Throckmorton Tribune (Throckmorton, Tex.), Vol. [76], No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1963 Page: 3 of 8
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How to Fight Communism
A great number of non-Marxists and non-Com-
General Motors Science Show To Appear at Throckmorton School
End 2nd. 6
r
to
7.
,C
Classes
5,
J2
3rd.
6
30 — Easter
Dealer
Authorized JEEP
FERTILIZER
ii
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1
Tn
ARIZONA
Call
Throckmorton
LP Gas, Inc
For BUTANE and PROPANE
la
Phone 6441 or 2641
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_____Ga
Mr. and Mrs. John Clark of
Dallas were Sunday visitors in
the home of his sister, Mrs.
E. D. Condron.
of Fort Worth spent the week
end here wiitih his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clifford Gordon.
special units of the show for
appearances at five Interna-
tional Trade Fains in South
America and Near East.
Mr. and Mrs. George Con-
dron and Georgia of Garland
spent Friday night and Satur-
day here with his mother.
Also 66” Spreaders — Pull Type
with Slip Clutch — $360.00
By DR. FRED SCHWARZ
Karl Marx taught that economic conditions
SUPER
Kem-
Tone
We Have Several
1,000 Gallon Nurse Tanks
and Plenty of
Applicators
Ready to Go
The Throckmorton Tribune
THURSDAY, SEPT. 12, 1963 PAGE 3
Ell
Shaw and Cogburn
with
Throckmorton
LP GAS, INCORPORATED
Gan Service
All Your Fertilizer Needs
HASKELL FARM STORE
Haskell, Texas
Your Mi'meapoliS’Moline Dealer
s
I
A. A.
Box 162
Throckmorton, Texas
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Cook
and daughters of Fort Worth
cecne in Sfand'ay night for a
visit %ith her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. D. Condron.
Sherwin-Williams
SUPER KEM-TONE
Gives You More
^'444 For Your Dollar
J
for
at
Morrison-Smith
Lumber Go.
7 (Tu
I koi/
Choose, Oy
RAMADA
MN
i
r
I
I
I
r
h
Mr. and Mrs. Bemell Shan-
kle of Memphis, Texas, visit-
ed his brother, Pat StenJde,
and Mrs. Shankle Monday.
They had been visiting her
mother and sister in Brecken-
ridge.
MISSOURI
ST. LOUIS Natural Bridge and Brawn Roadi
SPRINGFIELD 2715 N. GI era ton.
KANSAS
NEWTON 105 Mancherter
WELLINGTON 315 W. Eighth
NEW MEXICO
ALBUQUERQUE 4501 Central Av.., N.E.
CARLSBAD 601 S. Canal Street
GALLUP Highway 66 West
ROSWELL 1310 N. Main St.,
OKLAHOMA
OKLAHOMA CITY 1401 N.E. Expreowov
TULSA 4528 E. Skelly Drive
LOUISIANA
BOSSIER CITY U.S. Highway 80 Eart
LAKE CHARLES 1212 N. Lakeshore Dr.
SHREVEPORT (See Bossier City)
ILLINOIS
CHICAGO A
1229 S. Michigan Avenue
(Th. Town Hmm.) T’.W'
la
• More coverage
per gallon
• More durability
• Easier than
ever to use
My Neighbors
• Mil
rTL
'3 I
1
i
j
il
Complete line of the world’s most
Versatile Vehicles
McCATHREN MOTOR CO.
220 West Elm St.
Breckenridge, Texas
z-
■■ .
1
: •
£ ■
4
.a
zz
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. ■
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NEIGHBORS
Addie Beth Craft vacation-
'd last week at,. P.adre Island
as guest of Susan McKenzie
>f Fort Worth.
munist, had done so in terms of this argument. Tilt-'
argument, naturally, is fallacious, but many students
accept it because it seems convincing and logical when
they hear it. .
The second step is materialistic philosophy. They
accept the philosophy that there is no God; that matter
in motion is the sum total of all being; that man is a
mere material being, created by evolution and fully con-
ditioned by his environment; that all the qualities of the
human mind and heart are only reflections within his
personality. So, since man is an environmentally-condi-
tioned animal, it becomes conceivable that his character
can be perfected only through a perfect environmerit.
Therefore, communism can present a vision to them of
regenerating mankind and removing all evil through an
environmental change to socialism.
The third feature of Communist recruitment is in-
tellectual pride. Students throughout the world are
noted for many things, but intellectual humility is not
usually the most obvious of these qualities.
During their early student years they tend to reb&
against accepted ideas and traditions of their parents,
their religion and their country.
Man Born to Worship G©e?
Many a student reaches the age of 19 years before
he realizes how “backward and dumb” he believes his
parents to be. It comes as quite a shock when he sud-
denly tells himself: “Why, they haven’t had a new idea
for 20 years.”
Likewise, he tends to rebel against his religion and
national traditions. He has a sense of the power ot
science and of his own destiny and calling, resulting in
the attitude that the world is in a mess. “Somebody,’''
he tells himself, “must clean it up” and obviously he is
one of those few chosen for the task because of his
“superior intelligence.”
The fourth step in communism’s recruiting pro-
gram is unfulfilled religious need. There is that in the
heart of every man which reaches out for the absolute,
for the infinite. Man is born with a heart to worship
God. Life needs a purpose. Man needs a star to guide
him, to give meaning to life, suffering, love and death.
When the satisfaction of this religion urge is closed,
there is a natural quest for other means. A sense of j
ultimate purpose and fulfillment is found in a religious
identification with the Communist cause and its “his-
toric” or almost “divine purpose.”
Lost T<^rn to Communism
The young student without religious beliefs early
accepts the Darwinian hypothesis concerning the origin
of man. He tends to accept the Marxian hypothesis of
the origin of civilization and culture and national char-
acteristics. As a young man, he sits on the mount di.
learning and watches the animal species from savagery
and barbarism to civilization. He sits above it all,
beyond it all. He’s lost in lonely isolation. Where can he
find s nijmose in life?
Than he hears a whisper in the breeze that history
is calling a few of its finest and its best; those who
have ah insight into its purpose; giving to those who
answer the call the responsibility and the destiny of
conquering the world and regenerating mankind. It1,
comes as a vision of glory. It sets a song singing in his
heart. It puts stars before his eyes. It leads him for-
ward to live—and, if necessary, to die—in the Cc^
munist cause. In it, he finds a religious refuge for his
godless and unbelieving heart.
> MJSSILE COSTS
; ■ - ■■ . Z -
The cost of launching an inter-
continental missile, including the
missile's share of research and
development and training costs,
* is $6-10 million. Of this cost, the
labor involved—directly and indi-
rectly — consumes approximately
90 per cent. The labor costs in-
clude the wages of. everyone
involved—from men who mine the
metal to the.airmen at the launch-.
ing site/ . ■ aerospace,-
I Penalty ]
r I 80*.
A A
I' 1
“Rough game.”
F-44AA What Scouting Is
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the promise of the future,”
John. F. Gordon:, president of
General Motors ,declares.
Mike Krawcheck and Jack
Pyle of General Motors Public
Relations Staff will narrate the
, 45 - minute,nan - qqmmereiial
jentatiionz They'are one of
seven teams that take the show
to more than a million stud-
ents each year.
One of the highlights of the
shew is a fuel cell, > a
that converts chemical enegry
into1 electrical ower. Poten-
tially one of the most signifi-
A.t the request of the U. S. ■
Department of Commerce, GM I
recently equipped and trained
Reds Promise
Everything to
Lure, Trap Youth
Capture the minds of young people, promise them
everything—then give them nothing. This is a basic
^f ~ ~7zg~z:n that has worked
and over again for the benefit of the Russian
________’ mT------1 --i an
exclusive series of six articles on the menace of commu-
wide conquest. The series by Dr. Fred Schwarz, physi-
cian. writer and for 20 years a militant foe of commu-
. f . 1 . 7 7 fill _ _ .7 _ .7 _ _ _ f. J.T. _ J___
peril of communism can the free people of the world
fight the Red peril and destroy it.
\ J
A Friendly Flace to Trade j br S
New and Used
Moline One-Ways and Tandom Discs |
Priced to Sell
'ing, the proper places—but wc don’t have one very es-
sential ingredient—people.
The real key to the success of the school in Los
Angeles was that 1000 people living in the Los Angeles
area devoted themselves unselfishly and consistently to
hard work without monetary reward.
Many mothers left home very early, worked 18
hours a day doing the million things necessary to make
the school the success it was. They committed them-
selves to this cause with zeal and enthusiasm.
, They were not paid to be present. They were
wooed and won through our recruiting efforts to find
people dedicated to the cause of freedom. It took
months of behind-the-scenes activity to find them.
They were trained and realized the danger which con-
fronts us.
Dedicafion Is Communist Secret
So it is with communism. The triumph of commu-
nism is the triumph of people. They are recruited,
trained, put to work and finally they conquer power
and establish Communist dictatorships.
The five steps of Communist conquest can be sum-
marized as follows:
1. Recruitment of student intellectuals who are to
serve as the executives of the Communist purpose.
2. The molding of these student Communists into
hardened cadres, people who are selfless, devoted, dis- '
ciplined and ready to live or die as communism
0 i
3. To put these trained Communists to work to
exploit community groups, their sole interest being to
advance communism nearer to power.
4. The seizure of power, which may be done in a
Variety of ways.
5. The scientific consolidation of power with the
establishment of the Communist monopoly dictatorship
and reduction of the people to isolation and slavery.
The great recruiting ground for communism is the
college and the university; not the workshop or the
slums You may investigate the Communist leadership
of any country in the world and it is almost certain
they were recruited during their yeai s as university
students.
Reds Train Leaders as Students
Almost every Communist leader in China today
was recruited, while he was a student in his early twen-
ties; Mao Tse-Tung, Chou En Lai, Chu Tai, head of the
Chinese Army—all came from the student ranks.
It’s the same story wherever v/e go. Fidel Castro
and his friends, who conquered Cuba, received their
Communist orientation during their STUDENT YEARS.
At present, two American-trained Communists, Caeddi
Jagen and his wife Janet, who were recruited as stu-
dents while in this country, have came to power m
British Guiana. It seems probable they will transform
that country into a Soviet satellite very soon.
Why is communism so appealing to certain student
intellectuals? The answer to this question is imperative
if we are to know how to defeat it. Communism re-
cruits students in the terms of four forces or steps.
The first step is the disenchantment with the capi-
talist system. During their student years they are
taught the Marxist analysis of capitalism, which teaches
that because of the “surface value” of. labor and the
profit motive, it leads to over-production, unemploy-
ment, degression and eventual war. They are told that
as long as capitalism continues, depression and war
must be recurrent features of a capitalist society. This
argument is very convincing to tnc 2 sang o.uae..v.
Reds De-stroy Beieef Id God
Whittaker Chambers slated that every Lilelligcnt
person of his acquaintance v/ho bar. . zeome a Can.-
L
g I SAN ANTONIO O3N.W. Military Driv.
x ‘ M3® AutHn Highway (Flamingo Hotel)
B y*< __
K V- rt,n» RAMADA INN fw information
A write: RAMADA INNS?
Dept PR, Box 590,
PHOENIX, ARIZONA
Ramada Inns have been planned, designed,
and constructed to provide a nation-wide '
network of motor hotels offering the guest
LUXURY FOR LESS" accommodations
with d maximum of comfort and convenience.
FLAGSTAFF 601 Mike's Pike
PHOENIX 3801 E. Van Buren
401 N. Firrt St.
(Sahara Hotel)
1001 N. Central at Roosevelt
(Coronet Motor Hotel)
SCOTTSDALE 333 W. Main St
TUCSON 404 N. Freeway
TEXAS
ABILENE 774 Highway 80 East
AMARILLO 1001 N.E.8th St.
AUSTIN 5656 Interregional Hwy.
BEAUMOi'.'T IzF'S N. Eleventh St.
DALLAS 6900 E. Cedar Springs Rd.
EL PASO (2) 6069 E. Montana
6099 E. Montana
FT. WORTH 4201 S. Freeway
HOUSTON 2121 Allen Parkway
LUBBOCK 2121 Amarillo Highway
MIDLAND 3601 W. Wall
ODESSA 2201 E. Second Street
VERNON 287 Highway Wert
(“Liquid sunsihline’’ powers
a portable1 radio. A small
platform slides across the floor
on a thin layer of air. A?d a
“misbehaving’’ suitcase illus-
trates principles used in mod-
ern guidance systems.
Throckmorton, students wili presentation;7
see these and other interesting
demt'nstrations when the fam-
ed Generail Motors science
show, Previews of Progress,
appears at the school soon.
“We seek through Pr/views
to inspire more young people
to make science and engineer-
ing their career and provide cant scientific develcipments of
the trained talent America the century, the fuel cell man-
must have to keep pace with ufactures electricity with much
energy, a 10-wlatt power sup-
ply furnishes over 30-million
watts in an instant to demon-
strate the electrical disintegra- —-
ti:n of a fine wire. This phe- J
nomenon may someday propel
space vehicles.
Other Previews demonstra-
tions inclblde examples of uhe
wonders of modern chemistry
and a ciaipsuile history of j el
propulsion traced from 200 B.
C. to futuristic gas turbine
power.
Previews of Progress has" al-
ready been .seen by more than
32 million American students
and adults. The demonstra-
tions, constantly updated, to
keep place with recent techno-
logical advances and presented
in easy-to-understand non-tech-
nical language, have proved to
be a big hit with students
around the globe. Nearly sev-
en million persons in Latin
America, Europe, Africa, Aus-
tralia and New Zealand have
seen the show.
Mrs. Ida Ables of Eastland
visited friends here an-} also
visited Mrs. Taylor at the
Crestview home. ,
greater efficiency than is now
obtained from' conventional
power plants.
In the Show, a few drops of
“liquid sunshine” added to the
cells provide enough energy
to operate a portable radio.
Another example of solar
energy, the amazing Sunmo-
hile, will be demonstrated. The
15-inch model car depends on
eight photoelectric cells for
device .its operation. The button-like
cells on the hood of the car
convert light rays into elec-
tricity which drives a small
electrical motor inside the car.
A 300-watt lamp is used to
simulate the sun’s rays in, the
sihow. As the light strikes the
cells, the Sunmcbile moves
smoothly aicpsiss a table.
In addition to sun power, the
Previews audience will see an
air bearing platform in opera,
tion. This small platform,
supported by three large cir-
cular pads, is designed to
slide over any flat surface on,
a thin layer of air.
The operation of the Pre-
views platform is simple. A
small blower forces air through
the three pads, creating a thin
layer of air between the pads
and the floor. The air elimi-
nates all sliding friction, enab-
ling easy mobility of the plat-
form.
Another Previews sequence
illustrates principles used i n
modern guidance systems. A
student volunteer will manip-
ulate a suitcase with a “mind
of its own’’ as the lecturer ex-
plains 'how today’s planes,
ships and missiles are safely
guided along predetermined
courses.
iStudentis will also see the
Exploding Wire Phenomenon.
Using the principle of stored
Mr. Walter Cypert and Ric-
key visited his parents i n
Hamlin Saturday.
!
I
I
School Calendar
October 11 — End 1st. 6
Weeks.
November 22
Weeks.
November 28 and 29
Thanksgiving Holidays.
December 29 — Dismiss
Christmas Holidays
4 p. m.
January 2 — Resume
after Holidays.
January 17 — End
Weeks.
February 28 — End 4th. 6
Weeks.
March 27 and
Holidays.
April 10 — End 5th 6 Weeks.
May 17 — Baccalaureate Ser-
vice.
May 20 — Last Day of School
May 21 — Grade School Grad-
uation.
May 22 — Commencement.
. ----■ -
I'lT.-IBB :aL°-l,’s hearts of boyhood
l,?> ’ - around the world. o
If it were possible, we’d precept of communism., a^Pro^r2mt
’:./I ----• j, ---J? c, — 4.1— r. QVer t-. — ---- —c , - - .
dictators who hope to rule the world. This second in
j view the panorama jeZZs the Soviets’ five-point master plan for world-
I f 11 t. - SUsud 8 • ">t the »3out movement! Undei ....-j- nh-usi-
i UL11 -he
1 h milling mass‘of wide awekc nism, stresses that only by full knowledge of the deadly
>1 ^- busily occupied with ; -------------
m multitude of self-appointed
I W ^sks---all of them living,
r'H breathing, absorbing Scouting.
rp,ne boyg swarm around you,
and a s one of them rrus bv,
vou ask him, “Tell me, what is Karl Marx taught that economic conditions
Scoutiig?” As he passes, his finally create all the institutions of civilized
smile and his answer come society, and all the ideas of the people who live
back, “Scouting is fun!” Ano- within those institutions.
, “her right answer. “Scouting A great number of non-Marxists and non-Com-
JIF# is adventure” or “Scouting is munists have generally accepted this assumption. This
Kt mmradpsh-'D ” manifests itself in the generally accepted thesis that
Ffj' f \- rnv 4-11 +T1oi-n communism is basically the result of bad economic
Thus the boys define their conditions> resuit of poverty, the result of exploita-
activity, their game. tion Therefore, any treatment to defeat communism
The game of Scoring has ? rnUSt be directed to the transformation of these eco-
; different and distinct programs nomic conditions. The assumption is that when eco-
\ ■ Suh Scon-'iav fir bovs who are nomic conditions improve, the appeal of communism
8-10 vears of age; Boy Scout will disappear, that it will withered die. ... „
'ng. 11-14 years of age; and
Exploring, 15-18 years.
This basically is the Marxist analysis which the ,
western world uncritically accepts. But it is so wrong.
The failure of our efforts to stop communism has.been
because of our failure to understand communism is not ■
the result of economic conditions. It is the result of the |
coordinated, organized actions of committed and dedi-
cated people operating in a conspiracy to rule the
WOr It pas triumphed not where economic conditions
are worse, but where it has been able to recruit people
into the struggle for communism. It was not economic
conditions, for instance, that conquered Cuba for com-
Mr. an Mrs. Tom Craft vis- munism; it was the proper recruitment of dedicated
Ted Mr. and Mrs. Harry Craft individuals.
■f Houston last week. The Secrst Liss in Peopi&S
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Fowler. Many people ask me why the Southern California
’ormer residents and now of School for Anti-Communism, recently conducted at the
Calif., were visiting friends los Angeles Sports Arena, was so successful. They ask ■
’■nd relatives in Throekmor- why we don’t immediately fake the school to such cities
ton Friday. They have been as Chicago, New York and Washington. U^rtunately,
^cationino- in several states is improbable we could conduct such equally success
acationin0 m se .eiai scares. ful schools in these cities under current circumstances.
--- The reason? The basic need to conduct such schools
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Gordon does not exist in theSe areas. We have all the elements
k necessary to hold these classes—the faculty, the back-
| Stouts Grocery
i & Market
P Plione 4061 Throckmorton $
if
j IJ
£
f'-H
j s
Why do boys by the millions
flock int> the world-wide bro-
therhood of Scouting. The ans-
wer is that they want Sjiout-
ing! The founder of the Scout
movement had the genius to
■- give >ouiL,h a picture of the
ideal b>:y- -a picture that ap-
pealed to the imagination and
| around the world.
: If R were P°ssihle’ 1’'--
swing the gates of Scoutim
i ■ wide open and show in onr
t immense ' ’
l/Y.. / I t ' « ’ "’I fbe Scout movement! Unde?
open sky you would see a
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Throckmorton Tribune (Throckmorton, Tex.), Vol. [76], No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 5, 1963, newspaper, September 5, 1963; Throckmorton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1372292/m1/3/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Depot Public Library.