Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 300, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 19, 1960 Page: 4 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
W
TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1960
FOUR
Ours Is The Only Answer
de
der the Mall and connect with a
D—!
)
I
8
-<
His Declaration Of Independence
THE WORLD TODAY
9
HAL BOYLE’S GUEST WRITER
a
When fellow political bigwigs
THE WORLD WE LIVE IN
1956 was fairly mild for a cam-
care-
'will
The
r
, made a study of 85 of
Press la en-
which doesn’t make ths bunting
I
k •
I
/
Tx
I
"P
■M
Bow Gives W ay
To Handshakes
Rough, Tough Campaign
Already Well Underway
The Man In A Hurry-2
Second In Three Articles About Man Named Kennedy
Construction Gives
Capitol New Look
MVSIC HALL
IN PLANNING
SHOP FOREMAN
KILLED IN BLAST
new freeway.
Modernistic
50 BENEFIT
FROM PAY HIKE
he adds
Cone’s
day night Sen. John F. Kennedy,
the Democratic Presidential can-
didate, could have been strictly
noble, leaving the gunplay till
later.
instead, he used the first speech
of his campaign to make a savage
attack on Vice President Richard
M. Nixon, who almost certainly
will get the Republican presiden-
tial nomination next week.
It was like deliberately warning
Nixon he was in for a bad time.
Kennedy, who acts cool, is a tough
young man as he showed in his
determined and succesful effort
to get the Democratic nomination.
By KENNETH ISHII
For HAL BOYLE
TOKYO (AP) - Tch! Tch! Ev-
eryone is going around shaking
hands. The honorable bow is tak-
ing a beating in Japan.
NlXe
)
By JAMES MARLOW
Asociated Pres News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP-The 1960
presidential campaign will be the
roughest and toughest in years.
It has already started that way.
In his acceptance speech Fri-
south and in the Youngu - Aidong
corridor farther east
99 INI ASSOCUATED PRESS-The Associated
pvblicationetattocat
Ip 1959. the California assembly
adopted a resolution commending
Cone’s efforts. 3
Cone is proud of the letter from
the Libby parents but he also re-
members another mother and her
lost child. Cone was flown more
than 100 miles to take part in a
hunt, arriving with his dogs late
at night.
Hundreds of men were out beat-
ing the bush all that night, the dogs
tried vainly time and again to
pick up the scent.
Came the dawn and a maid tele-
phoned, asking when the lady of
the house wanted junior returned.
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record-Chronicle Files •
many corners. The State Depart-
ment is putting finishing touches
he spoke of the vice president as
NEWSMEN SHOCKED
His attack on Nixon was
people and an amendment to the
Social Security Act to provide
medical insurance for the aged.
NATIONAL DEFENSE - He
- — . — -2— ------- —___hOWl printed
es well as ell AP news dispetches.
ing for examinations in language
and literature.
4. The candidate calmly proceed-
ed down the aisle and began to
address the audience.
1. We can buy almost all va-
rieties of vegetables in the vilage.
Denton Record-Chronicle
Telephone DUpont 2-2551
Entered ee mail matter of the second class at the post office at
Denton, Texas, Jan. IX 1921, according to Act of Congres,, Morth
X 1872.
Published every evontne.srusoataturdeyosand.Sunday morning by
314 East Hickory
Riley Cross, President and Publisher
RomApketnn NanVjingPrasidrnt and Gomerel Manag*
Milton Leazenby. Circulation Director
Ed Walthalt, Advertising Director
George Avery. Mechanical Superintendent
cent of those lost were children.
If You Get Lost in Woods,
Settle Down And Stay Put
STRICTLY SPEAKING
By CECIL PRESTON
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
sional campaign, when his tactics ■
left scan which still infuriate the
Democrats, Nixon has been a fair-
shocker to newsmen who arc used
to the antics and tactics of politi-
[ dans, not because it happened.
। since thet wes to be expected
i some time, but because it hap-
pened so early in the campaign.
Nixon himself knows what play-
ing rough means. He has played
so rough in the past that some
Democrats, and none more than
former President Truman, despise
him.
Then there’s Sen. Lyndon B.
Johnson, Kennedy’s running mate
tor the vice presidency. Johnson is
no patsy, either. He got rough on
Kennedy—some people thought
too rough—before the Maaschu-
setts senator beat him for the No.
1 place on the ticket.
Knowing Johnson, as this writer
does, it seems safe to say he
’ won’t pull any punches, particular-
, ly on Nixon, who has given the
I Democrats such a brawny going
; over so many times in the past.
RESTRAINED
Ever since the 1954 congres-
MEMBER AUDI BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
aXIc suascAIrnon RATU
Single Copies Evening 5c Sunday 10c
Home Delivery on same day of publication by City Carrier or by Motor
route* 35c per week.
Hone Delivery by mail (must he paid In advance). Denton and adjoining
coentlea, 11 per month, $9.50 per year, elsewhere in the United States
$1439 per month, $15.60 per year.
22237
Behind the visible assets of
personality and vote-getting
prowess, there’s another hey
element la a candidate’s im-
age. hie political past. This
second of three articles on the
Democratic presidential nom-
inee discusses his record on
domestic and foreign aflairs
are rising on
12"
.34 a
F
V
ly restrained campaigner. The
Democrats refer sneeringly to the
post-1954 Nixon as the “new Nix-
on."
It’s doubtful Nixon will be able
to restrain himself this year if
the Democrats go for his throat
glass and atone
Chungju • Hamchrug - Sangju company, made a study
Raad where TUA ife moving his hunts and found that
sponsor, a dog food
music building. President W- J. as Kennedy did when last Friday
McConnell announced this morn- •
SPELLING
Check the misspelled words in
the following sentences:
1. The restaurant across the
street is probably quitting business.
2. The doctor and his chief assis-
tant decided to operate Immediate-
ly. .
J 1
Answers: business, doctor, libr-
John is in the library study- ry. candidate, village.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wash-
ington just won’t be the same any
more, no matter who wins.the,, ------------ .
election. The wreckers and the office buildings
I To The Cuban Challenge
relations.
The Soviet Premier has publicly assumed the role
of protector o2 the Castro dictatorship. And ha has
threatened to unloose Red rockets upon the United
States if at any time, regardless of the reason, we
should intervene militarily in Cuba.
To his credit, President Eisenhower immediately live
Khrushchev a fitting reply. In words surely welcomed
in every corner of the United States, the President
said flatly there is no room in the Western Hemis-
phere for a Moscow-dominated regime.
In other words no threats will stop us from meeting
this latest Soviet challenge.
The matter has not rested there, however. With
direct Soviet connivance, the Castro government is
taking its case against the United States to the United
Nations, hoping in the end to get the General Assem-
bly to pass a resolution condemning the United States
. t-should be obvious by now that the Soviet aim is
to discredit the United States at every turn in Cuba.
If we try to protect our legitimate interests there, even
by purely economic sanctions, we will be labeled ag-
gressors. If we stand still in the face of further con-
fiscation of our property and further verbal abuse,
and especially if we acquiesce in any encroachment on
our rights at Guantanamo Bay, we will appear in the
eyes of a world as a pushover. That would strengthen
Khrushchev’s drive to undermine our alliances all
over the world.
In a situation like this, our only recourse is a policy
of firmness toward the Castro regime. This is at least
as important as the new Latin American aid program
that Eisenhower has just announced.
; We must leave no room for doubt about our deter-
■ mination to maintain U.S. rights at Guantanamo. So
• long as we are there. Cuba will not become a Carib-
bean outpost of Soviet imperialism.
builder* are all over the place.
The faithful old Capitol dome
cringes under a red paint petti-
coat. A creamy new wfite coat,
gradually, ia creeping down from
the top.
The Capitol's east front exten-
sion has yet to emerge from a
maze of construction gear.
The fancy new Senate Office
Building neighboring the Senate
will be matched by an even
newer House Office Building.
PILES OF RUBBLE
, Southwest from the Capitol
toward the Potomac River block
after block of dilapidated struc-
tures look as if they had been hit
by a Khrushchev rocket. The old
wharf sections, once a favorite for
sea food lovers, are mostly piles
of rubble.
Great plans are afoot for this
southwest section; few federal
buildings, big apartment projects,
homes and shopping centers.
The Mall between the Capitol
and the Washington Monument is
cluttered with construction for a
new Museum of History for the
Smithsonian Institution and a tun-
neling project to carry traffic un-
sometimes showing “charity to-
ward none and malice for all."
Kennedy said that before Nixon
starts dealing in this campaign,
someone had "better cut the
cards.” The fact that Kennedy
didn't have to do this kind of
thing so early in the campaign,
but chose to, is a pretty good in-
dication he will try to chop the
Republican candidate to bits.
FAIRLY MILD
The Democrats' treatment of
Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952 and
which their population was pre- .... ... .0. a
finest, the committee was told, palgn. But they had to be
JULY 19, 1949
North Texas State Teachers
College has advertised for bids
for the erection of a three - story
brick building which will serve as
a combination residence hall and
$55225363,3*9
3 n me
hh." yVsFgRounc
shake hands Western style.
When college student meets col-
lege student, businessman meets
businessman, it’s getting to be the
same.
THE CHALLENGE
Traditionalists lament mis chal-
lenge to the bow. meaningful and
expressive gesture that has
played an important part in reg-
ulating Japanese society.
Let's start with the condescend-
ing “nod”—the brief dip of the
head plus an ever-so-slight for-
ward body motion from the waist
up. It is a greeting for superiors
to inferiors.
The boss, for example, will nod
ter. I accept it.** U e -i Li-m-
in the debate th‛s year on civil meet, mote often than not, they’ll
272
(M geNKrk
«WgbvPe8
>one rav6”
NOTKI TO PUBLIC-Any erroneous reflection upon the character,
repvtation or standing of any firm, individual or corporation
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publishers’ attentign. ___
publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, typogrephical errors
or any uninfentional errors that occur other than to correct them in
next issue after it is brought to their attention. All advertising orders
are accepted on this basis only
on a 37-million-dollar annex.
A labyrinth of highways is
a building for motorists: Three
new bridges will span the Poto-
mac.
DULLES AIRPORT
A large chunk of the Virginia
countryside is giving way to Dul-
les International Airport, named
after the late and much-traveled
secretary of state.
But not all of Washington is
changing. It is still a tree-shaded
federal city where military bads
give concerts from a water-borne
stage on the Potomac, where
youths play softball on a summer
evening on the park behind the.
White House.
There are still the old familiar
standouts—the Capitol, the White
House, the statues in the parks,
the memorials to Lincoln and Jef-
ferson, and the white shaft of the
Washington Monument.
This summer, for the first time,
the top of the Washington monu-
ment is open at night to all who
want to gaze on their capital from
its unmatched vantage point.
gyg-
70
2
: A Brat Bureau?
: ONE of the smaller campaign issues will be the re-
• cent Congressional committee report recommending
• that the government take a hand in the fight on juven-
' ile delinquency.
What is asked is a mere 2 V2 million dollars to
"help” the states educate more social workers. This
, isn’t much money, but nobody has shown that towns
- with more social workers have less delinquency.
It is well known that once the federal government
takes jurisdiction in a situation, everyone else starts
shedding any responsibility for it. In the case of juven-
. ile delinquency, this can be particularly touchy.
" So far, everyone is guessing as to why today’! teen-
' agers supposedly get Into more trouble than yester-
• day’s. The blame has been credited, by various observ-
• ers, to the home, the school, the church and that face-
‘ less scapegoat, "society.”
• Whatever shape our "society” is in today, the fov-
" ernment is largely responsible. If the responsibility
: really lies there, the cure would seem to be to re-
• verse the trend of the last couple of decades which
* has been to more government responsibility and a
resulting decline in local and individual responsibility.
If the trouble lies in the school, the church or the
home, federal action would not only be difficult but .
objectionable. Americans would not stand for an ed-
ucational Gestapo in dictating discipline in our schools.
Churches are, and should continue to be, immune from
governmental interference.
And would Americans tolerate federal interference
in the home? Should Washington dictate the time Jun-
ior should go to bed, the amount of his allowance,
what he should be told about the birds and bees and
whether Pa should paddle him when he sneaks a cig-
arette?
Juvenile delinquency is an increasing problem all
over the world. The first step toward reducing it must
be to study its causes.
As it occurs among rich and poor, in cities and in
rural areas, the causes doubtless are complex. It is
cause for alarm for Washington to seek jurisdiction.
This may lead to preemption of the rights of the
church, the school and the home.
LOS GATOS, Calif. (AP) —The
next time you get lost in the moun-
tains. be a help to Russ Cone and
stay put.
Cone. 39. is a professional pur-
suer of people—with bloodhounds.
About 25 times a year he is call-
ed in to hunt for people lost in
the wilds.
In his spare time he lectures
on how to get found. His No. 1
rule is "stay where you are." Too
many times a lost person wander*
back into an area previously
searched
Cone doesn't expect you to sit
•till on a log for too long, but he
does want you to stay in the area
the size of a city back yard. Aft-
er that, he advises that you make
•ome kind of a shelter, hang a
white garment where it can be
seen, make a noise by pounding
on something with a stick and eat
anything that does not taste bed
or have a milky sap.
If you try to yell for help, you
will probably just wear yourself
out. Pounding on a tree with a
heavy stick will get much better
results.
Most hikers wear dark clothing,
so Cone suggests hanging up an
undershirt because it is usually
white.
The shelter gives you something
to do and makes you feel better
at night, especially if you hear
wild animals. However, Cone says
on none of his 150 searches has
he heard of an animal harming
a live person. They smell human*
from a distance and just clear out,
attracted to the scene.
TOKYO (AP) — Fresh Ameri-
can troops, with one division es-
tablished on a new beachhead in
Korea and another backing the
Une. took some of the pressure
off the 24th Division in the cen-
tral front today The Reds never-
theless put a heavy squeeze on
Taejon. To complicate matters
for the 24th, North Korean infil-
trators got behind their lines,
said Gen. MacArthur’s com-
munique. Taejon and an adjoin-
inf village wort under heavy Red
artillery fire. The 24th still held
the city. MacArthur said fighting
flared also on the central sector’s
called tor a Moppod-up missile
program, the rebuilding and mod-
ernization of the Army and Ma-
rine Corps, and an emergency
stop-gap air alert program to den J.
ter missile attacks.
In an overall speech, addressed
to both foreign and domestie
problems, Kennedy said. "The
hard, tough question for the next
decade is whether any free socity
with its freedom of choice, its
range of alternatives. Its breadth
of opportunity, can meet I he sin-
gle-minded advance of the com-
munist system."
JULY 19, 1920
There are about 30 employes of
the railroads in Denton who are
affected by the wago increase
awards announced yesterday by
the Labor Board. The increase
will be retroactive to May 1 and
amounts to about 21 per cent.
Local railroad men do not think
a general strike will be called to
protest amount to the increase,
which was not as much as asked
for, and said it will give the em-
ployes a living wage unless the
cost of living advances further.
CONSTANTINOPLE - A divi-
sion of Greek troops is marching
upon Arianople in Thrace to give
battle to the Turkish nationalists
defending the city, it was report-
ed from French sources today.
Fighting with artillery and ma-
chine guns has been in progress
around Adrianople intermittently
since last Thursday. The civil
population of neighboring villages
has fled into the fields and for-
ests.
rights, Kennedy voted to give the
attorney general power to inter-
vene in civil rights cases, the
federal registrar plan to insure
voting rights, and, amendments to
extend civil rights protection. A
Negro newspaper, the Boston
Chronicle, said in an editorial.
Sen. Kennedy thus demonstrates
by h's deed that he believes in the
passage of civil rights legislation."
In other areas, Kennedy co-
sponsored a bill to raise the mini-
mum wage to 31.25 and to ex-
tend coverage of the b'll to eight
million additional workers. He in-
troduced a “bill of rights" to im-
prove living conditions for older
JULY 19, 1950
A. B. Helton, shop foreman of
the North Texas Tank Co., was
killed instantly at 1:25 p.m. today
when a butane tank he was
welding exploded. Helton was
using as electric welder on the
150-gallon tank. The blast, which
ripped out a large section of the
metal roof at the plant, was heard
as far as several miles distance.
The plant is located just east of
the railroad tracks and adjacent
to the old fair grounds. A large
crowd of several hundred per-
sons, gathered immediately after
-the blast. Streets in the immwtl-
ate vicinity wore blocked by the
heavy traftic of care and people
By RELMAN MORIN
AP Special Correspondent
in campaigning for the Demo-
cratic presidential nomination. i
Sen. John F. Kennedy spoke out
on everything from foreign policy
to fishing; from the problem of
depressed regions to the impor-
tance of primary elections.
He plunged into the controver-
sial area* of farm policy. ciV!
rights, and labor legislation.
Before that, there were 14 years
in the Senate and the House of
Representatives, bringing his
speeches and compiling his rec-
ord. Kennedy says it is tbs record
of a liberal.
Political labels such as “liber-
al. “conservative,” “progressive."
and the gradations thereof, moan
different things to different peo-
ple. But here are some of the
highlights ot the Kennedy record
and the results of it when he be-
came the Democratic nominee:
LABOR AND MANAGEMENT-
He was the chairman in 1957 of
a subcommittee which investigat-
ed improper pract/ces in labor
and management. A year later,
after serving on the McClellan
committee, he introduced the Ken-
nedy-Ervin Bill which passed the
Senate but was changed in the
House.
This earned him the enmity of
some labor leaders, notably James
R. Hoffa, president of the Team-
sters Union. But George Meany
president of the AFL-CIO, ex-
pressed “our appreciation for your
leadership in the fight to enact a
law which will help honest labor
and honest management deal with
the problems created by a cor-
rupt minority."
At the Democratic convention,
AFL-CIO leaders supported him
for. the nomination.
FARM POLICY — The Farm-
ers Union did not publicly endorse
Kennedy when he was battling in
the primaries for the presidential
nomination. A number of its lead-
ers, however, told reporters they
favored him over the other Demo-
cratic candidates.
Kennedy spoke at length on
the farm problem prior to the
Wisconsin primary. One of
his heart-of-the-matter statements
was: "We have no wish to be-
come a nation of giant commer-
cial corporation farms and absen-
tee landlords. Our whole vitality
as a nation depends on the con-
trary course. Our job is to look
out for the family farm, and we
can count on the family farm to
look out for the future of our
soil."
CIVIL RIGHTS — Two years
after the Supreme Court decision
ordering desgregation in the pub-
lic schools, Kennedy said, in re-
sponse to a question, “It is unani-
mous, and it is the law. Under our
system, that is the end of the mat-
“56222
ful since Eisenhower was a high-
ly popular war hero,
Nixon doesn’t enjoy such broad
affection if only because, like Ken-
nedy. he didn't have the same
wartime distinction.
Some of the ammunition Nixon
used against Democrats in the
past—by playing on public fear
that Communists might be infil-
trating the government—has pret-
ty well dried up. Communists-in-
government is hardly an issue in
1960.
For instance, in 1954 he said the
Communists were . fighting hard
for an anti-Eisenhower Congress
—which could only mean a Demo-
cratic Congress—because, he said,
many Democratic candidates be-
longed to a left-wing clique which
“tolerated" a Communist con-
spiracy.
Paul M. Butler, then chairman
of the Democratic National Com-
mittee, said Nixon was implying
the Democrats were traitors.
This year Nixon can hardly sug-
gest the two wealthy Democratic
candidates—Kennedy, a Roman
Catholic, and Johnson, a Texas
Conservative—have any sympa-
thy for Communism.
What he will probably try to do
is poke holes in the Kennedy-
Johnson voting records. They'll
certainly try to do that to him.
But that will be only the starting
point.
ing. The new building will face
north on Chestnut Street just east
of Orchestra Hall. The first and
second floor will be devoted to the
college broadcasting studio,
teaching studios, classrooms and
individual practice rooms
BEAUMONT (AP) - Absolute
social equality of Negroes and
white persons, including permis-
sion of intermarriage. was pic-
tured to the Dies committee as
an aim of the Communist party.
Communists planned to allow Ne-
grete to govern those areas in
t 111 THE DENTON RECORD^HRONICLE mt EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : t t
to a subordinate who, in turn,
will proffer a medium bend if he's
not too far outranked, and the
deep bow if he’s the janitor.
But what if the boss is caught
in a deep bow to the janitor? And
this can happen.
GREAT FAVOR ------------—------
Then you can be sure the jani-
tor has done the boss a great
favor—something like saving his
life.
And the janitor will respond
with an equally uncomfortable
bend—not because he’s the jani-
tor, but as a gesture of abase*
ment, as if to say, “It was noth-
ing at all.” Self-abasement is an
important social virtue among
Japanese.
Complicated, you might think,
and indeed, more than one un-
initiated foreigner has been
caught in a deep and reverent
bow to his maid.
But the serious bower must ask
himself these further questions:
How long must I stay bowed?
The theory is, the longer the
bow the greater the politeness.
The practiced low bender will
glance out of the corner of his
eye to time his rise with that of
his partner.
HOW MUCH?
How many times should I bow?
Uusually, after three or four
bows, the parties agree on an un-
spoken signal to call it quits. But
it can also turn into a subtle con-
test to see who can outbow the ’ *
other.
How shall I bow so our heads
don’t bump?
It takes but one error to effec-
tively remedy this fault. The par-
ticipants usually prepare them-
selves by facing each other at
a slight diagonal.
And there you have it, the com-
plete etiquette of the bow and why
it shouldn't bow out to the hand-
shake.
Besides, add the traditionalists,
its much more hygienic.
——•-----------
any easier. A 9-year-old boy, for
example, can travel 10 miles or
more the first day he is lost and
four or five the next. That makes
for a huge search area.
As soon as Cone arrives, he
questions parents about the lost
child, gets a description for hunt-
ers, guesses from the description
how far the tot will go, and learns
whether he is left handed
Lost person* usually wander In
a circle, right handed ones to the
right and vice versa.
Youngsters and old persons who
have trouble with their legs oft-
en go up hill. Cone thinks that
is because their hands are nearer
the ground that way—in case of
falls.
Having figured all that out.
Cone usually helps the sheriff di-
rect search parties in a likely di-
rection and then uses his dogs to
narrow the search area.
Cone says blood hounds can
smell about 400 times better than
a human. Humans exude more than
60 waste materials through their
skhe and these fall in a sort of
cloud behind them. That’s what
the dog smells and follows. 1
Given some garment from a
lost person, they can tell pretty
well the direction the person went
and follow the trail, even one that
is from three to five days old.
Wet weather or extreme heat les-
sen the time a scent will last.
Most of the sheriffs Cone helps
write glowing letters to hie am-
ployer and so, of course, do the
parents of rescued kids.,
“We wish to thank you for our
little Randy’s life." wrote Mr. and
Mn, Harwd g.Libby td Frame
M • typical letter after r one help
•d find that their 3% • year-oldi
•ob in the Sierra Nevada.
PERSON PURSUERS -Apeiemre
7 Cone With His Bloodhounds f
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 300, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 19, 1960, newspaper, July 19, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468714/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.