Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 191, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1959 Page: 1 of 12
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i
1 •
IFITISN’T
* 12 PAGES
Of Soviets Spur
Ike’s Aid Request
f
) .
. 8
*
JUBILATION REIGNS
Hawaii Looks
I
— Press Phelea
g
child to
love on
Seven Perish
Mac, Adenauer
w n
In Agree:
ent
-4
I
census.
1
, 3
ideas the British may have
■aid the territory will be "an as-
miles from the
border
Mt to the United States.
proposing a wholesale withdrawal
"to
le
to favor a
Eckardt told s pows conference
were agreed on the procedures in
Republican and a candidate for
the coming weeks:
as a threat to the free
this
dollar*
fighter at Loring Air Force Base,
his home.
for 4,000 independent oil
Lundy was a laborer in Presque sale.
Isle.
mas-
The British prime minister ad-
RE MEM HER W HEN
DR. ALICE E. MOORE
Science-Minded Young Girls
Cypriot Guerrilas Heading
with President Eisenhower.
of the Virus
Home After Bloody Rebellion
search" at 11 a.m.
in the Cyprus
more
At 9:15 Arthur C. Davies of San
v
mine on a mountain
dent. will speak and
followed,
**
of
C-
early
to the cause of
had led a fanatically right-wing
band in Greece after the wai and
re io««»g^H
Women's News ...
»’
22;-
1
A.
X
.
if
43
as traitors
. the union
10
11
a catch-all "refinery mechanic”
category, lumping many craft
esi-
W.
stock will be offered for public
sale at the end of this month by
the Ford Foundation.
The offering of common clam
"A" stock, at today’s price, will
PAPER ON roncn?
LET VS KNOW
, associate di-
Bank at Park.
13, ei
story
have aided them," he i
stand firm in the face of
A great many Denton County
women dipped snuff in a pre-
lude to the time when they be-
gan smoking cigarettes?
Ford Stock
To Be Offered
Orthodox Church in his campaign
for Enosis,
V
1n3
Cypriot mayor of Nicosia once pro-
claimed.
R,
at Sloan
ncer Re-
- 9
■
lecturer.
Dr. L. Ruth
rector of the I
worldwide Red
nationa, Eisen-
gislators: “Two
I
Wei
jo
2
2
«
Cyprus the night
Retired from the
or waiting for
set off a land
"Looking back on it.” a British
* - “ ‘ * after
offering price would depend on the
price of Ford stock on the New
York Stock Exchange just before
tion. She has conducted extensive
research on the actions of virus-,
es on tumor growth.
Following a luncheon in Hub-
bard Hall where staff and guests
will be introduced, delegates will
meet at 1:30 p.m. In the Main Au-
ditorium to view the Sophomore
Class Stunt.
MAXIMUM TIME
There is a maximum time
schedule set out in the state con-
।
4
signs the bill and the date of the
general election. The actual time
could be less.
Gov. William F. Quinn,tzth and
Emerson, dean of admissions-reg-
istrar, will award a scholarship
to one of the delegates..
Afternoon sessions will be high-
lighted by a discussion of the ori-
this week, "he was ruthless, ab-
solutely fearless, and a good or-
ganiser to the nth degree. In fact,
he was the. sort of chap you wquld
want on your side if you had to
do the same thing.”
Grivas was M when he landed
from Rhodes on the west coast of
It had always regarded the Mac-
millan trip as useful, but now it
---E.
tmn
last presidemtiully
eroor of Hawaii.
Dr. John A. Guinn, TWU presi-
dent, will greet the delegates in
b
iiA
Mikell Murphy of Fort Worth.
Campus Government Assn.
By WEBB McKINNEY
NICOSIA. ' Cyprus. (AP) -
KOKA’S war is over and the boys
are hooding home
‘ The wiry youths whom Britain
■o recently called terrorists now
are hailed as heroes on the streets
He immediately began to search
for potential leaders
of geology, Univerity of California
at Los Angelos. Dr. Kennedy also
will speak during the afternoon
session.
Dr. Alice ENzabeth Moore, head
WWW • enenvw epmmwmy "v‛"
of the Geological Survey, has con-
ducted recent studies on high
pressures and the crust of the
earth. He is a national Sigma Xi
134 r
—R-
Spooking of fig
threat against tree
hower told the lei
TRIP USEFUL
Asked about the Bonn govern-
ment’s attitude, Von Eckardt said
MUSCLES COUNT
Hoffa ayiltly made It clear It
was muscles that count with him.
"The real question is whether
you have the power to negotiate
the proper claasification," he said
Vice President Howard Gibbon
pointed out that "90 per cent of
petroleum products in America
are carried by Teamster*"
A-
mitted on arriving in Bonn Thurs-
day that the Western powers are
"still a long way” from their goal
of finding a policy to counter the
Soviet threat to drive them out of
West Berlin.
With US. Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles ailing. Macmil-
lan has taken over the role of rov-
aide He said he thought *hii
would be preferred by political
-..J VO el 8000
candidates in the field. Quinn is a
32
man Peter Hope concurred
The agreement followed a peri-
od of considerable German cool-
ness and misgiving over Macmil-
lan a visit to Moscow.
Some West German sources had
Indicated privately there was fear
Macmillan might give way on
some points other Western part-
ners regarded as vital without get-
ting anything from the Soviets In
return.
. WEATHER
intelligence official mused
Grivas called off the battle
Hig
■
fundamental purposes of our col-
lective dofsnso effort are to pre.
vent fenoral war and to deter
Communist local aggreasion.
"We know the enormous and
growing Communist potential is
launch a war of nuclear destruc-
tion and their willingness to ue
W-"
"....ns
IN TODAY'S PAPER
IDLENESS MAKES concert
pianist Van Cliburn restless
and disturbs his morale. Page
3.
HOUSE SPEAKER Waggon-
er Carr endorMa "across-the-
board” tax program for state.
Bage3 go —„
ChurehNews- ..... ...." c
" I”.
LOCAL AGGRESSIONS
"We know also that even local
aggressions, unless t^oched, could
- absorb nation after nation into the
Communist orbit—or could flame
Into world war.
"The protection of the few
world against the throat or the
reality of Soviet nuclear aggres-
sion or local atack rests on the
common defense effort estab-
lisbed under our collective securi-
ty agreements."
The sum requested is about 12
million dollars less than nought
00
j
A panel discussion on career op- I
portunities for women in science
will be conducted by science,
mathematics and. nursing majors
Denton Record-Chronicle
"wGus
. .4- WeM.
k./.
—,mfne
Dr. Moore was previously-chief
of the Yellow- Fever Virus Labora-
tory for the Rockefeller Founda-
— •v
of troops from central Europe.
QUIETS FEARS
Macmillan obviously sought to
quiet West German fears that his
recent mission to Moscow had
raised ton prospect of "disengage-
meat” as an Allied policy.
Bonn press chief Foils MR
of Cyprus with Greece fg
EOKA did not win Ehosis, But
on th advice of its leadership it
accepted the plan for eventual fa-
denendence for Cyprus. •
The hatreds born in the strug-
glo _ washed over into intercom-
munal fighting between Greek and
Turkish Cypriots that took another
its lives AW in all. ineluding those
killed b British securly forces.
The victims were John Hersey.
41. five of his six children, and
Carl Lundy, N, an overnight
guest.
The children were John. 13. Vic-
toria g. James. 7, Elisabeth • and
Cindy 4.
Hersey’s wife, Christina, < and
the only surviving ehild, Deanna,
EOKA had successes and some
near disasters. By mid-IBM, Brit-
ish Intelligence was beginning to
break through
Even so. IBM was the year that
Field Marshal Lord Harding, the
British commander in chief here,
awoke one morning to find a time
bomb in his bed. ———---
In March 1957, when EOKA an-
peered to be near defeat, with
L NEWS M the hour-KDNT 1444
' .. ■ ' . . •
■li played a significant part in the
final debate. Rep John R. Pillion
(R-NY) said admission of Hawaii
uimzmasuf
Congress.”
from the blaring 1%-
n dwelling by crash-
Iflg through a first floor window.
Both suffered from burns, cuts
IN SPRING A YOUNG MAN’S THOUGHTS . . .
... turn to love, go the old saying goes. That wasn’t entirely true today, though.
Take, for instance, the picture at the top left. It was taken in Los Angeles where
Marcos Varela, 4, and Kibble Loquet, 11, aren't out flying kites in the March wind
because of a clubfoot and a spinal ailment. In the center picture, Alexander T.
Chohon of the Continental Escrow Co. of Los Angeles smiles atfer he surrendered
in connection with an alleged 1800,000 forged promissory note’drawn on a Dallas
bank. At the right, Vittorio Mussolini, son of Italy's late Fascist leader, embraces
his daughter after he was acquitted in Florence of a charge of deserting the Italian -
Air Force during World War II. At the lower left, a New York passerby hands a
police and firemen at the scene of a blaze. So there was more than just
the minds of men this spring day.
--— ... ....... , —— ------------------ - ■ - -
Classified...
Cemies ,.,»2 •
Edltorials...,
du.uam
9PUTV9 •»•«•••!
Town Topice .
TV Ug .....
"thsdp Mt took fierce. It is
hard-to imagine one padding si-
lently along an alley, gun in hand,
" lor the right instant to
gotten a name for hardness and
etficiency.
He was called to Cyprus to or-
ganize a militant force to support
"Archbishop Makarios of the Greek
otNTN AND vicNTV AND west TasE
ce It WHY «*•»•♦» and mile"twough
road:
They look more like young
clerks, accountants, students, elec-
trictans, lawyers or farmers —
which in fact they once were.
But the four-yeor war they
fought in EOKA, the Greek Cy-
priot underground, to free Cyprus
from Britain was tough and ruth-
less. A total of 333 killings were
attributed to KOKA. More than
half the victims were Greek Cy-
se
WASHINGTON (AP)The
Hawaiian Islands will be-
coma the nation's 50th state
within the year.
Congress answered the terri-
tory’s half-century of pleading for
statehood Thursday with a re-
sounding 323-89 vote in the House.
The Senate assented a day earlier
with a 76-15 vote.
President Eisenhower gets the
bill today. His approval is certain.
Presidential secretary James C.
Hagerty said the President is de-
lighted
la four to six months Hawaii
could be a full partner in the un-
ion. It will take that long to set
up elections for the nearly 600,000
people to choose their first state
officers, their two UJI senators
and one representative in the
House. Hawaii will qualify for a
second House seat after the INI
cratic delegate to Congress, said
he favored the shortest possible
preliminaries to the ultimate proc-
lamation of the President formally
admitting the islands to statehood-
APPOINTIVE SYSTEM
"Hawaiians are tired of living
under the shackles of the appoint-
ive governor system,” he said.
Burns, undoubtedly a candidate
for something, has not said which
office he will seek.
Hawaiian! will have other things
to vote on, besides officers.
They must decide:
school girls and their science
teacher* are expected in Deuton
Saturday to participate in the
fifth annual Science Day at TWU.
Registration for the meeting
which will emphasize careen for
women in science is to begin at 3
a.m. in the Science Building.
KS 1.
ft
gex.c
week for conferences with Presi-
dent Eisenhower.
Apparently the French and West
German governments overruled
GEORGE C. KENNEDY
I
------- ...... /
; : c .1M
at 10 a.m. Panel members include
Marilyn Weathers of Beaumont,
biology major: Mrs. Rose Dean MA
Rogers of Penton, chemistry ma- vN
jor; Kay Hackmuth of Barties* j N
ville, Okla. mathematics majer; ■
and Nadell Raineyof Dallas, nurs-
ing maior.
The panel will be moderated by 28
Dr George C. Kennedy, professor -0a4
the block of shares is released.
Ford stock closed on the New
York market Thursday at $55.37,
up 62 cents on the day. This com-,
pares with the original offering
price of $64.50 a share and a low
of $35.87 in 1957.
lion Teamsters will help you fight
your battles with Easo Standard
Oil Q>." ,______________ .
The Teamster president brushed
aside, as angry barrage of criti-
cism from 30 AFLC10 unions in
the area for a bold invasion of
this bustling Deep South Industrial
center..
The offer posed a problem for
more than the local Esso refin-
ery and the Independent, industri-
al Workers Assn., which invited
Hoffa to speak here as a possible
keto Jo its contract difficulties.
Hoffa made it clear his sights
are set on bringing an Standard
-- Oils' independent unions into the
Teamster (q|^|
INVITATION!
He told a news conference be-
fore his speech he had met last
month with workers al an Eliza-
both. N.J., refinery and had an
invitation "to speak to another
large group of Standard Oil work-
ers in the East," but no date bed
been set.
"Esso soon will recognise that
> the fight is not limited to Baton
-Rouge," he replied later when
asked about a recent MO-man lay-
off at the giant refinery.
More than 1.NO I IWA members
and visitors overflowed the meet-
ins ball.
The J IWA has been working
since last summer without a con-
tract The My dispute is over
ttu
_ MTH YEAR OF DAILY SERViEE-L NO. 191
on the face, chest and arms and
from shock.
. Snow drifts four feet deep on
the highways prevented help from
reaching the scene in time
An ambulance sent from Pres-
que Irie, seven miles away, was
able to maneuver only two miles
in two hours before it bogged
down.
Firetrucks sent from Mars Hill.
privately owned, coralstel] 900
miles south of Honolulu 1
“HNHV. MWMN "VI “NVINMIMv’
3. Whether to acoept the federal
land Fants and reservations speci-
fied In the statehood bill.
EIGHT MAJOR ISLANDS
Hawaii consists of eight major
islands and a number of smaller
ones with a UH hI land area of 6,434
square miles, Hawaii would be the
47th state In site, bigger than
Rhode Island, Delaware and Con-
necticut. In population, Hawaii
now outranks Alaska, Nevada.
Wyoming, Vermont, Delaware and
New Hampshire
Although 85 per cent of the ter-
ritory’s residents are American
itizens, the bulk of the population
is of oriental and Polynesian (na-
tive Hawaiian) ancestry. In the
INO census, Caucasians comprised
33 per cent. The largest ethnic
group was Japanese, 36.9 per cent.
Opposition molted in the final
hours of House debate House
richest nation in the graveyard ot
MMory.**
The President said the fuR
amount is urgently needed to
thwart "a fanatic conspiracy ri
-nternational—communism" which
maintains 6% million men under
arms in about 400 divisions around
the world.
BERLIN PROBLEM
Singling out the Soviet drive to
•-9*2• V% WNV MVY •V% VI »U V•
force the West out ri Berlin, El.
senhower said: “fa Europe today
the Snviet Lninn ham MnAa a.
Mre 9vv vvn n«w muue we
youth movement, discarding as he
went along those with inadequate
hardness or zeal Ry the time his
campaign opened, on April 1, IBM.
he had around him a band of tough
young men forming EOKA's inner
core, and a second echelon of
couriers: paymasters, quarter-
masters, recruiters, and inform-
. ef de N
, ", " . e *ftrT 1 I ..
A Growing Nt ns paper For A Growing Area
DENTON, TEXAS, FRIDAY AFTERNOON. MARCH 11, 1952
rofessional boxer, was a fire-
ants
in the years that
Speaker Sam Rayburn (D/Tex),
mom congratulating Hawaii. He
atitutio which the people of Haw,
. . aii, tired of waiting, adopted in
to ease the Berlin crisis by 1930. The maximum Lx 100 days
. -i -1 between the date-the President
ing coordinator of Western strate-
gy He is flying to the United
States next week for conferences
War Capabilities
Ae ■ G:r, c.
BONN, Germany (AP)-British
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan
and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
have reached full agreement on
Berlin. the German question and
European security. a-Gei man gov-
ernment spokesman said today.
The statement came after Mac-
millan and Adenauer wound up
their talks at a morning session
of more than two hours. Only aa
interpreter was present
Macmillan arrived Thursday
from talks with French President
Charles de Gaulle in Paris. He
goes to the United States next
Engineering Technology in Lon-
don. Before joining General Tele-
phone in 1953, he was with the
British Post Office Telephones.
u w . - cu.... would be preferred I
that the two head* of government leaders of both parties
"No diffrences exist," he said, governor. It is up to him to set
British Foreign Office spokes- ®* election dates.
" ” 2" John A. Burns, Hawail’s Demo-
The Soviet Communist party
newspaper Pravda said this morn-
ing that Khrushchev’s recent visit
to Communist Esst Germany
"opens clear prospects for a
peaceful settlement with Ger-
many." .
While Pravda tended to play
* *
Due For TWU Science Day
the sovieta kept up their hot Some s00 junior ana wentor lg
eight miles away, could net get
through at all. Only one heavy fire
truck made it from Presque Isle. . - —2- — —..x-
ironically, Hersey, a former be worth more than 110 million
a. auring nur rurce owi The foundation notified the Se-
Limestone. Maine, 20 miles from curities and Exchange Commis-
sion Thursday of the intended
probably never numbered
____than N men, although the
line of communication and part-
Congress is
Cautioned
Against Cuts
WASHINGTON (AP) —
President Eisenhower asked
Congress today for $3,930,-
000,000 in foreign aid. He <
said the spending is essential
to survival in the face of a
“growing Communist poten-
tial to launch a war of nuo
lear destruction."
In a special message Eisenhow
vote again?
1. Whether to accept the boun-
daries defined by Congress. (This
excludes Palmyra Island, a tiny.
--
_ ___Issue has come about in large
_ — —0 measure because,our past pro-
Charges of communism in Haw. grams of economic and military
"“5” • suu in naw assistance to our NATO allies
RATON ROUGE (AP) - Tough-1 Emo's demand for acceptance of
talking James Hoffa had a simple
Minmide
— g i
’ m
11
-eg
2
Angelo, general equipment engi-
neer for General Telephone Co. of
the Southwest, wiU speak on "Sci-
once of Communication Past,
Present and Future.” ,
ENGLISHMAN
Davies, a native of England, was
educated at Post Office Training
College and the British Institute
milfan trip *s useful nut now n 1. Whether they want statehood.
Planstoutliningthe sale said the 4regaed»<L4l>y having been Or -(They voted for it 3-1 in a plebis-
Ifering price would depend on the tremely_uefuh". ______ . cite 19 years ago, but they must
fug IUMm Mere
-Uwmminge4-
Niehmere -........t 2 .
Lewnrage a
Son seti lodav at $,36p,m. rites aturdv
•t 6144 a.m. Fishinm Poor.
AAINFALA
of Nov. 9, 1954: support from theisland’s 400,000
army in 1944, he Greek Cypriots, and because of its
excellent organization and deadly
discipline
"We are an EOKA," the Greek
In,Snowbound
Cottage Fire
EASTON, Maine. (AP) - Seven
persons, including five children,
perished early today in a (ire that
destroyed their five-room cottage
in snow-bound Easton, about 10
time adherents ran into thousands.
Against them, Britain threw in as
many as 30,000 of Rs boot troops.
How did EOKA do it?
The answer is Col. George Griv-
as. a Cyprus-born retired Greek
army officer with the pseudonym
of Dighenis. who formed the un-
derground, led it end hss now dis-
bonded it
------------
—t r
6.
“. ""kpimmw"deodhjmdee
___*__ fmscaadan
wr-mAwu m 2
i TWEA"I Mi R
me
-1 4 u--qnt-rurgam
CLOUDY AND WARM
——m—s
g
PRIVE FIVE CENTS n‛
---------- -
this any longer.’'
"While the Soviet Union is striv-
ing to lay the path towards peace,
warmongering representatives of
the West threaten to lay the path
toward Berlin with their tanks,”
Izvestia said.
the war left 601 dead and 1,260
On the face of ft. EOKA was
battling hopeless odds Ite own
hard core centered in the moun-
land Memorial Hospital ta Dallas,
will give a demonstration on blood
typing at 3:41 p.m. in the Science
Buildfag.
Other demonstrations and exhi-
bits will bo on the first and second
floors of the Science Buildfag.
Science Day is sn annual affair
jointly sponsored by the College
of Nursing and the biology, chem-
istry and mathematics depart-
ment.
Join us and more than ■ a ■ mH- ■ ■
many of its top-men dead or cap-
tured Britain accepted a truce.-
But essentially. EOKA survived
because it won almost complete
Kettering Institute for_____________
search to New York, will speak is to speak at
on "Some Aspects of Cancer Re- “
ocean basins by Dr. Kennedy. He
____ J 1 p.m.
Dr. Kennedy, formerly on the
faculty at Harvard University and
1 gootogirt with the Alaskan Branch
mands regarding the future ed
_ -.a,, । Berlin which, if unmodified, could
.t ri have perilous consequences."
a state- "Tito resolutenesa with which -
we and our allies will meet this
WASHINGTON tAP)—Two mil-
lion shares of Ford Motor Co.
nmrmm"xnwmnamv
i • J|anr..4.l ji £ (. a,.
Hoffa Offers Union
Backing To 4,000
Refinery Workers
c.g
To Statehood
‘.......-d
Ala.ih
‛rnnd"
Ttemnr
arta
• " "82883
' pp,ww"mmu
down the prospect* of war explod- Ecin.A.a.pi-ora-. ~
Ing out it the Berlin crisis, the Ae aSik Arthur C nmim N emh
Soviet government newspaper Iz-
vestia editorially attacked the
Wests’ attitude toward Berlin and
declared "things cannot go on like
•— .< u-
Lost >4 Moun Nope
mis Mlonth , 43
Much Ayereg J ?2
Thi T
Aastvter .f •i
( > ~ adinutMM
and-cold propagenda.
PRAVDA COMMENT
last year. It would
alva mil
to some 70 fru—
13th consecutive postwar year.
Eisenhower's aid requests have
been cut sharply in past years.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 191, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1959, newspaper, March 13, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453492/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.