Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1960 Page: 1 of 20
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«
Denton Record- Chronicle
WEATHER
FAIR AND WARMER
Nothing Serves Like The Local Newspaper
DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 29. 1960
58TH YEAR OF DAILY SERVICE— NO. 49
Communist Heckling No
v
Barrier To Macmillan
Red Chief
,5
ev
we
At one point the Soviet premier
terest rates.
i
Argentines Quiz
cratic vice - presidential candidate
IN TODAYS PAPER
over the named liberalism of John I
day
Brother Of
was a German and had most of that Bormann might have lost an
I
s
kill
The 7,472 figure at NTSC is 456 greater than on the
Titan Halted
Short Of Mark
After Failure
Hearing Set JEWEL THIEF
Mrs. Doud
Dies At 82
WEATHER
tirtte
Frdaycleartopartty ctoudy
,2
chairman Mrs. Harvey Phillips of by other municipalities
Cedar Street.
merchandise, she said.
i first reading annexation.
pany ever Russella.
(Adv.)
L
1
1
4
r /
1
b'
I
I ‘
Volunteers Pledge
State School Help
designed to prevent the unincor-
porated land from being elaimed
high year ag•• 90
Sui sele today al A 15 pm; rises Fridy
at 6:19 a.m.
WASHINGTON (AP—Mrs.
vera Doud, 82. mother of
morning in time to attend a cof-
fee-reception in his honor begin-
someone
through
News And Weather On The Hout
And Half Hour, KDNT, 1440. (Adv.)
There were two big differences.
The captured man appeared to be
about 48 years old, whereas Bor-
mann. if alive, would be 60. The
"Martin Bormann of Hitler's day
had both arms, while the man
held here has had an arm ampu-
tated. It was possible, however,
worth of wedding bands.
Cecil White, a Denton fireman,
passed by later, noticed the brok-
By RAYMOND HOLBROOK
Associated Press Staff Writer
DENTON ANO VICINITY: Generelly fair and
> liftie warmer this afternoon and tonight
in attendance.
While bands played and Lodge
placed a floral wreath at the spot
where the Alamo heroes died, a
gronup of 100 ultra - conservative
Republicans held a protest meet-
ing at a San Antonio dinner club
because, they said. Lodge helped
sidetrack the presidential nomina-
tion of the late Sen. Robert Taft
of Ohio, at the 1952 convention.
Shivers, who bolted the Demo-
cratic party to support Dwight D.
MARTIN BORMANN
Has He Been Found?
Exp 4H
Nane
1.20
2.37
22 44
18.78
1
and Ramey are from Denton.
Murrell eplained that officers
d from the immediate
iDenlon vicinity because steering
TED KENNEDY
To speak Friday
Former Gov. Allan Shivers’
Wednesday night speech will
be retelecast tonight at 8:30
on Channel 4.
to
00
. ]
ss
s4
*1
ing grilled by Argentine police to
day. The suspect gave the name
of Wolter Flegel.
Interior Minister Alfredo Vitolo
told a TV audience Wednesday
night that the suspect obviously
No-.«
1 00
2.37
20 13
26 11
Eli-
Mrs.
rectly.
President Eisenhower,
determined Soviet effort to
both items.
ning at 8 a.m. |
The coffee - reception, open to
By KAY LONGCOPE
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
Help was pledged to the mental-
ly retarded when 150 persons from
a 13-county area met for five hours
Wednesday at the Denton State
School.
SEX KITTEN
TRIES SUICIDE
French film star Brigitte Bardot
cut her wrists and took an over-
dose of sleeping pills Wednesday
night in a suicide attempt She
was recovering today in a men-
tal hospital outside Nice. France.
A doctor said she is suffering
from an acute nervous depres-
sion and has been isolated.
Sec.
2
2
1
2
1
1
2
2
Campus Tab
Tops 10,000
Total enrollment at Denton's two campuses has passed
the 10,000 mark for the first time in history.
That was revealed today as both NTSC and TWU an-
nounced virtually final enrollment figures for the fall se-
mester. Both schools may have a few additional special
students enroll, but for all practical purposes the total
stands at 10,079.
AVERAGE NET PAID
DAILY CIRCU LATIUN
FOR THREE-MONTW PERIOD
ENDING JUNE 30
10,222
SUBJECT TO OX. AUDIT
-1
- l
The tiny community of Mayhill
is included in Denton's annexation
moves.
police station
' Pierce said
by the record-breaking enrollment of 7,472 at NTSC. TWU
final enrollment is 2,607.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(AP) — Prime Minister Har-
old Macmillan of Britain ur-
ged the United Nations to-
day to make a calm, reason-
ed approach to disarmament.
His speech was interrupted
by angry heckling from Sov-
iet Premier Nikita S. Khru-
shchev and the Communist
bloc.
L
/ •
w
22a
■
%
638
Leads Mates
Against Mac Reopened By Shivers
KAINFAL1
(In Inehes)
Gsuge
tast 24 Mours
Thu Mzenth
Soot Averaga
Thu Year
Last Year
4
1
65 High Fridey lower a0s north ••
south.
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Statien Report)
High Wednesday
Low this merning
Low year aqe
'However. an early stage shut " 1
down caused the re-entry vehicle
to fall short ot the intended target
break I don’t see how it could
have happened and so close to the
At one point the Soviet premier rousing receptions at San Antonio,
leaped to his feet, scowling, and Midland-Odessa. and El Paso, but
shouted at the British leader as all of the GOP faithful were not
Macmillan was presenting a ma-
jor statement of Western objec-
tives.
cratic face in front of his real-
life Republican face."
Yarborough said Shivers should
he called on to explain why the
Republican administration which
he helped elect had pulled down
the economy of Texas by allow-
ing a flood of cheap foreign oil
to limit Texas oil production and
cause heavy unemployment, had
caused farmers’ income to drop
24 per cent, and had boosted in-
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina the missing Nazis physical char-
i (APi—A one-armed man suspect-aeteristics.
ed of being Martin Bormann, Hit-
ler's long missing deputy was be-
cooler north portion low tonight 60
Pt
and then crawled into the jewelry
The Denton police station is on store. stealing about $900 worth of
The ability of both Atlas and
Titan to carry nuclear payloads
oxer great distances would give
the United States a powerful one
two long-range rocket punch. The
Air Force plans to repeat today’s
shot.
committee members felt that prox-
imity to each other would greatly
aid launching the program.
The steering committee is com-
posed of 10 persons: Mrs. Phillips,
Ivey, Mrs. Edward Muse of Fort
Worth, Rev. E. H. Campbell of
cloak of Southern conservatism
Hardeman, in a TV address at
Austin preceding Shivers’ talk,
urged support of the Democratic
nominees and said the Republican
Party should be retired to repent
in sackcloth and ashes for the Lit-
tle Rock school integralion inci-
dent
FEARSOME OFFENSE of
Cincinnati Bearcats is of major
concern to the Eagles this
week. Page 8, Sec. 1.
PROBLEMS IN the Congo
Fitzgerald Kennedy.”
Shivers' announcement brought
quick counter barrages from U.S.
Sen. Ralph Yarborough, a liberal
Democrat and a longtime Shivers’
political foe. and from State Sen.
Dorsey B Hardeman, a conserva-
tive Democrat.
"Some politicians are noted for
applying makeup before going on
TV,” Yarborough said, "but Mr.
Shivers goes farther than makeup.
He puts on a whole mask at a
time. He dresses with a Demo-
en glass and reported it to the
police.
Mrs. Pierce theorized that the
thief waited until no traffic was
on the street, hurled the carbure-
tor through the window, scooped
up the first things he saw in the
display window and then fled in a
car driven by an accomplice
' He took a tray of the medium
priced diamonds when there was
a tray of more expensive ones
right next to it He must have
taken the first things he could get
his hands on,” she said
Wednesday night was the second
time within two years that the
Vannoy Jewelry Co. has been bur-
glarized, Mrs. Pierce said About
two years ago, a thief broke into
the adjoining North Texas Sav-
ings and Loan Association Office
Dwight D. Eisenhower, died early
today in her sleep at her Denver,
Colo., home.
Another daughter, Mrs. G. Gor-
don Moore, was in Denver with
her
__She had been ill for some time
The White House, announcing
Mrs Doud’s death, said Mrs Ei-
senhower would go to Denver di
-
Mrs. Hal Norgaard of Denton, Mrs.
Grace Roberts of Gainesville,
Gilbar Hedrick of Lewisville and
Ramey.
Present at the meeting also
were Raymond W. Vowel!, execu-
tive director of the Board for Tex-
as State Hospitals and Special
rell chairman Ben C hey. ’ice
on McKinney Road, filed an 84- between 7:30 and 8 p.m. The rings
signature petition asking lor in- were scooped up after
■ ‘ - - threw a car carburetor
acres of an annexation ordinance glass or saw the robbery
which Denton s City Council adopt- Normally, pedestrians and cars
ed on first reading. are passing along West Oak at
• The City Council has no inten- that hour of the night, she said
tion of adding this far-flung acre- . •No one has reported seeing the
age to the citylimits immediately, robbery hearing the glass
uled to speak at a Republican
party dinner in Chicago, ad-
vanced his departure time to 11
a m today. He and Mrs. Eisen
hower will leave together aboard
the presidential jet plane The
President will stop at Chicago
and Mrs Eisenhower will go on
in the plane to Denver
No plans for the funeral were
set immediately. White House
press secretary James C. Hager
ty said. Therefore, he added, the
President’s plans are not firm.
Legal action may result from
Denton including Mayhill in its
— Associated Press
SAGGY SOCKS A TRADEMARK?—Democratic presidential nominee John Ken-
nedy tugs at his sock and surveys a turnout of some 21,000 persons Wednesday
night al the Buffalo, N.Y., War Memorial Auditorium The senator made a 12-stop
tour of western New York Wednesday before moving into Albany, the state capi-
tal, today. The sagging sock could replace the holey shoe of Adlai Stevenson as a
Demo candidate's trademark.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
— Premature shutdown of the sec-
ond-stage engine today blocked an
Air Force attempt to send a Titan
missile on a record 10,000-mile
flight into the Indian Ocean.
Instead, the Titan fell more than
6.000 miles down the Atlantic
range. This is more than 1,000
miles farther than any previous
Titan has ilown, but far short of
today's planned goal.
DISTANCE MARK
If the test had been successful,
it would have been the longest
surface-to-surface missile flight on
record, exceeding the 9,000-mile
mark registered by two U.S. Atlas-
es.
The 98-foet Titan roared off to
a smooth start from this missile
test center a 9:20 a.m. It appear-
ed to perform normally in the
2% minutes it was in sight. The
second stage separated and ignit-
ed on schedule about two minutes
after liftoff
But an hour later, the Air Force
announced that the missile did not
achieve all test objectives. The
flight, which impacted over 6,000
statute miles down range in the
south Atlantic is the longest Titan
flight to date.
EARLY SHUTDOWN
’REASONED ARGUMENT’
Macmillan urged the U.N. Gen-
eral Assembly to resolve its dif. •
ferences "by reasoned argument,
by practical solutions.”
He described as "remarkable”
the speech of President Eisenhow-
er before the General Assembly
last Thursday, and said its great
value was that it contained prac-
tical contributions for settlement
of East-West issues.
The President of the United
States made certain suggestions
for solving the crises confronting
the United Nations, he said. but
the proposal advanced by Soviet
Premier Khrushchev "seems cal-
culated to have the opposite ef-
fect.”
Diplomats say Macmillan is not
acting as a go-between for Eisen-
hower and Khrushchev.
Macmillian had a date for a pri-
vate talk with Khrushchev, how-
ever. shortly after his speech in
the General Assembly.
Khrushchev's lieutenants lost
three more important and bitterly ;
fought skirmishes in the Assem-
blv Steering Committee. ,.
The Steering Committee voted
to bring before the 98 nations in
the General Assembly the ques-
tions of Soviet actions in Hungary
and an airing of Communist
China's operations in Tibet. The
11-4 vote came after a long and
2,607 figures is an addition of
126 over the same date last year.
Enrollment at both NTSC and
TWU probably would have been
larger if additional housing facili-
ties had been available.
Francis Emerson, dean of ad-
missions at TWU, estimated today
that probably 100 undergraduate
students were turned away this
year because of lack of housing.
At NTSC, officials closed reser-
vation lists for women’s dormitor-
ies in June. After that, women
students who applied for dormitory
space by and large were unable to
find housing. Two new women’s
dormitories, now under construc-
tion, one to be opened next fall.
President J. C. Matthews said
at least 300 women students were
turned away this year. That many
definitely had been counted, he
said, adding that he had no way
of knowing how many did not even
try to enroll after the June closing
of dormitory reservations.
Hale • | Egan, wife of the owner, said she
Tuesday night, however. May and her husband were puzzled'
hill was included in the 46 354 that no one heard the breaking
area and prevented it from
Denton, Howard Moore of Arling-
A voluntary council comprised j ton. Raymond Neal of McKinney,
of representatives from civic, so- “ ..... * “
_------ ---- rector and youngest brother of
The all-time record was pushed across the 10.000 mark John F. Kennedy, will fly into Den-
a1--------j i 1-iw -af — •t 7 Ann xtTcr TWIII’s ton’s Municipal Airport Friday
arm in escaping from Berlin or
since.
Vitolo said a special police unit
captured the self-styled Flegel
I last week at Zarate, 55 miles
I north of Buenos Aires. He indi-
I cated Argentine authorities are in-
I dined to believe he really is Bor-
’ mann.
The suspect is being held incom-
municado at central police head
quarters in Buenos Aires.
NO ELABORATION
Vitolo would not elaborate fur
ther on the case.
Bormann was last reported try-
ing to make his getaway from
the Berlin bunker where Hitler
A died Testimony was given at the
I Nuernberg war crimes trial that
I he was killed, but his body was
I never found
j Although a German court offi-
I cially recorded him as dead in
I 1954, rumors that Bormann is still
I alive have cropped up periodical-
l ly
। The hunt for Nazi leaders who
: fled after Germany's collapse in
J World War II has centered in Ar-
I gentina.
i ISRAELI AGENTS
I A band of Israeli commandos
I seized Adolph Eichmann just out-’
I side Buenos Aires in May and
I whisked him to Israel to stand
I trial for directing the extermina-
I tion program in which six million
I Jews died
I The Eichmann case led to a
I strain in Israeli-Argentine rela-
I tions and brought to light that
the Jews still are hunting Nazi
leaders suspected ot hiding out in
South America.
sched- j achieving the desired test results,”
the Air Force said.
promising "socialistic measures
that Socialist Norman Thomas
Old political wounds—both Dem-
ocratic and Republican—were
rubbed raw in Texas Wednesday
as Henry Cabot Lodge made a
flying trip through the state and
former Gov. Allan Shivers en-
dorsed the GOP national ticket.
Lodge, the . Republican vice-
presidential candidate, was given
Eisenhower and Richard M. Nix-
on in both 1952 and 1956, made it
three in a row Wednesday night
when, in an address carried by
27 Texas TV stations, he an-
nounced the formation of a "Dem-
ocrats for Nixon and Lodge" or-
ganization.
Blasting the Democratic nation-
al platform as advocating and
20 Paget la 2 Sections PRICE FIVE CENTS
Stolen were a tray containing The jewelry stolen Wednesday
about $950 worth of diamond rings , night was insured, Mrs. Pierce
and a tray containing about $300 | said.
same date last year when the*
college’s previous registra-
tion record was set. TWU’s
Dallaz. secretary; and Marvin
Ramey, treasurer. Murrell, Ivey |
of 1103
from the Denton police station
Wednesday night.
Residents of Mayhill, which is The rings were stolen from the
about three miles east of Denton Vannoy Jewelry Co. at 216 W. Oak
at that." Mrs
never dreamed of,” Shivers delight-
ed his partisan crowd of 300 as he
took verbal jabs at Democratic
presidential nominee John F. Ken-
nedy and at his old political foe,
Texas Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, the
Democratic vice-presidential nom-
inee.
Shivers said that he had no de- / ITI /
sirsuresnmehsteudnethpoh.MVan Who May Be
Khrushchev shouted Russian
words at the British statesman at
several points and led the Com-
munist delegations in a new table-
thumping demonstration of pro-
test. The Soviet premier seemed
irate.
Kennedy Due
Here Friday
Denton County Democrats today
were putting finishing touches on
plans to play host Friday morning
to the brother of their presidential
candidate.
Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy,
Massachusetts attorney, western
states Democratic campaign di-
Fresh Shipment Bittersweet. It
bunch. Seiby Flower Shnn. Corner
N. LocustCongress. DU2-44191.
Officers elected to get the new The first reading annexation was
n.e prozram underway are Wyn Mur-
ForMayhill... HITS VANNOY’S
by Denton County Judge W K
Baldridge to decide whether May- About $1,250 worth of rings
hiltmay hold incorporation were stolen in a daring burglary
at a jewelry store about a block
Old Political Wounds
OTHER PROPOSALS
The Steering Committee also
voted down Soviet proposals to
open the General Assembly imme-
diately to disarmament debate,
bypassing debate in the Political
Committee and interrupting the
general policy statements now be-
ing given by representatives of
each U.N. member. It was report-
ed that Khrushchev wanted an op-
portunity to address the Assembly
again. ' *
Although British officials insist-
ed Macmillan did not come to
New York to try to mediate be-
tween Eisenhower and Khru-
shchev, one posed the auestion:
"Suppose Khrushchev agreed to
discuss the "B47 case. Would Ei-
senhower refuse?
DESTRUCTION
This was a reference to the de-,
struction of an American plane by
Soviet fighters last Julv 1. Two
crewmen are held prisoners by
the Soviets. The others were
killed. The Soviet Union twice
vetoed proposals in the Security
Council for an investigation of the
case
The RB47 is by no means the
only issue standing between a per-
sonal meeting of Eisenhower and
Khrushchev.
Not least among others is the
U2 case. Khrushchev's bare-
knuckled attack on Eisenhower at
the abortive Paris svmmit meet-
ing in May and the invective he
has hurled at the President since
the public, will be held at the Pat
Boone Country Inn.
During the affair, Kennedy will
make a short talk.
“While Mr. Kennedy's stops else-
where in Texas are largely keyed
to young voters and college stu-
dents, here in Denton, at the re-
quest of Mr. Kennedy, we are
making his visit a community -
wide and county - wide affair,”
said Rep. Alonzo Jamison, Ken-
nedy - Johnson campaign chairman
for the county.
At about 8:45, the Kennedy party
will leave the restaurant and pro-
ceed by motorcade to Fort Worth,
where a reception in Kennedy’s
honor begins at 10 a.m. at Casa
Manana. The motcrcade will
travel on Highway 377, passing
through Argyle and Roancke, us
ing the old main business street in
Roanoke.
Traveling with Kennedy when he
arrives in Denton will be Claude
E. Hooton Jr., of Houston, assis.
tant to Kennedy: Sam Houston All-
red and Price Daniel Jr, co-chair-
men of the state-wide young vot-
ers organization: Jack Bowen,
stale headquarters press aide; and
Jack Nelson of Austin, campaign
director of young voters division,
state Democratic headquarters.
The Young Democrats Club at
NTSC and the Young Democrats
of Denton County are joining the
Denton County Kennedy - Johnson
Committee in hosting Kennedy.
The Denton visit is part of an
itinerary in which Kennedy is hit-
ting 10 Texas cities, all of them
sites of colleges or universities,
terog memn
corporation Monday. Baldridge
was attending a convention In the plate glass window
Money that slips through year
fingers will pay the mat that pays
rout bills. Complete personel loan
service. Industrial Credit Com
cial, medical, fraternal, religious
and professional organizations in
17 towns formed to supplement
state aid to the school.
Ed Killian, superintendent. point-
ed out to the attendees that this
year's operating budget is $1,800,-
(MM).
The Voluntary Council, however,
was not motivated to provide funds
but to give mentally retarded
youngsters material and spiritual
help. Parties, Christmas presents,
flowers and grass pn the bare
campus, rides to town to shop or
see a ball game. Bible lessons and
art lessons are some of the many
things that the Volunteer Council
member will attempt to provide
the children.
At present. 160 mentally retard-
ed children are in residence. By
Christmas, said Killian, 300 will
be living at the school. By July
the institution will be providing
food, clothing and shelter for
1,000.
And applications continue to
mount. About 50 applications are
received each month from the 48-
county area which the Denton
State School serves.
Already 1,000 more beds are
needed in order that not only the
mentally deficient but the physi-
cally afflicted — children with
epilepsy and cerebral palsy — can
have a chance to join a world of
which they are more a part.
Here, said Killian, the mentally
and physically afflicted live in an
artificial world where they can
compete with others lust like
themselves The outside world is
tun full of frustrations for them to
develop to their fullest capacities,
as the school personnel teaches
them to do, he said.
During the business session at
the organizational meeting of the
Voluntary Council, a constitution
dnd by-laws were adopted
Schools, Austin; Mrs. Frank O.
Hamilton, state volunteer chair-
man of volunteer councils. Dal-
las; T. D. Weaver, state volunteer
vice chairman for special schools,
Austin; Harvey Phillips, president
of the Texas Association for Re-
tarded Children. Dallas; Helen
Colburn, state coordinator of vol-
unteer services, Austin; and
Charles Meisgeier, executive di-
rector of the Texas Association for
Retarded Children, Austin.
Houston and did not set an election . Mrs Weldon Pierce
become larger as each
passes Page 3, Sec. 1.
Page
Classified ............ 8-9
Comics ..... 7
Editorials ... . 6
Food News ..... 2,4.5
Sports ........... 8-9
Town Topics ......... 2
TV Log ......... »
Women's News .... 2,5.6
-2
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EiSSS Much Sought Nazi
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1960, newspaper, September 29, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468347/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.