Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 111, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 14, 1960 Page: 4 of 12
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EDITORIAL
Avoiding A Brawl
None of hie five Cabinet ap- 1
DEAN RUSK
Scholar’s
। Cabinet appointees has been in
war.
LETTERS
Medical Aid
Available
To Everyone
FOCUS ON
JO
%
R
HEALTH
Accurate Missilemen
GOPs And Robbers
HAL BOYLE
Only Blizzards Break Down
New York Into Small Town
Virus Disease
THE WORLD WE LIVE IN
Rush To Summit
Isn’t Expected
Of The Movies
YESTERYEAR
Looking Back Through Record-Chronicle Files
STAGE SRTIKE
MEMBER AUDI BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS
HORSE SOUGHT
George Gipp, considered Notre
month when the faithful in every
and
loquaciousness
SU&EeSlS VTe •OE‘PI ' •.11, )
University of California psychia-
serve
P
i
A
I
i
1
»
i
i
0
i
Path To
Success
blem—an intricate maze endless-
ly threaded by two-legged ants
hopped up by pep pills, ants end-
lessly bumping into each other,
least a period of peace and quiet.
He'll get his share of brickbats
later, which is par for the course
General Douglas MacArthur flew
to Korea to take a hard look at
in
af-
nf
'40s were suddenlv rope-ent
longer lives. Practical plans
fectine a furdamentn1 psvect
for secretaries of State.
The story would have been dif-
ferent if Kennedy had given the
No. 1 foreign policy job to Adlai
E. Stevenson, who is a hero to
i some
CABINET PICKING: Kennedy’s
I ap-
the
thank
has
this
Changing Morals ricocheting, and then bumbling
11 by the Waco High Tigers.
“Cooter" Hastings, captain of the
Broncos, was high point for Den-
ton with four points.
Miss Gertrude Fisher of Roan-
oke is being treated in Fort Worth
for injuries suffered when a car
in which she was riding struck a
mule on a road near Roanoke.
elderly patients
The combination permitted us-
him at Husk's right hand.
Bowles, a liberal, a Connecticut
congressman and former gover-
nor, had a fine record as ambas-
sador to India under Truman and
as administrator of the Office of
Price Administration during the
on, growling.
But let five or more inches of
If
moral standards
One wonders if they see their
DEC. 14. 1920
Truck men hauling for the San-
ger Road went on strike today,
saying the pits they are hauling
from contain too much clay. They
sharpshooting at him right from
the start if Kennedy had named
him secretary instead of the non-
controversial Rusk. As ndersec-
retary Bowles will be in a posi-
tion to move up if Rusk ever
leaves.
None of Kennedy's other four
by virus action and known as in-
terferons. Each protects cells in
test tubes against viral damage
and shows some protective activ-
ity in experimental virus infec-
tions in animals, he adds.
M'MBM of DM ASSOCIATED PRESS- the Associated Preu it en
htieo techesively *o 'he oM tor publication o* all 'oc« new* printed
i mn • newspaper as well as all AP newt dispatches
BASK SUBSCRIPIION RATES
Single Copies Evening 5 cents Sunday 10 cents
Home Delivery on same day of publication by city earner or bv motor
route 35 cents per week
Home delivery by mail (must be paid in advance; Denton and adjoining
counties $1 per month $9 50 per year elsewhere in the United States
$1 30 per month $15 60 per year
Researchers have found three
types of chemicals which prevent
viruss from multiplying without
hurting normal cells.
Future studies will show wheth-
er these or related substances can
be useful in preventing or treat-
ing human virus diseases which
include the common cold, ’flu. po-
lio. and smallpox, says Dr. Igor
Tamm of the Rockefeller Insti-
tute.
The three virus inhibitors are
Joy Of Antiquity
The Raleigh News And Observer
Those who scream for he-man resolutions ought to
remember, as they step from built-in showers, the old
Saturday night bath. Stylish idiots used the bathtub.
Parents and children were pack animals toting kettles
of hot water from the kitchen to the tub. The bath-
room was usually the most exposed place in the house.
The wind whistled through there hard enough to crack
ball-bearings with its naked teeth.
Unstylish but wise people bathed in the kitchen, just
as close to the range as they could get and still not
come down with first-degree burns.
Many stood in this tub, which was smaller and round-
er than the one in the igloo called the bathroom.
The backsides were well-done but the front was icy.
Stylish people used towels but smart folks Jumped
into heavv blankets.
No matter what you used, you felt as if you had
been swimming in the English Channel from Dec. 1
to March 31.
True, the laureates of brawn say these old-time
experiences put hair on the chest.
These bards of rugged rhapsodies lie through their
dentures.
The only thing those baths put on the chest was
icicles
if Patrick Henry were living he would say:
If this be decadence, make the most of it, you dunce.
his key men to pay off political
debts.
Kennedy said Monday he had
never met Rusk until last week.
And David Elliott Bell, a Harvard
economist whom Kennedy named
budget director, didn't take an ac-
tive part in the campaign and
hardly knew the president-elect.
said the clay causes such delay in «IIyp Anrn o y z w
hauling that they will not continue; HI • A.D fit A
Telephone DUpont 2-2551
Entered as second class mail at tne post office at Denton, Texas.
Jon 13 1921 according to Act of Congress March 3 1872
Published every evening except Saturday end on Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
bishops of the United States.
“A national crisis" was what
He was Kennedy's foreign policy
adviser during the presidential
campaign. But his part in shap-
l ing the liberal Democratic plat-
form far from endeared him to
I some of the conservative mem-
I bers of his party.
There might have been some
Dear Sir:
Your Dec. 8 editorial was
predated by the doctors of
county, and they wish to I
you for your stand.
Free care for the aged
been available for years in
-As.-
rumpus with an adroit but non-
spectacular figure; Dean Rusk,
head of the Rockefeller Founda-
tion, as secretary of State.
Rusk in the past held several
government jobs—the highest as
assistant secretary of State for
Far Eastern affairs under Presi-
dent Truman—but handled him-
self unobtrusively. To the public
he was generally unknown.
He had to be adroit to be on
that Far Eastern desk in 1950 and
come through unscarred when
Sen. Joseph McCarthy was belab-
oring the State Department for its
handling of Far Eastern affairs,
particularly in China.
Rusk is esteemed for brains by
people who know him. Since he’s
a quiet operator, he and Kennedy
will have the advantage of start-
ing out in foreign affairs with at
wN I,
N pooR
OSER’
* CRrBfBr
-- CHARGE _
* DANGERA-
such i combination on a group of
the bishops called the increase of
morally objectionable films from
"WEWU2,,
ROBBED/
of a tranquilizer and a barbitu-
rate sleepine pill might moke it
easier to get to sleep. Dr Wesley
. w. Bare of Philadelphia tested
own movies in “Strangers When lost their fust basketball game of beaten and able to battle the Chi- vored decisive action by the Unit- they would be happy to
Me Meet,” Kim Novak and Kirk the season as they were beaten 27-inese hordes led States such as President Trujwith Rusk.
trial
When both the motivation to,
speak and the motivation to re-
pointees so far is a controversial
figure.
None therefore is likely to get
much opposition or criticism from
liberals or conservatives in the
new Congress next year—at least
in the beginning.
Kennedy filled the spot which
could have caused the biggest
Some ski facts, defenses against
virus diseases, and a question on
anemia are among the week's
medical notes:
United Nations—can hardly cause
a fire in Congress or elsewhere.
In the United Nations Stevenson
will not be making American for-
eign policy. He'll just be express-
; ing
Kennedy reportedly had consid-
Dy JOHN M. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON (AP)-The new
secretary of State for the Ken-
nedy administration, Dean Rusk,
is expected to oppose the rush to
a summit conference advocated
by Soviet Premier Khrushchev
and favored by British Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan.
Rusk, 51, a self-made diplomat,
favors more traditional and cau-
tious forms of negotiation. His
views on the subject were spelled
out earlier this year in a lecture
delivered at the Council on For-
eign Relations in New York. He
made clear there that he thinks
the president's personal diplo-
macy should be reserved for very
rare and special uses
Rusk was named by President-
elect John F. Kennedy Monday to
take over the State Department
and the day-to-day direction of
U. S. foreign policy in the admin-
istration starting Jan. 20.
Kennedy also announced that
Rep. Bowles was his choice for
undersecretary of State and that
Adlai E. Stevenson had accepted
the post of United States ambas-
sador to the United Nations.
Rusk is an old hand at the State
a synthetic chemical nicknamed ----
HBB, a mold product known as
helenine and substances produced
tration's handling of Red China,
not favoring U. S. recognition but
considering a more flexible pol-
icy necessary.
Within a few hours of Rusk's
appointment Monday, Secretary of
State Christian A. Herter mes-
saged “warmest regards." He
told Rusk he would be in Europe
for a week but that top State De-
partment officals "will be glad
to facilitate your contacts with
the department."
Word of Kennedy’s three ap-
pointments was well received at
the United Nations
Both Stevenson and Bowles said
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP)-It takes a
blizzard to melt the cold, cold
heart of the world's greatest city.
So, if you want to see America's
leading metropolis at its friendli-
est, be sure to come here during
a blinding snowstorm.
A human thaw occurs that turns
sprawling Gotham into a small
town of some eight million neigh-
bors.
A 17-inch snowfall here this
week proved that again. A big
storm always does.
On ordinary days a stranger
seeing Manhattan for the first
ing less customary amounts of [
the barbiturate, he said, and
worked better than the sleeping
/
ment of the Roman Catholic
Catholic church was asked to take Dame's greatest football player,
the pledge. died today of pneumonia in South
e The Motion Picture Association Bend, Ind. The 24-year-old Gipp
has largely ignored public reac- was also a great baseball player
tion to its change of moral atti- and had been expected to sign a
WASHINGTON (AP)-Few mea
have followed a scholar's way to
such peaks of success as Dean
Rusk, who atpped has been by
President-elect John F. Kennedy
as the next secretary of State.
From his origin in Cherokee
County, Georgia. Rusk's life has
followed a smooth upward curve
through a Rhodes scholarship, ac-
ademic life, wartime service in
Burma, and assistant secretary at
State for Far Eastern affairs.
He took his present position, the
presidency of the Rockefeller
Foundation, when he left govern-
ment service nine years ago.
Now, at 51, he moves back to
the State Department as the head
man, and into the Kenendy ad-
ministration as the top Cabinet
officer.
Rusk first entered the State De-
partment immediately after World
War II. He left it for a year to
serve as an assistant to secretary
of War to Robert P. Patterson.
Then he was appointed director
of the Office of United Nations
Affairs back in the State Depart-
ment.
DEC 14 1940
his heavily-hit United Nations
The venton High School Broncos command He said it remains un-■
The measure of drift from ========
church-favored morality was dem- A..cu.c
onstrated recently by a state- TRUCK CREWS
Hollywood They called for a re-
form of the ‘presently ineffec-
tive" production code. The Legion
of Decency pledge to boycott In-
decent, immoral and unwhole
1 nill hlone And patients reported
fewer hangovers the next morn-
! ing from the sleeping drug
Stuttering Cause?
I
From the psychoanalytic point
of view, stuttering consists of a
conflict between the traits of
snow fall, and all this magically
changes.
The daily scramble to gain an
edge on the other fellow is for-
gotten. The subway stare—that
self-protective look of indifference
—disappears.
The city becomes a common
white battleground on which the
community forges a fresh unity.
Gallantry emerges. Men cheer-
fully break paths throhgh the
deepending snow, and old ladies
follow in their footsteps. The bus
driver no longer shuts his door
in the face of a passenger He
even stops his bus in the middle of
the block to pick up a red-faced.
main silent work together. stut-
। terine results He compares it to
• accelerating a car in gear, while
keeping the brakes on
ered several men for the job he
finally gave Rusk: Stevenson,
Chester Bowles and Sen. William
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneou reflection upon the character,
reputation or standing ot any virm individual or corporation will
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publishers attention the
publishers ere not responsible for copy omissions typographicai errors
or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct them in
next issue after it is brought to their attention Alt advertising orders
are eccepted on this basis only
panting pilgrim of the drifts.
Ill-temper vanishes. Good na-
ture reigns. An almost frolic at-
mosphere takes over. People
share cabs who never shared cabs
before. Strangers grin and speak
to each other. Everybody sudden-
ly has time to be helpful.
It might make the big city a
better place to live in if it were
hit with a real blizzard at least
once a month throughout the year
— just so it could show is real
human heart more often.
Fulbright, Arkansas Democrat,
among others.
Apparently he did his greatest
soulsearching in the case of
pace here. New York appearsihs BY CAUTIOUS RUSK
a city than a huge traffic prob- ......................................
county Not many people realize
that, since It first opened, Flow
Memorial Hospital has had a ro-
tating roster of doctors on call
for accidents, emergency illness
and patients who don’t have a
an entire society are not made
overnight, bu with stpte and lo-
cal representatives of medical
and civic "rouns workire toneth-
er. expansion of existing facilities’
shovld solve the problem within
the framework of our present me-
dical and political svstem.
DENTON COUNTY
MEDICAL SOCIETY
| some films had added force this at the present price.
Bowles Monday, he gave Bowles
the State Department's No. 2 job
as undersecretary, which puts
time gets the eerie impression he
has been set down in a vast civic
madhouse.
Everybody seems to be in a
termendous rush to get from
where he is to where he isn't.
Each person acts as if he were
carrying an important message to
Garcia. Each person appears to
believe the other eight million citi-
zens is trying to block his path.
It is a city where folks don't
really seem to have time for each
other. It is a city where you start
mumbling 'G’bye" before you
finish saying "H'lo.
Eastern issues remain to be de-
veloped publicly. It is understood
that he shares the Kennedy criti-
Department operation, having cism of the Eisenhower adminis-
DEC. 14, 1950
Denton police are seeking a “hit
and run" horse who collided with
an automobile driven by Lowell
Edward Sloan of 311 Wood The
horse was hit by Sloan's car and
then ran away. The damage to
Sloan's car amounted to $300.
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—After two
years of tinkering with movie
morals, Hollywood is getting
scared.
The film industry is once again
confronted with the hobgoblin of
hoycott. If there's anything that
can create a scare with the movie
makers, that’s it.
Hollywood faced the boycott
threat in the ‘20s, when scandals
and racy films prompted the pro-
ducers to hire Will Hays as puri-
fier. Again in the ‘30s. a loosening
of moral attitudes in films brought
public censure. This ended in a
tightening of the production code,
with a close liaison with clerical
moralists
man ordered to meet the Com-
munist attack on South Korea. He
then favored keeping the war
strictly limited and once told as-
sociates that it might be vital in
the nuclear age to establish the
practice of fighting for a precise
and limited purpose; in that case,
to repel the aggression.
Rusk also felt that the policies
of President Truman and Secre-
tary of State Dean Acheson had
to prevail over the war-expansion
policies of the U. S. commander
in the Far East, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur. Truman fired Mac-
Arthur in early 1951 for arguing
publicly against his directives
Rusk is expected to get off to
a good start with the Senate For-
eign Relations Committee when
he goes before it for examination.
He has a reservoir of good will
among committee members of
both parties.
But if he faces any difficulty
on Capitol Hill, it almost certain-
ly will turn on questions of his
views on the Far East,
Rusk’s detailed views on Far
Talk about being defended ... we in Denton ap-
parently live in the best defended city in the nation.
At least that’s a layman’s interpretation of what the
Army men stationed at the Denton Missile Site did in
El Paso last week. At their annual missile firing ses-
sion, the Denton missilemen scored 2,973 out of a pos-
sible 3,000 points to set an all-time high for missile
accuracy in the continental United States.
Fortunately for Denton, the missilemen don't fire
their weapons here except in case of attack But if
that attack should ever come we ought to feel secure.
And we also ought to pass out congratulatory mes-
sages to Capt. Craig Spence and his battery.
Anemia. Vitamins
Proposition: "Anemia is usual-
ly caused by vitamin deficien-
cies.”
Wrong, very wrong, says Dr.
Richard W. Vitter of the Univer-
sity of Cincinnati.
Most Americans get enough
vitamins In their daily food, and
not more than four ner cent of
anemia in this countrv is due to
vitamin deficiency, he reports.
Some 18 per cent of cases are
due to 'ron deficienev from
chronic loss of blood and the rest
to causes not connected with the
diet.
Sleeving Pill
HuulfOPINio,
/
Ski Stop
A skier weighing 150 pounds
and traveling at 30 miles an hour
develops a momentum of 6.600
stops within two feet, the stop-
ping force is 2,250 pounds.
So it's not surprising that about
80 per cent of all skiing injuries
involve the ankles, knees, and
legs, comments Dr. William B.
McCunniff in Missouri Medicine.
Dry Skin
A daily bath in water contain-
ing a little oil reduced annoying
dryness of skin in 90 per cent of
patients, a physician reports
Their skin became softer and
smoother, and patients reported
benefits in such problems as aged
skin, burn scars, and skin inflam-
mations. The bath is not a cure,
and dryness reappears if the
bating is stopped. But Dr. Gustav
Weissber' thinks it was more
beneficial in relieving skin trou-
bles than ointments, creams and
lotions.
PROMOTION
In 1949 President Harry S. Tru-
man promoted Rusk to assistant
secretary of State.
In the swift-moving events of
the following years, which saw
the eruption of the Korean War,
Rusk became known as the archi-
tect of this country's Far Eastern
policy.
Rusk is a big man physically.
He tops six feet and weighs in the
neighborhood of 200 pounds. Ten-
nis and golf are his sports
He was reared in Atlanta and
educated in its public schools and
at Davidson College in North Car-
olina Rusk is a Presbyterian and
Davidson is supported by that
church. At Davidson, Rusk won
Phi Beta Kappa honors and a B A.
degree, a start in his chosen ca-
reer as political scientist.
The Rhodes scholarship followed
and he took another B.A. and a
master's degree at Oxford Univer-
sity in England. He studied fur-
ther at the University of Berlin.
DEAN OF FACULTY
In 1934 Rusk became an asso-
ciate professor of government and
dean of faculty—at the ripe age
of 25—at Mills College, Oakland,
Calif. He stayed there six years,
also studying at the University of
California law school.
As the unmistakable signs of
war gathered, Rusk joined the in-
fantry reserve as a captain on
Dec. 15, 1940.
After two campaigns in the Bur-
ma theater and service on the
War Department’s General Staff
Operations Division Rusk left the
service as a colonel; He was
awarded a Legion of Merit cita-
I tion with oak-leaf cluster
personal physician. If the doctor
on duty needs consultation, h l s
call will be answered by anv doc-
tor in town. No one is ever turned
away because he or she cannot
pay
Physicians in their own offices
give free care amounting to 15-20
per cent of their time There is a
doctor on call at every athletic
game in town. The Kiwanis Club
Children's Clinic has the whole-
hearted support of all of us.
Among the most active members
of the Denton Countv Heart Asso-
ciation. Cancer Society, National
I Foundation, Bov. Scovts and the
United Fund itself are doctors,
in addition to their own churches
and other civic groups.
To return to the medical needs
of the aged, the Texas Medical
Association took part in the fov-
ernor's Committee for the Care
of the A°ed this vear, and last
night at the meeting of the Den-
ton Countv Medical Societv the
program suggested by the State
Association was vlaced in the
hands of the new county society
president for immediate action.
The details of this program will
be available in January. It will
close any gans in the present sit-
uation. coordinating all the exist- l
ing activities and encouraging the
furthe" develonment and exnan-
sion of the new fields in the care
of the chronicallv ill
The problem of additional care
of the aqed didn't exist in its
present form until a very few
years ngo. when the resulis of the
scientific break - through of the
served as assistant secretary dur-
ing the Truman administration.
He resigned from the depart-
ment nine years ago to become
president of the Rockefeller
Foundation, a philanthropic or-
ganization set up to promote re-
search and development in the
sciences and humanities.
ORusk made his big impression
on official Washington as the as
sisstant secretary of State directly
in charge of U. S political poli-
cies at the time of the Korean
War outbreak in 1950 and in the
months following
He was reported to have fa-'
Taking Time To Realize
What’s Happening Here
IN THE AREA of higher education, Denton has
been even busier than usual in the last week or 10
days.
So many things affecting NTSC and TWU have been
happening at such a rapid pace, you may have over-
looked some of the more important. As just one ex-
pie. look at the grants awarded in the last week. At
both Denton campuses, those announced just this
week total $123,400 for various areas of scientific en-
deavor. Add to that the million dollar loan approved
last week for a new TWU dormitory, and you come up
with a cool $1,123,400 of "new” money coming into Den-
ton via the campuses.
Of these grants, $33,700 goes to NTSC for support
of a summer institute for high school physics teachers,
one for $51,000 goes to TWU for a nine-week summer
institute in radiation biochemistry for senior high
school math teachers and another $38,700 goes to TWU
for a summer institute for high school math teachers.
These are outright grants. The million dollars for the
new dormitory is a loan.
Of course, it is always difficult to measure anything
only in dollars, but dollars perhaps are the most wide-
ly understood measure of growth. These dollars fig-
ures. thus, are impressive. Even more impressive is
the stature they represent in the rapidly growing re-
search programs at both Denton campuses.
In the hubub over more scientific knowledge, how-
ever. and the traditional interest in athletics, it is im-
portant not to overlook the other expanding programs
at both campuses. For example, Dentonites who have
attended—and many have—the almost exhausting
range of musical events this year are more convinced
than ever that the NTSC School of Music must surely
rank second to none in its endeavors. Another exam-
ple of something we often take for granted is TWU’s
College of Nursing, certainly ranking at the top in the
nation in its endeavors and expanding this year with
additional facilities at Houston as well as those in Den-
ton and in Dallas.
Actually we could devote an entire issue of this
newspaper (and we do every August) to the accomplish-
ments of faculty and students at the two campuses.
But in the rush of the Christmas season, we need to
pause for just a moment and realize once more that
Denton has a front row on a constantly changing, con-
stantly improving drama—the drama known as higher
education.
any broad public dispute and has
no backlog of ill will to carry into
his new job with him.
Those four are Connecticut
Gov. Abraham A. Ribicoff as sec-
retary of Health Education and
Welfare; Stewart L. Udall, Demo-
cratic congressman from Arizona
as secretary of the Interior;
North Carolina Gov. Luther H.
Hodges as secretary of Com-
merce, and Robert S. McNamara,
president of Ford Motor Co. as
secretary of defense.
A iteast three of them, like Bow-
les were active Kennedy supporters
during the campaign. Still Ken-
nedy can't be accused of picking
PAGE FOUR : ; : i EDITORIALS AND FEATURES: : : : THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE : : : WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14,1960
” — Anxiety is a common cause of
Denton Record-Chronicle
' , I
The slot Kennedy picked for
Stevenson — ambassador to the
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP» - Presi-
dent-elect John F. Kennedy has
gone about picking a Cabinet like
a man determined to avoid a
brawl before he has a chance to
start his presideny.
____________ ____ taciturnity, tudes for the screen But it contract with the Chicago Cubs.
^*^***‘ - - th proamcrrs agreed that films DENTON HRONCS
have been undergoing an evolu- Row Til wAcn
tion to “adult-oriented produc- 10 " •-U
tion," but denied any change of
Douglas have a blazing adulter-
ous affair and come out of it un-
scared, unscarred and unrepent-
ant. Prostitution is treated in
business-like terms in "The World
of Suzie Wong” and "Butterfield
8." Homosexuality figures in
"Spartacus” and "Suddenly, Last
Summer." .
Producers might well argue that
they are dealing in nothing new.
Adultery was a theme of the Iliad
and the Aeneid.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 111, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 14, 1960, newspaper, December 14, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475564/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1%22~1&rotate=180: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.