Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
SEEENN SAVE AT CROW'S IN 52 NSiies
@ TR
€ 0 R
-98 /* f-‘f‘f'"_ : Ky §i o .
L) L UNDER ONE ROOF
R br‘i"u NN e
CROW'S is the complete drug store, carrying full stocks of
everything you expect a medern drug store to have for your
hc-alih, appearance, comfort and convenience — and render
ing all the services associated with professional pharmzcy..
Here, you can fill ALL your drug store needs under one roof
—aquickly . . . easily . . . economically. Not a few brands—
but ALL popular brands from which to choose. Not a small
part of your needs—but ALL of them all in one place. And
nobedy has lower prices than we do. May we serve you?
} CROW'S
TN I B B T SR S SRR L TR R
HURRY -HURRY - HURRY
BN BPR T 5 R TSR R TR
ELECTRIC
HEATINGPADS .. .. .. .. .. .. 398
..3 . S S AT ST SRS K7W
ALARMCLOCKS .. .. .. .. .. .. 18
8 PIECE
B -
SET OF 6
LIBBY GLASSES .. .. .. .. .. ... 69
R PO W T R R ST S S TR, e
RINSO—DREFT—FAB—SUPER SUDS
i
RINSO — VEL — DREFT—FAB
O v A
VEL — SUPER SUDS
... X
m
%2 Price |
/2 Price ltems
ODD PIECES
LUGGAGE
ASSORTED
BILLFOLDS
GENUINE
LEATHER BELTS
IRASIRINES .. ... .o T
TR S RN SR YT TR SAR R
®
House Hold Specials
CHASE & SANBORN
B e e
TOIETTISSUE . .. .. ... .. 3for2s¢
HOT WATERBOTTLE .. .. .. ... 1.49
TOYSOVERI.OO .. .. .. .. ... Y off
RIS LR e RR A O A R R T R
Discontinued |
ilscontinued Item
ODD NUMBERS
TELEVISION SETS
AT REDUCED PRICES.
T, N T T R [ S A
Half Price Sal
ricé Jaié
TUSSY
WIND AND WEATHER LOTION
Regular $1 Size Large $2 Size
50c §t
m
1R
,
283 EAST CLAYTON. s PHONE 1767-8
PRESCRIPTION HEADQUARTERS S
General Educafion Board Director
To Speak At University Of Georgia
Robert D. Calkins, director of
the General Board of Education,
will speak at the Conference on
Liberal Arts at the University of
Georgia Feb. 8-9.
The Liberal Arts Conference
will be the first ever held on this
campus. Its theme will be the
place of the liberal arts in educat
ing for leadership in a democratic
society.
The two-day meeting will be
jointly sponsored by the Universi
ty’s Franklin College of Arts and
Sciences and the Division of Gen
eral Extension. '
Calkins is scheduled to address
the conference on the relation of
professional and graduate educa
tion to the liberal arts.
The General Education Board
Director is a native of Connecti
cut and a graduate of the College
of William and Mary and of Stan
Lie-Defector Tests Required
On Oak Ridge "Crifical” Jobs
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Periodic lie
detector tests are required of per
sons who hold “a few critical po
sitions” at the government’s Oak
Ridge, Tenn., atomic energy plant.
But no similar tests are required
at any other atomic plants, even
though they, too, turn out A-bomb
materials.
The Atomic Energy Commis
sion has disclosed that the lie
detector apparatus was installed
on an experimental basis at Oak
Ridge while the Army was still
in charge of the entire A-bomb
project.
Morse Salisbury, director of in
formation services for the AEC,
said its use is still on such a basis.
Asked why the system had not
been extended to other AEC
plants, Mr. Salisbury replied: “To
introduce it now in a new place
might create an uproar and might
break morale.”
Mr, Salisbury said the tests are
“designed to test employees’ re
liability—that is, whether they are
telling the truth as to loyalty and
other things as well.”
He said submission to a lie de
tector is required for anyone who
applies for one of the critical jobs,
and that those employed must take
the tests at intervals thereafter.
Periodic Tests
Those who apply for noncritical
jobs are not asked to take the
tests, even on a voluntary basis.
But once they are hired and put
to work in the plant’s production
division, the workers are asked to
submit voluntarily to periodic
tests.
Most of them do so, Mr. Salis
bury said, but he declined to say
specifically whether any refusals
have been encountered, A refusal
would mean that the worker
“would be subject to transfer to
less sensitive positions,” he said. !
He added that there is “much
controversy” both within and out
side the AEC as to the lie detec
tor’s value as an investigative tool.
But of the situation at Oak Ridge,
Mr. Salisbury declared:
“I think they love it there be
cause it keeps security uppermost
in a man’s mind. It is a good guard
on a loose tongue. When a man
knows he is going up against this
machine, he thinks about it when
he starts talking.”
Security Risks
At the State Department, Mi
chael J. McDermott, press officer,
told a news conference that the lie
detector test never has been used
to check on loyalty cases, but is
used sometimes in dealing with
security risks.
Government workers can be
fired as security risks, without
their loyalty to the government
being in doubt. A person who
talks freely of secret information
outside his work or is habitually
drunk, for example, could be fired
on security grounds. Mr. Mec-
Dermott said that “in the very
few instances” where a lie detec~
WEEK - END
&
Yeast Raised
DONUTS ....... 24( doz
&
Limited Amount - Superior
Fruit Cake 1/2 price
&
"BENSON’S
RETAIL BAKERY
“Next To Georgia Theatre”
4 ¢ . FAL”I ‘2ll 8 N}
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ford Unlversity. For some years
‘after he received his Ph.D. from
the latter institytion, he taught at
the University Xt California where
he became the dean of the College
of Commerce.
Later he was a professor of busi
ness economics and dean of the
School of Business of Columbia
University. He has been with the
General Education Board since
1947.
Dr. Calkins has been a member
of a number of important national
committees and boards including
the committee on Economic De
velopment and the Natural Re
sources Planning Board. He has
also served as a member of the
American Council Institute on Pa
cific Relations, as a member of
the Railway Labor Panel, as di
rector of the New York Federal
Reserve Bank, and as arbitrator
of labor disputes.
tor was used, the individual eon
cerned “felt it was to his advan
tage” to submit to such a test. Mr.
McDermott added:
“The department never forces
or urges a person under investiga
tion to submit to a polygrapn (lie
detector) test. Any employee who
takes such a test does so of his
own free will . ..
“Under no circumstances does
the department regard the results
of a polygraph test in any way as
conclusive.”
INNKEEPERS
Y INN FOR
AP Newsfeatures
MT. POCONO, Pa. — After a
working day is done, the hired
hands at one Pocono Mountains
resort “check in” at their own
hotel.
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Strick
land, operators of an inn near
here, recently bought another
nearby hotel for the exclusive use
of their 50 employes.
The new property consists of
two buildings, one with 28 rooms
for women workers and the other
an eight-room stricture housing
male help.
The larger building contains rec=
reational facilities comparable to
those provided for paying guests
at the inn—including game rooms,
lounges and a cozy fireplace. The
new property includes plenty of
acreage for outdoor fun and re
laxation, too.
There’s a chef to operate the
workers’ hotel kitchen. A mo
dern cafeteria is being installed.
The employers are supplying
everything—food, linens, bedding,
heat and light.
A housekeeper daily checks on
everything, to see that top hotel
standards are maintained.
The Stricklands are no star-gaz
ing idealists but pleasant, hard
working individuals who combine
their philanthropy with sound rea
soning.
As Ed Strickland put it:
“Most of our employes come
from nice families and are used to
nice things. And a hard day’s work
doesn’t seem so hard if you can
relax afterward in comfortable
surroundings.
“So this proposition works both
ways. The ‘kids’ are happier, and
happy people do better work. And
there’s less turnover in hired
hands, which means more effici
ency and a better deal for our own
hotel guests.”
The Micmac Indians are the ear
liest known inhabitants of Nova
Scotia.
News Of Fires,
Accidents, And
Police Action
Charlie Odell Martin, 39, 763
College avenue, was arrested yes
terday afternoon for burglary, ac
cording to Lt. Hardy, city detec
tive.
“About three weeks ago, Roscoe
Long reported that a laundry
heater, wash pot, duffle bag, and
three Army rifles were taken from
a house in the 800 block of Col
lege avenue,” Lt. Hardy added.
Detective McKinnon also worked
with Lt. Hardy on the case.
Upon further investigation the
39-vear-old man was arrested
yesterday for burglary and was
turned over to Clarke county offi
cials, police reported.
Four boys, all under 15 years of
age, were arrested last Saturday
night. .
According to Lt. Hardy, the boys
broke into the Pure Ice Company
on Dougherty street last Thursday,
Friday, and attempted to break in
on Saturday night. But the mana
ger of the ice plant locked the
building and remained inside, The
boys tried to break in and they
were caught.
They were turned over to
Clarke county juvenile authorities.
Recorder’s Court
Several cases of drunkenness,
violation of the meter ordinance,
running red lights, and one case
of making a U-turn in the middle
of a block were heard in Recor
deer’s Court today.
| Fire Call
Firemen were called to 1625
iWest Broad street last night at
6:42 o’clock where a truck was
Ibuming. Only = slight damages
were reported.
Danner 1
(Continued From Page One)
resolution concerning ad valorem
taxes being collected with only the
exception of the exempt property
included in latest exemption
records. Mayor Wells clarified the
point saying that the desire of the
Council was to cease exempting
property which was exempted
years ago and that should no
longer be exempt.
Councilman Wier also presented
an amendment which would raise
the water rates here in Athens to
12% cents per thousand gallons
after consumption of the first three
million gallons.
Councilman Phillips requested a
street light on Pulaski.
Councilman Pound presented an
ordinance prohibiting the sale of
Bay Rum in Athens which being
under the category of public wel
fare was acted upon immediately.
The ordinance was passed unani
mously.
Other requests and reports were
referred to the proper committees
for study and will be presenied in
committee reports at the regular
February meeting of mayor and
council.
(Continued From Page Onc)
der of the American Legion and is
a former national committeeman
of the Legion.
General Beaver has been a
mrember of the Board of Regents
almost continually since 1933.
During the administrations of the
late Governor Eugene Talmadge
he held the chairmanship of the
board twice.
From the winter quarters of his
Riverside Military Academy at
Hollywood, Fla.,, General Beaver
made the statement that his term
as a regent had expired and he
did not ask for reappointment,
He said his retirement had
nothing to do with dhis recent
move to de-emphasize football at
the University of Georgia and
Georgia Tech.
(Continued From Page One)
horizontal, and pitching like a chip.
Parker had little idea when he
could bring the ship in, if he suc
ceeds in getting tow ropes fast
ened.
He could make Falmouth in three
or four days with her if the sea
calms. But weather forecasters
could see nothing ahead but
storms, and Parker said it was
“anybody’s guess” when he could
get home under storm conditions.
The state of Illinios has pro
duced more than three billion
tons of coal since 1800.
it MM iolbiisosassmee i
[scoTTiES > |
Scotsman
o T
Ei )
Q%
;e & ©
“Why didn’t you say you
used to work at Heyward
Allen’s . . . they don't
need any introduction
with me!”
Bodies Removed
PHOENIX, ARIZ, Jan. 3 —
(AP) — Bodies of eight of the 28
persons killed Sunday in the crash
on an Air Force C-47 have been
removed from an Arizona moun
tainside and brought to a mort
uairyinMesa 16 miles east of Pho
enix.,
The eight bodies brought down
the icy side of 7,00-foot Armer
Mountain 65 miles northeast of
Phoenix were those of personnel
most easily removed. Three days
are expected to pass before all the
bodies are removed.
An evacuation team of Airmen,
aided by Arizona cowboys, strug
gled up the mountain yesterday
and found the mangled bodies
among the scattered wreckage of
the twin-engine plane. The vic
tims were 19 West Point Cadets,
four crew members and five other
military passengers.
A team of identification experts
from Wright Patterson Air Force
Base in Ohio arrived here late
last night to aid in the work of
identification.
So difficult is the task of gather
ing the bodies and evacuating
them by pack horses down the
mountainside, that it will probably
be late this afternoon before addi
tional bodies are brought to the
Mesa mortuary.
The mountain trail winds across
streams studded with ice-coated
rocks and threads through scrub
oak near the summit and pines and
large oaks lower down.
All aboard were killed instantly
when the plane crashed into the
shale face of the mountain about
100 feet below its snow-capped
crest, and exploded.
Cancer Killed
1,000 Georgians
In Four Years
ATLANTA, Jan. 3 — Cancer
killed 12,000 men, women and
children during the past four years
in Georgia and will kill 15,000
more during the next four if the
present rate continues, Lon Sulli
van, Executive Vice President of
the American Cancer Society’s
Georgia Division, reported today.
“The percentage of cancer pa
tients cured has also more than
doubled during the past four years
but it must be gquadrupled many
times before the rising death toll
is stopped. The prevalence of
cancer is increasing so fast that
one of every five people alive to
day will have it at some time dur
ing their lifetime at the present
rate. That means that 22 million
Americans, 640,000 of them Geor
gians, will have cancer some time
during their lifetime.”
“Barly cancer usually can be
cured with x-ray, radium or sur
gery, Most of those whom can
cer strikes can be cured but only
if they secure treatment in the
early stage.”
“Dr. Enoch Callaway, President
of the Georgia Division, polled 325
doctors in all sections of the State
during 1951 and they reported
substantial increases in the per
centage of cancer patients being
treated in the early, potentially
curable stage. In his own clinic
' he finds that cervix cancers treat
ed in the curable stage are above
}SO per cent compared to less than
10 per cent found in that stage six
years ago.”
“Volunteer workers who carry
aut the program to constantly re
' mind people of the danger signals
“and the importance of early treat
ment are responsible for this pro
gress,” Sullivan’s report said.
. “During 1951 they distributed a
— FANL ARY
Clearance Sale
~ SWEATERS
One Lot
100% Wool
Values to 7.95
3.95
RRSR RS A eN,
BELTS
Leather ~
Black, Brown, Red.
Values to 3.50
1.95
SN RS oT T TR
SKIRTS
Corduroys, Gabardines
Values to 8.95
4.95
The Fashion Shop
You Can't Afford
To Miss These
Lovely Bargains!
ONE LOT QF DRESSES
5.00
ONE LOT Of DRESSES
10-°°
ONE LOT OF DRESSES
1/2 price
BRADLEY'S
275 N. Jackson Phone 3222
million and a quarter educational
leaflets bearing vital ecancer lacts;l
serviced 3,451 match display units
through which 902,000 card;
matches bearing the danger sig
nals were distributed; showed
educational films 412 times to
29,000 people.” |
“Business and industrial firms
employing 186,000 people have in
stalled the Society’s educational
program using posters and giving
each worker twice a year remin
ders of the vital cancer facts.”
Sullivan’s report shows 742 in
digent cancer patients were pro
vided pain relieving drugs or
transportation to and from a free
cancer clinic for treatment. These
items are paid for with voluntary
contributions made to the Society
but supervised by local unit vol
unteers and Public Welfare De
partments.
“During 1950 there were 3,181
patients referred to the 17 State
Aid Cancer Clinics for free service
and an additional 1,008 were seerr
at Steiner Clinic in Atlanta. The
total number of patients served at
the 17 clinics was 4,043 counting
those coming back for treatment.”
It is not difficult to understand
that cancer will strike one of every
five Georgians now living at some
time during their lifetime when
we realize that 3,500 died ecf it;
4,043 were referred to the elinics
and an estimated 3,000 more re
ceived private treatment for the
first time just during 1951.
Deaths from cancer have risen
from 2,680 in Georgia in 1947; to
2,892 in 1948; to 3,060 in 1949; to
3,339 in 1950 and approximately
3,500 in 1951. Most of these lives
could have been saved if the pa
tients had been alert for the dan=-
ger signals and sought proper
prompt treatment before it was
too late,
THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1958
(Continued From Page One)
the French Legion of Honor. He
had lived and studied many years
in Paris but had maintained a New
York home until recently,
Among his subjects were Frank~
lin D. Roosevelt, John D. Rocke
feller, sr., Albert Einstein, -Will
Rogers and great figures of the
world wars.
He returned to France Decem
ber 20 from Israel after doing
busts of that ratior’: leaders, in
cluding President Caaim Weiz
mann, Premier David Ben-Gurion
and Foreign Minister Moshe Sha
rett.
Tiring Trip
Mrs. Davidson said the sculptor
had appeared tired after the trip
to Israel where, she said, “he dic
a great amount of work.” She saic
he had a bronchial -condition
which affected his heart.
Davidson, son of a Russian-
Jewish fanrily, was an odd-jobs
boy with a gift for drawing and
painting that asserted itself be
yond the pale of New York’s poor
est distriet. His talent won him &
scholarship at 16.
The sculptor became interested
in politics through the Artists anc
Writers Committee for Roosevelt
(AWCR) in 1944, Three years la
ter he became co-chairman of the
Progressive Citizens of America
(PCA) and later was made honor
ary chairman. He was a co-chair
man of the Wallace-for-President
committee in 1948, supporting the
candidacy of former Vice-Presi
dent Henry A. Wallace.
The Tasmainian tiger, actually
a marsupial wolf, is one of the
rarest of living animals.
BLOUSES
One Lot
Wool Jerseys & Crepes
Values to 7.95
2.50
T R R RTS .
SPORT JACKETS
Flannels
Red, Navy & Creen
Values to 22.95
10.00
WESKITS
Corduroys & Woolens
Values to 10.95
3.95