Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 78, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 5, 1957 Page: 4 of 10
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THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE :::
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umnist might never know if he
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An entertainer
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HARK TO HARVEY
How Much Do We Dare Tell
British Of Our Secrets?
sought to safeguard the secrets of
their heads and their hands could
ions for a substantial
out of the develop-
the dog-eat-dog principle of 40
for Khrushchev
Bold And Brazen
Bv Bud Blake
highly unpopular with a majority
cetebrates
the vice
by data paying—Co
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errors or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct
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the earlier he becomes a target
for political sniping and the more
time he gives his enemies to com-
country to the extent of making
compromises I would have con*
Reds May Permit
Crisis In Mideast
To Ease A Little
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1958
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No.03 7
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aid in
whict prohibits-tranamitta
certain nuclear information.
SADscdute control
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airline NEW YORK w—Much has been
said about how tough it is to get
started in show business today.
tenoral practitioner may
lirect preparation of his
not yet married.
That you have probably reached nuur a
middle age 'Ll™. asleep while perennial of radio and television
"Snew. Women that will celebrate its 24th birth-
MAD
PDLC
-- )
GRUSWORM stuck it out IN M4 ONg-Aus
JOINT BECAUSE-
By PAUL HARVEY
Aierican security agents will
not forget the risk and the cost
and the tedium with which we
Zneo..
o
WOULD TODAY
Sputnik II, Zhukov Fate
Usual .Red Contradictious
‘I . . i
(3
t 22
1,5
-
E IV
sions.
At the moment the party ap-
parently has little to fear from the
Russian people themselves, who
are bound to have a national pride
A man who has some actual fig-
ures on this subject is Ted Made. -
emcee of "The Original Amateur
as that of man
• That bandleader Sammy Kaye
says a dope-pusher is a gal who
is trying to make her husband a
success
That it would take 6,000 million
tons of coal to produce the power..,
that falls in the form of sunshin '
pared to do no, either."
The training in medical schools
for treating older people. Leake
said, could become a major part
of the effort of men who plan to
music weighs more than
rdrobe."
17
1 .
b .1s ■' '
at weddings—because they re al*
ready-married, or because they re.
World War II. Scotland Yard was
too late to prevent the departure
of scientists, diplomats and other
"insiders'' to assorted points be-
hind the iron curtain. And they
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
sions and rivalries. They may be
only temporarily suspended and
may erupt in bloody party expio-
physician as guide, counselor and
friend To accomplish this miss
i will need careful
whole AEU units in aircraft. ship-
ping and atomic energy actually
NOV. 5. 1947
Denton county taxpayers have
paid nearly one-half of the 1947
taxes, paying in $181,945, said Tax
Assessor-Collector W. C Orr. .
I. M. Atkins was elected presi-
dent of Denton Khwanis Club. —
. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PREM
The Meortoied Press is entitled exclusively to the two for publication
' mhe local news printed in this newspaper, ax well ax all AP
........ directions------------ .... . _________ ,,____l..
In the effort to get the state school—as was the
case in the Santa Fe project—everyone put his should-
er to the same wheel and pushed together.
Denton’s two colleges, the chamber of commerce,
the city commission. the county commissioners court.
: and businessmen of Denton quickly and solidly got
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record - Chronicle Files
— —------ .
The President and the prime
mimisterchavemigtnopesfer-the
proposed "brainpower pool," and
"merger of scientific know-how."
But in our pellmell haste to race
the Russians to the moon, we may
outsmart ourselves, if our brain-
power pool springs a leak. For
then Moacow becomes the bene-
ficiary of all the world's scientific
resources
- (Copyright 1957, General Fea-
tures Corp.). ,
That Grace Down.-------
hostess school dean, sys there
are two reasons why women cry
That Lon Noel of Little Rock.
Ark., can spell his name back- hours,
ward as quickly as he can for
with suggestic
loan to India
NOV. 5, 1917
The gas pressure in Denton again
was near normal following a line
break. *
Work of tearing out ties of the
old street car tracks on West Oak
was in process today.
s I
'W,'
PAGE FOUR
BUDBUAe
GAEP. HOPEFUL .
Nixon May
Be Starting.
Too Early
WASHINGTON u—Some friend
ly politicians are beginning to be
have Vice President Nixon may
be traveling too fast too early in
his drive for the 1960 Republican
of ancient Egypt made them
from bandages, metal cups and
even potter's clay.
That in Alberta. Canada, a hus-
band cannot legally pour a pre-
dinner cocktail for his bride if she
"a3555WoAMar-8#"*T,2R222*
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erroneous reflection upon the character, reputatio
y firm, individual or corporation will be gladly
being called to the publishers attention.
When Britain's Prime Minister
Macmillan returned to London
from his recent talks with Presi-
dent Eisenhower he called the Big
Two meetings "the most fruitful
I can remember, and the most ef-
fective."
He indicated that the Eisen-
hower Administration was going
to share some of its closely guard
ed atomic secrets with Britain
that the President would ask Con
gress to amend the McMahon Act
have the British spy. Dr. Klaus
Fuchs, walk out of our atomic
plants with our blueprints to his
briefcase.
Britain's batting average in the
mattar of keeping a secret is con-
spicuously poor.
Every few months, following
GROWING PAINS
THEDADDGE
on the Sahera Desert every 34 ’
Stale School’s Economic .
Impact Will Be Terrific
It looks like Denton can get anything it really wants
. . in the way of schools, business or industry ,
Coordinated community effort brought the Santa
Fe Railroad to Denton three years ago. The same
spirit of teamwork and cooperation brought the $2,-
2 000,000 stat school for mentally retarded persons to
Denton _ _
In the modem history of Denton, the Santa Fe and
the state school have been the only two projects that
actually brought forth a unity of effort among citizens
in all walks of life Denton has tried to get some oth-
er big ones but they always got away. There were
always several groups pulling, but often in different
I Am Thinking Of A Number
ago
Zhukov’s elimination provides
an unhappy prospect It comes a
few months after the purge of
most of the remaining top leaders
at Stalin’s day. It seems to restore
one-man rule again, this time
Nikita Khrushchev’s.
The picture to not all necessarily
bad. But there is no reason for
expecting any time soon any real
change that would benefit this
country.
The Kremlin in-fighting — while
the Russian people made startling
advances — reveals the Commu-
nist leadership still operates on
go Into general medical practice.
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
AP Foreign News Analyst
Nikita S. Khrushchev has exe-
ited what looks -like.a hasty
It is devoutly to be wished that more leaders, on all
levels of government, would speak such truths in such
plain and unequivocal words. If that happened, the
nation would awake to the menace of socialism—in
. electric power or in any other enterprise.
ment fund the administration
barely squeezed out of the last
session', this may be regarded hy
some Republicans as an opportu-
nity to cut the vice president down
to size. .___....■'■j
Friends say Nixon recognises
the political risks Involved in
getting himself labeled as front
man for a cause that might be
packed with
peril, and some small hope, lor
this country — were announced
over the weekend, a few days be-
STS? adningl-progPmnin
geriatrics."
In another speech, a. University
of Minnesota professor said that
an individual's physical effort
doesn’t affect his earning capac-
ity except for a small minority
of jobs.
"Consequently," Dr. Ernst Si-
monson, associate professor of
physiology and hygiene, "there to
no physical justification for the
arbitrary compulsory retrement
age of 65. -------'
EMTORHLS
one in 53—appeared on our show.
"But only about 3,000—or one in
300—went on to become profes-
sional performers.
"Not all of these, of course, re-
mained permanently in show busi-
ness Some married and got out
Others, probably, got smart and
got out.
“Perhaps no more than 1 in 10 -
000—and probably not that many
—went on to become real stars.”
Not all of the amateurs, how-
ever. burn with a desire to be-
come professionals. About 30 per
cent say they wouldn't accept a
regular show career. They merely
want to appear on a network show
once.
Many present day stars found
the amateur hour program a
showcase and springboard to
fame. They include Frank Sinatra.
Paul Winchell. Monica Lewis." Ve-
ra-Ellen. and opera baritone Rob-
ert Merrill.
But Mack is the first to admit
that picking a potential star isn't
ensy.
"One of the greatest talents we
ever had on the show was Frank
Sinatra," he recalled, "but he had
a rough time with us. He was a
member of a quartet called "The
Hoboken Four,’ and he had a case
on his hands getting us to let him
sing a solo
"You can't always call the great
ones on first sight—for one thing
they haven’t reached the peak of
their talent.
NEW YORK U_Things a cd- is under 31 years of age He must
‘ get a dptor, s dentist or one of
her parents to do it.
That Comic George De Witt
poisonous varieties of ivy. oak
and sumac irritate or disable half
a million victims a year.
president evidently feels that he
can get more convention votes by
standout positions on controversial
issues than he can by pleasing
members of the House and Sen-
ate.
Nixon's strategy appears to be
to make himself appealing to the
states that hold the big blocs of
convention votes. He has appealed
to them by his stand on civil
rights. •
This stand seems likely to cost
Nixon.the.support.of,all.ofthe
Southern delegations to the com
vention. Eisenhower needed some
southern support to best Taft in
Nixon's enemies thus may have
a reservoir to draw upon if they
can find a Republican less identi-
fied with the civil rights issue.
the 40th anniversary at the Bol-
shevik revolution.
The Sputniks testify brilliantly
to Russia's industrial and scienti-
fic progress at the very moment
when Zhukov's humiliation shows
the instability and political prim-
itiveness of the Communist
leadership.
Already Russian progross with
missiles and Sputniks may have
done this country desperate dam-
age by weakening American pres-
Uge; intimidating friends and neu-
Denton Record-Chronicle
______ TELEPHONE PUpeat MH1____________
Published every evening ‘except Saturday! and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., lac,, 314 E. Hickory St._________________
Entered as secund class mail matter at the postoffice at Denton, Tex-
as January 13, 1921, accordirg to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
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bine against him. .'
। In some respects, that is what'
i happened to the fete Sea. Robert
, A. Taft prior to 1952. Taft drew
so much attention to himself that
, he became widely known as "Mr.
Republican." He was the man to
: beat, and when Taft's critics were
given the time to bring Dwight D.
isenhower around to a receptive
mood, they had the man to beat
th* Ohio senator.
MODERN WING
Nixon is identifying himself
with the “modern” wing of the
Republicans so widely as to invito
an onslaught from the more con-
servative Republicans who make
up a aobotantisl majority of the
party's members in Congress.
These Republicans once counted
Nixon as one of them. Although
they were disillusioned on that
score by some of his sr*inns as
vice president, they came to his
defense when Harold E. Stassen
made his abortive effort to knock
Nixon off the ticket last year.
But Nixon’s new prominence in
the field of potential 1980 candi-
didn't open his mail
That although the Russians,-------- - - ,
were the first to throw a Sputnik gives thts description of a strip,
into space, the rocket was actu- tease artist: An entertainer
ally invented by the Chinese long whose music weighs more than
before the Christian Erd began her wardrobe."
One of its first wartime uses was That the v anishing Redskin is
to propel "firebolts," or -incen- , no longer vanishing. The Census
diary arrows. Bureau reports Indians are the
That it's no wonder housewives fastest growing minority in the
get tired. Someone has figured i United States. percentagewise,
out "they will wash 48 million That you can keep flowers,fresh
— tana of, laundry at home this year, longer by putting cigarette ashes
That even if you think you owe in the water,
nothing to anybody in the world,
your family's share of the federal
f dept still amounts to more than
88,000
That poison ivy is just as Amer-
ican as blueberry pie, as it origi-
nated in this country And that
WASHINGTON •—The launch- ----------
ing of Sputnik II and the down- now does not mean an end to ten-
grading of Marshal Zhukov are -------* -ue1i "he" he
shocking symbols of the contra-
dictions under 40 years of com-
-Nev. F in the -achievements. under_the4pinK.‘and.
party's direction In throwing out f0, "US?*1
Zhukov. the party asserted control
patients for old age, by regular
physical examinations, judicious
counseling, and by specific pro-
grams of training in diet ex-
ercise, mental relaxation, econom-
ic planning and human relations.
"The general practitioner.'' he
said, "might inded become again
the personification at the ideal
lengthening life.
■—-------------------- Old people, be laid, "do not
in Beat issue after it is brought to their attention. All advertising know how to take care fit them-
* selves and no one else is pre-
NOV. 5. 1937
Postal receipts in Denton during
October hit an all-time high. Post-
master E W. McKenzie said. The
receipts totalled 88.554
Second day of the Thanksgiving
turkey market continued at 14
cents defiyered at the pant and 13
cents at the farm. E .Nall said
pickers were needed at the pro-
cessing plant.
.. ■ .. ' .4'- i I). J ‘ J L, ...
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1957
। nomiration for governor. .
: Nien is coming to took more
- —----—------ ■ * - - and more like the man to beat
behind efforts to bring the state school to Denton. the nomination.
We can't heap too much praise on the men who spear- i That may be a satisfying spot in
, headed the drive—the men whose foresight and initia- i some circumstances. But many
Jeive led to the successful culmination of the brief but ( politicians contend that the earlier
busy campaign for the school I any aspirant, urivao at that point.
Now it is time for each of us—every Denton citizen
carry.
- From these embarrassing ex-
periences, Britain appeared to
learn little.
As recently as last September,
a Soviet General was allowed to
test fly a secret new British jet
- runts A FUTURE
IN MEG FOR YU,
TURGI/TIG15A
QGWINGMMK-
AND 90 >
G0INGTOW_1
That the guinea pig has a sense
of taste a thousand times as keen
dates, seems likely to bring his
critics closer together and to pre- our Manhattan Project, only to took with them all the secrete
cipitate some concentrated firing ‘ ------ - — ......
: i:: EDITORIALS AND FEATURES ::
. -------------— ...---------------
Gt t --..........
c.
at him.
A case in point may grow out
of Nixon's reported work in sur-
veying the foreign aid field. Un-
less the temper of the country
changes, any increase in foreign
aid is mb 89128 LQ De popular W-
the majority of Republicans in
the House and Senate. President
Eisenhower took his worst con-
gressional licking on foreign aid
in the last session of Congress,
with Republicans contributing to
Mb defeat.
AN EXAMPLE
If Nixon for instance, cornea up
fighter, the "Hawker Hunter,"
over Farnborough.
He flew it for 40 minutes crash
ed the sound barrier in a full test
of the new craft.
Though American and even
most British air officers, had not
yet been allowed to fly in it.
One said, “We might just as
well have wrapped it up and sent
it off to Moscow as a gift."
The following afternoon anoth-
er Russian General and eight So-
viet oflicersand two interpreters
were introduced to a display of
Britain's newest and most modera
aircraft
Historically, the British have
fielded some big league spies of
their own. They managed, in two
world wars, to maintain agents
on the German General Staff.
But something, since socialism,
has weakened British "resistance"
to infestation of Red agents.
Communists have thoroughly in-
filtrated Britain's Amalgamated
Engineering Union. Through its
900,000 members they have a fin-
ger in virtually every key indus-
try from autos to atoms.
An uncompromising, diehard.
Communist named Reg Birch is
a toolmaker in the vital de Havil-
land Aircraft plan. There are
.T
—to get our shoulders to the wheel Backers of the
drive—over 100 of them—have subscribed $100,000
to pay for the land. They didn't actually write checks
for the $100,000 loan offered by the two Denton banks.
But they specified, in amounts ranging from $100 to
$5.000 to guarantee the loan with the understanding
that all Dentonites will have an opportunity to con-
- tribute to the land purchase.
This major fund-raising campaign will get under
way immediately: This will be the real test of Den-
ton's spirit.
What does the school — to be called the Denton
State School—mean to this city—and to the average
citizen?. One official said the school will have the
same effect on Denton as when either NTSC or TWU
was initially located here.
It will have a payroll of about one million dollars
annually, growing larger as the school grows. More
than two million dollars have already been appropria-
ted by the state to build the school But the proposed
plant’s value would increase to $20,000,000 in about 10
years.
The school will have about 600 students at the start,
with enrollment climbing to an estimated 2,000 maxi-
mum in 10 years. The initial staff will include nearly
250 persons with a maximum of 650 eventually.
The impact on Denton's economic life will be ter-
rific. The entire county will benefit
When your opportunity comes to make a donation
to the fund for buying the land for the school, it will
be good to remember what George Pirtle, chairman
of the site selection committee of the board for Tex-
- as State Hospitals and Schools, had to say about the
Denton effort
Pirtle said that Denton was the only city with a
f citizenship that backed the offer for the school. Laud-
ing Denton’s teamwork and coordination, he said he
I had a feeling of a lack of cooperation in every other
city be had visited seeking the site.
Denton’s plan to donate the land to the state and
the facilities Denton has to offer are a Godsend, Pir-
tle explained.
Mr. and Mrs. Denton, let’s live up to those words
' of praise.
wweXFin srnicaw
i day next March.
"Over the yean we have Xpert
four million dollars auditioning
some 900,000 amateurs," said
Mack. "Of these about 17,000—or
tstiing up Miadle East bor-
net s. nest. here.j no.reason.to .
believe the retreat is permanent;
but it is highly significant.
It seems likely now the U.S.S.R.
will permit the Middle East crisis
to ease off a bit—but only until
Khrushchev resolves his current
problems over the dismissal of
Georgi K. Zhukov as Soviet de-
fense minister.
Before Zhukov was fired
abruptly Saturday night, Soviet .
propaganda was blaring out vio-
lent accusations against t h e
United States and Turkey, accur
ing them of plotting war on Syria,
and threatening Russian interven-
tion.. It was a real war scare-,
real enough to make the United
States warn Moscow that it would
not permit Turkey to become an-
other Korea
Suddenly Khrushchev came
forth with soothing words. He
attended a reception at the Tur:
kish Embassy last night and sazd
his very presence there wn6 a
gesture of pece. He told corres-
pondents the U.S.8.6. m iqauy
Turkey’s warm, friendly neighbor
He opined the Middle East situa-
tion had taken a turn for the
better.
If the Middle East crisis had
taken a turtifer the better, ft was
dramatically sudden. Only a few
days before. Khrushchev's own
propaganda had it that Turkey
was conniving with the United
States to attack "peace-loving
Syria" immediately-after Oct 27,
the day of the Turkish national
elections.
The sudden change of tone hints
that the Communist party is so
deeply involved in its current in-
ternal problems that ft finds on
external crisis—such as the chron-
ic one in the Middle East -
simply adds to the dangers.
Medical Schools
Warned To Turn
To Gerontology
CLEVELAND e-A medical
school dean said here that "a
serious scandal" may soon devel-
op if medical schools don't do
more to meet the increasing
health problems of older people.
This was the view of Dr.
Chauncey D. Leake, assistant
medical school dean at Ohio State
University, at the 10th annual
meeting of the Gerontological So-
ciety. Gerontology is the scientific
study of old age
"Medical schools," he said,
"have the prime repsonsibility in
preparing their graduates for a
tremendous jump in geriatric
practice. /
"Unless this responsibility is
promptly met, there may come a
sertous scandal in medical affairs
which could adversely affect the
traditionally high esteem in which
people hold the medteal proles-
sion."
Leake said the challenge to
meet the problem results from the
success of modern medicine in
I presidential nomination.
Nixon received boosts last week I ‘ *
from former New York Gov.
Thomas E. Dewey’s description of
' him as a "superb” candidate, j
’from Sen Wifliam P. Knowiand’st .
reported decision not to enter
presidential primaries outside Cal-,
ifornia, and from California Gov.
Goodwin Knight's apparent plan
; to avoid a decisive showdown
fight with Knowland for the state s
li’i always pleasant when a high government offi-
cial has something forthright to say in praise of the
American free enterprise system—and against tax- •
subsidized government business activities
That happened in mid-September, when Gov. Han-
Northern Indiana Public Service Company. The gov-
ernment. he said, has increased its generating capacity
76 times in the last 23 years—and “Thus it has bold-
ly and brazenly invaded a basic industry which was
" developed by private capital, private intelligence, and
private management." This, he went on, is."... un-
fair competition with a basic American service which
is adequately meeting service needs and which is pro-
viding legitimate income to millions of Americans."
Then Gov. Handley described what the socialized
power problems mean to us sll. He said: "We—the
taxpayers—are financing this war on privately opera-
— —ted-utititiese Duringthe-course of-the-combat-we
are paying twice—once for the government subsidies
and also as rate payers compelled to meet the higher
* a.
HAL BOYLE SAYS
Rocket Actually Invented
By The Versatile Chinese
jN.. a --o..2
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 55, No. 78, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 5, 1957, newspaper, November 5, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1450070/m1/4/?rotate=270: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.