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R Pty . r : SEE G ;
Senator Richard (Dick) Russell’s hometown folks and
geighbors brave pouring rain and a local 'flu epidemic
to attend a Russell-for-President rally in Winder. In the
photo at left an unidentified supporter carries the slogan
Civil Rights Is Again Election Issue
As Russell Seeks President’s Post
Snow Maroons 2,000 In
West's Roughest Storm
Allies Suggest
By ROBERT B. TUCKMAN
MUNSAN, Korea, March 20 —
(AP) — The U. N. command to
night in effect suggested off the
record truce negotiations to try
to break the long deadlock over
exchanging war prisoners in Ko
rea,
An official Allied spokesman
said the U, N. would ‘“give con
sideration” to secret negotations
with only the final agreement—
or lack of one—announced. There
would be no daily briefings of
news correspendents.
This development came only a
few hours after staff officers
agreed on 10 ports on entry
through which troops and supplies
would be funneled into Korea dur
ing an armistice.
Settlement of the ports of entry
despute left three major issues:
I—Voluntary repatriation. The
Allies insist that prisoners be al
lowed to accept or reject repatria
tion. The Reds want back all U. N.
held prisoners.
2—The Allied demand for a
ban on military airfield consruc
tion.
—Communist nomination of
Russia to a neutral inspection com
mission,
Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols,
official U. N. spokesman, said off
the record prisoners exchange
negotiations would permit staff
officers to talk freely without
having their daily arguments re
ported.
He emphasized there was no
(Continued On Page Two)
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ARM IN A SLING
While singing the title role in
the opera *“Carmen” on the
stage of the Metropolitan Opera
House in New York, soprano
Rise Stevens was shoved a bit
too hard by Mario Del Monaco,
who was singing Don Jose, and
finished the performance with 2
bad sprain. She is carrying her
arm in a sling, — (NEA Tele
photo.)
ATHENS BANNER -HERALD
Associated Press Service
“HUSTLE FOR RUSSELL” SPARKS RALLY IN WINDER
California Sees
Dawn Of Spring
SAN FRANCISCO, March 20.—
(AP)--Snow marooned some 2,000
people in east-central California
and threatened 600,000 head of
Nevada livestock with starvation
on this first day of spring.
. -In Mono county, on the Nevada-
California border, snow blocked
roads to people running low on
fuel.
“The storms are keeping up and
I don’t know when we’ll get out,”
telephoned Mrs. Marjorie Gripper,
secretary of the Chamber of Com
merce at Leevining,
Some 125 stilil were snowed in
at June Lake Lodge, 180 miles
east of San Francisco, where
drifts up to 45 feet covered roads
and many one-story houses.
“Here we can step out of a sec
ond story window onto snow,” said
George Conn, lodge owner, over
the only telephone line open from
that community. . ‘ :
Conn reported ample stocks of
food at June Lake, but Mrs. Grip
per said, food was running low in
other snowbound parts of Mono
county. e
Nevada Governor Charles Rus
sell proclaimed a state of emer
gency to qualify for federal aid
for livestock. Heavy snows have
blocked roads to 200,000 cattle and
400,000 sheep in north and central
Nevada.
Governor Russell said the live
stock industry was threatened
with a loss of $10,000,000. He com
pared the crisis to that of 1948-49
when planes made a “hay lift” to
starving animals.
In the Sierra Nevada passes
from California to Nevada, all
principal highways were blocked.
Last night, after two days of di
vertin gtrains, Southern Pacific
rotary plows chewed through 20
miles of deep drifts and reopened
its rail route over Donner Sum=
mit.
The record snow pack — 260
inches (21%; feet) at Soda Springs,
308 inches (25 2-3 feet) at Don
ner Summit — threatens Califor
nia’s interior valleys with spring
floods.
Winter, the wildest California
has known in decades, made a
dying gasp yesterday in typical
fashion in the northern part of the
state — now, hail, rain and light
ning.
i
.
Housing Talk Is
Set For WGAU
The housing crisis in Athens will
be discussed over both local radio
stateions by Paul C. Broun, a re
presentative of The Citizens Com
mittee.
Mr. Broun will speak over Sta
tion WGAU at 7:30 o’clock and
again over Radio Station WRFC at
B§p m
el s
SWALLOWS CAME BACK
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO,
Calif., March 20 — (AP) — The
swallows are back at Capistrano,
right on schedule in spite of leap
year’s extra day.
They flew in yesterday, a few
hours later than usual but still on
the traditional arrival date—St.
Joseph’s Day. > 2
An advance guard of 150 -
peared as the San Juan Capis
mission bell was. ringing tl 1
-a. m. angelus. Usually thmg
arrive ‘Hefore dawn. or'at dusk. -
that sparked the rally, “Hustle With Russell.”” And in
the photo at right, Shirley Robinson of Winder tootles on
her Russell-for-President horn as she stands before a
photograph of Winder's favorite son.— (AP Photos.)
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STATEMENT FROM
McKINNEY
National Democratic Chairman
Frank McKinney is shown as he
told a press conference in Key
West that in the event of a Ko
rean peace President Truman
will not run again for the White
House job.—(NEA Telephoto.)
Truman Denies
Parley Affects
Political Plans
By ERNEST V. VACCARO
KEY WEST, Fla, March 20—
(AP)—President Truman said to
day Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
is at liberty to return to the
United States any time he deems
it safe and proper.
The President told a news con
ference the General is doing an
able job and is the best judge of
when it will be safe for him to
give up his post.
Truman also told newsmen that
the Korean situation has no bear
ing whatever on whether he will
seek re-election.
This amounted to a slap at
Frank E. McKinney, the Demo
cratic National T<chairman who
said yesterday that his “impres
sion” was that Truman’s decision
would hinge on whether a satis
factory truce was reached in Ko
rea.
Truman said Korea does not
enter into the politics of this
country at all.
What happens in Korea has no
bearing whatever on what he (the
President) may decide to do, Tru
man added.
McKinney, after nearly three
days of intimate conferences with
the President, sald yesterday his
peérsonal opinion was:
1, The President definitely has
not made up his mind yet, and
probably will not in time for his
March 29 address to the SIOO-a
--plate Jefferson-Jackson dinner in
Washington. He predieted Tru
man would announce his decision
by May 15. |
2. His decision “will be predi
cated on the success or failure of
resolving the Koreap situation
satisfactmgg.”, 1 péce’ ‘ comes, |
then the President would feel he
has achieved his major goal, will
step aside without attempting to
name Kain;uccem Ll 4o
McKinney sid he b
7 (Continved On - Pwo) ')
SERVING ATHENS AND NORTHEAST GEORGIA OVER A CENTURY.
ATHENS, CA., THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1952,
Southerners Are
2 .
Fighting FEPC
By WILBUR JENNINGS
AP Special Washington Service
WASHINGTON, March 20 —
(AP) — The question of federal
civil rights legislation popped up
again with the entrance of Sena
tor Russell (D.-Ga.) into the pres
idential race. > AR
So far as Congress is eoncerned,
nothing is more dead right now.
The 82nd Congress has paid little
or no attention to the civil rights
bills that have been introduced.
Committees have let them hang.
But the subject now is back in
the news because Russell has be
come the recognized leader of the
South, particularly in the Senate,
against any form of federal civil
right legislation.
Down through the years the
Senate has blocked all attempts
at such laws. Southern members
helped by a few Republicans,
have been able to wield a strong
stick commonly known as the fili
buster.
Under Senate rules, debate can
be continued without limit unless
64 senators vote to stop it. So far,
Southerners have talked down
every civil rights measure offered
in the Senate.
Talkathon
At the start of the Blst Con
gress, Southern senators kept a
talkathon going for days when the
Democratic leadership ftried to
push through a change in the
body’s rules aimed at making it
easier to limit debate. The leaders
finally gave up.
The House from time to time
has passed civil rights bills only
to see them die in the Senate.
Numerous pieces of legislation
are included under the general
head of civil rights but anti
lynching ,anti-poll tax and com
pulsory FEPC proposals have
stirred the main controversies.
Of these, the South’s fight is
aimed primarily against an FEPC
(Federal Employment Practices
Commission. The section’s lead
ers in Congress have opposed it
on the grounds that it would upset
their traditional segregation of the
races and arouse new race enmity,
FEPC legislation would set up
a commission with power to en
force its orders against discrimi
nation in job hiring on the
grounds of race, crged or color.
The House in 1950 passed a com
promise bill by Rep. Hays (D.=
Ark.) to limit an FEPC to edn
cational and ceumnseling services.
This bill did not provide any en
forcement authority.
- FDR Began FEPC .
The late President Roosevelt
started the FEPC controversy in
1941 when he created the first
such commission.
The commission, or committee
as was known then, ended its
work five years later when Con
gress failed to appropriate funds
to continue its work. .
The committee was directed by
Mr. Roosevelt to eliminate dis
criminatory employment practices
(Continued On Page Two)
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“Thete isn't a stenographer or a
bookkeeper left. They 2-2 3!! se¢-
[tetories ond pccountants. . erm
WSB Holds All-Night Meet
In Steel Wage Controversy
lke Group Maps Drive
For Delegates In Minn.
Court Decision
May Be Asked
MINNEAPOLIS, March 20.—
(AP)—Jubilant backers of Gen
eral Dwight D. Eisenhower today
talked plans for gaining Republi
can convention delegates with the
surprising 106,788 write-ins the
Genéral got to challenge favorite
son Harold E. Stassen in Minneso
ta's presidential primary.
With 3,560 of the state’s 8,769
precincts reported, Eisenhower’s
total was 37.2 percent of the GOP
votes cast Tuesday. Stassen, with
128,134, had a 44.6 percentage and,
under the law, a clean sweep of
both the -state’s 25 Republican
delegates and the popularity eon
test.
Returns from the small and
scattered 219 voting districts re
maining were not expected to
change the standing materially,
Eisenhower supporters said
thoir drive for delegates would be
centered in the Third and Fifth
congressional districts, where the
General bested the fornmrer Minne
sota governor in the vote totals.
‘The Fifth is entirely in Minneap
~olis. The Third is made up of the
remaining Minneapolis wards and
four counties north and east of the
state’s biggest city. . :
A spokesman said these district
conventions, meeting April 26,
would be asked to name two dele
gates each for the General in the
place of four representing Stassen
whose names were printed on the
ballots. Because the state primary
law is not clear, observers said a
court suit might be needed to set
tle the matter.
There also were reports that
Eisenhower forces would ask the
state convention on May 24 to
name 10 delegates-at-iarge for
Eisenhower to the natienal GOP
convention. It was pointed out this
issue would have to be resclved at
the mnational convention, which
makes its own rules.
In the same 3,550 precincts,
Edward C. Slettedahl, a political
unknown, drew 21,339 votes, His
name and Stassen’s were the only
ones printed on the Republican
ballots. Write-ins included General
MacArthur, 1,536; Senator Robert
A. Taft (R-Ohio), 23,966; and
Governor Earl Warren of Califor
(Continued From Page One)
State Threatens
Textbaok Boycoft
ATLANTA, March 20— (AP)—
The State Board of Education has
threatened a boycott of book pub
lishers who do not sell library
books so state schools through a
private book broker.
The board said John Phelps of
Atlanta, operator of the Georgia
Book Brokers, Inc., tontracted <ast
September to furnish library
books at a price below the pub
lishing houses.
The board said Phelps promised
to sell the state bocks at the brok
ers rate plus 10 per cent, and
guaranteed this to be below the
wholesale price charged by book
publishers.
Miss Grace Hightower of Ce
dartown headed a library group
which complained that Phelps has
been slow in filling their orders.
Miss Hightower said she believed
Phelps was having trouble get
ting delivery of books from pub
lishers.
Board Member Irwin Kimsey
of Cornelia presented the resolu
tion to force publishers to fill
Phelps’ orders “either on an open
account basis or on a cash-on-de
livery” basis.
The board also ordered school
supervisors to push the use of a
soil conservation textbook in state
schools.
Jim Gillis, jr., of Soperton,
chairman of the State Soil Con
servation Committee, said a book
is on the approved text-book list
but is not being widely used.
WEATHER
ATHENS AND VICINITY
Fair and warm today. Fair
and slightly warmer tonight.
Friday partly cloudy and con
tinued warm. Low tonight 52,
high tomorrow 78. Sun sets fo
night at 6:4s_and rises tomor
row at 6:35.
GEORGIA — Fair and a little
warmer today and tonight; Fri
day partly cloudy and continued
warm.
TEMPERATURE
BREROE i) iie ke elB
JOWRIRE SSO e i w4O
RO oion sobsNors woed nee DB
NPI V. e B
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours ~ ... .00
Total sinca March 1 .. .... 6.77
Excess since March 1 .. ... 8.33
Average March rainfall ... 5.27
Total since January 1 .. ..14.39
Exeéss since Janguary 1 ... 1.03
Shrimp Operator
Hears Story Of
Boat Seizures
TAMPA, Fla, March 20.—(AP)
—A Tampa shrimp fleet operator
heard one of his captains tell
about a Mexican gunboat seizure
of several U, 8. shrimp boats and
called it “a shakedown racket
pure and simple.,” “They (the
Mexicans) did the same thing two
years ago when I was fishing out
of Brownsville, Texas,” Henry C.
Singleton said.
“I don’t know yet what we'll de
about it but as soon as the fleet
operators can get together we’ll
map a plan of action and probably
call upon the government for
help.”
John Donald, 19-year-old skip
per of the Miss Suzanne, was the
first to return here with an eye~
witness account of the incident off
Campeche, Mexico, a favorite
shrimping spot.
Donald said he knew four boats
were taken into the Mexican port
of Lerma Sunday but didn't know
what happened after that.
Singleton said he has received,
conflicting radio reports from
other boats as to whether the
seized craft have been released
yet.
Donald identified those captured
as the Laverne and Endeavor,
both frony Fort Myers; the Wally
Pernell of Punta Gorda and the
Surprise from Tampa.
He did not know just how far
offshore they were when seized,
but said . the .mw wag 15
‘miles out when * gunboats
first dashed among the 50 or so
shrimpers. Mexico c¢laims its terri
torial waters extend nine miles
from shore and reported the boats
seized were from three to six miles
out.
Going to Shore
Donald said the fleet wasg going
toward shore to escape threaten
ing weather, but was not fishing
close to shore.
Miss Suzanne and two other
Tampa boats, Fair Sky and Miss
Campeche, were in one group
rounded up by a gunboat, he re
lated.
The three trawler skippers had
to take their papers aboard the
gunboat and then were ordered to
proceed into the port of Lernra,
he related.
“When we got within three or
four miles of shore, we came upon
some 25 U. S. trawlers on the flats
there and told them what happen
ed,” he continued.
“I was talking on the radio to
Captain Kerse (Theodore Kerse of
the Fair Sky) and we decided to
make a run for it. Both of us
headed northward off the flats.
(Continued On Page Two)
Universify Has
Visifing Arfist
Francis Chapin will be visiting
artist in the Department of Art,
University of Georgia, for the
Spring Quarter, 1952. During his
stay on the campus, he will teach
a course in watercolor and also
work in lithography.
After completing his formal
training at Washington and Jef
ferson College and his art training
at the Art Institute of Chicago,
Mr. Chapin traveled and painted
in France and Italy. For a num~
ber of years he was a member of
the staff of the Art Institute of
Chicago, and he has been visiting
instructor at a number of institu
tions, including the University of
Georgia in the Fall of 1951.
He has won numerous prizes,
including the Chicago Galleries
Association First Prize of SI,OOO
in 1929, the Frank G. Logan Medal
and Purchase Award, Chicago Art
ists, 1932; the Norman Waite Har
ris Medal, Chicago Art Institute;
and Jennie Seaman Medal. Pen
nsylviania Academy of Fine Arts,
and more recently the Pauline Pal
mer Prize. First Award for painting
Chicago Artists, 1950. Witkin the
past month he was awarded the
fourth prize in the National Ex
hibition sponsored by the Terry.
Art Institute of Miami, Florida.
This award amounted to $1,250
and was given for the painting
“The Barn”, which was shown in
the Fine Arts Gallery at the Uni
vgsity of Georgia in the Fall of
1081
Had Two Shows
During January and February,
1982, Mr. Chapin had two one
man shows in Chicago, and the
critics again proclaimed him “the
first artist of Chicago.” He is re
presented in the following muse
ums: Pennsylvania Academy,
Brookliyn Museum, Art Institute
of Chicago which owns a dozen
or more of his works, the Library
of Congress, the Norton Art Gal=
lery, Georgia Museum of Art, and
the Metropolitan Museum to men
tion enly a few. s
Read Daily by BS;W;QM‘ In Athens Tr:‘l _é_l}_l
Chairman Feinsinger Collapses;
Delay Poses Shut-Down Problem
WASHINGTON, March 20.—(AP)—The Wage Stabil
ization Board (WSB) recessed its deliberations on the steel
labor case early today after Chairman Nathan P. Feinsin
ger collapsed.
Feinginger, who had been working day and night en the
case, in an effort to avert a strike set for midnight Sunday,
keeled over at about 6:30 a. m. (EST). A o
South Profests
In Coniract Bid
BY ERNEST G. WARREN
AP Special Washington Service ,
WASHINGTON, March 20.—
(AP) — Southern members of
Congress today protested any
change in government competitive
bidding policies to relieve unem
ployment,
They testified before a panel of
the Office of Defense Mobiliza
tion seeking a sclution of unem
ployment in northern textile man
ufacturing centers.
Defense Mobilizer Charles E.
Wilson has set up a system for
negotiating defense contracts in
labor surplus areas.
He has withheld its effective
ness, however, in the textile, shoe
and apparel industries until it can
be determined what his policy
would do to these industries as a
whole,
Rep. Bryson (D.-S.C.) keynoted
the position of Southern raembers
of Congress by declaring the policy
is “drastic and unprecedented and
should be disregarded.”
Bryson, who said he grew up in
the textile mills of South Caro
lina, contended the fact that Sou
thern textile mills are busy and
Northern mills are idle is “due to
the good management of the Sou
thern industry and the plowing
back of profits.”
Galnfully Employed
“My people,” he said, “are gain
fully employed and contented. By
good management they have gone
into the open markets and have
been able to submit low bids on
government contracts.
“There is a tendency on the part
of some of my colleagues in the
North to contend that Southern
manufacturers have been success
ful because they pay ‘slave wages.’
“I do not believe in wage differ
entials and I do not believe that
there is any substantial difference
in wages, living costs or living
conditions between the North and
South.
Profite Drained
“The truth is that profits of tex
tiles in the North are drained off;
not put back into industry im
provements which bring lower
preduction cost. Lower wages in
the South are not the answer to
the difference between success of
the South over the North.”
~ Bryson said Eastern mills “sim-~
ply have not kept pace” with the
Southern industry.
“It seems foolish to me,” Bry
son said, “to violate all economic
laws by ignoring the time honored
policy of accepting the lowest bid
in order ot channel work to high
cost areas on a negotiated higher
price. 'The South is legally and
economically entitled to any gov
‘ernment contract on which it can
submit a low bid.” .
~ Rep. Richards (D.-S.C.), said
‘Wilson’s policy is “directly con
trary to all concepts of the free
‘enterprise system upon which this
country has been built and is the
forerunner of a government-man
aged economy and industry.
“Southern cotton mills should
not be discriminated against be=
cause of their ability to save the
taxpayers millions of dollars
through hard work, efficiency, and
good management.
Must Not Suffer
“These industries must not suf
fer because there are others,
which, due to outmoded machin
ery, moss-grown management, or
employe-inspired internal disrup
tion, cannot keep pace. The comr
petitive bid systeni should be con
tinued.” -
Other Southern members of
Congress, who appeared in oppo
gition to any change in the low
bid policy and who indicated they
would submit full statements later,
included Reps . Davis (D.-Ga.),
Jones (D.-N.C.), Doughton (D.-
N.C.), Battle (D.-Ala.), Forrester
(D.-Ga.), Lanham (D.-Ga.). Ed
Hyde, secretary to Senator Spark
(Continued On Page Two) ‘
Spring Is Here
One Day Earlier
This is the first day of Spring.
It comes a day earlier this year
because of leap year, according to
Dr. E. S. Sell, meteorologist, on
whose authority it may be stated
that at 11:14 o’clock this morning
the Sun, on its course northward,
wag directly over the equator,
which signifies the advent of
spring. 3 ~
A second later the Sun had
crossed the line and by 11:14 to
morrow morning it should be fif
teen miles forther on its north
ward journey, with each day be
coming longer as it progresses un
tiL the equinox in Sepiember
when the process will be reversed.
HOME
EDITION
2 A‘;Bhvylsivcian was called and re
ported that Feinsinger eollapsed
from fatigue.
The board then recessed until
2 p. m. its consideratiom of the
case. ’
The unexpected delay posed a
serious problem.
The industry was facing the
problem of closing down furnaces
lest the threatened weekend walk
out leave the equipment without
workers to attend it.
Doctors said Feinsinger appa
rently would be able to eontinue
the negotiations this afternoon.
Earlier the WSB was dead
locked on the union shep issue.
Industry and labor members
could not agree during the sli
night meeting to a by
publie members that m:fl
dle the union shop problem.
Fred Bullen, board vice echair
man, told reporters no votes were
taken during the night.
Asked whether he thought the
board would be able to réach a
solution in the steel dispute, bul
len replied:
“We see some hope of getfting
together,”
Bullen told reportess that he
expected the 49-year-old Fein
singer to be in lhar for the after
noon meeting. Feinsinger was
back on his feet within a short
time after his colapse.
The union shop issue deadiock
and Feinsinger’s collapse upset the
WSB's time schedule m to
deliver a “package” in
the complex dispute iy time to
avoid a Sundgy strike.
College Offers
Camera Course
The principles of photography
will be one of four non-eredit
courses offered by the University
of Georgia in night classes during
the spring quarter, t wag #an
nounced today by the University's
Division of General X=tension.
The course, taught by D E. H.
Dixon, will meet for a two-hour
session on Tuesday evenings. First
class will be taught March 25,
with the class beginning at 7:30
p. m.
According to Dr. Nnoht the
course will be proaontdmfim
of lectures, films, and tory
practice, Class time will be di
vided equally betweem Jlecture
film work and laboratory work.
The course will consist of an
elementary approach te the fac
tors involved in the cholee of a
camera, the exposure of the film,
the development of the negative,
the production of contact prints,
and the production of prints with
an enlarger.
Registration for this course must
be completed with the Division of
General Extension by March 24.
Other non-credit courses to be
offered in night classes during the
spring are home landscaping, in
dustrial arts handicrafts, and the
psychology of adjustment and
problems of child growth.
Regular credit courses to be
taught at night will include His
tory of Western Civiliration, Prin
ciples of Accounting, Business
Law, Principles of Economics, and
College Algebra,
Homeless Family
In Need Of Aid
Late yesterday - afternoon a |
Winterville home was completely
demolished by fire and the family
lost all of its possessions, every
thing. 5
Captain John Kroeeze of the
Salvation Army sald the destitute
family, father, mother and six
children are in dire need of parcti
cally everything. i
The family needs beds, bed
clothing, all items of clothing, mat- |
tresses, a baby med, food lnd§,
money. i
Captain Koreze asked th eßanner |
Herald te announce that the Sal
vation Army will be glad to pick- i i
up and deliver any articles or items
that kind-hearted Athenians are
willing to donate to the stricken =
family. The Salvation Army tele
phone number is 1481. o
N. C. ACCLAIMS RUSSELL 4
RALEIGH, N. C., March 20 — i
(AP) — Sen. Richard Russell of '
Georgia was enthusiastically re-|
ceived here last night at his first &
public appearance outside Wash
ington since he announced he is
seeking the Presidency. i
Clyde R. Hoey of Shelby, North i
Carolina’s Senior Senator, des- & |
cribed Russell as “the nex# Presi- .
dent of the United States.” ko
There was additional applause @
when Hoey declared “there is no
reason on earth a i
man, should, not, he President.l, ,| 4