Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, September 12, 1958 Page: 4 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Means More, Better Leaders
y. But
2,
young," Mid
’ tM securi-
NEHRU THINKS
3 :
ity.
"The younger generation now
ional
la
Miu Hi
some gri
I
since 1982mare than 1,
dent leaders have
t
acientific.
and
3,
neglected.
party. Its title:
Congress
Basic A|
After
Gunpowder Tee
teda
4
\
THE WORLD TODAY
Here’s Why Ike Decided
To Make National Talk
a college
political. I
a realization that the
I
the relic of the battlefield coming
baa been arrested for forging a
Mateu and what statement Seme newsmen inter-
Ing a mayor.
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
By Blake
1/
BUSINESS MIRROR
{
I
/
/
no chance."
%
»
tries of today even before their
THERE OUGHT BE A LAW
economics
$
40
by Motor Route
i
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
est point since 1946. Shutdowns for
ange Tshirt and carries a stuffed
s
38
—
though one is
used now.
. ■■ .
3
--
ih
Ti
"vi.
——
4
■ \
(39%;
N
G880
/8X3M
) stu-
lead-
FULLCAR-RDOMEDR
JUST ONE NVfiEJr
■
to impound all d
streets without a
dent leaden are our
ers of tomorrow.
To her knowledge not one of the
1,000-plus student leaden has be-
come an adult delinquent. Nene
North
ball Ea
is State College a foot-
defenders of the Lone
tion on this critical question is
involved. There has been confu-
sion.
fol-
most
India Must
Learn Own
Ideal Plan
-*
‘ .
ru’s
"The
Dulles, in his role as a "high offi-
cial." said: "That is the indication
of thia thing
He quickly added that he didn’t
want to go beyond the official
00 stu-
oa the
conformity.”
She believes America’s
over
dal”
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record Chronicle Files
5D
"Up
L
seen on the
nse tag fast-
HA
u--
is also inte
to a a real
ey. stands
"Wa had
5..
Government’s Latest Report
Shows No Business Slackup
and that he loved the fox. Millikan
suggested the man kick him in.
stead. The stranger did. Millikan
ening total of the jobless
The mid-August employment in
from her son Lt. Jack Skiles, who
to with the American expedition-
ary forces in France. On it was
the notation that it was taken dur-
labor force in June sent that
month's total unemployed to a re-
cession peak of 5% million.
There are still two million more
persons out of work than a year
ago. While increased industrial
output has called some back to
to largely idealistic, _
in good government and
308 MILLION
India, with 380 million people
and per capita income of Oh-odd
dollars a year per person, is poor-
er than were the advanced coun-
barring a labor stoppage— should
send employment sharply upward.
NEW MODELS ,
they say are the final warning to
those who do not have such licens-
es.
Denton police have instructions
which are in many ways out of
date, even thouzh they throw a
considerable light on economic
IHNETOSENDY
(T TUI INFIRMA
FORX-RANVS:
fox. appeared in court on charges
of disorderly conduct. He explain
“9
Z
BUTNow,IFHEGETSSOMUCHNSAScOAWO
TE JOB, MES DOWN FOR TE COUNT OF TEN
They are designed to allow watr
to pass over them as well as un-
der them during flood seasons.
top.
"When wo were
Ruth Hagy, "money
ty were the “
money meant
SiC Approach."
a critical discussion of
earlierthan-usual changeovers to
new models accounted for most
"Western economics, therefore,
though helpful, have little bearing
on our present day problems. So
working as administrative or leg-
islative assistants to senators."
i
an
--...... . •
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER: Delivered to your home by
mail on weekdays and Sunday Morning • "
where this seryice is available, $1.25 per
(must be paid in advance).
0
problems. Hopes for peace which
seem impossible to us seem quite
possible to them.”
PRODUCER
willing to take on civic responsi-
bility.
"Kids are afraid of being called
a aquard.” she remarked. “The
good students need to be recow
nized equally as the athlete or
social big wheel on the campus,
and they are getting to ba.
FASHIONABLE
home in IL
"They are often
90555*3
7 \
• if
(
of its evils and in fact it is differ-
ent now from what it was a gen-
oration or two ago.” Nehru added.
UPWARD
He noted that despite two world
wars the trend of economic de-
sued for business or industrial con-
struction.
Some of their (.--------
so pertinent and probing .
lebrities were left aMria.
J-
H*,
I ( -
.....
ooed to their collars, Police Chief
O. C Pass said Monday.
UBERTY LOAN
FUND SLATED
SErT. it. 1918
A meeting of the businessmen
of Denton will be held to the
Chamber of Commerce rooms at
9 o’clock tomorrow morning to
elect a chairman for the coming
Liberty loan campaign in Denton
On Farm Still Used
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE.
Ohio ( — Two bridges, daringly
experimental when built early in
the century for private use on
farms here, still survive . . . al-
productivity through the
use of better equipment or by
lengthening of the work week.
ROOM I BETTER GO MOME AND
TAXI it tMN TILL THE DOCTOR
SoWs UR TUSK IF IM ABLE.
NAFEWDANSTILRL 3
OUT COMPENSATION
BLANIS-'
6 43
examinations for driver's licenses.
■ These officials have issued what
Old Man Lightning
FROM THE JACKSON (MISS. DAILY NEWS
Lightning struck twice in one day recently in widely
separated parts of the country, leaving six dead. Three
of the victims were under a beach umbrella during a
thunderstorm. The other three were in a group hud-
dled under a large tree. The type of shelter in both
cases may have proved fatal. The theory is lightning
bolts are likely to strike the tallest thing around. In
ap open field, a person might be lightning’s best tar-
get. An isolated tree or. on a beach, a single umbrella
could bo the bolt’s choice.
While discussing the subject of lightning the other
day a Jackson golfer remarked he always throws his
metal clubs aside when lightning is flashing around
the links. The question then arises, what is the best
way to stay safe during a thunderstorm? Plausible ad-
vice to to get indoors or into an automobile.
—
... , 2 Nohfatshhe 0
Miss Haff, a dark-haired, hand,
some gradmother, is financial
chairman of th National Student
Aaan, and producer moderator of
the ABC TV Sunday network show
College News Conference. L-
POLITICAL FORCE
The student waa a vital polit
ical force in every country but our
own.” aha said.
"But our younqer generation
was being called delinquent, silent,
beat, and a victim of too much
Fox, Chartreuse Lower
Outfoxed By Walker
----------
PICK THE ONE WHO'S BEEN
WAITING 20 MINUTES.
also have Mai
"Leadership stands out early.
It needs to be recognised and
trained."
THIS MONTH
The real test of the employment
trend will show up this month and
next.
' If the auto industry comes to
terms with its workers and there
is no strike, employment figures
should rise reasonally and the re-
covery should get up enough mo-
mentum to whittle at the disheart-
-Itft
promress,". he said., I . ______________ -
The Prime Minister ruled Marx- Jobe moat of the gain in production
tot economics out of date becauae has been accomplished either by
of their association with violence, greater
EDITORIALS.
Weekend Marks Start Of
Return Of Youthful Vigor
TOMORROW and the next day Denton’s population
will begin swelling by about 10,000 persons. For many
of those 10,000 it will be their first time to live in
Denton. For many others it will be a homecoming aft-
er a three-month vacation. For all of them it will
mean the beginning of a new educational year.
And by next weekend the presence of 10,000 college
students will make itself known in many ways. Some-
how, their return in the fall semester always emphasiz-
es the strange vacuum that’s created when they’re not
here. When they return, we all suddenly become young
again, seeing so many beautiful girls and neatly dress-
ed boys on the streets, in the stores, driving around.
. The atmosphere is refreshing. It means the end to
another summer.
Those who haven’t been in Denton since last June .
will see a lot of changes that have taken place since
they left. They’ll see (and hear) construction men at
both campuses, working desperately to erect badly
needed buildings. They’ll find a bit more parking
space at NTSC since Avenue A has been widened and
head-in parking inaugurated. They’ll find the bus
line still operating to both TWU and NTSC and they
weren’t sure when they left that the Denton
weren’t sure when they left that the Goose would still
be around when they came back.
They’ll see many new houses under construction in
all parts of town—houses that weren't here when they
left They’ll see the new wing under construction at
Flow Memorial Hospital, and new churches rapidly
becoming completed. There'll be new faces both on
the campuses where increased enrollment has ne-
cessitated new professors and in town where a growing
population draws even more people here.
They’ll find more cars and lesa parking space in
the downtown area, becauae, it seems every one of
them will have two cars and few of us have bothered
to keep up with the growth in the automobile ihdustry.
We haven’t even laid any definite plans to take care
adequately of the cars that were here before the col-
legians arrived. We’ve repaved few streets—so few
that what have been paved aren’t even noticeable,
unfortunately. We’ve laid no plans to connect any
of eur existing streets with the new highway network
that's rapidly becoming a reality. It'll soon be finished
and when cars try to get off the 1980-model express-
way, they'll land in a network of streets that were
laid out for 1890 traffic with few major improvements
since.
And, as a result, we won't make such a good impres-
sion on those who've come to live here for four years
or more. But we’re glad they’ve come—we wish more
of them could, for their presence does more than any
other single thing to make many of us aware of youth-
fu vigor-vigor that gets things done when nothing
More of us need some of that youthful vigor. We’ll
indeed be lucky if some of it manages to rub off.
■ Miss Hagy has caref
lowed the bidding career
CONFUSION
Dulles himself caused some of
it at Newport, R I., last week by
speaking to reporters as secretary
of state one minute and the next
as a "high official" who sounded
tougher than Dulles when he was
speaking as secretary. ‘
This left the public wondering
who was sounding tougher than
said he was just expressing his
feelings when the policeman ar-
qumtions’hafgten
nd probing the ce-
He said that in the present age
violence to likely to lead to war in
which there will be no victory,
only defeat for everyone.
He concluded by calling on In-
diana "to do our own thinking,
profiting bv the example of others,
but essentially trying to find a
path for ourselves suited to our
own-conditions."-----------------
The only coyrse for India, he
said, to a planned approach an
Socialist lines
By SAM DAWSON
AP Business News Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) - For ths
more than 4% million Americana
out of work, the business recovery
can’t come too soon.
The best thing about the govern-
ment’s latest report on unemploy-
ment to that it shows the situation
isn’t getting any worse.
The official figures Indicate a
drop in unemployment between
mid July and mid-August. But that
drop seems to be more apparent
than real.
•......-w—
STUDENTS
It was confined largely to the
removal of job-seeking students
from the labor force. For the ma-
ture worker the situation was little
for security
I to learn jto be inter;
nationalists The young people of
today were born into a world
without boundaries-and are at
ply. it said Eisenhower hadn’t yet
decided what to do. Although this
left the American public guessing.
It also left the Chinese Commu-
nists guessing.
But Dulles. having finished this
formal statement, then conducted
what to known as a background
conference. This means that news-
men understand they are not to
identify by name the government
official who talks to them.
GOES FURTHER
Standing behind this screen of
anonymity, Dulles went a little
further than what he had just
read.
He waa-asked if the vague but
official statement meant the
ggapmega
Fb-42M,5 $
‛ /
-
i«M mcium wewwan
23—-
......
United States would fight in de-
cnange mOuemoZiamn“nddptuem. morning by Mrs T N. Skitoe.
employment figures high.
For factory workers with jobs,
the summer has seen a alow in-
crease in the number of hours
worked. The average factory work
week is still below last year's fig-
ure but is graduaally pulling up
toward 40 hours again.
This, coupled with wage in-
creases In some industries, has
increased their take-home pay and
has helped keep the total of con-
sumer spending at a fairly high
level.
Partly because of this, many
merchants are turning very opti-
mistic about fall and Christmas
trade Their supplies report a
jump in reordering.
L MARKET CONFIDENCE
Growing confidence is shown in
other ways. The stock market ap-
parently anticipates rising sales
and earnings. The government re-
ports that businessmen who had
cut back on spending for plant and
equipment are now showing signs
of resuming at an earlier date
than seemed likely just a short
time back. Inventory cutting is
slowing down.
On all of this the recovery will
feed, And in time this will whit-
tle down the disheartening total of
4% million unemployed, industry
must also find work for a steadily
growing work force. Each year it
geta larger aa the population in-
creases.
Numbering Traffic Lights
FROM THE GREENVILLE (MISS.) DELTA DEMOCRNTTIMES
Following directions in a strange city has always
been a problem for motorists. Now a gimmick so sim-
ple it’s remarkable it wasn’t thought of before has
been devised by the National Automobile Association.
The ingenious plan calls for the numbering of traffic
lights. Instead of telling a lost motorist, "Turn left
at the third traffic light, etc." the informant can aay,
"Turn left at Number Three.” By looking at the num-
ber rather than depending on his count while he search-
ea out lights or looks for street name posts, a motorist
can drive more confidently and with less confusion
and preoccupation.______1________—
Local residents writing directions for finding their
homes to out-of-town friends and relatives would be
greatly aided by being able to designate traffic light '
numbers as landmarks to guide them in. Wade Myers,
state director of the Mississippi Automobile Association,
recommends the new system to cities and communi-
ties in this state.
(6)
joins to war with Red China
the islands. The "high offi-
said: “I believe the senti-
industrialization began, he said, changed. -——
The influx of students into the
NEW YORK (AP) - Changing
American youth in a single gen-
eration has changed its problems.
"There has been a general
change in the climate of the coun- '
try, off campus and on. It's no
disgrace to be a good student. It's
tashionable And there to more of
of the poor showing. . . ...______ __
Speeding up of work on the new ed to the judge that a man. threat-
models this month and next - ened to kick his fox into the street
Entered an second class mall matter at the postoffice at Denton, Tex-
an January IS, 1921, according to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES AND INFORMATION "I
Single Copies Sc for weekdays: 10c for Sunday.
HOME DELIVERY RATES FOR DAILY AND SUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier or motor route
on same day of publication, 35c per week ■ I.
BY MAIL ONLY: In Denton and adjoining counties, $1.00 per month,
$9.50 per year (must be paid in advance). Elsewhere in the United
States'$1.30 per month, $5.60 per year.
velopment in industrially ad-
vanced capitalist countries has
been steadily upward and that the
benefits have been spread. in
varying degrees, to all classes.
"This does not apply to coun-
tries which are not industrially
developed.” he said. '’Indeed, in
those countries the struggle for
development is very difficult and
sometimes, in spite of efforts, Dot
only do economic inequalities re-
main but tend to become worse.
... In a poorly developed coun-
try. the capitalist method offers
County. . azu......-.........1
The first German helmet to
rac Wartonasinecasvha huinain partmeat has aix. Fourteen are
By WATSON SIMS
NEW DELHI w_I econom-
ics, as in politics, India should
copy neither the East nor the
West. Although each has lessons
to offer, India's future rests on
the nation’s ability to think for
itself in meeting entirely new sit-
nations.
This is the heart of a thoughtful
memorandum circulated by Prime I
Minister Jawaharlal Nehru among
some of his friends. It now has
been published by Economic Re-
view, a fortnightly journal of Neh-
association with violence encour-
ages a certain evil tendency in
human beings."
The Prime Minister found short-
comings of a different nature in
capitalism
Normally speaking, it may be
said that the forces of capitalist
society, if left unchecked, tend to
make the rich richer and the poor
poorer and thus increase the gap
between them," he wrote.
To some extent, he felt this
tendency has been checked by
capitalism’s aceeptance of the
welfare state ideal.
“Democracy allied to capitalism
has undoubtedly toned down many
tagthe.retreat of the Gerinans check, holding up a bank. or brib-
from the Marne on July 38th. ing a mayor.
Star Conference crown the p a a t
two years, will return to the grid
wars Friday night when they car-
ry their Texas prestige to Okla-
homa City for a clash with the
Oklahoma City University chiefs.
3′44
K#
of the student leaders who ap-
peared on her program
•They are doing terrifically
well," she aaiJ^'A number are
taking active roles la political
parties.
WRITE HOUSE
■ •'The White House haa two of
our kids. Two more are in the vice
president's office The State De-
4 ART
BUILDING SPEED
BECOMES SLOWER -
SEPT. 12, 1948 '
Acceptance of the new models .......,
by the public would keep the rived
i
. The basic question to and has
been: Are they worth fighting for?
But more than lack of informa-
2
22
e
2
3223
55*
ment of the country, when it to
adequately informed," would be
overwhelmingly behind any deci-
sion to defend Quemoy and Matsu.
Then began the public puzzle-
ment over the identity of the "high
official" doing thia big talking.
Dulles let himself be named aft-
er Dean Acheson, former secre-
tory of state flatly said Dulles
himself had been the "high offi-
cinl" (
DELICATE
At his Tuesday news confernee.
Dulles was repeated!v asked why
the public had not been kept
better informed on administration
thinking about Quemoy and Mat-
su. Dulles said in brief: Some
things are so delicate — in final
decisions of great importance —
that the President and his advis-
ers can’t share them with the
general public.
fIF%.
Q IM* King r««'urw ayndir.te, it. WwW ^1, „
that is basic in man, but also do- <
prives human behavior of stand .
ards and values. Its unfortunate I
Building activity in Denio a
slumped last week as September
started off with only five permits
SSs42 Tmhumu
wewm foFtnerAfidemuia sx
construction. No permits were is- she thought Jtofield was being
the United States would do if they
were attacked. It actually added
little or nothing to what was al-
ready known.
It waa deliberately vague. Sim-
By JAMES MARLOW .
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-
dent Eisenhower's decision to
broadcast to the nation Thursday
on the Far East crisis came after
Secretary of State Dulles’ admis-
sion the public has not been ade-
quately informed on the situation.
Many people have wondered
why this country gives the appear-
ance of readiness to fight Red
China if it attacks the small Que-
moy and Matsu islands, bold by
Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist Chi-
nese just a few miles off the China
coast.
aue xansy-cugum. wuupuuyneu in NORFOLK, Va. (11 — Boarded
Experimental Bridge imduziz.".nEthetow: «2^ zla wenrsanhamreue
LETTERS ~
WELCOMED
The Record-Chronicl wel
comes letters from readers on
any subject in good taste.
Letters must be signed and
the writer's address given. We
reserve the right to edit let-
ters when necessary.
k ; ... 2 , w .' • — 11 • . ‘ t. -Th • ,
PAGE FOVR 1111 EDITORIALS AND FEATURES tut THE DENTON AECO1
---------------—--------------------------
Denton Record-Chronicle
TELEPHONE DUpent 22551
Published every evening (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., Inc, SU E. Hickory St ♦
communism and capitalism, Neh-
ru concluded that neither has been
able to keep up with the rush of
science and technology. Science
has advanced far beyond the av-
erage man's ability to understand
its accomplishments, ho said, and
the old philosophies, with their
many virtues, have proved inade-
quate.
MANY HAVE
NO LICENSE
- SEPT. 12, 19328
Quite a number of Denton peo-
ple are driving vehicles delivering
merchandise without having pro-
cured chauffeurs’ licenses, accord-
ing to state highway patrolmen
who come hero weekly to conduct
preted his words as saying the
administration had made up its
mind to defend the islands al-
though the official statement said
Eisenhower hadn’t made up his
mind.
. OPPOSITION
During this give-and-take Dulles
was asked if he didn't think many
people in thia country might op-
WenMEwaspiania ON uis couzae por
Ball TEAM,JERKIMER IGNORED NNJURES LKE
A RHINOCEROS IONORESA B-B GUN— ------------------
eayyeremm/E —-T
m*les;* " 82
2287 e 9kj
- •
• . .e; ’ . .0
NICLE tttt FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 195t \
, ‘ N - . 11 3
... S-......I.......... -----------
HUMANITY
“We have to give a new direc-
tion to education and evolve a new
. type of humanity," the 68-year-old
statesman declared.
"Essentially, our problems are
those of civilization ikself. Religion
gave a certain moral and spirit
ual discipline; it also tried to
perpetuate superstition and social
usages. Indeed, those supersti-
tions and social usages enmeshed
and overwhelmed the real spirit
of religion. Disillusionment fol
lowed.'
“Communism comes in the
wake of this disillusionment and
offers some kind of faith and
- of discipline. To some extent it
fills a vacuum... .. But in spite of
Ite apparent success, it fails, part-
ly because of ite rigidity, but,
even more so, because it ignores
certain essential needs of ‘"'man
nature. . ..
VALUES
“Ite contempt for what might be
called the moral and spiritual side
of life not only ignores something
Dulles and Eisenhower on a ques-
tion which might involve this coun-
try in war.
Newsman were bound by ground
rules not to identify the “high
official" as Dulles, but the secre-
tary since has agreed to let him-
aelf be named as the source
in all fairness — this writer
believes — some newsmen who
listened to the "high offieial" must
bear responsibility for part of the
confusion. They wrote 1 a much
tougher interpretation into his
words than the words themselves
expressed. ‘
BACKGROUND ’
This is the background leading
up to tonight's talk by Eisenhow-
Last Thursday Dulles visited the
President at his Newport vacation
headquarters, then he came out
and, under his own identity, read
to newsmen a 900-word statement
approved by Eisenhower
Thia waa the official American
on this country's relation
•---
mu
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being called to the publishers attention
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Jews dispatches. 7
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, September 12, 1958, newspaper, September 12, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467555/m1/4/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.