Newspaper Page Text
COTTON
{-INCH MIDDLING .... .. 39140
Vol. CXX. No. 161
Arnall Sees Higher Cost
0f Living In Steel Hike
\rmy Publishes
Part Of Grow's
Gecret Diary
By JERRY T. BAULCH
WASHINGTON July 31 — (AP)
__ The Army says Maj. Gen. Rob
ort W, Grow didn’t write in his
behind-the-Iron-Curtain diary all
ihe statements Soviet propagand
i«ts said he did and that the Reds
distorted many notes he actually
jotted down.
These notes, however, resulted
in Grow’s conviction by court
martial Tuesday.
Surprise Move
The Army, in a surprise move
vesterday, said the Russians pub
lished portions of the general’s
personal journal in such a fashion
that it appeared he pictured the
United States as & potential ag
gressor when he really was refer
ring to the Soviets.
Ag an examnle, the Army re-
Jeased excerpts from Grow’s diary
in which he said repeatedly he be
lieved Russia felt that 1951 was
the ripe time for war in Europe.
The Reds, the Army said, twisted
{his to indicate America wanted to
wage war in 1951.
The Army branded as “complete
f-brications” those statements at
tributed to the diary:
«War! As soon as possible!
Now!”
Below The Belt
“We must learn that in this war
it is fair to hit below the belt.”
«Wwe must understand that this
war is total war and is fought with
all weapons.”
This unexpected twist in the
vear-old story of the diary Grow
kept while military attache to
Russia came one day after a court
martial of eight top~ranking gen
erals convicted him of improperly
eeping information and of not
safeguarding it. He was sentenced
to a formal repirmand and suspen
sion from command for six months
—both deterrents to further pro
motion.
Helon Cutfing |
tng Day Feature
Dedication of the new location
of Georgia Eggs, Inc., will be held
at the State Farmers Market,
here, August 8, climaxing a day
of actlvities.
Heading the day’s full program
will be the dedication address by
State Commisioner of Agriculture
Tom Linder at 4 p. m. Mr . Lin
der's address will be immediately
followed by a watermelon cutting.
The program is to be jointly
sponsored by the State Depart
ment of Agriculture, Georgia Eggs,
Inc., and the College of Agricul
ture, University of Georgia.
Mayor Jack Wells will proclaim
the day “Georgia Eggs Day” and
open house will be held from: 10:00
a. m. to 5:00 p. m., according to an
announcement by Robert G. Ste
phens, chairman of the committee
on program and invitations.
Georgia Eggs, Inc., was begun
three years ago for the purpose of
‘developing the potential egg mar=-
kot in Northeast Georgia and to
provide our agricultural people
with a marketing outlet,” ex
plained Stephens.
“Through the efforts of our
¢tockholders and many others
who have given their time and
energy, this project has brought
a new cash crop to our farmers
in the production of quality eggs,”
he continued. “Georgia Eggs, Inc,,
is now at a turning point to be
marked by the dedication of its
new installment at the State Far
mers Market in Athens.”
GRADY STUDENT
MAKES GOOD
Timbes Riley, 1948 graduate of
the University of Georgia’s Henry
\V. Grady School of Journalism, is
now with the Chicago staff of the
Vi ull. Street Journal.
W!’nor to going to Chicago, Mr.
Riley was with the Milwaukee
Sontinel and Memphis Commercial
Anpeal, He came to the Univer
gitr from Washington, D. C.
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’ N'TOM SNIPER” FEARED — Three women have
been fired upon from ambush by a mysterious gunman,
i;-‘.:«‘\'ed by police to be another “phantom sniper.” In
the above photo Mrs. Eleanor Gleichner (left) holds up
the shoe she bent over to tie when a shot was fired,
slamming into her bedroom wall'On the right Mrs. Vona
Lauman holds vy elothing she was wearing when shot
al, while mowing herdawn. Mre, Lauman was struck.in
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Ameosiated Press Service
.
Nation To Feel
-
SIOO Year Rise
WASHINGTON, July 31—(AP).
Price Stabilizer Ellis Arnall pre
dicts the new steel price boo%
will cost the average Amerig®™y
family about ,SIOO a year in }3’;}?
er prices. ST
Arnall said in a tely &
(NBC) interview that ti®.& 20
per ton price boost he & re
luctantly yesterday w™ & ouch
off a new round of ir & ..
He made it clear & steel in
crease was not his own .noice, but
was ordered by acting Defense
Mobilizer John R. Steelman, Ar
nall said last night it was “a very,
very bitter pill for me.”
Living Costs To Climb
Earlier in the day price con
trol officials had said the cost of
living, already at a record high,
is almost certain to climb even
higher because of “inevitable in
creases” in some major industries.
A top official said the higher
steel ceilings probably will force
the government to drop its hold
the-line price policy and center
efforts on keeping apparently in
evitable increases as small as pos
sible.
He said it was hoped ‘some
semblance of stabilization can be
salvaged.” !
Officials were reluctant to dis
cuss the new policies being con
sidered, but they said the situa
tion may call for a complete re
vision of stabilization standards.
This decision, however, proba
bly will await President Truman’s
return to Washington August 5.
Any drastic changes probably will
have to get his approval, an of
ficial said.
Seeks Conference
Arnall is expected to seek a
conference with the President
some time next week. Arnall him
self was non-committal.
Some of his close associates,
however, said the former Georgia
(Continued On Page Four)
University Adds
18 To Faculty
Regents of the University Sys
temr of Georgia have approved 28
new facully and staff appoint
ments at their summer meetings,
according to Dean of Faculties A,
B. Biscoe.
New appcintments which in
clude replacements are:
New Appointments
Arnold Hugh Altvater, instruc
tor of music: John William Ander
son, assistant professor of business
administration; Sam H. Best, Jr.,
assistant professor of veterinary
medicine; Frank Biglow, tempor
ary assistant professor of art; Rob
ert T. Bowen, assistant professor
of health and physical education;
Doris Anne Bradley, instructor of
libraries; Fanny Lee Brooke, in
structor of homre economics; W. R.
Brown, assistant professor of edu
cation; .
Eldred Wayne Causey, instructor
of veterinary medicine; Howard L.
Dalton,, ascistant professor of
dairy; Martin Frobisher, Jr., pro
fessor and head of bacteriology;
Ada Louise Harwell, temporary
assistant professor of music; Hud
son Jost, professor and head of
psychology; James Hutton Lemly,
assistant professor of business ad
ministration; Robert Greer Mc-
Pherson, instructor of history;
Garland E. Oliver, film librar
ian for the Division of General
Extension; Herbert A. Otto, assist
ant professor of education; Dan E.
Pratt, instructor of food technol
ogy; Elizabeth T. Sheerer, assist
ant professor of home economics;
lßaymond Sheldrake, Jr., assistant
| horticulturist; Melton Shute, as
| sistant agricultural engineer;
l Thomas James Stafford, assist
ant professor of agronemy; Thad
Suits, temporary instructor of art;
Leßoy Keenan Taul, instructor of
veterinary medicine; William Hor
ace Waggoner, Jr., assistant pro
fessor of chemistry; Porter S.
Wood, assistant professor of busi
ness administration; James Fred
erick Woodruff, assistant profes
sor of geography and geology; and
William H. Woodward, assistant
photographer for the Division of
General Extonsion.
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MODERN ARK SAILS FOR AFRICA—
The LeTourneau Ark, a converted landing
craft, cruises down the Mississippi River
after leaving New Orleans on its trip to
the jungles of Africa. The missionaries,
who make up the larger part of the crew,
hope to teach the natives of Liberia to be
Mississippi's Stormy Party Factions
Are Heading For Even Wider Splits
For Athens Aid
¥. Paul Williams, local chafr
man of the Russell Appreciation
Dinner held here prior to the De
mocratic National Convention, re
ceived a letter of thanks from
Georgia’s Junior Senator, Richard
B. Russell, who sought the presi
dential nomination. The dinner,
staged at Athens Country Club,
featured James V. Carmichael as
speaker and raised a sizable sum
for Senator Russell’s campaign
for the nomination.
Tickets so; Itik;e affair sold for
twenty-five s‘o rs and the.Coun
try Club accomodated a capacity
crowd of Russell well-wishers.
Senator Russell in his letter, a
copy of which was mailed to the
Banner-Herald, thanked all of his
Clarke County friends for their
support in his campaign for the
nomination and expressed the
view that although he did not
gain the nomination, his campaign
results constituted a wdctory.
Text Of Letter
The letter follows in its entirety:
“Honorable H. Paul Williams,
Chairman
Honorable R. C. Gilmer, Treasurer
Dick Russell Appreciation Dinner
Athens, Georgia
Dear Friends:
“Let me express to you—and
through you to each and everyone
who contributed to the Dick Rus
sell Appreciation Dinner Fund —
my heartfelt appreciation. It was
the efforts of such friends which
made it possible for me to wage
my campaign on a national basis.
“Though we did not win the no
mination we did win a great vic
tory. My candidacy was a stabiliz
ing influence which prevented the
nomination of an extreme radical
or the adoption of the platform
urged by that element. We fought
a hard, clean fight. I have no re
grets except the disappointment
felt by my friends at failing to
win the nomination. In every other
respect our campaign represents a
victory.
“Again thanking you, and with
every good wish, I am
Sincerely,
Dick Russell”
“Horse Doctors” Yield
To Trained Scientists
By ELIZABETH ETHRIDGE
The old-fashioned ‘horse doc
tor’ is a vanishing species.
The age when a rotund, hot
breathed “vet” ministered to an
ailing cow or mule in his quarters
next door to a city stable has giv
en way to a new era marked by
white-coated young scientists who
hang their doctor of veterinary
medicine degree en hospital walls.
This is no minor miracle, Ac
cording to authorities at the Uni
versity of Georgia’s School of Vet
erinary Medicine — a regional
school — it has taken no less than
a.revolution in thought to accom
plish the change.
This revolution, they say, is the
work of the veterinarians them
selves and has come about despite
public apathy. The public de~
mands far less of veterinarians
then it should, but the profession
isn’t letting this hold it back.
By The Boot Straps
By its own boot straps, modern
veterinary medicine has pulled it
self up to the level ‘where it be
longs. The veterinarians are
climbing toward a ¢omparable
plane with M. D.’s and scientists
in other fields.
The school at Georgia, and
schools like it across the country,
are taking a lot of credit for the
profession’s progress — for its rise
in prestige and the erasure of the
social stigma that once marked it.
When the young veteranian gets
the type of training he needs, Uni
versity officials say, it would be a
‘}‘urd thing for’him to revert to the
Gharea dnctar’? level : Racked hy
SERVING ATHENS AND NORTHEAST GCEORGIA OVER A CENTURY,
ATHENS, GA., THURSDAY JULY 31, 1952
Democrats Seek
lke Endorsement
By KEITH FULLER
JACKSON, Miss July 81 —(9P)
— Mississippi’s stormy J)olltical
parties, split into five different
camps before the national conven
tions, are pulling apart again,
shaping one of the weirdest strug
gles in state history.
The Democrats showed signs to
day of developing a rupture be
cause some want the party to en
dorse Gen. Dwight Eisenhower,
Republican nominee, and some
want to support Gov. Adlai Stev
enson of Illinois, Democratic can
didate, for president.
The Republicans, on the other
hand, seen headed for a fight over
which faction will carry the offi
cial Eisenhower mantle {n the state
campaign.
More Complications
' And to top this politieal porridee
is ‘the seeming reluctance of the
Republicans to have any Demo
cra}s champion their five-star gen
eral.
Both parties have been plagued
with disunity all year. The state
capital, Jackson, was the scene of
five different state conventions
this summer instead of the usual
two.
Former Lt. Gov. Sam Lumpkin
of Tupelo, who says Mississippi
“won a battle at Chicago but lost
the war” with Northern Demo
crats, heads an infant movement
to get Eisenhower endorsed by the
state Democratic party when it
holds a post-Chicago convention in
Jackson Aug. 18.
Opposing this move is Cov.
Hugh White, Lt. Gov. Carroll
Gartin, State Executive Committee
Chairman Tom Tubb and Atty.
Gen. J. P. Coleman.
Predicted Victory
White yesterday predicted an
easy victory over the Lumpkin
movement and declared Missis
sippi would be foolish to try to
elect a Republican president with |
its Democratic congressional dele
gation. |
In the Republican camp, the Re
publican party of Mississippi, made
up predominatly of white persons
and often called “Lily White”, has
called a post Chicago convention
for Monday.
Chairman Aneon Sheldon of the
Executive Committee said he
would support Eisenhower and
thought the convention would, too.
The party sent unpledged delegates
to Chicago but they were not seat
(Continued On Page Four) |
proper training, the young vet
erinarain rises in his own esteem
and the pull up the social and pro
fessional ladder is easier.
According to one member of the
University’s veterinary medicine
faculty, veterinarians are in great
demand today and have a place in
the scientific werld. ‘They re need
ed for meat and food inspection,
for the development of vaccines
and drugs, and for the perfection
of operative techniques. Instead of
being cast-offs in the medical
field, they are now valued as con
tributors of important scientific
information.”
At the University, as in otker
first class veterinary medicine
schools, only the highest calibre
students may study, great profes
sional ability is demanded of the
faculty, and physical facilities are
the best.
The University’s new two-mil
lion dollar plant is a far cry from
the rented warehouse which once
was the location of many a veter
nary medicine school. In Georgi's
huge H-shaped building, only now
being completed inside, are housed
facilities for the care of sick and
ailing animals from kittens to
bulls, well-equipped laboratories:
and operating rooms that would
compare favorably with these of
a modern hospital, clagsrooms, dis
pensaries, and evep diet J%%Ch s
where special food ~MAY 'fi%&
pared.
Top Students
The :cost of the four-year pro
fesional education of a veterinare
self-supporting by making use of the ter
tile land for farming. The ship is loaded
with heavy earth moving equipment, pre
fab houses, an airplane, and several motor
vehicles which will be used to aid in clear
ing the jungles.— (AP Wirephoto.)
Principal Meef
Approves New
School Program
Georgia’s newly Initiated ex
tended school program was given
the nod of approval here this
week by more than 100 of the
state’s high school principals.
The principals, in conference at
the University of Georgia, agreed
that the program which was put
into effect in 84 Georgia school
systems this summer, is nothing
short of a boon to the state’s edu
‘cational progress.
They cited it not only because
it offers valuable summer time
training for students, but also be
cause it has proved to be an in
cubator for improved teaching
techniques which may be used
with profit when regular school
sessions open again in September.
Miss Elizabeth Donovan, state
supervisor of the extended school
program, said that the program
offers a real future for education
—a future limited only by the im
agination of its sponsors.
“Already we have learned,” she
said, “that there are no discipli
nary problems in an extended
school program. And this is not
just because students are allowed
to do what they want to do.
“In summer programs the re
lationships between teachers and
pupils are better. They get to
know each other under different,
more informal -circumstances.
Children’s attitudes about school
change. Instead of the chore it
may have been, school now be
comeés a pleasure.”
Miss Donovan believes that
much of the good brought akout
in the summer sessions will be
carried over into the regular
school year. The extended school
program provides continuous
growth for children, she said.
They become better adjusted emo
tionally and as a result will prob
ably return to school in Septem
ber as better students.
The summer programs also have
a merit in their own right, she
said. Students who never liked to
read before got interested in va
cation reading clubs. Hundreds of
Georgia children learned to swim
who never would have had a
chance. Others, whose finances do
not permit them to go away to
camp, had plenty of camping ex
periences in school-operated day
(Contin:ed On Page Four)
FIRST COTTON BOLL FOUND
The first cotton boll of the year
was reported this morning from
the farm of Jim Moon, of the Hol
ly Heights district off the Daniels
ville road.
Moon has several bolls open on
his 15 acres of cotton, from which
he is hoping to get a bale an acre.
This is the earliest boll that
Moon has ever grown, for it is the
first he has found in the month of
July.
’ ATHENS AND VICINITY
Partly cioudy and continued
t hot and humid this afternoon,
tonight, Friday and Saturday
! with widely seattered afternoon
| thundershowers. The sun sets
| this evening at 7:35 and rises in
| the morning at 5:44.
| 5 Rl
| GEORGIA — Partly cloudy
i and continned hot this after
| noon, tonight and Friday: scat
tered thuridershowers this aft
erncon and evening and again
Friday.afternoon.
‘ TEMPERATURE
| Mighest .... ~.. .... 2 O
t L AR TV LS L
LI ..oy svae ivaraens aeve B 0
| e L R e
RAINFALL
% Inches last 24 hours .. ... .00
Total since July 1 .. .. .. .04
’ Deficit since July 1 .. .... 447
| Average July rainfall .. .. 50!
‘ Total since January 1 .. ~27.26
Deficit since January 1°... 470
US Planes Deliver Biggest
Night Raid Near Manchuria
Nominees Swi
Election lssue
By The Associated Press
Republicans kept the civil rights
pot boiling today for the purpose
of cooking the Democrats’ goose.
Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge of
Massachusetts, chairman of Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower's cam
paign advisory committee, said
the selection of Sen. John J.
Sparkman of Alabama as the
Democratie vice presidential
nominee shows the Democratic
party intends to do nothing con
structive about civil rights.
Sen. Richard M. Nixon of Cal
presidential runnmg mate, told
newsmen in Fresno, Calif., how
ever, that Sparkman is not a true
Southern candidate and is known
{0 be completely pro-Truman,
' Hand-Picked Candidates
Chairman Arthur Summerfield
of the GOP National Committee
rubbed more salt in the wounds
yesterday with the assertion that
Stevenson and Sparkman are
“hand-picked candidates of Presi~
dent Truman” and will be “ex
pected to carry on the Truman
tradition.”
Sparkman, in Washington, said
he will have something to say
about clvil rights in response to a
series of questions in a telegram
from Rep. Powell, New York Ne
gro Democrat. Sparkman said.
Powell’'s communication is one of
15,000 he has received since his
nomination and will be answered
in its turn.
At the Illinois capital, Gov.
Stevenson made a few remarks on
civil rights issues in his first news
conference since the Democrats
nominated him for the presidency
last Saturday.
He repeated a previously ex
pressed view that fair employ
ment practices legislation is pri
marily a state responsibility. He
said the federal government
should hold off unless a state fails
in its duty. i
He said all citizens should have
“equal opportunities and equal
political rights.”
Stevenson told the newsmen he
hopes major campaigners in his
behalf will “stay within the
framework of my ideas.” One of
the major campaigners will be
President Truman.
T-H Revision
Stevenson also said he believes
the Taft-Hartley labor law, a
prime target of union labor lead
ers, needs substantial revision but
not necessarily repeal. He said he
views the Democratie platform
pledge of repeal as merely a
method of -accomplishing the same
result through® an entirely new
law. :
Commenting on Eisenhower’s
(Continued On Page Four)
Herbert Hein
Dies In Chicago
Herbert Hein, Sr.,, long-time
member of the Chicago Police
Force and father of Bob Hein of
this city, died in a Chicago Hos
pital yesterday following an ex
tended illness.
Survived by his wife and seven
children, Mr. Hein had been on
inactive duty for some months due
to his physical condition.
Funeral services have not been
announced, but will be held in
Chicago. Bob Hein, son of the vet
eran policeman, is living in Ath
ens where he is a student at the
University and is employed at the
Atlanta Gag Light Co. His wife
is the former Miss Polly Woodall
of Athens.
School Leaders
- -
Study Driving
Fifteen Georgia school leaders
are taking lessong in driver educa
tion at the University of Georgie
this week so that they will be
better able to teach Georgia young
people how to drive next fall.
The school officials are all en
rolled in a Driver Education Con
ference being conducted here by
Dr. James Eadie of New York
University.
The week-long course will deal
with all the problems of driver
education including discussions
and demonstrations of teaching.
The course includes lectures and
a traffic survey in addition to the
practical demonstrations.
Members of the Georgia State
Patrol are assisting with course
instruction. Similar driver ed
ucation courses are held on the
University campus annually.
[(CiITTLE LliZ]
P Mt
io N %‘. &g]\
ERF
\ |
y & \) |
s J A
K N i
A nervous person is one who
feels in a hurry all over but just
can‘tgetstorted . gNa
Rezd Daily by 35,000 People In Athens Trade Arca
-
Raiders Level
.
Aluminum Plant
SEOUL, July 31—(AP)—The U.
8. Air Force sald 63 American
B-29s returned safely to bases in
Japan and Okinawa early today
after leveling a huge Communist
aluminum plant near the Man
churian border in the biggest
cvernight raid of the Korean War.
The unescorted bomberg braved
Red anti-aircraft fire and fighter
opposition which two U. 8. pilots
described as ‘“the heaviest in
months.”
Gen, James A. Vsn Fleet, U. 8.
Eighth Army commander, mean
while, made a quick visit to the
Old Baldy hill sector of the west
ern front as six days of rain end
ed. He conferred with field eom~
manders and returned to head
quarters.
The 121; acre factory of the
Oriental Light Metals Co., 10
miles southeast of Sinjiju, went up
in smoke and flame after the B
-29s hurled 630 tons of bombs on
it and an adjacent troop buildup
area.
Biggest Raid
Five other Superforts hit other
North Korean targets. The ar
mada which bhlasted the metals
plant was the biggest Superfort
raid of the war against a single
objective.
Pilots reported flak f#from the
Manchurian as well as the Korean
side of the border, about four
miles from the metals plant,
Airman 2-e¢ Julius gl Meintel,
Wheeling, W. Va., was credited
unofficially with shooting down a
propellor-driven night fighter
which rose to defend the sprawl
ing target. The gunner’s pilot, Lt.
Richard G. Crane, Galveston,
Tex., said the Red plane “blew up
level with my wing.”
Col. Winton R. Close, Los An
geles, who directed the raid said
almost every other bomber was
attacked by Communist fighters.
High Noon :
A bombardier, Capt. Ralph R.
Searle, Houston, Tex., said “it was
light high noon all of a sudden,”
when “eight searchlights locked
on us at the start of the bomb run
and kept with us for the longest
(Continued On rage Four)
M’ Arthur Heads
Remingfon Rand
NEW YORK, July 81.—(AP)—
General of the Army Douglas
MacArthur today accepted the
chairmanship of Remington Rand,
Inc.,, manufacturers of business
machines &nd electronies equip
ment.
His acceptance was announced
by James H. Rand, president, who
said the post had been offered
MacArthur nearly three years
ago.
Generous Salary
The company made no n;ention
of the general’s salary as chair
man, but it was previously report
ed unofficially he had been offer
ed SIOO,OOO a year.
A company spokesman indicated
the general will retain his Army
rank, on an unassigned basis. His
status willi be similar to that of
General of the Army Dwight D.
Eisenhower when Eisenhower was
president of Coluinbia University.
Formal election of MacArthur
as Remington Rand chairman took
place at a directors’ meeting here
this morning ’
General’s Statement
MacArthur said in a statement
he was “delighted to have this
opportunity of becoming associat
ed with my old friepd, Jirr Rand,
and with the company he has so
ably headed.”
Remington Rand employs 86,000
people and operates 22 plants in
the United States. It maintains 23
additional factories in 15 foreign
countries.
Rand, whn had been serving as
chairman, will continue as presi
dent of the corporation,
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FARCUK IN ITALY—King Farouk (left) turns to help
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Egypt, King Farouk sought and received asylum in Italy.
| <A(NEA Telephoto.) 4
HOME -
EDITION
Posse Seeks &
Savage Killer
In Oklahoma
YUKON, Okla, July 31 == m
— The nude, decapitated y
a young woman was foumd lying
in a dry creek bed west of here
yesterday, spurring an intemsive
search for a savage, unknown as
sassin,
Claude Seymour, Oklahoma
Crime Bureau agent, said state
police are hunttng for a Blocde
smeared car which may lead them
to the killer.
He also said there was am oui~
side chance someone would *tfi
fy “Brunette X" and give them
their first clue in the baffling case.
No Identitication
“People have been looking l:;
the body, give a relieved s:, an
say, ‘lt's not our girl’,” Sey
mour. Originawau for an autop
sy were stymied when officess dis
covered Oklahoma University Hos
pital’'s two pathologists were out
of town.
A physician who cxamh?“tho
body said he was unable to deter
mine if sex was the motive.
The letters R-A-T were earved
crudely into the chest of Brunette
X with a pocket knife, Seymouy
said. Both hands were ecut cff}
one foot was partly severed, Can
adian County Sheriff Tiny Royse
estimated she had been dead 24
hours when found.
J. P. Brooks of Yukon said he
saw the body from his car as he
drove along a county road. He
went to a nearby farm house and
called police,
A posse of 20 grr;\om eombed
the rich wheat ing region
without finding dismembered
parts.
Army Inducts
Millionth Man
DETROIT July 31 — (AP) —
A typical 28 - year- old- meither
delighted nor grieved u;.l'eav—
ing a sweetheart behind-—today
became the millienth dreftee gince
the beginning of the Koream War.
He is Arthur Weinfeld and 8
year he has been expeetimg thi
day-induction day.
With a resigned, *I
well get it over with,” ?3
volunteeieredf for h‘}guetio% his
graduation from Wayne
in 1951. Detroit Draft m‘
took up its option today.
No. 1,000,000 is the son Jos
eph Weinfied, a tool ins on
war production work at Mud
son Moter Car Company, tasng
with the father for Art's :hfl
will be his mother, Vera, 48;
sister, Elsie, 15, and his sweet
heart, Rita Beitner, 20.
At nearby Fort Wayne Weinfield
went through what 999,999 ethers
have since outbreak of the luoa‘z
War, what 2,810,296 did in Wer
War 1, and what 10,110,194 did in
World War II
Incidentally, Art found he had
a second distinction, Me is the
52,000 th Michiganer inducted
since Korean hostilities began.
.
Georgia Included
In Disaster Area
WASHINGTON — (AP) —- The
Agriculture Department today de
signated the entire states of Ala
bama, Georgta, Kentucky and
Mississippi as %“disaster lean
areas” as a result of the severe
drought.
The action will make it easier
for farmers who have suffered
losses to obtain federal loams.
The Farmers Home Administra
tion is the agency which makes
credit available to enable farmers
to buy such things as feed and
hay for livestock.