Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN
#uth Roman And
‘Steve Cochran At
With Ruth Roman and Steve
Cochram, two fast-rising stars,
sharing the top roles, “Tomorrow
Is Another Day,” a romantic dra
ma, comes to the Palace Theatre
tomorrow,
The story of a fugitive pair,
‘“Tomorrow Is Another Day,” is a
hard-hitting, action film that
shows the paths a convict some
times follows after his release
from prison. His confinement end
ed, Cochran, in the film, meets up
with taxi dancer Ruth Roman. Her
admirer, a detective, resents him
and in an ensuing fight, is killed
by the girl. Cochran and the hos
tess flee from the scene, and it is |
their attempt to hide and live a'
model life that forms the drama- |
charged background of the film. !
Cochran’s role is not a new type
for him, for it was in *“White
Heat” with Jamres Cagney that the
handsome Broadway star made
such an impression that studio
heads starred him in one succes
sive action hit after another. He
has already played opposite some
of Hollywood's top female stars
such as Doris Day, Ginger Rogers
and Joan Crawford, so when Mae
West chose him for the lover role
in “Diamond Lil,” she had pro
phetically picked a winner.
Ruth Roman’s star has been in
the ascendancy since she gave an
unusually touching performance
as the girl who surrenders her
child for adoption in “Three Se
crets.” Ruth’s fans will get a
chance In “Tomorrow Is Another
Day” to see the brunette actress
as a blonde when she plays her
taxi-dance hall scenes in tight
fitting black satin and long gol
den tresses. ‘
Lurene Tuttle, Ray Teal, Lee
Patrick and Hugh Sanders play |
supporting roles in the film. !
(ontinued ¥rom Page Oned
e#s missing in action.
These points could have de
finite repercussions in the prisoner
of war subcommittee when it re
convenes,
Allied mnegotiators had forced
the list of prisoners from the Reds,
charging they were using .it as
a bludgeon for other concessions
and refusing to discuss further
conditions on exchange of prison
ers until the precise number was
known. The U. N. command said
it could expect to get back only
those prisoners definitely identi
fied by the Reds in advance on an
agreement,
The ecommittee reconvenes at the
call of Allied delegates. They re
cessed Tuesday until the list of
men in 11 Red prison camps could
be studied and the names of 3,198
Americans rushed to the United
States and their loved ones.
The Communist list supported
earlier reportg that Maj. Gen. Wil
liom F, Dean was a prisoner.
The Red-haired winner of the
medal es honor, missing 17 months,
was listed as hield in a small camp
for important prisoners near
Pvongyang. North Korean Capital.
When sand how to release the
prisoners still remains to be de
cided by trute negotiators.
Presumably an exchange would
be accomplished in stages after an
armistice is signed. Negotiators
are trying to beat a Dec. 27 dead
line—ohly 8 days away.
The truce supervision subcom
mittee made no progress toward
that goal, a U. N. spokesman said,
in more than four hours of wrang
ling Wednesday. :
They agreed to try again at 11
a. m. Thursday (9 p. m. Wednes-,
day EST.)
Gov't
-
" (Continued From Page One)
months of steel industry labor
peace, under Taft-Hartley, at the
expense of a possible combined
steel-coal labor dispute.
Seizure of the strike-threatened
steel industry also seemed unlike
ly, since the White House cur~
rently is trying to settie railroad
industry disputes after having the
rail industry wunder an 18-month
seizure.
The expected eourse was that
Mr. Truman would send the steel
case 0 the Wage Board.
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HERE'S THE “HEXTENT"” OF IT—This is the Army’s new “Hextent,” one of many new items
{ |of equipment being used in Korea. Far lighter than conventional tents, the “Hextent” weighs about
| g ‘
¢t 187 pounds, can easily be handled by the men it shelters. (Inset shows it folded up and held by one
+ 'man.) The new tent has a white inner lining, providing better insulation and light reflection. A
ground cloth around the bottom seals out cold winds.
Represenfafives
Take Sides On
Education Issue
ATLANTA, Dec. 1% — (AP) —
- With the 1952 Legislative session
less than a month away General
| Assembly leaders are choosing
'sides on the question of what to do
to stop squabbling in the State’s
Education setup.
i The problem finds Gov. Her
man Talmadge and two of his top
’Lieutenants in the House leading
opposing factions. And indications
‘are that the Governor will come
out on top.
Talmadge is strongly opposed to
a proposal ‘backed by House
Speaker Fred Hand and Speaker
Pro Tem George Smith to reog
anize that administrative set up in
the Education Department.
Smith, the guiding hand behind
the plan, wants the State Board
of Education to be elected by the
Legislature instead of appointed
by the Governor. Then the Board
would select a State School Super
intendent, instead of letting the
voters elect him.
Talmadge prefers the present
system, and he has the backing of
most legislatuve leaders excent
Hand and Smith. Lt. Gov. Marvin
Griffin, who is Senate President,
Sen. Grady Rawls, administration
floor leader, and Sen. Osgood Wil
liams, minority leader, allstand be
hind the Governor and predict the
reorganization attempt will fail.
So does Rep. Frank Twitty, house
administration floor leader.
Williams said squabbles between
the board and school Supt. M. D.
Collins can be ironed out by
changing the laws to clarify the
duties and responsibilities of each.
Most of the feuding between Dr.
Collins and the board has centered
on which has jurisdiction over
specific matters.
But despite the disfavor of the
Governor and others, Smith is
going ahead with plans to submit
to the legislature.
“We are just trying to get a
united educational ?’stem, one that
can efficiently administer that
520,000,000 budget,” he comment
ed.
And he added that Talmadge's
opposition does not indicate a split
with administration ranks.
“It’s just a difference of opin
ion,” he said. “After all, we are
administration men but this is not
an administration measure and we
have differed with the Governor
before.”
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IT'S THIS WAY, FELLOWS . , . — Barbara Payton, bride of
actor Franchot Tone after a stormy and much-publicized romance,
shows how it is to be the “Bride of the Gorilla” in front of a
Chicago theater, where the movie is showing. j
Commerce Fiier
Trip In "Copier
MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 19 — (AP)
— A Coast Guard helicopter flew
two mercy missions here, rescuing
an injured hunter in the Ever
glades and taking blood to an ill
officer aboard a destroyer escort.
The helicopter was flown by Lit.
James Durfee, 20, of Upper Darby
Pa., with A M James Potts, 31, of
Commerce, Ga., as crewman,
They lowered three pints of
blood to the USS Huse about 60
miles east of Fort Lauderdale.
Later the ill officer, Lt. Joseph
E. Bissanti, 30, of Portsmouth, R.
1., was transferred to the Veterans
Administration Hospital in Coral
Gables.
Returning from its mission at
sea, the helicopter refueled and
flew to the Everglades several
miles west of Miami where it
located William C. Reifenberg, 24.
Reifenberg was hunting with
two other men when their swamp
buggy became mired in the muck.
He was unable to walk because of
a recently broken ankle and was
“oisted into the helicopter and
cuzht to Miami.
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THE GCGENERAL RETURNS .- Gen. Douglas MacArthur acknow 74 ¢ thow
i s MacA r ywledges ovation by thoeu
nds follow : mmand,
sands following his arrival in San Franclsco in April after recall from his Far East command,,
»
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGLA
iNew Hosniial For
Within 3 Years
ATLANTA Dec 19 — (AP) —
Hughes Spalding, chairman of the
Fulton-DeKalb Hospital Authority,
says that the Authority hopes to
begin construction of a proposed
$20,000,000 hospital within the
next three years.
Spalding declared that the pre
sent Grady Hospital was built to
serve a population of approxima
tely 150,000. Since then the for
been turned over to the two-coun
ty authority and now serves a po
pulation exceeding 600,000.
The Authority has more than
$1,000,000 in its building fund.
With its capacity to service, or
repay, loans at the rate of $500,000
a year, the Authority could now
raise approximately $9,500,000. It
still must find some way to obtain
an additional $10,000,000.
Grass and weed killing chemi
cals are replacing the man with
the hoe in American cotton fields.
A hydrogen atom usually has a
mucleus consisting of a single
pratlicle called a praton.
, Taffy Sisters Have
Sweef Way To Fill
weel Way To
Movie Houses Again
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD — (NEA) — Far
be it from me to urge Greer Garson
Irene Dunne and Claudette Col
bert to drop their shoulder straps
and hoist their skirts in front of
the movie cameras.
But a couple of young, success
ful, Dixie-born sisters who design
glamorous gald rags for Holly
wood dolls whispered it to me that
there’s not enough blushing pink
on the movie screen these days to
lure the male customers away from
their TV stes.
“Our stars are all covered up,”
wailed Sari Taffy, a petite brunet.
“Why, the women on the screen
have more clothes on than the
women in the audience.”
“It's terrible, that’s what it is,”
chimed in her soft-spoken sister,
Ann. “There’s -just npothing for
the boys to look at anymore.”
The Taffy sisters sighed in chor
us:
They weren’t for anything that
wasn’t nice and proper, they
drawled.
It was just that they believed
that producers ought to go back
to the old device of putting at least
one disorbing sence into every
picture to be sure of drawing men
into the theaters.
There were other little tricks
that paid off big in the ‘3o’s, too.
Like a star fastening her stock
ings to her garter belt or getting
her skirt blown way over her head
by a gust of windg.
“Why, men used to storm the
theater doors to see Jean Harlow
in black step-ins or Norma Shearer
undressing behind a screen while
she talked to Clark Gable,” Ann
said. “Nowadays a star starts tak
ing off her clothes and the camera
cuts away quick-like.”
ANYTHING TO HELP
“It’s plain silly,” said Sari. “Lit
tle things like that help a picture.”
A “They cheer the boys up,” from
nn.
Had I checked morning attend
ance at the popcorn palaces lately,
Sari wanted to know?
Well, one of her friends was an
exhibitor and she had it straight
from him that salemen just
weren’t dropping in the way they
used to.
“The fellows like to knock off
for a few hours if there’s a movie
with a little zip to it,” Sari said.
“It inspires them. The word gets
around if Lana Turner is swish
ing around in a megligee and sort
of forgetting to keep the lace to
gether. Only they don’t let Lana
do that in Hollywood any morge.”
Telephones began to jangle at
their Beverly Hills salon and the
Taffy sisters rushed away to assure
Zsa Zsa Gabor that her evening
gown was ready, and to make an
afternoon appointment for a fitting
with Rhonda Fleming.
“We think of men when we de
sign clothes for women,” Ann
tossed it to me. “Right now I'm
thinking of the expressions on the
faces of the men who see Zsa Zsa
in her evening gown.”
“If we gave a little thought to
men as Hollywood does,” Sari ad
ded, “we’d be out of business.”
“That’s right.”
“You've got to think of the
boys.”
GO AHEAD AND TELL
Could the Taffys, I wondered,
name any movie producers who
were giving male moveigoers—
er—a little peck-a-boo considera
tion?
“There’s Cecil B. DeMille,” Sari
said. “Watch the woman in his
movies, Their shirts are always
falling aside a reveal a shapely
leg. Or they’ré doing all sorts of
wonderful, feminine things. That’s
why his pictures make money.”
“And then there’s Howard
Hughes,” exclaimed Ann.
“Oh course,” said Sari, reverent
ly.
Ann sighed:
“If only he could put in movies
what he puts on his big billborads
—wow!"”
They had been offered jobs as
designers on the movie lots, the
sisters volunteered. But they had
decided it would get them all
frustrated and that they had better
stick to whipping up fancy duds
for the off-screen hours of movie
shebas.
“We made some sexy gowns for
the ‘Quo Vadis’ premiere,” Ann
said,
“Spectacles, who needs spec
tacles?” shrugged Sari. “The burn
ing of Rome is fine, but the boys
would rather see Ava Gardner's
bare back.”
* » .
Short Takes: Twenty-six-year
old Charlie Chaplin silent movies
have been sold to telev:sion...
Jane Wyman has a new flame,
local attorney Judd Downing. ...
"innv Kaye and Gene’ Kelly, will
vy o hlac'-f4na routine in. MGH’s
musical version of “Huck Finn.”..
'Jimmy Ellison will do the title
role in the *“Buffalo Bill” TV
series. ¢
s i o
Soviet
(Continued From Page One)
months since they were said to
have dropped into Russia, today’s
announcement — also broadcast
over Moscow radio—was the first
hint of the case.
(The spy story came just five
days after the United Nations Gen
eral Assembly in Paris decided to
debate a Soviet charge that the
United States is fomenting treason
and rebellion against the Kremlin
through the Mutual Security Act.
U. S. Denial
(U. S. Delegate Ernest A. Gross
denied the act is meant to hire
traitors on Russian soil. But he
agreed to Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Vishinsky’s demand for a
U. N. discussion, which also will
give the U. 8. a chance to air its
own views on International Com
munist activity.
(The Russian story was similar
to one told last week by Romania
in a protest to the United Statés.
T'he Romanians said two saboteurs
were parachuted into their coun
try bv an American plane on Oct.
18. The note said they confessed
and’it demanded “punishment of
those responsible.”
(Communist Hungary K still is
holding four U. S. airmen whose
C-47 transport, enroute from Er
ding Airbase, Germany, to Bel=
grade, Yugoslavia, strayed off its
route and was forced down by
Soviet fighter planes a month ago.
(Hungary contends the fliers
were arranging to drop spies later
and has rejected American de
mands to turn loose the airmen
and their plane.)
Two Georgia Men
HOUSTON, Tex., Dec. 19-—(AP)
An Air Force pilot made two split
second decisions after both engines
on his C-47 transport plane went
dead yesterday——and his judgment
proved correct.
With the engines dead and an
overcast hiding the ground, Lt.
Col. Roy E. Bain of Houston, first
decided to order seven crewmen
to parachute.
Then ag the plane broke through
the overcast, Bain had to decide
whether to try for the Municipal
Airport—and maybe crash into a
residential area,
Bain chose to risk his own neck
— and that of Co-Pilot Capt.
Robert E. Pittman, Mount Olive,
Miss. He banked the plane sharp
ly to avoid any possibility of hit
ting houses and made a wheels-up
landing in a pasture 200 yards
from the airport. The plane skid
ded about 500 yards. Neither Bain
nor Pittman was injured.
Air Force Pfc. Jery Willey, 21,
Lost Hills, Calif.,, and Marine Pfc.
Sl ull L e T e
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-:<-?<:. Sa gy s m % i
MAE IN CROCHET—A foot
high figurine of buxom Mae
West, in her best “Diamond Lil”
clothes, is one of the pieces in
the “Dress Through the Ages”
roilection of Mrs. Lilian Lunn.
Mrs. Lunn is now showing 150,
such miniatures made of stitched
or crocheted velvet cord or
wool in London’s Park Lane.
| William L. Barton, 26, West Mon
]roe, La., suffered minor injuries
' in landing in their chutes.
Other crew members who
jumped included Capt. Henry R.
Lambert, 29, Savannah, Ga., and
T-Sgt. James Alford, 27, Route 1,
' Manchester, Ga.
| E L T ry
Climate of the Yukon Territory
is marked by great variaticns in
temperature from year to year. In
some years the coldest month has
-averaged from 40 to 50 below zero,
‘and in other years the average
temperature has been above zero.
Nt |
“Isoceraunic” maps, prepared :
by the U. S. Weather Bureau,
show the number of days when‘
thunder normally is heard in vari
ous parts of the nation. [
R |
Lac insects in Siam seem to pre
fer the Thailand rain-tree on l
which to live. These insects pro
duce the important gum for use in |
varnishes and polishes. ?
An abundance of good pastures |
and plenty of home-grown feedl
are essential for a profitable beef |
enterprise. i
Vermont, Arizona and Georgia |
are the leading U. S. states in as- ’
bestos production.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 155
News Of Fires,
Accidents, And
Police Action
Recorder’s Court
A man who was in Recorde '«
Court last month for driving un ~
the influence of intoxicants .. ..
before Judge Olin Price 1,
drunkenness again today. Judge
Price said that the defendant ~
served only 11 days of a 60 (..
sentence before the stockade co,.
mittee released him to go to wo
The man was given the alternativ
of serving the balance of the ;.
senterice or paying S4B,
Several other minor cases v,
also heard in Recorder's Court
News From The
Veteran Corner
Here are authoritative a;.- s
from the Veterans Administy, J
to three questions of interest 1,
former servicemen:
Q. Who is entitled ta receive 4
burial flag which drapes the ¢z 1
of a deceased’ veteran®
A. The flag goes to the next f
kin, with preference in tha foll(.. -
ing order: widow; children, : .-
cording to age, with sons having
preferer.ce over daughters: faflie -
‘mother; brothers or sisters: unc
or aunts; nephews or nieces: »4
others, such as cousins or eran
parents.
Q. I've had a permanent NSI|
policy on which I failed to .
premiums and which was extendc]
by VA term insurance for an -
ount equal to the face wvalue f
the policy. Does this extended i -
surance have loan value and czh
value, same as any permancit
policy? .
A. The extended insurance .-
a cash value, but it does not hoo
a loan value.
"~ Q. I'm planning to take a i
overseas. May I use my GI loun
to purchase a home ahroad?
A, No. Under the law, GI loans
may only be used to purchase pio
perty in the United States, iis
territories and possessions.
(Veterans living in Georgia
wish further information aboot
their benefits should write the VA
Regional Office at 105 Pry
Street, N. E., Atlanta 3, or contact
local VA Office, Room 308, New |
Post Office Bldg., Athens.
e ——————————— !
Most spraying or dusting of
farm crops with insecticides v
airplanes is done in early morning
and late afternoon periods hecaus
there is apt to bhe less wind at
those hours.