Newspaper Page Text
COTTON
Vol. CXIX, No. 258.
More Than 20 Die
A Trains Collid
Rescue Crews Brave Bitter Cold
To Search For Scores Of Injured
BY CLIFTON E. WILSON
EVANSTON, Wyo., Nov, 13.— (AP) —Benumbed rescue
erews today continued to probe the shattered vitals of two
passenger trains in which 20 or more persons died during
2 snowstorm-whipped collision yesterday.
An early morning check of the morgue in this small
southwestern Wyoming community showed 14 of the 20
hodies identified. Three persons are listed as missing.
[ight remain in serious conditon, with scores of others
treated for minor hurts and released. ’
Keds Insist 0
'mmediate Plan
For Buffer Zone
P,y ROBERT B. TUCKMAN
MUNSAN KOREA, Nov. 13 —
(A 7 An Allied spokesman said
(emmunist truce negotiators
“make it even more clear today”
they want to create a buffer zone
.cross Korea to end the shooting
Nnow.
The spokesman, Brig. Gen. Wil
iom P. Nuckols, said this “repudi
ates their earlier statement” that
fichting would not end until an
armistice is signed. The United
Nations command wants to create
4 cease-fire buffer zone only after
other terms of an armistice are
agreed on.
The Reds -outlined their posi
tior: i a& five hour session at Pan
.munjom while Allied artillery
;h.ells burst on hills less than two
miles away. The white phosphor
ous and high explosive shells
bracketed the town.
Nuckols said arguments became
more heated togay. Rear Adm.
Arleigh Burke, who carried the
brunt of the argument for the U.
N. command, was hoarse when he
left the negotiating tent.
Reds Impatient
Nuckols said Communist dele
sates became, more impatient and
their tempers grew shorter.
He declined to comment when
aslked whether the talks were de
teriorating. :
Another U. N. spokesman said
the Reds complained an Allied
plane violated the Panmunjom
neutral area Saturday. He con
ceded there was some truth in the
complaint.
Lit. Col. Norman B. Edwards,
Allied liaison officer, said a pro
peller driven plane flew over the
edge of the 1,000 yard security
area surrounding the village, but
turned away immediately.
By agreement, flights over the
area are prohibited except under
“weather or technical conditions
beyend eontrol.”
Edwards said the Communists
“were not trying to. make this
into a major inéident.”
He said the Communists merely
asked for an explanation of this
flight and the dropping of U. N.
surrender leaflets into the area
Sunday
Edwards said the leaflets were
dropped by an Allied plane out
side the area. Some were blown
in by wind, he said. This incident
was considered closed,
Edwards told Communist liaison
officers that the investigation of
the other flight was continuing
and proper disciplinary action
would be taken if the situation
required.
The plane was one of a flight
of three which attacked hills
everal miles northeast of Pan
munjom, Reds are enterenched
northeast and seuth of the town.
A sharp patrol ’s%fi‘mish broke out
Monday south of the village, typ
ical of action on the generally
quiet war fronts.
Truce negotiators scheduled a
nother session for 1t a. m. Wed
nesday (9 p. m, Tuesday, EST).
. Long Session
Their five hour Tuesday meet
ing was not broken for recess. It
was the longest session since talks
were resumed Oct. 25.
Nuckols said the two Communist
(Continued on Page Six.)
rillel To Lead
rittiel 10
F .
Chapel Services
The University of Georgia will
hold its weekly Service tomorrow
at 10 a. m, "
The Hillel Foundation will be in
charge.
The service, sponsored by the
University of Georgia Religious
Association, is held in the Uni
vercity Chapel and is cpen to stu
dents, faculty, and visitors.
The program tomorrow will be
similar to the Jewish Orthodpx
service. There will be three brief
meditations under the general
heading of “Judiasm Teaches Me.”
Beryl Weiner will teil how “Ju
daism Teaches Me To Love God;”
Annette Lieberman will speak on
“Judaism Teaches Me the Value
of Life;” and Howard Jolles will
tell shy “Judaism Teches Me To
Love My Fellow Man.” :
Students who will have reading
rarts in the service are Jerry
Fields, Atlanta; Ralph Kaplan,
Greenville, 8, C.; Lois Lefkewitz,
Jackson, Miss.; Jerry Saul, Augus
ta; Leonard Cotts, Augusta; Her=
%cr} and Milton Stolofé. Xentl:g
- J.; Maurice Ghingold, Augusta;
Erica Meyer, Atlante; Gerald Pla
lock, Savannah; Jerry Rittenbaum,
Atlanta; Herbert Shapiro, Augus
ta; and Marian Birland, Charles
ton, S. C, .
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Associated Press Serviee
The City of San Fraacisco, sleek
Union Pacific luxury train, roared
out of the swirling blizzard and
slammed into the rear of the
halted City of Los Angeles. The
collision sounded to one survivor
“like something screaming.”
The impact crumpled portions
of the two streamliners, Bodies
and parts of bodies were just “ly
ing around.”
The City of San Francisco was
thundering across the snowswept,
rolling desert about three miles
west of this small southwestern
Wyoming town, 80 miles northeast
of Salt Lake City. It plowed its
way through a snowstorm which
already had dumped eight inches
of snow on the ground. Ten min
utes ahead ran the City of Los
Angeles. Both were behind their
schedules. The 200 odd passengers
aboard both trains were getting
ready for lunch.
Halted On Line
Then the City of Los Angeles
halted on the line for a block sig
nal. At 11:32 a. m. (MST) the City
of San Francisco hit the last car
of the Los Angeles with a thun
derous rending of metal. The three
unit Diesel power plant of the
second train went through the last
car like a plowshare and crushed
four other cars. All cars of the
second train leaped off the tracks
but remained upright.
Thomas E. Sharp, owner of ra
dio station KFSD in San Diego,
was sitting in a compartment of
the City of San Francisco. He was
drinking coffee.
“The coffee flew out of my
hand and the conductor flew into
the Room,” Sharp reported. He ex
plained that the conductor was
standing in the aisle outside his
doorway.
Alex Henetz of Cheyenne, Wyo.,
a postal clerk, was riding in a
a coach three cars back of the San
Francisco power units, “Every
thing was running as usual when
there suddenly was a terrific roar
and a sound like someone scream
ing,” he saia. “I guess that was
the steel' being torn apart.”
Henetz said he rushed outside
and helped a woman from the top
of the shattered wreckage. “How
she was thrown - out I'll never
know,” he said. f
The snow let up as rescue op
erations began. It was a foot deep
near the wreck; drifts nearby
were deeper.
The snow begin again at night
fall. Workmen wigged floodlights.
They continued their work in
sub-freezing temperatures.
Reports of the dead began com
ing out of Wyuta, the Wyoming-
Utah border community which
was the precise site of the wreck.
Five were reported dead; then
eight, then 12.
Charles Wirbin, fire chief- in
Utah’s Davis country; drove an
ambulance to the scene. “Parts of
legs and arms were lying around.
They had to jack up a freight car
to get the body of one man,” he
reported.
“Rather Quiet”
A. F. Denham of Detroit was
riding with his wife in a com
partment of the City of San Fran
ciseo. .Denham’s wife suffered a
bruised leg, Denham, not hurt
said “there was not a lot of
screaming. It was rather quiet for
such a terrible wreck.”
A freight train, standing on a
spur beside the main line when
(Coniznued On Page Six)
Series Of Red Attacks
Halted By U.N. Troops
U. S. STH ARMY HEADQUAR
TERS, Korea, Nov. 13 — (AF) —
United Nations troops stopped a
series of coordinated Red attacks
today along the muddy east coast
of Korea.
The Reds attacked along a
three-mile front in the Kosong
sector. The attacks began before
midnight. Shouting Reds kept
coming through the darkness until
5 a. m. By 7:10 a. m,, the Eighth
Army said, the Ilast Commu
nist soldier nad been driven back
{o his own lines.
The Kosong sector is 45 miles
north of the 38th parallel, and the
northernmost point of the front.
It was the only action, aside
from patrol crashes, reported in
the Eigth Army’s evening com
munique.
Wonsan Seige
Sixty miles northwest of Ko
song, U. N. warships carried their
siege of Wonsan into the 271st
day. Destroyer guns set a big
Wonson supply dump - aflame
Monday. It burned fiercely for
more than four hours despite a
heavy raine
Skies cleared Tuesday and U. S.
Fifth Air Force fighter-bombers
cut North Korean rail lines in
more than 100 places.
U. 8. F-51 Mustang pilots re-
SERVING ATHENS AND NORTHEAST GEORGCIA OVER A CENTURY,
For Party Unity
By DON WHITEHEAD
HOT SPRINGS, Ark., Nov. 13
(AP) — The Southern Governors
Conference was in an angry turm
oil today cver House Speaker Sam
Raysburn’s fighting plea for De
mocratic Party loyalty which he
cuapied with sarcastic criticism of
Republians,
The Texan's hard-hitting at
tack last night against any revolt
by States’ Rights Democrats —and
GOP leaders—was like touching
a match to a powder keg.
Gov. Jarnes E. Byrnes of South
Carolina, regarded as one of the
engineers of a possible Dixie re
volt in next year’s Presidential
election, called a press conference
for 10:15 a. m. (EST) today to
answer Rayburn.
Gov. Theodore R. McKeldin of
Maryland, the lone Republican
Governor at the meeting, stalked
out the midst of Rayburn’s speech.
He later accused Rayburn of turn
ing the Governor’'s annual state
dinner into “a Democratie rally
of a very low order.”
Wright Views
_Gov. Fielding Wright of Mis
sissippi, a strong anti-Truman
leader, called the speech “a par
tisan political talk which should
never have been made” at a Gov
enors’ conference.
But Gov. Sid McMath of Ar
kansas, a pro-Truman Democrat
and a friend of the President, said:
“It was a good patriotic speech
by a great statesman and it was
made at the right time.”
Rayburn came to the conference
as the main speaker. He was in
vited by McMath —the host Gov=
ernor — in an obvious move to
counteract any possible move by
the States’ Rights leaders to use
the meeting as a starting point for
a “beat Truman” campaign.
Rayburn, an old friend of the
President, pleaded for party loy
alty in the South regardless of who
the Democratic nominee for Pres
ident might be.
He defended the administration’s
foreign policyy. its spending policy,
its tax record and the record of the
Democrats since former President
Herbert Hoover was defeated in
1932,
Then he said that Texas never
would have voted for Hoover for
President in 1528 (against Catholie
Al Smith) except for “pre-judice
and bigotry.” He declared his state
never would go Republican again
“as long as the people can remem
ber the Hoover days.”
He also mentioned the name
of Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio, avow
ed candidate for the GOP Presi~
dential nomination.
And then he said this country
might be plunged into a panic by
those who taik about the present
admisinstration thrusting the na
tion into bankruptcy.
With this ecriticism McKeldin
walked out. His wife remained
seated with the other Governors’
wives.
McKeldin Statement
McKeldin later issued a state
ment saying he had been amazed
“at the smearing of former Pres
ident Hoover, an outstanding citi
ben of the United States.”
He said his amazement turned to
“anger and disgust when Mr. Ray
burn brought the discussion down
to a ward politician’s"plan of who
is going to lose what job if the
Truman party is defeated.” .
Rayburn had argued that a
Dixie revolt would lead to the de
feat of the Democratic President
ial candidate— and would be a
blow to the South’s prestige in
Congress.
The house speaker said the
South would loose important com
mittee chairmanships now held by
Southerners. : y
. Until Rayburn’s speech, the
conference officially had been a
discussion of state problems of ed~-
ucation, highways and public wel
fare. Polictics was present but in
the background. ;
Gov. Herman Talmadge of Geor
gia, another foe of the President,
had told reporters the anti-Tru
man forces could organize a revolt
within 48 hours. But, he added, no
such drives would be launched at
(Continued On Page Six)
ported they killed or wounded
about 156 Reds in close support
strikes near Ando on the eastern
front north of the punchbowl.
South African Mustang pilots
led by Capt. M. S. Peterius of
Capetown, said they Kkilled 75
Communist troops in ground sup
port aitacks in the same area.
Weather was so bad Allied car
riers did not launch a single plane
Monday on the east coast. But on
the west coast the Australian car
riar Sidney launched its I,oooth
sortie in the Korean war.
B-29 Action
The Fifth Air Force kept its
fighters and fighter-bombers on
the ground Monday, But all
weather B-29 superforts hit two
air fields in Northwest Korea. The
Reds have been trying to get them
in shape for their jets, now based
across the Yalu river in Man
churia.
Gen. Hoyt 8. Vandenberg, U. S.
Air Forces chief of staff who left
Tokyo for Washington Tuesday,
said Allied planes have done such
a thorough job there isn't a single
target left worthy of attack by a
mass flight of B-295.
He credited United Nations su
periority in jet warfare to train
ing of American pilots and *that
indefinable something that makes
them want to win.”
ATHENS, CA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1951,
Russian<..Object As U. N. Votes
Plan For German Reunification
B S e
SRI AL R S T SRR R RR SN i
B T T
e e 1 3
\%@&‘f&: o (..
\*“%x\ e oG ‘
B R R ee R R T S SRR B 3
£X *’v'-:;§§~t::;45_‘“;-*.33;—-‘";‘7‘;5;:3‘:,.;jv;;. 43 W ¢l i
i - Ay 4
Q el o
o O S BUCIT g
““‘%\’3 b e
ei A !
e g
BRA SR P R S y
e ; : :
S :
e - =
SRNR e e e
B R F .
L i TSR e
& 0 ' ol e
eeR : S s
aOP T e
S 0 R RS R S n R a 5 iy il
eeE . b L
T .af;o‘ / ; e : i ; q
s ; .
sT : e
URGES STEP-BY-STEP SOLUTlON—Britain’s Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden addresses the United Nations
sixth general assembly at Paris, calling on the Russians
to put aside major world issues temporarily and seek a
step-by-step solution of the cold war. It was Eden’s first
speech in the UN since the founding conference at San
Francisco in 1945, and was notable for its mild tone and
lack of attacks on the Russians. Today the General As
sembly voted, over strenuous Russian objections, to take
up a Western Big Three plan intended as the first step
in the reunification of Germany.— (AP Wirephoto by
radio from Paris.)
Capital Crowded With
Brass, Senators Say
WASHINGTON, Nov, 13.— (AP)—The Senate Prepar
edness Subcommittee complained today that the Washing
ton area is overloaded with “upper brass’—high-ranking
military officers—and armed forces civilian employes.
“It is obvious that the Defense establishment is tending
toward an administrative top-heaviness that is inefficient,
wasteful and dangerous,” the armed services group said in
a report; 24T YT i 2 B 2 ey VGRS
R
B L i T
o e TR
LY (g T s
SR N R ;{?‘ R =
b TR TR el eI
e ;
soP : b
D b é* R o
B o 3\\ A \,s )-,,‘ P # {
e "fi,:]w}f"’?'fi’, S 5 4 2
fi b bt e, %
. .
RN B
E 'f g : ‘ Kg&,‘““, ~}{‘
e |
JUDY COLLAPSES
Songstress Judy Garland, who
was making a sensational come
back starring in a wvaudeville
show at the famed Palace Thea
ter in New York, collapsed dur
ing her performance there and
had to be carried from the thea
ter on a stretcher. Suffering
from “nervous exhaustion,” her
doctor ordered her to ease up.
But Judy, heeding the stage’s
tradition of “the show must go
on,” went right on working un
til she collapsed. — (NEA Tel
ephoto.)
Hendon Servi
Mrs. Ruby Hendon, wife of
Warren L. Hendon, died in a local
hospital Monday afternoon at 2
o'clock after an illness of several
days.
Services are to be conducted
Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock
from First Methodist Church with
the pastor, Dr, Dow Kirkpatrick,
officiating.
The body will lie in state in the
church from noon until the hour
for the services.
Interment will follow in Oconee
Hill Cemetery, Bernstein Funeral
Home in charge of arrangements.
Pall-bearers will be Guy Terry,
Tylee Terry, Herman Prather, Al
bert James, Jack Sprayberry and
C. H. Kemp.
In addition to her husband, Mrs.
Hendon is survived by two sons,
Jerry and Tim Hendon; parents,
(Continued On Page Six)
“Unless the trend is halted now
we could, in the classic phrase,
wind up with the fighting forces
composed of ‘all chiefs and no In
dians’.”
The report said there now are
almost as many Generals, Admirals
and defense eswsblishment civil=-
ians stationed at the Pentagon and
in the general Washingion area
as there were during World War
11 peak strength when the Armed
Forces were three and a half times
present size.
In an accompanying letter so
Secretary of Defense Lovett,
Chajrman Lyndon Johnson (D=
Tex) called the situation startling
and asked for recommendations
to remedy it. There was no im
mediate comment from the Penta~-
gon.
_ The committee’s study showed
that last Sept. 30 there were 361
General and Flag officers and 91,-
081 defense establishment civrlians
stationed in the Washington area.
On April 30, 1945 — just before
the end of the war in Europe—
there were 397 General and Flag
officers and 98,071 clvilians.
In 1945 the Armed Forces total
ed more than 12,000,000 men and
women. The present strength is
around 3,500,000,
Referring tc the present situa
(Continued On Page Six)
ATHENS AND VICINITY
Considerable cloudiness with
mild temperatures this after
noon and tonight. Some light
rain this afternoon. Wednesday
partly cloudy and warm. Low
tonight 52; high tomorrow 68.
Sun sets today 5:31 and rises
tomorrow 7:04.
GEORGIA — Consider
able cloudiness and warm this
afternoon, tonight and Wednes
day.
EXTENDED FORECAST
GEORGIA — Average tem
peratures for the next five days
considerably above normal with
low readings mostly in the fif
ties and afternoon temperatures
in the 70’s throughout most of
the period. Showers in mountain
sections Wednesday night or
Thussday, producing one-fourth
t one-half inch of rain and little
or no rain elsewhere.
TEMPERATURE
P TSR e B
et s,
I i Lk i b eBB
DONENRE - . . el DB
RAINFALL.
Inches last 24 hours .. ... .00
Total since November 1 ... 1.31
Excess since November 1 .. .23
Average November rainfall. 2.74
Total since January 1 .. ..35.33
Deficit since January 1 ... 823
VISHINSKY ATTACKS PLAN,
BY STANLEY JOHNSON
PARIS, Nov. 13.— (AP) —Over strenuous Russian ob
jections, the United Nations General Assembly voted today
to take up a Western Big Three plan intended as the first
step in the reunification of Germany. .
The vote was 47 to 6 with 2 abstentions.
By its vote, the Assembly re
jected Soviet Foreign Minister An
drei Vishinsky’s claim that the
German problem was none of its
business.
The Assembly also beat back a
Russian attempt to force off the
agenda long-pending Nationalist
Chinese charges of Soviet aggres
sion in China.
The Big Three plan, as ex-~
plained by U. S. Secretary of State
Dean Acheson and British Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden, calls for
the establishmnt of an impartial,
international commission to in
vestigate whether conditions in
both West Germany and Commu
nist-ruled East. Germany are suita
ble for holding elections.
Both Acheson and Eden said it
was designed to lead to eventual
unity of Germany, and was intro
duced at the request of West Ger
man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.
Vishinsky Attack
“I beg to differ,” Vishinsky said
in a slashing attack on the plan
today. France, Britain and the
United States want “first and fore
most to perpetuate the dismember
ment of Germany,” he said.
Vishinsky claimed that estab
lishment of such a commission
would violate both the charter of
the United Nations and the Pots
dam agreements.
He also said it was “an insult to
the German people to present them
with demands which are usually
made to such backward countries
as Morocco and Tunis.” A
The Soviet Foreign Minister, in
angry tones, insgisted that the
problem of Germany should be
considered &ot by the U. N. Gen~
eral Assembly but in the Council
of Foreign Ministers, made up of
the Foreign Ministers of the United
States, Russia, Britain and France.
Russia has a veto there.
Vishinsky was backed by Moshe
Sharet of Israel, who claimed that
“the spirit of Nazism” was reviv=-
ing in Germany and that the Big
Three proposals were “morally
and legally unjustified.”
Britain’s Sir Gladwyn Jebb said
the plan had the support of West
Germany and urged its acceptance
as “a preliminary step which might
lead to the holding of elections
throughout Germany.”
Austin Action
U. 8. Delegate Warren R. Aus
tin also urged inclusion of the
item on the agenda of the 60-na
tion Assembly.
The vote to keep the Nationalist
Chinese charges against the Sov
iets on the agenda was 30 to 8
with 13 abstentions.
Nationalist China has had be
fore the U. N. for two years the
charge that Russia boosted the
Chinese Communists to power in
vioiation of the U. N. charter and
her treaty with Chiang Kai-shek.
The Assembly also was expected
to hand the Soviets another set
back later today by ruling there
can be nc further debate at this
session on the Russian demand to
admit Communist China to the U.
N. Such action was recommend
ed Saturday by the Assembly
steering committee, despite strong
Communist objection.
Malik Denunciation
Soviet Delegate Jacob A. Malik
denounced the Nationalist Chinese
charges as “silly and provocative
libel” and charged that the real
menace to China’s territorial in
tegrity was American aggression.
Nationalist China’s T. F. Tslang
replied that the question, which
was debated inconclusively at last
yeai’s assembly, was the most im
portant item before the United
Nations. He demanded that it be
taken up immediately as unfin
ished business.
The Nationalist charges were
referred last year to the “Little
Assembly.” It was expected they
would be shunted off again in the
same manner.
The Assembly also decided, over
strenuous South African objec~
tions, to air indian charges that
the Indian minority in South Afri
ca had been mistreated. This aiso
was on the agenda for last year’s
General Assembly, but no definite
conclusion was reached. Only
South Africa voted aaginst in
clusion of the item on this year's
agenda.
Before taking up the issue of
Nationalist China’s charges against
Russia the 60-nation Assembly
adopted 22 agenda items without
(Continued on Page Six.)
s e -
&
( T, .
g
c&\ v iot
; » Frrd
i s ‘f "R\ )
T ’3\§°
© 1951 by NEA Service, Ing.
Most people who bury the
hatchet mark the soot.
Read Daily by 35,000 People In Athens Trade Area
Killing Coach
ATLANTA, Nov. 13—(AP)—A
sheriff’s deputy fired six shots
last night and ended two lives —
his own and that of a 23-year-old
basketball coach.
The dead: W. D. Martin, 38-
vear-old Fulton county deputy;
and James R. Phillips, high school
teacher and coach at Alpharetta,
a community of less than 1,000
about 27 miles northeast of At
lanta.
Lieut. H. B, Carroll said a wit
ness, Otis Damnger, told of en
countering Martin outside the
school’'s gymnasium,
Danger told him, said Carroll,
that the deputy volunteered, “I'm
going to get Coach Phillips. He
broke up my home, He’s caused
me trouble.”
The witness said he had driven
to the school to pick up his twe
sons, both members of the basket
ball team.
Carroll said it happened like
this: :
Phillips, who had gone to the
high school gymnasium to direct
the basketball team in practice,
was called outside by Martin,
The deputy fired once. The
shot struck the young coach in the
neck and knocked him down. Mar
tin then fired four more shots in
to the coach’s body.
Two players on the basketball
team—Carroll Shirley and H. H.
Pinkle—rushed to the gymn door,
but the deputy menaced them
with his revolver and ordered
them to remain inside.
Martin stepped back a few
paces, placed the barrel of the gun
against his head, and fired.
Both men were married. Phil
lips had taught and e¢oached at
the school for the past two years.
Officers said Mrs. Martin also was
a teacher at the school.
Noted Dai
Atfend Sessions
Nearly a dozen of the nation’s
top flight dairying leaders are to
visit the University of Georgia
campus Wednesday and Thursday,
and leaders in the industry in this
state will be on hand to greet
them.
The occasion in the Market Milk
Short Course sponsored by the
Dairy Division of the Coliege of
Agriculture, of which H. B. Hen~
derson is chairman. This is one of
four dairying short courses to be
held on the campus during the
next few months.
R. F. Holland, professor of Dairy
Industry, Cornell Tiniversity, It
haca, New York, opens the pro
gram at 10:60 tomorrow morning
with the subject Automatic Mer
(Continued on Page Six.)
ANNUAL EVENT
‘Stunt Night' Planned
At University Tonight
This is Stunt Night on the Uni
versity of Georgla campus.
For the 25th year University so
rorities, fraternities and dormi
tories will pit their wit and talent
against that of the rest of the cam
pus in compeition for one of the
University’s most coveted awards
—that given for the mostioriginal
stunt night entry.
The event, sponsored by the
Men’s Glee Club, of fun and sa
tire will begin in Fine Arts audi
torium at 7:30 p. m.
The Glee Club will open Stunt
Night with a collection of songs
including their now-famous Geor
gia Medley. W. C. Owens, Atlan
ta, president of the club, will be
the master of ceremonies,
Eleven campus groups will com
pete for top awards. These groups
were selected to present stunts in
campus-wide try-outs last night.
Two Contests
Between stunts there will be en
tries in the original and love song
contests. Prizes are to be given
for the best song in each classifi
cation.
Announcement of all winners
will be made at the end of the
prograr, Edwin Blanchard, John
Downs and William Tate serving
as judges.
The program is as follows:
Songs, Women's Glee Club;
“Jug” Campbell, love song—“ Sin";
HOME
EDITION
E Tot i ;g S
e EW T )
)e e 1
5T Y PLI
’ i ,9, % ; v‘. PR 0] 3’ !
: AT TT O
i S % b
%e i ¥
2 ,‘_ _’:}s;- < & 5 :‘k s i
a 0 o RNS
"':;: \:"f %Bm‘ b (/5 \A‘: e R i
W “% - .
MORNING MEETING
Vacationing President Tru
man, while taking his regular
early morning stroll in Key |
West, met 12-year-old Joln ;
Lawer. The President sfopped |
to shake hands and have a |
word with the boy.—(NEA Tel- '
ephoto.)
HST Working On
State Of Union, |
daié son, !
By ERNEST B. VACCARO
KEY WEST, Fla, Nov. 13 —
| (AP) — President Truman’s press
'l secretary said today he has already
started perliminary work on three
major messages he will submit to
Congress in January.
The Secretary, Jaso?h Short said
| he has gone oyer with his staff
the broad outlines of the “State of
the Union Message” and that work
is well underway on the budget
and economic messages which will
follow it.
Sharing importance with the
messages te Congress will be the
President’s meeting sometime in
January with British Prime Min
ister Churchill in Washington.
' While their discussions likely
will cover the whole runfie of
mutual security, financial ald for
Britain will have a major part in
them.
There is no disposition of the
part of the administyation to over
look the importance of an econe:,
mically strong Great Britain .J
this country’s defense program.
"And W. Averell Harriman, the
new mutwal security administra
tor, will be able to give the Pres
ident an advance briefing on the
English situation.
Particular interest will eenter
in the 1952 election year on what
the President will have to say in
the “State of the Union Message”
which he always delivers to Con
gress in person.
That document is expected to
lay the groundwork not onsi{ for
the administration’s legislative
program but for demccratic cam
paigners around the country.
Regardless of whether Mr. Tru
man seeks re-election— he has
said he will not disclose his de
cision until after the messages
have been the Demoeratic Cam
paign and furnish targets for Re
publican speakers.
Short would not discuss the na
ture of the “State of the Nnion”
appeal this year,
Alpha Gamma Delta, “Inferno™;
Jimmy Oglesby, love song—“ Make
Believe”; Physical Education Club,
“Trampolino”; W. C. Owen,
“Drain Pipe Song”; Kappa Alpha
Theta, “Mellow Drama.”
Billy Smith, love song, “Through
the Years”; Alpha Tau Omega,
“Jungle Heat”; Mary Jo Andrews,
love song, “Long Ago and Far
Away”; Zeta Tau Alpha, “Wo
men Soldiers Never Die”; Carlten
English, love song—*‘Come Back to
Sorrento”; Chi Omega, “Amen for
Carmen”; Freddie Stroupe, whist
ler—“ Listen to the Mocking Bird"’;
Ray Warren’s Orchette, “Shorty’s
Got to Go.”
Intermission
Glee Club, Georgia Songs; Mar
garet Church, love song - “My
Bill”; Alpha Delta Pi, ‘The Trage
dy of Oso Pure”; Cy Waldron, ac
cordianist — “Two Guitars”; Pi
Phi, “Creeping Congo”; Artie Bo
vee, “I Want To Be An Escapist”;
Phi Mu, ‘Jeli Spell”; Cas Hoffman,
love song — “Some Enchanted
Evening”; Chi Phi, “Jack Head
stron: All Americans American.”
Lecnard Whatley, love song —
“Be My Love”; Xappa Delia,
“Dancing Thru the Years”; Jo&h
Yow and W, C. Owen, “Row, Row,
Row"; Kappa Alpha, “Caesar and
Cleopatra™; combined Women's
and Men's Glee Clubg, “Alma
Mater.”