Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Aug. 25, 1945, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR THE CAROLTNHAH WEEK ENDING SA'. ^JRDAY, AUGUST 2S, 1945 iMifORlALS WHAT BROUGHT VICTORY? The end of the war with Japan ram** th dramatic suddenness. Was it linssia’r entry into the slrufjKle. nr was it the atnni ■ bomb, which caused proud and fanatical Japan to throw in the tnwid v Despite the fact that Jai»an'.s Kieat land armies were almost intact, tlie fact is tha'i she was l)ealen montlis ajfo. Her chatices of ultimate victory, bari'intt some world- shakinji invention or discovery of her own in the ail of do.struction. wmv praciically non-existent, even witli but liussia or tli-* atomic bomb, liesi.stap'.e had ool lieconn- impossible, Imt was aready futile. The fanta.sti.- power of the a*omic bomb w^s undoubtedly the factor that d‘cided the issue. No amount of palri»>tic fervor, based on emperor worship, ilie tflorifica- tion of war. or anything else, could with stand the prospect of th«.* unprei edenti-dly wholesale slauKhterand destruction which the terrible new weapon demonslralcd it self capable of. There \\as no defense SKainst it, no time nor opportunity to work out one, no possibility to devehtp a retali atory w'eapon of like potentialities. As was said in the.se columns only a .short time ago, the Japanese are aftci’ all only human. They would stand almo.st any los.s as long as there were any prospects of stemming sucli lo.sses, but tliey could not stand the ])ro8pect of the certain and swift ' adonal annihilation threatened by the atomic bomb. It will be natural for the Japanese to bitter and revengeful toward the fnit- ■ \ ■ M* '•,> u’S to come. ’I'he pride of o )i> iKfore vaniui.sli(‘d nation has ■iiffcrcd a toriblo blow. .Japan must bo .;.v;r I ’ d '-atchod carefully in the fu- tii . , I.- ‘ an that the I'nited States ;ni.' oHi I J ' ' nations must avoid all :: • •. treatment of this noii- - - I- . hat the bitter and deep . . ^ ' and antipathies whiili ijuj.t i'i ■ ‘ have understandably 1-\'ll'," i ' ■ m1 the white world will • hi: -i ■ ' • ’ existence; so that the - j,p; ■l•••1gaIK•e and bitlerne.ss jf-,.,. ... 1... = ,. have long cultivated ’ 3'. - ■ vorld may disappear. ■ i lu.st have living room 'll the new world order. of some congressmen are very interesting, as set forth by Dr. Michael M. Miller, the psychintn.st who is responsiJiIe for the statement. Symjiloms appearing often within till* halls of (’()ngri‘.s.s, siiys he. are: “Uepelitivi- \ ei b.ili/atioM jiiid ratiomilizji- t;,,u — a tend* iicy to la-peat words iind i(h‘;is ovi'r and o\er. \’ulgarity. ruden«‘ss ainl b*‘llig*’n'nc>’, as displayed in fililms- t**rs, debates and committee licarinys. .Ag- gr«'.''sioii, (lii'«‘cti il. not I** till' weltai*' ef .soci*-ty 1)111 to llieir own special iiiten-sl.-:. Wishful amnesui . . . Impaired judgment.” The jibove signs and symptoms ar** com mon in the (lis*'as*> called akaniolism. which is «iuitc a different thing from fol lowing tin- urge to take a drink now and tln'M, or going on an tna a.sional bjmrler. T)u v also occur in many ollnn- nu'niul lis- orders. We do not know tniongh almut the pm - sonai liabit.s uf cci'lahi of our slJitesnuT.. of wliom wc may take Senator liilbo and (’ongressman Kankin as lyj)ical. to say wlielhor or not they are victims of jilco- jiolism: but there is no doubt tliat the symptoms I'Utlined by Dr. .Milbn- sliow thomsohu's clea.rly and often in the say ings and doings of oiir lieroes just men tioned. Maybe it is alcoholism, maybe it is some other mental disease with a long and uiuironounceal>te name. Hut whatev er il is, the descriution of mental unsound- no.s certainly seems to fit. If may be then, that we have Iummi do ing our poor brethren like Bil))o and Ran kin an injustice in holding them respon sible for their antics, some vicious, oth ers simply irritating or disgu.sting. Maybe they need .sympath.v and psychiuinc treat ment. Cortainlv it is futile to write them letters, or to try to answer publicly their fulminations and ravings. Mentally ill per sons can bo reasoned wiili only to a lim- iti-d extent. They cannot l>e reach‘d by Jiny ordinary means of argununil, reason ing or persuasion. They ar«‘ impervioii.s to faci. w’hich do not fit into their distorted sclujme of things. It is positively worse than u.seli'ss to rave back at tiunn. It is equally usi le.ss to call on Congress to impeach them, as some individual.s and groups are now doing. Once a man gels into Congres.s, it is the custom of Con- gn-ss to put up with him and protect him practically without limit. Maybe the best thing to do Ls to ho.oe that their constituencies will become .siil- ficientlv ashamed of them to retire Ihepj •The government needs and asks TT; CITIZENS TO MAKE SURE OF T^ SIgEST POSSIBLE HARVEST FROM VOUR_ VICTORY GARDEN. AND STORE AND S FOT YOUR FAM1LY5 NEEDS CIVILIAN SUPPLIES OF ^NEI^ VEGETABLES WH'. > LOWER next winter: TMKE SURE OF A BIG HARVEST.!* /econd Thcuaht$ By C. D. HALLIBURTON Thu app*)intint nt by Mayor La Guardia of committee uf ten to njako a thorough study of the color linu in oigaiii/ed baseball bring.s to mind again a jnin*n but pciennial and dcpits-Ning llaw in th«- American seen*'. The (■*immitt'-f induihs Larry Mac- Phail, pri'sidenl of the N>'W York Yankees, and Branch Rickev. president of th* BroJiklyn DoJ- gers, and iepre.-*entativc Negroes like in* Rev. John H. John.si/n and Bill Roi)in.son. The two club pri'sident.-' are regarded in some degree a.s repre.sentativi-s n*it *in- ly of their re.spictivi" clubs, but (>t tlu ir leagues also. Il will be ri-membeiu'd that some Negro players did try out with the Dod gers last .spring, but none were signed, That Negroe.s are not accepted in organized basi ball is largely a matter of tradition. Tli*‘ war has shown that Negroes and whites can fight and work to gether. Til*- colli'ges hav*‘ long dt monstrati-d that Negroi'.-. and whiti'S ran tak*- part in sports together, a.s teammate.s and as competitors. Then' an' 1hr*'e main obstacles li..seball. Gne is the fact that thi' teams train in the South. But if the owners of the clubs were de- tii mined, that difficultv could be *vercunu'. Titey could .simply ic- lu.se to train m a locality where then Negro team nuinbers wtjuld no', be given a square dial. .Must towns .s*deeted uS .spring training places an* anxi- * U.S for the business and publi city advantages gaini'd thereby. Furtlu'rmore, .spring training is really more a matt*r of publici ty and promotion than anything eLse. It could' be dLspensed with t ) a great extent. During the v.-ar tile teams gave up going to tlu far South, and some trained a’, home. Another objection sometimes raised is that many of the big league clubs have "farm" teams in Southern localities. Tnev draw a larg«‘ proportion of their new players from these farm teams. But all farms are not in the .South. Many arc members, of icague.s all of who.se ts anis play in the North only. The third ob jection often hi'ard is that the big league team.s contain a large pnipiirtiiin of srrjthi'iners on that one is obvious. Baseball players are well paid, and it can easily be believed that very few pLyt-rs. whatever their section al origin, would forego the ehanee of a big league career for the sake uf avoiding contamina- tum by Negroes. St. Lours and Washington ace the .soulheinmost cities in the tv.o big leagiiu circuits, and 'he only ones below the Mason and Dijcuns line. America has bern pro.id of and generally fair to Negro football and track stars. Negro athletes have played a big part in the victories of the United States in the Olympic Games of this century. There are no insurmountable obstacle to the usi* of qualified Negro play ers in organized baseball, at least in the big leagues, which are almost entirely in the North, where Negro athletes in other .sports, individual and team, have long been cccooted. If inertia and timidity can be overcome, and if some big league owners and managers develop the cour age and .sportsmanship to insist on giving N*‘gro players a THE NEGRO IN LATIN AMERICA HAROLD PHEECE JACQUES ROUMAIN — HAITI'S POET AND FIGHTER One year ago, this week — on August 18 — Latin America's gi-ealest contemporary Negro author, Jacques Roumain, died of tuberculosis while serving as Haiti's ambassador tc Mexico. Lord Bryon, the great British poet, died at the same age from wounds incurred while fighting ia Greece's war of liberation against Turkish imperialists. It might be said also that Jacques Rou main died of wounds inflicted by Wall Street imperialism during his fight for the emancipation of his people and for the people of the whole world. Wall Street — appointed Haitian dictators put hin in a foul prison with little light or air. His health broke, but his .spirit survives in Port au Prince as does the spirit of Bryon in Athens. •* Jacques Roumain was a close friend of an exiled Haitian writer, Max L. Hudieourt, who is a close friend of mine. Through that near acquaintance, I feel that I knew Jacques Roumain; and it is with a deep sense of personal loss that 1 commemorate the first anniver* ary of his death, ’ But, I’ll take Max Hudiuourt’s word for it that the books of Jacques Roumain, translated into English, will some day be on the shelves of every school library in our country — along with the works of Roumain’s other frienJ Langston Hughes. And some how, 1 think that Langston Hughes — or maybe, Langston Hughes and Max Hudieourt collaborating together — owe us a book op Jacques Roumain Too often, the books which deal with the lives of men and women who have given hope to a sad world, are written after these men an’ women are dead. They are compiled frrm second hand material, and sound lika worn-out viclrola reco.-ds when you read them. . But Max Hudieourt, once locked in the same prison with Jacq jes Roumain and still fighting for the same pri-’-iples, could give us a personal impression of his friend. It would be read by every Negro and every white, conscious that the culture of the Americas is at least one-third African — the other two thirds of the mixture being respectively white and Indian. DESERTED ARISTOCRACY Max Hudieourt could tell how Jacques Roumain renounired the Haitian creole aristocracy into which he was born to champion the cause of his country’s black masses, drudging in the '^o^^age that imperialism imposes upon biack people in the sugar mills and the houses of native quislings who sell out their race. He cojio tell how the poet went to Paris like other sons of the Haitian ^isto- cracy, but came back as something other than an affected dandy, willing to live on the blood and sweat of Negroes enslaved be- caused they lacked the "white blood” prized by the Creoles. He could tell of Jacques Roumain’s contacts with Negroes from the United States, from the Caribbean, and from West Africa, working together for the complete and final emanctpation M the Negro and all other peoples through the old International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers in Paris. Max “ measure the effects of these Negroes — men I'*'® son of the United States and Wallace-Johnson of West Africa on Jacques Roumain. He could say truthfully that Jacques Roumain stopped writing pale, little verses about moonlight and roses vO write about people after meeting men like these. ‘ , For Jacques Roumain saw the hope of Haiti and the hope of the world’s subject peoples symbolizes in the organized labor unions in a country where Creole bosses and the puppet Creole governments, decreed that there should be neither unions nor democracy. He saw the eternal passion for freedom of the colored P®°P^ expressed In the poorly-armed, poorly-clothed Hait|an suerilla bands which carried on running warfare against ‘•'c , some-armed and handsomely-decked out U. ®: the little people who organised unions o"'* B"""'”. that they were fighting only lor Haiti. But then Jacaues Lumain, si d in hLs poems read throughout predominant ly colored Latin American that they were llghtmg for all humanity Max Hudieourt could write how they '“'.c both .mprnonjd when they started a paper in Port au Prince spirit of the Prophet Mieah, ‘he-1- eat the flesh of my people and Hay their skin from of .. j al.,^cv> in Tkifappe __ aS flesh within the caldron." I . i{;. ' , I 1.? have undenstandably d-’ .1 ' ! the white world will -•“-•iii i ' ■■■ I'M existence; .so that the >iinj;ance and bittemesci th' |l fr.iv* ptoi'i* have long cultivated !i vorld ma.v disappear, i f 1 ip must have li' ing room -i. -I " .! t. . -,t in the new' w’orld order. T' . I ■ .•! uccessful imperiali.sni i» ;u • I'!"!!; iiM> i loss progressive peo- j.!; : " h.''' h IS l>een .set before them ' j(R.3 thou own back yard by Britain and oD’o** powers must be eliminated in the ’ .'trs to come. Otherwise in another gen- ■ ration or so Japan may b«' back .it Pearl Harbor, with an atomic bomb, or worse, of her own. PSYCHIATRIC CASES IN CONGRESS An eminent Washington physician, an authority on mental disease, has advanced the theory that indulgence in alcohol is responsible for much of the bizarre, asin ine, and sometimes shocking beJiavior of some of our congressmen and other gov- ' eiTunent officials. ' The medical man, apparently with all seriousness, feels that the mental effici ency of Congress is being undermined by certain of its members who are iiabitually on intimate terms w’ith the "demon rum.” They get that way, he sa.vs, because their salaric.H are sufficient to allow as much indulgence as they please; because lob byists and favor-seekers follow the prac tice of oiling up and mcllow'ing down these whom they seek to influence by passing out free drinks, and because many of the .'atesmG-' fnrn to drink, just as many oth- 1pii'iil. 1)". 's an escape from strain. • -LS 'll'! .' •!• o-’k. rjw x: ,..,. . • of pathological indulg- ‘•»’t f II' ill oil. ■ ;is revealed in the behavior T-HE CAROLINIAN Pubit '■ ' o> Ihe Carolinian Publishing Co. Kntcrea as second-class matter, April 6, 1940, at ibi P Offire at Raleigh. N. C., under the Act o; M.^rh IP?:'*. • n. JI RVAY. Publisher . O. ^‘ '.LLIBURTON, Editorials CA^l EASTLt'vLlNG. Circulation Manager .' ' ' r>tion Rates Or" Y'.Si S'j.'J.i, tx Months. S1.25 AJ'j*'fll u'.i’Tur-.'ica ions and make all , lo Tn- Carolinian rather than to • iTidiviibriL. ih • C , linian exprosslv repudiates r. loi iu*turn of unsolicited pictures iiia'iusi.. U'U ole., unless stamps are sent. 116 East Hargett St.. Raleigh, N. C. ^ ! Telephone 9474 to impeach them, as some individuals and groups are now doing. Once a man gels into Congress, it is the custom of Con gres.s to put up w'ith him and protect him practically w’ithoul limit. Maybe the best thing to do is to hone that their constituencies will become .sut- ficiently ashamed of them to retire them from public life. It the people wdio elect them arc too uninlelHgent or too path ological themselves to roaize that their representatives are a disgrace to them, and continue to return them to Congress, the Congress should at least recognize that certain of their members, being not entirely rospon.siblo, must be subjected to certain restraints. The Senate, for in stance, can abolish filibuster whenever it desires to do so by the simple process of appl.ving the cloture rule. PaiT.v pressure can be brought whenever party leaders are willing to assume responsibility. Os tracism and group censure could be of- fccli\Gly used. Possibly if the sane members of Con gress realize that they are dealing w’ilh mentally ill characters, they will develop and use some techniques of control. ONE REASON One of the reasons why such charac- tei’s as a certain well-known statesman from Mi.ssissippi can continue to flourish in the law-making assembly of the w'orld’s greatest democracy w’as revealed recently. Senator Bilbo was invited to attend a meet ing of the liberal Democratic members of tlie Senate. The same man wiio by his re cent display of assorted boorishne.s.s. ven om, actual of feigned ignorance, and an amazing callousness toward not only large minority groups of his fellow citizens but even his close associates, is invited to iden tify himself with those who regard them selves the leaders of the democratic forc es in our highest law-making body. As lung as our great champions of de mocracy in Congress choose to take that kind of altitude toward such as Senator Bilbo, it is not dificult to understand why his kind can continue so boldly to play the role they love. Our Special Advice: If you can’t spell, don’t use a typewriter. players £lid try out with the Dod gers last spring, but none were signed. That Negroes are not accepted in organized baseball is largely a matter of tradition. The war has shown that Negroes and whites can fight and work to gether. The colleges have long demonstrated that Negroo.s and whites c.in take part in .sports together, as tcammat*>s and as competi’nr.s. There ,re three main obstacle.s of a practic.nl nature, over and above tradition, inertia and pre judice. to Negroes in big league at home. Another objection sometimes r.nised is that many of the big Ica^ie clubs have ‘‘farm’’ teams in Southern localities. Tney draw a large proportion of their new players from thc.se farm teams. But all farms are not in the South. Many are member.'*, nf leagues all of whose teams play in the North only. The third ob jection often heard is that the big league teams contain a large proportion of southerners on their rosters, and that the.se men would object to playing with or against Negroes. The answer to Games of this century. There are no insurmountable obstacle to the use of qualified Negro play ers in organized baseball, at least in the big leagues, which are almost entirely in the North, where Negro athletes in other sports, individual and team, have long been accepted. If inertia and timidity can be overcome, and if some big league owners and managers develop the cour age and sportsmanship to insist on giving Negro players a chance, their appearance on the diamond could in a few years be a common place. Lest We Lerset. Bt W. L GREENE The Post-war period has begun and our domestic problems arc hardly any nearer solution than They were at the bci{inning of the eoniUct. On a national scale the colored Amoncun has gamed many opportitnilici- in the aimed ser vices and the nation's economy which has been wilhcld tradition ally. In the South, however, and in the laws of the Southern State* the old status still obtains. That freedom frr-m discrimination and legally ciiHondcred prejudice which has been decreed for the peoples uf lands liberated by our forcES in Europe is nat yet de creed for the colored Amei ier.r. at home. And we speak of TIME. "It will toke time,” we say, and thus pass the responsibility up as the merchants of prejudice would have us do. Less than a decade ago we declared ourselves against the program of r.-icism in Europe and began Icnd-Icasa to aid those whs fought fasci'^-m abroad. ,.'c entered the war and pressed to victory over German in a liiilc les.s than four years At the conclusion of the war we have outlawed the Gorman legis lation which discrimir.atcd against any citizens on account of “race, national origin, or creed,” JUST FOUR YEARS IT TOOK US TO OUTLAW JIM CROW ABRO.AD. We still iiave it here in the Sun ny South with n.» official apology ceming from the lawmakers. Instead of our Dixie solons aerklng woys and means of bring ing our fair land around to the oructice of our democratic creed, we find them insisting op. keep ing all our discriminatory laws in force and leading the babel of voices clamoring for peace by FORCE OR ARMS. They are not conrerticd about the causes of war to the extent that they would have us set the world an example. Racism such as is cncounched in Southern law and practiced in the SCHOOLS EVEN OF THE NA- TION'S CAPITAL flourishes un challenged by any amount of power in the oulion except a few small chuPCh groups with, as yet. little political influence. Wp ought to try the Supreme Court again. It once decided that Segregation was not discrimina tion. That was long ago and in a illfferent age of human relation ships. Today it is the prime neces sity of civilization >0 get rid of the hypocrisy of racism. Either we are a world of peop e who ought to have freedom anu equal ity or we have fought a to pstablish might instead of right expressed in the poorly-armed, poorly-clothed Haitian controiiw guerilla bands which carried on running warfare against the hand some-armed and handsomely-decked out U. ,^**‘^*'^J**^^ the little people who organized unions and guerilla bands thougnt that they were fighting only for Haiti. But their country|na^ Jacques Roumain, said in hU poems read throughout predominant ly colored Latin American that they were flghtmg for all humanly. Max Hudieourt could write how they weie both when they started a paper in Port au Prinee which 'h' spirit of the Prophet Micoh, thundering against those hurho alao cal the flesh of my people and flay their skin from off them - and chop them in pieces — as flesh withm *e caldron. Langston Hughes could take up from tierej He could produK letter,, received from Jacques Boumaiu over a ^nod of yearn, showing how the soul of a poet and the sou! of “ to grow and push through the prison bars which held his body. PH0TEST8 FOB A POET Langston Hughes could tell how he and other authors through out the world .looded the Haitian government “> Port au Prince and the Haitian embassy in Washington with Protest, demandmg the freedom of Jacques Roumain. With his fme ^ our peoples’ poet could analyze the quakmg feam of the Cwle puppVts hug Jng their plantations, hugging their pennies dribbW dZ from Wafl Street when the world >ot them know that they had imprisoned one of the world's outatandmg citizens. For the Haitian guerillas, and the poet who tfrote atout thcM guerillas, belong to mankind before they belong to any oounliy ^f mank\nd. Moreover, poets like prophets, are save in their own country. And they who stone the proph-ts ’“'".'rhoptlgrt'Me'ssirSughes and Hudieourt would print in tiaTSt one protest received from a writers in the South - the Manuscript club of Wi^U Texas — protesting the stoning of a man who was ^th i^t an prophet in Haiti It would be a show how the Haitian government unlocked “ made him ambassador to Haiti to quiet the P'°P'“. Jacques Roumain is dead. But his books are th^ialilled wrath of the people, not to be quieted UU the people are free. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON By Rev.M.W. Williams Subject: Jacob Adjusts Person al Relationships. Gen. 33:1-11, l7-2n Key Verse: Let us therefore fol low after the things which make f.r peace. Rom. 14:10 Nearly three thousand fiftv- five years ago, soi.icwhere on the eastern side of the Jordan River, North of the Dead Sea at the lit tle river Jobbok iBliie Tarrent) about one hundred miles from Esau's home, Edom, a spirit of forgiveness is demonstrated by the action of two brothers. Wc left Jacob at Bethel in out last lesson vowing to give God one tenth oi all he should earn since God had promi.sed to bless and bring him back to Bethel. A young unmarried poor man trav els to Haran is kindly received and treated as a guest for the Rustomary time (30 days). Labon, his mother’s brother proposed to hire Jacob, who, in turn a.sked Labon what he couldo to marry Rachel, Labon's daughter. Lazoa promised io give Jacob his daugh- ter.Rachcl for a wife if he would work for him (Labon) seven years. This, Jacob consented to do and after seven years Labon gave him the elder d'lughter Leah and when Jacob protested, Labon told him to work seven years more for Rachel. .At the end of fourteen years the old man gave him Rachel. Now Jacob propose to work longer for wages. Jacob prospered so that Labon and his sons thought it was at their ex pense. Jacob became dissatisfied and after a consultation with Leah and Rachel leaves tl.e home of Labon secretly. Labon finds it out after three days and pursued him. Just before Labon overtakes him he has a dream which warns him n-it to do Jacob any harm. They after the usual conversation —why be left as he did, etc.? A covenant 13 made between them (Mtzpah — The Lord watch between me and thee, etc.) Labon returns home and Jacob continues his journey. JACOB FEARFUL OF ESAU Twenty years is a long time, but you cannot escape your conscience. Jacob realizes his plight and plans accordingly. He sends mes sengers to Eiau, but gut no consol ation. He divides his family and possessions into divisions accord ing as they stand in his esteem. He leads them a certain distance then sends them on and he is left alone all night. It is here where the wrestling takes place. Hl> name is changed to Israel. He is left a limping man, b' I he has re ceived the olcssings. He is now ready to meet Esau unarmed, but arm^. When nne is armed with the right spirit Bf n result of prayer Gen. 32:9-12) many Esauc of from one to twenty years back ran be met. HELPFUL LESSONS — JACOB AND ESAU STORY This Jacob and Esau episode has played its role in human society all through the ages and will con tinue until men and women every where accept the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. We have family feuds, indivi duals scheming to get that which belongs to another, races taking advantage of each other and na- Uons with greedy lustful eyes upon another’s territory. Even certain laws are placed In the Btatatus with the avoided Intent of depriving a large class of the citizenry of their birthright. It has been a long time since the Negro worked and toiled during slavery paying for plantation.' which others own; It has been c long time since capital has been expLiiting labor; We have prob- lems now of the teijant-farmer the share cropper and the lan-t lord, all of these require adjust ments. We have the hate and ill will engendered by thls-war. Be fore we can live with the world ■t peace relationships must be ad. Justed- The Christian Church has the key to the solution of these oroblems, Esau was no* blameless and Jacob needed repentence. Gold was first discovered in Colorado along a small stream that flowed into Cherrv Cro.'k. near the present side of Denver Of the many species of grapes Itnown today, only the A-uropoon or vinifera graps was familiar to the ancients and to the E'oropeans of. the Middle Ages. -QUOTES- OF THE WEEK CM wipe mt wrerytUnc bed—or good—in the world. It’e ep to the people te dodde wWeb.* — ff. G, WbUm, e» et—i4e boeii. ' **NewBpepcrs tbeee daye «ebe lie too nerrons r*—Mrs. fmely Perry, Pufnom Volley, N. Y., loAo re/used to read thorn om hor 104^ b^’thday. ^ "Both industry and gerenH ment must hasten their plana for reconversion to peaeetimo pro* daction.**— Pres. Ira Afesher, Noft Assn, of Manu/aeturoro, o/toratofniobotnbannoitnoomonL Tlanned econoBy* ia aeteally a relic of the Uiddle Ages.** — Pres. Roger M. Kyes, Harry For- fuoon, Inc., Dearborn, Mioh. **ThIs ia seme way te get YotoaV*—Vacationing Congrw woman Clare Boothe Luce, Cenn.. acting «n a summer theatre giay. heve more time on my hands now.” — Harry (the Hop) Hop- fctns, vho hu.) left the White Houee. .
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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