The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1956 Page: 4 of 6
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MCE FOUR
THE DENISON PRESS, DENISON, TEXAS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1956
Telecasts, broadcasts
by Humble Co. games
played Oct. 13,1956
A live telecast of the Texas
Oklahoma football game over a
network of 24 TV stations will
highlight The Humble Co.’s cover-
age of Southwest Conference
football games Saturday. The
game will also be broadcast along
with six other games being played
by Southwest Conference teams.
The Texas-Oklahoma telecast
will be described by Kern Tips
and Alec Chesser. TV time will
be 1:45 p.mj (CST) over WBA1’-
TV, Ft. Worth and WFAA-TV,
Dallas, and other Texas stations.
The Texas-Oklahoma game will
be broadcast by Eddie Hill and
Coit Butler. Radio time will be
1:50 p.m. (CST) over WFAA-
WBAP, Dallas, Fort Worth-570
and other Texas stations.
SMU plays Duke at Durham, N.
C. Jerry Doggett and Mike Mist-
ovich will be there to describe
the action and color beginning at
12:50 p.m. (CST) over KRLD,
Dallas-1080, and other Texas sta-
tions.
Rice plays Florida in Gaines-
ville, Fla. Ves Box and Jim Wig-
gins will be there to broadcast
the game beginning at 1:20 p.m.
(CST) over KGKO, Dallas-1480,
KXOL, Fort Worth-1360, and
other Texas stations.
The TCU-Alabama game will be
broadcast from Tuscaloosa, Ala.,
by Bob Walker and Stan McKen-
*ie. Radio time will be 1:50 p.m
(CST) over WFAA-W BAP-820,
Dallas, Fort Worth-820, and other
Texas stations.
The Arkansas-Baylor game will
he broadcast from Fayetteville,
Ark., by Dave Russell and Dave
Smith. Radio time will be 1:50
p.m. (CST) over WACO, Waco-
1460; KFJZ, Fort Worth-1270;
WRR, Dallas-1310, KRRV, Sher-
man-910 and other Texas stations.
Texas AA-M plays Houston in
Houston. Eddie Barker and Carl
be represented bp peeteri end ley-
men.
- > _ -
Mann will describe the action and
color beginning at 7:50 p.m. (CS
T) over KFJZ, Fort Worth-1270
WRR, Dallas-1310; KRRV, Sher-
man-910 and other Texas stations.
Ministers-Laymen
I from 20 counties
to meet Sherman
SHERMAN —Six hundred lay
delegates and ministers from
Methodist churches in a 20-coun-
ty area are expected in Sherman
for a one-day called session of
Noith Texas Conference to be
held at the First Methodist Church
here Oct. 19.
Bishop William C. Martin, pre-
siding officer, has called the con-
ference to consider the current
j four-year program of the general
'church and the North Texas
group. Emphasis will be placed
particularly on the local church
and higher educational institu-
tions.
Bishop Marvin Franklin of
Jackson, Miss., will speak at 11
a. m. Bishop Martin will speak at
the closing service at 7:30 p.m.
This service will be followed by
a reception honoring Bishop Mar-
tin dud Mrs. Martin and members
of the Advisory Council.
The 47 churches in Sherntan-
McKlnney District will be hosts
for the meeting which the Rev.
Philip W. Walker, district super-
intendent, has called “one of the
great occasions of our church.”
There are 130,685 Methodists
in the conference area, 11,231 of
these in Sherman-McKinney Dis-
trict which includes all of Gray-
son and Collin Counties. Other
counties in the conference are
Denton, Hunt, Cooke, Wichita,
Dallas, Fannin, Lamar, Red Riv-
er, Hopkins, Kaufman, Rockwall,
Archer, Wise, Montague, Delta
Franklin, Jack and Clay.
Waples Memorial, Trinity and
Humble highlights
in review on TV
S.W. conference 11s
Football action from three
games played by Southwest Con-
ference teams will highlight The
Humble Company’s Texas in Re-
view TV program, next week..
Kern Tips will describe the
most interesting football plays
which will be taken from the
Texas-Oklahoma, Texas A&M-
Houston, and Arkansas-Baylor
games.
Also to be featured will he
“Come and Take It” Day as cele-
brated at Gonzales, Texas. This
is a re-enactment of the challenge
offered when a cannon was de-
manded from the city.
In addition, the colorful Atas-
cosa County Centennial celebra-
tion will be shown.
Texas in Review can be seen
Monday (October 15) over
KRLD-TV, Dallas, 10 p.m. and
other Texas stations.
Sig
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igma Delta Chi
awards honors at
Dallas meet Friday
Honors were distributed to a
Texas editor and a young lady
student at the annual meeting of
the Sigma Delta t hi of Dallas
Friday night ot last week.
The special meeting is always
on Friday night before opening
of the Texas State Fair Saturday,
the latter being a special day for
honoring members of the Fourth
Estate. Editors and their wives
are expected to attend the meet
which is featured by a reception
followed by a banquet and danc-
ing and a formal program. The
piogram always presents special
honors to editors, one editor be-
ing -vhosYw each year by a select-
ed committee making a close
Study of editors who have done
some special piece of community
work. The award went this year
to Ed M. Pooley, editor of the
El Paso Herald Post.
In addition to this award, the
committee awarded special hon-
ors to Miss Ethel Solomon, a stu-
dent in journalism and taking
work at Texas State College for
Women at Denton. The following
report of the meeting was printed
in the Dallas Times-Herald of Sat-
urday.
An El Paso newspaper editor
with a record of 35 years of
journalistic achievement has been
named Newspaperman of the
Year in Texas by the Dallas chap-
ter of Sigma Delta Chi.
Ed M. Pooley, 58, editor of the
El Paso Herald-Post, received the
title and a plaque Friday night
at the sixth annual Newspaper-
man ot the Year Party, given by
the national journalism fraternity
in the Grand Ballroom in the
Statler Hilton Hotel.
A special award, a two-year,
$200 a year scholarship, went to
Ethel Solomon, senior journalism
student at Texas State College
for Women in Denton.
B. C. Jefferson, editor and
chief editoiial writer of The
Times Herald, presented the
Newspaper of the Y ear award. He
said Editor Pooley was chosen be-
cause of his long and deserving
record in the field of journalism.
"We always try to honor a
man who richly deserves it, and
has not been honored by other
press groups,” Mr. Jefferson said.
One recent campaign initiated
by Editor Pooley has been against
“radar traps” as used by the
State Highway Patrol. He believes
them to be illegal, and his news-
paper gives daily locations of
radar traps in the El Paso area.
Other campaigns instigated by
the editor have resulted in a new-
public library for El Paso and the
first, picture in the White House
of Benito Jaurez, one of Mex-
ico’s great heroes.
A native of Milton, Fla., Editor
A Proclamation
WHEREAS Dwight D. Eisenhower has dedicated him-
self to serve our Nation in whatever capacity the United
States government and the peoples of the land ask of him
in war and peace;
WHEREAS this great soldier and statesman, now serv-
ing as President of these United States will celebrate his
birthday on Sunday, October 14;
WHEREAS the men, women and children of our state
may want to convey birthday greetings to the President
and express their appreciation of his dedication to our
Nation and for the example he has set of devotion for God,
family, and his fellow man;
Now, therefore, I, Harry Glidden, Mayor of the City
of Denison do hereby proclaim Saturday, October 13, as
Ike Day so that birthday celebrations may be observed
throughout the city.
I also invite my fellow citizens to display the flag
of the United States on Ike Day and to join together in
paying a warm birthday tribute to a great and beloved
American, by cooperating in local observances of the day.
In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and
caused the seal of the City of Denison 10 be affixed.
Done at the City of Denison this 8th day
of October in the year of our Lord nineteen
hundred and fifty-six, and of the Independ-
ence of the United States of America the
one hundred and eightieth.
(SEAL) /s/ Harry Glidden
Mayor of Denison
unto? Ss*y A No*. Their drat
«t*re back in the year 1901,
which operated for more than 20
years, was located in the building
recently wrecked to make a home
for the firm of Lilley-Ayres.
Now,, after being connected
with a local car dealer as parts
man, the scion of the founder of
Seay & Noe, Bob Noe, has decid-
ed that he likes the smell of drugs
and is more at home in that line.
Suiting his desires to action, Bob
this week started in as a clerk in
the Kingston Drug store, u drug
business established hack even be-
fore Seay & Noe went into bus-
iness.
The Noe family is one of the
earliest of Denison’s families and
their life has been identified with
the city’s interests in all these
years.
"1 am glad to be back in the
activities of a drug store and
know my way around in that line
and I cordially invite friends to
come in and see me. We are just
entering another of the famous
“One Cent Sales” which are fea-
tures of the Uexall stores and
there are so many good buys I
want friends of the store to take
advantage of them," declared Mr.
Noe.
Pooley came to Texas during
World War I and was an officer
in the Air Corps. He stayed in
Texas after the war, and got his
first newspaper job in Texas on
the Scripps - Howard Houston
Press.
By 1930 he was city editor of
the Press, and in 1931 he was
made managing editor. In 1937
he was transferred to his pres-
ent position in El Paso.
Miss Solomon, the other award
winner, was graduated from high
school at Enid, Okla., and has
worked summers on the Texar-
kana Gazette.
Sigma Delta Chi init'ated four
new members Frida" night in-
cluding Thomas H. Thompson,
editor of the Amarillo Globe-
Times; Alex L. Acheson III, as-
sistant editor of the employee
publication of Lone Star Gas Co.;
Jere Louis Cox, Dallas staff writ-
er for United Press, and James
H. Gibbs, assistant news director
of WFAA-TV.
Sup’t. Goodgion
and W. E. Winter
on forum at TASB
sody in BJu*" was gives its prem-
iere. The Feb. 12 concert «u
titled “An Experiment in Modern
Music” and also included the
first performance of Ferde
Grofe’s “Grand Canyon” Suite.
For the same occasion Victor Her-
bert composed a suite of seren-
ades. Walter Hendl, conductor of
the Dallas Symphony would be
piano soloist for “Rhapsody in
Blue.” The proposed concert
would also be in form of a mem-
orial to Gershwin on the 20th
year after his death in 1937.
The world’s most innovational
accoustical shell is being develop-
ed by the Dallas Symphony for
I
tor Hendl. The thell is be If de-
signed bp Peter Wolf fot the
1956-57 season.
“We are experimenting with
the idea of translucent plastic for
the ceiling pieces,” Hendl said.
“The side pieces would be of
plastic and plywood, mounted as
panels which could be easily
stacked.
its return to State Fair Auditor- 'are now collectors’ items.
The first issue of Christmas
Seals sold to raise funds to fight
tuberculosis in 1907 was quickly
bought up by an enthusiastic pub-
lic. A second edition had to be
printed to fill the demand. Both
Denison School Superintendent
H. W. Goodgion and W. E. Win-
ter, member of the Denison
School Board, will go to Austin
this week end to participate in
the 10th annual meeting of the
Texas Association of School
Boards, according to announce-
ment fiom Superintendent Good-
gion's office.
The two Denison represent-
atives will take part in discussion
groups on a school problem for-
um represented by leading Texas
educators and lay citizens. Super-
intendent Goodgion will be a re-
source person on a discussion of
School and Community and Win-
ter is to be a resource person on
School Finance.
The meetings will be held in
the Driskill Hotel in Austin Sun-
jday afternoon and Monday, Oct-
ober 14 and 15, and speakers on
pertinent problems at the meet-
ing will include: J. Lester Bu-
ford, past president, National
School Boards Association and
I superintendent Mc-urt Vernon,
[Illinois; Taylor T. Hicks, pres-
| ident National School Board As-
sociation and Board President at
Pre.cott, Arizona; J. W. Edgar,
State Commissioner of Education,
Texas Education Agency; E. W.
Jackson, Commissioner of Educa-
tion, Texas Education Agency
and H. W. Glosserman, president,
Texas Association of School
Boards.
Discussion groups will be held
on such topics as school finance,
integration, school and commun-
ity, a modern program, staffing
and schools, school housing, and
written policies.
A special feature of the meet-
ing will be the election of of-
ficers for the Texas Association
of School Boards for 1956 and
1957.
A joint banquet with the Tex-
jas Association of School Admin-
J istrators will be a special feature
of the meeting and there will be
a luncheon session at which time
j an address on the Economic Out-
look. for Education, will be given.
T
FREE
1 Stainless Steel Steak Knife
with each
Gallon of No. 999 Climatized
Primer
1 coat of this primer and
1 coat of No. 480 Finish Coat
Equals a 3 Coat Job
NOW IS THE TIME TO PAINT THE EXTERIOR
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THE LINGO-LEEPER CO.
210 South Austin
Rhon* HO«.1921
Drug business holds
family of Noe in its
fascinating grip
Drug stores have their fascin-
ating attachment to the family
of R. M. Noe. The father R. M.,
was in the drug business here
back at the turn of the century,
| being in partnership with E. L.
(Seay, the firm operating by the
Symphony Orchestra
Weekly Newsletter
•---------0
A large increase in season ticket
orders for the Dallas Symphony
Orchestra has been reported by
Miss Nan Cockrell, business man-
ager. The Symphony which has
returned to State Fair Auditor-
ium will open its season Novem-
ber 12 for a series of sixteen con-
certs.
The total of orders as of Oct.
1 is already larger than for the
entire season last year, Miss Cock-
rell said.
The final count when the sea-
son opens next month, promises
to run twice more than last year.
Season tickets giving admission
to all sixteen concerts are offer-
ed at a sizable reduction under
the cost of tickets purchased in-
dividually. Season tickets range
from $9 to a $55 top.
Town and Coun'ry Magazine
will cover the Dallas Symphony
Ball and will send society editor
and photography editor, Jerome
Zerbe for the Oct. 19 party in
the Adolphus Hotel, ball chair-
man, Mrs. Ralph Howell announc-
ed. Hosts for the annual party
will be the Dallas Symphony
Orchestra League and symphony
officers and directors. Joe Reich-
man and his orchestra will play.
Paul Whiteman, the “symphon-
ic-jazz” maestro, has made known
his availability to the Dallas Sym- I
phony Orchestra for a special
concert this season. The program j
under discussion would be a re- ;
peat of the historic occasion in j
Aeolian Hall, New York in 1921 I
when George Gershwin’s “Rhap-
JavTfo«»m**
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Anderson, LeRoy M., Sr. The Denison Press (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 17, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1956, newspaper, October 12, 1956; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth738456/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.