Newspaper Page Text
sUADAY; AUGUST 5, 1051
South’s Editors
Hovember-8-10
raiors of employee, trade, and
5 slized publications from
throughout the Southeast will ga
(e here Nov. 8-10 for the fifth
annual Southern Industrial Edi
t( [nstitute.
This announcement was made
; by Ed Gambrell, Bradley
nd Sons, Atlanta, Institute chair
man: and Dean John E. Drewery,
University of Georgia Henry W.
Grady School of Journalism.
The Grady School and the Sou
ihern Industrial Editors’ Associa
tion are the Institute sponsors.
planned for the three-day meet
ing are lectures by outstanding
joaders in the industrial publica
tione field. The meeting will be of
interest to editors and editorial
assictants of employee, trade, and
specialized publications.
Gambrell, who is serving as In
giitute chairman, was formerly
with Southern Bell in Atlanta. He
v s scheduled to serve as chair
o last year, but an asignment
i New York made this impossible.
yvtiending the Institute as presi
dent of the Southern Industrial
Titors” Association will be Henry
Morrow. editor of the Log, Life In
surance Company of Georgia. Mor
row was Institute chairman last
“tembers of the Institute com
mistee, in addition to Gambrell, are
Jorn Clavton, Photo-Process En
sraving Ca., Atlanta; Ann Cutts,
Banker Publishing Co., Atlanta;
Ernest H. Abernethy, president,
Abertnethy Publishing Co., Atlan
t2- R. E. Carter, vice-president,
Slozn Paper Co., Atlanta; J. Hart
well Jones, Peninsular Telephone
(n., Tampa, Fla.; R. Clifton Long,
Virginian-Carolina Chemical Co.,
Richmond, Va.; Richard N. McAr
thur, oresident, Higgins-McArthur
Co., Atlanta; Joe Parris, Georgia
rower Co.; John A. Reagan jr.,
public relations director, Sonoco
Produets, Inc., Hartville, S. C.;
Wwilliam J. Rooke, president, W. R.
(. Smith Publishing Co., Atlanta;
Wanda Chris Stone, Chicago and
Southern Airlines, Memphis,
Tenn.: Mrs. Jane Faulkner, editor,
The Bull Ladle, Stockham Valves
and Fittings, Birmingham, Ala.
Dean Drewry, Morrow, and Ver
non Boylan, southern area vice
president ICIE, Brown-Forman,
Louisville, Ky., are ex-officio
members.
Florida has both the. longest
scacoast and the longest tidewater
frontage among the states.
Iceland proclaimed itself a Re
public in 1944, ° -
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Don’t Antagonize Fox Hunters
MANY years ago, one of the State Wildlife officials made
a statement that Georgia had too many foxes and a pro
gram of extermination should be started. The papers gave it
space and the next morning the State Capi
tol was jammed with hundreds of irate fox
hunters.
Angry fox housd owners erowded into the
o Governor’s office. The official who made the
statement sat uneasy in his office behind locked
doors. The clamor outside from aroused sports
\: men prepared to defend their favorite sport
. . was alarming. Lowd voices and bitter words
1 rang in the old Capitel halls. It was the first
real demonstration of infuriated sportsmen.
They eame for satisfaction and they got it.
When somebody steps on the toes of fellows like
Mol B. E. Clary, of Thomson, Dr. J. H. Nicholson, of
;‘ad_lson. and T. P. Wooten, of Elberton. the fireworks are not far
behind. The fox humters ask only to be allowed to enjoy their sport
In peace. They insist that all sportsmen be permitted to take part
in the game and fish program that most appeals to them. Fox hunting
is here to stay. The supporters of this age-old sport will see to it.
There are muny whe cuss and condemn the fox snd scorn all
whe would lift a hand to save the sly creature. All forms of sports
should be approached with am open mind. Perhaps if those who
dislike fox hunting would attend the sixth annual East Georgia Fox
Hnnten Association meefing at Lineolnton August 6-9 they surely
‘T‘,’“W look: more kindly on this sport. :
™ h," Lincolnton meeting will feature a bench show as well as trials.
here T be a hot time in old Lincolnton town when these showmen
zet together and it won't all be traced to weather conditions. Sturdy,
keen-eyed fox hounds from several states will compete against Geor
e ‘;’i‘-fl- The followship and good will of the fox hunters is unsur
asseq.
~ You will see hound owners compare dogs. One will support the
Trigg and anether favors the Walker or July. The argument will
warm up and then get torrid. You'd expect the parties involved to
beat the daylights out of each other but they cool off fast. Soen,
they march off arm-ni-arm and alPs well, That’s part of fox
hunting.
.v* . *
Doa Owners Biamed
8 Wildlife Ranger Clif Palmer, of Morganton, tells of dogs in the
i Ridge Management Area chasing deer. Clff recently found a
fawn with its hindquarters torn and partly eaten away. The little
sotted deer attempted to eseape by pilling its body along with its
front legs, bleating pitifully. : E !
It was a disturbing, sickening sight and Clilf was impulsively
furious with the dogs. Better judgment, however, comvinced tae
Ranger that the owners of these dogs were the guilty ones. Three
times he had returned one dog te its owner who must have accepted
it at the front deor and released it out of the back door. Maybe
Cliff ought to take those dog owners over for a look at the little
spotted deer that never had a chamee.
-¥- . ®
Trout Obituary -
They wrote a solemn obituary for “Old Granny,” & 28-year-o
mackinaw trout at Mt Shasta gtchery in California recently. Not
one of her family of 33,750 children was with her at the end. A sad
hatchery erew was in attendance. The grand old trout had entertained
thousands of visitors. She had fived four times longer than the wild
pmummmm»hmnmm.mua
1
years.
Vgfifiomd-oum—y'&emmmmmpm on
experiments with this .pd-.l ?ee.iu.c!.m
Hm g it unlawful to shoot
John Lodge bas signed a bill making it W
azgght ‘. u,.‘ hc.t'kf.di R poultry. S “;o conservation clubs
” in the act of destroyi . Some :
testified to the value of ttl:”:.v‘v protected birds. . . . About 29 milliom
pounds of fupe was landed during May by one West Coast state.
- . . A healthy one-half pound crappie will spawn from 20,000 to
60,000 eggs. . , , Sanford P. Carr, Jr., President of the Whitfield County
Sportsman’s @lub, reports more than 100,000 fingerlings have been
placed in county waters by his club.
L I s & »
Sign in bank, “We are enlarging our quarters.” — Inflation?
Some girls go for the simple things in life — men.
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TV AMBASSADOR Richard C. Hooper, behind camera with hand
on eyeshade, is shown here with an assistant and twe bullfighters
in a Mexico City arena prior to a weekly bull fight, The spectacle
was filmed with the aid of another assistant operating mechanism
atop the city’s tallest hotel. o
BOOST U. S. TV ABROAD
TRAVELING TELECASTERS
| By GARVEN HUDGINS
[ AP Newsfeatures Writer
{ NEW YORK—TV cameras are
| proving one of the best U. S. boost
| ers abroad since nickel candy bars
| were first exported,
; Richard C. Hooper, manager of
| RCA Victor’s shows and exhibits
| department is largely responsible.
He has led highly-skiiled video
technicians all over the world
televising everything f-om sur
;gical operations to grand opera.
I TV Enthusiasm Abroad
! “People are plenty keyed up
iabout American television every
| where we go,” says Hocper. “They
lare anxious to see how it works
ibecause they want TV in their
‘own countries.”
i The purpose of the tours is to
’sell foreign communications of
| ficials on U. S. video techniques,
| “looking forward to the day when
;round - the-world, staudardized
| television transmission will be as
| common as short wave radio is
today,” Hooper explains.
| The traveling telecasters have
{ turned their cameras on countless
special events, like gonventions
{and fairs, in this country in ad
| dition to their foreign assignments.
i Their first job came 12 years ago
twhen televsion cameras were set
up at a Pittsburgh fair to show
| pedple that the new-fangled con
?traption really worked.
[ Closed Circuit Televising
¢ The size of the crews has stead
i ily grown since the Pittsburgh ex
periment. Today, split into groups
of from two to 10 meén, they carry
field cameras, life-size projectors
land large screen receivers with
’them on their junkets,
| “We usually televise over closed
circuits, transmitting by cable to
| receivers in theaters, lobbies and
' auditoriums where interested
| groups gather,” Hooper states.
! On foreign trips, the teams have
. televised bullfights in Mexico and
| Brazil, « rare surgery in South
| America and France, and Moorish
I guards in Spain, to mention only
| a few.
| For the medical “shows” (tele-
I vised exclusively for medieal con
‘gresses), the teams have mapped
jout a flawless routine. A pre
' focused camera is suspended over
the operating table and run by
i remote control. No specia; lighting
% is needed. The only worry, in fact,
.is explosive anesthetic. Hooper
i refuses to televise an operation
i in which explosive gas is used.
| Extra-heavy wire insulation is
ls used on the cameras at all opera
{ tions no matter what type of
§ anesthetic is used. :
i Results Are Evident
| One crew got set for a crack at
| colorful Moorish guards near
| Madrid on a Spanish tour. They
!discovered they were on the {tail
iend of the power line that ran
i from generators inside the city.
; “Since television requires stable
| current, that meant no pictures
I and a long ride for mnothing,”
Hooper recalls. “We told the min
' ister of communications, who had
| requested the pictures, that we'd
| have to let him down. He was set
' on seeing the Moorish detachment
on TV, so he ordered power to
some 16 surrounding villages cut
in order that we'd have the nec
essary power. He got his pic
tum." B ¥ &8
On a recent trip to Italy, RCA
TV teams televised performances
in the La Scala Opera House for
the Milan International Exposi
tion, a Vatican choir for Pope Pius
XII and a special show for Premier
Alcide de Gasperi.
“We've had a good reception
abroad,” Hooper asserts. “We like
to feel that we’re emissaries doing
a valuable service for the televi
sion industry.”
Results of the tours already are
evident in South America, Cuba
and Mexico, where a total of nine
television stations have been es
tablished within one year after
a visit by the fraveling teams.
The future looks busy for these
TV ambassadors. They're about
to take off on a trip to an undis~
closed destination that “will keep
us out of the country about a
year,” says Hooper.
SPAGHETTI 'N ONIONS: Pre
pared sphaghetti in tomato sauce
with choose mixed with plenty of
?cown onion and green pepper
ings - is a supper to shout about.
Cut rings about 1-4 inch thick;
brown in a little hot shortening in
a skillet, Mix with the heated spa
ghetti. y
Thread, made by twisting fibers
together, was used by the Swiss
Lake Dwellers 25,000 years ago..
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KOREAN WAR BRIDE — The
rst war bride of the Korean
ar, Mrs. Insook Choi Mosher, is
en aboard the U. S, Army's
tation ship, “Red Ball Express,”
{ust before sailing from Korea to
Japan. She married M/Sgt.
Maurice W. Mosher, of Glen
Lyon, Pa., of the 24th Infantry
| Division, at Taegu, Korea. The
k couple will live in Hawaii.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Brown Asks Hike
WASHMNGTON, Aug. 4 — Offi
cials of the Commodit'es Credit
Corporation are being urged by
Rep. Paul Brown of Elberton to
increase the loan value on cotfon
from 31.71 to 36 cents per pound.
The request on the government
agency is being made with a view
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‘ b e B e N o
_ (VURE, a trim new Buick makes a
S mighty pretty picture when you
see it in your driveway, or watch it
wheel by.
But if you could get a mechanic’s-eye
view of this big, broad beauty as it
sits on a lift, you'd see an impressive
picture of rugged brawn that makes
good-to-look-at Buicks give such a
good account of themselves on the
road.
You'd see the full-length torque-tube
drive that firms the whole power
relay system, and steadies your going
like a giant hand beneath you.
You'd see big sturdy wheels with
really wide rims that provide surer
footing, give better car control, make
tires last longer.
You'd see all four wheels cushioned
by stout coil springs that are
completely service-free, practically
breakproof—and a principal reason
.w,m.m“weh.l*tbchqwnfi.
*N(dnm on R(I{DHASTER, optional at extra cost on other Series.
DUT OUR WAY
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THE CUT-UP COPR. 1951 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REC U, & PAT. OFF
to assuring farmers of a reason
able profit on current crop opera
tions.
Congressman Brown pointed
out to the CCC that the govern
ment has called on cotton farmers
for all-out production this year to
meet world shortages in fibers.
As an encouragement to this end,
all acreage restrictions have been
lifted.
But increased production costs,
reflected in higher prices for la
bor, materials and fertilizers,
threaten to wipe out the farmer’'s
margin of prolit, he said. “The
GEORGIA MOTORS INC.
Warren C. Thurmond, President.
“YOUR BUICK DEALER FOR 21 YEARS”
Phone 3141 Broad and Lumpkin
cost of roducin; the present year
crop will be thé highest in his~
tory,” he told CCC officials. |
Officals have given a hympa
thetic hearing to the Brown pro=
posal and have premised to review
the cotton loan situation after the
next crop report, which comes on
Aug. 8. In addition to an increase
in the loan wvalue on cofton, the
Elberton member is also asking
that a higher price be set on cot
tonseed. He is optimistic over
| prospects for gaining favorable ac
tion on his requests.
' In view of the large cotton crop
for the ever-level Buick ride.
But mainly, you'd see the massive
foundation that backbones every
Buick —the deep, wide, X-member
frame that's rugged as a rock, and a
brute for strength,
So when you look at the beauty of a
Buick—the big mileage power of its
valve-in-head Fireball Engine — and
the moneysaving ability of its
Dynaflow Drive*—don’t overlook
~—o——— NO OTHER CAR PROVIDES ALL THIS; ————
DYNAFLOW DRlVE®*—saves sirain on driver and cor
FIREBALL ENGlNE—high-compression, valve-in-head—gehs
more miles from every tank of fuel
PUSH-BAR FOREFRONT—combines smart style and
wnsurpassed profection
WHITE-GLOW INSTRUMENTS—greater clarity ot might
TORQUE-TUBE DRIVE — seals the chassis, steadies ride,
improves driving control
4-WHEEL COIL SPRlNGlNG—cushions and levsls the ride,
saves servicing costs
When betier aviomobiles are built BUICK will build them
! YOUR KEY TO GREATER VALUE A
BY ). R. WILLIAMS
(expected from the current year's):
| operation, an increase in the loan |
value of cotton would be of great|
| benefit to Southern farmers, since |
it would maintain prices at a level |
| that would be profitable to pro-|
| ducers. ‘
ORPHANS HAVE 300 MOTHERS
LEVITTOWN, N. Y. -~ (AP) — |
120 boys of far-away St. Anthony’s
Orphanage in famine ridden India ]
aren’t orphang any more - they
now have 300 friendly foster
mothers. |
Three hundred housewives, '
the tough stamina that goes with it
all.
And don’t overlook the fact that a
new ‘sl Buick, with all its heft, costs
less per pound than any other car of °
comparable size, structure and
weight.
Better come see us first chance you
get—and find out what a smart buy
this is—from every angle.
DUAL VENTILATION—eviside oir fed sepsraiely to right
or lo#t of front compartment
SELF-ENERGIZING BRAKES—hydreulic—muitiply pedal
pressure five times as brake drvm
DREAMLINE STYLlNG—fapered, car-length fenders,
gleaming sweepspears on most models
Plust Sslfdocking luggage lid, StepOn parking brake,
two-wey ignition lock, Safety-Ride rims, Hi-Peised engine
mounting, Body by Fisher
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
PAGE ELEVEN
members of the Rosary Confrater=
nity ot St. Bernard's Roman Cath
glic Church ulx?l this gottwc subur=
an community, Odt)filf' e
youngsters in regponse to an &-
peal for aid from the director ot
the orphanage in Alleppey, India.
Each housewife will buy an exfra
package of food on her weekly
shopping tour. The food will be
collected and shipped to the or
phanage once a month.
Congresg adopted the Great Seal
of the United States on June 20,
1782. 2
MAJOR HOOPLE