Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 174, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 22, 1959 Page: 4 of 32
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SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1959
RAGE FOUR :: EDITORIALS AND FEATURES
VWIUMIWES
’ ■
a
Afticu
STA
U.S.S.R.
o"E
INDU
JPAN
♦
UM 11000
Politics--Or Not
I
Writer
Bold Words
took them books. because he hasn't =
In
I
Have any suggestions? Ad-
#
14
at.
new
*
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
By Blake
‘)
(
60"
County
loot
first.
1
I
win
Denton Record-Chronicle
them
itee to
the
9
4
by ft if a
X
)
5
R. H. Cory.
to
I
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Of
7
omissiona.
other than to
-errors that
Tamdta
or THE ASSOCIATED PRES
ii
strife .
you
I
4
T
Ku.
ad
24
#205
3
4nd
Published
Denton Pi
might also have
only two Denton-
-wereint
before the
83
k
STRICTLY
SPEAKING
By CECIL PRESTON
that
d in
■ care
, Bau
bill which, most believe, could have
an important impact on Denton -
as well as the rest of the state.
You may still be wondering. _
WHT YOU CAN DO
Of course, not everyone can pack
pup should
the Denton
it's more likely that the Ri
would be the ones to start
By Logic Alone
An Editorial Sidelight To The Arlington Bill
•2-21
TEE
Interecholaatic 1
mining the cov
Conets will be
. Jemison
to appear
Entered as second darn total matter at the postotlice at Denton, Tb
as January 13, mi. according to Act of Congress, March 1 101
$9.50 per year (must be
States $1.56 per month, I
AMU Thursday in the Qty Kall
at 10 a.m.
BUT,EOT
' XOHW SAID EE
41 THiNK-)==
, reputation «r standi
ba gladly cortected
N
lisenhpwer said a
nea during the week
Junior DONrgEkuy wrmeowcuzaE
BUT SARA* AS ADAMANT
2mh
ogram of interest to an dal-
i has been 1
g%.,
<* Si—-*.
piste, return Syndlente, Im, Wori4 righua maivad A
immittee under whose wing
is now tucked • but not for
If you had (
members of the
ever stolen anything before, and, _ „m--AE
between you and 1 he don’t LETTERS .
to read any. <1 errors—fair).
WELCOMED
The Record-Chronicle wel.
comes totters from readers sn
any subject to good taste.
Letton must be signed and
the writer’s address given. Wo
- ntwn the right to edit let-
tors when necessary.
A ph
rymen
second
TELEPBONE DUpeto UMI __________
ning (except Saturday) and simday awning b
o,,Ine., 314 ft- Hickory St
SET SATURDAY
Saturday la the date eat for the
reflection upon the character,
lividual or corpration will
» the publishers attention
are not responsible for cup
county basketball contorts in the
" for deter-
drone strictly Speaking,
et too Record-chronlele,
NANCY GATES
IN MINSTREL
FEB. *. ms
When too 13th annual Kiwani
Minstrel lifts the curtain in Teach-
ers College Auditorium Friday at
8:15 p.m.. ft will present a veterap
A.tpk=
gAp*gge
WEPNrA
championship,
on the outdoor
YESTERYEAR
Looking Back Through Record-Chronicle Files
-
E Million
IP
chev sprung to the offensive again
last week and made some pretty
bold statements concerning bl|
led Press is entitled exclusively t the use
local news printed to tola aswspar, aa
merce that a boost er
be organised to suppo
Broncoe
State CoDege
through Sat-
couple of week
tionshave bean
THERE OUGHT A BE A LAW
MQBTM
AMikiA
TO
tArie
AlEicA
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivered to your
‘ Morning Delivery to Md
______________„ MM per month. $12.50
imust be to advance).______ ______
MEMAER AUDIT BUREAT er CICULATIONS
2828
Q9C
0^
he-*
viatally intar- pained, the FAO says,
a junior col- Gains made in food production
The Record-Chronicle for many years has been a
strong advocate of good government at all levels—local,
state and national. Wo all like to gripe about what’s
happening in Austin and Washington because it’s eas-
ier to grip
suggestion
court on the Normal College cam-
pus.
Carpenters began work to Pllot
Point today on the new lumber
yard for the Rockston Lumber Co.
DAWSON, MINN., SENTINEL: “During the recent
campaign, the matter of labor endorsement for can-
didates was pretty much a hush matter. Now that the
- campaign is over and labor has again come out on
top, there seems to be no hesitancy on the part of the
labor bosses to make frequent use of the term “labor,
endorsed candidates.' Could be that use of such a term
during the gamrgien mi^ht have had an embarrassing.
Ruasian Premier Nikita Ehrush. was given to Germany.
Before Tuesday’s Election
‘AMID ALL THAT has'been said abbut Tuesday's
election concerning Denton's proposed charter, it hard-
. ly seems possible that anything different could be add-
ed.
-SAPKemteaturesL
asng
PARKER URGES
BOOSTER CLUB
FER, 22, 1949
Walter Parker, head oqthall
coach at Denton High School. Mop-
day night told 70 membera of the
Denton Junior Chamber of Com
From Reds
and solar energy may help in-
crease food production; there are
those who say land already to cul-
tivation could produce more if
greater care were taken with the
sol and better fertilizers used
Plant diseases, insects, weeds
and rodents cost farmers in the
United States nearly 13 billion dol-
NO!WAKTNuDuAR!
"gzyak
PhOVER NHBUINES:
YOU CATpO i T
A. K. NITMOuTA
g 7 LEGE . )
69 X EUCATON! J
502
Record-Chronicle Staff
Covyright ina
F*
’ in Austin and Washington
ipe than to congratulate and offer a better
km. And, besides, both Austin and Washing-
ton seem too far away for us to do much about any
situation we dislike.
gA
hzthe Danas
Mttersts"umn.nohk sountry’a average dally consump- . I can hardly believe that Jota
. ,, took those books, because he hsn"t
z-•N-x2 -r-7• 2 The United States, United King- “eAKtigEeelna
Secretary Dules in the mean- W** » the ooeo of Deltas ata dom, U.S.S.R., most of Western evenstoln.anythinK.beforuand
time underwent his first radiation Fott Worth. If so, you Eurooe and some South American hetween,you andyme,: -dossnt
aa- =n=ss Eemssesa # S
=2*e ==522 #5
heps. anothJ mnifestatin of the biggeatindriries, inthetwosou ed
secretary's unusual strength at his W - voters work at emmo cemcerne the UnH^d States;
age and his ability to recover from both places.n, I » surplusfood. There are those, both
surgical setbacks • COULD BE .in the United States and abroad.
YouL.mAAalp have wondered who argue that the surplus should
wide support for
you might have asked your- ference Bureau says, "tend to
why AAk'a enrollment has make the food - rich countries rich-
at the decline in recent years, er and the food . poor countries
E-t--amAUaina.wasi.ai wnue enrollment at NTSC, TWU, poorer by reason of mounting pop-
from4i, Southern Methodist University, Ar- ulation."
ous-matter * ■■Ml" um tn ngton suu and Texas Christian The research ageny i
mmitar, .talftOMK. niversihasnsontinuedtosin- qnlegdirh-seateglere.o
qticialstim. anvayScomepnupoditi"nyonumist _
of ideas. Not all of them might be rise, ultimately and inevitably” to
as far - fetched as you may have check the population increase. (The
first thought. Only time - god the Aasoctoted Press)
passage of the Arlington State bill
— ould prove that one.
is. acraapFm, Uba very much to have a medical of the hungry 1.8 billion.
• Itrenigth"trughout branchio the Universityrof Texas FAILURES
. 25* 5 “--51 “al end by "etine fer Arlineten .
pol- legisiator
By TOM KIRKLAND week. you’d likely consider the iced one, unfortunately Sort of a
Record-Chronicl Staff Writer chances all but excellent for iU reverse prok - barrel type of thing.
What ar the chances tor Pasue-n hand, you
thepasagea the hii that would ly wou have received the impres- ord- Chronicle, approaches the
make ArUngtooStato College a lon that the bill could fall just as bill in all of its state - wide im-
Laur.t y!9r, degree • grunting in- easily if. somehow, the word could plications as much as anything
aututionT become general knowledge around could.
talked with many the state. . ON LOGIC?
)O Texas House of The stand taken by Denton Coun- If the bill were to be decided
Representatives and attended * ty Rep. Alonzo Jamison was gen- on logic alone, it seems incompre-
committee hearing on the bill last erally received as. being a prejud- hensible
why the ther apparent state- bo aent abroad to help ease the
wide support for the four - year problem
Arlington existed. Why. for to- But the United States Depart-
stance. would a legislator in San ment of Agricukture says that one
Antonio be more interested in a year's surplus supply. wouldn't
four - year Arlingtoa than in saving dent the hunger problem: It would
the state a great deal of money? mean the equivalent of two teacup-
Could it be that San Antonio would fols of rice every 17 days for each
_/ HE WANTS TOO TO SHAKE
o HANOS WITH TM, CHARLIE -
(8) HOW CAN YA RBFUSe HIM
v- WHEN HES BEING —
6s"ok, THAT CUTE? )
Wet, our or couEGE! mo Susr
LET WM TRY AND USB Nl$ EDUCATION ON POP:
AH:GUTLETHIMTRV:
So far charges based on everything from the Dallas
Metropolitan Area to higher taxes have been thrown
rather hapazardly and, we believe, often without bas-
it But the fact that no really organised opposition has l
de veloped seems to be an indication that most Denton-
ties believe adoption of the proposed charter is not only
a step in the right direction toward better municipal
government but also the only step Denton can now
take.
For those who strongly favor the adoption of the
charter, events of the last few days may seem unfortun-
ate to them. But in a democratic society, the individual
still has the right to stand up to be counted, no mater
which side be or she takes. Indeed, something would
be wrong with Denton if there had not been some op-
position to any proposed charter. Those who oppose
the adoption of the charter apparently are sincere in ‘
their beliefs that the present form of government is
, the better of the two.
PORT GIBSON, MISS., REVEILLE: “From news re-
ports and the recent election in France, it seems both
France and Great Britain, who have tried many social-
istic schemes and found them wanting, are veering
more to the conservative side in their governmental
v operations. May the United States, which has been
toying with entirely too many socialistic plans in its
national life, watch closely our allies, and avoid ruinous
pitfalls.”
daughter of Mr. and Mrs |
Gates of Denton. She made her
first appearance at the age of five,
bo’tald"? "coa.nog“ungnagu
to the Southwestwill be held on
the campus of the “
for Woman Monday
urday. ________
a... ..,2 r. calories for each cultivated acre,
that,any.statelegislator the U.S.S.R. 2,700 and ndia 3,000
outside of Tarrant county would calories
vateazainsti - nokal. To be wen • ted ■” individual
ways the .case in the realm ofpol- woods from 2.000 to 2.200 ealorles
Hies, particularly in Texas House daily, depending on the climate
of Reprosestatives where the lag- nd-energvused
islators are almost as close to their Ner ENOUGR
constituents assity WtotUmw are Japan, Slthonugh most successful
to their neighbors. I crop production, sti does not
AuApa ton in the dapital Producesvufflelent.tond.forher
. “2 •-M .“1 “V44 •• •45 II ■ ■ mounting populaton Ihe averaKe
last week, you probably would . - - . ----
have wondered why the Dallas
delegation is sa ______’___
loVaki thing in Tarrant County when, us- on:
uall. it's county vs. county, par- -
meeting Plennd CAGE CONTBST
Artificial Insemination
That, then, is why a local government is usually the
center of our attentions, if we pay attention to any level
of government which we must do if we are to govern
ourselves as we wish to be governed.
On Tuesday we will have an excellent opportunity to
register the opinions we have about the form of local
government we want. Nothing else in our opinion, no
_ matter what has been said, is the issue- -nothing but
the form of government
As the Record-Chronicle has said editorially for more
than a decade, the council-manager form of govern-
ment appears to be the first answer to the problems
that beset Denton. Surely no one will deny that Den-
ton has its share of municipal problems. .
Whether the majority of Denton’s 6,000 voters agree
with that idea or believe we should retain our present
. system, this newspaper will continue to work for good
government at all levels. Every citizen should dk the
same.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION
Single Copies: 5c for weekdys: 10c for Sunday.
ROMS DELIVERY RATES FOR DAILY AND SUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier « motor route
on same day of publication, 350 per week.
BY MAIL ONLY: ft Denton ata adjnining coumntiet, $1.09 per month,
pinrgancb Eerhemohtevnid
-4
. - — research organ- Hammarskjold takes a u.—
ization, predicts this will exhaust view. He hails me diplomatic — -------------- -
‘ invaluable source of comfortable, air-conditioned hall
a fruitful field of with adjoining kitchens con ac-
-------- quiet diplomacy. commodate several hundred per-
Some scientists have urged that A U. N. reception played a key tons It is also easily accessible
the sea be harvested more effic- to the weary delegate,
iently; there is hope that atomic Ffr- To avoid of:lending any member
gathemintreatpersu
-FM9• 9 is nancy vane
Aclorins Producod Daily 9
8 Per Cultivated Acts '
y ritir J ~ '
I,
LDII PHIALS
The Facts We Must Decide ;
212775
Hectic U.N. Life:
0^ The Diplomatic
b Hungry Cocktail . Parties
-ITE sations.* ~~ ..".,2".
SSdT naround.the. *w. the may w a delegate through the Philip c. 2wltw“ chatting
te We General ssembly, but he needs with the Soviet Union’s Jacob
aunny.".. . , great inner fortitude to survive Malik when the latter hinted that
it could be called a universa the United Nations social whirl. the Berlin erisis could be solved
utterance, for two • thirds of the By the time the seasonal cock- by private U S -Soviet talks, Jes-
world B population, or 11 billtan. tai- party round ends, the aver- sup followed up the hint. The two
are underfed. age delegate has attended more diplomata were soon engaged in
.For every, well : fed personin than 50 parties, consumed several negotiations which ended the crf®
the t nited States, there are 10 oth- hundred assorted f anapm. and sis
era in the world who are hungry, sampled a variety of drinks that The receptions are usually
And unleas ways to increase food would make a bartender blanch, scheduled from I to 1 p. m., but
production are found. population He also has chatted with scores if the guests-get in the proper
• say. the ratio will widen P of fellow diplomata from the mood they sometimes last until
world population continues to spir- U, N,‛s u member stateg and midnight.
el, I. . . picked up information be "never Some of the larger delegations
Last 47 million people were wou J have heard on the assem- give receptions at theta own head-
added to world population, raising bly floor quarters or at the big midtown
- ft to 2.8 billion. The population is Former General Assembly. Proc- hotels The Russians stage their
expected gto,he..3.4 billion in 10 ident Jose Maza of Chile once bo- annual vodka and caviar soiree at
years and six billion by theind of moaned the late of a diplomat their big Park Avenue mansion,
the *^“7, M doomed to spend his evenings The Americans entertain, at the
EXHAUSTED BY 2000 "drinking the Yame scotch, eating Waldorf, others at the Plaza or
For each year’s increase. 47 mil- the same shrimo and seeing the Pierre.
lion acres of new farm land will be same * Mat of the smaller states en-
needed. The Population Reference U. N, Secretary General Dag tertain in the delegates' dining
Bureau, a private research organ- Hammarskjold takes a different room on the fourth floor at the
ization, predicts thia will exhaust view. He ails me diplomatie re- U. N. secretariat building. This
all cropland resources on earth by caption as an
2000. contacts and
What's the answer?
itibrqugtl to their attention AU
on thia bsis only
::: THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE tm
-----------------------------------------------
A LOOK AT THE NEWS OF THE WEEK
every party to which he is invited.
With as many as four receptions
scattered across the midtown area
in one evening, the guest is apt
to bsve a hectic time.
Despite the large amounts of
—===-===- liquor served, there has been lit-
- - -------- —---— — LANGUAGE at WovE tle evidence of drunkenness at
Hagttupchoxganudhjon °deanduaz minory Dallas “cawaest“tecton, Arab-largei
iZ’™ ays.Megesuresazainst “AtADallas schogl recently • touw "a
are mort kilers, the EAo.ad mother was struggling with the ence, hayecatt theirshado
States than to foreign lands where -onEudugtonna Ie.8u mi ted, a Nationalist Chinese delegate
the food problem is most critical, pares * propectve. trsgrad is never invited to a Soviet bloc
Japan, bcause of its large pop- A.Gueitionwaie party or vice versa. The same
ulation and small land area, has Eend: -ansuase apoken in the holds for receptions given by Is-
been forced to become the world's “Ena „ wnt. . a. reel ata the Arab states.
most suecesstul nation to food pro- mrU0G mo her After the Hungarian revolt was
duction, according to the FAO. The "MAX* aaqtinn Aia ror t smashed by Soviet tanks, u 8
nation produces 13,000 calories per ud guestiqndidreferwgua Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge
day for each cultivated acre while SXoninstemdQatuu.i8 Lnsh refused to attend any function giv-
Rie United Bates produces 5.000 werf yurLhe be poo? fata' en by the Russians or their satel-
goodt, , Hmm. , The Russians invite represent-
s"bicai f th. speech in your
mhaktngpmup"mer
hk nvm s0le hoths Stohe -p"toz”eezn.ottig boatop,
and between you and I, he don’t champagneat ’ e al k. 412
like to read any. (10 error; poor.) 1P , ’ W4s ' ted ' thet
I can't hardly beleve that John vHation —st
B
lady hr Capita AUSTRAUAO
Calsrie intake
and «>r
EMttoc-ute
C105bdow1oo m
Lbesgetwaieble U
MWELLDOWTTWINR!
N> IDONTNEEDAN •<
i / COLLEGE KIDS TELLING
#>r me ho* 10 Run M 4
IW BUINESS!1learned
ATE BEST WAv:r-Mt )
J Q cLLGOF <
* EXPERIENCI!)
1
saumnrrruarovmemneramuee
Esumtrios Dalartauaacii
' iirt>
Seanisi
ly what the hesds a tate
talk about, but surely Mm au.—
tpographical of Germany will come up. The people of
? tarfSS BmvJnAi Pf ae e t
pie have been treating the meet- acme early pvg
tag with mixed emotiohs, some of Cypriot leder A
state, a delegate must attend
. _ ana could almost hear Sa werda.
braasy “Th King la Dead. ... Long
be that Live The King.’’
_ made the statement that There'
the United Sthtes would continue to this _____ _
....."
_____________ „ttsta and meteorologista to drive
to the Russian people as those into the seereta of weather "
spoken [by the Russian r “ 5-----
“h-z-sa-m.s I CUBA:,
speech seriously Lemaina to b* NEW PREXY tes-oneot
seen, but surely such hard-boiled Fidel Castro was made Prime
talk can’t be brushed aside m Minister ofuba last
the babbling of a bully True, a
good deal M this talk to '
and blustery, but it could _ ___________
aomothtag could really come of IL Truly, Fulgencio Batista, long
If a man aays something like that Mme strongman of Cuba, is gone
' STrTXLlS: SK.1*» nduscdtocaseryomnzad"aana up and go to Austih tot.Fom-
yn Snfaon jszir cubmn “revolution, mittee hearing. But it sti costs -
±22 " - - •
is settled — Hit’s sottal ier. Castro apparently baa had J
waa enough time to refliet now and Elozd Bri
British has decided that perhaps Cub* Wasgoner
i for a ned ton in command of the ehairman.
U M- yhole country, not just the army, fairs’Com
enow M. b U. wheelhouse. &*%..■
vexac. IN CYPRUS 2 letter to afl 31 stat, aenatorswould-
1 EREEDOMI__________ . “emmgsze 52
ibe politician*, more than anyone
_____ over elge. relish mai. particulartyi ft
from Greek advocates a way to sye money,
hop Makari- Ata that. It seems, le the real is-
ndependence am bare: inerease the suppott of
- ridden to- what we have or spregdourelves
Greek eonat. A plan even thinner Many, believe
uthoe to to Mb vert*, couldn’t get muchthinnen
for Arlington, a India made progress in tnereas-
_______ ____be assured of the IM her food production during the
bloc of 14 Dallas-Fort Worth vot- first of her five - year plans which
_______ OS for his bill? Could be. ended in 1956. But crop fallures,
or, of courge, IN THF KKIRG, You might also have wondered and an inereased emphasis on in-
erene,tht HW.IHS.Dn2:._ why AM, of which Arlington dustrialization, has the last two
kl* ANOTHER SPLASH Btata is yr and would continue to years wiped out much of what waa
"amaszam se 5 ~. popmnnn.
a "woatber eye" satel- sohs.V94
“ United States SL
Catam 1900 Lite 5,000 1,000 9,090
1 UI
■
f 0
ift _ r
77?'7 ■ ■.....
The loquacious boaa of the Krem-
lla seemed to grab up the advan-
ELWMTl’sS:
John FOotar Dulles. The United
Btotao and her allles have been
stepping rather gingerly since doc-
tors discovered a new cancer in - ..
Dulles a week ago :e210en5 ti _
wsctarersnzdrFarudchey w«ia remain
"nossmsara Me m-T? 8ucse kgtuo
lie. If they try to shoot their way be ot assistance and could even-
Ue* will break a nw Berlin Bud and the Western Al-
ade somebow ft ft presents 1- gm *•
self to an outgrowth of the Bov- Hefn.D . .
lets’ announced intention to turn
over the Kaat rppan rein to the ™ negottations and foreign 1
German Communiat government _________
aaid in a newa conl
Khruahchev wee eff
charge that the allie
their way into Berl
It'S doubtful that the United Ite into space. The United States gu.
States or her allies would ever hopes to gather unprecedented in- hil,
attempt any shooting la Germany, Fommatinm rezarding the miiltikndi- "MI
but it shouldn’t be forgotten that
It wasn't too long ago that U.S. of satellit.
ficials made the statement that There's no
the United Sthtes would continue to this shot,
to go into Berlin if it had to ram i
its way lh. It could be that those L
words might be just as alarming enl
) as those tote the seeret of weather with
. strongman an eye toward better prediction of
are to peoph to the weather to the future Aad if you had been to Austin
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 174, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 22, 1959, newspaper, February 22, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453475/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.