Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 62, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 17, 1957 Page: 4 of 20
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Conditions In
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Moon Gazers, It's High Time
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The first American artificial moon with broadcast*
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iverty, living conditions aoem to
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slowly improving for Bulgari-
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Still A Lonn Climb
Here’s One Politician Who
k
Plainly Doesn’t ‘Promise’
Meany, As U.N.
1g
W
Reds With
ords
GROWING PAINS
By Bud Blake
Lord said.
"He's
Even so, it is the intellectual
0
its council of elders issues a de-
TEXANS IN D.C.
‘Ga
Chief Claims
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THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!
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io study in El Azhar.
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El Azhar Is 1,000-Year-Old
University In Cairo Shadows
have
the <
it out in his deci-
technicalities that
AND TEN GPEND
ML naif OH M
FIRST MOUTIPUL
eWAULOW
ALREADY!,
aef-old
of six
a _ tremendous
speaker."
Who Is Punishing Whom? •
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"qmrr
‛k, ‘ ",p
02"
Es
ME’NOrTATL
cAn!mSeQtALL
MYSPAE ART?
-
w
A game warden can haul you
before a judge who may fine you
28M8-.
abound in most court decisions.
Just back from Amarillo and a
fishing trip. Jones found himself
the subject of George Kennedy's
column in the Washington Eve-
fling star. Kennedy wrote:
ztAu..
been more interested in ending the intolerable and
shameful stalemate in Little Rock, and less determined
to continue shaking the Federal fist under the noses of
all our 48 governors—if they had included Governor
Faubus in the White House meeting--the wounds
of the Arkansas "occupation” might now be healing—
however slowly.
Better Use Hook
To Catch Oysters
; ROCKPORT Tex., i_I you're
over 17 you’d better get a $2.15
salt water fishing - license- before
going to the Gulf to not crabs
up to $100 and costs if you haven't
a license.
The Game Commission says it's
illegal to catch crabs without a
license by any other method than
a pole and line. trot line or throw
line
The commission ruled that both
crabs and oysers are fish, too,
for the purpose of collecting the
license fee.
Who ever caught an oyster on
a fish hook?
The last Legistature passed the
new licensing measure
this operation — a 38-
housewife and the mother
Cree, the impact is felt wherever
the faithful gather. Its graduates
fan out to carry the message of Is-
lam to the ends of the earth.
There is no green campus, no
football stadium, no ivied wall. El
Azhar is a large mosque topped
by three minarets. Around the
columns inside, the students liter-
ally sit at the foot of learned
sheikhs to study the Koran and
Moslem theology.
In narrow streets and bazaars
about El Azhar, the population
case, he'll bring
sions and avoid
WHICH ONE "\
of you Guys is
DRAGGIN’HSeET?
ll
Misses Margaret Ballard, Virginia
Edwards, Gladys Blewett, William;
NOTICE TO PUBLIC: __ _
Any erroneous reflection upon the character, reputation or standing of
any firin, individual or corporation will be gladly corrected upon
being called te the publishers attention.
The publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, typographical
errors or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct
in next issue after it is brought to their attention. All advertising
orders are accepted on this basis only.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS '
The Associnted Press is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
of all the local news printed in this newspaper, as well as al AP
news dntpa tches
Bromoeemy
30"---
,,7
bladder must be sacrificed," he
seld.---
.The surgeon said the only pa-
Hunt who so far has undergone
2 ' 5
----- of the students are old
men who have devoted a lifetime
eme ’
I
Judge Gets
Wide Praise
By TEX EASLEY
WASHINGTON U—The tang of
the Texas Panhandle, to which
he was long exposed, may have
something to do with the clarity
and interesting reading that mark
opinions handed down by Chief
Judge Marvin Jones of the U.S.
Court of Claims
Jones long ago attracted wide
attention with the uncluttered
prose and lack of, legalistic 'lan-
guage in his opinions.
If there's human interest in a
OCT. 17, 1847
Thomas 1 Dawson, 25, Houston,,
was accidentally electrocuted at
work on a line near Mayhill. He
was an employe of Texas Power
and Light Co. and had been work-
ing in this area for two months.
Mrs: R.- M. Carter of Sherman,
former president of the second
district of P-TA. opened the fall
meeting of the Denton County Par-
ent - Teacher’s Assn.
। More than $50,000 was paid for
436 dairy cows and calves in a
dispersal sale of the Simmons
Bros: dairy at Grapevine. The sale
was made necessary to make way
for the new Grapevine Dam.
7Aamat
6 dever
Ae0,*
-Zpca_
? to n A
LARAMIE, Wyo. U - Laramie
city sanitarian Charles Walton wo
ders now whether the automobile
really has replaced the horse Dur-
ing one 34 hour period. Walton
received five compiaints of horses
running loose on Laramie streets
*8
With the attention of America and the world at
large still centered on Central High School in Little
Rock, Ark., where disturbance, distraction and disre-
spect of authority still prevailed at this writing, the
nation’s number one problem still seemed to be how
to get the President off the hook on which his At-
nesday evening at the home of
her parents on West Hickory
Street. The guest list included
HAL HOYLE SAYS
4-Year-Old Girl Is Quite
A Mystery-A Pleasant One
HARK TO HARVEY
Davidson Frances Mae Long,
W. B. MeClurkan Jr., Mrs. Connie.
Jones and Mrs. Bert Fowler.
4
Horse Not Gone
. -'A?
Vg
0
g.
•.Gag
We
TRIM OUCHTA BE
L A LAW AGAINST-
T
La
By HARVEY HUDSON
SOFIA U—After IS years of bit-
ter struggle against collective
Denton Record. Chronicle
________TELEPHONE DUpont 2-251
Published every evening (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., Inc., 314 E. Hickory St.
Entered as second class mail matter at the epostoffice at Denton. Tex-
as January 13. 1831. according to Act of Congreee. March 3, 1873.
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MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
them," Mrs.
By PAUL HARVEY
When Sen. Knowland announced
he was running for governor of
California, considerable acrimony
resulted from some who said he
was really running for President.
They charged he was ‘using the
California office as a stepping-
stone. _____
by mo.” .And a few hours later, after Attorney Gen-
eral Brownell—the man who is reliably reporr ’ *
(prevented agreement between the President and
Governor at Newport—had rushed to the White
House, the nation was stunned with the announcement
that the Faubus response was “unsatisfactory".
It seems apparent now that if the palace guard had
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Im-
George Meany is used to being
called "a tool of Wall Street." But
the president of the AFL-CIO isn’t
going to let the Russians get away
with it. /
The squat. plainspoken labor
leader is busy answering the Rus-
sians these days as U.S. delegate
to the United Nations.
An ex-plumber from the Bronx.
Meany shares the U.S. spot on the
Social. Cultural and Humanitarian
Committee with Mrs. Oswald B.
Lord, who has been active in the
U.N. for 10 years.
He takes labor and refugee
problems and she takes the cul-
- tural and humanitarian subjects.
"And he does a fine job with
-experienced a good resu
tion of the main part _ __
stomach was not impaired-Ss a
result of these surgeries. The pa-
tient experienced no gastro-intes-
tinal symptoms. She gained eight
pounds in six months. Her diges-
tion was faultlesa, and restor-
tion of kidney functions took place
34 days after surgery.
OCT. 17. 1917
Denton High School will carry
out a full schedule of games as
arranged by Coach O. W. Stewart
if school resumes next week. A
game has been scheduled with
Gainesville, and others with Ma-
sonic Home of Fort Worth. North
Fort Worth and Decatur Baptist
College.
Miss Louise Richardson enter-
tained a number of friends Wed-
ing facilities— built and launched in full color ip our
popular magazines long, long ago — will be lofted into .
the nothingness next March, while a beepless dummy
will be sent up in a test shot in December.
This is the President’s forecast, made to his press
'conference as Russia’s sputnik continued its 90-min- -
ute round-the-clock flights. The President paid his
respects to "the very powerful thrust in their (the
Russian) rocketry," but said of the satellite itself,
"that does not raise my apprehensions, not one iota."
„ Nevertheless; America's top experts on satellites,
rockets and missiles r trooped ito the White House
the next day to attend, with Mr. Eisenhower, the reg-
ular meeting of‘the National Security Council Neil
• H. McElroy, our new defense secretary, told newsmen
he was studying ways and means of speeding up the'*
missile program. Following this came another high-
level White House meeting on the IOMB—which Rus-
/ J
•....... --N, ,
PAGE FOUR
, NEW YORK (-I know a child
who's a wilderness to me. and fun
to explore day by day.
Her name is Tracy— "Margaret
Tracy Ann Kathlen,"' as she
likes, to brag when she is sure
her fdther is listening. She is 4
years old and grabbing for eter-
nity.
Out of all the children in1 the
whole wide world my wife. Fran-
— ... ,
Yesteryear
Looking Rack Through
Record * Chronicle Files
T.-m ... o Even so, I Is me intenectuer, and „ - . has for
extemporaneous center o theMostemwotid: 'When' Nxsnnndselvaschinthas &
Z wXed ThXu Hungary Seem
I hat We raced Ihe Muzhiks Eo Improve
The fipc+ AyAp;ai artificial pAAw with hygogeg+_ •
full coping with alert young stu-
dents quick to catch the* teacher
in error.
In a class in grammar, the
sheikh may spend endless hours
teaching students the nine ways
of reciting "in the name of Allah
the merciful. the compassionate."
opening words of the Karn.
The ■ students study until they
have acquired sufficient know
ledge to pass examinations. When
they have passed a probationary
period, they may qualify to re-
ceive rations, supplied by income ,
from sacred endowments. These
endowments- "waqfs" - also sup-
port the sheikha and generally
cover the expenses of the univer-
FAIRPORT, N.Y.,. HERALD-MAIL: "Ordinarily
neighbors are reluctant to protest or 'make trouble'-
for their friends next door. They feel that complain-
. ing about a dog's behavior is only one notch lower
than spanking a neighbor's child. . . In consequence,
they have continued to suffer in silence while dogs de-
stroyed their property, frightened their children or
noisly disturbed their slumbers."
:::: EDITORIALS AND FEATVRES ::::i THE DENTQN RECORD-CHRONICLE :::i
.................... .................. .-----= =—
4*662
"Marvin Jones, chief judge of
. the U.S. Court of Claims, is back
from vacation. This adds a blythe
spirit to the capital, albeit in ju-
dicial robes." -
The judge caught some bass in
the Panhandle. His main purpose
in returning to Texas each year
is to visit his mother, who is 101
' years old.
Jones represented the Panhan-
dle in Congress during the early
"New Deal" days of Franklin D.
Roosevelt. As chairman of the
House Agriculture Committee he
wrote most of today's basic farm
laws.
torney General had Impaled him.
The best hope could well be'the. appointment of an-
other Governors' Committee by the Conference of m . - .
Southern Governors—omitting Maryland’s curiously__Delegate rlghtB
belligerent McKeldin, and perhaps Tennessee's loq- — - —-- -E -
uacious Clement and including Governor Faubus. .
* '
NK - Wie/
gon,E
(7
62-,
lot of it across to the world right
here."
—-----------------...x........
Bladder Is Made
From Section
Of The Stomach
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. un -Pro-
duction of an "artificial bladder"
from a section of the stomach was
reported today by a Chicago
surgeon. *
Dr. Edwin S. Sinaik, of Loyola
University said the substitute
bladder was fashioned to aid a
woman whose natural bladder was
affected by an inoperable cancer.
The tumor, he told the 43rd
Clinical Congress of The American
College of Surgeons, had blocked
the openings to tubes linking the
blader with the kidneys, had pro-
duced hemorrhage and anemla,
and left the woman unable to void
unrine without the aid of an in-
sorted tube.
He said the operation—in which
a pouch of the stomach was cut
away and resown into place as a
functioning unirary bladder-
might be useful in the case of
paraplegic patients where there is
a joss of the normal muscular
control of urine passage. Abo. "It
may ba useful whenever the true
Li
ft
sia has and we haven’t.
Sputnik has been of immense value to Russia, pro-
viding the Reds with a psychological victory over
which the world is still gasping. Yet sputnik may
have performed an even greater service for the U.S.
If it punctured official complacency, reduced some
swelled heads and frightened some of the jealousy
out of our ranking defenders, it has served us well.
It may even have shaken our Central Intelligence Ag-
ency which appears, again, to have been taken un-
. aware.
We have been gravely assured by various officials,
from the President down, that there was no internat-
ional race to mount the first earth satellite. But we
find it very hard to believe—in view of the tremend-
ous publicity buildup—that those in charge of our pro-
gram were not trying to do just that. The fact that
the original satellite appropriation of $22 million was
boosted to 166 million and then to 1110 million would
also seem to suggest a certain amount of pressure on
the project. ’ ..
But whether there was a race or not, it cannot be
denied that we lost. We can afford to lose the pre-
liminary races but when the big one — the World
Stakes—is run, we can’t afford to lose.
I '*
■ ■
8
2, )
, It will be recalled that the original committee, ap-
• pointed at the governors’ Sea Island conclave, reported
success in their White House mission, and an official
statement from the White House declared that, “upon
a declaration on the part of the Governor of Arkan-
sas that he will not obstruct the orders of the Federal
courts and will, in connection therewith, maintain law
and order in Little Rock” the President would order ’
return of the National Guard to the Governor's com-
mand and "u soon as practicable" withdraw all Fed-
eral troops.
IThe governors reported that Faubus had agreed by
phone to comply. Received shortly afterward at the
White House, his statement read: "I now declare that
upon withdrawal of Federal troops I will again assume
full responsibility, in cooperation with local author!*
\ ties, for the maintenance of law and order, and that
the orders of the Federal courts will not be obstructed
OCT. 17,-1937
1 - Burglars took $49 from the Rai-
ley Grocery, 700 West Hickory, the
first nighttime burglary in the city
- in several weeks.
Miss Billy McCarley. 18. State
College for Women student from
McKinney, was killed Saturday by
a small calibre rifle with which
ahe was . attempting to shoot a
chicken at her parent's home. -
Presidential nomination, The. vot-
ers of Callfornia will want to know
whether Sen. Knowland is willing
to abandon his higher ambitions
for the next five years."
Sen. Knowland, confronted with
the charge, refused to make any
promise. In his formal announce-
ment he said oaly. u. was his in-
tention if elected to "devote my-
self faithfully to the administra-
tion of the duties of the office for
the term or terms to which I
might be elected."
. "Senator, does this mean you
would refuse to run for any other
office while you are Governor?"
"No," the senator replied. "No
one has a crystal ball as ot 1880
or 1964."
The Knight • Knowland race is
going to be a,reel Donnybrook. I
will watch it with interest, but
from the sidelines and in silence.
I Aauaza..m.12t..u1. * a..% Aaa.. A _
I COIEIUCTVATOrIIE poTTTTVS Tnr
exclusive province of the people of
California. You have never known
me inject myself into any purely
local affairs which are not rightly
the concern of an "outsider."
I am personally acquainted with
Sen. Knowland and, with Gov.
Khight and their families and H
don't aim to get mixed up in their
fight. But the academic debate
concerning whether a governor is
every really running for goverhor
is one we have in every state. And
I have never yet seen one who
would refuse a White House nomi-
nation.
None ever protested more voci-
ferously than did Gov. Stevenson
of my state of Illinois that he had
"no ambition beyon Springfield."
On the very eve of his first Pres-
idential nomination he stated his
refusal to run. saying he consider-
ed himself neither "mentally nor
physically" up to the rigors of the
Presidency. But he’ did run.
Twice. ; ,
, So l was rather reassured with
the manifestation of Sen. Know-
land's integrity when he plainly
stated in his announcement he
"intended" to be Governor for the
full four years, but he didn't "pro-
mise" it.
We who are pretty fed up with
shattered scrape of campaign pro-
mises would just as soon not hear
any as transparently hupocritical
as the one where a gubernatorial
candidate says: "I have no am-
bitions beyond the Governorahip."
They all have. (Copyright 1987.
General Features Corp.)
©1,KinkFeamSyndiomaime.wGlasighursena,
By WILTON WYNN
CAIRO I — School has started
again in a thousand-year-old uni-
versity in the shadow of the domes
and minarets of Old Cairo. En-
rolled this year are students from
54 countries where the mueznin
calls "Allahu akbar" (God is
great) from the minaret
The university, called El Azhar,
is the oldest Moslem center of
learning. It clings to traditions
and systems begun in days when
men thought the world was flat.
'
crosslegged on carpets puff heav-
ily on hubble-bubble pipes.
The air is heavy with a mixture
of odors—amber perfume, tobacco
smoke, broiling mutton, and
spices of every kind A woman
shopper screams imprecations at
e merchant who won't bring down
his price. A donkey driver shorts
at pedestrians to get out of the
way. A weary taxicab chugs
through the crowd, patiently honk-
ing as it Inches along.
You stop out of this noisy world
into the calm and repose of the
mosque.
On the left as you enter is a
wooden stand where students pig-
eonhole their shoes. No one wears
shoes inside the mosque.
Through another arch is the
sunny, stone-paved courtyard, ar-
caded on three sides The row of
archs on the east opens into a
forest of columns inside the sanc-
tuary itself. Here the gloom is cut
by beams of sunlight filtered
through multicolored windows
near the ceiling. A mihrab (pray-
er niche) points the way to Mec-
ca. toward which the faithful face
when they pray.
Around almost every column a
circle of students squats cross-
logged on sort carpets covering
the floor. Seated on a wooden
bench with his back to the column
is a lecturer, usually bearded and
wearing the white and red turban
of the ashar sheikh, re learned
man.
The students represent a cross-
section of the Moslem world. They
may be black men from Nigeria,
yellow men from China, or white
men from Albania. But all of them
study and argue in Arabic, and
almost every sheikh has his hands
Meany regards his main job in
the U.N. as speaking for millions
of American workers and "stand-
ing up to the Russians and trying
to beat them at their own game."
His principal opponent in the
Social Committee is Mrs. Z. V.
Mironova, a tall. Imposing woman
from Moscow who called U. S.
labor leaders "tools of 'wall
Street" in a recent meeting.
Meany told her that "American
workers set their own wages here
by mutual agreement. In Russia
they re set by a state committee
—and that sounds like manage-
ment."
Then he quoted Russian sta-
tisties showing that a plant man-
ager can earn 40 times more than
his workers. "We have capitalists
here in America." Meany said,
"but we don't have any like
that," • >
Mrs. Mironova did not answer
Meany directly. Later she com-
plained that "Mr. Meany is dis-
turbing the harmony of our com-
mittee."
Meany spends three to five days
a week at the U.N.
"American labor has a lot to
say," he said, "and we can get a
Incumbent Gov. Knight, promis-
ing this will be no "panty-waist
campaign," charged the Sen.
Knowland is using the Sacramento
job as a "pebble on the road to
th White House."
. "His announcement," said Gov.
Knight, "is a thinly disguised in-
vitation to his later 'draft' for the
MRDERFOR er .
Cow 7y-*
op ./ALL RIGMT! ALL RIGHT!
TiE TTE ANq€L$, TMS9NG-----
WHO JOLLER 8.000 \Nw:ejeA
Food is plentiful and cheap, al-
through specific items may be
scarce from time to time. This
year’s harvest was. good. People
on the streets are not stylishly
dressed by "Western standards but
the clothing is neat.
Diplomats say that the better-
ment in living conditions has been
oticeable since 1953, with a pro-
nounced stepup in the pace after
the 20th Party Congress in Mos-
cow. New concessions also were
made to the people after the up-
rising in Hungary .last year.
Merchandise in the shops seems
to be meager and of saeddy quali-
ty, but more and more goods are
appearing. Prices are high for
manufactured goods. A bicycle
sells for about a month's salary
for an ordinary worker.
The broad tree-lined streets of
Sofia are virtually empty of auto-
mobiles. An estimated 8,000 motor
vehicles are registered in all Bul-
garia and most of these are
trucks.
Housing is extremely short and
government regulations say each
room must be inhabited by two
persons. Big blocks of new apart-
ments are being built but con-
struction goes slowly.
Ten years ago Bulgaria was de-
scribed as the tightest little police
state in the Russian orbit. It may
no longer be the champion in this
league bit It is certainly well up
in the standings.
About 5,000 persons are reported
held in a concentration camp, al-
though the government claims
that all political prisons have been
doted. Officially, there is no un-
amnlaumAnt Antasallu nnvhnwa
C’P’OY-IIcnt- Aviuaiiy, p^msps
100,000 must eke out a precarious
existence on the gifts of friends or
relatives.
An estimated 80 per cent of the
peasants have been signed up for
the Russian-style collective farms.
First - hand reports continuously
come to Sofia, of violence used to
force holdouts into the collectives.
cgoyedw-h ■
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126831,8624 •
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(282
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1957
he----—
a . J '
cos. and I picked her out at the
squirming age of one month to
share the common adventure of
our life, which we enjoy, and
Tracy, who is rugged, seems to
also.
She is as sure of herself as a
tractor on a half-acre farm, and
does a fair job of plowing UM
household rules. But she is a mys-
tery unto herself, and her next
step to me is always a pleasant-
word puzale.
I don't know whether you have
ever adopted a' child. If you have,
you must be familiar with one of
the first instruction:
"Do not hide from the child the
fact it is adopted. Tell it from the
start it is a chosen child. apd
make it feel very, very selected.”
' Well, never a man to go
m jg
.. .
K •
against social scienre, I started
trying to indoctrinate my daugh-
ter early. When she was 6 monbs
old, I swung her in my arms and
crooned:
"Baby, you're the best. We saw
the- crop in a good year, and
you’re the top of the harvest. You
were never a grape. You were
born champagne."
Month after month, year after
year, endeavoring as best we
could to save her from any early
searing emotional scars and try-
ing to abid by the book, we have
told her she is the absolutely
the greatest, which she is: the
1 positively absolute and that's tor
sure; and the real sine qua non,
which is a foreign way of saying
it.
I try as subtlety and as hard
as I -can to pave the way to let
this child know she is adopted,
but after all I cannot go beyond
the truth, which is:
"Tracy, out of all the millions
and millions of babies In the whole
wide world. Daddy and Mommy
picked you."
She is a stubborn, willful, self*
I confident child.
| "1 picked you" she replies.
Sometime, though, she will ask
a question. But not now. Not now.
’ > 20 . ' I j.
■ Bafec,.a
{aaseeseng‛ ■
e-
.1 . ■ .
■ll- ' ‘ ...
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 62, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 17, 1957, newspaper, October 17, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1450054/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.