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PAGE TWO B. DUr. i "? frT ’T* *Vt P ' l ' l In rinnn Every afternoon. Monday through Friday v «ry comm unitv for urn, where ideas ofa current topics can be discusse4 Rnd B?w brought to the fore by well in formed speakers, can, spinel public thinking for the better. too, if $e meeting is a sellout this time, it will encourage the sponsoring group to even greater efforts) for future ipeetings. R wMt enable them to attract speakers of W#r> t«v because no spacer enjoys speaking -. jfeta make sure nope of the 175 seats for this event are ewtetx- % tket UvaJnformßtlou Clinic is intendiu for the ladies as well as the men. Speakers at events yS luye'something important for It Costs Taft and Ferguson. 7 | '. Bach charges the others with the expenditure Os huge sumgof money, and each blames the other for the fact that | MS qyn campaign expenses ran to such a high figure. | There was a time in the not-far-distaht past, when a candidate who was put fortunate enough tp possess pjfihty ts Whtftg wuuey. had % good chance of wb*M?s U2SS3 S £^ or • “*» w ' , Nowadays, if you are a candidate for anything from dog catcher up, you cap rest assured that if you want to win, ; you: will ha- ! to spend money, perhaps much more than the-salary the particular job for which you are a candidate twill ever pay. -; We «e not suggestiug the remedy we are m #W iUg.out the facts. Perhaps someone w$ figure out some nmii f-$s lie oS^^h'a^iason dUg chance of winning. ; Tierney Say* igfftTkwwaK With Whiitey JMLITWOOD frf— Scn*n l • ss&irsrjwsa j*» «■* API ' A tk b AA. m m m I *s_■**« •d *wS&fc‘ 1 i. ■ In the hmue.” He still faces a 9t-d*y, aentaace Car *“**'— WL k> a.« -----i-a . ,j%is>ygs-’Msg toUt toe Jsfp, “and, I've altar mi es Isms **,*«•“ ■„ ", j,".' * -4 jmsiNL gm advise man- < W <Twp 0* thou wind j ST 1 mil naa Deen n’t help liking him, even as he j , MfjKpri tge ittiijegndea how well , he a reiyeeettt tfiga as soon as he 1 got J Thest, Days v» TBiy THE GHOST OF NUREMBERG The assumption of countries at war is that nations, not soldiers, m«ke war. The individual soldier is not personally responsible for his conduct because he has no con trol over himself, lie U ordered into battle; he must kin or be kill ed either by his adversary, or by his superiors for treason. He is not a free agent. plausewitz, the philosopher on war, wrote: “..War is an act of force, and to tse application of that force there limit.' Each of the adver -sMl.es forces the hand of the after, and a reciprocal action re sets which in theory can have no .There is no. such thing as a Bwar because there can be it to the killing of human Nevertheless, as long as it :pted that responsibility is le nation, not the Individual lelty of war can be limited, br instance, was done by the Hague Convention of laps and Upe Oeneva Convention of 1929 which is now binding upon most nations and is designed tp minimize cruelty tdward prisoners of war In World VVar 11, there is only one known instance of total sav agery toward prisoners of war and that was the Katyn Massacre during which the Russians mur dered VfcW Polish officers and threw them into a common grave in the Katyn Forest. It WA B a mark of barbarisip. Clausgwltz makes this ppint: “If the wars of civilized nations am far lass cruel and destructive than those of the uncivilized, the reason lies tn the speiaj, condition of thie states, both, in themselves add in, their relations to one an other. From this condition, with iU. attendant circumstances, war arises and is shaped, limited and modified.' But these things do not themselves belong to war; they al ready exist....” ''Then he adds this telling line: Iftwr Id fth Pjtf£*ophy iff W ittelf can we introduce a modifying principle Without committing an afeurdHy; - they Pursued logic to its the Nuremberg wad Tokyo Wj&, the United States accept** the principle of personal respon sibility, which was a horrible thing l* Germany nor Japan hie far the acts of w&i ij Germans and lridlvi se who engaged in war, act of will or by the and. These men would .traitors to their own L they not served just ; Marshall, Eisenhower, I, MacArthur would be ler similar cireugasti •r of this doctrin* was ;ed to at the time, fpr t then the converse hqld*, lat the individual who, de assumption of such re -1 whether because of or cowardice would he n refusing to go to wtr or naye anything to do with i* That could make of any govern ment ah anarchy. AbPn conversely, no humane pro. visions with regard to pytaaftets of was of other matters cgn be ex pected under such a doctrine. If officers can be tried for the crimes of their country, prisoners of war can be killed for having been In par. To the victor belongs the power of death. The Geneva Con vention denies this in the following specific language: “Prisoners of war are in the power of the hostile power, but not of the **» <*»- ' “They must at all times be hum anely treated and protected ” upon that limitation altogether coI »JSSLSn STM bill ties of the soldier for the con- Wf wa pays for derisions which 4f|% natiopaVhr taken. i& the United states, for in- Itewe. it if Congress which de Ttaj* dpEsrion can now by re tasasaeze. The • Geneva Convert HP provides that prisoners of war arJrr rTy ” BMW WOOBD. WJJW. N. C J V V | I L : t A, I "Mother, what did you used to give Father after he at*/ YOUR cooking.. .y'J fX^cTswawi MERRY-60-ROUND J b It »RKW MAKSOM I|. IA Till- 11 J- . "VoXi"—im 111 L- WASHINGTON. Though Price Boss Mike Di Salle is a genial, fun loving man, bis relations with Mobilization Boss Charlie Wilson have just about reached the boil ing point. The clash is over stim ulating production by increasing prices which, in turn, boosts the cost of living. Wilson has adopted this policy over Di Salle’s bitter objections As an incentive to step up' pro duction, Wilson has increased the price of machine tools, lead and zinc, and is considering a price boost to relieve the sulphur short cut the result has been an ip* crease in prices all down the line The price boost for lead and zinc for Instant, caused a correspond ing increase in all lead and zinc products, such as automobile tat teries. Di Salle has argued that this brings cracks in the economy without actually solving the pro duction bottleneck. During the fight over lead and zinc, t>) SaUp sent his righthgncf man, Ed Phelps, to have it out with Wilson. “X°u guys always think of increase* W an incentive to Pro duction,” argued Phylps. “We give you the Price increase, and we still don’t get the production. Then ypu ttunf of other reasons for the production. But you never think of thy other reasons until you force us to give the Price increases.” “I don’t rive * damn what it does to stabilization, snapped Wilson. “We'need the metals.” Shortly after, tats argument the cost-of-living index shot up again, automatically giving 1,000,000 CIO auto workers a wage increase, which in turn sharpened the de termination of CIO steelworker* and other unions to get a wage S*N. MUCARRAN RENTER Sen. Pat MeParran is supposed to be a very sick m*n. He was not top sick, however, to' dispatch a Stonge two-page telegram to Chairman Cecil King of- the House QopimtUee Investigating tax frauds, and since a House committee is also prpUpg taxes and doing a good job of if. Senator McOarran’s sud s’ 1 Nation* I** 1 ** the Senator’s own shirttaii Is show? tag recall that it’s * matter of official recall that it’s % matter of ifficlai record that OOP o> McCarran’s henchmen, Deputy Tax Collector Pat Mooney in Reno, sold $5,000 in , y , - 9 43m Hpal) yH f A^ mu r / , rfy / / yis , / j| I : worthless Nevada mining stock to ■ Gertrude Jennies, the Sap Francis l co abortionist, when she was under l investigation fof> a $57,000 tax fraud. Mooney, who got his tax-coUec • ting job through Senator Mcparran, i also sold $2,400 of worthless min ! ing stock to “Bones” Remmer, big time gambler of Northern California ' when Remmer faced a $910,000 . income-tax deficiency. These intersting little matters ■ were probed by the Kefauver Crime I Committee, but then dropped »f --; ter Senate colleagues hastened to ■ cut off funds for a further crime probe. Now, however, a House - Committee has rudely taken up where the Kefauver Committee left off and is scheduled to investigate - Northern California tax matters in i January. MCCARRAN’S COUNTERPROBE ; In preparation for this, the ' House Committee’s West Coast in • vestigator, Charles Tobin, showed up in Reop, which may have been \ wpy Senator Mcparran sat bolt ( upright iii bed and started to do i his own investigating. McCarran is chairman of the ! Judiciary Committee, which has nothing to do with taxes. Further s more, his committee la not sup l posed to overlap the work of an i other committee. Despite this, i IgcCarran sent his trusted inves i torgator, J, C. Sourwine, to start : a counterprobe. Sourwine first slipped into San ; Francisco add proceeded to cross -1 examine Charles O’Gara, the as sistant U. 8. Attorney who pioneer i ed thy that tax-fraud probe, sour , Wine's line of- questioning was not 1 at all friendly- It was not that of a man who wants to see tax frauds Incidentally, it was another JgcCarran man, U. S. Judge kd wnyrd Morphy, who dismissed the grand jury which was probing tax 1 frauds under O’Gara. Nturphy’s ffther and McCarran were old prospecting' pals and McCarran blocked the Appointment of other Judges until the Justice department ffyrily appointed Murphy to the INSTIGATING THE INVESTI GATORS After butting into the San Fran cisco tax situation, McCarran’s in vestigator Sourwine slipped down to bos Angeles tp investigate Con grareman King himself. Sourwine’s baa of inquiry in Los Angeles in dicated thgt he was hunting to* evidence that King may have ex erted political pressure oh the tJ. (Continued On Page Three) I u . tuuur Tl - ‘Wf WtMohfU In X New ar York MAN ARGVT TGWN Snutar dMmd wffh her tars and Faniey Gran- Atad US all With their TO^u^arJhis Wife «to tawgtag tt vriß be top hrir to Awt Haris’ fortune . Lt. Mtann Ravti, the grid star, finally consulted barristers about his un happy domestic problem Wln thrap Rockefeler told pals young gals boee him, etp. which explains Ws preference for Q. Rosen. J. KtandeU and other seasoned sirens Composer Eerdie Grofe, who is being Renotarised by his wife Ruth, Will next merge with Ana Lam top... The Rosemary Clooney-D. Garryway plans are e» to- She leaves for the Raraiponnt lot-- The Buddy Riches have the mis eries apart —X. digit's divorce fees (both) to date cost hhp $97,- 000. He will establish residence in 1 Philly, which outlawed yellimony. Josephine Baker’s manager, Ned - Schuyler, turned down the plea of ' the Gilded Cage impressario a few ■ months ago—when owner Lou Wal ters needed a “name” attraction to open his new spot at B'way and 1 49th—The star snubbed it, say -1 ing she wouldn’t work in a “Broad way night club”—On Saturday • her frantic manager phoned Wai '■ ters from Canada—offering Miss Baker’s act at half of what she got > at the Roxy recently—Mr. Walters : yawned a polite ‘‘no sir.” ! i Inmates report that when actress ; Claire James tells a judge about > hubby Dr. Peter Hoffman on Jan. i Bth, the gazettes had better cover it Sammy Colt of the Barrymore clan loves the Froet. Jackie Frost, i that is Patricia Fitsmaurice, dghtr of the late star, becomes a I bride Jan. Mth. Weds Les Bexter, t whose accompaniment la so good on ; Ypia Sumacs, hit album .. Sky i scrapper stripper Lois DeFee has Count Ronsea of Farce making wiz i zee pasa-ee-yopel..Tommy Phipps I of the Astor tribe has been signed . to write the scripts ter the Stork . Club program Hildy Parks of the . flop, “To Dorothy, a Son," is get ting her consolation from B> Mc ! Gold, the drama inspector .. The Doug Watts of the drama sections (she was Ethel Madsen of “Ki» Me, Kate”) expect a little critic in March. Raa&all “expert*” will wager the N. Y. Giants go nuts trying to make trades. Nopody . want* any of the 10 tradeable . Giant*. . For the Record: Paul Lukas, male lead in “Call Madam," . told the Police Dept, that he was in the Club Room the same night | La Baker charged “ discrimination" because *he waited a long time for ; service. Mr. Lukas adjds: “I had to wait about an hour for a ham burger!” — Radio Corp of America veep Emanuel Sachs offered the following testimony to this col'm: “I was in the Stork Club' recently with Dinah Shore, the Pinzas and the Robert Sarnoffs, and we malted over an hour for chop suey.” Despite Barbara Hutton's denial ' of “a romance with anybody,” she sends at least ope $65 cable daily to a renowned yoo-hoo —The Geo. Kill up Rossea (Joan Schuyler Reew mg of the Don’t-You-Think-Dia monds-Are-Passe Set) are infantici- PAting- The Ritz-Carlton Rpr will be named co-respondent by a socialite In her Florida divorce. She’ll , insist her drunc groom squanders $3,000 a month at it— The Floridian will open on B'way in Hatch. A. Mattel's 6th state-named eatery. Nine years ago he peddled radios at Davega’* Prince Nicho las Toumenoff is pressing his suit for Rosemond Dodge, one of the richest widders in the Sast-of- Fifth dis't. His enemies tell her chums he hopes to avoid deporta tion Don’t ypu lore ad pushing ‘‘Quo Vadtt?” The one whare they quota what the N. Y. Times called it. “historical nreten tiougnesa,” in huge, black type***! ' Adult Rureau of Circulation reveals that Life's newsstand circ has drop ped pearly a million a week (la Red A y«*rs) and stiij diving. Henry Lues’s coin is suspenders. RV Hillard, the thrush, and At- Wrier Rent’s son Prentiss are ah hAi|nu’ u/m Mwanil u ImL'. yKkta, Who returns as asat owe ... flWfck bM decided te ditch cheeag cake Plx . Bobby Barry, tv actor. Pffd "otiy'HttaMri" a lobbyist in te peddle UN to the werta via tea Mm.- His name It |taps ' Skot-Hansen, a Dane .... Ajems »fbr 1 .. Ari» which te| to cover its -jniy i Ita’ i van. - WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, ■■ - " .'"i»i«niote^ The Worry Clinic By DR. GEORGS W. CRANE When yon pick a husband or wife, look ahead to your children. Try to avoid mating a defect to a defect. Instead, mate the reces sive (defective) characteristic with the normal strain. Normalcy ge minates the recessive. If you have diabetes, don’t marry anybody with a diabetic background, but marry into normal stock. If your fam ily strain is marked with deafness, doo'l marry into a similar strain. Case C-303: Sarah 8., aged 20, is an attractive private secretary. “Dr. Crane, 1 am in a dilemma and need some expert advice/’ she smiled. "Two boys are in love with me I a mvery fond of both of them I think I could be happy in mar riage to either one. “But I am looking ahead to the possibility of having children. One of these men is already somewhat hard of hearing. "My mother’s family also has this trouble. Mother is only 42, but she now has to w&br an earphone in order to understand normal con versation. “What are the facts about in heritance? Would my children be more likely to be hard of hearing If I married the boy who is partly deaf? EUGENIC LAWS If every young woman were as thoughtful as Sarah, there would be fewer divorces fewer ailments among mankind. When a girl selects a husband, she likewise chcpses the father for her children. To this extent, she is determining their mentality and physical health, even at the moment of the wedding ceremony. The usual defects that are ac quired after birth, cannot be pas sed on to one’s children. by here dity. Thus, a person who had become deafened as a result of a war in jury or other accidental cause, could not pass this defect on to his offspring. Some forms of deafness, how ever, run along family lines. This also seems to be true of diabetes, feeblemindedness, hemophilia and several other conditions. MENDEL’S LAW Mendel’s law of inheritance should be well understood by every bride and groom. By America's Foremost Personal Affair* Counselor Widow, 45, Is 111 At Times With Unrequited Love For Eligible Man Whose Mild Interest Flick ered Out. DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am a widow, 45; and my friends tell me that I am unusually attractive for my age. I dress well —as well as my income permit*; and well for the community in which I live. I am employed in an interesting office and have a fairly important position. I have , traveled exten sively but seem to be somewhat of an introvert in my social rela tionships. My husband died several year* ago. I have had some emotional ‘dis turbances in my life, which I have hurdled successfully, I feel. I don’t think I am stupid and I feel I am mature. All this I tell you, hoping it will enable you to help me with my problem. You see, I am in love, desperately so, and my love In un requited; Sometimes I'even become ill over it I know that about six months ago, the object of my affections— W call him Walter —was definitely interested in me; but now, even that slight interest has waned, it teems. Mine has not. I have done everything I kndw how to dtf, ex cept “run after" him, to gain his approbation, friendship and an In vitation to dinner. I have been cordial, have tried to make intelli gent conversation if we meet (which He is kind, courteous, attentive to what I say—but there he stops. Walter is a little older than I am; eligible to marry and a suc cessful business man. Must my fir-JTvxrTfcS thing I can do to attract him to me? What have I done wrong? Or to it something I haven’t done? Has no one written a book “How To Capture a Man?” Surely there is some solution, to end this loss of sleep, this depression. -Y.V. Emotional Tension The Rastc Problem DEAR I. V.: There is nothing In this picture to Indicate that you are in love with Walter. *hlfr it s saajr&stfgFSE’ Suppose we ihate a pure black rat with a pure white one. If they have four baby rats in the litter then here is how the color In- £ heritance normally operates. One will be pure white, meaning it will always pass along the white strain when it mates with its own type. Another will be pure black. The other two will also be black, for black is dominant as a heri table trait of rats, but will not be pure as far as breeding purposes are concerned. They have the white recessive traits- If they were later mated to each other, they would produce both whites and % blacks. If the pure black were mated to another pure black, however, they would produce only blacks. If the pure white were likewise mated with another pure white, they would always have pure white offspring. SARAH’S CHILDREN Sarah is like the two blackrats that looked black but carried the white strain as a recessive char acteristics. Her father’s normal hearing B strain dominated her mother's deaf strain, so Sarah herself has good, hearing. , But she can produce deaf child ren, especially if she marries a man with defective hearing as an hereditary factor. The boy who to already partially deaf is not a good husband for her , to choose, therefore, since they might have some deaf or hard of hearing children. , The other sweetheart, if early f deafness is not in his family an cestry for several generations, would probably “dominate” all of her children with normal hearing. If there are hereditary defects in your family strain, then marry into families that lack these de fects. Thus you can protect your children. The defects are normally recesivq tratits, so they are usual ly submerged by the normal. Rule your heart by your hsad! W Pick mates who will not only give you equal happiness in marriage, but who will also help guarantee your children a sounder eugenic inheritance. Don’t match diabetes with dia betes, x>r deafness with deafness. Submerge the defects by mating with normal strains. 1 "JM rative points to social maladjust ment and neurotic character. Bor example, the anxious pitch of your % personality, as you strive desperate ly tp interest Walter, suggests that you* private life is prttly desolate. , “ide from your office routine and : workday contacts. One gets a fur , ther hint of this in your reference 1 to being “somewhat of an lntro ; vert.” Also, the fact that Waiter figures «p largely ta your bearfeick reveries. When *rtUjto you hardly know him and seldom see him, shows that you run te day dreams 'SVvSlj® * * unsatisfactory “ Now, to caousWw tile question of ’ what you did wrong, ip bidding, for | Walter’s attention. It to my muss i that unconslcously you communi -1 cated your great anxiety to hkn. ■He may have Uked your looks or , ' manner on first acquaintance; Rut ’ as he sensed the urgent self serv ing nature of yojir man-hunt, he A 1 sidestepped, defensively, I think— I) ' probably without realizing why he * lost interest. I » * ' . ( V, ■ She Is Stymied Ry Self-Doubt* It is masculine instinct to mtpt to feel stropg. dominant and posi i tive In matter* romantic—l suppose . because lt gives man a sens* of greater security when submerging his Individualtiy in A close relatlon ship With *'woman. Thus a riper a i woman creates the Impression that she 1s responding to the man’s ta* .ItaWse to mqlti . monial or her aim noi shilti But > of course it takes unhurried patience i and poise for this; also great con fidence in one’s feminine wrath i and powers of attraction—which your notion of Walter, not in-'toe* i with the man himself. It to tm i possibtojte love someoneyou dppt % SSI.„ “etaee gar* for books on “how .to sap 'aUßstanri& tention If ths a-Ju twswgali • The W«y to His Heart.” by Jpfcn
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Nov. 28, 1951, edition 1
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