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rURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1952,
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L vICTeD BY VOTE — The voters of Southwood, a su
burb of Ban Francisco, went to the polls to deny the
Sheng family the right to live in their community on the
grounds that their presence there would depreciate
real estate values. Sing Sheng, 25, had bought a home
in Southwood. He fought with the Chinese Nationalist
army in World War 11. He is shown with his Chinese-
American wife, Grace, and their son, Riche, 2.— (NEA
Telephote.)
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¥ o@* Dr. Logan's Wife
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~ (B X 272 By Diana Gaines
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THE STORY: Jennet Logan,
whose well-ordered life is upset
by her atiraction to a young and
charming hiophysicist, Peter Suri
nov, contributes to Peter’'s move
ment of slum clearance as a final
gesture, and afterwards plans
never te see Peter alone again,
To raise the money, Jenne{ has
sold a 2 diamend lavaliere which
she inherited and gave Peter a
certified check for the amount,
SI2OO. Peter is in the middle of a
fizht at Angel's hospital where he
is doing research in atomic medi
cine. Maxwell Cota, hospital head,
holds real estate in the slums and
he is trying to have Peter ousted
on the pretext that Peter, of Rus
sian extraction, is a Communist,
because Peter objected to signing
the loyally oath. Dr. Gus Logan,
not suspecting his wife’s infatua
tion, has supported . Peter.
* = *
Thursday morning, June 15,
Maxwell Cota, fortified by the
immaculate sweetness of Valencia
orange juice, faced the fact that
to this day he had lived one half
of a century.
Despite his wealth, he had
worked hard. No one could say
that he was the lazy, spoiled son
of a rich man. He had not missed
a day at the hospital in 10 years.
He housed his paralytic sister
whom another man might have
put away. No one could say he
was not a dutiful son and broth
er, Besides Elvirita’s presence in
the 14-room® house gave point to
its upkeep, and Maxwell would
have been loath to abandon it now
that he was master.
He gave SIO,OOO a year( his hos
pital salary) to charity as his fa
ther had done before him, and he
lived comfortably but modestly
oif the income from the wine
business, paid his property taxes
frorm the profits of the Elvirita
Beach Hotel, and never touched
his principal. Neither miser nor
spendthrift, mindful of family and
community obligations, he led an
extmplary life,
~ He discounted the interns’ call
ing him “The Crumb” and “Fig
face”—nicknaming was a common
form of rebellion among under
lings in a large institution. But
@here was Gus Logan, who had
been heard to say that he never
met a man so devoid of human
feeling. 'There was Pelletier, the
most popular man at the hospital,
who at a closed ‘meeting had de
wunced him as a “double-dealing
politician with the eyes of a dead
titmouse and the soul of the ban
shee.” (He had examined his eyes
in the mirror for some time after
that and had pondered the dietion
iry’s definition of a banshee.) To
Maxwell Cota, who had been
cavesdropping all his life, these
snipings had little sting—his posi
tion at the hospital was secure,
the board of directors was
lidly behind him—but ' they
proved again that he was not “one
of the boys.”
* » *
Fortunately, he did not need
veople. In a swruggle between his
vants and his money, his morals
and his ynoney, his dreams and
his money, money was always the
victor, It was here in the very
center of his “Achilles’ heel that
Pc_ter Surinov had unwittingly
pricked him, for among Maxwell
Cota’s properties were some
down-town slum properties on
vhich taxes were low, and the
upkeep zero except for the small
salary of the rent collector,
From the first, Cota had felt
antipathy toward the tall Russian.
When, however, he heard of Suri
Alwaye on my patry sheif! ) #5723
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nov’s interest in public housing,
heard that Surinov had taken part
in the demonstration against re- |
sertctive covenants, he determined |
to break him. In this decision,
Cota sincerely felt that he would
be acting in ‘the best interests of
Angels University Hospital. There
was no real evidence that the man ,
was a Communist, but there was |
reason to suspect it from his rab
ble-rousing behavior. l
Peter Surinov’s insurgence in |
the matter of the loyalty oath had
played directly into his hands. It
transformed any action taken
against the man from persecution
to- patriotism. The Monday night
meeting had been a disappoint=
ment to Cota. The fact that he,
superintendent, had to get a vote
of permission from a bunch of
doctors who knew nothing about
administration in order to fire a
non-medical fgmploye, was infuri
ating. The founding fathers had
undoubtedly meant well when
they organized the hospital as a
democratic autonomy, separate |
from the university proper. They
had maintained that the doctors
were better equipped to run a hos
pital than businessmen and poli
ticians, and they had accordingly i
drawn up a charter which pro
vided that a medical executive
committee, composed of staff de
partment heads, make hospital |
policy by means ¢f majority vote. !
*% % !
There were 11 men on the com
mittee. The head of the ortho
pedics department was in bed with
a virus, the eye man on summer
vacation. The Chief of Staff and |
at least three others could be |
counted on to vote Cota’s way, had
in fact prepared brief speeches
which he had already read. If
Warner and Rappaport persisted
in supporting Pelletier and Logan,
that made four against four. The
pediatrics man, who could break |
the tie, had not returned Cota’s
repeated phone calls. It was pos
sible that Pelletier had already got '
to him. . |
Well, if the doctors would not |
see reason in this matter, Cota was 1
prepared to exploit a political con- |
nection or two. There were plenty ‘
of men in the state of California
who understood the publicity
value of crying “peril!”’—especial- ‘
ly now that they faced the No
vember elections. Nor would the
incumbent office-holders object 10 |
the support of the university’s
powerful regents who were fight- |
ing mad about resistance of any
kind to the loyalty check they had |
devised. ‘
(To Be Continued)
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Tijuana and Mexicali are in
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purposes by all the major nations ‘
involved in World War IL |
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" A/ ‘ . .} gl CELEBRATION CAKE|
: M 2 . : : ; ; FOR VALENTINE'S DAY « CHILDREN'S
(& : A PARTIES « WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY
A / \ , : Recipes At Our Dispay
: : : : : : Cod BeTTy CrocKER |
. : : : PARTYCAKE MIX 35¢
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| iz RIS GINGERCAKE MIX 29
It’s the truth— . h buy ALL food need BELL’ A (’-".-"3'?’-}3’:s';'-"-":f’f;,i-_.‘ a 2
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§ money all along your food orders. It means more savings for you every day ... and that’s ‘ ¥‘o ) "xf:?a
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Fill your needs for the week-end with our fine quality foods and see for yourself how V
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f = Q‘OUg“F"A:’f'R‘fl CAKE FLOUR
\APPLE SAUCE ::= 10¢ fpi peen
‘y: No. 303 Can )\/ M ! S it (
5P \ (\3\mst quick G .
4 Northern Embossed =) BttCocksnia e crusTi TOMATO SOUP §
: 80 Count Package c ‘\, £ ‘ USEIT3 WAYS .
§ 4 IB¢ SOUP...SAUCE...INGREDIENT |
PI NE AP PLE Delmonts 2 ~ 3oans 35¢
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4 White Tuna .6% oz. can 33¢ | Calsup .. ... 14 oz bot. 19c¢ B IR T
¢ 3 FOR AUTOMATIC R
§ DASH—WITH LIVER HAPPY KIDS SWEET REUE 0 Y S T E R S B E E F
t Dog Food . ... 11b. can 16c | Krispy Pickle .... 12 oz. 27¢ ALL Rt 37| 2o GG
POPULAR BRANDS STOKELY'S TINY @] Can.... ... Can .... ...
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‘ MEULLER’S THIN SUNSMBNE WHOLE NEW < 19 c ‘ TENDER POLE
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L’ CURTIS FRESH—IO OZ. PKG. DEVONSHEER | T LARGE 4 DOZ. SIZE
{ Marshmellows .. .. .. . 19c | Melba Toast .3% oz.pkg. 18¢ § womsovswax & JLETTUCE............ head 15
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OHIO ROSEBUD HONOR BRAN? ORANGE ? S ——— - LARGE GOLDEN |
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!: : :‘ i SLICED BACON
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THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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