Newspaper Page Text
MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1951,
Fisenhower Is Now Europe’s
symbol Of The Will To Live
By LEON DENNEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
PARIS —(NEA)— A big black
usine tagged with five stars
15 up to a building set in the
ng woods of suburban Marly
nol. Two more cars come to a
1t just behind the first.
Aut of the limousine steps Gen.
- vight D. Eisenhower, command
os the North Atlantic Treaty
rganization armies. With a faint
' of discomfiture, he glances
" 2 second at the other cars.
~ contain U. S. and French
..rot service men assigned to him.
\n unassuming man, he doesn’t
- being trailed every place he
[t's eight in the morning, and
. soneral’s jam-packed day is
.pinning. He walks briskly into
a main building of the new
‘ATO group at Marly. His office
wing A-4 is the real capitol of
» European defense system.
Actually, it's more than that.
v, in the eyes of the great and
‘1 ardinary men of Europe, “Ike”
. not just a military commander.
o's a symbol of the free world’s
ill to survive-and live in peace.
“h» Europeans see Eisenhower as
. man dedicated intensely to the
-5k of preventing war. They feel
» has made their cause his own.
Remarkable Progress
vnd, midway in his first year as
NATO commander, the general
5 already achieved remarkable
orosress toward the military uni
si-ation of Europe. His solid ac
omplishments in building a West
.n defense army have stirred the
oreatest confidence Europe has
,on since World War II ended.
Because he occupies a special
rle, men of all walks from all
NVATO lands beat a path to his
joor, Thus he bears two bur
jons: the job of building the
NATO armies into a force formi
{sble enough to deter Russian ag
sression, and the job of explaining
;nd discussing his efforts with an
endless stream of visitors.
He may talk labor problems
with s Allied general, and de
fense matters with a labor leader.
Not long ago, for instance, he
talked with Jacob Potofsky, pres
ident of the Amalgamated Cloth-
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Or, you could do it faster— *== N oll'ec ‘
without leaving your easy ’br iy
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YELLOW PAGES.’ ELEGRAPH COMP
POUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND T
ing Workers of America, about the
importance of Spanish air and
naval bases to general European
defense.
Potofsky and Irving Brown,
AFL representative in Europe,
spent many hours with “Ike.”
They report he showed a lively
interest in labor issues at home
and abroad. They were impressed
by his direct and honest approach
to all matters touching the security
and well being the the West.
Generals, Allied statesmen, U.S.
political pilgrims, these bulk large
in the invasion of visitors. Through
it all, the men emerging from
Eisenhower’s office unfailingly re
port they find him pleasant and
patient. Many he sees at lunch
time, and he’s always the generous
host, even though he himself eats
frugally,
Two years ago, after a serious
illness, he had to give up smok
ing. Since then he’s had to watch
his diet. Lunch, for example, con
sists mostly of fruits and vege
tables. :
Lately the déluge of visiting
firemen has been especially heavy,
with platoons of congressmen and
other U.S. politicians coming in
waves. Most appear hopeful the
general will drop a hint about his
political plans. They tell news
men, however, that when they
seem to be warming him up on
that topic he always steers them
away to harmless generalities,
Occasionally a report crops up
that the horde is getting “Ike”
down. His aids point out that the
steady trek of outsiders to Wing
A-4 Pertainly robs him of time he
needs both for work and relaxa
tion.
The general likes his golf game.
It’s his big escape. Too often these
days he has to give it tup, and he
finds it hard to keep fit for the
14-and 16-hour days he puts in
at his desk.
Nevertheless, the visitor can’t
detect any sign that Eisenhower’s
naturally frank and friendly man
ner has suffered. To the inter
viewer, he still has all the sum
plicity and freshness of the Kan
sas country boy. He is bearing
his burdens well.
He behaves like®a man who un
derstands his symbolic role and
regards it as great public trust.
‘His pursuit of his goals is tire
less. Nothing affecting the de
fense of Europe—whether mili
tary, political, - moral or psycho
logical—escapes his attention.
Like the famous German gen
eral, von Clausewitz, he sees war
as merely the continuation of dip
lomacy in the field of force. Like
von Clausewitz, too, he is said to
feel it is the moral forces which
are the “noble metal, the sharp
and gleaming sword,” with ma
terial forces only the “wooden
scabbard.” Thus his book on World
War II was titled: “Crusade in
Europe.”
* * *
Eisenhower’s “Little Pentagon”
in Marly forest, once the private
shooting preserve of France’s pre
sidents, is the physical proof
of the general’'s efforts to mold
the Western nations together in
a new crusade for freedom.
SHAPE's international charac
ter is plain. The 12 flags of the
member nations fly atop the
buildings. Men and women from
all those lands, speaking their
varied tongues, crowd the cor
ridors. Some 225 Allied officers
and 450 enlisted personnel make
up “Ike’s” staff.
They’re all working 'toward a
single objective—the preservation
of peace and the defense of the
free world against Soviet aggres
sion. Many Europeans feel the
unity gained there in defense may
hasten the day of political unity
for Europe.
* * *
Should that happen, future his
torians may find it ironic that an
American general succeeded where
far-sighted European statesmen so
often failed. For no one questions
that it is Eisenhower’s magic, his
crusading sense of dedication, that
have wielded these nations into the
purposeful combination they re
present today.
He has proved the one man
capable of restoring postwar Eu
rope to confidence and galvaniz
ing its shaky nations into active
resistance against the Kremlin.
Early each evening, as he climbs
into his car and heads back to his
five-room apartment in Versailles,
the general may have a moment
again to reflect uncomfortbly
about those two cars behind. But
he never protests. He knows
they're one measure of the esteem
free men everywhere have for
him and the job he is doing.
In Italy and Spain, the cow is
superseded by the goat as a milk
giver.
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THIS SCENE WASN'T ON THE BOY SCOUTS’ PROGRAM — These Explorer Boy
Scouts of Moultrie, Ga., are afield to pose for photographs to be included in a boys’
cookbook — but the photographer hadn’t counted on this scene. It popped up unex
pectedly when a couple of girl hikers chanced to pass by and added a touch of female
competition. 'Official photographs for the book were halted temporarily. Please note
th.at the older boys are quite aware of the girls’ presence. Younger boys plod along
without a backward glance. The book, “Time for Chow,” will be published by
Bobbs-Merrill.— (AP Photo.)
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THE WINNAH-AH-OH! — Clare Lippert, of Tarentum, »Pa.,
smiles happily after being named Miss Pennsylvania of 1952 2t the
state beauty contest at Harrisburg. Next month she’ll compete ia
Atlantic City for the title ¢f Miss /. merica
Teen Talk
AP Newsfeatures
Lots of students get false no
tions when they see that piggy
bank swell from summer job sav
ings. Before you decide that the
working world is easily conquered,
and that you’ve no further need
for education, give some thought
to the experiences of others who
have met the issue. Any high
school graduate should regret not
having given college a whirl, if
she can afford it. And a girl who
leaves high school to retain a
summer job is making a serious
mistake.
Here’s some advice from Mary
Linn Beller, 18, who recently
signed for one of the leads in
CBS-TV's comedy, “The First
Hundred Years.” Mary was faced
with the problems of job versus
career many times. Says Mary:
“Listen, kids, maybe I'm a fine
one to talk. Maybe the example I
set in leaving college to take a
regular job in television makes me
a poor witness. But please listen
to what I've learned about the
problem of education versus ca
reer. Believe me, I know.
“First, I know- the glamor of the
stage, the radio or TV studio, the
movies and modeling.
“lI am one who succumbed to
the lure.
“Sure, it’s easy to get jobs in
the summertime. Jobs that you've
been dying to gets. Jobs that you
never dreemed you could get. If
you fancy yourself an aetress
there are any number of summer
theaters in the East, at any rate,
that are open to you, if we've
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HE'S ON THE BOLL—Disq jockey Ed “801 l Weevil” Keane, of
Harlingen, Tex., made the mistake of deelaring on his radio pro
gram that “Anyone can pick a bale of cetton in a week.” Veteran
cotton growers challenged him to do it, offering SI6OO in cash and
prizes if he made good. Here, with three more days to go, he mops
his brow and decides it isn't as easy as he thought,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATPENS, GEORGIA
got talent. ¥ modeling is your de
sire, it isn’t too hard to walk into
a big Park Avenue agenecy and
come out with a job. If you want
to be a secretary to a big shot that
too is available. When the weather
is warm, and vacation time is at
hand, there are any number of
swell jobs for attractive, ambitious
girls and boys in many different
fields. And such wonderfully
dreamy jobs.
“But, jeepers, that's just the
trouble. It's too easy in summer
and too hard in winter! Take it
from one who khows.
“For the past three or four sum
mers, I have been playing in sev
eral of the best summer theaters
in and around New England. It’s
plenty exciting playing on the
same stage with such big Holly
wood glams as Franchot Tone,
Burgess Meredith, Eve Arden and
loads of others. I fancies myself
a well-qualified actress and fig
ured I could zoom my way to
success on Broadway in TV and
radio if only I didn’t have to go
back to school. But Mether and
Dad just couldn’t see it that way.
School came first.
“I grudgingly went back to
school each fall dreaming of the
wonderful parts I had played dur
ing the summer.
“Discussing the problems with
some of my gang who had rushed
into modeling during the summer,
I soon found that the same facts
were true, They were busy dur
ing July and August and made
more money than they had ever
had before. When the fall rolled
around—no jobs—no money. In
the summer professional models
took their vacations. When Sep
tember rolled around they were
back at work getting the only jobs
that were available.
“The girls and boys who got
Jobs as secretaries were also read
ing the want-ads in the fall.
I'm glad Mother and Daddy
were so adamant about me and
my career, After my first brush
with the strawhat circuit, I ac
tually thought I was something on
the stage that would make Kathe
rine Cornell jealous. I was posi
tive I could reach stardom without
further education. School could
just hang, I was an actress, wasn’t
1?
“I never knew how wrong I was
until I discussed the problem with
friends who had given up school
to make the rounds of producers’
offices. They just couldn’t seem
to find work anywhere; nor could
my modeling friends! nor my sec
T e, TV
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retary friends. Lt
+ “Those of us who went back ‘to
high school dutifully have done
all right. Of course, some have
left the professions and settled
down to good, steady jobs, thank
ful they don’t have to rely on their
parents for support. However, the
odds aren’t good. Iy my case, I
studied hard each winter, and got
marks that enabled me to accept
a scholarship to Bennington,
“Each day I realize how much
my schooling has meant to me.
1t has given me the proper under
standing of life and the roles I
have been called upon to inter
pret. I found it helped my acting
enormously. I understood what 1
was doing, not merely repeating
words like a parrot. I knew what
the words meant. I was able to
think like an adult and not like a
stage-struck goop. B
“Although I left Bennington af
ter only two terms, to join “The
First Hundred Years,” I knew that
to continue to improve as an ac
tress I must continue my educa
tion. That's why I study night at
one of New York's best evening
colleges.”
The “Stourbridge Lion,” first
locomotive run in America, was
tried -at Honesdale, Penna., on
August 8, 1829.
No Man cr Woman
Can Enjoy Life With
Stomach Gas!
Poor digestion—swelling with
gas after meals—heavy feeling
around waistline—rifting of sour
food. These are some of the penal
ties of an Upset Stomach.
CERTA-VIN is helping such vie
tims right and left here in Athens.
This new medicine helps you digest
food faster and better. It is taken
before meals; thus it works with
your food. Gas pains go! Inches of
bloat vanish! Contains Herbs and
Vitamin B-1 with Iron to enrich
the blood and make nerves strong
er, Weak, miserable people soon
feel different all over. So don’t go
on suffering. Get VERTA-VIN—
Crow’s Drug Store.
WOMAN MISSING
' ALBANY, GA.,' 'Aug. 13—(AP)
—A 16-year-old Albany wife was
reported missing Saturday night
by her family and her mother,
Mrs. Johnnie Vickers of Albany,
said she feared foul play,
The husband of the missing girl,
Cpl. Danny Mosher of Turner Air
Force Base, is due for discharge
this week, Mrs. Vickers said. Mos
her’'s home is in New York. Her
mother said she had been missing
since last Saturday night. She is a
brunette, weighing about 120
pounds and about 5 feet, 6 inches
tall. They have a smali child. «
A missing persons report was
made to police.
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Phone 246 Day Phone 3932 Night
PAGE FIVE
You'll find you get cleaner cuts
when ryou're sawing b&h Ny
plywood if you first apply te the
wood a wvery thin white shellac
covering, Thin your liquid shellac
with an equal part of industrial
alcohol to get the proper thin ¢on
sistency.
Crows often drop mussels or
snails on rocks to break the shells
so they can extract the meat more
readily. 3
*ASPIRIN » -~
FOR CHILDREN J ORANGE S
FLAVYOR