The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 28, 1947, Page 8

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i a Pe ee ee ee miathesel: rom “pe ty — aren — Fux ' E ( SIX THE REY WEST CITIZEN THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1947 ABE USESIGAR B ARROW RE EN cnn - $a Po oay 7 i ee aoe pats — ——~—— -—-— woes 4 ue nee = See SS What it Means : ! Emigration From Europe _ st , By SIGRID ARNE i hy JASHINGTON.—(AP).—Thé worry over keeping Europe fed | : and at work thay partially solve itself through @ factor © in which the politicians haven't the ied gear ati millions | ; of Europeans want to leave for homes in other lanas. | (ko ‘call Ritiac chines ‘ell 2. se! : ery musically ambitious merican, as well as scores of = = That report was brought to Washington by Australia 's min- peuugihueblal labieed i heve|kciched|thetr scagons/tolcha wer we ae aah: at x a bk os ister of immigration, Arthur Calwell, after a quick swing ‘of Carnegie Hall.’ Among them are the world’s future artists cert grand during the eli- eas. eaaien rr fortis ! by through seven European countries to study that exact question. like Lily Pons and Rise Stevens, Harry James and Artur Rubin- mactic phases of Chopin’s eudary sephitticatid . bulkndlase ; th Winston Churchill has ‘pleaded with Britons to stick it out | . Mein, These current headliners too once looked to the Hall as ae 2 ry pPslealeth, aed expanded into shlvée ot sbpletib, th in the home-land, but Calwell says he discovered that 400,000 erie rieeitemes.. eitend Sey have nove reached wills thekr Dance.” both of which are I am very tense and nérvous be- ; A own recitals and their collective app Boris Morros’ m f 1 But I think fit Britons want to go to Australia. Another 200,000 want to come “Carnegie Hall,” the greatest concert ever filmed. In this series, eriormed hy De nahin, 2 S64 pool. types at AituS thaw $ wi pete: bia actoor ty eps Cane i these artists describe their glory road to Carnegie Hall.) stein in “Carnegie Hall.’ sits Ce dds i. caged | ave already resettled in Can-, mentalist_has in it one serious ? ce ada, : Your Horoscope (Second of a Series) fay sia knew. we Rivkiie Ws he . | ou Milli Movi 1 a best at 8:30. A composer can say, we But not only Britons are on | THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1947 by ARTUR RUBINSTEIN or deat feat like conepeeg Wiaee, ca the move. Calwell says millions |—This degree mises a useful : Till go to : land.” But aa Mi of other vnting ar ‘ Q Under a sim- ring the 56 years Carnegie Hall has | standing, it _instrumentalist is tied to an open- ber for see Seiicig ne canada plé exterior, theer is really a pro- b Duri 6 | m oars ve os = oy _ me en ing curtain. Nervousness, in some pu United State tin America, found mind, perhe een growing in stature and prestige until today it stands as way, helps this 8:30 feeling. thy ent Musktalla. . " lacking the gift of the citadel not of the best in music alone — there are many ; ee r ' They fear another war. They this trait may be easily o symphony halls around the globe with equal standards — but eleg Mctord the, esmbras’ia “Chm ; ha feel it impossible to rebuild in |>Y training. The aspirations will of the most mature and critical musical audiences in the , negie Hall,” the. United Artists kr Europe. ‘they want te protect 1De Well directed, the life well ais : Frag ger array ayer ’ burope et Bs P rounded and with the end passed world. 5 i ter their children from the horrors . ‘ edge that if my performance did ; °'in a state of comparative com- I made my debut in Carnegie —————__— not satiefy mb, © “revshe” ‘would a | they've seen. Many ¢xpect an- Hall in 1906, when I was 16, and .2 heavy obstacle to the mature tA bee other war within five years. [Perey Oe The continent is striped with | KY BABY population shifts, Sweden, hard j ile have played there frequently since. Each appeal bee highly ri negie Hall audience is and free artist in the best expres- sion of his axt. ing an audience from the stage, we interpreters may be in order. That mitigated the tension somewhat, though I real- ized the potential film audience was far greater numerically — if up for labor, has just signed | PHILADELPHIA.—Little Allan sense the spirit of the listeners, less seasoned musically — than any agreement to take workers from !Frederick Kaminsky, 3-months- equipped to hear, appraise and the acoustics of the hall, the quali« hall or combination of halls could 1 Italy and Hung: Some 200,000 ©ld, was in his carriage in front respond to innevations. ties of the piano we are playing, accommodate. My performance be- y tert Jews are determined to leave Eu- ,0f a shop when two trucks col- A few years ago I used Carnegie and, last but not least, our own fore the cameras, therefore, had : ci rope. Beginning in January Aus: ;lided. The spare tire flew off one | Hall as a testing ground for some- state of inspiration. But if we must teittesbd vigutheunes. | alia will take 50 Dutch farm-|and struck the front of the car- | thing I believe in firmly. I gave a plhy ons which are un- “Carnegie Hall” has a great o 4 ers a morith as long as they come. |riage, overturning it and pinning | eoncert there without a printed suited to the circumstances merely portunity. It has what is virtaally Mn Brasil fy taking ri em pars ag ol toa Labs andemeatiebolice rush: Program, announcing my numbers — because they have been announced the first chance to bring so much std is taking in selected Eu- | FB io.& Hocbital, but he from thi e. [had done it before in print, of what is our — music of the masters by so many ropeans to: build its economy. ;ed the baby to a hospital, bu | — in Paris, Madrid, Barcelona, shall I call it — sixth sense? great artists to millions of people bw | Several other Latin American didn't have a scratch, { Buenos Aires, Sydney and San I am convinced. that audiences who are relatively uninitiate in republics are half way throu Poe ON ee ee Francisco. But I had never done it all over the world — and I have musical appreciation. It can be the negotiations to take in’ Kure me of its best pene The man = i orks L veeioed to perform played all over except Tibet — en- Halen eeyyeecte weet ce o $V speci ills, * ‘with gumption to pull out is valu- this way only in cities where Ij, A hes 2 7 ith s 1 skills. Both Can- With gump' Pp y only tand best the s “ 4 da. and “Australia BRI eoU able. Besides, the nations taking | knew I would not be suspected of Aen ote ie aiabs Beshiy, ithe (emsatienal see) Ste cw thousands of the’ Poles who the immigrants are carefully seeking publicity. of the moment. This conviction Se cially peaebict are: Pp fought with the British, | —«; Screening them. | After long experience I have prompted me to appear without a portance of my part in the picture A ks SaaS | Europe was once the world’s discovered that 2 prearranged and planned program and to announce Be as cise the ether artans S Por 2 city es ea * ee aie ‘most important factory section. It printed program tends to become each composition from the stage. ® equally, a says i y a é ei 5 a Pe 4 114 trolla waite 3 build its 7,500,000 ‘shipped to all the world at the See eee Eas ema airs es fi er WE 2 Xe 8y into’! in th +t favorable profit that factory sec-| * Frpacens aa ; z Saori enna ee tas er ea Fs = people into 20,000,000 in the next = E k ' 3 ! i i ‘ “= twee qenerations because they ,tions seem to take from raw ma-| U.S. Girl Und Marddiies ravaged Warsaw University has|the university dining hall. But In the winter, I fight to keep! HELPBES$ TO SAVE WIFE “have no faith in the peaceful in- |tetial producers. : | Used r. n ergoes ards Ips been restored to permit holding Usually doesn’t bother. _warm, because it’s terribly cold.”|_ TROY, N. Y.—While her par- + tentions of the Japanese.” i When Europe cEiy teeseen ‘. of classes. The university, like |. He ary A aes : ts ; Miss Waterman says the Polish {tially pares husband, er ' The ssies want not only [oses part of its ability 4 2 T T h P 1 Ab A 5c SE Ro ee GnOUehicen. Gee e Tood Is ter-" | ERA AP eet ee ee cy iCharles Flaherty, sat in a rowboat sare: population, but a'balanced But it also loses part cf the press- o. leac oles OUt America Miss Waterman, lacks enough jibe," ‘The tablecloths look #Uthorities haven't yet tried to iC Hames RIMNENS, sit I 8 sow nant ety“ ‘onal eople ing need to buy food abroad. text-books and teaching materi-/as though they've never been censor anything she tells her pu- ing. Morcar population. They need people on 2 7 |Mrs. Margaret Flaherty, 40, who their farm and range land, and More Factories | By LARRY ALLEN als. ;washed. And waiters just dip dir- pils. And she talks much about} was swimming beside the boat, ™ they're putting emphasis on tak-| And in other parts of the world’ AP Newsfeatures : , She says she hasn't any par- ty dishes in cold water and slap American democracy and con-| drowned when she sank in 40 ine non-skilled workers. They factories are growing. There isn’t; \¥/ARSAW, Poland.—A lone American girl, pretty 21-year-old ticular system of teaching. Most tem back onto the table. __ ‘cepts of freedom, most of which feet of water. ry re looking to the day when, for a so-called raw material nation” Anne Waterman, who admits she “never had it so bad," is.4¢ her students seem to concer, |, Miss Waterman gets some aid are lacking in Poland. — ; example, India is richer and will in the United Nations which! staying another year in war-ruined Warsaw to teach Poles how |. de F ah pe mane from home to keep on living in; “his is far from the comforts | i ve be buying more Australian beef. hasn't voiced a desire for more to think and speak in the American way. rate upon iB Sa Warsaw, for 8,066 zlotys per oi home. But I came over here|Yout Grocer SELLS That Good j jal English, and so her classes are month, at the present prices, is to do something worthwhile. I'm |highlighted by talking back and J about enough for five good ‘staying another year. If I suc- forth. meals. ceed in teaching even twenty She lives in a tiny, white-plas- | Asked what she does with her ,Poles how to speak English and time when she isn’t teaching, understand America, I'll have Auswwalian range is going to factories to piece out farm pro- waste for Yack of market. duction, Brazil wants immigrant colon-- Those factories are growing, ies to build up a more. varied particularly in Australia, cul:ure and is glad to get the and Bra She's the youngest—and only American—teacher at War- saw university where she in-» a 'S>/struets in English. She does that i India | for one hour, at eight p.m., every Work. Today, after nearly a year] As they grow, Europe's | Monday, in Warsaw, which is far from a tered room in the woman's dorm- STAR * BRAND: macusay COFFEE iceeneaeiliaeiiod know-how” of the «European old markets shrink. For example, Wednesday and Pleasant place in which to live,!itory near the university with a|Miss Waterman said she plays |done something worthwhile,” the —Try A Yound Today—— farmer and the few European’ Australia is now exporting many Friday. ishe has a strained and worried |hefty, 24-year-old Polish room- tennis, reads, and travels about young teacher says a WEES ore technicians they are taking. small consumers’ articles—things , Her class is look. hate. ‘the city with some of her young | = ~~ oe ame ° va i Best People Involved ‘as big as radios—and will shortly! composed of Miss Waterman seys other The wall decorations are prin- 'Polish students. But what does it mean for turn out its own autos. | se teach id fes Ww cipally Chri a y o{ “In the s r I eat heavil z ‘ 5 S { pupils whose: teachers and professors at War- (cipally Christmas and greeting n the summer eat heavily. t =e ; # The spose pentcane? Ven ages range saw University often ignore ‘cards Miss Waterman received AC un an orm ; The possible answers‘ kick up ington economists are not partic-| from 16 to 60,: her. She doesn’t know whether {from home. There are two small \ ‘ALL METAL ere in off-the-record talks of uarly worried. They say there economists ‘who don't want to be will be a creaking, complaining | quoted, Here are some of, their interim, but the result is likely; conjectures: to be a more nearly balanced liv- Europe is losing, and will lose ,ing scale all over the world. OUIDJA TAKES UP ART it’s because of jealousy or they don't like what she teaches her Polish studnts. bombed-out, beds in the room covered with U. S. Army blankets. Because of high prices, she and her room-| fire- ‘mate do much eating out of can and make their own beverages | Through the U.S. Embassy com- missary, Miss Waterman is priv- ileged to buy limited quantities o} American canned foods. The average is 23 years old. Sometimes, she ae has as many as; Enough of emma BOstudents. meee x }Anne Waterman Other times,’ | | WORK Is Our PLEASURE, and We Love It— WETHER IT’S SMALL or LARGE {STRETCHING your money is our! motto. Rich or poor, we guaran-| tee to make it go further—whether it is for YOUR CAR or YOUR STOMACH. | She gets her room rent free. 7 7 av or Nie HeRPoMsH Ministry (of Education| tenes oe eon Nene few! 2000) lbtysiperrmonti JANE d SHINE s $80.00, at the official rate 4 and Of exchange. She is permitted to 1502 BERTHA STREET Have oné free meal per day in wa WNINGS When OPEN—It’s A Distinctive Awning t When CLOSED—It’s A Perfect Storm Shutter } | CONSTRUCTED OF HEAVY GALVANIZED SHEET METAL GUARANTEED WILL NOT RUST OR ROT Finished in Gleaming Enamel—Your Choice of Colors, Monogram or Design Simple to Operate - FHA Terms - Model on Demonstration | fg Installed 614 GREENE ST. | 5) LEE BROS, °' —— ! the figure drops to 10. | Miss Waterman says it’s been a tough battle to put across her “program” in Soviet-back- ‘led Poland where there’s much | government-inspired anti-Am- erican feeling nowadays. But even if her university class oc- | casionally dwindles, she always has a big list of persons who want private lessons. And many specifically request to learn what American slang ex- | pressions mi j Miss Wateman is the - starry- eyed, blonde, baby-faced daugh- ter of Dr. Alan T. Waterman, of | Washington, D. C., a scientific ex-'| g pert for the Navy department. While in Washington,~<she said, a woman attached to the Polish |embassy met her and told her of the great need for teachers in Warsaw. “She gave me a glorified pic- ture but warned me to expect} nothing in the way of comfort— | only what war left,” said Miss Waterman. H “But I had always been a par- | ty girl and I wanted to show my | AW Newsfeatures 4¢[)SYCHO . AUTOMATIC” has been left by the Marian Spore Bush, whose pic- tures were described by one critic as “dreaming on canvas,” ” and by another as the product of a “primitive mystic’. Now publication of Mrs. Bush's book, “They.” which was written just before she died in 1946, gives her own explanation: her painting was guided by “other-world people,” whom she called “They”. She said, “They move my hand up and down and across and side- ways in all directions . . . I have no idea what will be the out- art oe late { | i i} H : VET cuts —— = Oshes glassware gleam without wiping / After washing, just rinse dishes. Even glassware dries sparkling clear without time-wasting wip- SCHOOL DAYS IN PO- LAND... Teacher Anne Waterman and one of her students. jfamily that I could do something | HOTEL { ing! Vel leaves no soap scum or worthwhile. I sat out the whole | | streaky film to polish away. Pots | war, studying - Vassar, with the 1 LEAMINGTOR and pans get clean with far less bees ittle U. S. O. and | scrubbing because Vel removes i MIAMI, FLORIDA | grease faster, more completely | “I went to the Polish embassy | and they agreed to send me to} Poland. That is, to accept me as | a teacher, for I paid my own way | over here, I left the United States, in Nov., 1946, and ar-, rived here on Thanksgiving day lcf that year.” | | When she arrived in Poland | |Miss Waterman appeared gay, ! {happy and anxious to start her | than soap. Leaves no dishpan ring to scrub out! Vel cleans dishes cleaner than soap and saves up to half your dishwash- ing time! Milder to Hands than Soap Actual skin tests made by an inde- pendent laboratory (name furnished on request) prove that Vel is milder to hands than any other leading product made for washing dishes and tine fabrics. x%Low Summer Rates Air-Conditioned Dining Room and Cocktail Lounge %100 Rooms and 100 Baths— Air-Cooled * Radio in Every Room *Parking Lot Adjoining Stockings stay sheerer- looking, lovelier ! Vel leaves no soap scum or color-clouding film in stockings or other washables. That's why Vel beats even finest soap flakes at keeping stockings sheerer-looking, lovelier longer! Vel is easier than fin- est soap flakes or floating soaps on many delicate washable colors. % Opposite Greyhound and Trailway Bus Station %Se Habla Espanol Lost your eppetitet Feet drag- ty? When dve to “VEL is the trade-mark of the Colgate- Palmolive-Peet Co. Tonle can help you line @ bill ; $i. hn pa GARDNER'S PHARMAC | 1114 Division St.. Cor. Varela | Phone 177 i STREET: ot Grd AVENUE 4EART OF -0¢ On COMGATE

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