Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / May 12, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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’W BMtlr cloudy and <nm with scattered shower* ami thunder-I •Urau. VOLUMN « i M Two Towns Devastated In Worst Storm In Texas ■ xii HP bB :S| ||| , &JPONFEDERATE MEMORIAL DAY “OBSERVED Pictured here arc some tfthTdiSTilteries who BjlliEjslid fat the observance of Confederate Memorial Day Sunday afternoon at Chldora Cemetery, jart to right are: Mini Jessie Smith, historian of the CSC for 40 year* and an authority on Chieora .4KI the Battle of Avrrasboro; Mitt Alice Prince, present of the Chtoora Junior Chapter of the UDC; Mrs Hugh W. Prince, proirinent UDC leader; Rev. C. T Thrift, the speaker; Major Roy J Brown, fjffnmender of Doha's' Legion Poet; Mrs. Nathan M. Johnson, wpo introduced Uie speaker; Lt. M Wade, oommanqer of Dann’s National Guard unit; Attorney J. Shepard Bryan, . who presided; 'Mr*- BUI Carroll, dresMent Os Chieora chapter; and the Her. J. W. Lineberger, pastor of the Methodist Church. (Daily Redord Photo). . ' —* * f i • : Hasty* Is Named Chairman Os New Sixthtikihwav Division County will r*nu4 in the SbctW] Dtotriet, but with a different grot* of ,counties In the district and "a new /*■ Governor Utnste&d, in naming a complete new slate of officials to head the, highway sett*, yesterday appointed C. A. Hasty of Maxton Wj,:commissioner of the district which includes Hhrnett. ■J' wjcqaDsa COBLE He win succeed George Coble or Lexjjlgton, who maintained head quarters at Ashebaro" Chairman Hasty, prominent busi nessman, farmer, and chairman ol thy Robeson County Board at Com missioners, has been a Dolitical and in Robeson -for many l||nUes now In the Sixth Dis trict In addition to Harnett, are: Hoke. Robeson, Scotland. Chatham. Lee/MoOre, Davidson and Randolph. * TyRAHAM .IS CHAIRMAN • ‘ RALEIGH m - A. H. (Sandy t amfiMmi of Hillsboro rfas scheduled toflifce Die oath otoffice today asi#dof a brand new State Hlgh- G&ham. who served from" 1945 to IBS as highway chairman under OWfc Gregg Cherry, fl be the only m*n on the 16-roember com mission with, previous experience ‘B. Umste*d said the are "men of Ifchliicter and business exDerlence.” aßr other commissioners, who uSkad under the authority given hMEJay the 1953 Oeneral Assem- Xm five-man committee which adHfcd Umstead on reorganising tblgommlsslon said the hew dlv- meiival f Services Mi ewi j, mt Glad Tidings trigK&ureli the pastor, Rev. A„ A. . ja| M announced today. 1 ta h£* cf. TELEPHONgH: 8117 • 3118", 3119 . —•. r~ j — : Spring Fever Now Sweeping Campuses Last Minute ’ ■ ■ News Shorts WASHINGTON W> Republi can congressional leaders were told at the White House today the Ei senhower administration hopes to have national spending And in come in balance by July 1, 1954; They declined to gueaa whether • R will open the way to tax reduct ion this year. , CAIRO, Egypt - (W Angry press attacks on the United States and a fiery denunciation by Pre mier Mohammed Naguib of'British policy on Egypt today blighted hopes that U. 8. -Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, here on a “trouble mission, might ease Mid-Eastern tension. pretty blonde X T ray technician charged as Hie brains behind a *IO,OOO Wood donor swindle at waS indicted on^three*c©unts^ of bills naming Mias Reign Hood of Columbia, Mbs., 27, were handed down as the grand Jury finished *fv nti»'uen <lo,Peer Two' m: \ , WBs. m M. VOO»KE jflHr m A A JKIA I I f■, j| Ip pT* Wf I 11 1 I /lir Ctaw c v •> i- .'HUraPj k ■' • iPWiv .'saMmi*.':’■: COLUMBUS, O. (tfl Nearly 2,000 Oho State University students did shake dances in the streets, held up traffic and' threw spot lights on sorority houses here last flight * an outbreak of campus “spring fever.’ ’i i Male students' made the rounds of sdorlty houses shouting “we see you’ >*l6 bathing the places with spotlights and flashlight. They did not try to enter. One group broke into a theatre, paraded down the aisle and theft left Another mob attempted to break Into Baker Hall, a girls’ dor mitory. The rioters shattered sev eral window*, but *dld not raid any Meanwhile, students with hand kerchiefs pulled- over their faces attacked -trolley busses, removing trolleys from the wires and letttng air out of the tires. They also turned on several fire hydrants, Gooding a street. EAST LANSING. Mich. Ml A group of Michigan State. College students faced suspension and pos sible revocation of graft deferments today following ‘a “Panty raid” that turned into a watery ridt On the banks of the Red Cedar Wvfcr. „ About 1.000 men students, egged an tty coeds, tsfants of ‘‘we want ( boys” and, “como on, leTs got : or ganized,” raided Mason THUtH. a wo man's dormitory, and tried to enter two other dorms. V About 50 got into. Mason, where they lifted nylon uncterthtngs as souvenirs, hut coeds at South Wll-; hams and-Campbell dorms turned rfhem back With firehoses.f. TCSty doll<o© jailed 29 students-to “cool off.” policeJjook^id l I . . ■ a. * V|', DUNN, N. C-, TUEBPAX AFTERNOON, MAT 12, 1983 Charge Plan To | Cut Air fortes 1 Too Big Gamble ; WASHINGTON Demcterats charged today that Defense Secretary Charles fi. Wilson’s?plan to* cut Air Force expansion and slash military . means ‘too big R kamble’' with national seconty. The newly unfolded G&f gram calls for a-50 per cent dropj in monthly draft quotas, ka> overalfij reduction of 291.000 In't«’qjectqg manpower strength of the- armnH services and an Air For* goal imf. 120 instead ol 143 winfls. i Wilson, who laid tlie pton before a House ’Approprlationrf subettni® mittee yesterday, was expected w ’ fpc« a barrage of Questions on M > effects at en afternoon news cooJ ference today. Hfe prer-a-ed congressional t«tfs mony, caPin® for a 25.247.128 006 slash in fl«-al 1954 aonropriatlong mqi’este *f the former Truman ad*j ministration, was made nubile by subcommittee Chairman Richard m Wlggleeworth (R-Mass.) witho:«f comment Bui House Democratic leader John W. McCormack oounded on the plan, especially criticizing th* administration for slowing down and cutting back the Air Force ex pansion program. CITES RED MENAGE x | “The import of Wilson’s state-- m*nt is an intention to scrap the' 14i-wing Air Force goak” be said, “In the world todav. with the Com munist menace this seems to mg too big a gamble to take." v Mr«m—*ek, like other decried any effort to •»’»"'» the budget “at the expense if our mil-’ rbah-Bwh of the S(toato irmed Ser-^ vices Committee, said last n|qM had not been an “adequate exo’anatlon” of the proposed mil itary cuts. He Refused to say, with out more fact, whether he would vote for them. -jka Intimating that the fiscal 1954 plan Is chiefly -regarded 1 as a ston , vgn revision of Truman nraposils. Wilson told the subcommittee that an “intensive and detailed study of all asoeets of defense” Will be made this summer and fall. At that tim» all put the Naw rteber—Adm. William M. Feshteler —of the present Joint Chiefs of Start will have been replaced. The review. Wilson said, will cover comnosltlbn and size of the HVeMnned or rage two) BULLETINS SEOUL (IF —TheU. S. Marines have been taken out of combat in Korea after 13 months in the Hne, it was Us closed today. An Bth Army announcement said the Ist Marine Division was moved into reserve May 4 after de fending the western; end of the battle line since March 25, 195?. VATICAN CITY —OF —Pope Pius XII called today for a conference of big world powers as an “indispensable first step toward assuring world peace.” He expressed hope they woui!d'get together for discussions. WASfUi'OTGN (Os) Legislation to raise congress ional salaries ran into opposition today from members of the Senate economy bloc. Sens. Allen X; EUender (D-La.) and Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.) said Congress has nodnistnesS '* 'dHIIIIBM Ml- Hff ' .'V. -j- Betty Cathey Wins r\ i r l I l,* ■ Uukg hcho arshiD "* . • . .... •.. f - • • ... j sC , , ~ ~ _ • •, 1 - - * YOUTH WEEK OFFICERS: The Deity Record photographer wee present when the youth of the First Baptist Church met en Sunday afternoon t o make final mans for their duties during Youth Week. Shown in the picture, from left to right, fr ent row, ant Jeannig Ruth Barbour, deaconess, Beanie Strickland, DBS, the Rev. Ernest Russell, Fete Skinner, youth week pester, and Frank Campbell, chairman of the Dlaeonate. Back re w; Lewie Strickland, Jr. Doug Overman, Donald Johnson, Sonny Carr, Anne Connor, Laura Belle C arr and Ethelyn Maxwell, all mefcber* of the Di- Ike Names Radford , Ridgway Sn’m - ' yjr~ WASHINGTON «l President Eisenhower today named Adm. Ar thur W, Radford to be chairmen of the Joint Chiefs es Staff. , n wih °!r*t hs will name Adm. RoMlt B. Carney as onlef of na val operation* sometime In the fu ture. * >" ; ' Carney will replace Adm. William M. Fechtcdtr. , . Today's White Room aetto.% fol lowing last weekS selection of Gen Nathan Twining as Air Force chief of staff, meansv a complete change of the uniformed heads of the en tire defense establishment. GRUENTHER SUCCEEDS Gen. Alfred M. Oruenther will succeed Ridgway as supreme Al lied commander in Europe. The shakeup was announced as the Radford and Ridgway nomin 'ftoMssri ati Fare «»- , MKXTO iliißflHti FIVE CENTS PER COPT Female Soldiers g> 1 pnwssimn fH » • r (UF Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON <W Lady soidw lets are giving the light, feminine touch to many vital Jobe. Take the case of Cnl. Mercellne Warren of White Earth. Minn. The pretty, 25-year-old WAC la the on ly woman in the armed services who makes plaster casts tor sold iers broken bones. , j The corporal, who' had nurse training mt the White Earth Hos pital before rite entered the ser vice rafrs: •Mine not onlv is an unique lob. mi I consider lt Important. .The njen tell me the woman's touch it more <»*ntle than * man’s.” Currently Mgrceline is bone uiendltW at Walter Reed Hospital hfre .under supervision of an army orthopedic surgeon. She makes piaster of parts casta for an scuta of fractures,- j “When making a cast for a brok en back,” she ssvs. “I wit a quar ter-inch layer 0 f stocklng-Uka ma terial over the patient’s bodv and top thYt with -a thin layer of soft, snonw material Then I take a roll of Plaster, dampen lt, and roll it around the body from the neck to the lower nehrtc. Next I rub the plaster until lt Is smooth'and firm and fi*s the bodv contours. ■ After the plaster hardens I trim ; aw*v the excess material.” The_ operation takes about 10 minutes, but it takes the chat -*4 no«r» ito set. During that .time the patient la suspended In air by . straps above an orthopedic table, r Another uniaue Job Is done > a woman—Lt. Col. jean Wiener. She 1 is thief comptroller for the Phila- I detphla Ordnance Dktridt. t She handles ordnance contract amount lng to more than 22A00.0Q0 annually Paul* Green Revises **Connon ls Alfcbn G Johnson hss return* | brother of Mrs John- I eon, read his new Americanised ver THE RECORD GETS RESULTS wlnpUld that rank. Sfle Joined the "wp* to 1942 a* a ari vate and walked her way zp.. Another lady soldier la putting to work the skill she learned la civilian life. She is Lt. Grace Stanley King, formerly of Wlckford, R. L Presently she is stationed At the Army Engineer Center at Fort Belvolr, Va. There she draws Illus trations for training manuals and Army films. ■ « • She Is the only woman graduate of the Associate Engineer Company officer's course it the- Virginia base. What’s more, she took top honor* in competition with 35 men whet) die graduated from the Engineer topographical drafting school at Fbrt Belvoir, PAMELA SREWART —Tn*ri« i— ’ J Tornado Alerts Issued As Waco Digs Itself Out WACO, Tex. (IP) TOfr nado alerts were issued to day for a second time in a wide section of Texas work ers recovered at and San Angelo late yester- Forty-four bodies were , recovered here and eight at San Angelo, Mjf miles to the west. At least-250 per 4 sons were Injured in the Waco tornado, first ever to hit the. qaflg tral Texas city, and -79 in 9m Angelo, a total of 329. Tornado warnintr- were istfMi yesterday a f£w hours before £Kjg first storm hit San Angelo ab3*|| 3 p. m. At 4:30 p. m. a tornado hit downtown Waco, a city of fjHB 000 population. The weather bureau issued tWa additional tornado warnings toda* the latest covering an area l»ya®|| ed by Tyler, Lufkin, Yoakum, Xm Rio-Eagle Pass and Junction. TftJti during the remainder of today M| early tonight. Mayor Ralph Wolf of Waed servativelv” estimated damage-;* ♦Kf.OOO.OOQ A six-story ftWttfM store and a nearby theatre M (Continued on page two! ' J Johnny Spoofs In •tov Dw lyoormw; end Mrs. John W. Soem * of fit- served' ns one, of the 'rm • Vareryjor the SJneen, Mfas Ear i b«-a Wheeler. •» ■ Theme of the festival -.vas a “Awakening of Smteea” Bt» t taking oart in the * dance of W • snowflakes which opened tee pM| • eant. were Domttav McDonald .MM I also Elizabeth Warren of Wilntilfiß ton former LUltnetoir reatin • Shirley Cameron and Henrietta <M ' ©"tan took part to the sjaTwSM ran bow dances Miss O’QuhW ! B,oal la^ uc<^t *° n the
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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May 12, 1953, edition 1
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