Newspaper Page Text
' sUNDAY, AUGUST 13, 1950,
What The
A
People Say
R e
wE'LL PULL THROUGH
roday, Communism is slowly
.+ urely spreading to all parts of
e earth including the United
ci.tes. This forceful -and destruc~
o avernment is going to.injure
" “world, whether physically,
9 11y, spiritualy, or both. The
le. the real live human-be
" . that must be ordered around,
| soverned by this terrible form
"+ ule, even their leaders, soon
. to find out that it is wrong,
they. will e very hurt. mor
‘maybe physically. May be
Cev won't -Jive so. be.. either.
roen though Communism is. the
| est government in the world,
.1 spreads to far more nations,
‘han does Democracy, it is . still
~ matten. what. they say, a bad
~0. The only two real Demo
i states in the world, today,
. Gwitzerland and the . United
States. -
America, the land of the three
important freedoms: freedam of
the press; freedom of speech, and
of course, above all is the greatest
.. . JreedorEE re{iiion. Ours
is the nation built by. Washington,
Jefferson, Franklin, Lincoln, Roose
velt, Edison, Ford, and Firetsone,
to mention only a few. We !have
’ sone through several wars and de
pressions, but we have ‘always
~ome out, all right.
Now. a terrible thing is happen
. It is not uncommon after all
e Bible says, “THERE WILL
ALWAYS BE WARS, AND RU
MORS OF WARS.”
Today, the United States is
fichting for three reasons:
1. To conquer, or,drive®out an
enemy agressor of an ally and ter
sitory of the United States, South
Korea.
9. To prevent by force, if ne
cessary, any type of rule other
than Democracy from reaching
American shores.
3 To promote the ideals and
advantages of Democracy to all
sections of the world.
Many of our courageous fighting
men in the service have been
killed and wounded. But that can
' not, and must not stop or slow
down, in the least. We must go
on. fighting for what we think and
believe in . . . . for the right thing
Even though the war in Korea
is going on and the Atomic Age is
upon us, there is no cause for
. alarm about the A-Bomb or the
" H-Bomb.ln a war like that, over
there, no one would dare use eit
her one of them, not even one bomb
just once. The battle area is far
too small for any such thing. Even
if the Communists should ever
dare to attack the United States,
they still would not use the bombs,
in my honest opinion .....:..
unless they want to get blown off
the face of the earth, and leave
a wide space in the map of the
world, They wunderstand very
clearly, that if they dare to use
it, we most certainly will, also.
We the people of the United
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A L RS Z T "PHONE 1767-8
States of America, the people who
beliéve in real freedom and liber
ty, must do something on the home
front about this ghastly situation;
not necessarily by force, but by
learning the meaning of Demo
cracy, its laws, duties and advan
tages, and by learning the full
meaning of Communism and other
forms of government of that sort,
their dis-advantages, and cruel=-
ties to the people. We must de
stroy all forms of greedy destruc
tion, by Democratic Construction.
We must exterminate construction
for gretdy power directed against
us by necessary destruction
Not always by force-remember:
“The . pen is mighties than the
sword.” “Braln is greater than
brawn. “When we hit those Com
mies, - they’ll- know - they’ve been
hit; and if we hit them hard
enough, they’ll never know what
hit them. MARK MY WORDS.
“MR. DEMOCRACY”
University Sef
New Year-Round
Orientation Pl
A streamlined year-round coun
selling and orientation program for
freshmen men will be inaugura
ted at the University of Georgia
this fall. The year-long program
will be conducted in addition to
the regular pre-registration orien
tation week.
Two campus service clubs, along
with 15 students doing graduate
work in counselling, have pledged
to support the new program.
Members of Blue Key and “X™
Club will act as counsellors to
many of the new students during
their first three quarters at the
University. Graduate students will
take care of the rest.
Counsellors will conduct new
students on tours of the campus
and will help them schedule their
courses during registration. Fresh
men are expected to -seek advice
more readily from a student coun
selior than they would from an
administrator.
Until now men students have
been oriented to University life
only during the week preceding
registration. Extensive orientation
programs for women students,
however, have been in effect for
some time.
PARTS OF WRECK
MAKE NEW SHIP
GENOA — (AP) — The prow of
one Liberty ship wrecked in the
Red Sea and the stern of another
blown in two by a mine off the
Ttalian coast have been jointed ir
a giant shipyard surgical opera
tion to make a “Superliberty”
ship.
The new ship, now launched, is
named the “Boccadasse.” It has a
gross weight of 11,600 tons and a
top speed of between 11 and 12
knots per hour.
Ten Feeder and Fat Calf Show-
Sales are to be held in Georgia
cities during August and Septem
ber, livestock specialists point out.
X - 7 .
1 "‘l 1 Gr e 5 e y
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— esLRA ia S G ' B
The slim sheath dress, which sets the straight and narrow line for fall, can appear in many guises.
In this design by Greta Plattry, a charcoal gray menswear flannel sheath dress can go to the country
(left) with a white cotton blouse, become a short evening gown with addition'of overskirt (center),
or with pearls and chiffon handkerchief (right) convert to a late-day or dinner dress.
By GAILE DUGAS
NEA Staff Writer \
NEW YORK — (NEA) — The%
fashion spotlight for fall is so- |
cused sharply on the slim and
narrow line of the sheath dress.
It’s seen in daytime and in eve
ning. It may be straight and un
adorned or it may have panels
which float from the waist giving
it freedom and motion. But no
matter how it's done, it’s seen
everywhere, ?
A budget-priced basic sheath
U.S.GROWTH IS CALLED SPUR
TOPRODUCTION OF MOREFOOD
LARAMIE, Wyo. — The United
States will soon have so many
millions more people that food
surpluses will be 'a precious asset
rather than a tproblem. The task
is to’increase food production 20
to 25 per cent in the next 25 years.
This was the strongly optimistic
note expressed by Orris V. Wells,
director of the Bureau of Agri
cultural Economics, United States
Department of Agriculture, before
the annual University of Wyom
ing’s National Forum of. Labor,
Industry, and Agriculture.
He said the status of food stocks
had changed with startling sud
denness, in some editorial minds,
from “unmanageable surpluses”
to ‘irreplaceable strategic re
serves” with the outbreak of the
Korean war.
Sugar Aplenty
But he said the Korean war
had not “blown the top off” our
PEDIATRICIANS
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
dress which can convert to wear
for many occasions is the brain
child of designer Greta Plattry.
She uses menswear flannel in the
new charcoal gray for her sheath.
There are shoulder bands which
button on and off with shiny pearl
buttons and thus help ~ffect the
conversion trick. There are trouser
pleats over the hips and there is
a narrow natural calf belt.
For country wear, this sheath
can take a lantern-sleeved cotton
blouse or a sulphur yellow and
economy, and he does not antici
pate disastrous inflation. : |
Food prices, he said, might go
1,2, or 3 percent higher, but then
he thought they would settle down.
Further, he added, the rise had
set in before the outbreak of Ko,-‘i
rean hostilities. l
Scare buying is silly and base
less, he said, and nowhere more
so than in sugar. In addition to
buying 600,000 tons from Cuba,
the department is negotiating for
another 150,000 tons from other
sugar-supplying countries, he
said, which would put sugar
stocks higher per capita than ever
before. The beet sugar crop |
promises to be a bumper one. (
The prospect, he pointed out, is
for “overemployment” for some!
time at high wages and, in gen- |
eral, for a high level of activity,
which promises to affeet farmers
permanently. Further, he said,
gray rib knit worsted jersey
blouse. Then, as the shadows
lengthen, the straps can come off
and with a velvet belt, a colorful
chiffon square and pearls, it's a
baretopped dress for dinner.
But this dress can go formal, too,
and take its place among hand
some evening gowns. To become
a short evening dress, it needs only
the addition of a full-gathered
overskirt in ruby red rayon otto=-
man, floating free from the waist.
Given rhinestones or pearls, it’s ‘a
drese for a big evening.
despite a downturn in the export
market, America will “still be ex
porting food 10 to 15 years from
now.”
Turning further to the long
term view, he said that instead of
the near-static population and
economy predicted by pessimists
of the last decade, the nation had
nearly 20,000,000 more people in
1950 than in 1940.
“In making some recent Mis
‘souri Basin studies, I decided that
the median series of population
projectives soon to be released by
the Census Bureau give the most
likely growth of our population.
Population Gains
“This particular projection is
for 169,000,000 Americans by 1960,
or approximately the same gain in
numbers as during the decade just
passed.
“But it is interesting to note
that even a gain of only 1,000,-
000 people per year until 1975
would give us 175,000,000 people
by that year; and a gain of only
1 per cent a year—as against an
average yearly gain of 1 1-2 per
cent in the decade just closed —
would gave us 190,000,000 people
by 1975.
“Nothing seems clearer that,
barring catastrophe, there will be
many more Americans who will
need -much more food.”
He said that next year’s wheat
acreage allotment is around 72,-
800,000,000 acres, probably the
most liberal allotment that could
have been made under the law.
The minimum might have been as
low as 65,000,000 acres. Had it not
been for conservation considera
tions—the danger of over plowing
—all wheat acreage limits might
have ‘been pulled off, he added.
MONKEY DANCES
WITH SNAKE
RANGON — (AP) — Chico is 18
inches _of performing Burmese
monkey. When he goes into his
roadside dance he does it with a
three-foot cobra.
Rest periods he strokes the
snake laying its head on his hairy
paws. His Chinese owner won’t
say how he involved Chico in this
unusual monkey business which
pays dividends,
In 1949 the U. S. Government
Printing Office handled 2,000 car
loads of paper and printed 3,217
million postal .cards, according to
the Encyclopedia Americana.
Children in junior high school
grades suffer more eye injuries
than any other group. .
Gleaming 24-k o L L
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Magnificent, the classic beauty of the ; T ;
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House service and the dinner services G i Gt L G et Y
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THESE WOMEN—
Where's Your
®
ix-Shooter
7
Mother Dear?
BY SYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Newsfeatures Writer
With preoccupation for west
erns and mysteries, American
youth must be forming a pretty
strange idea of American woman
hood. And it isn’t their fault,
Let us take the beautiful ranch
ers’ daughters, All' these dames
can ride lige Annie Oakley, wield
six-shooters like saucepans, know
how to file a claim, saw the bars
of a jail and rescue a no-good
brother who has joined with bank
robbers. Also they seem very
happy when, Daddy rescued and
the mortgage restored, the hero
rides into the sunset alone, . leav
ing them to a spinster’s life full
of memories.
At least, the -westerns don’t
turn out small fry actively against
women. But the mystery story
writers are really fixing things up.
Any one of today’s children who
doesn’t have a good healthy sus
spicion directed at anything in
skirts is iust plain stupid
Once Necessary
Once upon a time a gentle-faced,
sweet-talking old lady was a nec
essary part of every formula-con
structed plot. Then she was sim
ply a gentle-faced old lady. Today
as anvone old enough and strong
enough to twirl a dial knows, a
gentle-faged, sweet-talking old
lady is a woman who for- years
has been knocking off the mem
bers of her family with poisonous
draughts of her . own brewing.
Sometimes it’s because the vic
tims’ father done her wrong when
she was a beautiful belle, or some
times it's just becouse she thinks
they are waiting for her to die to
inherit the heirloom pearl, neck
lace.
~Any child can tell you there
are only two kinds of gentle-faced,
sweet-talking old ladies: if she.
gets knocked off by blunt instru
ment, poison or gun within the
first five minutes of the drama,l
she‘s rich and on the verge of
changing her will .If she lasts any
longer than that, she’s responsi
ble for any deaths which occur
during the program. .
The yvounger women are broken
into two types. There are women
with rough, throaty voices who
slur their “-ings” and who are
usually found talking tensely
with whining men in furnished
rooms. There was a time when
any woman, bound by matrimony
or affection to a crook or murder
er, was a pitiable object. Pres
ently, under a pretty rigid proto
col, the pitiable person is the
man who winds up on the {busi
ness) end of the gun. His wife,
or moll, invariably is a scheme
ing, gold-crazy wench who is
merely using the man so she can
get her hands on the money. Usu
ally, too, she is in love with the
head crook and they are planning
to knock off foolish old George
once he has held up the bank or
put Aune Luella (see above in
ber grave. It doesn’t seem to mat
ter a whit to her that George has
already done 10 years and wants
to go straight. Of course George
usually gets knocked off in the
climax and she gets picked up by
the police.
And Finally
Finally, there’s the spoiled little
rich girl who has been given her
own way all her life. This broad-a
type — every youngster knows
this — is no darned good, and
she’s just a bundle of neuroses.
Sometimes she deliberately seeks
out the underworld for “thrill”
crimes. More often she is a female
Jekyll and Hyde, sweely innocent |
when around her family, and then |
sneaking off to the dinappers’ hide
out to tell them what the author
ities are up to. This one is always
swept up by the authorities, and
we are assued that she will be
given proper medical treatment.
On the hopeful side, there’s one
type of woman who is sure to be
good, on the side of law and order.
That’s the girl secretary of the
hero-detective. Unfortunitely, she‘
is invariably very stupid. ,
Maybe all our American boys
will grow up with the ambition
to marry a girl who has been the
secretary of a private eye, not for
love but just to be on the safe side.
The _state of Connecticut is
sometimes known as the “Land of
Steady Habits.” ,
The oil from menhaden fish is
used in soap, paint, varnish, insect
spray and printing ink.
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SPORTS RULER —poris
Kleiner, of Santiago, was chosen
“Miss Winter Sports” by vaca
tionists at Portillo, Chile’s new
winter resort ‘12,000 feet high
in the Andes.
More than 1,000 Georgia 4-H
club boys and girls and their
leaders will attend the State 4-H
Council. Meeting in Milledgeville,
August 21-25.
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PAGE THREE
Sociologisi To . .
At Universit |
niversify ,
Dr. T. Lynn Smith, professor of
socioloby at the University of
Florida, is expected to visit the
campus this week-end. Dr, Smith
is collaborating with Dr, €, A.
McMahan of the University of
Georgia department of sociclogy
in the production of a book, The
' Sociology of Urban Life, due for
release on January 1 by the Dry=
den Press.
One of the foremost sociologists
and demographers in the nation
Dr. Smith is the author of leverai
popular textbooks: Population An
alysis, The Sociology of Rural
Life, and Brazil: People and Insti
tutions. He is also a consultant fo¥
the Bureau of the Census. In the
past he has headed the sociology
departments <at Louisiana State
University and Vanderbilt Uni
versity.
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61 Butler St.,K.E. » Atlanta, Ga, » LAmar 1044