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DOWN
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3. Age
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coin
5. That man
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severe
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devices
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restful
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11. Formal
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force
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mouth
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41. Apart
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43. Irish
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46. Beverage
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49. Scuttle
50. Attempt
53. North Cen
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abbr.
Professor, Student Analyze
Stories on Murder Case
Tallahassee, Fla. ? The need for
better background coverage in the
news of murderers and maladjust
ed persons has been stressed in
"The Pcakes Murder Case," a re
cent publication by Dr. Sidney
Kobre of the journalism school and
Mrs. Juanita Parks, a graduate of
the school of nursing at Florida
State University:
This publication, which is dis
tributed to instructors of journal
ism, is a report of the coverage giv
en the Peakes murder case by four
newspapers.
Bayard Peakes is the mentally
deranged man who killed Eileen
Fahey July 14, 1952, in an office
at Columbia University in New
York. The reason for the slaying
was the refusal of scientists to ser
iously accept an electronics theory
of his.
In covering this story, the New
York Times concentrated on the
veterans hospital angle. Having
discovered that Peakes had at one
time been a mental patient in a
veterans hospital the Times set
out to prove the hospital was at
fault for allowing him to be re
leased.
The New York World Telegram
and Sun's treatment of the case
was studied next. On the whole, it
gave the same facts as the New
York Times.
The New York World Telegram
and Sun of July 28, 10S2, in addi
tion to carrying on page one the
complete story of Judge Streit's
censures of institutions that free
killers like Peakes, followed up
with a story on page two which
said, "Judge Streit in denouncing
the release of dangerous mental
patients today cited eleven cases in
addition to Peakes in which crime
and violence had followed."
Best coverage of the case was
given by parade, say Dr. Kobre
and Mrs. Parks. Parade is a Sun
day supplement issued for many
newspapers.
In order to write the story Par
ade's reporter toured New Eng
land and talked to the people who
had known Peakes. The reporter
??
by this method obtained more back
ground information and more in
sight into the development of
I'eakes' illness.
Dr. Kobre and Mrs. Parks cov
ered five newspapers over a per
iod of several months in preparing
this booklet. In all the papers ex
amined .there were seven stories
that contained background mater
ial or that had required some back
grounding by the reporter in order
to write them. Only four editor
ials appeared.
Only one reporter in all material
covered outside of editorials, de
fined psychiatric terms as they ap
peared in the story.
According to Dr. Kobre, the
handling of the Peakes case seems
to. be a great advancement over the
handling of crime news a few years
back. Dr. Kobre said that it is
quite possible that one factor in
the changed approach to crime
news from "sensationalism" to
dealing with it as a social problem
has been recognition by many
newspapers and newspapermen for
the need of a knowledge of psy
chology for backgrounding these
stories in their proper social set
ting.
Dr. Kobre went on to say there
is a need for better and more com
plete backgrounding of murders
and maladjusted people. He. said
that newspaper coverage was good
but "uneven," and suggested that
in the future papers place more
emphasis on the preventative side
of emotional difficulties.
Many bears have a third eyelid
which is transparent and can be
used like sunglasses for protection
against glare.
Most fresh water shrimp are too
small to be of any value but one
species found in southern Florida
grows to a length of two feet.
THIS IS THf
MAN WITH A PLAN
For tha Working Man
In CMC df dlaaMlity It m far
Itself and pan you ? monthly
Hp to *S5?.H.
It pays the (ace amoaat far
natnral death. It pay* doable tha
face amount for accidental
In eaae yon lire and keep (nod j
health, M automatically I
? ??I
Perfect Protection Policy
SOLD ONLY BY OCCIDENTAL [
LIFB INSURANCE CO.
af Raleigh, N. C.
Phillip.
ain Arendall St.
?arehaad City, N. C.
Ho fry Drnomtrgtion Newt
flower Show, Dress Revue
Will fake Place May 7
By RjlltRX BABNtTT
Home Ainl
May 7 is the date set by our
County Council (or the County
Flower Show and 4-H Home Dem
oristration Dress Revue. This year
we have set as our goal, at least
two dresses or garments from each
Home Demonstration Club in the
county. Now is the time to make
your dress.
Now is the time to make your
plan to attend Farm and Home
Week at North Carolina State Col
lege, June 7-10. Miss Current has
set a goal (or 1854 o( 3,000 club
women attending.
There is something special this
year (or you. Thursday night will
bring oite of the biggest events ever
staged at Farm and Hofne Week.
Climaxing the week's program, will
be the Home Demonstration Pa
geant to be enacted In William
Neal Reynolds CoUseum.
1954 marks the end of the first
40. yfars of Home Demonstration
progresa in North Carolina. Woven
into the pageant will be . the high
lights ot tne forward movement,
stories of courage, faith, and per
severance. The pageant will belong
to t^le Home Demonstration women
of the state. It tella how (arm
leaders, joining hands with Exten
sion workers have carried the
Home Demonstration program for
ward.
Starring in the production will
be the Home Demonstration women
Of 100 counties in North Carolina.
The Home Demonstration Chorus
win play an important role.
The pageant was written under
the supervision ot Dr. Sam Seiden
of the University of North Carolina
who is known for his direction of
Paul Green's "Lost Colooy."
This Farm and Home Week, you
as Home Demonstration women,
won't want to miss. This pageant
is your. story. Plan now to attend
June 7 19.
Mrs. Howard Nelson, hdstess to
the Cedar Island Atlantic Home
Demonstration Club In March,
served a Lemon Fluff which the
dub members considered OAusually
good. Mrs. Nelson says this is a
dessert that teeps in {fit refrigera
tor tmtfsuaHy WeFl. Here is her
recipe :
Lemon Fluff
Juice and grated rind of 1 lem
on; 3 egg yolks; 1V4 cups sugar;
1 cup whipped cream; 3 egg whites;
Cooky or wafer crumbs.
Method of Preparation: Cook
lemon, egg yolks *nd sugar in
double boiler until thick. Fold in.
one cup whipped cream Fbld in*
beaten egg whites. Put crumbs in
bottom of tray. Potir tn mixture.
Add. a few crumbs on. top. Freeze.
This recipe is good for desserts
Or to serve at parMes.
Raleigh - Driver license examin
ers of the Department of Motor
Vehicles approved 33,334 applica
tions for permits in February and
collected $67,018.50 in fees. They
turned down 6,752 applicants large
ly because of their failure to pass
the rules of the road test.
@
flits TACTS
NEVER- NO, NEVER?
USE KEROSENE FOR STARTING OR OUkJKENING
v A FIRE IN YOUR HOME
Took/no KEROiEHE ON HOOP OR COAL FIRES
MAY COST YOU YOUR LIFE!
CnrruRY
Cum
ItMietf fikklBOI VBISEBT
fMt 4NI3KD It 4 TEMS Ol? ? M HOOF
IMTKfc* Ot^THLEW PWOUCT5 COWOMTKJK. *. T.
k X ' J
Syrian Wafer Resources
Being Restored to Use
Damascus, Syria ? (AP) ? The
America^ Near East Foundation
has turned to ancient Roman wells
in a program to restore some of
tM enterprise which made Syria
Sne of the rich provinces of the
loman Empire.
The privately financed agency
baa been working since World War
f on aid to poor countries similar
to that which has had a lot of
public attention since World War
If. One of its recent projects
brought clean water to the village
of Zakia for the first time since
the Romans left.
The objective is to help the peo
ple help themselves. Almost five
(e?t of filth was dredged from the
bottoma of the wells and surface
trash cleaned away. In the debris
were human bones, bits of pottery
and glass and other accumulations
of hundreds of years.
Then a Syrian nude pump and *
cement well head Were installed
Kepairs can be made locally. Wo
men who had dredged a mixture df
.sediment and water out of the wells
all their lives now fill their jars
with clean water.
The foundatioo has a staff of 3
Americans and 36 Syrians in this
country and also has projects in
Greece and Iran.
The programs get down to grass
roots and provide only what the
villagers can do for themselves.
Besides the wells, the foundation
sponsors plans to dry fruit to pre
serve it, creation of better tools,
training of mid wives. Peasants
learn to bring running water into
mud huts, build concrete sinks and
provide sanitation.
Staff members say their work in
four villages has fanned out to in
fluence 32 others.
Zakia women fill jars with the first clean water they ever saw.
This Syrian well had been foul since the ancient Romans left
Wake jTJnd" W
111. ... IVM|Cfc?roM MAI> ?-<toor ><?
With 3 great C h?rfoM off ?n A* matt
beautiful dKxc* of aodcto tell A?M?
. . . and we know this is what you'll find
Chevrolet is out ahead
in powerful performance
*
Chevrolet is out ahead
in economy
/CHEVROLET^
Ytar aft?r yar
Ch?vrel?tt than
ptcph buy
oHttr carl
You can easily tell the difference between engines wtien yon drive^1
and the difference is all in Chevrolet's favor! That's became
Chevrolet's great engines deliver full horsepoxrer where it counts?
on the road. What Chevrolet promises , Chevrolet delivers?
There's new power, new performance and new economy in both
1954 Chevrolet engines? the "Blue-Flame 145" in Powerglidc
models and the "Blue-Flame I13v in gearshift models. And they
bring you the highest compression ratio of any leading low-priced
car. That's why they can deliver a big gain in power, acceleration j
and all-around performance, along with iinportaut gasoline savings!
Your fe?f car't roady now . . i WcU be glad to have yon compare
the smooth, quiet performance of this new Chevrolet with any
other car in itsx field. Come in and put it through any kind of
"proving ground" test you care to, and judge its performance fa*
yourself. Your test car's ready now and we hope you are, too. J
SOUND CHEVROLETCOMPANYJNC.
1308 ARENDELL ST. PHONE 6-40/
Capt. BILL
Proudly Announces .
His New Chef
Ralph Cantall
? For over 28 year* Mr. Cantall hat been (err
ing delicious food in such well known diniiig
place* at the Waldorf Astoria in New York . . .
the Statler Hotel in Buffalo . . . the Curtis Hotel
in Lennox, Massachusetts and the LafO-Mar in
Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Enjoy Fine Food*
Prepared by
A Master Chef
In Addition to our old menu, Mr. Catttall ha>
added new specialties to make you# dining
enjoyable.
Bill's is open daily from 1 f :0t) a.m. 'til 1 1:00 p.m.
Luncheon Specials setved each day
Capt. BILL'S
WAllftitONT RESTAURANT
Photo by Jerry Schumacher
Weekend guests? Up
state friends drop in?
Relax! Capt. Bill's can
wine and dine all on
< a moment's notice
THE WATERFRONT'S LARGEST SEATING CA
PACITY - TWO PRIVATE DINING ROOMS