Newspaper Page Text
ruIDA!. JULY 4, 1952.
Coming
Fvents
rhe Coming Events Column
is designed to supply the pub
lic with facts concerning or
sanizational and other meet
ings, times, places and events
only. Contributors to this
column are requested to limit
their coming events to these
facts to insure the brevity and
clarity of the various items in
the column
e Georgia Museum of Art
v .1 not be open on Sunday until
{urther notice in September.
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Children’s antique tea sets be-
Jonging to Mrs, Murray Soule
are now being displayed in the
Library.
An exhibition of water colors
by Miss Mary Frances Carter is
now on display in the Library.
Children’s Story Hour each
saturday in children’s room
from 10 until 11 a. m.
Library story stime over
WGAU each Friday, 3 p. m.
Opening hours: Monday
through Friday, 9 a. m. to 9 p.
m.; Saturday, 9 a. m. t¢ 6 p. m.;
sundays, 3 p. m. to 6 p. m.
Tuckston WSCS will have the
next meeting on Tuesday July 8,
3:30 p. m.
WCTU HOUR
WGAU
Over WGAU the following
{alks will be heard on the Wo
man’s Christian Temperance
Four each Wednesday afternoon
during the moth of July from 3
to 3:15.
July 9, J. H. Logan.
July 16, Mrs. R. F. Thomas,
July 23, Mrs, H. A. Haygood.
July 30, Baptist Student Union.
WFC
Over WRFC the following will
be heard on the WCTU Hour
each Monday morning during
the month of July 11 to 11:15.
July 7, Mrs. A. E. Logan.
July 14, C. S. Denny,
July 21, Rev. C. H. Ellison.
July 28, Mrs. William J. Rus
sell
University Demonstration
School Canning Plant on Boule
vard and Satula avenue will be
open each Tuesday and Friday
through out the canning season
after the fourth of July. For ap
pointment call 2697 during the
day and after 5:30 call 127-J.
Wintervilie School Cannery
will open on Tuesday and
Thursday for the week of June
30 because of the holiday week
end. The Cannery will return to
the Tuesday and Friday sched
ule beginning the following
week.
J. E. Lowe, for twelve years
a member of the Georgia State
Patrol and now safety director
for the Simpson Trucking Com
pany, will address members of
the Clarke County Women Vot
ers at their regular luncheon
meeting in the Holman Hotel
Tuesday, July 8, at noon. Res
ervations may be made by tele
phening Mrs. William J. Russell
at 1092-J.
The Bykota Class of the First
Christian Church will hold its
regular meeting at the home of
Mir. and Mrs. William Threlkeld,
next Monday night, July 7. Mrs.
Bradford Allgood will be co
hostess.
Wesleyan Service Gulid of the
Young Harris Methodist Church
will meet Tuesday July 8, 8 p.
m. with Misses Flo Oudia and
Cdessa Williamson. Members are
urged to attend and visitors wel
come,
The Woman’s Society of
Christian Service of the Young
Harris Memorial Church will
meet Monday, July 7, at the
Church. The meeting is slated
for 3:30.
One hundred million tons of
lluminous coal were used for
coke in 1950,
Coal reserves account for 82
ber cent of the nation’s total min
al fuel resources.
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y,fi? Sorry:
or “Michael’s Reminder”
Hope your holiday is happy,
Hope you have a lot of fun,
But “accidents will happen”
So—before your trip’s begun . ..
Resolve to drive with caution
No matter whom you're with.
If you're eareful on the fourth
You'll live to see the fifth!
There are many eareful drivers
And loud the praises sung them,
There are also death certificates,
Let us hope you're not among them!
Young Harris
Church To
Honor Pastor
The members of the Young Har
ris Church cordially invite their
friends in the Athens area to an
open house on Sunday afternoon,
to meet the Rev. and Mrs. Henry
Walker, the new pastor and his
wife,
The reception will be held in the
Educational building, (the old
Lumpkin Home) on Prince avenue
from 4:30 to 6:30 p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. Walker arrived in
Athens from Summerville on July
1 to take the pastorate of the
Young Harris Church.
Independence Of
Colonies Stated
176 Years Ago
Philadelphia, July 4, 1776. On
July - 2nd delegates from every
colony voted for independence
Thomas Jefferson, Benjanin
Franklin, and John Adams were
appointed to draw up the Declara
tion of Independence. Today, John
Hancock, president of the Con
gress, signed his name to it. The
other delegates are expected to
sign soon. The following is from
the Declaration of Independence.
“When, in the course of human
events, it becomes necessary for
one people to dissolve the political
ba_nds which have connected them
with another, and to assume,
among the powers of the earth, the
separate and equal station to
which the laws of nature and
nature’s God entitle them, a de
cent respect to the opinions of
mankind requires that they should
declare the causes which impel
them to the separation.
We hold these truths to be self
evident: That all men are created
equal; that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain inali
enable rights; that among these
are life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness. That, to secure these
rights, governments are instituted
among men, deriving their just
powers from the consent of gov
erned; that, whenever any form of
government becomes destructive
of these ends, it is the right of the
people to alter or to abolish it,
and so institute a new govern
ment, laying its foundation on
such principles, and organizing its
powers in such form, as to them
shall seem most likely to effect
their safety and happiness. Pru
dence, indeed, will dictate that
governments long established
should not be changed for light
and transient causes; and accord
ingly all experience hath shown
that mankind are more disposed
to suffer while evils are sufferable,
than to right themselves by ab
olishing the forms to which they
are accustomed. But when a lonz
train of abuses and usurpations,
pursuing invariably the same ob
ject, evinces a design to reduce
them under absoulte despotism, it
is their right, it is their duty, to
throw off such government, and
to provide new guards for their
future security. Such has been the
patient sufferance of these colon
ies; and such is now the necessity
which constrains them to alter
their former systems of govern
ment. The history of the present
King of Great Britain is a history
of repeated injuries and usurpa
tions, all having in direct object
the establishment of an absolute
tyranny over these states. To prove
this, let facts be submitted to a
candid world.”
There then follows a long list
of grievances which space wiil not
permit us to list but with which
all colonists are familiar. The De
claration closes with, “And, for
the support of this declaration,
witd a firm reliance on the pro
tection of Divine Providence, we
mutually pledge to each other our
lives, our fortunes, and our sacred
honor.”
Elijah Clarke Chapter
NSDAR
RR R e
Oregon had the fifth largest
perentage increase in population
in the nation during the 1940-50
period, according to Department of
Commerce figures.
ST
In 1513 Ponce de Leon #~came
the first mariner to recor‘g, 16 ex
istence of the Gulf Streat T
Camp Council
Announced By
FF And FH'ers
FFA Camp, Lake Jackson, ten
Georgia boys and girls were named
as a Camp Council today by the
two hundred Georgia Future Far
mers and Homemakers who are
spending the Fourth of July Week
here at the first FFA-FHA Lead
ership Training conference, dir
ected by Larry Taylor of Michigan,
an expert in group dynamics.
The Council members are Bobby
Webster, Waynesboro; Joyce Ven
able, Jefferson; Lawton Murray,
Patterson; Gene Aiken, Coving
ton; Bettye Tate, Atlanta; Jimmy
May and DeLoyce Strickland,
Moultrie; Marilyn Middleton,
Blakely; Marsha Tucker, Adel;
and A. J. Casey, Dawson. X
PERSONALS
e e —— . V——ne ve——
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Hilliard and
children left Wednesday for Mo
bile, Ala., for the holiday week
end.
* » =
Friends of little Miss Barbara
Ann Breediove, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard B. Breedlove,
will be pleased to learn she is
doing niceiy following a serious
operation at Emory University
Hospital.
- * -
Miss Terry Goldsmith, of Green
ville, S. C., is the guest over the
week-end of Mr. and Mrs. How
ard McWhorter and Mr. Howard
McWhorter, jr., at their mountain
cottage, *“Nacoochee Lake,” at
Lakemont.
*® % B
Miss Mary Rob Ellington, of
Montgomery, Ala., is the guest of
her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Fowler, on the Jefferson Road.
* o *
Friends of Mr. George A. Tucker
will be pleased to learn his con
dition is reported improved today.
He is a patient at St. Mary’s Hos
pital.
- - *®
Monday, July 8
According to H. E. Hemphill,
teacher of agriculture at Ila, the
cannery will operate on Tuesday
and Friday, beginning on July 8.
The charge for canning this sea
son will be two cents per can. The
pea and bean sheller will run at
50 cents per bushel. The dehydra
tor will dehydrate fruits at 50
cents per bushel.
The school shop will be open on
Mondays from one to six in the
afternoon. The public is invited to
use these facilities,
In Wild Lif
Of This Staf
The Soil Conservation Service
is very much interested in wild
life, not from a recreational
standpoint, but to make out a
well-rounded agricultural pro
gram on each farm.
One of the greatest contribu
tions of the wildlife program by
the SCS is the research into new
plans which will control erosion
and furnish abundant food and
cover for wildlife.
During the past fiscal year,
SCS nurseries have furnished
494,000 seedlings of multiflora
rose to be used as a living fence,
furnish cover for the wildlife
population, and some food for
birds and rabbits. This plant is
used more in the northern part of
the state, while 62,875 seedlings
of the trifcliate orange have been
distributed for the coastal areas
for the same purpose as the rose,
Pokeberry has been found by
the SCS as one of the best foods
for doves, and they have distrib
uted from narseries 122 pounds of
seed for seed patches throughout
the state to the Soil Conservation
Districts.
The State Wildlife Commission,
through the Pittman - Robertson
project, has furnished the Soil
Conservation Districts 8,282,000
bicolor plants for wildlife borders
and areas on farms of District co
operators. The State Commission
started this project in 1944 with
less than 600 feed borders being
established. During the past few
years, approximately 10,000 bor=-
ders annually are being estab
lished in Georgia.
The SCS is continuing its pro
gram of study and research for
plants to best aid the wildlife
program, and will doubtless in a
year or two come up with addi
tional species of plants tc contrib
ute to ths preservation of our
wildlife.
bt
THAT'S WHERE THEIR
'MONEY GOES
Contrary to popular belief, folks
who win radio jackpots don’t go
on a big spending spree but are
quite thoughtful and conscientious
in their expenditures, A survey of
recent winners on radio’s biggest
‘cash prize show “Break the
‘Bank” shows that most prize
‘money is used for important pur~
poses.
Among the last twelve persons
who have amassed & total of over
$40,000 L jackpot oarnini:é st
put their money into their homes,
two elected to travel, one chose
charity, one sponsored a son's
honeymoon, o?.o K:id a loan on &
car an? one lncing a book
on world peace called “Operation
Heaven.”
R L ks
Telescopes show that the lurfam
Jupiter {8 marked b{ belts of lig
ang darker materials.
THE BANNER-HERALD, v THENS, GEORGIA
College Ave. Play
v
School Pupils *
Visit Water Works
This week we took a trip to the
Water Works. The men at the
plant were very nice to show us
how the water is purified. We
learned that many things must be
done to water before we can use
it.
After seeing the plant we had a
picnic. Mr. Cooke took some pic
tures. Some of the boys went fish
ing, others went wading and clim
bed trees. Coach De La Peirriere,
Miss Carolyn Thurmond, Mrs.
Ruark and Mrs. Cooke were with
us. Everyone had a good time so
we are planning to go on another
trip soon.
The girls are enjoying piano
classes with Mrs. Ison. It is sur
prising to find how much they
have learned in three weeks. We
all join in the rhxthm game. We
have seen two musical films. They
were “Carmen” and “Inside Opera
With Grace Moore.”
Some of the older boys built a
racer, The little children have had
some exciting rideg in it.
Our rooms are full of nice art
TV.'MAGIC CARPET' TO CARRY
MILLIONS TO CONVENTIONS
Viewers to Get Ringside Seats,
Tour Chicago Area by Camera
Some seventy million Americans will travel to Chi
cago during July aboard the magic carpet of television.
By a mere flick of a switch they will be on their
way: to tour the Loop, visit the top hotels and meet the
next President of the United States face to face.
To most laymen, the plans for television coverage of
the political conventions are right out of the Arabian
Nights, =7 :
Four networks will transport
the residents of hundreds of
American cities into the Inter
national Amphitheater where
the Republicans and Democrats
will assemble.
Historic Audience
The camera will give them
a bird’s-eye view of the entire
gathering, then whisk them
close enough to a single dele
gate in the convention hall to
spot the soup stains, if any, on
his necktie.
The vast spectacle of Amer
fcan democracy at work will
be viewed by more people than
any other event in the history
of the world.
As Sig Mickelson, CBS Tele
vision executive in command
at Chicago, says:
“The effects of television on
this convention may shape the
destiny of the nation.”
A Dbattery of seven cameras
will record history as it unfolds
within the walls of the huge
Amphitheater, located in the
heart of the famous Stockyards
district.
Doors Covered I
Two will cover the main en
trances to the building, catch
ing notables as they come and
go.
Five will be set up on special
platforms in the arena, at loca
tions from which they can peer
into every inch of the conven
tion hall.
TV viewers also will visit
convention side-shows, such as
press conferences and parades,
and travel to Chicago’s munici
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HISTORY'S STAGE—The eyes of the nation will be focused
on the Internatienal Amphitheater, pictured above, as the
_political parties meet here to select their candidates for
the White Mouse, Television cameras will ecover every
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1 FHMED N Actrees bisa boughiin poses preftily by her kitchen radio, demen
shvaling how many wilflons of Americans will hear the conventions, so be
wflfi bundrody of sadie stations. Gar radios and portables will bring
mmnmammafiny,-mmmm
dwmmer resorts. Bodie wifl blunket the nation.
work. This week we have made
mobiles, cut paper pictures, water
color picturgs, wire dolls and ani
mals. ge‘gé working on our pup
pets, Sonte of them are hand pup~
pets and others have strings on
them. We are making stages and de
corating them., We plan to begin
writing our lines soon.
On Thursday morning a group
went to see a puppet show at the
University Art Department. We
had a good time.
We have many exciting plans
I for the next three weeks so come
, and join in the fun, .
* L "
LIBRARY GARDEN INVITING l
The advent of hot weather after
several days respite in which the
therrmometer held constantly be
low sizzling 90’s has been making
the garden next to the Regional
Library more and more attractive
to passers-by. The library, cool
and refreshing after stepping in
side from the broiling sidewalks,
affords a pleasant glimpse of the
garden. According to librarians on
the desk, patrons are taking ad
vantage of that glimpse and often
stroll through the small but well
,planned garden before leaving for
: home. I
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| Asbestos was first used in auto- i
mobile brake linings in 1906. i
[ pal airport and railroad stations
to see the arrival of prominent
politicos.
' CBS, for instance, has assign
'ed two mobile units, complete
: with cameras and equipment,
ito cover the entire Chicago
larea.
On Constant Call
Like prowl car police, the
unit crews will be on constant
call to rush to the scene of ac
tion when & news event breaks.
It has been pointed out that
the television audience will see
more of the conventions than
even the delegates or the in
dividual television reporters in
the hall.
Betty Furness, who will give
the commercials for Westing
house Electric Corporation on
the CBS network, has jokingly
said;
“I'll have to go home to find
out who's been nominated.”
- Miss Furness will be a “cap
tive” within the special CBS
'studios at the Amphitheater.
Since commercials will be
presented only during dull mo
ments in the convention pro
ceedings, she will be cempelled
to stand by during every ses-‘
sion awaiting a lull, The instant
a bell rings, sounding a cue, she
must be “on-stage” before the
cameras.
~Monitor System
CBS viewers on most stations
will see the scene selected for
them out of fifteen being re
corded by cameras and filtered
through a staff of five directors. |
"Wmm
Of Woman Journalist's Advenfures
' By JANE EADS
WASHINGTON -~ Heien Kirk
patrick calls many top European
figures by their first names and is
known and aq‘:nired bry journalists
in most of the world's capitals,
where for 15 years she reported
momentous events for American
newspapers.
She's personal press aide to Sec
retary of State Dean Acheson and
policy chief of the State Depart
ment’'s European Information
Service.
A tall, willowy blonde, cooly ef
ficient, Miss Kirkpatrick presides
over an office in the new State
Department Building—when she’s
in town, More frequently, how
ever, she's off in Mr. Acheson’s
party to serve as liaison wish the
press on his trips to foreign capi
tals.
She accompanied him to Rome
last November, to Lisbon in Feb
ruary, to Bonn and Paris in May.
She was with the secretary on his
recent trip to London where she
sat in on his talks with England’s
Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden
and France's Foreign Minister
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TRANSCONTINENTAL—The convention felevision neik
works will span the nation, as the above map indicates.
The CBS netweork will criss-cross the couniry, with eutiets
on the west coast at Seattie and San Diego and on the east
Here is the operation, as it
will unfold:
l Don Hewitt, veteran CBS
newsman, presides at the net
work master control room in
’ the Amphitheater.
~ He is in constant communica
tion with four ether directors
stationed at key news points:
one covering the actual conven
tion program, one directing the
mobile units, ene assigned to
the CBS studios in the conven
tion hall, and the fourth located
in the special CBS studios at
the Conrad Hilton Hotel.
Each field director monitors
the eameras at his news spot
and selects the picture to be fed
to the CBS master ocontrol
room. ]
Hewitt sits before a panel of
four screens and selects the one
inch of the convention floor, Special radio and television
studios have been instalied in the building. A new aire
conditioning system has just been installed for the comfort
of the delegates.
to be transmitted to the vast
audience across the nation.
The arrangement is unpre
cedented in television history,
and contrasis with the usual
studlo situation where one di
rector in the control room mon-~
itors three or four ecameras
from which ke makes his selec
tion.
CBS studios in the Amphi
theater will be located on the
upper level of the North Wing,
less than fifty feet from the
eonvention stage.
Persons te be interviewed
can leave the convention floor,
walk up a few steps and be
before the eamera in a matter
of seconds.
Hotel Studios
Yhe special studios at the
Hilton Hotel will be in the very
thick of the “smoke-filled
room” atmosphere, since both
political parties are establish
ing their convention headquar
ters there,
Final Choice
Robert Schumann.
Born in Rochester, N. Y., a
graduate of Dobbs Ferry School
and Smith College, she first went
abroad on a graduate fellowship
at Geéneva, Switzerland. Here she
met many of the men who were
later to become world-renowned
figures, ‘Mr, Eden is among her
close friends. She was also a per
sonal friend of Jan Masaryk of
Czechoslovakia.
Later Miss Kirkpatrick returned
to Geneva to work for the Foreign
Policy Association and as a cor
respondent for the New York Her
ald Tribune. In London in 1937
she started the weekly “Whitehall
' Newsletter” with a British journ
alist. “It had a fantastic circula-‘
tion as a dissident anti-Chamber- |
lain publication,” she said. |
~ After she became a correspond
}ent for the Chicago Daily News,
Miss Kirkpatrick sold out her in
‘terest in the Newsletter. She cov
‘ered the war in North Africa and
Italy and went to Normandy at
the time of the landings. Finally
she became The News’ bureau
coast of Bosten end Miami. The 1948 conventions o
Philadelphia, the first ever telecast te the public, wers
viewed by only six cities in the east. Estimates of the
'52 convention TV audience go as high os 70 million.
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TV CHIEF—Sig Mickelson, CBS ex
ecutive, will be in charge of the huge
network operation aof the conven
tions. Only 39, he typifies the youth
of top personnel in the television
industry. A native of Minnesota,
Mickelson is a former newspaper
man and college Instructor,
Most of the leading eandi
dates also have set up cam
paign offices at the Hilton, so
that press conferences and in
terviews all will be within
range of the CBS cameras.
In charge of this vast net
work operation is Sig Mickel
son, Director of News and Pub
lic Affairs for CBS Television.
Only 39, Mickelson is a for
mer teacher and newspaper
man who served as supervisor
of the TV corps that covered
the Japanese Peace Treaty con
ference in San Francisco.
At Chicago he will direct the
activities of a staff of 300 men
and women that will include
everyone from page boys to
such famous broadcasters as
Edward R. Murrow, Lowell
Thomas, Robert Trout, Erie
Sevareid and David Schoen
brun.
Railroad Caravan
Mickelson’s *“caravan” will
comprise eleven special cars on
‘the Twentieth Century Limited
that will transport broadcas
ters, cameramen, engineers,
maintenance men, secretaries
and office employes from New
York to Chicago.
The network also is as
sembling political specialists
from various parts of the coun
try to analyze convention de
velopments from their local
point of view. ‘
CBS gear, including cameras,
microphones, dollies, booms, ca
ble and monitors, is being ship
ped to Chicago in three large
trucks.
Although the Philadelphia
conventions of 1948 were tele
cast to the public, for the first
time, the job done there
amounted only to a test run for
the coming operations in Chi
cago. l
Cameras Improved
Cameras have been greatly
improved since then, with the
notable addition of the Z>omar
lens, which can “z¢om in” from
chief in Parie.
In 1946 she joined the New York
Post ae roving oormponfint. i
was & fun-job,” she said. *I could
go wherever I wanted, Twice 1
visited -Moscow, which gave me
valuable background for t:L curs
rent job, I also got to In anc
Afghanistan,”
She returned in 1949 to the
United States and her. first jol
with the State Department wa:
as commentator for the Voice o
America program,
In the days before the white
man came, Kentucky was knowr
by the Indians as “The Dark anc
Bloody Ground” because of the
wars between the Iroquois anc
Cherokees for its possession.
Helium is widely used now te
fill balloons because it will no:
burn and is therefore, much safer.
The climate of the Azores ir
nearly ideal—4s degrees at the
lowest exireme and 88 degrees &
the highest.
~ The most importaut furs of Can
‘ada are {first muskrat, seconc<
beaver.
About 125,000 beaver pelts werc
taken in the U. S. in 1950.
long range on a subject for an
intimate closeup.
The walkie-talkie, which was
| used at Philadelphia, has been
perfected so that CBS reporters
may roam the convention floor,
unencumbered by cable.
On the arrival of a Presiden
tial aspirant, a party spokes
man or a newsworthy delegate,
the walkie-talkie reporter can
call for an available camera
and put him immediately on
the air.
The Chicago conventions will
be the first ever covered by ra
dio and television under com
mercial sponsorship.
Westinghouse, sponsor of CBS
radio-TV coverage, also has ar
ranged to sponsor over the
same network a thirteen-week
series of debates between lead
ers of the two political parties, |
as well as the returns on elec
tion night.
Studie Kitchen !
For its commercial announce
ments from the Amphitheater, |
Westinghouse has installed a
complete modern kitchen and
living room in the CBS studios
there.
Betty Furness will preside
over both, demonstrating her
‘appliances amid comfortable,s
air -conditioned surroundings
‘that will provide a quiet con
trast with the hectic scenes on
the floor.
Whoever the party choices
will be, it’s certain that they
will get a more intimate intro
duction to the American elec
torate than was ever given a
White House candidate in the
history of the eountry.
As for the choice for vice
president, it appears that the '
anonymity that eloaked the
fictitious Mr. Throttlebottom is
gone forever!
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CBS ACE—Edward R. Murrow, ace
CBS newsman, is shown here board
ing an airplane for ene of the many
jounts that have taken him round the
world to the scene of headline events
he has covered. Murrow will be @
key man in CBS coverage of the
conventions.
PAGE THREE