stage as they
walk out durmz intermission.
When the lights went up for the
second act one night, a woman
who had lost her bearings was
gtanding in the spot where the
heroine was supposed to be. Actor
Barney Hughes directed her to
her scat and the play was re
sumed,
RARE CLOCKS ARE |
HIS SPECIALTY |
GLENDALE, Calif.— (AP) —F.
Greenwood is a clock maker and
collector who has several rare
models including:
A cuckoo clock which pops a
quail every 15 minutes and a
BY MICHAEL O’MALLEY and RALPH LANE
PAGE THIRTEEN
cuckoo every hour, A clock which
is its own pendulum and wags
back and forth with each tick, A
Japanese clock in a gilded cage,
equipped with a canary which
tries to escape every hour, A 1731
English models which has 14 bells
and 28 hammers and can play six
different tunes, A clock with &
built=in thermometer and baroms=.
eter. ¥
HOME BODIES ‘
TROY, N. Y. —(AP)—No Rens
selaer Polytechnic Institute la<
crosse team has ever been beaten
‘at home in the six yars that Ned
Harkness has coached the team.
During that span, Engineer sticlkk
teams have won 67 gages on all
fields, lost nine and tied two for
a percentage of .881.
BY EDGAA MARTIN
BY AL VERMEER
8Y MERRILL BLOSSER
BY LESLIE TURMER
BY MERRILL BLOSSER