Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 287, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1961 Page: 4 of 12
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idea. If he had played quiet.
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Strides Made
lifetime the babies born in Ameri-
Ever watch an ant and wonder
ea in 1960 will buy half a billion how fast it can travel? If it is
In more and more families
The eyes really are"windows
chiatrists have found that the
wives has hiked from 5 million in
manner in which pupils of the eye
Our quotable notables: “An asy-
will reach 20 million.
in America.’’—George Bernard ner conflicts and anxieties.
Government shorthand: "Oper- Shaw.
ation Kiss” designates the pro-
In the past American help was
the average British executive now
Keep it simple, stupid.
American critics that this was the glaring testimony comes from the
wrong way, that aid should be
vast acreages'of cotton produc-
given long-range to let receiving tag three million tons of long sta- when alone than at
time?
247 days.
Prosperity note: During their mail by the Pony Express.
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bottlenecks since Congress tradi-
tries bow the Communist regime
k
what good cotton looks like, had
some time in Texas. But
Texas is Texas, while this terri-
tions of Pakistan, a few hundred
displeasure.
"a
tered through the Pentagon, would
Denton Record-Chronicle
Telephone 382-2551
through which passed the age-old
local resources rather than unre-
f
lated projects, with special
toward those nations under
favor
all he asked—at least in the form
fist-
i
.5
Carlos Watkins and Van S. Ward,
COOL MAN, COOL
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$4.
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MoNNN
& 1
cAeu
mama
con.
is
the
Kennedy bought this idea and
asked Congress to let him ap-
social and economic reforms.
It's doubtful Kennedy will get
COTTON
IN RUSSIA
Looking for a warm place to
swim? Try the Persian Gulf, the
pean allies of the United States,
who were helped back on their
feet after the war by American
ton County Commissioners Court
to give financial aid in the pur-
be very great. The count
nervous about the outlook at
PRAYER
FOR TODAY
ers who, with their families, form
a population of 7,750.
might find eternal life in Thy
love, so infuse our spirits with
sacrificial dedication. Through us
may Thy love be a conquering
power over prejudice and hate.
For His sake. Amen.
I
critical atmosphere will resolve
doubts in favor of the bill."
Since the war the United States
has spent $85.8 billion on foreign
aid—$60.4 billion of it for econom-
ic help and $25.4 billion for mili-
tary assistance in one form or
another. This aid has gone to
more than 70 nations.
Not all of it has been used
wisely. Some of it was lost in
corruption, some of it has gone
to dictators who used it to sup-
press their own people in the
name of anti-communism.
areas.
Without dispute, the develop-
ment is impressive, whether you
come from Baghdad or Omaha.
But it is more impressive if you
come from Baghdad.
Three Pakistani cotton special-
ists studying here, who know
the cotton mills, the bulging un-
iversities and the housing pro-
jects. .
Members of the Denton City chase of a lighting system for the
Commission today asked the Den- Courthouse Square.
T.
as
handled. •
Be suggested too:
1. Putting most existing eco-
nomic aid programs into a single
new agency whose boos would re-
port directly to Kennedy and
Rusk.
Union and Afghanistan all come
together.-
That farm of about 17,000 acres
e L
dTmhbemabxsE*’ * ^D»> ' -M d 22.
WORLD WE LIVE IN: THE SWISS ALPS
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By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK CAP)_Things a
all of Denton.
CITY ASKS AID
TO BUY LIGHTS
JULY 10. 1N1
Hal Boyle
Working Wives On The Increase
Did you know most people are
inclined to drink milk more often
e
homes—and heaven only knows of the soul". Two Yugoslav psy-
The number of U.S. working how many aspirin tablets!
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record-Chronicle Files
lation to regulate movies.
6 FROM COUNTY
HEAD FOR ARMY
JULY 11, 1941
Six Denton County men left for
military service under the Selec-
tive Service Act. They are Alvah
King of Sanger, Ernest E. Walker
of Frisco, Ray Elmore of Pilot
eign aid package and placed in
the military budget.
3. Carefully tailored programs
ily having a two-room house,
kitchen and porch with outdoor
bath and toilets.
• There is a 100-bed hospital with
12 doctors. Schools are the equiv-
alent of junior high school. The
nearby town of Andizhan has
higher technical schools.
The averge worker gets 773
rubles—about 1800 a year income,
much more than a Pakistani and
Indian farmer.
NEFF REFUSES
MOVIE ACTION
JULY IS, 1821
Gov. Pat Neff, in a letter to
Denton Mayor H. V. Hennen, said
he will not submit a bill to reg-
prove aid over a five-year period.
This has been one of the '
in the shuffle caused by the more
generally accepted and more vi-
olent concept with which we
have become so familiar.
The basic meanings include:
The manufacture of sabots, the
French peasant’s wooden shoes;
and the grooving of rail ties for
placing (not blowing up) rails.
Therefore, by an odd inversion
of the real and secondary mean-
ings, sabotage on a railroad could
mean repairing, not destroying,
the track.
Sabotage, in the sense we know
it, comes from the epoch of the
first labor troubles in France dur-
ing which the peasant workers
put the machinery of their em-
ployers “hors de combat” (out of
action) by throwing, their
wooden shoes into the works. A
tabouur, in this meaning, was
originally one who bad a ten-
dency to throw his wooden shoes
into the machinery to express his.
of beef, 91 billion gallons of gas, has a fast track, it should be able
11 million new cars, 63 million to go 12 feet a minute.
helps bring home the ba- suits and dresses, a million new
stirred up such a ruckus about
something that Congress looked
7 . ■ < ‘
—
Foreign Aid
MARLOW
LANGUAGES
() in the NEWS
eKBy Churles F.Beli
I and Robert Strumpen-Dorrie
Sabotage, one of the basic in-
gredients of active subversion,
has several interesting meanings
in French which have been lost
-
areas. Kennedy wants them to do
more.
MORE MONEY
For the coming year Kennedy
asked what Eisenhower had
asked, about $ billion. But for
the long-range project he asked
around $3 billion, although in
% g
are God's. (1 Corinthians 6:20.)
PRAYER: O God, as Christ laid
down His earthly life that we
miles southward across the moun-
tains, that they could not escape
the comparison. Durnig lunch
they told me how much higher
quality Uzbekistan cotton was
than Pakistani.
The three Pakistani cotton spe-
• • e
That seems to be the opinion of Roxanne Maxey, 18, as she welcomes an oppor-
tunity to cool off under the hot Texas sun. The seven-foot snowman she is hug.
ging was made of ice shavings from a Lubbock ice skating rink. He quickly melt-
ed after the hug from Roxanne—who wouldn’t? —
-
tionally likes tighter control, such has built up its underdeveloped
as year-by-year spending pro-
vides.
Entered as second class mail at the post office at Denton, Texas,
I Jan 13, 1921, according to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
Published every evening except Saturday and on Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
Riley Cross, President and Publisher
Roy Appleton, Jr., Vice President and General Manager
Tom Kirkland, Secretary and Managing Editor
Fred Patterson, Treasurer and Business Manager
Milton Leazenby, Circulation Director
Ed Walthall, Advertising Director
....... — Mechenical Superintendent
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NO accepted on this basis only.
By PRESTON GROVER
TASHKENT, Uzbekistan,
U.S.S.R. (AP) - In the Soviet Un-
ion there are two tourist circuits.
One goes through Moscow, Lenin-
grad and Kiev—the modern his-
tory cities of the industralized
part of the Soviet Union.
Home Rule Lesson
I The cheers of weary taxpayers still are echoing
'around the state of New York over the stand of the
’little city of Newburgh. •
. That municipality sought a conference with state
authorities about the heavy relief burden which is
taking $1 out of every 13 of its taxpayers’ levies.
When the state failed to reply, the city put 13 rules
into effect which would limit relief to the able-
‘ bodied or put them to work, and discourage unwed
2 mothers from having additional illegitimate chil-
dren to qualify for higher relief payments.
How right or wrong the rules are is a moot point.
What is most interesting is the demonstration of
the growth of federal government power in local
affairs.
’ For the state authorities, while agreeing that
Newburgh taxpayers are being victimized, threaten
to withhold state funds from the city unless the
rules are abolished. Their reason is that by failing
to coerce Newburgh, the state’s $150 million a year
payment from the federal government for relief
would be jeopardized.
Thus the entire might of the state and federal
governments are brought to bear upon a town of
30,000 who are trying to stop relief chiseling in
their own backyard.
The reasoning behind the state’s stand is put by
the New York Times this way:
“The state and federal governments, supplying
a considerable percentage of the money, have a
legal as well as moral interest in standards.”
Of course, the Newburgers are the source of the
state and federal funds in the first place. Once
having paid these taxes, the reasoning goes, they
must hold still while their own money is used to
| coerce them. _
If the federal aid to education program is enact-
ed, the relief situation of Newburgh will be repeat-
ed in our schools. A local community will be pre-
vented from running its schools to suit itself in the
same way—through threats that state and federal
funds will be cut off.
And it isn’t hard to see the effect the threatened
I creation of a federal department of urban affairs
will have on sweeping away the principle of home
rule for our cities.
‘ The other one — Tashkent, Sam- 1940 to 13.6 million today, by 1970 lum for the sane would be empty respond to light betrays one’s in-
arkand and Bukhara—is great will reach 20 million. in America."—George Bernard ner conflicts and anxieties.
aid. they have joined in giving
some help to more backward propaganda country.
and one of the safest ways is in six settlements with each fam-
through some more foreign aid.
aid sound like one of the good
ways to undercut him
Thursday, for instance. Sen.
X W. Fulbright. Arkansas Demo-
crat and chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee,
said menacing conditions in Ber-
lin, Cuba and. Laos have im-
proved chances for Kennedy’s
foreign aid proposals.
This was after Secretary of
State Dean Rusk had told the
committee about the troubles
communism is causing the United
States around the world.
NERVOUS
" Fulbright said: “The pressures
to approve it (foreign aid) will
practice it probably will run a
lot higher.
But Kennedy tried to make this spent
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Ye are bought with a price:
therefore glorify God in your
Point; and James Robert Garrett, body, and in your spirit, which
ONCE MORE
And now, just as Kennedy was 3
having a gloomy time getting ap-
Citv Fareratinn hne circulatad n. “ ■ •8 weP i cunVi- trial organization given over
UuL in Detntonbascnrguiotedgs tngComgress he has • be stopped mostly in cotton. Te people live
The English long jeered at the
U.S. passion for modern plumb- world’s hottest sea, where the
tag. But a recent survey showed water temperature is 96 degrees.
IKE THE EXPLORER
Presidents Eisenhower and Ken-
nedy might have had more trou-
ble here at home.
Khrushchev did it in 1969 when
Eisenhower was in the White
House by threatening Bertin. He
did it again in 1960 by insulting ;
Eisenhower, wrecking the sum-
mit meeting and being generally
nations do long-range planning pie yearly, the machine plants,
with worthwhile projects.
Responsibility doesn’t necessar-
takes a bath every day, and two ily shorten life. The average long-
if he is going out for the evening, evity of U.S. presidents no longer
Many complain at the high cost living was 68 years and 181 days,
any other of postage rates today, but in 1861 the record holder: Sturdy John
it cost $5 a half-ounce to send Adams, who lasted 90 years and
In almost every public building
in Tashkent signs tell of Commu- gram of the U.S. Bureau of Naval
nist mvcerere in converting these Weapons to improve its commu-
given on a year-by-year basis ancient, sleepy areas into produc- ideations system. It stands for:
which brought complaints from tive farms and cities. The most "Keep it simple, stupid."
iantsamtnoorPisturegisatheSm he asked—but Khrushchev’s
silk route from Chiga to Europe,
those nations undertaking it is run by Uzaknai Sarimsakov,
28, and under him are 2,800 work-
1 Arms aid, now running about calists had seen the same state
$2 billion a year and adminis- farm I saw, about 100 miles from
- - - i the Chinese frontier, in that
This is where the Soviets show
big people from underdeveloped ceun-
columnist might never know if he pairs of shoes, 25 billion pounds young, free of rheumatism and
didn’t open his mail: - * — ~
for each country receiving aid,
based on the over-all needs and is in the fertile Ferghana Valley
The farm is, in effect, an indus-
banging is a big help in convinc- trial organization given over
- - — .1
on foreign aid aa a pretty good
69 propoding tory to --a W. ierigatedss
,a . , • r ,7 ,9 finne nf Dakrieran • four hmdror
other changes in the way aid is
Former President Eisenhower, wearing an Explorer Scout’s cap, removes his
glasses as he tours Pennsylvania Stat: University watching the activities of
Explorer Scouts who are holding a regional conference at University Park.
Eisenhower was invited by the Scouts to speak at their conference.
v
/
proval for his new long-range for-
eign aid program, Khrushchev
dug up his Berlin scare again,
trotted it out, and made foreign
be separated from the annual for- strange corner of the world where
‘ * China, India, Pakistan, the Soviet
Editorials
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in Switzerland some of the most scenic trips excellent view of the famous Rhone Glacier in the
through the Alps are made by the Swiss Alpine background. A scheduled 7-day Alpine tour costa
Postal Coaches. Passengers on this bus have an 1105 and runs from June 10 to Sept. 9,1961.
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 287, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1961, newspaper, July 10, 1961; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491697/m1/4/?q=%221961-07%22: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.