Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 66, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 29, 1952 Page: 13 of 20
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Ms old business partner, Domo-
cratic Gov. Chester Bowles, now
ambassador to India. It ran until
the 1950 election. He then squeezed
through in a 1,100-vote victory to
fill the final two years of Baldwin's
term.
Purtell got Ms a 1
Harrington A Richardton
GUNS
Repeating, Bolt Action
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MONARK
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$tf°
Is to replace the late Democratic
Ben. Brien McMahon, who served
as chairman of the joint congres-
sional Committee on Atomic Ener-
gy before his death last summer.
Rivals in the fight to serve the
final four years of McMahon’s
term are U. 8. Rep. Abraham A.
Ribicoff (D), a two-termer in Con-
gres, and Prescott Bush, (R)i l
Because of its two Senate races
(Nebraska is the only other state
with two) and its listing as a
doubtful state, Connecticut has
been crisscrossed by top leaders of
both parties with an intensity out
Purtell got Ms appointment from
Republican Gov. John Lodge after
Congress adjourned. The new ap-
pointee has yet to sit in the Senate,
and may never do so unless he
beats Benton.
Purtell’s interim appointment
runs only until election day. His
seat will go to the winner of the
^"monark
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B For
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lihirnO's technique recently
brought from Bush, a tall, digm
fled financier of ST, the comment:
“The voters have had enough of
phony protestations of indepen-
dence, false pretenses and evasion
of the real issues.”
Benton, who tops around the
state in a helicopter as he did in
his uso campaign, has referred to
the two GOP nominees as the
''twtiedlodes candidate favored by
the manufacturers’ lobby” (Pur-
tell) and the “tweedledum candi-
date from wall Street** (Bush).
Purtell is a manufacturer. His
ra
Wedneadey, OeteOer 19, 190 THK D B N T O N B B C O B D • C H R O N 1 C L B
Senator Vs. Senator Race Grows Hotter In Connecticut
McCarthy comas back to Con-
. He has a two
, and slander suit
pending against Benton in their
feud over the Communist-in-gov-
ernment issue.
With the exception of Ribicoff,
a handsome 42-yoar-old lawyer, the
senatorial nominees have net
spared the hot word.
Ribicoff, member of the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs, has
acquired a reputation for political
independence. Much of the time,
Icon dispassionately,
criticism of his own
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of prortion to its eight electoral
votga.
President Truman camo twice
last week. Gen. Dwight D. Eisen-
hower, the GOP presidential nom
inee, came tweio this week. Gov.
Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic
nominee, came last dtenth.
Sen. McCarthy spoke earlier in
the campaign in Bridgeport. He
did not mention Benton, who lives
in nearby Fairfield.
Truman, also speaking in Bridge-
port, hotly upbraided state GOP
leaders who, be said, “to their
. — ——« shame, openly embraced” Mc-
The second race will decide who Carthy.
FADA
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NEW HAVEN, Conn. UB — Two
Senate fights, one involving a
bitter foe of Wisconsin Sen. Joseph
McCarthy, have turned little Con-
necticut into a Mg political battle-
ground.
Two men called “bill” are locked
In one contest—Democrat Sen.
William A. Benton, who wants Mc-
Carthy kicked out of the Senate,
and Republican Sen. William A.
Purtell.
They are running for the full
six-year term in a contest which
stands as a political oddity in the
country. Rarely does a senator
battle a senator for the same seat.
lir*
FLOOR MATS
*49. *10 .440
*41-*43 XOO
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (El—They said it
couldn’t be done. But a producer
has gotten a movie script out of
“From Here to Eternity,” the best-
selling book laden with sex, four-
letter words and slaps at the
Army.
Many Hollywood producers had
been interested in the James
Jones novel. But most despaired
of how to combine its elements
into a movie that would get the
combined blessing of the censors
and the Pentagon. Columbia took
a chance and bought the book. The
gamble apparently has paid off,
because the studio claims it has
an acceptable script which will be
done before the cameras in Janu-
ary.
The man who accomplished this
is Buddy Adler, a distinguished-
looking producer who is a reserve
Army officer himself—“So I know
what the Army would and would
not approve.”
The actual scripting was done by
Dan Taradash. Novelist Jones was
first brought out to whip up a
treatment for his book, but that
didn't work out. “Jones didn’t
seem to understand the censorship
problems we have in the movies,”
producer Adler explained.
“Of course the four-letter words
had to go,” he continued. “We try
to retain the same flavor by Sub-
stituting words that have the same
sort of feeling but are not offen-
sive to audiences.'*
Much of the sex remains, he
added, but in a form that will
pass the Breen Office, Hollywood's
self-censorship group. Adler re-
marked that one of the characters
will retain a relationship with a
lady of the evening, while another
character dallies with someone
else's wife.
“But the Breen Office stipulates
that sin must be punished,” he
said. “So the characters will suffer
for their transgressions.**
Some changes have been made
in anticipation of Army disapprov-
al, he remarked. The brutality of
a stockade beating of a prisoner
by a sergeant has been altered,
be said.
“Also, the character of the Army
captain is somewhat different,” be
said. "We show that he is a bad
officer and make no effort to
claim there aren't bad officers in
the Army. But there is a depart-
ment known as the Inspector gen-
eral's office, which can take over
any command and investigate in-
competent officers. The captain
will be dismissed from the service.
This was only suggested in the
book.”
Adler feels confident that thia
and other changes will meet the
approval of Army brass. He has
received tentative but not final
agreement from the authorities.
“I could make the picture with-
out Army approval,” he said, “but
it is cheaper and more realistic
to use actual locales, which the
Army would provide. Beisdes, I
don’t think it would be right to
make any picture in these times
which might reflect badly on the
armed forces.”
The producer takes off this week
to scout locations with director
. Fred Zinneman (“The Search,”
“High Noon”). So far, Montgom-
ery Clift is the only casting; he’ll
play Pruitt. Clift and other stars
have sought to appear in the film.
Among the others is Frank Sin-
atra, who requested a test as the
Italian GI. .■
Adler said that the theme of the
film will bo the same as in the
book—the life of the peacetime
soldier.
“We’ll show how the soldier be-
fore Pearl Harbor was almost
shunned by the other Americans,”
he said. "They dWto’t want Army
men around. Mow.the sitMatton has
changed, since every family in the
Army7l t^nk ft will remain that
fray during our lifetimes.’'
rove rm e "
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. Hairiest Fox Shot
PEHN, Ind. LB—Tales cf a
natodtookteg wild beast roaming
• L*W£TS£S
shot it to Na cMeton yard.
It turned out to ten grey
that, tor some unknown res
ted shed practically all Ma hair.
tweedledum jibe was that Benton
had embarked oo an “Uth-hour
program of smear by implications,
innuendos and accusations of guilt
by association, something which
be has piously protested against.”
What brought about the senator
vs. senator battle was the fact that
both Benton and Purtell got their
jobs in the first place through
appointment rather than election-
tbe S-year-old Benton in 194
when Republican Sen. Raymood E.
Baldwin resigned, and the 55-year-
old Purtell when Sen. McMahon
died. .
retort to toe twoedtodee and Be8Mli,a appointment came from RIMcoff-Bush contest.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 66, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 29, 1952, newspaper, October 29, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348801/m1/13/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.