Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIXTEEN
Tyrone Power
Makes New Deal
To Half Profits
BY 808 THOMAS
HQI:WWOOD. — (AP) — A
mo¥ing van recently pulled up
bafore Tyrone Power's dressing
room on the 20th Century-Fox lot
¢ and hauled away all the actor’s
personal effects. This signalled the
end of one of the longest and most
» successful contracts in movie his
tory,
Power is not completely severed
from the studio. He still has a
picture to do there in 1853 and
another in 1954. But for the first
time in 16 years, he is free of stu
dio control.
How does it feel?
v Likes Freedom .
“Great,” he replied. “I'm begin
nin~ to realize what the outside
Ve Yieg After all I -was 16
wyears at Fox and I did only one
picture for another studio. That
was ‘Marie Antoinette,” which was
14 years ago!”
Power was frank to admit that
his severance was initiated by the
studio. His regular contract would
have expired in December, and
the studio wanted to make an ad
justment. “I wanted to be free
right away so I could take this
aeal,” he lemarked.
By “this deal,” he was referring
to his curreng picture, “Mississip
pi Gambler.” K is one of those
fabulous contracts which U-I has
also offered to such stars as Errol
. Flynn, Gregory Peck, Irene Dunee,
_James Stewart and Alan Ladd.
f'l’he stars get no pay for their
! films, but take 50 percent of the
profits, :
Makes Sense ]
“It's the only kind of a deal ‘
that makes sense In these times,”
| Power remarked. “Even if Fox
! id me five times what I was
@ting, I couldn’t keep any more
i than I do, But under the U-I deal,
| the money comes in over a period
{of time and piles up in other
i eountries, Then I can go to those |
countries apd spend it.” |
——p—————— |
Teens Should Dress
Part For Day «
Spent In Town
By ALICIA HART
! NEA Beauty Editor
M you and your teen-age friends
are planning a day in town, the
big question at this point probably
s how you will ever manage to
keep from looking wilted before
the day is over.
Admittedly, the sultry sun does
have the advantage. But you don't
have to succumb completly if you
treat the matter scientifically. And
that's not as foreboding as if
sounds. |
First, ng)proach the problem of |
riding in buses, subways or street
cars. As you finow, they can be
terribly hot and uncomfortable.
¥You can help the situation along,
however.
It helps to wear gloves. Hot,
perspiring hands don't make
strap-hanging very pleasant. If
{ you sve worried about soiling
! white glows, wear dark cottons
instead.
Should you be lucky enough to
get a seat, don’t just plop down
_writhout a thought to your dress.
fCarefully pull your skirt taut so
} #hat you won’t sit wrinkles into it.
| Wear stoekings, if you can possibly
stand them. They're certainly
{amuch better, it would seem, than
“Javing your bare legs rub against
dirty seats.
A light-welght hat will pretect
your head from the burning sun
+and alse keep your hair in place.
Carry a stick cologne in your
wpurse for a refreshing touch-up in
the middle of the day.
Better wear low-heeled shoes,
tooo. Nothins can make you more
#rritable and hot than uncomfort
able footwear. And as a last re
sort, should the heat finally prove
%00, much, seek a temporary re
spite in an air-cooled movie or
restaurant.
WILDCAT WELL
In field Yingo, a wildcat is a
well d on umnimproved land,
while wildeatting is the process of
drilling exploratory wells.
v On Your Signalure Only
e UP TO S2OOO
e ONE-VISIT SERVICE
e SELECT YOUR OWN
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¢ COME IN AND GET IT
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WHACKLEFORD BLDG., ROOMS 102-104, 215 COLLEGE AVE.
ATHENS, GA., - TELEPHONE 1371
Beorving the South for 25 UYeard
COMMUNITY INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES PAY 3% PER ANNUM :
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oo riff Lol &0 8
POULTRY PLANT VlSlTOßS—Visitors from many sec
tions of Georgia and from numerous other states take
advantage of an opportunity to look over the Colonial
Poultry Company plant here, one of the largest in the
world. Shown at the plant here are Commissioner of
Agriculture Tom Linder (left), John Maulin, Agricultu
ral Extension Poultry Marketing Specialist (center), and
H. W. Terry, vice-president of the plant (right). The
three men are standing by a truck that is being loaded
with Colonial chickens for a trip to Oklahoma.
Nothing Golden About Silence,
Cries Silver Tongued Milland -«
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD — (NEA)—Ex
clusively Yours: Starring in a
full-length movie without saying
a single word may be right down
Harpo Marx’s alley, but Ray Mil-l
land’s confessing he’s never
worked so hard in all of his 20
years in Hollywood. l
“As the discovered that dialog
Producer Harry Popkin’s “The!
Thief,” a chase movie in which no
one says a word, Ray told me.
“I've discovered that lialog
covers a multitude of sins. You
can read lines and be thinking
about something else. But without
dialog, if your mind isn’t on what
you're doing, it shows up on the
screen, Before me, I've dug up
reactions I never knew I had.”
Stars of the slient films even
had it easy compared to his role,
Ray sighed. “They talked and
then their words were flashed on
the screen. I can’t even open my
mouth.”
** * ‘
Sterling Hayden’s pals are all
smiles. The big, rugged star is
once again living under the same
roof with his wife, Betty, and this
time it looks as though the recon
ciliatien will stick.- The stork
played Cupid‘in‘their case.
*
Ted Donaldson, a child star only
a few popcorn bags back, leaves
for Europe in July to wisit 10
countries in a college credit tour.
He's 18. l
o~ * * ‘
Keenan Wynn offered to do
anything—even haul his ex-wife,'
Evie (Mrs. Van) Johnson, .into
court to cut down on the money |
payments he’s been shelling out to
her—but Bétsy Wynn did the cold,
cold heart act to his reconciliation
plea.
*® * *
Roberta Peters will get a quick
divorce from Robert Merrill by
filing in Mexico. Her reasons are
hair-raising. They lived together
only two days.
CHEERS TO LILLIAN
Lillian Roth’s big chance to
prove that she’s in the Ethel
Merman league as a musical com
edy star has Hollywoed cheering.
Big-vocied Lillian has big lead in
a Broadway - bound musical,
| “Gumbo Yaya,” with an 1890 New
Orleans background.
* * *
Gleen Ford, who played golf
wizzard Ben Hogan in “Follow the
Sun”, is still steaming about why
the film wasn't titled “The Ben
Hogan Story.” . »
He complains: “The ads for the
film read, ‘The story of two rol
licking kids from Texas.! Can
you imagine that”?
Trouble with Rita Hawworth
during sliming of “An Affair in
Trinidad?”
“I should say not. We got along
great,” says Glenn. The picture:
“It’'s a lot like ‘Gilda.”
* * *
Linda Darnell, back to work
only eight months after her seri
ous yellow jaundice attack, is
amazing her medics. A year and
a half usually is required for com=
plete recorvery.
*® * *
West coast legal giants Jerry
Geisler and Jake Ehrlick—Jerry
represented Walter Wagner and
Jake was Jennings Lang’s lawyer
—are barely nodding these days.
They’ve been staunch friends until
now.
GOING, GOING, GONE
Studio can now start biding
for the movie rights to the
biography of the late Mark Hel
linger. Jim Bishop has just turned
over a thick manuscript, 215,000
words long, to Appleton-Century-
Crofts publishers, who will have
the biography on the bookstalls
this fall.
* * »
Mickey Rooney’s still denying
talk about Jane Kean becoming
his next bride.
“We've been friends since we
were 14,” he told me. “It’s just a
friendship—believe me.”
I quizzed him about the fall TV
show. A grown-up Andy Hardy
role for Mickey in the on-film,
story-line half hour?
“How can I play a grown-up
Andy Hardy,” he asked. “I haven’t
grown an inch since I played
Andy.”
£ * *
The autobiography of Mae Mur
ray the screen’s original “Merry
Widow,” is in the final writing
stages with plans for a film ver
sion. There’s a buzz that Lou Luri,
who recently tried to buy Warner
Brothers’ studio, will finance the
film.
~ Mrs. Bessie Taken, school marm
on the Fox lot, was explaining
money values in the studio class
room to six-year-old George Win=
slow and assorted kiddies who
work with Joanne Dru and Dick
Widmark in “Big Man.”
Finally she held up a silver dol
lar, dropped it on her desk so that
' the children cou'd hear its clank,
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. TRAGEDY: — An ironic death
‘ befell this sparrow when a plece
| of string to be woven into her
nest became a noose. The ‘“hang
ing” occurred under the eaves of
. & Binghamton, N. Y., house. ¢
E BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
) R A e EIIERERTERA—II__————~
and asked:
“Anybody know what it is?”
“Trails”, screamed the Winslow
moppet.
Arnall Sefecis
New Consultant
WASHINGTON June 26 (AP)—
Price Chief Ellis Arnall said Wed
nesday Frank B. Cole of Newman
Ga., will be one of his personaf
consultants. .
Cole is a soft drink distributor
in Arnall’s home town. Arnall ex
plained the consultants to not
draw a salary and serve only when
they are needed. They act as ad
visers and are paid expenses and
SSO per day when on duty. In most
instances they waive both expen
ses and pay.
Arnall said he now has five
such consultants. Besides Cole they
are Ellis H. Peniston, Newman;
Harry K. Schauffler and John L.
Leban, New York City; and John
B. Hutson, Washington.
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|Magazine Arficle Claims South Is
lAdvancing Rapidly In Industry |
NEW YORK, June 26-—-Below’
the Mason-Dixon Line, a ‘“fantas
tic” boom in farm and factory has
opened the South within the last
few years as America’s new fron
tier. This new boom is challenging
the North as an industrial center
reports the July issue of Coronet
Magazine released Wednesday
June 25.
An area that once lacked indus
tries, the South “is becoming a
key U. S. industrial center. Digni
fied old Southern cities are turn
ing into boom towns. Run-down
farms are setting new crop re
cords. Land once thought useless
is yielding vast mineral riches.”
Throughout the South, there is
a new sense of excitement as new I
developments come with startling
rapidity. “This swift, exciting re
volution has brought breathtaking
changes in the economie, social
and cultural life of Dixie.”
To get an explanation of this
boom one need only look at any
one of the spectacular develop
ments already underway in the
South . . giant paper mills in Tex
as . . . huge rayon plants in Miss- ,
issippi . . vast cattle grazing lands
in Florida. '
Men by the millions the article
reports—are needed in this new |
industrial empire. “Every business |
day for the period 1941-1951 seven |
new industrial plants have set up
shop in the South. For every mil- |
lion dollars spent in building new I
factories, fifteen million have |
been poured into expanding ex- |
istent ones.”
Wages In the South are coming
up to Northern standards, cites
Cornet. But Southerners assert
that Northern wages have to be
higher with the Northerners’
extra expenditure for fuel, hous
ing and clothing.
“We got in late,” says Robert
Holder, an Atlanta industrial de
‘veloper, “but that's helping us
now, We can plan the building
of industrial districts . . . every
thing a group of factories need.
And we can put the workers'
homes where they will be close.
lThe haphazard growth of North
ern cities can’t happen here.” |
’ Spectacular Development |
The South’s spectacular de-‘
|velopment goes far deeper than
| material progress, claims the ma- ‘
| gazine, as is evidenced by its eager
{determination to bolster ils cul
ture, strengthen its educational
lopportunities, and better its civie
( life. True, there are still tremen- '
| dous social problems that it has
THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1952,
barely begun to fackle, b, -
lightened Southerners are facing
them with new courage.
What is happening south of the
Mason-Dixon ine is good o, the
entire U. S, concludes c,, net
“Just as the opening of t}q West
in the last century swept ihe rest
of the nation to new prospe,iy,
so the dramatic 20th Century
Dixie promises new horizo, sos
the whole country.”
ettt e
OLD FLOWER
| The poppy was known some
5000 or 6000 years before I}, birth
of Christ and, by 100 A, D ~,
had knowledge of the ngycqy,
qualities of drugs made fro, the
plant.
e ———————————
Althought there are 109 i¢je, ;.
sion broadcasting stations i, the
United States and a high percey.
age of the nation’s populatioy is
within television range, abo 1 one
half the area of the coun(, y is
outside.