Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 171, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 18, 1959 Page: 4 of 12
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RED CHINA TODAY: Revolution On The Land
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idea."
What Charter Would Do
backwoodsy ballad of the doomed
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turkey.
ili
But th
Ive - fire
communism.
ropriation bill fa-
eluded in an
on in Congress
vorably
University and
for a new post office for Denton.
on
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
ITS YOUR CHOICE TONI6HT,DEAR
Published every
Denton Publishing Co.
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COMBENATION MAO. AMD CARRIER: Delivered
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i it all he was a
Iding antagonist of
2-18
BLAE
The name is an accident— "We
started out when the calypso craze
was on, so It sounded like a good
II
Ex-College
Students Now
mail on w
where this
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d
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2
Bur LET A
MOTORISTLEAN
CNAMORN
WMENHE$
Shane and Nick Reynolds,
call themselves the Kingaton
"Dooley" did it
"The teen-agers buy single rec-
ords. and they made it a hit"
explained Guar
Ian. "So far it
ata.lne,WorMdrightruered.
■ .
Th.
/ Copyright, 1959 .________
HE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1946 and 1949 was so desperate embarked upon them"as circum- son that they knew their end was
natural that in any under- that the price of a measure of Atances demanded „coure, the near no matter what their de-
4
to advance)
RR AUDtT BUREAU OT CIRCULATIONB
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Dint the people
i departments,
gDEE
i
I
ACCIDENTAL NAME
They are Dave Guard, Bob
HAL BOYLE SAYS
You’ve Got To Watch Cats
Or They’ll Take Over Home
NEW YORK (AP)-We have a three times, while the cat. held
Top Singers
By BOB THOMAS
AP Movie-TV Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Three
-CO YOU WANT TO PUT, WE
WPS TO BED-ORDOTHE
PsHES?? J
ists took over, peasants got
the land—briefly. In the third
of five articles on Red China,'
based on his extensive travele
there Dr. Chandrasekhar tells
how Peiping tackled the coun-
try's food problem.
By Dr. Sripat Chandrasekhar
of all the local news
MM dianatehoa
if any Dentonite has loot a '—
fectly good counterfeit mold I
manufacturing US. dollars, here’s
fective administration of the de-
partments, agencies and servic-
es of the city, he should — and
under the charter, does — have
- Editor's note: "Land for the
peasants'' was uno of the early
cries of Chinese revolutionar-
DONOAASETME
FLLOWTE--
(t4A
STRICTLY
SPEAKING
By CECIL PRESTON
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Covvrigm tees
LETTERS
WELCOMED
a—e"Ee
The Record-Chronicle wel.
comes totters from readers on
any subject to good taste.
Letters must be signed and
the writer's address given. Wo
reserve the right to edit tes-
ters when necessary.
agree to serve on our city council.
Most of those who have served re-
The boys got together at Palo
business students.
Looking Back Through Record-Chronicle Files
================--=---
formulate the policy with which
he agrees. The responsibility f
good government will still be
the shoulders of the citizens of
WDYOU •
de.
chief Kingston-
is sold 1,800,000
?g
THAT COULD .
BELETHAL<
IWEAPON. J
a few.words. _
yourself With these
d stood the following
PAGE FOUR .. • • FnirnRULS AND FEATURES :•! <
Alto. AH were bu
Dave at Stanford
Entered as second class mall matter at the postotnce at Denton, Tex
as January U, ML acoordtog to Act of Congresa, March g, UTZ.
8URBCRIFTTON RATU AND INFORMATION '
Single Coptea: Ie for weekdays: 10c for Sunday.
HOME DELIVERY RATU FOR DAILY AND BUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered oyour home by city carrier or motor route
on same day of publication. Me per week.
BT MAIL ONLY: In Denton and adjoinin counties, $1.00 per month,
is SO per year (must be paid to advance). Elsewhere to the United
States $1.50 per month, $15.60 per year.
Ganht
Mir 11*4
ggt OOdOta VBM ,
NEARK.N*
NMttnutr
359 CRAN• Ala.,
PTF/ELR,
Vm(44253z
THE GUY Ok AL
FOOT
exclusively to the use for publication
to this newspaper, as well as all AP
Denton Record-Chronicle
mmon DUpont 22351
»E*a
reality, the Eisenhower adminis-
tration must be thinking in terms
of a successor just in case the
cancer-stricken secretary, despite
his extraordinary endurance, can't
come back.
There's a good. Immediate rea-
son for the need of such fore-
thought.
ble for carrying out the
of the council and the ef-
yond its capacity with administra-
tive detail. We are very close to a
point where we can no longer get
1 * )
■
pain and maintainance, sewage
and garbage disposal, effective fl-
nancial management and the like.
Under our present form of gov-
ernment the council is taxed be-
Dooley, are they hillbillies. Dave
and Bob grew up to Honolulu.
Nick is from Coronado, Calif.
How did the Kingstons crack to
The production, graced by the
brilliant and dramatic perform-
ance of its beautiful prima donna,
Leonora Corona, former Metro-
politan Opera Co. star, drew at its
conclusion a wild and spontaneous
burst of applause which continued
through a dozen curtain calls for
composer, principals and other
members of the cast of more than
100.
POST OFFICE
PLAN UNKNOWN
FEB. n. 1919
Because he ran foreign policy
almost by himself and made his
fob such a one-man operation,
both his critics and his admirers
any firm, Individual or corporation will bo
being called to the publishers attention.
The publishers are Mt responsible for copy omissioms, typographical
ApuAua no mnntaninnal arrarg fhat rMVMir ather than to correck
orders are accepted ea this basis only
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Um Associated Press to
expect from our city
is primarily administr_____
and police protection, street re-
By Blake
the power to appo
who will run the
manager - a person qualified by
training and experience for, the
job — and it will hold the manager
responsible for the proper execu-
tion of the policies and effective
administration of departments,
agenaies and services of the city:
Since the manager will be held
cently have refused to run for
re-election. It is asking too much
to ask any man or group of men.
Who. of necessity, must attend to
their own businesses during the
day, to give the time and energy
it now takes to run our city gov-
ernment.
Under the proposed city char-
ter the council will appoint a city
-zfc-
The Elephants Trunk
here and about the same in
England. We're just as amazed
as anyone."
BUSINESS STUDENTS
disintegrate.
_ It‘s_a wish that hasn't come
true. The man credited with being
the author of this containment
policy back in Acheson's day.
George Kennan. who was then
head of the State Department
planning staff, is having second
thoughts now.
He's not the only one. There is
talk nowadays of being flexible
with the Soviet Union. Being flex-
ible can mean giving concessions,
with or without concessions in re-
turn.
While Dulles has been pretty
much as one with the rest of the
country on his basic policy of con-
tainment, there have been times
when his wisdom on individual de-
cisions within the broad policy
has been questioned.
He has been criticised, for ex-
ample. for his handling of Presi-
dent Nasser of Egypt, for his use
of big-sounding phrases, like
"massive retaliation" and "brink
of war and for his disproven op-
timism about the results of the
1955 summit conference.
Is taciturn to habitually inclined
to silenc, habitually reserved in
speech.
Laonie 4la KON lek One who-is -
Bob and Nick at nearby Menlo
College. Dave and Bob were
chums from Hawaii, where they
had strummed ukeleles to island
tunes. The trio began playing
their guitars and banjos and
chanting folk tunes to campus
hangouts.
San Francisco publicist Frank
Werber introduced them to San
Francisco niteries. They caught
on. played other intimate clubs in
Chicago and New York. A year
ago, they signed with Capitol Rec-
ords and made an album which
became a bestseller.
I arrived home end smelled a
turkey roasting to the even.
"Who's coming tn dinner—pr<o-
is reticent is disposed to be silent,
not inclined to speak freely, either
habitually or occasionally.
Secretive (se KRE tiv). (
is secretive is extremely i
Living a disposition to secrecy.
Taciturn (TAS I tern). One who
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Attorney Co
Dear Sir:
With respect to the proposed
city charter, I would like to make
a few omment in answer to re-
cent letters published in your
newspaper. City government does
not involve politics to ary appre-
ciable extent. What we want and
Gilmer - Aikin Committee.
MUSICAL HISTORY
IS MADE HERE
FEB. 18, Uto
Musical history wm made for
Denton Thursday night at NTSC
as Julia Smith’s colorful folk
opera "Cynthia Parker" played to
a capacity house of the most dis-
tinguished audiences of musicians
and music critics ever brought to
the city.
iBiy College Students
: Should Help Bear Burden
’ SEVERAL LEGISLATORS thin session have propos-
ed that tuition be raised at the *18 state-supported col-
leges, which includes NTSC and TWU. Added impetus
to this suggestion now comes from the Texas Commis-
sion on Higher Education.
Although the commission, which is more up to date
on Texas' needs in higher education than any other sin-
gle official semipolitcal group in Texas, made no def-
inite recommendation on how much tuition should
be raised, there is little denying that the students them-
selves should help bear more of the costs of their col-
the place to look. Ask Sheriff
James Goode. He has one to his
possession, and he said he would
like to talk to the man who has
been using It The person who lost
it can get quick action by seeing
the, sheriff. The mold, made of
plaster of Paris for a U.S. Silver
dollar, was found by H. R. White-
man. a farmer, Sunday.
some tmehaks.a s competent, dedicated people Jr
K1., U --------* 44 1m --A- “m -a"- m All* nnnmil
only in current proDlems but in
foreign affairs in general.
Nevertheless, as a matter of
pas "nod "ordonbyachvs "upep nounete that saa.000 has been in-
Intendents. It puts the scale in
line with recommendations of the
fresh-faced young men stepped up . . ----,---
to the microphone They were how • cot that comes into a house
dressed identically in Ivy League as a guest stays to become its
pants and open-necked striped 2oss. Four months ago when Lady
.i plunked two guitars Dottie arrived as A mewing kitten,
and a banjo and started crooning: I was one ofthe dog-lovingest,
at-disdaingest husbands in Amer-
ident ELsenhower?" I asked
"No," Mid my wife. Frances.
"I just thought Lady Dottie wm •
getting tired of beef Mw The
turkey will make her feel better."
’ iously contend that we should elect
i our school teachers, principals,
bus drivers and other school per-
> sonnet at public election.
) The council • manager form of
, government makes it easier for
. the voters to fix responsibility for
I all policies and to secure efficient
i and economical city government.
The city manager will not and
■ can not be a dictator. The Council
• will have the power to pass ordi:
I nances, determine all matters of
i policy, and will appoint the city
i manager. Under this form of gov
ernment the responsibility will be
1 centralised in the manager. and
i at any time the manager fails to
I perform his responsibilities he can
* be removed by the council.
> The citizens’ responsibility will
be to elect a council which will
Why World
Admirable
Of Dulles.
the Fort Worth Star • Telegram an-
949 BUSINESS
CALLED GOOD
FEB. U, 1949
Business will remain good in
INS, reaching a peacetime nor-
mal after the wartime boom years,
according to R. L. Thornton,
chairman of the board of the Mer-
cantile National Bank of Dallas
Thornton spoke at the Chamber of
Commerce banquet Thursday
night
AUSTIN m - Revision and
strengthening of the Texas elec-
tion laws wm encouraged by the
house committee on elections. end
Sen. R. L. (Bob) Proffer of Justin
the top of a music market that____ ... „ . w.
- the
Nor, despite their h with the had hsked 2S-ohtukiy“ H would
have been granted only as a
deathbed request Butlheld my
peace A husband who openly ad-
mite he ia jealous of o cat has al-
ready tost his battlefleld. This at.
tltude paid off Lady Dottie let
sentence: Most people admire a
person who is reticent about his
success and laconic in giving in-
structions. but find a taciturn per-
son unsociable and often dislike
< suspect a secretive person.
"Hang down yer head, Tom icn ---------------
Dooley, n;," rr . , In "‘Now 1 find my is surround,
i The.youthfulsrwd on 60 M by four white paws. So are the
Loos - , “x anarmt orour tamiy.,
• .. mi.• I we Menu most of our tone now
• -rore boy youre Eoi pleasing Lady Dottie. Her whims
tdie . . _ ...are getting more imperial every
Cheers shook the great han 'dgy. --------------!------f-----
This.wa thessigngl.ofaccsptance .can remember when Lady Dot-
for throe bright fellows who are tie was overjoyed to get a can of
riding the teen-age music boom rot food Not now The other night
to early fortunes._____ I arrived home and smeiled a
RESERVED IN SPEECH
A word that has the same mean-
ing or nearly the same meaning as
another word in the language is
called a a ynonym.
Four adjectives that mean "re-
served in speech" with various
shades of mooning are reticent,
taciturn. secretive, laconic.
Reticent (RET I sent). One who
evening (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by:
g Co.. Inc . 114 E. Hickory St
new morning ritual in our home, aloft in her arms. watched with
The other morning I was in the an eager intensity
bathroom and shaving when my As they started to march out
young daughter, Tracy Ann. en-! I asked: "What’s the big idea’’
tered carrying Lady Dottlei her ."Nothing, daddy. Ldy Dottte
wk . ....a .. just likes to watch wateralts."
„Withomsaying pA..ward.Ta l "well take her out in the kitchen
waaad over aad tiuabeu tbs yuet and turn on the faucet there," ! .
told her crossly, r
-------------- "I can’t ..
"Why not?"
I "It's not the same thing," said
Tracy with that air of exaggerated
patience children adopt when ex-
{plaining something to their ignor-
lent elders "Lady Dottie doesn't
like to watch kitchen waterells.
। She likes bathroom waterfalls ”
Now. every morning, whether
I’m late to work or not, all opera-
tions in my bathroom halt white
Lady Dottie watches her quota of
three waterialls. We have another
bathroom but for some reason
Lady Dottie doesn’t like to watch .
waterfalls in it.
I cite this incident only to show
Honey Of A Job
ELKVILLE. IU. (B _ Bom heM
up painting the Elkville Methodist '
Church belfry with members Gua
Gray, Myrton Piper and Meibom
Porter volunteered to remove
them. Although the price wm sev-
en stings, i was worth it. It re-
quired three hours to remove three
washtubs of honey.
... hevo difficulty now in seeing any-
Pe. thing but a vacuum if he should
Tor not be able to return to his desk.
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) - In full
health Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles was criticized, but
in this moment of his serious ill-
noaa he is eulogised and is even
spoken of as indispensable. Why?
For perhaps these two reasons:
1. His critics at home have fully
differed with him not on his basic
foreign policy but only on his
handling of individual situations.
1. He has so completely domi-
nated foreign policy that he rep*
resents it and it is hard to think
of anyone else coping with the
crisis coming up in Germany.
The policy followed by Dulles
and President Eisenhower was
the om laid down by President
Truman and Secretary of State
Dean Acheson.
Uda was to surround the So-
viet Union and Red China with
military bases and alliances and
make no concessions, or very few.
At the root of this policy there
has always, perhaps, been a cer-
tain amount of wishful thinking
that if a ring could bo kept tight
around the Communist world, in
time it might weaken, suffer dras-
tic internal changes, or petheps
les. And when the Commun-
V f
G IE
agencies and provide the services.
The manager will appoint those
people who are most efficient and
with Whom he can work, and our
city government will operate effi-
ciently end economically.
The council - manager form of
government to very similar to our
public school eetup. Instead of
the school board we will have the
council, and instead to the super-
intendent we will have the city
manager. None of us would ser-
Denton, for no form of government
can be a substitute for the citi-
tops’ interest and active partici-
pation in municipal elections and
government.
W. C. BOYD JR.
Box 189, Denton
and Sunday Morning L
to available. $1.25 per
♦ A i . .1 L. ' ’sl
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE ::: WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1959
" — "" II II ....................... —1^W—— ..................... - ' ।
lege education.
Opponents of the proposal are already busy, point-
ing up cases of alleged hardship among students and
their parents who might be affected if the tuition were
raised past the present $50 per semester cost
Actually, the $50 per semester (or $100 per year)
fee is slightly misleading. In addition to the $50 tui-
tion, the average full-time NTSC student pays another
$19 matriculation fee and the average full-time TWU
studentpays $15 additional. That totals $65 per se-
mester kt TWU and $69 per semester at NTSC or $130
and $138 per year, respectively, for Texas residents,
providing they do not attend summer school.
1 To the uninitiated that may sound like a sizeable fig-
ure, but it’s one of the biggest bargains available to
anyone when you compare the $500 or more charged
at the other four colleges in the Dallas-Denton-Fort
Worth area, and all claim tuition fails to pay the costs.
It’s also a small figure when you look at the tuition
other states charge. Only four states out of 49 charge
a lower tuition rate than Texas. Virginia, the nation's
highest charges $690 per year, North Carolina $590,
Maryland $490. Mississippi $450 and Arkansas $350.
As Dr. Ralph T. Green, executive director of the
higher education commission, put it: "The money has
to be raised from some source—taxes, the student or
through economy... in a real way the faculty has been
paying for what the students have not been paying
through the lower salaries he receives as compared
to that paid in other states.” "
If the tuition fees, for instance, were increased to
$150 per year, the state would raise an extra $4,290,000
for 1960-61, a $175 fee would raise $6,434,000 and $200
would raise $8,578,000. The last figure, for instance,
would still fall about two million dollars short of the
increase the higher commission has recommended. And
almost everyone, with the exception of the governor
and the Legislative Budget Board, agrees that the high-
er commission recommendations sre sound.
So, it would appear, a hike in tuition rates would not
only be a sound move but would ease much of the pain
the legislators themselves are undergoing in attempt-
ing to stretch the fast dwindling tax dollar to the lim-
* its. This is particularly true since it is apparent that
this session of the Legislature has no serious inten-
tion of adopting a broad-based tax program to finance
__ the needs of a growing state.
Actually, even if the Legislature were to adopt a
broad-base tax program this session, the needs of
raising the quality of higher education are severe
enough to warrant a tuition hike. Texas cannot go
much longer on a patchwork of fiscal operations. But
if we are to have a patchwork for the next two or three
years, there’s no sound reason for those who benefit—
the students—to help stretch that patchwork.
After all, anyone who really wants a college educa-
tion can get it. And if he has to pay more than a pit-
tance, he’ll appreciate what he receives even more.
.JU
WOT
Ue
Ay
{G
By
It i
develer
=--===- #= 5m= =-=i .
During the last too vun what nt view No one starves in China tribution scheme There were inery was set in motion to distri- 1 ion, UM s I. abundant iertiizers clining mortality rates.
with a Keries at warsywith’West- now. Though ths common man some who evenbelleved the Chi- bute the iand on the basis ot num- and. mechanization were impos- There the fourth and present
rn nation, Japanese dow not have meat or truit,- sta-sas. were, merely erous criteria. The average, pea- “r™ , stage -the Kg?
i mmmra z
state at political unrest, econom- you remember that China’s popu- when the long-suffering peasantry among 500 million peasants, but it t0-14,000 in 1953 and,to 600,000 TOMORROW: We to a model
‘ic dislocation and recurring fam- lation today is about 650 millions, knew that the new regime meant did not last long. 1854 By the spring of 136, china commune.
It is estimated about two mil-
ins. China has not known peace Any -satisfactory -solutioh oi the business, they accused the land- Within two years, the third stage could boast'of 1,300,000 agricultur-
all over the country for even two food problem to Asian countries lords of all the crimes known to was launched It was said that ul cooperatives. This meant that
consecutive years during the past mpules revoluttiongy changes in mannfromnarshtreatment.awith- private ownership of iand was a.? omallnnumber s
About a yoars Mo. when China. tend ownerehip Md methods of sherpenams SStX^.SiSES SZBaES“u wereoutitde the
SMsseiiP
gencies China 17.” W ffikttai ataS wer there weranoiawyerso defend ha Uherundtput *hI" moniounly, arstriptedrtoahecpea-
was not an emergency but a chron- * u. . P‛E0 "ET them. Communist justice is of a nd • that Enilnctiv. and sants oniy a IeW years euruen
ic state of affairs, necessarily planned “ such over different kind Most landlords edtodicover"sthatcolset,vand While collective ownership and
Again, the situation between • 10-year. period. The government pleaded guilty, for the imple rea- sage8 eAle nrobkm S China s cooperative farming increased1the
embarked upon them “ circum- son that they knew their end was glarianhpovertyand hungeF.hihus yield,“»• wasnoloretputico
. country the problem of rice, thanks to rocketing “na- over-all obsectiveottgodforall tense." " " " " colect yiationwasugheredin but tl’tod Suppf chins poputation
> and food Suplv should tion soared and kept changing workers and some kind of collec- It is estimated about two mil- The peasants felt cheated, but had been increasing by a net an-
paramount importance from hour to hour tive ownership of the land were lion landlords were executed. Now they were made to see the need nual addition of 12 to 18 million
p amount Importancki-’ — urtnc... ihe-- fMm Ka hacinnine thnch IL i“I1 available for collective ownership, for their during these years, especially as
olots were tiny and this "pocket the necessary anti rigorous public
“hi" "" was not health measures, adopted all over
earlier observers were misled on
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 171, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 18, 1959, newspaper, February 18, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453472/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.