Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 286, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1963 Page: 4 of 14
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FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1963
PAGE FOUR
F
WORLD TODAY
EDITORIAL
Long-Playing Record
By BILL MAULDIN
Brennen
Meeting Affects
Dedicated
Denton’s Future
Y
To His Job
22
dotmaj
President Mrst Act
I
Ke
c29*
MILITARY
LETTERS
Club Lauds
। Race Mix
Decisions
Dear Sir:
con
tween
d
sary expenses.
■ 4 .■
niques for using helicopter* and
YESTERYEAR
seasoned veterans returning
=~
It all adds up to a body of ex-
SLOW THIS YEAR
DOI RLE ROLE
An Electronic Computer
Has Secret Night Life
MANCHESTER, England (APY chines can do and how they can
lems.
chey. now
movements being a blaze in a National Boy Scout Jamboree.
LETTERS WELCOMED
assault up, took my hand, and asked me
sinkable. shallow draft
ame on which
a contrivance
Denton Record-Chronicle
KEEP UP WITH
YOUR FRIENDS
prayers.
cinity since 1877 "
ide meaning pay-
paid for 'protection,' and was first
so used along the Scottish border.
thought to come from American
land *be • to
‘ \
tions in the delta which were
hitherto not feasible,” ARPA di-
Lillie Garden Club
Mrs Paulin. Smith, Pres.
Denton
They do these things by night consultant. He then showed the
because their time is scarce and machine how to string the words
expensive. Their daytime hours together and left it to get on with
ming away writing letters, poems, taught how to write love letters,
music, and playing games such Appropriate words were fed into
as checkers or solving chess prob- its memory by Christopher Stra-
*1
1
RI RRIsH RLAZE
RRIGHTEXS UH
craft.
‘ The great increase in mobility
afforded by the swimmer support
rector Jack Ruma told Congress
recently. I
Another project in this same
field is called the marsh screw
militaryequipment.
It also is giving the Army, Ma-
fewer than 10 pages, for a total;
of 511 pages, plus footnotes and
references.
readers on any subject in good taste.
Letters must be signed and the writer's address
given. We reserve the right to edit all letters when
necessary.
\)
6,
for a date every night next week.
And guess what—he's the son of
a wealthy lawyer.”
The lazy office boy limps in
When a majority of the nine jus-
tices reaches a decision, One of
them is assigned to write it. This
is the official decision which alone
has the effectpof law Any other
justice can write a concurring or
dissenting opinion to explain his
own reasoning This is extra and
is not required
in the school prayer case Jus-
tice Tom Clark was assigned to
n
s(
n
A
of his two law clerks, Robert the sheer fun of the thing Rut it
O'Neil and Richard Posner, both could he justified if need be For
under 30 and. like Brennan, grad one thing, he said, the experts
uates of the Harvard Law School.— — -——
They took over a big room on book-length studies of the problem
some of them.
In the 1962-63 term just ended
and he wrote 23 opinions, none of them
Another word for 'pirate' is "buc: Justice Charles Evans Hughes wtg
caneer," coming from the French “.....- ' ”
M22
GRIIX MOI EM EXT trash basket at the Uso Center impart what they have learned
held seem fo me tn justify detail-
. ing at some length my reasons for
joining the court's judgment and
opinion " ■:
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
FWUTE,
72/
boats now permits military opera- with a bandaged ankle, and ex- --
plains: "Twisted it sliding into, meat wassmoked.
ti
Old French, man
verb peran which meant "to at-
tempt" or 'to attack.’ Strangely
mough, our word 'tear' Is also
descended from the same root.
The late Prof. Alan M Turing
In the research he had the help once said the principal motive was
JULY 5, 1943
Over 3 200 soldiers celebrated
S. Viet Nam Provides
Combat-Testing Zone
C
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE : :
‘ 1111 ■—S—W '-T-. ... nil ...- -------- --------------------------- ----------
-.5099’
—e-BE-E
rines and Air Force a chance to
ran up his blood pressure, a neighbor scrooched
deep in a lounge chair in a shady spot in his yard
and laughed each time the other man's car pulled
out on a new errand
He got his last night when his son brought home
three playmates and their firecrackers and Roman
Candles and what-have-you blasted the evening and
he couldn’t escape the jolting noises no matter
prove it."
"I was stuck in a 15-mile high-
way tie-up for seven hours," says
the senior salesman. "Four wom-
en give birth before they could
get to a hospital. My wife and I
helped one lady deliver triplets. I
The thousands of I S military namese government is resettling
men advising and training the hundreds of thousands of peasants
•South Vietnamese fortes in their in fortified villages to give them
war against Communist insur-security against the Communists
gents form a growing corps of who have preyed on them,
FOLRTH FOLLOW
A Little Fellow’s Penny
Buys His Independence
When Denton had drained the Fourth last night
and put it away, a brand new Fifth was opened which
bubbled with memories of a holiday that rollicked
and banged and burned
used by the old pirates to preserve
their food.
stagecoach days, when the "bad
guys' would atop a coach with,
"High, Jack!'— meaning that
driver and shotgun rider had bet-
E-ANGUAGES
Einthe NEWS
“By Charlos F. Borlitz
•nd Reber Strumpen-Derrie
The dispute involves the entire country but a set-
tlement rests with the President and his Administra-
tion.
ter Hf their hands high, or risk a
gratelul she i going । bulleL 3-7
to i.—_ . — a
TALL TALES
Other words prominent to
Fidthsta activities include’kidnap,'
whose origin is preciscly what one
would think -‘o nab a kid’ ("kid*
in its slang meaning of'person').
It was in England that this word
was first used to describe the car-
“1 lifted a high one from the .
third tee ' says the golf bug It men, * m In the beginning,
“ btandd u X?
hounced to the left and rolled into PXcsnad camnetoSigErenelze
the cup for a hole in one. I'm --c- •_____—rnL—a .
having the squirrel stuffed to
The hijacking of a Venezuelan
tanker by fts crew and the flight
to the south point up again that
time has not dimmed the Carib-
b The parks and libraries are like
ARPA has been brought into salt and pepper and the daily
lixed-wing aircraft in guerrilla-‘the vital strategic hamlet pro- meal. They make the situation
typewars. gram; under which the South Viet- "edible".
Brennan's kinship with Brandies Why then, should computers be
showed in the references he used used to write music. poems, let-
to support his and the court’sters and play games in their spare
reasoning against public school time?
a leading computet
■
■
<
ivncanr, a wooden ft,
2.
DA
which room he hid in
But even those kids finally ran out of firecrackers
and the Fourth quietened for all but those who had
stayed too long in the searing sun.
It was back to normalcy today. The Fourth of
July, 1963. was stored away.
2QAH012
write the decision of the court's
eight-man majority, which in-
cluded Brennan I
Clark did it in 23 pages, after
a lot of research, but his refer-
ences, explaining how the decision
was arrived at, mostly cited pre-
..vidus court opinions. Brennan
V)k
grn.2
Many a closeiy-cropped lawn was cluttered with
fragments of singed firecracker paper, flimsy sticks
of wire left over from sparklers that had lit up the
night and broken sticks that had guided make-be-
lieve rockets toward the low-hanging moon.
Wealth to purchase noise-making for the day did
not belong to everybody, though.
“You got any firecrackers four for a penny?” a
shoeless boy of about 10, reddish hair paled by too
much sun. asked the teenaged girl in a fireworks'
stand on Highway 24
"Un, uh," the girl managed to reply between the
filling of orders for ther customers.
"One for a penny?” the boy persisted.
The girl shook her head and the boy leaned over
the counter-like front of the fireworks’ stand, eyes
large like vioets in his tanned face as he studied
the piles of firecrackers and rockets and the like
on the shelves.
"Bel they’d make a lot of noise,” the boy said to
nobody in particular as he admired a packet of
small firecrackers priced 15 cents.
A well-fed man watched the boy hungrily gaze
at the 15-cent firecrackers and motioned for the girl
to nand a packet to the little guy.
"Gosh,” muttied the boy, his face lighting up
like a Christmas tree
The man who nad told the girl tn give the little
guy the firecrackers slipped her 15 cents to pay
for them without the boy seeing him and went on
about his business
The boy straightened, clutched the packet in his
left hand while his other hand dug into a pocket of
his khaki shorts and came up with a penny. He
laid the coin on the counter, straightened his back
and skipped away
The little guy s penny had bought his independ-
ence on Independence Day.
Other little folk and their parents and friends
and cousins picnicked in backyards or the parks and
lasted until the broiling sun got the best of them
and drove them back into air-conditioned homes.
Not everybody did those things, though Some
persons just sat and rested and did nothing more
strenuous than walking to and from the table. Some
visited relatives and friends
One man was seen digging in his yard, obviously
planting something, while his wife stood by, arms
folded and demeanor saving. "You've put off this
little job long enough. Today, vou’re doing it.”
Another man said he'd just as soon have been at
his office.
"Here I got the holiday off and what am I doing?
Making like a taxi driver, that’s what,” he griped.
"One kid has to go to her friend’s house The boy
has to go to the pool Then the girl’s ready to come
back home and the boy phoned that he forgot his
money."
While that man put holiday miles on his car and
Like the other justices, Brennan ,
was sensitive to the criticism the —Electronic computers have a se-be made to do it while playing,
court suffered for a similar deci- night life. While mortals are it was a predecessor of Atlas
sion in a 1962 school prayer case asleep, the computers are hum- at Manchester University that was
But this did not deter him or them
and the criticism this year was
cnly a trickle compared with 1962,
Most justices have to sweat over
their writing, as Brennan did, at
least on major opinions. There
... >
2.
2,,2
Now Comes The Talking
With Workers Listening
Telephone 382-2551
Published every evening except Saturday an* on Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 last Hickory
Intered as second cassmait at toe post offce at-Denton, Fekes, 1
Jan. 13, 1921 according to Act ot Congress March 3, 1872.
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Homa Delivery on same day ot publication by city carrier or by motor
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States $1 50 per month $18 00 per vear. J
MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - The Associated Press is en-
titled exclusively to the use for publication of all local news printed I
in this newspaper as well as ell AP news dispatches
MEMBER AUDI BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneous reflection upon the character
reputation or (tending of any firm, individual or corporation will
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publisher* attention. The
publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, typographical errors
or any unintentionel error* that occur other than to orvect them in
the next issue after it is brought to their attention All advertising order*
ar. accepted on thia best only.
(1930-41) and Justice Louis. D. ematical problems. They can cal
Brandeis Hughes made endless culate the stresses on an aircraft's
drafts. Brandeis revised dozens of wings while it is still on the draw-
j times. mg board, solve economic prob-
, Brandeis had helped steer the lems such as the most economic
court away from rigid dependence way of distributing goods from a
on legal precedents in reaching number of plants, calculate
decisions Tn make them informed wages, produce life expectancy
decisions he urged "consideration tables for insurance firms, ana.
of the contemporary conditions, lyze surveys and predict election
social. Industrial. and political." results.
Swimming pools at both colleges It all adds up tn a body of ex- -
were filled with servicemen all perience that may pay dividends
day in possible future operations else-
June saw a total rainfall of where in the world if as I. S. offi-
Movement of this year's grain 2 40 inches in Denton County ac- cials expect, the Communists con-
centrate in years to come on sub-
Friends visiting? Have a
new grandchild' Death in the
family' Going on a trip?
That event may not sound
important to anyone else but
your friends are interested in
what you do And your friends
read the Record • Chronicle.
Why not cal the Record
for Town Topics. There's nev-
er a charge.
n be exceptions likeuusticemust be put to more practical the job.
S’JU'STZJ uses. The latest British computer, one ot its eftorts:
t j . l Alms, built by Ferranti and used Hon. .
piece over a weekend at home . .. 1 . . Hones dear Mv sympathetic
PK . . ,. by Manchester University, for in- . : . .. ,,
But for every Holmes there .2." ... em n‘ , affection beautifully attracts your
probably have been JO like Bren- stan ' an ou ° affectionate enthusiasm. You are
nan or. going back. like Chief " pns .0my loving adoration: my breath-
Electronic computers can cope less adoration My fellow feeling
an amazing range of math- breathlessly hopes for your dear
eagerness. My lovesick adoration
President Kennedy went to Cape Cod yesterday
afternoon to spend a few days with his family and,
no doubt to bring them up to date on his European
visit Although entitled to a little relaxation, it is
poped the President took with him to Cape Cod at
’east-one of the major problems w hich demands solu-
tion
That is the nationwide railroad strike which is
threatened fol next Thursday, but which cannot be
permitted to take place it is up to the President
and the Administration to move as speedily on this
n - "er as in other fields
Labor Secretary Wirtz said Inert has to be a "fac-
ing up bv the parties and the country to the settling
of this issue . . . -the strike) has got to be stopped if
there is any way of stopping it "
Voluntary arbitration, which has failed to peace-
fully resolve the squabble between the railroads
and five operating brotherhoods, is one possibility.
. Another is congressional legislation, which probably ,
offers the only solution.
But whatever is necessary should be undertaken
by the President. It is doubtful if his personal
magnetism or moral persuasion can work on the
! Or a peace is cold
And not every candle is pure
And every peace is still—" and
soon..
More recently the Stockholm
Central Bureau of Statistics set
a computer to work at night mak-
ing up new surnames for people
who want to change. It is part of
an upper floor of the court build- of separation of state and church, encourment sponamred sbemecb2
ing and1 covered shelyes and a the constitutions of Inia -Japan tion The computer produced
long table with all they could and the German Republic of 1922 nearly a million new names in a
__ gather from the Supreme Court James Madison s historic protest night
The word "hijackrtseif‘i Library, the Library of Congress against religion in Virginia One man who has done much
, and even university lew school school., the views of Patrick Hen- work in these special applications
libraries - ry and Thomas Jefferson, Amen- of computers » Dr D G Prinz,
The Brennan research included can history, studies of the Consti- 43 now employed bv Ferranti,
not only previous court decisions tution, studies of conflicting Uber Among other things he has put
but ranged over articles in law ties the Jewish Yearbook, an computer* to work solving chess
reviews statements and opinions Episcopalian and a Catholic maga- problems, composing and even
of previous justices, individualzine. playing music.
bean'* age-old reputation for pi-
racy. The word 'pirate' comes from
sible to Vietnamese government a book by Franz Kafka says the Greek pttriuti (i was popular
forces, except by helicopter the homely young secretary, m those days, too), bated on the
~ u , 'When I saw this fellow strug-
The boat is a rugged craft built , e
, Kling in the turf. So I swam nut
, locally from plastic styrofoam and and pulled him ashore, and when
home plate with the winning run
in the last of the ninth Guess LU
be a little slow in distributing the
mail for the next few weeks"
"When7! looked through my
binoculars I couldn't believe my
eye. " remarks the office bird
watcher "There were two giant
flabby-crested purple egrets The „ ,
Audubon Society says there n8 of of people for service on
haven't been any seen in this vi- American plantations.
"Blackmail" is derived from the
, .. .... n WAL BOYLK »— two * the babien after 2 y©
this week ^^f1nlv• 7b rars of velop a new gear for special pur- NEW YORK AP -Feu people ■ She plans to callI the third The importance of the issue
f have been moved through REPI RL*LA\ S E1E poses « carried on by the Ad- get much work done the day he- child Jammy’—on account of he an the deep conviction with
XFXT TF\ IS I OLE vanced Resear h .......... Ngency re ah day B ut on the day aft- arrived during this traffic jam - " on both sides are
The spirit of 76 asserted itseff ARPA) under the name Project er a holiday practically no.work
vesterday n general holiday at- JILT A. 1953 , at all is done in the average busi-
tire andthe Fourth can feel bv n pizn .Agile" ARPA has two research ness office
no means slighted with the lack DentonCuntyEepublicanswith and development team, in South- it is just a long eight-hour cf.
of . big general picnic in Denton wnii t 0) preeint organization, east Asia fee break as the sunburned, me-
at a meeting to be held at 7 The emphasis is on simplicity, quito-bitten survivor, gather
pm Thursday at the Hundley durability, ease of maintenance around and tell each other tall
Boat Works at Lake Dallas and adaptability to the terrain stories of what happened to them.
Seven Denton County Boy Scout. One development — .called g You. wouldn’t think it Possible
will be among the 50,000 from all swimmer support boat—is credit- so many st range thingscog dhaP.
, . . ,, , f pen to so small a group of people
th. Fourth of Juiv with . com- the nited States and 1 foreisn ed with opening up areas o the on a single holiday in a civilized
paratively quiet weekend in Den- countries Who Wi gather at the watery Mekong River delta that country
ten one nf the most exciting Irvine Ranch in California for the formerly were virtually inacces- 'j was just lying there reading
crop over the Denton division of cording to the monthly record re-
the TAP is very slow for this port from the State Experiment version in efforts to bring down
season although threshing is ex- Station The June total was .74 pro-Western governments.
N
Whit could be one of the most productive meet-
ings in Denton’s recent history will take place next
Thursday when leaders of various segments sit
down to discus* the city’s industrial future
Sponsored by the Denton Chamber of Commerce,
the meeting will afford an exchange of idea* and
suggestions from bustness, industrial, educational
and civic leaders of the community.
But. the meetii.g. also will be open to the public
and average citizens should attend to be indoctrin-
ated on the thinsing of Denton f leader* about the
city’s industrial future and to voice their own opin-
ions
Fortunately, the discussion at Municipal Audi-
torium — scheduled to last from 1 to 5 p.m.—will
be operated along the lines of the once popular Town
Meeting wherein persons at the grassroot*’ level
are welcomed and encouraged to participate
The thoughts of one person expressed only to him-
self go unheard, but uttered to others can have
the same spreading power of many candles burning
together.
. /
, . FJ
2,/
Viet Nam i. proving to be a valu-
able laboratory for combat-test- Tehicie
:ing new f.S. idea, in special L u u _ . ...
Ruina said it represent. a The Board of Education
neat technological compromise be- the City Council are to be
the principle, of a propel- gratulated and admired for open-
, j l ler the principle, ofa wheeled ing the schools and the other city
workout- undershooting-war con- vehicle and the principle, of a facilities without pressure.
ditions — new tactics and tech-boati" -
",ey
cherishes your avid ardor. Yours
wistfully. M.U.C."
M.U.C., the signature, • stands
for Manchester University Com-
puter. "
A German computer composed
a Christmas poem: A
। "The snow is cold
And every peace is deep . I
And no Christmas tree is
Or ever candle white ' -
thorny railroad problem.
At stake is the railroads’ intention to institute
new work rules which over the long haul would
eliminate thousands of jobs The railroads claim
the present "featherbedding” regulations are out-
dated and cost them $600 million a year in unneces-
By RAYMOND E. PALMER learn more about what the ma
fiberglass. ARPA officials de- I bent down to give him mouth-
The Record-hronicle welcome' letters from Its scribe it as a high .peed un- to-mouth resuscitation he reached
WASHINGTON (AP) - Su-
preme Court Justice William J
'Brennan Jr. writes in longhand
and then scrub, what he writes,
even if it takes months, as it did
in his recent opinion on the school j
prayer case.
I In' an interview Brennan 57.
gave a rare insight into a justice
at work behind the doors of the
court's marble palace
The effort he put into this one
opinion, which he didn't have to
l write, illustrates the vitality of
i the present court and the dedica-
I tion of a justice to his job
11 On this opinion alone he re-
searched and wrote, when he
could, for over three months to
produce 77 pages with more than
410 footnotes and references rang-
ing over history, th. philosophy of
separation of church and state,
and much besides
j He worked in his office week
days with his two law clerks, do
ing everything in longhand be-
cause he is no good at dictation
and at home at night, writing on
an old card table, or on Sunday1
at his office with his clerks
Brennan added his final touch
on June 16, the day before the
court gave its decision prohibiting
Bible reading and recital of the
Lord's Prayer as required ex-
ercises in public schools.
On that last day he inserted ‘ es-
sentially” in an important sen-’
tence. He found it in a book of
synonyms which he keeps beside
his desk and uses constantly in'
search of the exact word
He said of his writing and re-
writing. ''I always try to say what
I have to say in words that can
be understood This take, an aw
ful lot of scrubbing " .
Meanwhile he had to do all his
other work: examining cases. r»-
searching them, hearing lawyers'
arguments on them, deciding
them, and writing opinions on
Ry FRED A HOFFMAN
WASHINGTON AP - South
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 286, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1963, newspaper, July 5, 1963; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517637/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.