Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 11 June 1959 — Page 11

THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1959

Not All Os Women Fickle About Jobs By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPI) _ it’ s a woman’s privilege to change her mind—-about her job. Yet one study of feminine stability shows we are not as fickle as some bosses would have you think. I This study was made by “Today’s Secretary,” a magazine for the business gal, which will publish the results in its June issue. More than half of its continuing panel of 750 white collar said they had been punching the same time clock for at least five years. Thirty per cent had changed jobs only once during the fiveyear period. But the remaining 20 per cent had switched positions more frequently, and gave rea sons ranging from “the boss barrier” to a candid “I was fired.” The wanderers listed lack ot ad-

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vancement, unsatisfactory salary and unpleasant office conditions among reasons for straynig- They were looking for greater job opportunity and more responsibility. “I now work longer hours, have less vacation and drive 30 miles a day,” said one secretary. "But I realize I’m an important part of this organization and am contributing to its growth.” “I just wasn’t kept busy enough at my former job,” said another. “I was afraid laziness would become a habit.” And a third secretary said she now has a boss “who respects my mind.” Only 9 per cent ol the panel listed boss trouble as the reason for job change. Those who stayed gave a variety of reasons from “enjoying the work” to “earning a good salary.” Incidentally, more placed pleasure in the work above the pay check in reasons tor staying. Save Yourself NEW YORK (UPI) — Still drying dishes with a towel? They'll be more sanitary and you’ll save time by letting them, drain dry after rinsing with very hot water.

1 Stassen Not Loved I By Parly Regulars By LYLE C. WILSON United Press International WASHINGTON (UPl)—Place a ’ ring on your calendar around this date: Nov. 3, 1959. That could be a big day in presidential politics. On that day Harold E. Stassen will be running again. Stassen has been running for something or other during most of the past 30 years since he was elected Dakota County, Minnesota, county attorney. Next Nov. 3, Stassen will be running for . mayor of Philadelphia. He has lowered his political sights considerably. Stassen was a three-time governor of Minnesota beginning in 1939 at age 32. He showed some, not much, early foot in two or three sprints for the Republican presidential nomination. In 1948, Stassen shifted his political base from Minnesota to Pennsylvania but was unable to generate there much enthusiasm for his political ambitions. Pennsylvania’s Republican regulars threw Stassen so hard last year that he bounced and ricocheted with the force of his fall. That was the occasion: when he bucked the party organization in a grab for Pennsylvania’s 1958 gubernatorial nomination. The regulars beat Stassen in the primary with Arthur T. McGonigle, a pretzel bender who was a political unknown but with considerable charm and vote-appeal. A Political Maverick McGonigle lost the governorship, however, to Democratic Mayor David L. Lawrence of Pittsburgh. The Republicans salvaged a U.S. Senate seat from their November, 1958, calamity. Rep. Hugh Scott won it. McGonigle’s defeat was a shocker to the Republican old guard. They couldn’t have done much worse and might have done better at the polls if they had accepted Stassen. Stassen is a political maverick, I however, a Modem Republican with a capital M. He plays rough and junks the rules when they seem to impede him. As, for example, in a pre-convention effort for the Republican presidential nomination, Stassen violated the tradition that an outsider does not —should not—invade the state of a favorite son in a raid for delegates. Stassen so invaded Ohio that time against Robert A. Taft and got himself some new i enemies thereby. Another time, Stassen stepped down from the Republican national convention rostrum where he just had delivered the keynote speech and became floor manager for Wendell Willkie’s campaign for the Republican presidential

THE DECATUR DAItT DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

nomination. The old guard was enraged at this breach of keynote speaker decorum and even more >i disturbed when Stassen’s man won out. Not Loved by All Willkie scarcely could qualify as a Republican at the time he kidnaped the party’s presidential nomination and Stassen, of course, was a party to the snatch. That was in 1940. In 1955-58 Stassen led ■ the movement to deprive Vice i President Richard M. Nixon of renominatlon. I - Those are some of the reasons Stassen is not loved by party regulars. He has made his peace with the Republican organization in Philadelphia, however, such as it is, which isn’t much. He won the mayoralty nomination with organization backing and practically without effort on May 19. He will run in November against Mayor Richardson Dilworth. There will be Republicans about who will hope Stassen gets licked. If Stassen wins he automatically will become a big figure in the Republican Party. He and Scott will be major powers in the state and in the national organization. Stassen surely will throw his weight against Vice President Nixon for the 1960 presidential nomination. His weight might, even, be decisive. More than the Philadelphia mayoralty may be up tor grabs next November. I ■ , Eggs Are Top Food Value Al Markets WASHINGTON (UPI) — Food shoppers Will find such*''popular picnic items as eggs, hams, and broiler - fryers leading the hot weather parade this weekend. Egs continue just about the best food value on the market right now, and supplies remain abundant. In pork, excellen t values will be found in hams, ; roasts, bacon and chops. Broilerfryers also favor the family budget, and markets are featuring ' these as an outstanding buy. Dairy products of all kinds are , also a leading value as the nation celebrates June Dairy Month. In fruits, there’s a wide range i to choose from. Among the lead- , ers are peaches, strawberries, '■ watermelons, and cantaloups. J Blueberries and plums are plenti- . ful, and oranges, lemons, and limes are also abundant. . Vegetable bins will feature ex- , cellent values in such items as cauliflower, asparagus, cabbage, j onions, squash, radishes, snap beans, cucumbers, corn, and field ' peas. Potatoes continue in good ' supply at most markets. ' Fish counters across the coun- ! try will feature shrimp fish sticks 1 and canned tuna. •

Says Learning New , Language Inspiring I < By HORTENSE MYERS United Press International CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. (UPI) —Want to be a “new” human being? Learn a new language, says Miss Clara Grosse - Schware of Bonn, Germany. The woman economist and interpreter was back in her home country today after a quick trip that made her voice and face as familiar to millions of Americans as that of her boss. Dr. Ludwig Erhard, vice chancellor and minister of economics for West Germany. But crowded into her busy schedule as platform-sharer and co-speaker with Erhard as he rushed from White House conferences, televised news shows ar.d acceptance of two honorary college degrees, was a brief interview of her own. Miss Grosse - Schware mostly was the voice of the West German statesman as she has been since 1953, but the blonde from Bonn, speaking for herself during a lull in ceremonies at Wabash College here, said she hopes there never will be a universal leaguage. Sees “Brains Tick” “I think it would be a pity,” she commented. “Every language has its own differences. You are a new human being when you learn a new language.” She attributed her own role as interpreter to the fact "I just loved English.” She had studied it at school in her native town of Castrop-Aruxel long before she studied it to become a translator. But profiency as a German - English translator is only part of the qualification for her job. She also is a graduate economist. “I do enjoy a good economics meeting,” she said. “Social occa- • sions are nice, but nothing like ' seeing how brains tick. “One of the most breath-taking assignments was accompanying i Dr. Erhard to the United States i last March when the recession had just reached the bottom of the : trough and translating meetings ■ with Saulnier and Hauge (Ameri- , economists Raymond J. Saul- . nier and Gabriel Hauge), Secre- ■ tairy Anderson of the Treasury I and other people of the administration. “It was breathtaking because > they were great economists batt- , ling the depression. One of the > attractions of my job is meeting 1 the same people all over the 1 world. I saw Mr. Shearer (Wabash College economics professor - Warren Shearer) here. I had met s him in Geneva and Paris. I was so surprised.”

' Uses Sl«nr Miss Groese-Schware is amused because she often gets more applause than Dr. Erhard since she is delivering the words her American or English audiences understand. “Some people have suggested that I just deliver his speeches, but I remind tham of Alice in Wonderland saying she had seen a cat without a grin, but never a grin without a cat. We couldn’t have a speech without the speaker.” The hard-working interpreter, who takes down in short-hand Dr. Erhard’s spoken German and reads his words back with his same inflectins, attempts to select words she feels are most familiar to the audience. “I use American slang, sometimes. I think it is expressive and to the point,” she said. Her favorite-story of a wrong choice of words concerns a long meeting in Bonn. “It had been going on for five hours. I was so tired I was mechanically translating. I came to the name of a Cologne banker described in German as most worthy of confidence. I called him, in English, a confidence man. Then it came back to me. I had read about a “confidence man” in Erie Stanley Gardner — and it wasn’t the phrase I wanted.

Worn-Out Blood I Vessels Replaced I By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPD— I You will understand why many 1 1 scientists expect human beings i l some day may live a few hundred 1 1 years when you study the work 1 1 of Dr. Michael E. De Bakey. I In operations on more than a I 1 . thousand persons he has replaced I vorn-out Hood vessels with blood j I . vessels made of snthetic or man- 1 1 made fabrics. With accumulated , I r experience, he now can do this ; I i in any part of the main heart ar- ; I ■ tery, the aorta, or any part of the | 1 I major arterial system. I . Furthermore, he is now apply- • ing this accumulated know-how to J . one of the most common killers .of people—the “cerebral accident” . or stroke. He still can’t replace j r the small blood vessels of the | . brain, true, but in about 40 per 11 cent of “strokes” the first block- » age is in arteries of the neck . and chest. And those he can ree place. , His pioneering repairs of those ( e arteries also have led to a dis- | _ covery that challenges the belief j r that brain cells can survive only | t minutes after their blood supply s has been interrupted. This adds j further substance to the dream of I unheard-of longevity for people. I

Six of his patients have had full brain function restored after the Hood supply had been partially blocked for four days. All this marvelous technique has been evolving for seven years at Baylor University, Houston,

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where De Bakey Is chairman of the department of surgery. The technique now is In use in medical centers throughout the world, including Russia where De Bakey introduced it last summer wtiiel lecturing aS a “cultural exchange” scientist I