anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-05
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4 — ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN Monday, October 5, 1953
Published Daily Evenings Except Sundays and Holidays by
ANAHEIM BULLETIN PUBLISHING CO., INC.
222 S. Lemon St.
Anaheim, Calif.
HAZEL D. LOUDON, President
L. H. LOUDON, JR., Vice Pres. and Co-Publisher
STANLEY LOUDON, Co-Publisher and Treasurer
MILDRED TAGGART, Member of Board
RICHARD FISCHLE, JR., Secretary and Business Manager
DON SHAFFER, Editor
CARRIE LOU SUTHERLAND, Society and Women's Department
C. WM. BLAND, Adv Manager
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Tattered Laundry
The following little item is reprinted from Time magazine: "How that Malenkov himself has criticized the shoddiness of Soviet consumer goods, Pravda is washing some of the tattered laundry out in public, complains that Soviet rayon underwear does not survive a single laundering, that men's shirts fall apart in the tub."
In past times similar official criticisms of Soviet production and distribution agencies have appeared, and have usually proved a prelude to wholesale liquidations of managers and technicians who somehow fell out of favor with the powers-that-be. But what is significant to us Americans is the character of the system that makes manufacture and sale of such shoddy goods possible.
The answer, of course, is found in the nature of communism and socialism. The state owns practically
In past times similar official criticisms of Soviet production and distribution agencies have appeared, and have usually proved a prelude to wholesale liquidations of managers and technicians who somehow fell out of favor with the powers-that-be. But what is significant to us Americans is the character of the system that makes manufacture and sale of such shoddy goods possible.
The answer, of course, is found in the nature of communism and socialism. The state owns practically everything—including all of the factories and the vast majority of retail outlets. There is no competition as we understand the word. If the consumer doesn't like what he is offered, or thinks the price excessive, he has the privilege of doing without and going cold or hungry.
Contrast that with conditions in the United States. Every manufacturer is in direct competition with other manufacturers, and all are trying to sell the public on their trademarks. Every store from the biggest chain to the smallest independent is competing with other stores for consumer patronage. The result is the best deal for our money that the cost of carrying on business will permit.
How Much Do You Pay?
Very few of us realize how much money we must pay in taxes—for the reason that so large a part of the tax burden is indirect.
The National Association of Manufacturers has done some research on the subject, using government statistics and other reliable data. Here is what it believes average families in the listed income brackets pay:
Four thousand dollars—$1,093, or 27.3 per cent of income; $7,500—$2,766, or 36.9 per cent of income; $10,000—$4,006, or 40 per cent of income.
Keep that in mind next time you hear the hoary old argument that only the well-to-do and the rich need really worry about taxes.
Calling the Tune
A great many people still seem to believe that it is possible to get all kinds of handouts from the federal government and still keep our freedom and independence.
They should ponder this sentence from a 1942 U.S. Supreme Court decision: "It is hardly lack of due process for the government to regulate that which it subsidizes."
The Court simply said, in judicial language, that when government pays the bills, if can call the tune to which we must all dance.
Ten Years Ago
Regina DeCoursey was named Legion
They should ponder this sentence from a 1942 U.S. Supreme Court decision: "It is hardly lack of due process for the government to regulate that which it subsidizes."
The Court simply said, in judicial language, that when government pays the bills, it can call the tune to which we must all dance.
Ten Years Ago
Regina DeCourney was named president of the Solidity Project at Marywood Girls Catholic school yesterday.
Phyllis Boettcher, four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Boettcher was honored at a party on her birthday this week.
Pern Kirby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kirby of this city, and Maxwell Robinson of the Merchant Marines were married at the Baptist church in San Francisco on a recent date.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Raxter have received a letter from their son Eric in the U.S. Navy overseas duty, stating that he is well and happy Mr. Raxter is the commander of the Anabellin post, American Legion.
Farmer McCabe
I was jest athlinkin' that folks often referred to Elison as a "Crack-pot" when he wun liven, and to Lincoln as a "very sick man." They also sed Ben Franklin was jest an old man enjoying his second childhood when he discovered electricity with his knife. Judging from the things she did about Senator McCarthy, I finger he'll be ranked as one of America's greatest men one of these days.
Farmer McCabe (All Rights Reserved)
SONGS OF A SONNETEER
"NAUGHT MORE TO SPEND ..."
Unfulfilled promise: incomplete designs—And the book comes near, much too near, its end: Page after page—and in-between the lines, Naught but what might have been—folios blend Into rows of cyphers depicting years Of idle posturings; naught more to spend—and nothing saved! across Earth's hemispheres, Eroded footprints on a cross-cross trail Which touched joy—bells quite as often, tears!
Others have sought—and was—some humble Grail! But we had set our aims beyond the stars Such folk could see! What might we do, save fail? And yet, the regret each memory mars! The ink for Life's Book was leached from our scars!
PRINCE OF POXES—Page 62—
Samuel Shieldsberger
STRONG, NEW LINK
Othman's Views on Washington
BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
WASHINGTON — Match factors do, too, burn down and for this information I am indebted to George E. Melsha of the New York Underwriters Insurance Co., New York. The moral is that match makers shouldn't be careless, either.
Fire Prevention Week is upon us. One year ago in that connection I wrote a little piece on the subject of matches, quoting my old matchmaking friend and press agent, Stuart Little. He said he was in favor of preventing fires, too, but he was all caught up with having this nation' bares blamed on the product of his clients, the match manufacturers.
What particularly palmed him was the fire prevention folks giving the ordinary match star billing as America's number one arsonist.
"Naturally this is very distressing to the match manufacturers," Little continued. "When a guy's wife goes yoo-boo at him while he is taking a swing at a nail and he drives his thumb half an inch into the plank, does he blame the hammer? When a blonde passes a paintter, does he blame the ladder when he falls off? When a pedestrian is kissed into the side pocket by an automobile, does he put the finger on General Motors?"
Little did admit that matches in early days maybe were a hazard. He produced a chronological history of matches and improvements thereon, from the early lucifers that frequently exploded when you looked at 'em, to today's safety matches, which are made of sesquisulphide of phosphorous.
This material hardly is nourishing. Little continued, but it is wholesome. He said a baby could chew a modern match all day; it tastes like sand and will do the little tyke no more harm.
Little said he calculated that American light 57,000 every hour and if they careful, like the mann matches, they would much real estate.
"No match factory burned down," he concludes only one man ever burn in one. He really was less. He had doused his sequietcetera and scrub a wall."
Insurance expert Mr. tient man, read this died it in his hat, and w said, there's a first time thing.
On last June 25th, a seemed to have flipped own products aside in City, N.J., plant of the Co. The whole business.
The smoke was visible, the building of fireman was hurt, and of matches blazed at was $300,000.
Little, you may remember who wrote letters ago to the editors over the United States whether residents of had had any experienc crows. Little said he lily interested in these He was, for a fact.
He represented (when working for the match distiller of whisky, name I'll certainly here. Well air. Little garner a wide assortment to the editor, as well concerning old crowns, sold any whisky. I'm no Maybe this will redden I quote insurance man us caution the public careful when hang match factories as whites matches."
(Copyright, 1953, Byure Syndicate, Inc.)
Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
HOLLYWOOD (UP)—Ava Hamilton looks like a motherly, middle-aged schoolteacher, but she's a movie director whose "stars" are man-eating lions in the heart of Africa.
This bosomy widow with twinkling blue eyes is heralded as the top lady explorer, hunter and photographer since the late Osa Johnson.
She photographs wars, native uprisings, foreign scenery and big game for newsreels, and now she's touring the country with a filmed travelogue of her adventures.
While other ladies of her age are lunching in tearrooms, Mrs. Hamilton is on "terrifically dangerous" movie locations trying to get a lion to come into the sun for his picture.
Alone In Jungle
MGM recently invaded Africa to shoot "Mogambo," a movie starring another Ava named Gardner, with a small caravan of native guide. But Mrs. Hamilton bustled into the jungle alone.
"I went in my car and took along maps," she said today in her offhand, almost absent-minded fashion. I didn't drive on roads. I wanted to get off the beaten tourist path. Who needs a safari?
Once a lioness jumped on her car.
"I was trying to get a group of lions to play, like kittens, with a football tied to a string. They're dears," she said.
Mrs. Hamilton also photographed the edge of a volcano while it was erupting. She killed three elephants and a couple of leopards. She crossed the Sahara desert by herself and, like many another woman driver, stalled the car when the battery went dead.
Mrs. Hamilton tells this hairraising story as if it happened in front of Schwab's drugstore.
Radiator Water
"I spent five days building a hill so the car could roll down," she said.
"I drank the water out of the radiator. My thirst was terrible. I spent the best part of the day under the car."
But when I rolled the car down the hill, it wouldn't start. Then the self-starter miraculously worked. My overheated car made it to a French Foreign Legion post. My goodness, were they surprised to see me!
I asked her why she risks her beck when she could be taking life easy at her Jacksonville, Fla., home.
"I was repressed as a child," she said gently. "I was raised in a French content behind high streets."
Women's Work
By VIVIAN SANDE
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK — Around this time of year, a number of experts advance various theories about how to beat the heat.
Just in case you could use some here is a sampling of theories — from a physical cultureist, a dietician, a dancer, a decorating institute, and a psychologist.
Paul Miller, who believes in relaxation of nerves through exercise and runs a New York school to teach his belief, naturally plumps for the relaxation theory.
"Prayed nerves," he maintained, "step up the pulse rate. When your blood is flowing faster, you feel hotter."
Eat Cool
For those who have the courage to take his treatment, here it is: 10 to 15 minutes of exercise a day; hot towels and massage at regular intervals.
Dancer Alice Alonzo, who spends her summer working out on the concert sages of her native Cuba, also subscribes to the exercise-for-coolness theory. She says she doesn't mind the heat because "I work off all my excess energy."
Florence Brobeck, dietician and writer of cook books, believes your practice to weather is directly related to your intake of calories. Comfortable eating during high-temperature days should comprise a low-calorie but not a reducing diet, she says.
Her recommendation is about 1,500 calories daily in meals, fruits and salads, leaving out as much fats and starches as possible. High school students, men who have to use physical energy in their work and athletes, Miss Brobeck says, need about 2,400 calories of the same sort of foods.
Think Cool
The Decorative Fabrics Institute in New York suggests cool colors for slipovers—ints of green, blue or gray, or bright floral prints to give an illusion of coolness. The institute also favors white curtains, fresh flowers around the house, and white decorative touches throughout.
You expect a psychologist to say you can beat the heat by exercising the power of mind over the discomfort of body, and some of them do say, "think cool, and you won't feel so hot."
But if you're one of those who has tried this unsuccessfully there's at least one psychologist who won't claim you're weak-minded.
Dr. Charles McCormick, who teaches a personality adjustment course at the New School for Social Research, believes that "the theory of the power of mind over matter is an ideal."
The only thing to do in summer is accept the fact that weather He produced a chronological history of matches and improvements thereon, from the early lucifers that frequently exploded when you looked at 'em, to today's safety matches, which are made of sesquisulphide of phosphorus.
This material hardly is nourishing. Little continued, but it is wholesome. He said a baby could chew a modern match all day; it tastes like sand and will do the little tyke no more harm.
Little said he calculated that Your Birthday Forecast (BY STELLA)
MONDAY, OCTOBER 5 — Born today, your tremendous energy, managerial capacity and ability to make do under pressure and finish whatever you begin are all qualifications that should bring you an early and prosperous success. You have considerable mechanical ability, and might do some important inventing. If you don't you will have only yourself to blame for not developing your star-given talents.
You are one who enjoys only the best but you have had enough contact with life in the rough to know that there are varying qualities power to better your own environment and if this crusading spirit were really put to work your sphere might extend to the entire country. You probably would be successful if you entered politics on the highest level.
Popular with all with whom you come in contact, you are especially attractive to members of the opposite sex. You don't quite understand why, but you are! It is likely that an early marriage is in store for you, but wed someone who is willing to share some of your affectionate mature with the world at large. Loyalty in your own is unchallenged, but you like people too much not to be a highly social animal.
To find what the stars have in store for tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Tuesday, October 6
LIEBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23) — Keep well-informed in your particular field. Current events are likely to influence it materially.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Be cautiously investigative when I comes to a business affair today.
PHIL NEWSOM
India's very vocal Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru accuses the United States of being politically immature.
The United States might accuse Nehru of suffering politically from an inferiority complex.
At any rate, a series of events mission, said that prisoners "appeared mistreated" about—presumably by this commission gone almost entirely by the Arrest Syndicate, Inc.)
I spent the best part of the day under the car.
"But when I rolled the car down the hill, it wouldn't start. Then the self-starter miraculously worked. My overheated car made it to a French Foreign Legion post. My goodness, were they surprised to see me!"
I asked her why she risks her beck when she could be taking life easy at her Jacksonville, Florida home.
"I was repressed as a child," she said gently. "I was raised in a French convent behind high walls. I secretly read Robinson Crusoe but my teachers said that wasn't suitable for young ladies."
"As soon as I could, I got away and photographed and wrote my way around the world."
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. Bystander with difficulty
2. Premature
3. Devise for murder
4. Prober
5. Arrow police
6. Japanese sail
7. White
8. Emerge vacations
9. Do not water
10. Tool into muddy
11. Teenage delity
12. Demonstrate guilt or respect
13. Condemned malice
14. Sympathy for man
15. Number
16. Ship's clock
SMART ARROW RIMAL HEADER NOTICE ANT NOTED ARE SALE TIME SO AD INITIA PRINT AGE SEE RED ERR ARMOR SHIN WHENNA NESTER WESEN WHERE NESN ERSE
PHIL NEWSOM
India's very vocal Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru accuses the United States of being politically immature.
The United States might accuse Nehru of suffering politically from an inferiority complex.
At any rate, a series of events and interactions by Nehra in recent weeks has not improved relations between the two countries.
The brilliant 85-year-old Nehra inherited his mantle of leadership of the Indian people from Mohandas Gandhi. He is a contradictory man with a determined and apparently instinctive distrust of the imperialist west. It would be difficult to say just what the United States could do to please him.
Still Chadish
Or late, he has in effect accused the United States of history.
He has found United States foreign policy immature.
He has denied that India wants a place on the Korean Political Conference table, but because the United States banned India from the conference, he accused the U.S. government of flouting the will of both Asia and Europe.
He describes Indian policy as independent but not neutral. And, while he freely admits U.S. policy which disapproves" his own policy "must be thinking in terms of printing the people of India around."
Neutral Outsiders
At Panmujom where Indian troops are guarding some 32,000 war prisoners unwilling to go home and where India acts as chairman of the five-member general commission, the commission first was accused of distributing Communist-affiliated literature to anti-Communist prisoners.
Then over United States and alien objectives that it violated the white spirit of voluntary registration, the commission ruled that prisoners may be forced to attend "explanation" sessions attempting to get them to change their minds.
The commission also asked that the 30-day period for "explanation" be extended. The U.N. command related.
Finally, Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimson, Indian chairman of the commi
Washington Scenes
Buck C. Othman
The David Lawrence Dispatch
(BY DAVID LAWRENCE)
American light $7,000,000 matches every hour and if they'd only be careful, like the manufacturers of matches, they wouldn't ignite so much real estate.
"No match factory ever has burned down," he concluded, "and only one man ever burned to death in one. He really was a little careless. He had doused himself with seequitcetera and scraped against a wall."
Insurance expert Melsha, a patient man, read this dispatch, pasted it in his hat, and waited. As he said, there's a first time for everything.
On last June 25th, a matchmaker seemed to have flipped one of his own products aside in the Jersey City, N.J., plant of the Ohio Match Co. The whole business went, boom.
The smoke was visible for 20 miles, the building collapsed, one fireman was hurt, and 30,000 cases of matches blazed at once. Loss was $300,000.
Little, you may remember, is the man who wrote letters a few weeks ago to the editors of papers all over the United States, inquiring whether residents of their towns had had any experiences with old crowds. Little said he was peculiarly interested in these elderly birds. He was, for a fact.
He represented (when he was not working for the match makers) a distiller of whisky, whose brand name I'll certainly not mention here. Well sir, Little managed to garner a wide assortment of letters to the editor, as well as editorials concerning old crowns. Whether this sold any whisky, I'm not certain, but Little showed no embarrassment. Maybe this will redden his ears and I quote insurance man Melsha: "Let us caution the public to be just as careful when hanging around match factories as when handling matches."
(Copyright, 1963, By United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
HDAY FORECAST
(STELLA)
Explore all the angles.
SAGITARRUS (Nov. 21-Dec. 22) — If a friend needs some encouragement, perhaps you are just the one to give it. Even be a Pollyann!
CAPRIORN (Dec. 23-Jan. 30) — Any attack will only be a temporary one, so don't become alarmed and lose your head.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19) — Business aspects are bright for others just now, but you're apt to get beaten in any deal you undertake!
PISCER (Feb. 30-Mar. 30) — If today everything does not materialize as you had hoped, keep smiling. There's another day coming!
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 20) — Shifting the responsibility to others is not the way to unload your troubles. Solve problems yourself for best results.
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 21) — Don't go off the limb for anyone in matters of business or finance. See that your own affairs are first in good order.
GEMINI (May 22-June 21) — You can increase your popular appeal by joining in some community affair wholeheartedly. Could increase business.
CANCER (June 22-July 23) — If invited on a party with friends you have not seen in quite a while, accept and have a good time!
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23) — Grumbling over a postponement never helps. Look for another way to do the job and win out anyway!
VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 28) — Be very wise in making decisions or you've apt to blunder. Look at all aspects of the problem very carefully.
(Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
NEWSON ---
mission, said that anti-Communist prisoners "appeared to have been mistinformed" about their rights—presumably by the U.N.
Since commission rulings have gone almost uniformly in favor of the Communists, one U.S. officer remarked bitterly:
"The Indians are just as bad all the countries behind the iron curtain as well as such hypothetical aggressors as now are known as members of the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
The President is reported to have shown an interest in what Mr. Stevenson proposed and also to have listened intently to the story of what the former presidential nominee found on his trip around the world. It is natural for Mr. Eisenhower to be polite about such things and to do so in the interest of a bipartisan front in handling foreign policy. But at the same time the nation is getting a rather confused impression as to what the Eisenhower administration really has in mind in the matter of world policy, especially as it relates to Soviet Russia.
There is a feeling that the President has been unable to formulate a definite policy about what to do as consequence of the development of the hydrogen bomb by Soviet Russia. From Mr. Eisenhower's press conference on Wednesday came the following information:
1. The knowledge that the Russians have the bomb is, of course, an acute problem for the Defense Department.
2. This is causing more earnest study than anything which has happened lately.
3. When the President can get Science
By DELOS SMITH
United Press Science Editor
NEW YORK --- The common neurotic pattern of the present day, when viewed from the outside, is the inability of the neurotic individual to act as "an independent entity;" when viewed from the inside—that is, by the neurotic himself—it is the inability "to experience himself as a self in his own right."
For whatever worth it may have in understanding the world we live in, that is the hypothesis of Dr. Rollo May who with 21 other psychologists under the leadership of Dr. O. Hobart Mowrer, research professor of psychology, University of Illinois, have put together a fat, complex, and challenging book, "Psychotherapy—Theory and Research" (Ronald Press).
The challenge is to make the fills of the mind as accessible to treatment by scientific methods as are most of the ills of the flesh. The perhaps least difficult phase, that being the relation of the world in which the mind operates to the health of the mind, was approached by Dr. May through the concept that "the ability to treat himself both as subject and object is, so far as we can tell the unique difference between the human being and other mammals."
Victorian Differed
In the Victorian age, "conflicts and consequent repression, inhibition all the countries behind the iron curtain as well as such hypothetical aggressors as now are known as members of the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
The President is reported to have shown an interest in what Mr. Stevenson proposed and also to have listened intently to the story of what the former presidential nominee found on his trip around the world. It is natural for Mr. Eisenhower to be polite about such things and to do so in the interest of a bipartisan front in handling foreign policy. But at the same time the nation is getting a rather confused impression as to what the Eisenhower administration really has in mind in the matter of world policy, especially as it relates to Soviet Russia.
There is a feeling that the President has been unable to formulate a definite policy about what to do as consequence of the development of the hydrogen bomb by Soviet Russia. From Mr. Eisenhower's press conference on Wednesday came the following information:
1. The knowledge that the Russians have the bomb is, of course, an acute problem for the Defense Department.
2. This is causing more earnest study than anything which has happened lately.
3. When the President can get Science
By DELOS SMITH
United Press Science Editor
NEW YORK --- The common neurotic pattern of the present day, when viewed from the outside, is the inability of the neurotic individual to act as "an independent entity;" when viewed from the inside—that is, by the neurotic himself—it is the inability "to experience himself as a self in his own right."
For whatever worth it may have in understanding the world we live in, that is the hypothesis of Dr. Rollo May who with 21 other psychologists under the leadership of Dr. O. Hobart Mowrer, research professor of psychology, University of Illinois, have put together a fat, complex, and challenging book, "Psychotherapy—Theory and Research" (Ronald Press).
The challenge is to make the fills of the mind as accessible to treatment by scientific methods as are most of the ills of the flesh. The perhaps least difficult phase, that being the relation of the world in which the mind operates to the health of the mind, was approached by Dr. May through the concept that "the ability to treat himself both as subject and object is, so far as we can tell the unique difference between the human being and other mammals."
Victorian Differed
In the Victorian age, "conflicts and consequent repression, inhibition all the countries behind the iron curtain as well as such hypothetical aggressors as now are known as members of the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
The President is reported to have shown an interest in what Mr. Stevenson proposed and also to have listened intently to the story of what the former presidential nominee found on his trip around the world. It is natural for Mr. Eisenhower to be polite about such things and to do so in the interest of a bipartisan front in handling foreign policy. But at the same time the nation is getting a rather confused impression as to what the Eisenhower administration really has in mind in the matter of world policy, especially as it relates to Soviet Russia.
There is a feeling that the President has been unable to formulate a definite policy about what to do as consequence of the development of the hydrogen bomb by Soviet Russia. From Mr. Eisenhower's press conference on Wednesday came the following information:
1. The knowledge that the Russians have the bomb is, of course, an acute problem for the Defense Department.
2. This is causing more earnest study than anything which has happened lately.
3. When the President can get Science
By DELOS SMITH
United Press Science Editor
NEW YORK --- The common neurotic pattern of the present day, when viewed from the outside, is the inability of the neurotic individual to act as "an independent entity;" when viewed from the inside—that is, by the neurotic himself—it is the inability "to experience himself as a self in his own right."
For whatever worth it may have in understanding the world we live in, that is the hypothesis of Dr. Rollo May who with 21 other psychologists under the leadership of Dr. O. Hobart Mowrer, research professor of psychology, University of Illinois, have put together a fat, complex, and challenging book, "Psychotherapy—Theory and Research" (Ronald Press).
The challenge is to make the fills of the mind as accessible to treatment by scientific methods as are most of the ills of the flesh. The perhaps less difficult phase, that being the relation of the world in which the mind operates to the health of the mind, was approached by Dr. May through the concept that "the ability to treat himself both as subject and object is, so far as we can tell the unique difference between the human being and other mammals."
Victorian Differed
In the Victorian age, "conflicts and consequent repression, inhibition all the countries behind the iron curtain as well as such hypothetical aggressors as now are known as members of the North Atlantic Treaty organization.
The President is reported to have shown an interest in what Mr. Stevenson proposed and also to have listened intently to the story of whatthe former presidential nominee found on his trip aroundthe world. It is natural for Mr.Eisenhowerto be polite about such things and to do so inthe interestofa bipartisanfrontinhandlingforeignpolicy.Butathemainthesupportingnecessaryforownsecurity.Theophenominationallyandtheintentionsaremisunderstood,andbadlymisunderstood.
Science
By DELOS SMITH
United Press Science Editor
NEW YORK --- The common neurotic pattern ofthepresentday,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—itistheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependententity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它istheinability“toexperiencehimselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependentEntity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它istheinability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependentEntity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它istheinability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependentEntity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它istheinability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependentEntity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它istheinability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependentEntity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它istheinability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“anindependentEntity;”whenviewedfromtheinside—thatis,bytheneurotichimself—它是this_innability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“aninnability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“aninnability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
Forwhateverworthitmayhaveinunderstandingtheworldwelivein,theviewfromtheoutside,theinabilityoftheneuroticindividualtoactas“aninnability“toexperience himselfasselfinhisownright.”
ForwhateverworthitmayhaveInunderstandingtheworldweLiveInTheWorldAtHorizonManagementAndPsychotherapyDr.McrowtherInHisIntroductionToTheFutureOfHumanPersonalityDisordersAndTreatment.
Film Shop
By CLEMENT D.JONES
United Press Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD --- Feminist curiosity impossible about what men are like when no women are around makes movies with all-male casts pay off at box office, Hollywood survey indicates.
Latest entry in this womanless approach to a successful movie is "Island in Sky," starring John Wayne who's an irresistible boxoffice magnet for men, women and children and full scientific and social account."
Squeezing Orange County
(By FRAN SHERLING)
Alvyida "Tennis" Rutledge assistant in Station post office and often referred to as Mrs. Stanton, asserts she is in a perpetual state of indifference as to whether she is bringing up her blue-eyed teenage grand daughter, Carol Jane, or vice versa.
(All Rights Reserved)
Weather
By UNITED PRESS
Temperature and rainfall for 36 hours ending at 8 a.m.
High Low Rain
Albuquerque 71 50
Atlanta 59 50
Bakersfield 59 50
Boston 59 50
Brownsville 59 50
Chicago 62 50
Denver 62 50
Detroit 62 50
El Centro 103 44
Fairbanks 103 44
Phoenix 54 50
Pittsburgh 54 50
Red Buddy 54 50
San Francisco 54 50
Seattle 62 50
Stockton 103 44
Thermal 103 44
Tacson 71 1
Washington Yuma
By CLEMENT D. JONES
United Press Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD — Feminine curiosity about what men are like when no women are around makes movies with all-male casts pay off at the box office, a Hollywood survey indicates.
Latest entry in the womanless approach to a successful movie is "Island in the Sky," starring John Wayne, who's an irresistible box-office magnet for men, women and children and the nation's top star.
The story concerns the plight of an Air Force transport crew forced down in Arctic wilderness, fighting for survival against freezing starvation and pains. Women enter the picture only as memoirer to the men, who include Lloyd Nolan and Walter Abel.
Women like pictures about men and a picture women like is sure to sell tickets, or, so believe the powers behind Hollywood cameras.
An example to back up their theory was "Breakthrough," starring David Brian, John Agat, Frank Lovejoy and Dick Weson. The picture made Lovejoy a star.
Wellman's Opinion
"Destination Tokyo," which was earlier, was another successful production in which women appeared only as a memory.
There were no women in "The Desert Rats," a highly successful picture about Rommel's stand at Tubruk nor in "Destination God," with Richard Wildmark. And among the several new pictures on the way from Hollywood without women is "The Glory Brigade," a Korean war story starring Victor Mature.
While "Stalag 17," a huge success starring William Holden does have women in it, the Russian prisoners of war oppose the men's prison camp where the picture is laid, they never get close enough to the 800 American sergeants in the compound to be touched.
One reason according to a reporter, William A. Wellman, write the all-male picture has been invariably successful in the care that goes into the selection of an offbeat story.
Every picture can't be the greatest love story ever told; any Wellman, but when you break away from the love formula, the story has to be really good as well as different."
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin