Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 268, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 10, 1954 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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Thursday, June 10, T954
Thursday
PAGE.FOUR
THE DENTON RECORD.CHRONICLE
■ /-
0
AFTE
r
Hal Boyle Says:
Denton
E
D
New Arts For Wars
i. '• 4
T
I
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1
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F
acting district administrator, who new arts of possible new wars to
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grave—much
it is evident,
II
stormed across Omaha Beach, took
two hills in
Kwajalein
S
A’
921))
ANNU
O
E
I
A
Opportunity For Battery Inventor
From H-Bomb, Atomic Contamination
Bath
But
(
Television Schedules
Uy Fred Nehev
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
<Aa annonnced by television stations. Subject to change.)
0)
a
Ever
4
01
/G
A
1:80
$
N
3:30
4:00
[WlLL-yUM.
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
I
10 18
wi
10:21
t
• •
A
D,
Denton RECORD-CHRONISLE
Lv
EARS AGO
TWE
FRIDAY — JUNE 11
2
4
130,
--an(A2Ns6
V
4
4
d
I
8
e
White Show
unrm
an
mm
e
J*
V
23
(
I
ment. Rev. Sam Barcus held ma-
ny important positions in the Meth-
odist Church. At one time he was
KIDDY
PONY
"23
A mode
20,000 gall
Rommel must have known almost
as well as the face he shaved.
It would have been nice to have
12:30
12:45
1:00
• 00 4 Morning Show
• Sunup
2:15
8:80
6:30 4
6:55 4
6 P.M.
to 8 P.N
Hig
B
tory government and
Naval Air Station.
But why wasn’t the
foreseen? Actually it
Eight s
among the
the fifth
Cross Nat
TSCW.
Classes :
11:18
11:30
11.25
11:30
13:00
6:0
0:5
0:25
• 40
unleash their forces.
This week a battalion of the 16th
Infantry Regiment, partly manned
8:85
5:45
1:48
8:00
5:85
• 00
jet aircraft.
But it more than impressed a
0
J
i
4
v •
4:15
4:80
4:45
5:00
5:15
5:80
News
Dinah Shore
Kiddle Hit Parade
Jane Proman
New*
Camel News Caravan
we did not know the siekness would
com* before th* health. ” Diann* is
a famous pianist, pupil of Isabell
Scionti, and is a positively pre-
clous girl. She has been serving
as organist at Asbury Methodist
Church.
OLIN NEWTON IS A GRADU-
ATE of the University of Georgia
and a graduate student in music
at NTSC. He was an assistant
chaplain in Germany in 1951-2.
The Newtons will sail on the
Olympia for Germany, Aug. 6,
where they will study music and
languages.
THAT PAUL ROGERS FAMILY
is remarkable. Lon Ed starts his
work in pre-med at NTSC this fall.
Charles is in the University of
Texas on a four-year scholarship.
He is in the naval reserve, and
he sailed June 7th on a cruise to
Holland, Belgium, and Spain. His
ship will return to Norfolk, August
4th. He has one more year in the
University.
Some people are talented, oth-
ers are smart. A few are both
talented and smart.
A
/
Douglas Edward* and the 12:1$
---- 12:20
16:004
5
2
s
•249
N
In Denton
CU
in Hu
Twice
LONG ISLAND, N.Y., SUN: "The Fifth Amend-
• . ment was never meant to be protection for those who
• would overthrow our government by force.”
p-"
•HEN UE GOT
BACK 10 MIS
HOME OFFICE
AND OBOir
DID UE GET „
THE BUSINESS!
chance—do we want war of any type.
If ever a coalition of nations strove for a peacefu.
and satisfactory solution—working together for a free
world—now is the time.
o o
.°o,
It TOOK SWEATLEY,
THEOADMAN,
WEEKS, AND MIS
COMPANY NEARLY
BROKE, BUT AT
LAST ME LANDED
AN ORDER-
P-
I
FIVE YEARS AGO
Production and maintenance *m-
ployeces of the Morrison Mill in an
election Thursday voted 15 to seven
in favor of the United Packing-
house Workers of Angerica (CIO)
as their reepresentative for bar-
gaining.
A family reunion was held by
the W. F. Fulmer family in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Regie Mar-
tin of Cross Roads Sunday.
Dr. J. L. Gammill of Haslet was
a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ben D.
Gammill of Stony Sunday.
TEN YEARS AGO
Miss Lillian Estes, head nurse
st the Denton Hospital and Clinic,
was spending a few days with her
parents, Rev. and Mrs. C. W. Estes
of Whitesboro.
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Perryman, 609 Avenue A. Friday,
a girl, in the Denton Hospital and
Clinic.
,X
3277
33vw
pl
V
LOOKING BACK
Yesteryears*
ritory government — that Ameri-
cans here felt responsible for what
happened March 1.
This was borne out by Neas, the
. . I was being a perfect little gentleman, Mom . . . then seme
kid noticed it!"
e,
yup!(BuRP> WE YE PECIDED
TO OVE %U THE 1
BUSINESS! J
-----{
VIRGINIA, MINN., MESABI DAILY NEWS: “Giv-
en a favorable political climate, the private enterprise
' system will meet every challenge." ___
I
One Man's Family
Cowboy Cinsaics
Three Btepe fo Reaven
11:00 4 Fashion in Paces
15
s
- TWE HERRINGBONE
AND WCHi TELEVISION
COMPANY REALLY
APPRECIATES YOUR WINING
AND PING US LIKE •
—t TW®,9V«XrLSY~ „
S—t CBURPQ )
LOOK WUAT JUST CAME iNf
OU YE6. TWE BOSS WANTS TO)
.SEE YOU ABOUT TOUR <
3-L EXPENSE ACCOUNT^
expected." It spread over a much
wider area as a result. Then a
Sudden shift in high-altitude winds
7:28 « Local Weather
“ — " Morning Show
Local Rows
group of 42 former war corre-
carried the radioactivity in an un- spondehts flown here by Pan
expected direction. American Airways for a tour of
.2
X-
a test attack—hills
s
Strahen
EV
Magic CI
commented: come.
“I believe officials of the nuclear On rolling Bavarian hills only 15
tests should have given adequate miles from the Czech border, the
and timely information to the na- U.S. infantry division is going
tives so they could protect them through intensive maneuvers over
sel es. To my knowledge this was the same ground they would have
not done." .. ..,to defend if the Communists eever
There is no question that in deal-
ing with the unforeseen trouble at
Rongelap and Utirik a magnificent
job was done by all hands—the
U. S. Atomic Energy Commission,
the joint task force, the trust terri-
graver than most people choose to think.
although French censorship has tried to hide it, that
• without outside help, the French may be lost.
Three of France's top generals, headed by Chief
WFAA-TV
l
possibility
was, and
veterans who
Bathing
territory I
the people
more prot
er of droi
This fac
H. Gillian
Cross Nat
TSCW Ju
The Red
gram is I
sary this
lifesavers
Baltimore,
Commodor
low.
Twenty
one millior
tificate w:
tal stands
are more
water safe
of the nat
million R
cates wen
Instruct!
the times
by some of the
22. ' .
June was the month, the experts agreed, when Ho
Chi Minh would launch the big battle for the Red River
Delta. His troops already are nibbling at the French
.......Union fortress within the delta; by June 15 at the
latest, the experts said, he would be ready to lay seige
• to Hanoi and Haiphong.
Hanoi is the headquarters of the French Union
• forces; Haiphong, the main French supply port. If they
. fell, all Indo-China would lie open to Red conquest.
So the situation in Indo-China is
5 Movie Marquee
____ _ • Hawkins Falig
1020 : ST
Admiral Carney did not spell out precisely where
he believed the free world should attempt to halt the
. ■ Communists, or how. He dfa say that the United
• 1 States can’t make the decision alone, nor can military
men make it alone, for it is a political, as well as at
. military, decision.
: - The Administration, itself, hasn't yet made up its
mind what should be done about the situation in Indo-
China. Diplomatic talks on creating a Southeast Asia
Treaty Organization, a SEATO similar to NATO, are
under way with Australia, New Zealand, Thailand,
Britain, France, the Philippines and the Associated
(Indo-Chinese) States, but no decisions have been
reached And no commitments made. ",
One reason for the indecisiveness of the free world
• on Indo-China is the insistence of the British and the
French on exploring every possibility of reaching an
. ’ . agreement with the Communists before taking a deci-
81 MePtary action by the U. S. alone—without po-
litical action—would be utterly futile it seems to us.
There’s simply no use in fighting for people who won’t
fight for themselves—and according to Gen. Matthew
B. Ridgway, the Indo-Chinese won’t fight for themselves
as long as the only alternative to Communism they
see is a continuation of French rule.
It fa a problem of monumental importance and its
solution is a grave responsibility. Certainly we do not
want another Korea--neither--if there is any possible
■
5:40 5
5:45 4
5
8
8:58 5
WBAP-TV
*
gy
l^aqe Doings
.... J By E. J. HEADLEE
KRLD-TV
4
THURSDAY — JUNE 10
4:00 4' Martha McDonald'*
6:30 4 Four Star Playhouse
5 Th* Loh* Ranger
8 Where * Raymond?
7:00 4 Lux Video Theatre
* Dragnet
* Th* Goldberg*
7:80 4 Big Town
5 Ford Theatre
* Th* Name * th* Same
1:00 4 Publie Defender
• Martin Kane
• Dollar A Second
8:30 4 Place Th* Fac*
5 Groucho Man
* Boston Blackie
9:00 4 Munl Kall Varteties
5 Justice
• Captured
• SO 4 Tour TV Theatre
* avalcade of Ameriec
• Counterpoint
10 00 4 Th* World Today
6-10-^ .
±2eY
M=44A
A heavy shower of rain, accom- 10:30
panied by considerable wind, visi- 10 35
ted Denton early Friday. 10:48
4 House Party
5 Little Theatre
8 Noon Edition
4 The Big Payoff
5 Kate smth Hour
a Showtime Matinee
4 Bob Crosby Show
»
5 Weather
5 Newa
Jack Paar Show
Ding Dong School
Ma«gto and Her Frlenda
ministrator) or other Americans
know about it. We were afraid
they would get into trouble.”
Heine was on a trust territory
ship at Kwajalein the day of the
hydrogen explosion.
“Water around the ship teemed
to shake,” he said. “There were
several explosions that went
i 4 The Secret Storm
• 4 Portia Face* Life
8 On Your Account
1 4 Cash Qui*
1 4 Mary Carter** Cook Book
ft Movie Marquee
8 Pinky Lee Show
• 4 Variety Fair
8 Howdy Doody
) 4 Manna McDonald’s
Kitchen
8 Kiddle Karnival
l ft Ann Alden
> 6 Bobby Peter*
8 Frontier Playhouse
1 4 Party lime
* S See Saw Zoo Club
) 8 John DaiL and The News
> 4 Douglas Edwards and The
Newa
• Coke Time with Eddie
Fisher
1 8 Kiddie Hit Parade
i 4 Perry Como
ft News
8 Camel News Caravan
i ft Evening News
1 4 Mams
6 Cowboy Thrill
8 Evening Edition
1 8 Weathercast
1 8 Baseball Hall of Fame
, 6 Weather
• 4, Topper
< ft Stu Erwin
V
oesendetee Mee Patureni 1
oria
:2
;; 15163
’ 1-1
“wham wham.’”
The ship arrived at Utirik next
day.
“We were met by many canoes,"
Heine reported. “The first question
they asked was ‘Is there a war
on?" The people said they saw
something like flames or shooting
stars but too low to be shooting
stars., They said children cried and
hid in the bush.”
Heine later learned that Ronge-
lap and Utirik atolls had been con-
taminated. He began, with other
native leaders, to work on the
protest.
Heine is superintendent of the
Marshall Island schools. He and
Atlan Anien, a teacher, were chief
draftsmen of the petition.
Heine is 35, with dark skin and
bushy hair. He went to mission
schools, and worked for the U. S.
Navy as a guide and interpreter in
World War II.
“We like the Americans,” Heine
declared. “We petitioned Congress
with 2,000 names to have you (the
United States) stay here."
He says the petition implies no
lack of confidence in the trust ter-
By HAL BOYLE and capture his famed Afrika
— . Korvs. It was in the forefront of
GRAFENWOEHR, Germany U. the forces that ten years ago
From the desertsofTuni Field landed and breached his West
the beaches of Normandy, Held defenses
Marshal Rommel’s, battle, plans « the ghost of the brilliant
were upset by the Big Red one - desert Fox" could come back this
The V.s.ist Infantry division.w at way once more, he would find rea-
it balked his breakout . son for a dry smile over the antic*
Kasserine Gap, then helped crush time plays with the dreams of cor-
porals and field marshals.
For here on the great sprawling
German military reservation where
Rommel himself once trained his
feared panzer legions, his old foe—
“The Big Red”—is practicing the
• Quest Book
1:56 • Charm School
2:00 4 Brighter Day
ft What’s Cooking
8 Welcome Traveler*
EwLe
eLe
3//0 1 o
•
4:18 5
4:80 ft
8
4:45 4
5:00 ft
8
8:15 •
8:80 4
when it happened the trouble was had Rommel’s opinion of the oper-
quickly detected. As AEC Chair- ation-a skillfully coordinated at-
man Lewis L. Strauss announced, tack employing every element
the “detonation was larger than from doughboy and tank to modern
b Musical Memo
8 Julie Benell Show
4 Catholic Report
ft Good Morning Pastor
4 New*
4 Garry Moore Show
ft Museum Adventures
4 Double or Nothing
6 Farm And Home
• The Money Man
POM
Mb* In en
these new
mervels th
work into
In 3 sizes
need. Fof
Vectory gu
MR. AND MRS. OLIN NEWTON
(Dianne Rogers) returned from
their honeymoon Buffering from
food poisoning. Dianne said to her
mother, Mrs. Paul Rogers. "We
promised to take care of each oth-
er in sickness and in health, but
8 The Texas Newa
8 Final Edition
4 Let's Talk about the
Weather
8 Weather Teletacta
a Mystery Piayhouse
4 Sport* Tonight
• Kawa Final -
4 Nighttime Movie
5 Sport* with Bhermani
• Showtime
8 Chennai 8 Thentre
8
6:10 8
• :1» 8
• 28 •
38,
8
gga
Pubitohed every eftanaeen (exeept Saturday! and Sunday by Denton Pud-
WhiM fio me_ n« E Hiekor st ......
Hhtered at BRcpnd clane mal matter at the poetoffice at Denton. Texan,
Janunrv M. 1021, aecording to Act of Congrena. March 8. 1872.
SUBSCHIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION
5araumarr"cesersaAave,0o for Bundaz.
Decision May Be Near
—
The moment of decision appears to be swiftly
approaching for the United States in Indo-China.
Within the month—perhaps within days—the nation
may have to decide whether to stand by while the Com-
munists devour that rich, unhappy land—or whether
to step in.
The stepping in could be either militarily or po-
litically—or both. Certainly, we and the rest of the free
world hope for a peaceful political settlement. But such
• is indeed difficult with the Communists—as has been
i evidenced now and before.
Kitchen
Kiddie Karnival
Ann Alden
Bobby Peters
Frontier Playhoune
Party Time
Bee Saw Zoo Club
Tims For Magio
John Daly and th* New*
fun NaT
CUK< 8UOMT
8 Life of Riley y
7:00 4 Playhouse of Star*
6 Pride of the Family
8 Th* Big Story
740 4 Our Mins Brooks
ft Who'* Th* Boa*
8 sundstage
8:00 4 My Friend Irma
ft Ozle & Harriet
8 Gillett* Fight*
8:80 4 Pavorite Story
ft Pepti Cola Playhouse
• :4ft 8 Th* Big Playback
9:00 4 Meet Mr. MeNutley
ft Lttie Theater
8 Dave Qarroway Show
9:30 4 Telephone Time
ft Barn Dane*
8 Royal Piayhouse
9:45 4 Wonders of Th* Wild
10:00 4 Th* World Today
B The Texas New*
8 Final edition
10:18 4 Let’s Talk About The
Weather
8 Weather Teletacta
8 Mystery Playhouse
10:28 4 Sport* Tonight
ft New* Final
10 80 4 Mignttime Mort*
* Sport* With Sherman
10 88 5 Movie Marquee
50395 • Cbagnel aThegtre
825. .2 FIxa, 7 ,, • v
K4M2Bald8e tel-a
Fred Moore, supertntendent of
Denton's Negro schools, will attend
Fisk University, Nashville, Ten-
nesee, this summer.
Born: To Mr. and Mrs. James
M. Copeland, 711 Bradahaw Street,
Saturday, a boy, who was named
James Ray Copeland.
I
Evening New*
Flash Gordon
Cowboy Thrill*
Evening Edition
Weathercast
Baseball Hall of Fame
Weather
ONE MORNING LAST WEEK
Gene Thomas wss just trying to
gat awake when he want into the
breakfast room to find Alice mak-
ing coffee. ‘
Before he waa wide-awake she
said, “Happy anniversary, honey!”
It was their 19th wedding anniver-
sary, and all Gene could think of
to aay waa, “'Isn't It remarkable
that you have been able to put up
with me for nineteen years?"
Alice said, “Darling, shed-ap,
that’s bad psychology.”
• • • •
.v. . ...
7ankt, Y
JERB ABAT,
RUSHINQ,L.I,
£-IQeeg
WASHIN
pence Co
President
what he a
today dim
victory foh
floor fight
tax cut.
Finishing
page tax
after six v
tions, the
all of the I
and indivi
ministratio
to about $
in the firsl
Democra
not even o
big reduct
taxes by
it had be
mitte woul
Their fa
support th
hopes for
reduction
the Senat
nance C
legislation.
president of Southwestern Univer-
sity at Georgetown. He died 10
years ago. Mrs. Barcus is still
living.
ONE OF DENTON’S BEST
KNOWN MEN, Sam Canafax is
critically ill at his home on South
Elm St. Sam made thousands of
friends while serving as policeman
on the court square in recent years.
You have not known a better man.
'MO J
229"
08
"DeEeG,*$ •
The weather man, that night of old battle scenes. It was so real-
March 1, gave Maj. Gen. Percy W. istic that at one point, when a
Clarkson, task force commander, quadruple mount of 50 caliber ma-
the first tip that something had chine guns began clipping trees
gone awry. The next day planes branches on the road a few yards
landed at the affected atolls and before them, several began moving
scientists decided all natives and nervously toward the nearest
military personnel must be evacu- ditches.
ated. A destroyer spmpleted the The only foulup in the maneuver
. _ I aa r ■ ■ I I evacuation in two days, taking the came in the field of air support.
Nl-FIuIMe pe-p I Mce <1T —mmel-re people to Kwajalein for medical Eight swift Sabrejets swooped
DR. AND MRS. FLOYD STO- IVdIIVW3 EUdI •33 •uJ I | I V | I I • I Cl I IVI assistance and maintenance. down to knock out a strong point
VAL of Chapel Hill, N. C. are • Besides the natives, 28 U. S. mH- with napalm and 200-pound bombs,
house guests of Dr. A. M. Sam- , ,,itary personnel on Rongerik Atoll— They hit the target exactly, but
sx 25 hJ «anir* emo 88 ma .“Sfe u.
is a former head of the English jured Japanese fishermen and izens of the Marshall Islands. It atomic tests, could g0 forward. recovering without serious con- flamed after hitting the ground.
K.“M -♦ “Arrec .na “w showered radioactive ash upon said: Then, in the March 1 test of the ecncne AfPiciale .av tamec cae 51 .
Departmeentat NTse, and nW three atolls charted as safe. The "We feel that we must follow the hydrogen bomb, 45 persons on s eque nes,(officials say, friendlv Some of the ground a oIdtors,kneoW:
holds the sameposition with the Associated Press sent correspond- dictates of our consciences to bring Rongelap Atoll suffered radiation The Marsh lese.a a iendy ing the nearest Czech jet air a.e
University of North Carolina He ent William J. Waugh to the Mar- forth this urgent plea to the United burns from falling ash. The 23 and practical people..They, recog, is only about three minutes flying
is.a friendly man, has remark- shall Islands to get the residents’ Nations ... We request that all residents of Rongelap and Utirik nize that the. d! f ; may time away, snickered aloud,
able ability. Not Ho he said, views. Today's article tolls of the the experiments with lethal weap- atolls were evacuated on a tem- have to continue.. If thatsis the
"We are both incorrigible Texans feelings underlying the appeal of ons within this area be immedi- porary basis. case, says Heine, our petition out-
and will always keep in touch with the “poisoned people” to the Unit- latey ceased.” The Marshallese are scared. But lines satisfactory alternatives. C.7 Wofor!
our Texas friends. ed Nations. If these experiments are “ab- after talking with them for 10 days These include all possible pre- - •
...__________ , ----- solutely necessary for the eventual I feel they are most concerned lest cautionary steps, education in to, ,,, *
THE REV. J. SAM BARCUS had _ WILLIAM J WAUGH well-being of all the people of th* the atomic tests force them to lose safety measures and adequate ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. P A
the distinction of being the only ’ world,” then it urged better pre- their home lagoons. compensation for loss of goods or glass of ice water drop* stomach
pastor to serve First Methodist MAJURO, MARSHALL IS- cautionary measures and adequate They put the gist of their fears lands. temperature more than a third;
Church at two different times. He LANDS (P — There was a certain compensation for uprooted citizens, and hopes into the petition they “Land means a great deal to the Tha twas the report a group of
waa pastor in 1908-9 and again in eloquence to the letter. Dwight The Marshall Islands scene of sent to the United Nations in April; Marshallese,” says the petition to University of Pennsylvania re-
1921-23. He was th* father of Mrs. Heine dropped it in the mailbox u. s. atomic experiments, are oc- it is to come before the Petitions the U. N. “It means more than searchers made here at a meeting
T. Herbert Minga, wife of the new across the 7,500 miles between cupied by the United States under Committee of the U. N. Trustee- just a place where you can plant of biologists.
District Superintendent of the Den- here Aprill 22 and sent it winging a trusteeship from the United Na- ship Council late in June. your food crops and build your After you drink a glass of ice
ton District, and a brilliant worn- these coral islands and the glass itons. With a population of 11,000, “We spent a month working on houses; or a place where you can water, your stomach temperature
an. Denton Methodists are congra- and stone headquarters of th* the islands are a group of low- it," said Heine, spokesman for the bury your dead. It is the very life falls from around 98 degrees to
tulating each other on thia appoint- United Nations. lying atolls. All residets of Bikini committee that originated it. “We of the people. Take away their land 63 degrees and doesn’t return to
purposely did not let Mr. Neas and their spirits go also.” normal until 35 minutes later.
(Maynard Neas, acting district ad-
-(CONGRES
ae"se
LEG/S/A7/VE •
PRGlGBAM. e* J
of Staff Gen. Paul Ely, returned to Paris last week after
making an emergency on-the-spot survey. Their top-
secret report—so secret that it was delivered to the
National Defense Council orally rather than in writing—
first leaked in part in the French weekly L'Express.
(The French police, acting on a request from the De-
fense Ministry, promptly confiscated all copies of that
' issue.)
Here are some of the report’s contents, as pieced
together by Newsweek European correspondent Ben-
jamin Bradlee:
(1) More and bigger Dien Bien Phus are threaten-
ing, not only in the Red River delta but also in Southern
Indo-China, hitherto regarded as securely under French
control. z
(2) Dien Bien Phu cost the French Expeditionary
Corps both its best troops and its mobility.
(8) During the last three months French Union
• Forces have loet 20,000 killed, wounded or prisoners,
• including 2,500 officers and non-coms.
(4) The morale of French Union troops has taken
a nose dive since the end of Brig. Gen. Christian de
• Castries’ heroic stand.
Right now French planes, tanks and artillery are
- pounding the small concentrations of Communist-led
• Vietminh guerrillas in the Red River delta. And the
• main rebel forces took a firmer hold on their semicircle
, of positions just outside the delta defense perimeter,
, strengthening the pincers they are expected to try to
• close coon aroynd the war capital—in preparation for
" , the Communist push.
Last week, the U, S. Navy’s top-ranking officer,
Admiral Robert B. Carney, Chief of Naval Operations,
attempted to impress on the American people the magni-
* tude of the disaster should Indo-China be evacuated by
. the French.
The loss of Indo-China, he declared, would put the
free world in great peril. Soon, all Southeast Asia would
be blanketed behind the Iron Curtain, the Admiral said.
And Southeast Asia, with its millions of people and vast
resources would, immeasurably strengthen the war-
: making potentialities of the Communist world.
9
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 268, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 10, 1954, newspaper, June 10, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1441847/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.