Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 212, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1959 Page: 4 of 10
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NBysiie
TUESDAY, APRIL 7,1959
N
STRICTLY
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Says Pauling of Loper's statement:
in the coffee house on
slept
table.
I
I lived like that for throe
|
he said.
58
I
A
VIEWS AND
4
WORLD TODAY
The Johnson Citicis
s:
End Of Comfortable Year
Is Dissent Dangerous?
I
I
ting the skipper of
sindless sea Then
it was
in brief, this was Proxmire’s
■
ft
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
ByBlake
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i
85
Eisenhow-
with
there is
I
..
a similar poll taken two
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW ,
7
tNOUGM:
hit
e
0
NOTICE roruuc
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I
k •
4
1
1
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a
irrm
2250’0%
ii
§
on
n"usm
It waa like bei
a ship on a wl
smashed In
independent
but glamour. too many would stay
in the business who ought to get
The annual Future Farmers of
America and 4-H Club Fat Calf
Find Tax Income ”
Outside Of Texas
i’
■ \
a bulidozer driv-
l'a jungled inter-
I
a
This
over
Ford Views Tariff:
“Two-Bit Poker
or. or perhi
er deep in
ior.
HARK TO HARVEY
Wheat And The Gravy Train:
How Long Will It Continue?
A
1
Imports Damage
Little Oil Man
The oil Industry in Texas and
years ago.
(Copyright 1959, General Fea-
tures Corp.)
E
I -
V
t
F
AA
g:
HAL HOYLE SAYS
By JAMES MABLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON, (AP) - At the
start it looked like such a com-
fortable year for Sen. Lyndon
Johnson. As leader of the Senate
Democrats the tall Texan had ev-
erything he could wish for, includ-
ing peace and quiet.
75
E ’
FVa
■
kes
Hk,. N
VOICES
Of People You Know
And People In The News
Obviously. the wheat glut la ut-
terly out or control. And th__1
nothing that can be done about it
and Hog Show and Sals. which
vromises to be the biggest in the
CAN’T, MA?
rMLnd
Pk/
A
mi
nology, I
country.
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through .
Record-Chronicle Files
flooding into this country comes
from fields controlled by the inter-
national oil cartel.
Sums LKE BRATNELLA NEVER MAS ANY MOML-
WORK WHIN GHE6 WATCHING TV.
TRUMAN MAKES
ATOM DECISION
APRIL 7, 1949
WASHINGTON (fl — President
Truman said today he made the
decision to drop the atomic bombs
on Japan in the interest of saving
200,006 American lives and per-
haps 300,000 to 400,000 of the en-
emy. "Now I believe that we are
in a position where we will never
have to make that decision again,”
oilmen . . . and the people in re-
lated jobs. These people are being
deprived of their chance — their
right — to make a living.
SEN RALPH YARBOROUGH
Washington
1—-
\ I
Published every evening (except Saturday) and Bunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., Inc., 114 E. Hickory St
But an exceptionally blunt answer to this assertion
has come from Dr. Linus Pauling. He’s a Nobel lau*
reate in chemistry. now at California Institute of Tech-
and one of the eminent men of science in this
The persons being I
thia operation are the
over wheat to stored.
You can build a wheat storage
warehouse for approximately 35
cents for each bushel it will hold.
THE COST
Entered as second class mall matter at the postollice at Denton. Tez
■ as January U. 1921, according to Act of Congrees, March 3, 1872
YOUR IDEAS CAN PAY OFF
IF YOU WRITE THEM DOWN
Record-Chronicle readers can make their ideas pay off.
The newspaper will award two 35 checks each month to the
writers of what judges consider the best contribution to the new
editorial page feature called "Views and Voices." One check will
go to the adult writer and the other to the student who is the
author of what's judged the best letter.
AU letters must be no longer than 300 words and must include
the signature of the author and his or her address. The Record-
Chronicle reserves the right to edit letters to fit space require-
ments. No letters can be returned.
Judging will bo bam on the content of the letter and not upon
grammar. Letters on any subject hr good taste are welcomed.
No More Table Top Naps
For Oscarless Homolka' "
Diplomat Luce
Will Have Big
Iff
miserable life."
The beetle-browed actor, noted
for his skill at Russian roles, has
portrayed Soviet leaders ranging
from Leon Trotsky to Premier
Nikita Khrushchev. But although
he is fluent in English, German
and French, he has never learned
to speak Russian.
In his youth he spent 2% years
with Austrian ski troops in Italy
during World War I.
GOOD LIVING
Oscar loves good living, and one
of the sorrows of his life is that
he has to diet to keep his chunky
frame mobile.
"But you have to make the best
surplus wheat.
’our warehouse is paid for with-
The fear of controversy is a thing to be feared.
. Editor Ralph McGill of the Atlanta Constitution has
been led by events to cancel an address to the Colum*
bus (Ga.) League of Women voters "in order to spare
further harassment of those concerned."
SUBSCRIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION .
Single Copies: Sc for weekdays: Me tor Sunday.
HOME DELIVERY RATES fon DAILY AND SUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier or motor route
sa same day of publication. 35c per week.
BY MAIL ONLY: In Denton and adjsintng counties. |L00 per month.
$9.0 per year (must bo paid in advance). Elsewhere in the United
States $1.30 per month, $15.60 per year.
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivered to your hemo by
mail on weekdays and Sunday Morning Delivery by Meter Route
where this service is available, $1.25 per month. $12.50 per year
omust be paid in advance).
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU or CIRCULATIONS ’
Denton Record-Chronicle
TELEPHONE DUpant 22551
off the place.
Is a 10 per cent Increase
Salesman Sold Wares
CUSHING, Okla., W - An in-
surance man met more than his
match in Mrs. Loyd Harris. Ho
tried to sell her a policy. He failed
but wound up buying two pounds
of peanut brittle she was making.
once.
Yours and. ironically, the farm-
You have paid 3% billion dol-
lars just to support wheat prices
alone. That is $20 each for every
MBMBRB OF THEASsOCIATen PRESS
dVMM to eqtitled ezcltnively to the use for publication
ml new printed to this b—www. as wel as al ap
ig*r MTe,
leothanacostmake up the Shoes To Fi
was a positively brilliant maestro
in a place which has more prime
donnas than an opera house? He
had a genius for getting them to
say yes or no as he wanted.
And best of all for him: he had
an overwhelming majority of
Democrats to work with. Thanks
to last November's elections, his
party's majority waa the greatest
since early New Deal days.
Whst more could a Senate lead-
er ask? If he were naked, he'd
probably have said more of the
same, aa anyone would. He was
even being prominently mentioned
as a likely Democratic presiden-
tial candilate in 1960.
Then a comparative newcomer,
Sen. William Proxmire, Wisconsin
Democrat, strode up to the bridge
and pulled the skipper's cap down
around his ears. This was a few
*
. M5AIL,
\ 0%bu
jistory of the event, will get un-
derway at 10 a.m. Friday when
hedging begins.
ITACY LAND^
p.AAN 1II2
nm-sn--m
EDITORIALS
member of your family. For
wheat alone.
The breadwinner is paying more
for bread than he realised.
We now have 2% billion dollars
worth of wheat on hand.
HOW MUCH?
We now have so much wheat in
storage that if not another bushel
were grown, we'd have all the
food, feed and seed we could use
at home and abroad for the next
full year and we'd still have 300
million bushels left over.
Yet this year’s harvest to going
to be another record.
Needs A Check
OUR FEDERAL government has traditionally de-
pended on a system of checks and balances between its
three branches for the protection of the public.
Now, a new atomic-age of checks and balances has
out hazards be removed from the Atomic Energy Com-
mission. The job would be liven to some agency inde-
pendent of the AEC—the Public Health Service, for
example.
This is a subject on which verifiable data is hard to -
come by. What little independent auditing that has
come to public attention suggests that perhaps there
are those in the AEC and the military who are overly
prone to minimize the fallout danger.
Here’s a for-instance: Maj. Gen. Herbert B. Loper,
assistant to the Secretary of Defense for atomic energy,
says that the risk of damage from nuclear weapons test-
ing is "extremely small and much less than other com-
mon occurrences, such as X-rays."
short of derailing the gravy train,
sharply reducing the price props
under this crop which encourage
these superfluous plantings.
Farmers know this.
A recent Farm Journal poll of
10,000 farmers shows that 55 per
cent want the government to get
His decision was announced after the Leagul
denied the um of a county court room and of school
facilities aa a meeting place. Commissioners said it was
their duty Mto keep down strife.” One described Me* ■
GUI’s speech "as an effort on the part of the Atlanta
newspapers to ram their opinion down the throats of
the people of this county."
And so the people of Columbus will be denied the
right to hear one of the outstanding American editors
of the day. It has become increasingly apparent in the
past decade that controversy is now a controversial
thing in itself.
This to a sad thing for the American public, which
in spite of traditional democratic base of public opin*
ion, increasingly finds it difficult to find the raw mater*
ial which can provide enlightenment on public issues.
We need more views, more voices, more facts—and
fewer public figures dedicated to "keeping down verbal
2 '
hb,
■ 12
Mk- X '
I
l~
in two years, and if you can keep
Uiis fantastic extravagance going
. . . from now on everything you
collect from the government every
year is gravy.
Certainly, it is not a om - com-
modity problem.
Uncle Sam (who is you) to this
year buying up more cotton than
ever before — 80 per cent of our
entire crop.
The government will turn right
around and sell it for $17 a bale
months."
Today ha thinks a measure of
hardship is good for beginners in
"This comes close to being a big lie. My estimate
is that the probability is 1 to 500 that any one Individ*
ual will be seriously affected, and will die of cancer,
or be born with gross defects because of carbon-14 and
cesium-137 fallout’’
. He further predicted that at least 23,000 unborn
Americans will begin life as mentally defective or
mentally ill persons as a result of radioactivity now
in the atmosphere. Pauling said that at least 50,000
living Americans, in addition, will develop cancer from
pest nuclear tests. It should be quite obvious that this
to a man who has consistently opposed any further re*
sumption of nuclear bomb testing.
The layman is in no position to assess the relative
merits of Loper’s and Pauling's charges and counter*
charges, although one may tend to suspect that the
scientist is better equipped to make his statements thsn
is the general
Any system that would provide a check and balance
between the agency interested in nuclear warfare and
the agency interested in the public health and safety*
would certainly be welcomed.
out. ,
"There's nothing worse than anIN AIRANIA
unsuccessful actor. He has a“% 4-A--A
- Greece.--------------_2____
Yon are apt to find him chatting
to Portuguese with a coffee farm-
"Sometimes perhaps the
right year and the right pic-
ture will come along," ne said
cheerfully,
"An Oscar is a fine thing to
get. Let's face it—it's very good
for business."
A crowded lifetime oa two con-
tinents has left Homolka philo-
sophic about fortune, good or bad.
Now starring in the Broadway
drama, "Rashomon," he started
acting at 18 in his native Vienna
for about $9 a month.
“After I was paid for my first
engagement," he recalled. "I had
to decide whether I would eat or
rent a room for the night.
Congress, instead
pushing through
[rams, has been
show business. L
"Those who are sensible give P!
up,” he said. "It is too tough for hl
them. But if there were nothing
EATING WON
"I decided on eating, and
Mr
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fexyki
GUESS WHOSE 6-Y£AR-OLP CHILD \I l JL
IS HAVING A BIRTHDAYPARTY! I K.
Prestige? He had it in abun-, weeks ago.
dance ’Wasn't everyone saying he] L -i",
[I
s
•5e*
~BU»g
•4EvonEMT89EVeg
errors or any antes
8-
WffNsmtemu B
QUINCY, MASS., PATRIOT LEDGER: "If Presi-
dent Eisenhower wants to halt inflation, he will have
to call for strong government action. He will have to
ask for enough taxes to balance the budget. He will
have to take issue directly with American business
and union leaden even to the point of threatening
wage and price controls. ... To get the American
people to discipline themselves in a fight on inflation
calls for extraordinary leadership. . "
suddenly out of nowhere the wind
came up. It didn’t capsize him but
it rocked his boat.
Loyalty? He had it. Probably ev-
ery Democratic senator is behold-
en to him for some favor or other.
He's a great one for doing favors,
knowing the importance of having
senators feel favorable to him
when he wants something done.
2200"
rsV
3s
. MO DE JANEIRO (AP)—Fiom
that Brazilian point of view, Claro
Boothe Luce will have to fill a big
pair of shoes when she becomes
U.S. ambassador to Brasil.
The shoes are those of Ellis
Ormsbee Briggs, who has spent
2% years as UR representative
here. After long service in Latin
America, he is moving on to
the nation is in grave danger of _ anvarnmant cwon the tn,.
pnendea izEnt paybe “hen pms 11 Xents 5 Bushi
man between big oil company tv- plus six] cents handling for stor-
coons. Much of the forein oil
complaint: Senate Democrats
were being treated to too much of
the daddy-knows-best stuff, with
Lyndon the Daddy. Proxmire
wanted less of a one-man show
and more say-so from everybody.
He wanted Johnson to hold more
pow-wows with other Democrats
so they could have a voice in what
legislation should be pushed,
changod. or shoved aside.
Last week Johnson encountered
criticism of his leadership from
another Democrat, Sen. Pat Mc-
Namara of Michigan. He didn’t
like the way Johnson acted—failed
to act was the way he put 11—on
the jobless pay bill.
This bill, as approved by Con-
gress, was much less than McNa-
mara wanted. He accused John-
son not only of failing to provide
leadership but of falling to take a
stand at all.
MORE BARBS
Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore)
came up with still more criticism
during the weekend. He didn't
mention the 51-ear-old Johnson
by name, nor did he name John-
son's fellow Texan. 77-year-old
Sam Rayburn, speaker of the
House. The two Texans have been
the undisputed Democratic bosses
in the Capitol.
But Morse blasted the "Demo-
cratic leadership on Capitol Hill"
which he said has been the “Char-
lie McCarthy in a political ventril-
oquist act" with President Eisen-
hower and his administration on
the Edgar Bergen end of the act.
SPECTACLE?
“Could it be," asked Morse,
"that we are witnessing a tragic
political spectacle of both of our
political parties in the control of
old, tired, sick, reactionary men?"
He said in effect: the Democrat-
l
Look Away?
er administration.
On top of all this the 27-man
Democratic party advisory coun-
cil tried to liht • fire under John-
son and Rayburn Sunday with an
appeal to them to Ignore Elsen-
hower's spending holddown and to
start a program to bolster the
economy.
Johnson, a man highly sensitive
to criticism. was out of town and
there was no word from him.
2mn1
2 •
, By BAL BOYLE
Oscar Homolka, who once slept on cafe table tops, now
has an art collection he values at 1500,000.
One of the greatest living character actors, a veteran of
more than 200 plays and 80 films, his long career lacks one
final crown—the Academy Award. ;
In the past Hamolka has been nominated for the award.
But Oscar la still Oscarless. It doesn't worry him.
—OnFa
He to om of the few foreign
diplomats in Brazil who is eager '
to leave his office chair for a seat
in a bouncing jeep and a look at
the growing interior of South
Americas’ largest nation.
Briggs has traveled in every om
of this nation 4M states end terrh
BurwaNwupLEMGRTOGNEMUAWAND
fc)C M HOM ,QHMEOMMY!« ME TME 88/ CHE!
k IrE VHTED’g
APRIL 7, 1939
TIRANA, Albania - ( - Ital-
ian troops landed today on the
coast of Albania and apparently
already had imposed Italy's will on
the little Balkan kingdom after ov-
ercoming her handful of defenders.
Indications from Rome pointed to
the end of King Zog’s reign ever
big Italy's little neighbor, wedged
between Greece and Yugoslavia
about 45 miles across the neck of
the Adriatic Sea.
Today in the Record - Chron-
icle’s comic page, "Alley Oop" will
begin a strange, new series of ad-
ventures that will take him far
from the prehistoric land of Moo
—far away in both distance and
time. Read "Alley Oop" each day
to follow his adventures. (Adver-
tisement)
NORMAL MAKES
COMEBACK
APRIL 7, 191
Staging another of those come-
backs for which ths Normal Col-
lege is becoming famous, the col-
lege baseball team Saturday after-
noon defeated Austin College from
Sherman on the local diamond with
the score 3-1, although the Kan-
eauAma la -B Aht.mn aLa. mML a
84T90S nan Geteawed tnern WAn ft
1-9 score the day before.
Start Chapter 1 of "Groen Fan-
cy” by George Barr MeCutheon,
author of "Graustark," "The Hol-
low of her Hand," "The Prince of
Graustark" and many others. In
the Record - Chronicle today. It
to the story of a fabled land in
Europe, a land still living in the
medieval times.
... a corporation profits tax or
a natural gas tax, even though
it is passed on, would be paid in
large part by people living outside
of Texas. More than half of Tex-
as' natural gas to consumed out-
side Texas, and the tax would be
paid from outside Texas
Many of the biggest corporations
operating in Texas are ewned whol-
ly or largely by people outside
Texas, and ths profits tax would
be paid in large part from out-
side Texas.
Or, if the tax were passed on,
the greatest part of it would be
paid by the customers of t h s s s
corporations living all around ths
world.
Texas AFL-C1O
402 W 13th
Austin
By PAUL HARVEY
How would you like to build a
now apartment building that
would pay for itself in two years?
Or let's say a house Suppose
you could get the government to
guarantee to rent a new house
from you . . . before you build
it. And pay you such a high rent
that the house would be entirely
paid for in two years.
You’d like that.
But you'd figure the taxpayers
are suckers if they sit still for it.
That's what's happening wher-
in material terms, our future
prospect is breath, taking. The
new technologies which have al-
ready so vastly altered our lives
- atomic energy, electronics, the
new chemical and the new metal-
lurgical advances — are in their
infancy. We have had a scientific
explosion that has yet to be trans-
lated into an economic explosion
of like magnitude.
In the face of, vast opportunities
and the economic challenge of
world communism, ws simply
can't afford to play two - bit poker
with protective tarriffs and unim-
aginative foreign policies Nor can
we afford, at home, to sit around
haggling about how we will carve
up our pie instead of doing ths
things necessary to free our eco-
nomic machine and make that
pie grow as it baa never grown
HENRY FORD II __
Ford Motor Co.
VERBA
A verb to a word that expresses
action, being or stats of being.
Most verbs express action, as go.
run, jump, walk and laugh. Verba
like ths verb "to be" in its various
forms, seem, remain, look and
feel express being and are called
Unking (copulative) verba. Sloop,
rest, remember and similar verba
express state of being.
Verbs are transitive and intran-
sitive f marked in the dictionary
v.t. and vX). "Trans" means
"across": bonce, a transitive verb
takes ah object. In the sentence,
Mary hit John, John peceives the
action and hit to a transitive verb.
In the sentence, Mary sleeps
well, "well" tells how Mary sleeps,
but does not receive the action:
sleep to an intransitive verb.
Remember that the verbs sit.
Us, rise and be are always in-
transitive.
The principal parts of a verb
consist of the present, past and
past participle forms A verb to
called a regular verb if the past
and past participle ars formed by
adding "sd" or "t" to the present,
as, walk, walked, walked.
A verb to called Irregular If the
principal parts are different
forms, as, ring, sang, tung.
Cultivate the habit of looking up
troublesome verbs in ths diction-
ary.
Ic leadership in
of leading and
Democratic pro
of what to possible," he remarked,
growling pleasantly as he put on
his monocle and inspected his en-
tire lunch—a chunk of ground
meat and nothing else.
Hers to Homolka:
"Two things I hate most deep-
ly: sloppiness of mind and intoler-
ance People won't take the
trouble to think even to the extent
of their limitations.
“Stupid people bore me. I pre-
fer s crook to s stupid person.
You can deal with a crook, but
with a stupid person you are up
against a double waU.
"I don’t believe in fear. What to
the use of being afraid? That
won’t change anything.
BIG CHANCE
"Everybody gets at least one
big chance, and usually two or
three. You can always took back
and say. That wis the momentr
“Success that to thrown in your
lap is one of tbs greatest of
dangers."
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES ,»-ii THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE
\ ■’—m----v--------------------------- .—
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 212, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1959, newspaper, April 7, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453513/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.