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PAGE SIX
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The liberalization of Veterans
£ ministration regulations premit
-1 World War II veterans in
t ing under the G. 1. Bill of
T "“hts to re-purchase entitlement
v 'l aid manv ex-service men to
c-mplete their schooling, accord
i~ to Reymond E. Lester, Man
-2~ 2r, Athens Division Office, State
I»- i, of Veterans Service.
ceording to Lester, a VA re
¢ ‘ation has been in effect for a
rimber of years which permitted
a veteran, by pavment of a small
#mount, to re-purchase from the
Covernment time spent on leave,
if that extra time would allow
h'm to take anv additional courses
leoding to the completion of a
co 'rse of study .
Jowever, under prior regula
tio s, this leave time had to be
re-purchased within one-year af
ter it was taken.
Tinder revised regulations, there
* 1o time limit on when the leave
I~v be repurchased.
'f a veteran who, for example,
is majoring in Journalism, took
three months leave with subsist- |
ence during the summer of 19481
and now finds that he lacks one
guarter in entitlement to complete
the required work for a degree,
he may reimburse the VA for the
subsistence checks he drew during
the summer of 1948, and he willl
aviomatically acquire one addi
tioanl quarter of entitlement.
The VA regulation affects all
forms of training. It is not limited
to college level studies,
Lester, invies all veterans now |
in training, who feel they can gain I
additional training by re-purch
asing leave, to call at the State
Department of Veterans Service
Oifice 283% E. Broad and make
application for re-purchase of this
leave, i
Civilian Help
leeded In A. F.
ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE,
Ga.—There are still critical va
cancies to be filled by civilian
employees with the Air Force in
the Far East.
The openings are .in Japan,
G m and Okinawa.
Openings for skilled civilian
employees in Japan and the yearly
salary for each position is as fol
lows: (10 per cent is added to sal
aries listed for overseas service in
Janan). |
Operation analyst, GS-13 ($7,-
600), GS-14 ($8,000) and GS-15
($10,000); position classifier, GS
-9 (8$4,000); civil engineer, GS-9
($4.600) and GS-11 ($5,400); air
craft modification design engi
neer, GS-9 -(54,600) and GS-11
($5,400) ; aireraft modification de
sign engineer, GS-9 ($4,600) and
GS-11 ($5,400),
Maintenance engineer, GS-9
($4,600); safety engineer, GS-9
($4,600); training instructor air
craft maintenance, GS-8, ($4,200):
training instructor communica
tion radar equipment mainten
ance, GS-8 ($4,200).
Openings on Okinawa - and
Guam and the yearly salaries are
as follows: (25 per cent is added
to salaries for service on Guam
and Okinawa).
Guam—Position classifier, GS
9. ($4,600); Okinawa—training in
structor erafts, GS-5 ($3,100).
Those who are interested may
get a Clvil Service form 57 at the
nearest post office and forward
it to the Overseas Employment
Coordination Office, 11 W. Mon
ument Avenue, Dayton, Ohio, at
tention Project P-10.
Addition of castor ooil to the
paint used in marking highways
improves sticking qualities and
prevents ehipping off.
FUNERAL NOTICE ‘
(COLORED) l
MR. JOSEPH ANDREWS of 323 |
South Finley passed Tuesday
morning at 12:10 a. m. at thel
Veterans Hospital, - Tuskegee, |
Alabama. He leaves (to mourn)
Mrs. Stella Andrews, wife: Miss
Josephine Dolores Farmer,
niece; Mrs. Lady B. Bowen and
family, and Mrs, Arnilla Saun
ders, two sisters of Chicago, I 11.;
l two brothers, Mr, Jessie An
drews and family, Mr. Macco
Andrews amnd family of Wash-l
ington, D. C, and a host of
! cousins, nieces and nephews.
{ The funeral of Mr. Joseph An
drews wili be held Friday, Aug
| ust 81, 1951, at 2:00 p. m. from
the Ebenezer Baptist Church.
Rev, E. D .Thomas will officiate,
assisted by Rev. L. S. Durham.
The body will lie in state at the
church from 10:30 Friday until
the hour of the funeral. Mem
bers of the Ladies Auxiliary of
the W. C. Brunt Post 3910 will
serve as flower ladies. Both
pallbearers and flower ladies
from the Post are asked to meet
at the church at 1:50 o’clock.
The following persons are asked
to serve as honorary gallbear«
ers: Messrs, E. M. Freeman,
Henry Thornton, Merty Killian,
sr., §roiusor LB Stroud,
Prof. T. H. Smith and Dr. A, M.
Jones, Interment in the Shady
Grove eemwtery, McWhorter
Funeral Home in sharge.
CHEVROLET
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THEY'RE GETTING IDEAS: In Greenwood, S. C,, Dr. B. M. Grier
(left), chairman, and Colonel E. R. Rosenber (second from left)
sit down with twe other Greenwood Plan committee members to
look over anti-Red propaganda ideas peuring in from people in
300 communities all over the United States,
Crusade For Freedom Enlists
"Man In Street” To Think Up Ways
To Fioht Soviet Propaganda
By NEA Service
GREENWOOD, S. C. — (NEA)
—A stenographer in Greenwood
thinks refugees and displaced per
sons now in America are the
people to “sell America to their
countrymen aborad” on U. S.
propaganda broadcasts.
A woman in Winston-Salem,
N. C., thinks every mother in
America should write an under-l
standing letter to every mother
in Russia and Red China.
Picked at random, those are a
couple of the hundreds of sugges
tions pouring into the Chamber of
Commerce in Greenwood, which
has become the headquarters for
a “man in the street” campaign
to combat the Communist “Big
Lie.”
* * *
The ideas are coming in from
men, women and children all over
the U. S. in a contest backed by
the Crusade for Freedom. Orig
inated by Chanuncey Lever, man
ager of the Greenwood Chamberi
of Commerce, it has spread tol
300 other communities in the U. S. |
Hawaii and Alaska. ]
Early this fall , a board of judges |
picked by the Greenwood proup |
will select the three best sugges- |
tions for penetrating the Iron Cur- |
tain by radio broadcasts. And the |
three winners will get a free trip |
to Europe. |
The winning ideas — plus any ]
others that can be adapted to |
the battle against Soviet propa- |
ganda — will be utilized by the |
Crusade for Freedom’s Radio Free |
Europe and by the Voice of |
America. |
¥ % ¥ |
With stations now operating at |
Munich and Frankfurt, Ge'rmany,|
Radio Free Europe this year hopes |
..
Let's Find !
Some Brand
New Cliches
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Newsfeatures Writer
What this country needs, among
other things, is a new set of popu
lar similes, or—top be more exact—
a modernization of its comparative
cliches.
This thought occurred during a
recent conversation when the per
son under discussion was referred
to as “dull as dishwater.” Maybe
in the old days of homemade soap,
dishwater was uninspiring, but I
would say that dishwater is about
the liveliest thing in my house. It
snaps, crackles, pops, revs up
mountains of phony foam, gives
the washer of dishes an incidental
beauty treatment and has taken
over the old-fashioned chores of
rinsing and drying,
A hasty and incomplete run
through of our fixed phrases —
those trite ones which rise irresis
tably and effortlesly to the average
tongue—indicates that most old
\ favorites just don’t stand up un
! der modern Jliving. t
| Some of them are pretty much:
‘without meaning. “Straight as a:
die” is one of these. I've looked
| carefully through my desk dic
tionary and fail to find any defi
lnition of ‘“die” or “dye” which
! would show straightiness. “Slick as
a whistle” is another. Somebody
said that probably comes from the |
habit of country boys to make
whistles out of fresh cut willow
wood. These, when stripped of
bark, had a slippery, moist feel to‘
them. This I wouldn’t know, on
account of T don’'t know any wil- |
low whistle makers. I
Many modern pipe-stems aren’t
plain; pins aren’t pm'ticulafly]
neat. Hedge-fences aren't homely
in these days of floribunda roses,{‘
evergreens and even privet. Old]
Croesus and his kingly wealth.
probably wasn’t half as rich as a
modern industrial executive oven!
after taxes. I know a couple of
very unsober judges. |
Most of the popular similes con
structed around the animal king
dom have been disproved by mod
ern research or we're just assum
ing thinks to be true. Who says
oxen are dumb? Owls aren’t so
wise, they just look that way. I've
| never encountered a tight tick, al
| though I've heard of alcoholic cats
'{and dogs. Beavers don't seem so
| eager to me, and I'm, sure that
' | mice aren't quiet. In these days
| of exterminators, church mice are
_jrare. I understand that elephant’s
memory has been vastly overrated,
_|and we have materials which are
tougher than its hide.
Larks may sound happy, but a
competent psychiatrist undoubted
ly ceuld find some sad, maladjust
.ed ones. Swans are graceful while
floating, but they are awkward
land bad-tempered on land. Bats, I
HARLEM
LAST TIMES THURSDAY
“CALDONIA"
Also
FiGHTER SQUADRON
to build a least two more broad
casting units by enrolling 25,000,-
000 Americans in the 1951 Crusade
for Freedom. In a national cam
paign during September, the Cru
sade is secking $3,500,000 in con
tributions.
Unlike the Voice of America,
which is government-supported,
the Crusade for Freedom gets its
funds through private backing
and support from the general
public.
A housewife in California, how
ever, had a still different idea on
how to finance such broadcasts.
“If they would issue stamps or
small baby bonds for $lO or sl2
each”, she wrote the Greenwood
committee, “thousands of people
would buy &hem and the money
would be obtained immediately
(instead of through more taxes)
for an all-out progaganda cam
paign.”
Like the stenographer who
would use refugees to get Amer
ica’s ideas across, a California
man suggested enlisting some of
the former Russians in this coun
try who have “grown into the
American way of life.”
If they were to broadcast in the
Russian language to the Russian
people, he thinks, it would pro
vide “a message about this coun
try that the native of Russia
could understand and accept.”
On their free trip to Europe,
the three winners will visit Voice
of America transmitters, the
World Freedom Bell in Berlin,
and the Radio Free Europe sta
tion in Munich,
There will be plaques, too for
the orignator of the best ilea in
each state,
understand, are not completely
blind. Rabbits, however, seem to
maintain their rating as a fertility
comparison, and fleas do jump.
Perhaps we might quietly drop
some of our monetary compari-
sons. Gold is still good, but much
of the world has abandoned it as a
standard. Exactly hw sound, I'd
like to ask, is the dollar?
Introducing new standard similes
into the language is a difficult job,
however. Professional writers and
talkers, who shy away from the
hackneyed phrase, have tried out
a number of them for size. Most
of them don’t ride comfortably and
easily on the tongue. I'd say that
about the only two which have
caught on enough to be cailed
“fixed phrases” are “powerful as
an A-bomb” and ‘“fast as a jet
plane.” Neither does much to
brighten up a sentence, but mark
some improvement over the old
fashioned bull and greased light
ning.
WORKING
MOTHERS
ARE WARNED
By DAVID TAYLOR MARKE
AP Newsfeatures
With production for defense
swinging into high, Mrs. Anna H. !
Hayes, president of the National
Congress of Parents and Teach~l
ers, souids .a note of warning
to those parents working or con—l
templating work in the national |
effort. Says she: i
“We are hearing of thousands ‘
of woman ‘doing their Datriotic;
duty’ in plants and factories.l
We do not question the right or |
even the advisability of women
working to produce esential
defense materials, but we in the
parent-teacher movement are
alert to any situation that threat- |
ens the well-being of the child- |
ren of our land.” i
Older women shou!l be re- |
cruited first, declai>s Mrs. |
Hayes. Younger women who still
have the responsibility of rearing ’
families should not be called !
upon nor volunteer if there are
likely to be children of elemen
tary and preschool age at home'
“who may be deprived of the
natural security of mother’s care
in the home.” It is altoghter
‘likely that many such little ones
are neglected, unhappy children
}beetuae their mother's are away
at work in a plant of factory, she
says.
Mrs. Hayes has known of many |
instances when infants are left |
to care for infants! Obviously |
they are not old enough to accept l
responsibility, “nor should they
be expected to do so,” she says.
‘“We hope,” continues Mrs.
Hayes”, that mothers who cannot
provide satisfactorily for the
care of their children will find
homebound ways of serving their
country. We hope that mothers of
young children will not surrender
the care of their children unless
circumstances make it necessary
for them to provide for the family ]
maintenance.”
When mothers must work away
from home, suggests Mrs. Hayes,
adequately supervised child care
centers should be provided. Such
centers should be located in areas
reasonably convenient for receiv-
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
{ing the children. “We urge that
| financial responsibility for such
| centers be shared by industry, the
lcommunity and the federal govern
| ment, and that they be operated
| according to acceptable standards
| for child care,” she says.
| “Our experience in World War
‘ll revealed that it is extremely
' difficult to provide proper ecare
' for children whose mothers must
' work the ‘swing shift. In such
cases great numbers of little
children were released from
'school without provision for
their evening meal and without
supervision through the evening
hours. The ‘door key’ children
suffered 2 handicap we cannot
afford to repeat. It seems reason
able to petition that young maoth
ers skilled enough for important
jobs be given priority in the
matter of working hours.”
Employers should be coop-‘
erative enough, says Mrs. Hayes,
to plan to use such young
mothers only after they have had
an opportunity to see their
children off to school, properly
clothed and fed, and should
release them from work in time
to be home to receive their
children after school hours.
If we don’t do this, declares
Mrs. Hayes, we are helping so
bring up a whole generation that
could easily tend toward delin
quency. And “if we allow a
generation of children to grow
through their most sensitive,
formative years without the
security of care in their own
home, we are failing in the de
fense of our country.” |
In The
Service
WITH THE THIRD ARMY IN
FANTRY DIVISION IN KOREA.
—Major Harry C. Barnes of Ath
ens, has been awarded the Bronze
Star Medal for meritorious serv
ice in Korea.
Major Barnes, whose wife
lives at 165 South Milledge ave
nue, returned to United States in
July.
The award was presented for
meritorious service in connection
with military operations against
the enemy. The major was serv
ing with Headquarters and Head
quarters Company of the Third
Battalion, 65th Infantry Regiment,
and the medal was given for out
standing service fromr January 30,
1951, to February 10, 1951.
Walter E. Rice has graduated
from the Air Force's automotive
preventive maintenance school at
Okmulgee A. & M. Technicul
School, according to Captain H. L.
Thompson, commanding officer of
the 3453rd School Squadron.
Private Walter E., Rice, whose
home is Athens, Ga., finished the
nine-weeks course in engine tune
up.
He is one of the 735 Air Force
trainees who will be trained at
Okmulgee A. & M. Tech, a voca
tional institution of over 30 trades,
under the present contract exten
sion. The program has been in
operation at the Okmulgee school,
branch of Oklahoma A. & M.
College, since March 5.
Trainees are being brought to
Okmulgee Tech from Lackland
Air Force Base at San Antonio,
Texas. Twenty-eight new trainees
arrive each week and 28 comrplete
their course, maintaining a total
of 252 men in training at a given
time.
Men are quartered and fed on
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;; ifi “ Starts Sunday
A TN PALACE
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| the Okmulgee Tech campus, which
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| type buildings connected by all
| weather covered ramps or hall
ways. The school is housed in
| buildings which formerly con
tained the Army’s Glennan Gen
| ergl Hospital,
Teen Talk
AP Newsfeatures
It is easy to tell that school
days are upon us —SO many
young men write asking the cor
rect thing to do when escorting
a girl to a party or formal dance.
Most of the young gentlemen
are confused about their role
when it comes to formal dating,
and the majority do not own
formal clothes. So, here are a
few tips that might help the
young gallants do an expert job
of being gentlemen when called
upon to escort that beauty
queen to a formal party.
What to wear.... A tuxedo is
correct attire for a formal date.
You can buy a good one for
about SSO (or more) or borrow
one or rent one for the evening
at from about $7 to $lO. One of
the most popular types nowa
days is a tropical-weight worsted
in midnight blue for year-round
wear and white for summer. The
fabric’s lightness assures you
of comfort while dancing. You
can brighten up own formal at
trie with a colorful cummerbund
and matching bow-tie. You may
wear a soft pleated formal shirt
or a plain white breadcloth with
French cuffs, from your bureau
drawer. If you ecan’'t afford to
invest in patent leather shoes,
wear black calf with a plain
toe.
If this is to be your first time
in a tux, wear it around the
house a couple of hours. This
dress .rehearsal will increase
your poise and self-assurance.
About that corsage ..... You
should supply a corsage for your
date and it is always good taste
to have it sent to the girl’s
home. It is particularly smart to
call the girl’'s mother or her
roomate or ask the girl herself
what color and style of dress
she plans to wear. After you
know, the color combinations, if
you haven’t ideas of your own,
ask the florist’s advice on what
will go with the dress. African
daisies, white daisies, Colonial
Bouguets make tasteful and
unusual corages. More conven
tional ones such as sweet peas,
baby roses, carnation clusters
and baby orchids always are top
drawer favorities. Auy of these
should ¢fit your budget. For
strapless growns, a waist cor
sage is most appropriate, al
though, if it suits the girl’s
personality, a wrist corage or
tiara of tiny roses would be
lovedy. Remember, although
every girl dreams about orchids,
full-size orchids are usually for
more mature women.
Transportation Problems ... Tt
is best to plan your mode of
travel in advance. If you depend
on the family car or a borrowed
one, make sure you .have it
sewed up completely. Other
wise, you should be able to
escort the girl from door to door
in ataxi — not always easy on
the exchequer. In case you are
forced to take her in a bus or
other public conveyance, tell
her about it in advance —
diplomatically. of course.
The lady always gets into the
car first. You should hold
the door, and help her with her
grown, it it is a long, trailing
‘one. You should get out first
and assist her out of the car.
Be a Gentlemen . .., . Arrange
beforehand where to go after the
dance is oved. Discuss this with
the girl to make sure her parents
approve of the Jlater hour, If the
girl has a curfew, don’t spoil the
evening my arguing the point,
Both you and your date should
make it a point to say hello to
the chaperone., If there is a re
ceiving line it is up to you to
introduce your date.
Dance Dilemma ... If there is
DRIVE IN
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a dance program, it may be made
out ahead of time, if your like,
Custom demands that you have
at least the first and last dance
with your date., Unless cutting is
ruled out for the affair, you
have to say ‘yes’ to a cut-in.
You might as well be gracious
about it,
If the orchestra plays a dance
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SUSAN ~ DAN GEORGE
PALACE FEATURE STARTS: 1:12, 3:12, 5:12, 7:12, 9:12.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1951,
you ean’'t do, it is better %o ex.
plain and suggest “sitting this
one out”” It is your responsibil
tiy to see that your date always
hag someone to danceé with,
And — don’t think you deserve
a goodnight kiss for being so
sweet about it all. It is up to
the girl and if she says “no”,
be a good sport ... or maybe get
your face slapped.