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PAGE EIGHT
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DAILY MEDITATIONS
Behold ye not unequally
ST TR voked together with unbe-
B ) lievers, for what fellowship
hath righteousness with un-
PIRASSND iohteousness?, and what
communion hath light with darkness?
Wherefore come out from among them, and be
- ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the un
clean thing, and I will receive you.—2nd Corin
thians 6:14-17,
tlave you a ravorite Bibie verse? Mail v
A, F. Pledger Holly Heights Chapel
—-G_RV'H; idence Indicates
rowing Evidence Indicat
Truman Won't Run In 52
BY DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON.— (NEA)—There is some smart
money here betting that the presidential race is go
ing to end up General Eisenhower versus Chief
Justice Vinson, i
Big news of this is that President Truman isn’t
going to run. Evidence to this effect has been grow
ing ever since he announced at a press conference
that he had made up his mind about being a can
diJate but that he would not reveal his decision
until after the first of the year.
Several prominent Democratic senators, who
should have the inside dope, have stated publicly
that they didn’t think that the President will run.
And the same story has been leaking out all over,
from the President’s personal friends and from
party officials.
However, the slightly different twist to the story
of his intentions, which comes again from the usual
excellent source, very close to 'the President, is to
the effect that he has not really made up his mind
yet, in spite of what he has said.
This source says that President Truman is now
undergoing one of the most severe mental struggles
he has ever suffered, trying to make up his mind.
He is said to be plagued by several conflicting emo
tions, the strongest of which is a feeling of infal
libility which has been building up in him ever
since he first became President, and which solidi
fed when he won in 1948.
EBEZLIEVES HE IS ONLY DEMOCRAT
WIHO COULD WIN
Further, he has fought hard and cleverly for all
of his policies, with a fair degree of success as far
. as political and legislative strategy goes. This has
increased his conviction that he is just about the
only man in the party who not only can win the
election, but guide the party’s destinies succesSfully
for the next four years.
Opposing this feeling in his mrind are reasons and
emotions telling him not to run again. He fio doubt
believes that he could quit and go down in history
as a fairly successful President of the United States.
He also knows that the perilous four years ahead,
i qwith terrible pitfalls for the chief executive, could
change his place in history from good to bad if he
made a mistake,
On top of that, as has been reported, are the feel
ings of Mrs. Truman on the question, and her great
influence with him. She does not want another four
years in the White House for herself. She could sac
rifice that feeling and go along with an attempt for
another term. But it is reported now that she is con
vinced that another four years would harm her
husband’s reputation and health. And she will not
corhpromise with those things.
Those whbt know her say she is deeply shocked
" with recent scandals being revealed in the Adminis
tration. She is deeply religious and appalled at the
thought of her hushand’s reputation being tainted
with any of it. :
In other words, she is putting all possible pres
sure on him not to run again. And she could have
the last say in the matter. |
WOULD BE ELDER STATESMAN,
IF HE POESN'T RUN
Also in the balance tending to influence him
| against running is the very pleasant prospect of
playing the role of elder statesman. He is naturally
gregarious and would enjoy a more relaxed life
with his friends than the one he now endures as
President.
| He could still be a party strategist and main cog,
. even out of office. And he might even try for an
! other term or two in the Senate, his favorite place
of employment.
In the capacity of retiring President, he could
still campaign strongly for the man he picked as his
| successor. And he has already said he would make
i a speaking {our of the country whether he was a
eandidate or not.
| ~ The question the party leaders are nervously ask
| ing themselves is, what can change his mind, if, as
| he saps, he has already made it up, or, what can
| nyale wp his mind if he hasn’t already. The current
rumors and stories about his not running being put
out mey be an attempt to influence him not to run.
' They could have that effect.
| I¥s almost a lead-pipe cinch that if he doesn’t
run, €hies Justice Vinson is his choice for the nom
ination.
Wheatever decision he makes, however, he has got
| to male it soon. If it’s Vinson, the job of getting
l him ready for the race is a long and tough one. It
‘ means the announcement will have to come soon.
| However, if it's to run himself, he has a little
; more timwe. And that could be the clue as to what
l he is going to do. If he delays more than a month
after the first of the year, it's a good tip that he
' has decided to try it again.
‘ A tors aren’t like- cther people. I'm not normal,
T ot 15 B >, How ccu'd I ke and still be
: 1 s oY, SCEOOH RO OF.
.
.
Movies, Threatened By TV,
Prove Quality Counts Most
When radio came in, the prophets foresaw the
quick demise of the phonograph recording industry.
But they were wrong. The record business soared
to new peaks, far outdistancing the moderate pre
radio levels.
Television’s arrival produced similar glum fore
casts of the death of motion pictures. Who would
get out the car, drive downtown or to a neighbor
hood center, hunt for a parking spot and go to a
movie when he could put his slippered feet up on a
hassock and be entertained without leaving his liv
ing room?
For a good while, it looked lixe there would be
much more substance to the movie-makers’ fears.
Cinema theaters closed by the dozens across the
country. The volume of business sagged painfully.
Good films seemed an increasing rarity.
But those who thought the time had come to start
choosing pallbearers have been confounded by the
events of recent months. The box office has picked
up sharply. Hollywood, recognizing the threat to its
existence, has poured energy and talent into pic
tures with a determination seldom matched in its
erratic history. And, in dazzling succession, many
of these films have won high critical acclaim,
In the experts’ judgment, it is this new stress on
quality that has turned the tide. Careful scanning
of the box-office figures shows the movie-goer ex
ercising extreme selectivity, The good ones he sup
ports with impulsive vigor, long lines outside the
big métropolitan theaters attest to that. The tur
keys he lets die a lonesome death.
Television has had sonrething of the impact on
movies that the latter had on the legitimate theater.
The films destroyed the market for run-of-mine
stage fare, Why see a play for a few dollars when
you could see a picture just about as good for forty
or fifty cents?
TV, with its great spate of studio dramas and its
almost embarrassing emphasis on old films, is
slicing away at the market for “B” pictures. The
family that wants an evening of merely passable
dramatic entertainmrent doesn’t need to budge from
the house.
But the thirst for top-grade cinema apparently
has never really abated. In the dramatic mirroring
of life, in the creation of light-hearted fancy, the
films can occupy a unique place. With unsurpassed
technical facilities, with abundant resources, with
cameras that can range the face of the earth, the
movies are equipped to contribute to art and enter
tainment in their own special way.
Too often in the past the film-makers have sadly
underestimated the increasingly discriminate nature
of their audience. Too often they have measured
their task narrowly, in terms of superficial enter
tainment routinely and unimaginatively offered.
The recent run of excellent pictures raises hopes
that, under the spur of TV competition, they are at
last out to make the most of their rich potential, In
the end, there may be something like a merger or
compromise with TV, But a continuance of present
trends will at least assure that this will be a meet
ing of equals, the movies are not going to yield by
default so long as quality is their insignia.
Have All The Answers
Every military headquarters has a “brain trust”
of smart young fellows who don’t get much in the
limelight, but who are expected to come up with
the answers whenever the big brass pushes a buz
zer. General Eisenhower’s headquarters is no ex
ception, according to press dispatches.
His top civilian aides are Douglas MacArthur 111,
a nephew of the ex-Far East commander, and Wil
liam P. Burnham, & New York investment banker.
MacArthur is a State Department career man who
is Eisenhower’s political adviser, and of whom the
general is very fond. He has the same high regard
for Burnham -— who is no relation to the James
Burnhanr who wrote “Coming Defeat of Com
munism.”
Ike's Burnham established close relations with
the general while he was president of Columbia
Univeristy, though Burnham himself is a Yale man.
Ike seems to like him because he is no “yes-man.”
Among the military braintrusters, Major-General
Cortland Van Rensselaer Schuyler, deputy chief of
staff, is tops, a West Pointer, a statesman and a
scholar. Brigadier-General Anthony J. Drexel
(Tony) Biddle is General Eisenhower’s official
greeter and military diplonrat, smoothie handler of
VIPs and foreign diplomats who speak to Ike
through Tony, in the first instance. Vice-versa,
General Eisenhower speaks to the European mili
tary missions officially through Biddle.
On a slightly lower level is a smart group of
young colonels who are supposed to know every
thing, The word around headquarters is that no
body makes a move without first asking. Lt.-Colonel
Andrew Goodpaster. Others in the group are Colo
nel Dodd Starbird, Colenel Hamilton Twitchtell,
Colonel William S. Steel, Colonel Vernon P. Mock,
Colonel Robert O. Wood and Colonel Peter Carroll.
They're all future generals.
The experience they're getting now is of course
invaluable, just General George C. Marshall's ex=
perience as a colonel at Genral John J. Pershing’s
headquarters in World War I helped make him.
I submit that men do not build houses or castles
or beautiful churches or diesel trains, or even make
soap, for themcelves, They do it for, or kezause of,
woren. Wonen wa e pever so important as
in the yzar I€3l.- . Hwe~r Ce' Houghton,
presideiat, General Facd cration of VYomen's Clubs.
They Landed, We Knew Not Where
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13,000 Combat Troops Slated To
Be Home For Christmas Holidays
ATLANTA, Ga. — Home-by-
Christmas plans for 12,000 to 15,-
000 American combgt troops in
Korea were outlined this week by
Mrs. Anna Rosenberg, assistant
secretary of defense in charge of
mranpower, William K. Barrett, di
rector, State Department of Vet
erans Service, announced today.
The program calls for return to
the United States of men in the
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E'LL put it up to you! There must be
Wplenty of good reasons why more people
buy Chevrolets than any other car. j
Here are some things to think about.
There's the way Chevrolet looks. Nice
clean, curved lines—like cars in the high-price
field! Chevrolet's Body by Fisher sets the pace
among low-priced cars.
There's the way Chevrolet rides and han
dles. The smoothness and big-car comfort of
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATPENS, GEORGIA
Army, Navy, Marine Corps and
Air Force who have accumulated
37 points — if their replacements
are on hand.
The 37-point rotation program
works this way.
1. Four points monthly to men
in the combat zone, including div
ision headquarters.
2. Two points monthly to men on
“behind the lines” duty including
UNIVERSITY CHEVROPI:E;!: CO.
corps headquarters.
3. One and one-half points
monthly to single men in Japan
for each man since July, 1950, and
to all single or married on Okina
wa, Guam, and in the Philippines.
4. One point per month to a
married man serving in Japan,
whose dependents are in Japan.
A man wounded in action in
Korea, if he received the Purple
Heart, is credited with the same
time during hospitalization as if
he had remained with his unit.
A man who returns fromr con
firmed prisoner-of-war status re
ceives the same four points
monthly he would have been
credited with during that time in
Unitized Knee-Action. Bigger brakes—biggest
in the field—for safer, surer stops. Finest no
shift and standard driving at lowest cost with
Powerglide or Synchro-Mesh transmission.
There's the way Chevrolet saves. Chevro
let is the lowest-priced line in the field and the
savings go on and on with low operating costs.
There are plenty more reasons why Chev
rolet i 8 America’s favorite. Come in and let
us show them to you.
combat,
Personnel in the United Status
on emergency leaves will e con
sidered eligible for change of sta
tion if 82 points have been ae~
quired.
Barrett learned from Mrs. Ros
enberg that National Guardsmen
who were promised discharages
within two years would start go
ing home after 16 or 17 months, so
that the impact on remaining
forces would not be too great at
any one tinre. The Guardsmen will
not be returned as units, but as
individuals, Barrett said.
Barrett invited persons inter
ested in the release of these com
bat troops to call at the nearest
branch office of the State Depart
ment of Veterans Service for fur
ther information.
Atlanta Naval Air
Station Inspection
Scheduled Dec. 5
Rear Admiral Lucian A. Moe
bus, USN, Chief of Naval Air
Reserve Training, and Brigadier
General Verne J. McCaul, USMC,
Commander of Marine Air Re
serve Training, will arrive at the
Naval Air Station, Atlanta, on the
afternoon of December 4th, 1951,
to conduct the fourth annual mil
itary inspection of the Atlanta
Naval Air Reserve Training Sta
tion, Commander T. W. McKnight,
acting commanding officer of the
Naval Air Station, announced to
day.
Approximately 1,300 Naval-
Marine Air Reserve veterans from
the Georgia area will be inspected
by the top Naval Air Reserve com=-
mander on the evening of Decem=-
ber sth.
The inspection of the local air
base is one of the 28 station in
spections to be made by Rear Ad
mriral Moebus and General McCaul
to determine the current military
preparedness and operating effi
ciency of the Naval-Marine Air
Training Command.
Vice Admiral John Dale Price,
USN, chief of Naval air training,
is expected to be present at the
inspection,
Prominent civilian and military
dignitaries in the Atlanta area
and families and friends of Atlanta
reservists have been invited to
witness the colorful ceremonies
that will be held in Hangar One
at the Naval Air Base on the even
ing of December sth.
An “amphibious” mining %lant
mounted on barges in being built
to mine a new deposit of sulphur
in swampy Bay Ste. Elaine on
the Gulf of Mexico.
Chevrolet’s time-proved
rowznéé‘aé
auvtomatic transmission
Finest no-shift driving at Jowest cost.
Combination of Powerglide Automatic
Transmission and 105-h.p. Engine optional
on De Luxe models at extra cost,
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1951.
Conyers Student
Gefs Oufsfanding
Chemistry Award
Charles H. Hill, University o 2
Georgia student from Conyers,
has been named outstandlni chem -
istry student.for the year 1980-51.
The award was made on the
basis of his having maintained
the hightest academic standing in
his course over a period of three
years.
An annual award, presented by
the Zep Manufacturing Company
of Atlanta, entitles the student to
a one-year membership im the
American Chemical Society.
Hill, a senior at the University
is a candidate for the Bachelor of
Science degree in chemistry,
Since the Titanic disaster of
1912 the U. 8. Coast Guard's In
ternational Ice Patrol locates ice
bergs and warns ships in or ap
proaching the danger Zzone.
Various inds of Insurance.
FHA, City and Farm Loans,
H. N. CHICK, SR.
Special Agent - Phone 2769
The Prudential Insurance
Company of America
DON'T PUT
IT OFF
ANY LONGERI |
Your
. State and | |
County
Ida D. Davison, T. C.