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University
News Briefs
W
WAGA-TV will salute the Uni.
versity of Georgia Friday in hono
of the: 167th ‘anniversary of the
granting of the University's char.
ter.
The salute ‘will be made on g
regulariy scheduled news broad
cast.on.ChHannel 5 at 6 p. m, The
salute ‘will probably include pic.
tures of the University Arch, the
Chapel, and the new buildings un
der construction on the campus.
The. University received its
charter, the first to be granted by
a state in America on Jan. 27, 1785,
In connection with the 167th an
piversary of this day Georgiz
alumni groups will hold meeting:
throughout the state this week and
next.
A one-man exhibition of recen!
pa'ntings by Lzmar Dodd, head of
the University of Georgia's art
department, will onen Jan. 26 at
the Grand Ceontral Moderns Gal
lery, New York City.
The exhibition; composed of
some 25 paintipgs, will remain in
the gallery through Feb. 9.
Dodd, highly regarded as an ar
tist in this couniry, has had num
erous one-man exhibitions. He is
represented in outstanding col-
Jections.
lgi W
Winferize Korea
i ¢
Troons Demand
PL
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(f The Brifish
LONDON Jan. -— Reported
shortages of winter equinment for
the British Commonwealth divi
sion in Korea have raised a major
stir here.
The War Office in London in
sists that reports of shortages
from the Korean front are mis
leading. It is stated that these
reports give the impression that
some {roops have mno winter
enuipment, whereas /in fact, ac
cording to War Office svokesmen,
all commonwealth troops in
Korea have winter equipment.
The great majority of front
line troons have the latest winter
kit, the War Office says. All thase
without this latest kit have last
vear's clothing, which it s
claimed is warm enough but was
found somewhat cumbersome for
combat purposes.
According to Whitehall, any
front-line troops which have not
the latest winter kit are victims
of supply dislocation through war
circumstances. It is admitted that
perhaps a few recuiring the larg
est“fittings may have had diffi
cultv.
Thiz is British War Office’s
answer to a major press campaign
in Britian which has been charg
ine a War Department muddle.
With Parliament not reassem
bling til! January 29 after Prime
Minister Winston Churchill’s re
turn from the United States, the
press has taken the stage as the
main medium for question and
answer.
Reports from the Korean front
have told in particular of a short
age of parkas or hooded coats and
of boots. It is the larger sizes
which are said to be mainly lack
ing. Stories tell of grousing
among British troops about “a
War Office blunder” back home.
Two Governments Prodded
The men at the front are said
to be indignant because London
has had a year to get a winter
kit lined up. As a parliamentary
reporter in London, one can cer
tainly vouch for the fact that for
the greater part of 1951-52 two
successive British governments—
first the Attllee and them the
Churchill regime — have been
under continuous pressure to in
sure that a winter equipment
blnmder should not occur.
The British people at home are
grateful for the offer of Amer-|
ican Gen. James A. Van Fleet,
commander of United Nations
troops in Korea, to fit out com
monwealth front-line troops. But
they are irked by the idea that
the commander felt he had to
make such an offer, considering
all assurances that have been
given by the British Government
~—first a Laborite government
and then a Conservative govern
ment,
At British Army headquarters
in Korea, it was stated Jan. 11th
‘that the War Office in London
‘had authorized the purchase of
2.000 -sets of Canadian winter
clothing. Dollar allocation had
been made for this purpose.
It also was stated that British
supply authorities hoped to com
‘)lete the issue of Canadian win
er equipment before February,
%hich is the bitterest period of
the Korean winter.
This statement certainly gives
a different impression to that
given by the War Office, here in
London. Reports from the front
do not suggest that ¢ombat troovs
and the newspaper reporters who
are with them are so satisfied as
the War Office thinks they ought
to be with their equipment posi
tion.
More winter equipment is be
ing flown out to Korean in addi
tion to shipments already en
route. But the War Office says
the fact that air lines are being
used for urgent supplies in noth
ing new. Where necessary, the
War Office says it always uses
Army transport planes or char
tered planes.
A Conservative member of
Parliament, Monigomery Hyde of
Belfast, has just been on a per
sonal visit to British troops on
the western Korean front. He has
reported back that Common
wealth ttoo;s are “well fed, well
clothed, and their morale is very
high.”. .
OPS says. When you buy shirts
vou ask for shrinkproof cottons.
You ean help make f'our qollars
shrinkproof by buying wisely,
paying no more than ceiling prices
and saving all you can,
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|LA BASAABW LN |
I PRESIDENT PRASAD
|
gty ‘ |
By HAROLD K. MILKS l
AP Newsfeatures i
NEW DELHl—lndia, too, has a |
presidential election this year. !
Sometimes near May 1, its elec- |
toral college wil ballot for a suc-!
cessor to kindly 67-year-old Ra-’
jendra Prasad, this country’s pres- |
ident since the republic was in
augurated Jan. 26, 1949.
But in India the presidential
election—unless there are unex
pected and unforeseen develop
ments—will be an election in r.ame
only. .
Because the Congress party |
majority will vote the choice of |
one man—Jawaharlal Nehru, con
currently India’s prime minister
and president of its administration
party.
It’'s Up to Nehru
Sometime before May, Nehru
will decide what man he wants
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RAJAGOPALACHARI
in the $25,200-a-year presidential |
chair during the next tive years.
The Congress high command |
will ratify that choice, the party’s
parliamentary members will ap
prove it, and instructions will go
out to Congress electors to pick
the man Nehru names,
Whether Prasad, unpretentious |
Calcutta professor of Enhglish be- |
fore he joined Mahatma Gandhi in!
1920 and shared with him British
jails and the struggle for freedom,
will succeed himself depends on
Nehru's decision. l
Some political observers believe |
the prime minister will by—pass‘
President Prasad and choose an
other.
Here are the three naines most
prominently mentioned.
Rajendra Prasad, food and «gri
culture minister of the interim In
dian government in 1945, later'
president of the constituent as
sembly, and the nation's first pres
ident. It is generally thought he
was the choice of Sardar Patel,
former Indian deputy premier and |
its top Congress politician, rather
than of Nehru himself.
A Lawyer and a Moslem
Chakravarti Rajagopalachari,
72-year-old elder statesman whose
association with Mahatma Gandhi
antedates that of Prasad by at
least a year. A former Madras
lawyer, dhoti-wearing Rajagopal
achari was India’s last governor
general and beeame home minister
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| ABUL KALAM AZAD
| at Patel's death in December, 1950,
| although Nehru never raised him
| to the deputy premiership Patel
‘held‘ Rajagopalachari resigned
ifrom the Nehru government last
| autumn, on a plea of ill health,
| and his availability for the presi
| dency—shouid Nehru's choice fall
| on him—depends in great part on
| his recovery.
| Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, In
| dia’'s Mecca-born Moslem min
| ister of education, youngest of the
| three possible candidates at 62
| years. A great scholar of Arabic
| and Persian, Azad wields great in
| fluence throughout the Middle
| East and as a Moslem president of
{ a predominantly Hindu country
he could go far to support Nehru's
| elaim that India is a true secular
| state. Only Nehru with his un
{ challenged .control of both the na
| tional government and India's
| dominent political party would
| dare choose as his presidential
| candidate a Moslem leader.
| /PR ot PO T st FFV FOIL WRAP |
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V 4 g ' é- s Pop’s rarin’ to go — when he goes shopping at BELL’S! That’s because ROA S].
AR L he can fill his basket quickly and easily — check out the order fast and
P L o i T SAk fvting:
B ‘F\!‘m‘-‘\!‘i\!!!‘-\g And blst of all — ou:pp:i)c’:esp are low o':n all the foofis he likes sog muc‘:,h: BE E F ’
4. *'-‘!‘“!“\-\ml i ~‘..,’ These are the very good reasons why our market is so popular with Pop
A ‘\‘_\!“‘i“\ -\o‘!“'.“'\ / —whether he helps with the shopping or does it himself. 12-0 ¢l
!“\-fi:\%“‘!-\\!“%\.!l!\!‘!\ili\il!ll\!“\ili I Can unce 5o 53
M ““i'\iig‘a‘i'%‘f“fi%‘a%%ii / fraisshassi |
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| / Chase Those Colds Away With
e ati Plenty Of These Juices. |
| V'E:'s;; ok A STOKELY’S ORANGE . ... .. ... 46 ox. can 23c |
° Grade “A” Large LIBBY'S PINEAPPLE .... .... 46 oz. can 33c
T STOKELY'S BLENDED . ....... 46 oz. can 23c |
STOKELY’S GRAPEFRUIT ..... 46 oz. can 21c }
LIBBY’S TOMATO .... ...... 46 ox. can 3¢ §
pp e auce . No. 303 Can c V-8 VEGETABLE . ... ...... .. 46 oz. can 3% }
Whitehouse E 1
SUNSWEET PRUNE .... .... ... qt. bot. 35c §
CHURCH’S GRAPEJUICE ... ... 24 ox. bot. 37¢ |
We Also Have Smaller Cans Of Juices
Chase & Sanborn New At Popular Prices. |
Pressure Pack, Regular
90c Value - 1 Lb. Tin c %fif&%fl%fii&efi@“gfi&fifi&fi@hl@mm ,
E%‘ i % '3, Y
CALIFORNIA DRY SWANSON BONNED i -7W ;:’Z old
: & i - 7227 g 5
Blackeye Peas ... . Ib. 15¢ | Turkey.... .. 60z canss¢ Sp\y N § 7 i |
CLOVERLEAF DRY STOKELY'S SHREDDED ‘\‘ 'r:-:%;&‘ — S j“
Skim Milk .. . Toz.pkg.l6c | Kraufl .....2No.2cans2]c | |yourwsrzcmnor| & .
CHEF BOYARDEE—IBI} Pkg. PEPPERIDGE FARM PALMOI"VE ¢ POI-E BEANS ot mE.ms 2 lbs- 35( 'Z
Spaghetti Dinner ... .. 39c | Bread .. .. ... ..loaf ¢ | —iiisaT™iotn - é %
s 20 e | COLLARDS B
(offee Cake .. .. . box 27c | Cigaretfes .. .. .. crl. 2.06 fit C%
GERBER'S BABY GOLD KING (ashm*eré B Oij y ’i}e ) %’f YELLOW FANCY l'
Oatmeal . 2-8 oz pkgs. 35¢ | Flour .. ... 101 b. bag 1.03 e "%SOU ASH 1 Ibs 25(5; |
DOUBLE Q DIXIE CRYSTAL '. port 3 for 25¢ 5 al e e e . %v.
Pink Salmon .. 11b.can55¢ | Sugar .......51b.bag 48¢ | comrmmmrsumms @ @
Cashmere Bouquet §: 3
WAXTEX FRANCO AMERICAN _Il (4 OUqUB _ ,:LE lEITUCE head 23c5:r1
Waxed Paper 125 . roll 24 | Spaghefti, 15% oz. can 16c | rgesdy " e |
S WY 25¢ i BYRD STAYMAN o
MONTMORENCY PITTED CURTIS FRESH—IO OZ. PKG. \Y Efi t'}
Red Cherries . No.2can24c | Marshmellows .. ... .. 19¢ | SYTIT BRI 18 %‘EAPP[ES s 29C§
RED RIPE SEAL TEST o b’ Sk ffigmnm 2 = §
Tomatoes 2-No. 303 cans29¢ | lce Cream .. .. .. pins 29¢ | @ Lrg. 29¢ £ i
MONARCH PITTED BLACK ARMOUR’S EVAPORATED - f};; ORANGES S dOl. 39(;:‘3; !
Cherries ... N 0.2% canßsc | Milk .. ..... 21allcans 27c |@A &-§ Ss&§ = 2 o
LIBBY’S FRUIT SNOWDRIFT, SPRY \. e . E@_fi*;};&&kmwmfifimafi;%tmfi‘}:fi";"%‘flmmfifi
Cocktail .. No. 303 can 26c | Crisco ... ... 3 Ib.can 93¢ (‘“\\ brg 30 H ey o % |
MONARCH FANCY \ NABISCO CRACKER: e i Q“AL ITY |B 2
White Honey . 11b. jar33c | Rtz .. .. 1t box3s |DR.O 0 @ [ardveAgwlplLl
LIBBY'S EARLY POSS’ GEORGIA ' \- ¢ 30 l;é’ : 3‘75&%“ EAT s N %E i
Midget Peas N 0.303 can3oc | Hash.......tllh.cand9c | {374 ™ 7° [ ee=NimAdee
CAMPBELL'S SOUP GOOD SELECTION %fif\?&:“wfi ;,1 BONELESS U. S. “CHOICE” %’J, g
‘Tomato, . 3-11 oz. cans 35¢ FROZEN FOODS Sakeancts 0t | OEEF RIB STEAKS .. ... ... .Ib. 1.13; |
‘ MARGARET HOLMES GOOD SELECTION 33%'@\\ 2 for 25 %iE‘EToT’T&\M‘Em ib 81Cg§z 1
i "\ or £ & » FiA i ki s R |
Field Peas 2 No. 303 cans 33¢ DIETETIC FRUITS "l o s ]
S U ————— 0
STOKELY’S ALL GREEN y %QUCED BACON SQUARES . . .. . ib. 39%¢ ‘”i
TINY LIMAS = 29¢ iy |
an € | RADE"A" PORK CHOPS ... . Ih. 4Tc |
- 2 . ‘ \ g{;CHOICE CU'T's 2 ?L
ez E .. || GRADE "A" PORK CHOPS .. h. 65¢ -
.-\ e : . Y. % gémnnsssn FRESH LOCALLY i. |
A Nl | - D (COIONALRYERS . 1b.5% |
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-4 FOOD MARKET fiß Ff% s |
QOOO‘A < N - s . B MARKET g ‘ BRE;IS:es of Chlc:tben9s£ J
= DELIVERY SERVICE AT SMALL EXTRA CHARGE "% |IOKEACA \\‘;\:“#' oor! | THIGHS ... Ib. 85
WASHINGTON AT PALASKI ST. =-> =* - ATHENS |\ SIS by - S W
e A RS BT et RN R R A bBT T s | L. 29Cf§BACKs N zsz |
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
THURSDAY, JANUARY 24,1