Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Athenians
,\
{Osmtinued From Page One)
during other parts of the year.”
Plans are that it will be possible
to utilize the facilities on a year
round basis.
The beautiful site for the camp,
located near Eatonton, has been
leased to the Board of Regents of
the University for a period of
ninety-nine years through the co
operation of the Soil Conservation
Agency. With an eye toward mak
ing immediate construction of cot
tages and development of the
camp possible the members of the
State 4-H Club last year raised
$40,000.
Vital need for the camp is evid
ent, according to Mr. Sutton, who
pointed out that there are over
126,000 members of the 4-H Club
in Georgia and that due to limit
ed facilities only some 10,000 of
that number are able to attend
camp .
With the functioning of the
camp, pressure will be relieved
other camps which are far too
crowded and it will be possible to
once again hold a statwide meet
of club members, the state leader
pointed out. &
The directors and organizers in
. the camp development resolved to
"ask the governor of the state for
permission to use some of the
workmanship of prisoners for
construction of the camp and were
given that promise by Governor
TERETY MONDAY THRU THURSDAY (SNSRI
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Talmadge. Mr. Sutton stated that
the idea was to “take men from
solitary and confinement and give
them opportunities to use the
skills they had developed in out
side life.” He pointed out that an
effort was thus made to “rehabi
litate souls” as well as building the
needed camp.
The prison detachmeM was
completing work on the Boy Pa
trol Camp at the time the request
was made for their services and it
become necessary to get things in
preparedness for them to begin
weork by June 1 in order to get to
use them.
Dollar For Dollar
Governor Herman Talmadge,
who told Mr. Sutton of some of his
rich experiences in 4-H Club work
and at its camps, made a further
offer to the members of the ex
tension service. He promised that
while he was in office he would
match every dollar raised for the
camp with a state dollar to ex
pedite the proceedure of complet
ing the camp.
Since that time the camp de
velopment fund of the 4-H Foun
dation has gained $115,000 through
personal and business donations.
Some $83,000 of that sum has been
spent since June in setting up ac
comodations for the prisoners,
paying for materials, and getting
development under way.
Large donations toward thé
completion of the camp have been
made by several businesses and
individuals. Sears-Roebuck Foun
dation gave a check for $6,000;
Southeast Ford Motor Co. gave
' $10,000; Callaway Community
Foundation donated $25,000; Mill;
B. Lane contributed SIO,OOO and
Mrs. Pansy Ireland Poe added an
other SIO,OOO.
Advantage To Athens
The advantages of the center,
only farty miles from Athens, will
' be great for this city, according to
extension leaders. The University
due to a speeded up college pro
gram, has been unable to take care
of large group meetings for some
time and the state meets of 4-H
' Clubs have been held in Milledge~
ville on the GSCW campus.
~ Located near Athens, the Center
- will have easy access to the educa
tional facilities of the University.
The point was also mentioned dur
ing the day spent at Rock Eagle
that 4-H Club work stimulates in
terest in college attendance.
Visits to college campuses dur
ing high school for 4-H activities
often influence young people in
the choice of educational institu
tions. In the words of several of
the attendants at the tour, “The
center will be good for the state
and the University and consequ
ently good for Athens.”
All the men present at Rock
Eagle during the short program at
which W. A. (Bill) Sutton, Francis
Bowen, and G. 1. Johnson spoke
endorsed the camp a hundred per
cent and voiced their approval of
plans for its development. A chair
man of the Clarke County group
and other officers will probably be
elected at the meeting of civic
leaders at the Court House tomor
row afternoon.
Tenative plans are that the citi
zens of this county will attempt to
pay for the construction of a cot
tage as their part of the overall
development program.
Leaders Who Serve
.
Program Tonight
Mrs. J. M. Lewis and Mrs. Pres
ton Almand will appear on
“Leaders Who Serve” tonight . . .
speaking on behalf of the Amer=-
jcan Legion Auxiliary, Allen R.
Fleming Post No. 20.
Mrs. Lewis is retiring next
month after two years as presi
dent of the Auxiliary; Mrs. Al
mand is serving as Ist Vice Presi
dent. They will discuss the work
of the organization and its in
terest in the Athens community.
Burl Womack is host on “Lead
ers Who Serve”, and it is heard
at 10:00 p. m. on WGAU.
King
(Continued From Page One)
inherited from his father, King
Fuad I, a private fortune of 5
million dollars that gave him a
greater income. He won and lost
thousands in visits to European
casinos,
In London British Foreign Min
istry officials went into hurried
conferences. The abdication is of
prime imHortance to Britain, which
has been in a bitter struggle with
Egypt. About 100,000 British troops
guard the Suez Canal zone de
spite Egypt’s cancellation of a
treaty authoriz'ng their presence.
Another issue is the Anglo-
Egyptian Sudan, still ruled jointly
by Britain and Egypt despite Fa
rouk’s claim to sovereignty over
|
A British Foreign Office spokes
man said in London that Britain
will take action in Egypt if Na
guib’s military coup endangers
British lives. -
SMOKE CONTROL CHECKUP
NEW YORK.— (AP) —The Bu
reau of Smoke Control has taken
to the water in an effort to clear
up smog about the New York
Harbor.
Weekly inspection trips are
nrade to enforce air-pollution laws.
Major offenders have been found
to be pile drivers, dredges and
some carelessly operated tugs.
Authorities said enforcement re
quired professional discretion,
Boats preparing to dock, it was
said, emit smoke as they struggle
to buck winds and tide, and are
not penalized
SOW FARROWS 19 PIGS
RALEIGH, N. C.—(AP)—A
prolific sow recently farrowed 19
pigs in one litter on a Tyrrell
county farm. All pigs were ap
parently normal and healthy at
birth.
The litter is the fourth farrowed
by the half Duroc and half Po
land-China sow. She bore 9 pigs
in the first litter, 13 in the second
and 16 in the third.
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ADLAI STEVENSON in action before the convention microphones:
“If there is Deryocratic dirt, turn the flashlight in every corner.”
Gov. Adiai Stevenson's Political
Concepts Hit Middie Of Road Theme
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO — (NEA) — Illinois
Governor Adlai Stevenson’s pub
licy-voiced ideas on government
add up to a portrait of a man who
is a middle-of-the-road Democrat
many paces to the right of the
New Deal-Fair Deal.
Thus, though he embraces most
of the present administration’s
foreign policy, its record in the
domestic field cannot be fastened
upon him. He had no part in its
making, and he feels no deep ac
cord with it. _
In the nearly four years he has
been governor, Stevenson has
etched his views gharply over
the whole range of government
policy. There are no important
blank spots. And in the process of
getting himself on the record, he
has revealed a notable talent for
phrase-making.
His speeches shine with rhetoric
that can be remembered with
lines tinged with humor. His wel
coming speech to the Democratic
Convention underlined this char
acteristic. For example, he jibed
at the Republicans for being “out
of patience, out of sorts, and, need
1 add, out of office.”
* L .
Stevenson’s utterances show
him fearful of further enlarge
ment of federal operations and
consequently cautious on health
insurance, public housing, and na
tionally-enforced civil rights. In
this caution lies the secret of his
acceptability to all wings of his
party. He has outraged no one.
Here are excepts from his
speeches, covering a wide field:
Government philosophy:
“I do not identify big govern
ment with good government. ... I
think government should be as
small in scope and as local in
character as possible. But it is
the job that needs doing that must
shape and delimit the area of
governmental activity.” (New
York, 1949.)
Health Insurance:
“l am against the socialization
of the practice of medicine. If the
insurance principle could be
brought to bear on catastrophic
illnesses, it would largely elimi
nate the specter of terror from
the average home. I am sure that
this objective can largely be real
ized without the destruction of
professional independence.”
Ho®sing.
“Teamwork between govern
ment and private builders is the
only ultimate solution of our
housing needs. No single group,
public or private, can do the job
.... The aim, as I understand it,
of the Federal Housing act, is to
encourage, not compete with pri
vate housing.” (Springfield, 111,
1949.) !
Taxes and spending:
“Confronted with a nenormous
increase in the Federal budget, the
preoccupation of the whole coun
try today® has become the cost of
government. Money will be harder
and harder to get to maintain, let
alone expand, state service. Can
we do more for less? I know we
must. I think we can.” (Chicago,
1950.)
“The more we do for ourselves,
the less demand there will be
upon government to do it for us.
If the communities shift part of
their normal responsibilities to
the state or Federal governments,
their state or Federal taxes will be
higher and their control over the
spending of their tax money will
be further from their hands. It is
as simple as that.” (Farmerville,
111, 1950.)
Labor relations:
“T am this much of an expert on
the Taft-Hartley law: I know that
anyone who says flatly he is either
for or against that law is undulging
our common weakness for over
simplification .... Some features
of the law seem to me to advance
the cause of good labor relations,
and other features do not. I think
the Democrats should recommend
modification. We must learn that
whether we work in a factory or
in the front office, whether we are
employes or employers, we have
the same self-interest in the har
monious management of our af
fairs. There is no such thing as a
victory of one segment of our so
ciety over another; we progress
on a common front or we don’t
progress at all.” (Chicago, 1949.)
Civil rights:
“In Illinois I have tried ear
nestly to effect the adoption of a
fair employment practices law
with powers of enforcement. I feel
very strongly this is the first re
sponsibilitiy of the states them
selves. If the states are unwilling
or unable (to prevent discrimina
tion in hiring workers), then I
presume there is no alternative to
having the Federal government
do so.”
Corruption in government:
“Let there be no misunder
standing. We have not, we do not,
we will not condone, excuse or
explain wrong -dong or moral ob
liquity in public office, whoever
the guilty and whatever their sta
tion. One corrupt official is one
too many. If there is Democratic
dirt, let us clean it up and turn
the flashlight into every corner.
Corruption is treason .... high
standards of public service were
never more important than now.
The free world looks to us for
leadership. The greatest weapon
we have in the struggle is public
and private morality” (Chicago,
1952.)
Communism:
“Communism i§ the corruption
of a dream of justice.” (Chicago,
1951.)
“Communism resolves no anx
ieties. It multinlies them. It or
ganizes terror. It is without spir
itual content or comfort. It pro
vides no basic security. In the
long run it cannot cure the di
sease of this anxious age.” (Evan
ston, 111, 1951.)
Foreign policy.
“The Democratic Party should
continue to stress in the future,
at it has in the past, the necessity
for mobilizing our strength, both
military and economic, in sup
port of the free mnations of the
world.”
“I believe in the maintenance
in Europe of American forces for
the period required to assure the
protection of Europe. I recognize
that the size of our force must
always be limited by what is
possible for us to do.”
» “Military force alone . cannot
win the day for us in Asia. Our
moral authority there is low be
couse we are white and Asia is
colored .... It will take great pa
tience, great insight, great re
straint for us who see the white
(Continueda From Page One)
money on a cotton crop he raised
during the Summer after he grad
uated from high school. That
financed his freshman year at the
University of Alabama, and he
worked his way through the other
three years. He was a Phi Beta
Kappa student. s
He graduated right into World
War I, and, after his discharge,
tried to get into newspaper work.
When he couldn’t find a job, He
went to law school instead. He
practiced law in Huntsville, Ala.,
until he was elected to the House
of Representatives in 1936..
Appropriately, his first speech
in the House was in support of a
law to aid tenant farmers.
After five successive terms, he
ran for the Senate, to fill out the
unexpired term of the late Sen.
John H. Bankhead, of the Tal
lulah Bankhead clan. He was re
elected again in 1948, ,
* * * |
His Congressional record hasf
been studded with important is- |
sues. In the House, he had much
to do with pushing through leg
islation having to do with the Ten
nessee Valley Authority. |
He was one of the first to urge
President Roosevelt to seek a|
fourth term. During his last term’
in the House he was Majority
Whip.
In the Senate, he authored a
vital bill on housing. Although he
first voted for the Taft-Hartley
law, he later turned around and
voted to sustain President Tru
‘man’s veto of that measure.
Northerners, as well as his
Southern colleagues, respect abil
ity to make and keep friends,
to see both sides of a question,
to keep calm in times of crisis.
They figure those qualities are
prerequisites for a vice president.
world in our image and like
ness to win confidence and faith
in the great uncommitted areas of
Asia. It can’t be done with the
white man’s sword.” (Evanston,
1111., 1951.)
“We must thread our way be
tween imperialism and isolation
ism, between the disavowal of the
responsibilities of our power and
the assertion of our power beyond
our resources.” (Chicago, 1951.)
(Continued From Page One)
they were so weary from long
overtime sessions they couldn’t
put on any blazing show of spirit.
Delegates had spent most of
their energy in two marathon
stretchouts in which they put up
11 men for the presidential nomi
nation and then picked Stevenson
from among them.
Dramatic Coup
Stevenson was put over with a
dramatic coup and accepted in the
early hours today an honor he
said he never sought.
He had lagged behind Kefauver
on two ballots. But he had strength
to call up later on. And the oppo
sition collapsed before it when
Averell Harriman of New York,
the mutual security director,
leaped out of the race and swung
in behind Stevenson.
That started a stampede. Gov.
Paul Dever of Massachusetts, a
favorite son, switched over to
Stevenson. With a bandwagon
under way, it was all over at the
end of the third roll call.
President Truman put in an ap
pearance for one of those typical,
fighting speeches that took him te
an upset victory in 1948
Truman introduced Stevenson—
a man who seemed a bit awed
and overwhelmed by the nomi
nation.
BLACK ‘SNOW’ FALLS
WORTHINGTON, Minn.—(AP).
A jet-black “snow” covered more
than a block of this town while
dumbfounded- residents watched
with amazement.
They later learned the “snow”
actually was soot, blown from a
12-foot pile that had been re
moved from a 245-foot chimney
at a power plant. A strong wind
came up, whipping the oily mass
around the block. Buildings were
blackened, along with streets
walks and yards.
Residents were told to clean up
the mess and send the city.their
bill for the work.
S CATALINA BATHING
A %:2:?: SUITS to chooizofs‘:é?‘%
[, Vs oF 14
regular price
K e e
DRESSES - SUITS
1/ PRICE /o S
LESSER'S APPAREL SHOP |
301 E. Clavo;l St., AthensD. Abroms, proprietor
Citadel Appoints
The appointment of two new
assistant professors of political
science at The Citadel has been
announced by Colonel C. F. Myers,
Jr., tollege adjutant.
They are Luther G. Haggard,
Jr., a native of Red Oak, Texas,
and Ernest E. Means of Akron,
Ohio.
They will both begin their
teaching duties in the fall quarter
which staits in September and
will have the college rank of sec
ond lieutenant.
Lt. Haggard received the bach
elor of arts degree from Southern
Methodist University in 1943 and
the master of arts degree from the
same institution in 1947.
He has completed course work
and passed the preliminary exam
inations for the doctor of philos
ophy degree at the University of
Minnesota. During the past year
he was a teaching assistant in the
political science department at
Minnesota.
He was an instructor in political
science for two years at Southern
Methodist University.
Lt. Means received the bachelor
of arts degree fromr Wittenberg
College in 1949 and the master of
science degree from the University
of Wisconsin in 1951.
He has completed the course
work and passed the preliminary
examinations for the degree of
doctor of philosophy at the Uni
versity of Wisconsin. He has had
‘eight semesters of experience as a
graduate tcaching assistant at
Wisconsin.
OCS Candidates
The Navy has announced that
applications from males are now
being accepted for the Officer
Candidate School, Newport, Rhode
Island.
To be eligible, an applicant
must have reached his 19th but
not his 27th birthday at the date
of the submission of his applica
tion. On specialist ratings, the
maximum age limit is such that
the application can be accepted
until the 33rd birthday. Further,
an applicant must be a graduate
of an accredited college or univer
sity with a baccalaureate degree
but his application will be ac
cepted and placed in process any
time within 120 days of his grad
uating date.
All applicants accepted for this
program will be sent to the Offi
cer Candidate -School, Newport,
Rhode Island, for 120 days train
ing after which they will be com
missioned as ensigns or lieutenant
junior grade in the U. S. Naval
Reserve.
Additional information and pre
liminary application blanks are
now available at U. S. Navy Re
cruiting Station, Post Office
Building, Athens.
Levulose is the sweetest of the
sugars.
SEAT COVERS
/2 PRICE ‘
Installed In Your Car—Fibre And Plastic.
Limited Number At This Price. Get Yours Now.
]. SWANTON IVY, Inc.
SUNDAY, JULY 27, 1952,
1 ] [T
=
| A=
\l\ <L/'~A
R
OFFICER CANDIDATE SCHO
OL, NEWPORT, R. I, July 25 —
Among the 682 men awarded en
signs’ commissions from the
Navy’s only Officer Candidate
School here today, was Roger W.
Harper, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Justus C. Harper of 185 Fortson
dr., Athens, Ga.
Ens. Harper was graduated from
the University of Georgia in 1951,
Established in June 1951 1t
provide junior officers for the ex
panding fleets and to relieve re
serve officers ordered to active
duty since the outbreak of Korean
hostilities, the school’s original
enrollment of 500 will swell to
21006 by October. It is currently
graduating more new officers than
the Naval college NROTC pro
grams comined.
During four months’ training,
the candidates, all college gradua
tes, undergo intensive training in
the basic sea-going skills: gun
nery, seamanship, navigation, en
gineering, damage control and
communications. They cover the
same ground in 16 weeks that the
NROTC students do in four years.
Final
(Continued From Page One)
ore handlers would be eliminated
within the next year.
Stumbling Block
Apparently one big stumbling
block was the portion of those dif
ferentials to be wiped out imme
diately. It was agreed that part of
that would be done now and the
rest next July, but the division
was left to bargaining.
About 23,000 iron ore workers
in Minnesota, members of the
steelworkers-union, walked out a
few hours cfter the steel sirike
began June 2. They asked for the
same concessions demanded by
the steel workers and included a
demand that their wage scales be
brought up to those prevailing in
the mills,
The union-Big Six agreement
included an average wage boost of
18 cents an hour, retroactive to
March 1; about 5 cents in fringe
benetits; and a modified form of
the union shop.
TORONTO EXCHANGE SEAT
EXPENSIVE
NEW YORK—(AP)—The price
for a seat on the Toronto Stock
Exchange, which has only a few
more than 100 memberships com
pared to 1,375 for the New York
Stock Exchange, recently went to
s7s,ooo—highest since 1937,
The most recent New York
Stock Exchange seat transfer was
for $44,000
Non Cancellable, Hospital &
Surgical Insurance. To age 65.
LOANS, City & Farms. Quick
Service. 4
H. N. CHICK, SR.
Phone 2769