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PAGE SIX
aymmic 'Deadtine’
aking its cue straight from the
headline, “Deadline—U. S. A.”
the frank and searing. new melo
darma starring Humphery Bogart
which opens tomorrow at the
Palace Theatre, undertakes to
handle a story as any that has
appeared in print, That it does so
boldy and challengingly, with
nothing barred or prettified, at
tests to its slambang success as
high-powered movie fare.
“Deadline—U. 8. A.” exposes
big city corruption down to the
roots. Though no movie has’
‘dored to say so before in kuile
the out-spokenly honest terms
this ene employs, actual events
have sadly taught us the hard
truth that a rackets machine
oflen involves politicians who
eontrol a community’s destiny.
'z a lesson “D2adiine—U. 8. A.”
jmpresses on an audience, and
the picture adds to its substance
by pointing out that an antidote
*y ¢rime in government may well
%% a free and fighting press. .
¥umphrey Bogart sccz‘(rs'de
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; -:‘?'/ P AT OuR NEaresT stort .. . GEORGIA POWER
o 2 AR _
who leads with his chin in main
taining the freedom and the
spirit of a newspaper that be
comes anathema to a rackets
king.
The ruthless realism of “Dead
line—U, S. A”™ is a ftribute to
Richard Broeks, the brilliant
voung film - maker who both
wrote and directed the Twenti
eth Century - Fox hit. Many back
ground scenes whnich lend au
thenticity and power to the
story were actually filmed in the
New York Daily News publish
ing plant. :
Also deserving of top credit
for “Deadline—U. S. A’ are the
players who form one of the
top acting wnits seen on the
screen this yeai. Bogart is in
rare form in the kind of role he
‘does better than any other play
er on stage.or screen. The re
doubtable veteran Ethel Barry
more has seldom had a choicer
assignment, and her scenes ith
Bogart are _particularly effec~
tive.
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START OF PEDAL TOUR — competitors in Tour
of Italy race pass through Cathedral Square, Milan, at start of
22-day, 2,410-mile marathon which ends in same ecity.
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‘ ép@.) ,’) Copr. 1952 by NEA Servics, Inc. ;
THE SIORY: Private Deiective
George Kendall, retained by the
wealthy Albert P. Sutworth te
prevent his daughter Marilyn from
eloping with an ex-wrestler called
Chief Big Bear, has gone to Sen
eca Springs, a small city where
Big Bear operates a gymnasioum
for women. After an unsuccessful
attempt to see Big Bear at the
gym, George goes to his home. A
young woman who has an apart
ment on the same floor says Big
Bear’s real name is Max Arno and
that she drops in to keep the ex
wrestler’'s apartment presentable.
They wait for ‘Arno, listening to
recerds and dancing, while' Verna
Denton, George's secretdry, waits
outside the building.
XL
Possibly a storybook private eye
would have been equal to the sit
vation, but George was simply a
detective who ran down bad debts
and discovered where wandering
hushbands went. Besides, this pret
ty girl didn’t look like a death
stalked woman that private eyes
meet in stories.
Al] in all ‘it was a ridiculous
situation, George decided, but he
danced. He held her gently, at a
respectable distance,
“You dance well,” she said.
“Thank ycu,” George replied.
“Don’t be so afraid of me. I
hardly ever bite strangers.”
George acted as if he wasn’t
sure she wouldn’t. Suddenly, in
the middle of a record, she stop
ped. “Do you like mathematics?”
she asked.
Now she was the one that was
uninspired. It wasn’t a brilliant
question. “What made you think
of that?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “I
THY BANNEFR-FER
guess it’s just that I always want
led to meet a man who would dis
cuss the preblems and theories in
volved in olane and spherical trig
gmoznetry or dimensional quadrat
-7 By
“Say, what kind of a girl are
you?n -
“Is there anything strange about
liking trigonometry?”
“No,” he said disgustedly. “You
don’t look like the genius type.”
“You don't approve.”’
“Well, look at you! You don’t
make me think of trigonometry,
you know.”
For the first time since he'd en
tered the apartment, her smile
disappeared. She walked away
fiom him and moved toward the
windows. *“Apparently, I've given
you the wrong impression.” She
'turned to face him. “I was only
trying to entertain you until Max
arrived. Perhaps, wyou’d better
leave.”
' “No soorner said than done.” He
snapped up his hat. ¢
“No, wait a minute,”” she said.
“Maybe I''n the one who’s at
fault.”
“It’s getting late. I'd better leave
! anyway.”
| “Please don't, I'll feel very
guilty if you do. You came to see
Max, so stay and see him, And
I'll tell you what — just so that
things are ketp on an academic
basis we’ll ithrash through my trig
| book while we're waiting for
| Max.” .
George started to protest, but it
was of no avail. In a minute she
was back with the trigonometry
book, dragging him to thé divan,
preaching the excitement and
thrills. of sines and cosines.
He pretended to be interested,
ATHENS, GEORGIA
but he wished that this girl would
not sit so (Jose to him, She was
attractive, he had to admit, but it
was her erratic, unpredictable na
ture that was unnerving him. She
was complex; she was different.
One minute she seemed to be a
schaol teacher of superior intelli
gence and n the next instance she
was a seductive, empty-headed co
quet,
“Do you know anything about
probability curves?” she asked.
He studied her slender, white
neck, the softly molded shoulders.
“Not as much as I'd like to,” he
said soberly.
“Then you've overlooked one of
the most inieresting phases in the
field. Do you know that you can
chart the mathematical possibility
of practically anything and the
odds of it happening?” She set the
book down and got up. “I'll show
you a graph I was working on last
night. It shows you exactly what
the mnrathcmatical probability of
my getting married is.”
He knew nothing of charts, or
graphs, and cared less, but he was
certain that her mathematical
chances were -extremely high, as
long as therc were men on earth,
She returned Wwith her purse.
She opened it and removed a
piece of paper with a lot of lines
criss-crossing it. “The lines on
this paper are rather fine,” she
said. “I guess I'll need my glass
es.”
Suddenly, the doorbell rang.
“That must be Max now,” she
said. She pressed a buzzer near
the front door and then came back
into the living room and began
wiping her glasses.
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He could hear heavy footsteps
pounding up the stairs and the
sound of muffled voices. Max had
company with him and Kendall
suddenly wished he'd brought a
gun.
There was a loud lmv:ckingi at
the door. “That doesn't sound like
Max.” She opened the door and
three policemen spilled into the
front room.
George Kendall bit his tongue
and the trigonometry book fell to
the floor.
“What's going on here?” the
taller of the three policemen
asked.
“Going on?” the girl asked
“Nothing, why?” * t
“We got a report that there was
a crime committed here,” the tall
one said, looking behind the win
dow drapes. “Where’s the body?”
“There must be some mistake,
officer,” the girl said.
“Maybe sO,” he said, lifting his
cap and scratching his head, “but
we want to investigate.” ~
The officers began to search
through the apartment. They
looked in closets, behind doors,
under the sink and in cupboards.
One of them got down on his
hands and knees. “May be. blood
stains,” he explained.
George sow that the men were
in earnest and he felt weak and
trembly in his arms and legs.
(To Be Continued.)
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NEW CHIEF—_Lt Gen.
John R. Hodge, commander of
the Third Army, has succeeded
Gen. Mark Clark, new U. N,
commander in Korea, as Chief
of Army Field Forces.
Three-fourths of all sulfur pro
duced in the United States is burn=-
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TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1952.
Nurserymen Set |
For Meet Here
Nurserymen from all parts of
Georgia are expected to attend
the 15th Annual Convention of
the Georgia State Nurserymen's
Association and a short eourse fop
people in this field on the Uni.
versity of Georgia' College of
Agriculture Campus today and
Tuesday.
Dr. F. E. Johnstone, jr., chair
man of the College of Agriculture
Division of Horticulture, said to
day that Edwin Kellogg, presi
dent of the nurserymen’s associa.
tion, Douglas, heads the list of
experts participating in the con
ference and will preside over the
morning session June 2.
Two out-of-state horticultural
leaders, L. C. Chadwick, Ohio
I?ate University, and F. C. Galle,
niversity of Tennessee, are also
to appear on the program, Dr,
Chadwick’s subject will be new
developments in nursery prace
tices, and Galle will discuss
methods of plant propagation,
At a luncheon meeting June 2,
Dean and Director C. C. Murray,
College of Agriculture, will report
on Georgia’s farm research pro
gram and the way it assists
nurserymen. Johnstone will tell of
his experimental work with the
new soil conditioner, Krilium, at
the Monday afternoon session.
The delegates arrive here Sun
day afternoon for registratiom and
an informal meeting.