The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 89, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1965 Page: 2 of 8
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PAt>£ fWO—THE FAIRFIELD RECORDER, FAIRFIELD, FREESTONE COUNTY, TEXAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1H5
THE FAIRFIELD RECORDER
THK ( 111 NTl PAI'KH—ESTABLISHED IS7I.
l,rrr ihr liiml lllftbnaya of T*im
Job LEE KIRGAN, JH, P ■' ’ r Editor
filtered a. h.nil claxx m ill matter at 'I"' office at Fairfield. I •*“*
Under A' t of Muroh 6. lH7f
Per Si ng !• • '• i1> .................... ..........................*
«l na« IIIPTION It %TK»
One Ye.a. FrMitsnt ami )olalM count m ......................^
Hi M l • Frees tom ind Joining ...............** '5
One Year, outside Freestone and Joining counties ................It.50
■Is Months, outside Freestone and Joining counties ..............™
No 8uba< riptlons Will lie Accepted for i Period of Less Thun Six Months
i pon the eharael III I reputation
any pers n. firm or corporation which may occur In the eolumna of rite
Fairfield Recorder will be corrected gladly upon being brought to the
Published Kach Thursday at Fairfield. Texas. Freeaitorie County
attention of tlte puhllalier
j . - , .1 irda 1 »nu * word
Privilege of omitting all poetry reserved by this paper All news Items
or notices sent in lor t .Plication must he signed by sender___
Looking Ahead
..by Of. Beorg* S. Isssoa
HtSSIDINT—NATIONAL
■PUCATION ritOSAAU
lurxy. AiMssas
t.*-*’1 MEDITATION
from
The World's Most Widely Used
Devotional Guide
© TMI UPPER ROOM. NMHVIUL UNNtSlU
READ LUKE 10:25-37
“Thou shatt love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy
strength, and with all thy mind;
and thy neighbor as theyself.”
(Luke 10:27.)
THE REDS ACTIVATE
A CAMPUS
A great deal of analytical editor-1
ial comment around the country con-]
tinues to discuss the so-called "free
speech" struggle on the Berkeley
campus of the University of Calif-
ornia A coalition of student organi-
zations known as the Free Speech
Movement, topped off a series of agi- j
tations which had continued for many,
weeks with an all-night sit-in strike]
in mid-December in which 800 per-j
<uns, including many non-students
and professional agitators, were car-1
red limply to jail. Indications are,
that the Reds would like to export)
similar unrest to other large cam- j
puses. j
In Arkansas, some debate on free-!
dom of speech and the uses of pro-1
pagandu recently followed refusal ^
of University of Arkansas authorities |
to provide facilities for a Bulgarian!
Communist speaker. A Methodist re-1
ligious center offered facilities, the i
-peech was delivered, and the host
minister was censured by some and
lionized by others At Berkeley, tra-
ditionally an open campus, turmoil
followed university efforts to restrict |
outside radicals and Communists
adjusted to the soils and climate ^11 as student activity in outside
where thov are Native grasses are «*™P* The difference in Fayette-
adequate to protect soil from ero- vnle and Berkeley- I Unity of Reds
m the Bay area’
seems to go a long way.
Such situations of destructiveness
as this, disrespectful as they are of
law and order and conducive to
lawlessness, are made to order for
the Communist cause This kind of
activity is not promoted by patriotic
law abiding young people who love
their country. It is inspired by pro-
fcsional "demonstrators" who stand
to profit from such exploitations
and who "demonstrate" clearly
enough that they stand in the shad
ows leady and waiting for the revo-
lution they confidently expect. It is
a pity that young people in our uni
versities will lend themselves to such
purposes.
A Communist Goal
munists. Not all of them were en
rolled as students. But if Latin
American universities offer their
political activists for revolution, evi-
dently the Reds think that U. S.
campuses can become centers for
revolt. On hand or photographed at
various times were a dozen or more
Just as in San Francisco at City j recognized Communists. The first to
Hall in 1981. these campus capers j be arrested was Robert Treuhaft. a
brought out the professional Com- Red attorney and husband of Jessica
Mitford. who had been advising stu-
dents to go limp when confronted
by police.
The penetration of U. S. college
and university campuses is a prime
goal of world Communism, one that
has been ordered by the Moscow
high command. This was an ach-
ievement that Red intellectual lead-
ers and cell workers of the Thirties
very nearly accomplished.
Frecstone-Leon
District Soil
Conservotion News
The F F Hill Company, Crowflight
1 Ranches, Roy Whatley, and several
! other cooperators with the Freestone-
I.von Soil Conservation District use
I native tall growing grasses to carry
] the bulk of their grazing needs Many
I other livestock men may be over-
I looking a good possibility for develop-
Tht iUttDCTRddlll- i ing a native grass pasture at a tow
cost .1 there is a good start of na-
tive grass either in woods or pasture
Native grasses which occur na-
turally are already established and
soils and climate
How tragic when we
goodness with weakness, for true ^ weU as (Q greatness
goodness is one of the grand attri-
butes of God It keeps company with
.mart men are also goodl«n.te tnUl University of)
assocate chXnges youth to goodness California had not attempted to en_
force its rules against collecting]
funds for political purposes, including
PRAYER Our Father, help us civil rights organizations like CORE
faith love, courage, strength, jus- to have the mind and heart and ^ When in this case solicitation was1
tjee, and mercy. The essence of good- hand—the goodness—-of the Samari- , allowed at only one gate. FSM in-
ness is having a mind, heart, and tan of the Jericho road. In the ! sisted on the same freedoms on-
helping hand for our fellow man in name of the Master, who suffers | campus or off. This seemed a rea-
his time of need us goodness through redemption. | sonable enough position to attract a
In 1919. President Woodrow Wil- Amen. I considerable follow ing of campus or-
son was sitting at the peace table THlll,iHT FOR THE DAY - To *"*•**’ lU.i,rk ,K<'n'1
in Versailles, France. With Lloyd g.....,, d^nds ™ P™*** <* J* 1 •"
George Vittorio Orlando. George- , . ^ prayei perLrverence and 1961 °Pened door ,,,flue,K'es
Clemenceau and others. Wilson was j]unt, help
contending strongly for self-deter- Horace T. Freeman 'Georgia)
mination for the small nations of ______0_
Europe Suddenly. Clemenceau. "the
Tiger of France." is said to have
turned to W :lson and remarked. “Mr. We w ish to express our deep ap-
President. you are not only a great predation to Dr Bonner, nurses,
man. but you are a good man." hospital staff and to our many
The nations of the world are strain- j friends for the kindness shown us
jng every nerve to produce -mart! during James Ray s illness,
men, and that is well. But unless
CARD OF THANKS
Key’s Welding
Repair Shop
1 MILE EAST—FM 488
ol extremists groups by contesting
loyalty oaths in the courts. It is
ironic that he thus encouraged en-
larging the campus role of outside
I/olitical and activist groups.
This policy included allowing Com-
munists to speak to students. It wasj
an effort to revise this that is said to
have sparked the unrest A massive
,vaj ^ .....sit-in strike followed innumerable
James Ray Day Famil> j rallies pickets and demonstrations.
------ I This was an attempt to paralyze
the institution's administrative ac-
tivity by closing down Sproul Hall.
Some 800 policemen worked 12 hours
to move strikers from the building
and perhaps as long to fingerprint
and book them. The immediate cost
to taxpayers was about $25,000 A
, number of jury trials will require
even larger amounts of public mo-
I ney.
Control by the Few
Perhaps no more than 4 per cent
of the University’s 26.000 students
are said to have been involved in
j the strike Yet. the FSM leaders were
1 about to be pacified in their goal of
I seeking control over the institution.
! according to informed sources. Lead-
I ers of FSM were flown to New York
I by ABC television and were making
| guest appearances on other cam- j
' pu.-es around the country, where j
1 other sit-ins will doubtless be stag- j
ed if the off-campus Reds and other,
extremists are able to get into the
act on time A little infiltration
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sion loss, and when they are proper-
ly managed the soil under them is in
a state of continuous improvement.
Native grasses such as Indian-
grass. Little Blucstem, Switchgrass,
and others have very deep rooti
systems if they are not overgrazed I
and can stand severe drought. J
One advantage native grasses have
over most tame pastures is that
native grasses cures out well after
frost, and can be used as a standing
hay crop with protein supplement.
Native grasses provide nearly a
year-long pasture with a minimum
of hay and temporary pasture i
needs, although slightly more acres
are required per animal unit. Most
ranchers agree that cattle do well
on native pasture. Native pastures
provide a variety of plants for cattle
to choose from Usually by the time
standing grass begins to deteriorate
in winter, the native legumes and
forubs begin to furnish grazing.
Proper management is the key to
maintaining the native pasture.
Under proper use. native pastures
require much less upkeep than Lame
pastures and commercial fertilizer
is not necessary
Although more acres are required
per cow on native range tbe profit
per cow is usually higher because
of fewer expenses
Anyone who would like informs
tion or on the land advice about the
development of native grass pasture
is welcome to contact the local Soil
Conservation Service.
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Kirgan, Joe Lee, Jr. The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 89, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1965, newspaper, February 18, 1965; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1107346/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Fairfield Library.