I ° * a'...4 a. *.' 2. a. 4. ~ ar 2. s. . .t4 S. Q.J V.Iy Asp/.,.w-. J4 ".:: w Llti_ .".Yi u:r >. 4,. 1 4 1 '- aiA.f 111tLLY.rl"~lYL~"1aPc. n- . ..._ ~l a...\ . i. ,,:;a..C A~i.. - rAr 1%A Q. ENERGY, AGILITY REQUIRED: Disc Jockey Show Keeps MacDonald in renzy , "V . By JOHN DAVIES Disc Jockey Ken MacDonald finds that managing his two- hour, six-night-a-week program takes more energy and agility than running the Marathon in the mud. He is kept in a frenzy announc- ing the numbers, reading com- mercials, answering and writing down telephone requests, curing up the records, racing down a long hall to get them from the disc library and keeping a watch- ful eye on the volume meter. * * * KEN'S THRONE is a swivel chair which faces a complex mass of meters and dials and is flanked by two large turntables. Three telephone lines are also trunked into the control him. panel in front of1 MacDonald thinks riding the records is an over-glamorized, underpaid profession but he en- joys his work because of the in- teresting contacts he makes. lie has a regular clientele of record requesters, and prides himself on recognizing their voices al- though he admits he wouldn't know therm by sight. Many of MacDonald's unseen friends have been made in the West Quadrangle which relays the FM program over local wired-rad- io stations. THE WIREY announcer, who looks a little like Spike Jones, thinks his show is almost as near ta a town get-together as a record request show. Many listeners call up and ask for requests in the name of their guests to impress them as well as because they want to hear the number, he says. Ken will tell you that most of his-listeners are normal, courte- ous citizens, but he has had his share of scrapes with eccen- ties. One was a rural woman who seemed to be losing calves from her farm. She demanded either a classified ad or space on a news- program to advertise a reward for the animal which she said had been stolen twice in the past six months-in a jeep. * * * CERTAIN TEEN-AGED baby sitters are so fond of Ken's show that they have found a way to listen to him even when working in home that don't have FM re- ceivers. They phone in their requests to Ken and then wait for a friend who has an FM receiver to call them up and hold the3 telephone earpiece next to the amplifier so they can hear their request. Once MacDonald inadvertantly spoiled a surprise a listener plan- ned for his guests. The listener sneaked out of his living room to phone in a request for the guests who were listening to the program at the time. AS FATE would have it, the MacDonald was between numbers when the listener's call registered on the board before him and his microphone was open. The result was that the guests in the living room heard the request in their name and gave him the horse laugh when he came back into the room. Occasionally people give the Doolittle Survivor Returns to Japan SALEM, Ore.--(T)--A survivor of the Doolittle raid is en route back to Japan to become a mis- sionary to that country. Jacob Deshazer, 35, bombardier in the famed Doolittle raid of April, 1942 will sail from San Francisco next Tuesday with his wife and year-old son. They will be missionaries of the Free Meth- odist Church in Japan. Deshazer came soack from 34 months in solitary confinement at a Japanese prison camp determ- ined to "do something to help those people." As soon as the war's end liberated him, he began studying for the ministry. acif ic Isles Gain Fame During BATAVIA, Java-P)-The most backward and destitute islands in the Pacific today are the ones that gained the greatest wartime fame -the Solomons. This was the report of Capt. Ir- ving Johnson, American skipper of the Yacht "Yankee II," after he had finished the' most complete survey of Pacific islands that has been made since the war. THE SPRINGFIELD, Mass., author and yachtsman arrived in the East Indies after sailing for almost a year through the Pacific and making 85 stops, most of them at remote islands. "Shipping in the British and Australian Solomons is almost at a standstill," Johnson said. "Copra is not getting out and the coconut plantations are de- teriorating rapidly. Many na- tives are going hungry." There are few reminders that the South Pacific was one of the world's great battlefields, or that places like Tulagi, Bougainville, "Iron Bottom Bay," "The Slot" and Savo Island fill monumental places in the history of World War IT. "AT GUAIALCANAL the piers and warehouses built during the war are rotting and falling apart," t'; said. "Nothing will be left of them in another year. "Sailing through the Solo- nions we spotted a few hulks of Japanese and American land- ing craft on the beaches, but that was about all." Jungles have crept over most of the airfields, although some sections of Henderson Field on Guadalcanal remain cleared. r. THE SITES of a few former military bases are marked by the rusted remains of trucks and war machinery stretched out for miles in neat rows. Firearms and am- munition, still usable in water- proof packing, were found by Johnson's party on one isolated atoll. The "Yanks" have a place in native legends, but even those are becoming vague. To- day even the bodies of Ameri- can servicemen have been re- moved from South Pacific cem- eteries. The "Yankee II," a 96-foot Bri- gantine with auxiliary engines, sailed with a crew of 21 from Gloucester, Mass., in November 1947. Johnson, on his fourth world cruise in a sailing craft,ex- pects to circle the globe and. be back in his home port in June next year. He left the East Indies en route to Africa. Christmas shoppers looking for something novel in the way of ifts may find the very thing they want in the annual display of Chinese items at International Center. IC headcluariteis Porehases the merchandise from the United Ser- vice to China. Part of the profits received from the sale are return- ed to the USC and part is donated to the Emergency Fund for For- eign Students. Last year $300 was turned over to the Fund. ROBERT K INGER, assistant counselor to Foreign students pointed out that the Center is one of the largest buyers for USC Display of Novel Chinese Gifts eAd to Yule Shoppers i-S NIGHT S ggeszons galore - For the gal you adore! merchandise, investing $1,000 each year. Some of the items on sale are Chinese Christmas cards, play- ing cards, stationery, Chinese tea and a recipe book of auth- entic cantonese dishes. The various flavors of Chinesj tea are being sampled at the week- ly Thursday teas at the Center. DELICATE reproductions o i Chinese paintings are embossed on the Christmas cards and gifi wrapping paper. Articles will be sold at the Cen- ter from 8:30 a.m.-noon and I p.rn.-5 p.m. Q BATH TOWEL SETS Q TEA TOWELS QIBATH MAT SET Q TABLE CLOTHS QiBLANKETS QICOLORED SHEET SETS Q HANDKERCHIEFS QlEMBROIDERED PILLOW CASES QlCOCKTAIL NAPKINS LITEA NAPKINS Q SILK SCARFS QIPLACE MAT SETS QITHROW RUGS p GUEST TOWELS L SHOWER AND WINDOW CURTAIN SETS GAGE LINEN SHOP DISC JOCKEY-Ken MacDonald finds that running a two-hour record request program six nights a week keeps him busy answer- ing the three telephone lines that trunk into the control panel. When off the phone, he amuses hiiselif by dashing down the hall to get the records, keeping a wat-hfiul eye on the volume dial, writing down the requests that are phoned in and reading coi- mercials. * * * -is busy announcer a little trouble, ;work for the day. A show featur- but not often. One listener call- ing new records and a quizz pro- ed up and made a request for- grain are among the other labors less talking. of MacDonald's day, besides mis- The disc-jockey program isn't cellaneous assignments, ,such as by any means Ken's only radio station breaks. Officals Say Total Presidential Vote Second Hioheston Record / \v- ac~ Come in to' see our - French imported Perfumes and Colognes $3.50 up Gorgeous lacy Lingerie $4.50 up Jewelry and Compacts $1.25 up Sweaters and Blouses $4.50 up Also a wide selection of BAGS, GLOVES, HOSE, SCARVES, and B I LLFOLDS. WASHINGTON-(AP)-The total vote for President on Nov. 2, with all figures official except Connect- icut's, was 48,680,009, second high- est on record. But the total number of ballot: cast was 49.363,391 or 683382 higher than the presidential total. This is explained by the fact that 16 states showed higher votes for state and local candidates than for the office of president.j * * THIS WAS one of the many striking features of the 1948 elec- tion which President Truman won with an electoral vote of 304 in 28 states against 189 for Gov. Thom- as E. Dewey in 16, and 38 for Gov. J. Strom Thurmond, States Rights candidate, in four. 'l ae Vr sidexit polled a total lof 24.11,04.8; Dewey 21,969,- 625; Thurmond 1,169,312; Henry A. Wallace, Progressive, 1,156,- 856: Norman Thomas, Socialist, 1:3i,0:8; Clatde A. Watson, Pro- hibitioti, 10.3,343: Edward A. Teichert, Socialist-Labor 27,921; Farrell Dobbs, Socialist Work- ers, 13,007, and the rest scatter- ed. A1I purchases gaily gift-wrapped free of charge. 11 Nickels Arcade 302 SOUTH STATE Phone 4727 S.anta o e ing u3 out now We've persuaded ol' Kris Kringle to give us a helping hand A cf for the next couple of weeks. And he brought his whole +, 7 sed-load of Christmas gifts with him-cosmetics, " toysrt camera supplies, sinoking needs, candies. Come in today and let Kris help you select your Christmas gifts atCak n -lth rs "ass RARITY wo" r ;. r " a b " ., . ' ...- . °- , r ti . Y_ , 's .. r = ,,._ , r 'R'ti. 12 1 . v . s " ., . _J . "y ~ 16i. aka.-/°+ ..'n.n e"+w.s ...p._., ' '1 1 ti SLIGHTLY IN THE AIR OVER WHAT TO GIVE HER? .., ~r>~r4 // N if yo LAN / / / / a-_ L U I. U D at / / / CAjte~o r (0"'TPmPCi / r-...w/