Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 107, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 16, 1952 Page: 4 of 10
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TBl DENTON RECORD-CHRO MICLt
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LOOKING BACK
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FIV« YEARS AGO
Square Peg, Round Hole
The Worry Clinic
Students Use Poor English
tncni
4
Voice Of The People
f-W4
knowledge of
Bv Fred Neher
L
of words.
Nation Today:
Schedules
Television
Scientists
01
Play It Safe
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Hal Boylo Says:
1.952 Marked By Tension
Yesteryears
In Denton
Fr
Ex
I've found out, if you slant your
1_, you stand a better chance of
[ye manv friends in Denton,
t the Rameys. They are
quick outlet for his emotions.
A few slang terms thus serve
as convenient safety valves by
M
KJ',
r!
By JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON UH—The Russian
Communists are whining because
heir own scientists, whom they
rtrorized into conformity, are try-
.ng to play it safe by saying noth-
I!1
it
i
FH
Fris<
ita 1
In n
Th
tor <
data
Mrs.
ney i
chow
sheci
pear
ce*M
and
Th
Lc
nirs
I?
. Detective
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io.1 u
” Sit?
R
"Fy
THE CMPlSTMAS
l CARD SEASON'S
7 AT HAND. THERE
WOULDN'T BE ANV
CONNECTION, OR
\ WOULD THERE?
Q
--
Den
Will f
patien
ton a
Week,
eutive
Seni
Party
Oakia
~42toto
Hoapi
the p
their
Christ
Reti
Ing tl
progr
Wynn
Dento
Scout:
gram,
a talk
Colles
attend
camp
Her t
liette
of th<
mote
Ref
the V
Scoyti
al me
Bro
house
Christ
Browi
will s
tion s
Englt
fang.
The
goods
maim
spent
Brow,
have
own i
se le<
C TH
d fa
f: ui
said.
Gil
to otr
fi-.
San
to t <
Ch.is
Snap!
Mn
Fann
^4
10
tion around the house.
I am not advocating elegant style
At Hubbard Hall last Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. “Hatch" Odom
of Dallas, were guests of Rev. Dick
Ervin. Also with them was Miss
Jackie Moore, of Dallas, a Braniff
Airlines hostess. They had come up
from Dallas to attend services at
AsbuTy Methodist Church. The Od-
mciuaing
members of the Dallas church
where Rev. Irvin was pastor, two
or three years ago. Miss Moore, a
very attractive brunette, said she
just came along with the Odotns.
associates.
' But high school graduates have
JtTftolth Hour*
Sdy D^dy*“
i The Kremlin decided that for its
.....purposes - to show that mankind
nphieai errors could change maYvelopsly under
the Soviet brand of communism—
l. - 1— hereditary factors should he
rz
TUB CHlSSLER’. Mg L
. WORKS ON A LOAD
' RVtRV NIGHT AND J
< I SET HE PAYS < 1
( THE PARTENDER J J
\JN 34 BTAMPtf
JDonaM s KltchOn
rhasa
In the same paper is a story
about Dr. E. H. Hereford’s “busy
season as Governor of District 186,
Rotary International.”
Dr. Hereford is a former Denton
college prfessor, and the father-
in law of Ed Miller. Jr.
Quoting further, "Dr. Hereford
so far has traveled 4,000 miles in
the district. He has addressed 28
Rotary Clubs, representing a
membership of 1.700 Rotarians plus
visitors and guests. His address in
each community was centered
around the subject, 'Rotary h> Ac-
tion’.”
Dr. Hereford spoke to Denton
Rotarians recently and his tenure
culminated in the Annual District
Conference in Fort Worth, Nov. 18
and 17.
never better off. But despite the
fact we had more money to spend,
and more gadgets to buy, wc
ji
TRANSLATED FROM THE \
DOUBLE TALK-OWCI I
COMIISPONDffNCB ; S
ELECTRIC AND GAS BILLS,
SUBSCRIPTIONS TO TOUT 7
SHEETS, INVITATIONS <
to rent party and • A
(general accumulation)
OF STAMPS! '
yestor
Mickey Rooney, with Brian Don
levy, Ann Bly th and James Dunn,
was featured in “Killer McCoy”
at the Texas Theater.
TIN YEARS AGO
The Whitson Food Company ship-
ped the first carload of army hash
---------1 was
Quie often we read something in
the Texas AAM System News about
the activities of Jack MaTquls, head
of the physics dpartment at Ar-
lington State College. The latest
item says he "has completed con-
struction and installation of a new
and unusual amplifier for a chan
table organization in Dallas.
“The amplifier is for use by the
Pflot Institute for the Deaf, which
works with handicapped children.
In addition to providing for ampli-
fication of speech sounds for the
school's public address system, the
amplifier also contains Audiomefric
features. It enables the diagnostic
personnel of the School for the Deaf
to measure scientifically the exact '
degree of existing detfMBS."
Jack is a son of Mrs. H. L.
Marquis, 1721 W. Oak, and the late
Dr. R. L. Marquis Sr., who was
president of NTSC for 11 years,
from 1928 until his death in 1934.
He was succeeded by Dr. Joe Mc-
Connell, who resigned and was
made president emeritus a year or
so ago. Dr. McConnell was suc-
ceeded by Dr. J. Carl Matthews,
now president.
Dr. Bob Marquis. Jr., 1319 Pan-
handle, is Jack Marquis’ only bro-
ther.
WHAT A JOB
I COULD Da
WffiHtSffT
ONfc‘
z*
i
about
“how
-V — —r- —--- - . -
It has been a restless and un-
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
OU-AH-WOULD YOU LET \
ME HAVE SOME 34 5TAMPSU
MISS' GRINDSTONE ? I'M
TARING HOME SOME \
OFFICE CORRESPONDENCE! V ’
I’VE GOT QUITE A LOAD ,7
TO WORK ON TONIGHT. ) R
ABOUT 30 THREES V I F
\SHOULD DO ITf JT i
nVL
Tn 1887 be came out strong for statewide prohibition. 'Prohib-
ition loet-out and so did he. His printing press was kicked out in
the street. The door was locked. On it was a notice to get out of
town. He got They treated editors rough In those days.
At that time there must not have been any libel laws. I
remember two editors throwing verbal brickbats at each other.
One called the other a low class, dish-faced, lantern-jawed, sway-
becked, bowlegged, knotty-kneed, bat-ankled, pigeon-toed wild-eyed
galoot
Oh. he threw the book at him. Editors and the people are
more tolerant now than they were in those days. Newspapers
have come “a fur piefce."
Ik"
ME CERTAINLY KNOWS
MSftAMPAGT!
ergpuw
been in school for 12 years. They
should be reasonably familiar with
their mother tongue by that time,
don't you think?
“Yet many of them cannot even
spell coTectly! And they have lit-
tle I
rules
“In fact, unless-they have stud- say “shucks" or “darn" occasion- LIFE'S LH'6 TU’.T
their led Latin, they seem to absorb re- ally when he is angry and craves •
F MAVPtt HE DOES 1
WORK AT HOME, AT
THAT? HE NEVfen
k DOES any in the
OFFICE! s'
I home, the latter would then use Or morals.
perfect English when they enter-
ed the kindergarten.
You adulu. therefore, should re- ^aatj m-ging your child to correct
alize the critical need for good the speech of his parents. Give
English in your daily converge- him a penny for each mistake he
tion around the bouse. detects. 1
Parents can do more for a child’s .
•r highbrow speech’or polyaylla- speech in his first 5 years of life pounds lor 59^cents”
7
stations. Subject to change )
4 SO— Featurette
4.46—Just for Fun
6:00—Party Time
5:46—Western Theater
e 15—KKLD Movletor.e News
6:30—The World Today
6 40 Continental Weather
6:45—Perry Como
7:00—Arthur Godfrey * FMcnV*
6:00—Strike It Rich
6:80— M*n Against Crime
9:00—Blue Ribbon Bouts’
9:45—Sports Parade
10:00—Big Town
10:80—Living Room Theater
11:00— Vesper A Sign Off
•Indicates live natwork pragraas
WRAP-TV (Channel S)
7:00—Today’
a 00— Bobby Peters Show
8:50—Good Morning Pastor
9:00—Ding-Dong School
9 JO— Morning Matinee
10:16—Let's Oo Shopping
10:30-Movie Marquee
11:48—Imperial Quartet
12:00 h'wrni and Home Kdltor
12:20--News. Baaalndale
12 30—Memory Lane
1:00—What* Cooking-’
2:00—TBe Big Payoff*
2:30—Welcome Trarelers*
3 :00—MovlS Marquee
4:18—Ann Alden
4:30—Hair Stylos
5:00- Kltiy’s Playhouse
6:30- See Saw Zoo
5:48—Roundup Time
6 00—Cowboy Thrills
6:26— Weatherman
6:SO-Kit Carson
7.00—Gone Autry
8:00—Boston Blackie
9 :".O—Ellery Queen
9:00—Wrestling
10:00— Texas News
10:18—Weather Telefaet
10 aS—Sports with Sherman
10:30—News Final
10:86—Movie Marquee
la-.OO-SIgn Off
’Indicates live network progr
WFAA-TV (Channel 8)
8:00— Today*
9.-00—Channel Inn
ig Movietone
Ooeelp
"Could you sand this by p«ny expratsf My little grandson
' • |ua» lovos horses."
of the Academy of Sciences of the 11:45—veoper sign Off
USSR, Division of Economics snd ---------- .——m---
Law—said not long ago about dis-
cussions among adentlata:
"We often take more care that
in them there arg no mistaken or
controversial poaitiona taken than
they present new facta and now
quesUonc .-Many elements of play*
ing safe were preset in our work.
...Every manuscript had to go
through seven or eight reviewing
levels before it was published.”
The result, the Journal said, was
that the work became so deperson-
alized that no one individual could
be held responsible. Even body
ducked The Kremlin will not per-
mit scientific inquiry, criticisms or
conclusions that contradict the
party line.
But. because the partV line itself
shifts, any worker in an intellec-
tual field finds himself in double
leopatdy. No matter what bo says
to conform to the party line today,
if the parly line shifts next month
he may get exile or worse for what
he said today.
Some Russian scientists, regard-
ed as among the most brilliant in
the world by scientists outside the
Iron Curtain, have been disgraced,
' exiled or *
—KremHn L ,
, flict with party line or propaganda.
WBOTV wnw w n©- Tn^ KrtBIlni 8 leilvniBUOU OT Ww
a month., 83 50; on. monte. ien(isU w„ m0„t notoriously , ---- -
revealed !n the field of genetics, • :!JZSEL’2
the science of heredity. Its treat- s ob—Naw.*
ment of the outstanding Russian
•NteUcists, whose ideas didn’t ^^Arteur
ueet the party’s needs. the so xx>—Thera's
most publicity. wf
“ -------------- *1
ME. HAERKLL RECALLS SOME HOT WATER'
To the Record-Chronicle. Recently, Mr. Bogan said in his
■“* column he had to be neutral, it put me in*». reateuacent mood
I've been writing letters to newspapers nearly «5 years. 1 seldom
• ■ took the neutral road so being in hot water isn’t anything new to
Tt »•
<uu never can teu whether the editor win publish a letter
or how the readers will react. During the depression, I wrote a
letter pouring it on everything from Hoover down to county
agents. 1 was surprised at the editor sending me a note saying,
“tend me some more, pour it on, give 'em hell ”
When I went to town nearly everybody said “howdy'* and
congratulated me on my letter. In no ume at all 1 was too big
i, tor my britches.
1 Another time, I wrote a letter entitled “Man's last lament ’’
* 1 told about how. the women were taking the country and fast
swiping all of man’s prerogatives. To my surprise not a woman
replied Some men did, though. One of them was a woman hater
from away back. Another one accused me of hating my mother
and said my wife ought to kick my pants out the door with me in
them.
Oh brother, when you write a letter criticizing labor unions
you are in for hot replies. I remember one woman throwing the
hammer and saw at me. She called me an old fogey, goat, ter-
mlte, worm and moron.
I have written some letters that mads everyone sore at me,
•ven my wife. Letters criticizing me used to make me mad and
Mm—not any more. 1 get a big kick out of them.
There have been many letters praising my efforts. They
make the road ahead much brighter. I never did write abusive
tetters. There isn't any argument in abuse.
Editors have their troubles, too. Moat of them have been
alee to me. Now and then I run across one who la allergic to any-
thing I write. Another thing l’v
letter the way the editor thinks,
getting them published
I remember talking to a man who ran a paper in the 1880's.
One time he came out strong for county prohibition. One night
acme fellows took sledge hammers and beat up his printing mach-
•ry.
at times How can we improve the
spoken English of our people”' “type.” be sure he reverts to fun-
If all patents were to speak cor- da mentals that are correct, wheth-
rectly before their children in the er lt be in the realm of English
— H. L. HARRELL.
Argyle.
Denton Recon d<>Chroni(:lk
FMiUhed every alteraoon (eseapt Saturday) and Sunday by: Denton Fut
Hahins Co . Inc.. 314 K. Hickory BL
Entered m second claae mall matter at tee pooeofflce at Denton. Taxa
January 13. 19S1. according to Act of congreaa, March 8, 1879
BUB8CRIFTION BATES AND INFOBMAU^N
Steglee copies. 5c lor areekAaya. 10c fur Suudaj
ASr Barrier- 30e per week
yetf^^maStbaTeOft
Kf mau ovtaiur Denton County) glSSO per year, ala aaontba. 87M; three
aAnthe. etso. ew month, auto.
is:; Ta^EHKna c-aaa:
HE.. NOTICI TO PVBUCi
uE&mk: k. . ' ” ■ ■ *
■RMinMi leftectioa upon the eharacter, reputation or Mending of any
IMtvHuU cr consdraMn *m be gladly aometed tapen Mm <*u«d
iMBMMHrt nut rexponeibie for eeny omlaaUma. typographies arrom
uninuu-jonc »rrj*» occur other than to correct 1_ :---
I to Jprngm fa U»e;r attentxm All advertising orders are aecepted on
SBoStoton or tin tenociawo Fwaea
MMMl'-tllKj1* eaciuttrNy to fka use lor raprslteatton et
r.tiBFilFWwMed' in -nw as trsn -i> ’ * tom dto*
A GOOD
E ENGLISH
F>--? vj
The Future Is . Bright
The business outlook is for the happiest, moat proa-
peroua Christmas on record.
Times an booming. People are earning more'than
ever before in America’s history.
- The big question, of course, ia how long will pros-
perity last. Ara we about to plunge into another de-
pression? A good many economists, including those in
the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, look for
prosperity to last through next year, unless there are
major developments in foreign affairs, particularly
Korea. Even then, no major recession looms.
On the other hand, there are aome who argue the
boom can’t last. That we’re in for another "bust”.
" U. 8. Chamber of Commerce economists take a
different view. They believe that depressions are not
inevitable; that both business and government have
learned a lot since the 1930’b about licking the boom
and bust fiascos. They have learned counter-measures.
. They are less likely to be cgught napping if business
■* begins to drop.
Government, naturally, is a major force in resisting
depressions. By purchasing its own bonds from the
public it can pour money into circulation. Through
loans, or the guarantee of loans, government can make
it easier for busineaa to borrow money for working
* capital or investment in new plants and equipment.
’ Or, by means of its controls over banks, government
* can reduce reserve requirements so that banks can loan
' with more freedom. Experience during the last depres-
sion has shown how these controls can be used more
affectively.
New factors are the Securities and Exchange Com-
mission and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
With its tight controls over market speculation, SEC
can prevent one of the evils leading to the last depres-
* sion. And citizens’ bank savings now are insured up
to $10,000 by FDiq.
Also new since the early 1930’s are the government
old-age and unemployment insurance systems', providing
a backlog of security against loss of income due to age
or unemployment. And of course, many business and.
industrial firms have begun pension plans since the
thirties, providing additional insurance against* hard
times.
Finally, there is a brighter outlook for trade, an-
other important item in the prosperity picture.
For its part, business is better prepared for a de-
pression than it was back in 1929. It has learned much
•bout management. And it has a far bigger, more ver-
satile research plant for the creation of new products
when the sale of products already on the market begins
to drop. Products which meet basic needs resist de-
pression. This is not speculation. Refrigerator, electric
washing machine and radio sales, for example, held up
well during the bleakest days of the thirties.
Today, many, many new products are on the draw-
• ing boards or ready for market.
These new products mean new jobs, and new jobs
mean continued prosperity.
PAGK FOUR
/ Z Denton
C^ditoriat[ ci^e Doings
.... . .... By E. J. HEADLEE
bic "jawbreaker” words. than all his English teachers in
On the contrary, it ia better to Jtrammar, high school and four
use simply. *hort words. But choose F®*™ °* c°Je3c'
them correctly. And avoid an undue
use <
1
pJijred down and the envirunmen- ii
. tel played up Communism, tf • - gry.--.-r-z
*• mw *■
By HAL BOYLE weren’t particularly happy
NEW YORK ifi-Tto latite time tong’wKTriaatr*
< backward look and weigh the gains .J’ u'months? probably because I
and losses of a waning year. we weren’t sure whether the world I
What happened to you. in ’82? was teetering toward peace or tot-
. Historians assess a yeah by the taring toward wap The yearning
mighty changes that take place in for some kind of certainty and
it, but most paopio Mmember it security grew among us. —
on a personal basis. A little girl Probably years and years from
may always remember 1952 as the now moat °^*rW^w1^k t *1 '
a brave now world—kindergarten, more grateful? It was a good
An older girl may recall it as the time.”
■ • 1 But right now the average man
feels that in 1962 ha only grew a
little older, grayer, wearier—and
more puzzled. He had a job, be ate
well, he bought a new car or tele-
. „...v. .. vision set. But he still holds a
the destiny of nations. A boy who vague resentment against iW be-
put on long panti for the first cause it didn't give him a clear
time is more likely to remember answer to the main problem on his
1952 for that reason than the fact mind—what lies ahead.
that Britain lost a king and gained
a queen.
By and large, 1952 has been a
year of watchful waiting and ga-
thering tension rather than one of
tremendous and dramatic decision
—except in the field of domestic
policies.
There the deep disquiet among
the American people created a
landslide victory for Gen. Ike, but
the real results of the political
earthquake cannot be known be- " — -----------
J P. Harrison, manager of thea
ter row in Denton, led the Inter
state Circuit last year in the salt
of Christmas Gift Books
Maximum tempeature
day, 48; minimum, 29
The number of mm who emtgrst-
w in English, enclose cd fro i t':o Ui’lcd S ntes has been
Bk J a^OTtet and abhor all slang piTrsV- * stamped return envelope, plui a greater than the number of women
es. but reduce them to a few ex- dime, and (frder my bulletin, “How yc:r s ASJ0, although the ratio
/I plosive te7ms by which your chii- 10 Tutor your Child at Home ” It of two to one in some years of the
•"•""J ren can vent their pent-up emo- H’ts the commonest mistakes in 'Xs .’as been reduced since that
grammatical tlons English. time.
, It is probably wise to let a child
fore 1953.
No stars collided in the heavens
but a potential H-bomb weapon
was exploded in the Pacific. And
what is the full meaning of that?
We do not yet know.
New rumblings of unrest sturtd
in the teeming millions of Afrk-u
aud Asia. The war in Korea coiled
deeper In its long stalemate.
The average man earned morJ
money and paid more taxes in 1952
than he ever had before The na u w.
tion as a whole ate higher on the ^day moraing* The”shipment
hog than at any previous time in co^pn^ of 2,000 eases,
its history. Bill Bas», Jr student'in the Uni
As a people we were probably ve„jty TeXas, was here to aper I
the holidays with hia parents. Mr
and Mr R. W. Bass.
Marriage license was issued t.
Raymond Green and Lena Fa; .- j
Mobon.
TWtNTY Y8ARS AGO
Rolla Knox and Homer Seely ci
the Justin community were in Den-
ton Friday.
Mrs. Pen Sull-van. who suffer
ed a sprained side when she fc K |
on the Ic? Tuesday, is improvir.;
at the home of her daughter, Mr:.
R C. Kee
Safeway quoted Airway Qqffc:
at 21 cents per pound or three
Parents, In hia 5 years be-
fore kindergarten yqou can do
moro to stimulate your child’s
correct use of English, than
all his English teachers in the
public schools and colleges
Language ia the apparel of
correct and smartly talored
raiment, even if he goes bare
footed and you cannot affort to
dress him in anything but
overalls and a blue shirt.
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
Case F-344: Egbert X.. aged
35. is a college professor of Eng-
lish.
The Optimist News says: “When “Dr. Crane, I am really shocked
a speech is boiled down, it isn't so at the poor English employed by
dry " This reminds us of a remark high school graduates," he inform
made by a man recently coming ed me at a university luncheon not
out of a church, in another town, long ago. *
after the service: "Words, word,. -perhaps I shouldn't criticize,
words'" Often a fine address or however, for even our cqjlege grad-
NCimon Ktowl rwsinta litoral. * ____
ly snowed under by an av*lanche lYnuuafe" They go back to
of words. home communities and soon tend latively little regarding correct us a
to drop back to the level of their •«« of the subjective versus the
“Dr. Crane, 1 grow discouraged which wc can let off psychological
x steam.
Lst your child realize, moreover,
that many of bls friends or rela-
tives. will not speak correctly, but
he must be polite and not repri-
mend them too bluntly
Don’t teach your child to be a
highbrow who tries to lord it over
his grandparents or country cou-
sins on the basis of good English.
But do encourage him to make
his original language patterns the
correct ones. Then any inter slang
will be a superficial veneer
and deliberate In selecting EL'uTE
Many a child hears so much pro-
fanity, slang and wrong grammar
that these become his fundamen-
tal language habits.
He may lateY cover them up with
a veneer of good English, and thus
hide his basic errors, at least as
long as his conscious of his speech
snd deliberate in selecting his
words.
This may be true, for instance,
when he Is trying to impress 'his
best girl or write an important let-
ter.
But in an emergency, he will re-
volt to type and then hia foul
language will pour forth
So when your child reverts to
period of crisis during which sbe
finally made up her mind to dye
her hair red.
For most of ua a year ia made
memorable by how it touched ua
rather than in the way it affected
into for the first cause it didn’t give him a clear
Encourage good English by stu-
dying the bulletin offered below
alize the critical need tor good the speech of his parents. Give
‘ ‘ 12 _ _2_J you avoid the coin-
of slang. You don't need to be monest errors
es, but reduce them to a few ex- d*™, and otter my bulletin, “How yc;r
ren can vent their pent-up emo- Mats the commonest mistakes in 3C.» .’as been reduced since that
(As announced by televi
TUI8DAY PR0GRAM8
««LB-TV (Channel 4)
4 15—Movie Quick Qulx
4 30—Movletime
5:00—Farty Time
6 15-KRLD Movietone Newt
6 30—The World Tbday
6 40—Continental Weather
6 45 -Heaven far Betey
7:0O—Wrestling
8:00—Cltf Hospital*
•ng io piay n saie oy saying now 8 jp—wreatling
Ing which might get them tote io u-Sporu on FarMt
trouble. 10:80—Danger
The Soviet Journal—proceedings H
•indicates live netwotk program.
WBAF-TV (Channel n
4:18—Ann Alden
4 :30—Laugh THM
4:50—Cartoon T»le-Tala«
8:00—Kitty x Playhouse
6:80 Bee Baw Zoo
8 45—King Mark’* Court
6 :00- Cowboy Thrills
6 24—Weatherman
6:80- Beuixli
7:00—Star Thea tar*
8.00—Fireside Theater
S:SO—March of Medicine
8:00—Two for the Money
9AO- Embassy Club*
6:43—Bob Coneldlne’
10:00—Texas Nswe
10:15—Weather TelefacU
lo an -Hporta with nqerman
10 30—Nsws Final
10:46— Movie Marquee
ia«o—aign Off
•Indicates live network program
—oOo—
WFAA-TV (Chaanel 8)
4:00 Kiddle Kamtve'
4:30— Howdy Doody*
5 00- captain video
s »o—Frontier Playhouse
4:15—Newt
|Bo Bosau
8 :25- Weather
6 30—Dinah Shore*
6:48—Camel Newt caravan*
7 00—Cowboy Classics
8:00—Dollar Derbr
9.-00—Where Wai “
9.-80— Rooky Kin
Min, nave ucen uiagiavwu, *2:??
perhaps shot because the men'on —
found their wdHi to ooi>* *!Mteates mm netwSrti mori. .---
tuanaiBeasAte Jsssmtomniato. _______
----*rr (OtaBM 4)
a Previews
SSSH“'
has its beat pointe literal- ua(eJ often are carries* in their
r.mrSmSu« mu. wnji».
objective ca»e
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 107, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 16, 1952, newspaper, December 16, 1952; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348842/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.