Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, August 30, 1963 Page: 4 of 13
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I
’ I
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE : :
PACE FOUR
FRIDAY, AVGUST 30, 1963
How About
((
EDITORIALS
8
A
$
A
33
)
4
J
Their rights have been violated
By JAMES MARLOW
ever since.
Associated Press News Analyst
told both the crowd and the
continues to be frustrated.
a
4
»
7
profits by stockholders,
many a
2%
lonely
A
2V
NW,,
5
1
Va
V
th
2 J
F
Several State Workers
Nearing Retirement Age
Here are a few tips
make the boss
feel they realize he is important
a girl
By EUGENE GILBERT
1 Two teeners.
have done last week With no boss
around
should be finished by noon —
in
making over $100
were
a
find jobs agree with this remark
YESTERYEAR
Denton
Telephone 382-2551
of
1 and Oct 8
st ruction.
7
*+7
/j
C
2,37
L
cevenience to the people of the
€
Alex Dickie Jr , former Denton AP news dispatches
5520
no more than a fifth of the per-
would be welcome to attend.
roneous reflection upon the charac
C=>
>
deh)l 'Do you understand?"
\h
$
0319
Ominous Warning
Is Sounded By
Negro Marchers
fulfilled. One "fourth felt the sum-
mer fell short of their expecta-.
"I had a fabulous experience I
at the University of California in I
summer school," says Jennifer I
Bron, 16. of Santa Clara, Calif. I
"I was independent, on my own. I
and gained a lot of new knowl- I
ment it has been reckoned that
the increase in their annuity will
amount to 5 per cent by a change
up and say my party is the party pened to be a necessary tech-
of principle'? The party of Ken- nique of resistance to the British
nedy is also the party of East- when the British had superior
resident who operates ranching in- ’
terests near Krum He said am
farmer or stockman interested
schedule, five of them out of town
and three on the home field. Only
two open weekends are now slat
ed from the date the season begins
Sept. 17 through the closing Nov.
since I have been working, and it
has given me a more responsible
attitude toward life."
wealth of young men.
Many of the lucky ones who did
1
1
\
M\
“FOu
Labor’s Holiday
Then And Now
I
shortages the post office at Denton, Texas. I
• on -----to Act of
; in the formula to raise the value
of each of the first 10 years of
service from 34 per cent to 1 per
cent per year. Accordingly per-
edge/'
’ All in all, more than half the .
] teen - agers feel their hopes and I
ambitions for vacation time were 9
on how any j
E-ANGUAGES
Ein the NEWS
“e By Charles F. Bovlitz
•nd Rober Strumpen-Derie
will receive larger benefits than
under the prior law.
NOT MANDATORY
The amended law requires that
In this country racial violence
was increasing until the time for
MEMBER audit bureau of
CIRCULATIONS
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any er
(pohr fah-VOHR, kohn-TEHS-teh
SOH-loh kohn see oh noh) "Please
system when they reach 60, if they elect
Legislation to put the broaden- to come into the system, and if
publication by city carrier or by
I motor route 40 cents per week.
BASIC SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Single Copies: Evening 5 cents
bunday 15 cents.
feeling against the city to con- Creek on Bolivar was under con-
tinue enforcement of the law He
Home Delivery on same day of retiring after Sept. 1 of this year
land The party of Javits is also power. When the Indians got their
the party of Goldwater Where is independence thousands of Hindus
‘contained some items whose purposes rightly seem-
ed extraneous to Free World security—-aid to coun-
-tries trading with Cuba, and a steel mill for India—
’•and these were eliminated
BUT A LARGE AND GROWING segment of the
■public is becoming convinced that a program that
shows so few concrete results is itself extraneous
I sons newly made eligible. It is
required that elected officials in-
cluding legislators shall have as
much as eight veers of tenure
to be eligible to receive benefits.
Less than 20 members of the pres-
answer only with 'Yes' or 'No'.'
(Watch tomorrow's column for
these expressions in Russian.
has had no such successes since then.
The approach by Congress is to try to separate
the obviously extraneous while going along on what
Cot XCIL LIUS
PARKING RAN
AUG. 29, 1923
Suspension of enforcement
lions, and the other one - fourty
couldn’t decide
To get simple replies to your
questions, a good trick phrase is:
To the great and growing num-
ber of travelers who will visit Spain
and Latin America thia year, and
who may find themselves out of
their depth in certain situations, we
are offering the following phrases,
to help them out of linguistic tight
spots In villages and countryside
off the beaten track:
No ro m p ren do (noh kohm-
PREHN-doh). *1 don't under-
stand."
dHabla nsted mngls?(AH-blah
oo-STEHD een-GLEHS) "Do you
"hEAmona.KLiatmtesa, „ Jobless Teeners Hardest
held to be eligible for member-]
H9
-aid several physicians had been
sent to the city hall for parking PRIC.E SI PPORT
5
220
5
office staff can
Because of labor s.g-, , - a
street repairs have been halted congres, Marc 30872.
while the bridge crossing Denton %
ment of $162 into the system. That five years until he is 60 and col-
sum represents the 5 per cent of led $160 on the basis of $10 a
TEEN AGE
UNEMPLOYMENT -
HEAPQUARTERS A
JOBS WNTEGe-
-PL-L EEEZE
Y J
WASHINGTON (API—The disci- King, lest white people assume
pline and tranquility of Wednes- that because the Negro has en-
day's civil rights demonstration dured this until now he is a per-
will not be the permanent condi- manent patsy and Wednesday’s
tion of the American Negro if he peaceful demonstration proved it.
1:. •
2,,z
town who needed a place where
baggage could be kept.
company president has
%esaks
ft
Z
Labor Dav
For Boss?
to bother them, they
thp 20-minute parking rule in front
of the stores on the court square
was authorized at Tuesday after-
noons session of the City Com-
mission when Mayor Hennen in-
formed the Commission of the ob-
jeetions to enforcing it He told
them that many farmers were
being sent to the city hall and
that it was going to cause an ill
ly draws upon the time and
(age,
kl.* *
19 The open week-ends are Oct
road commissioners < three1
For those already in retire-
For instance. a youth of Balti-
more. says all states should set'
up special employment depart-
ments in the state employment1
divisions, as is done in Californ-
ia.
A Cleveland Heights. Ohio girl
thinks there should be an appren-
tice system where teen - agers
could acquire jobs after paying a
small fee, so they can learn skills.
HOW THEY WERE PAID
"Lower the age limit on jobs”
says a 19-year-old of Salisbury,
N.C. And her statement echoes
that of many other students.
•As a result. the final figures, when approved by both
House and Senate, may be the lowest in several
’years.
‘ It can hardly be otherwise, when the clarions have
been sounded so often, in such Sweeping terms, about
"Free World security while the Free World is little
;more secure than it ever was —National Observer.
found by 28 per cent of the cent
week.
seems important The bill as it reached the House
25 1 79 1/
•7
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 R cord - Chronicle.
Why not call t he Record-
for Town Topics There's nev-
er a charge.
o'er. everybody sit in a circle on,.. c.
the floor While the boss tells how ed state officiaksi including mem-
much he missed the good old davs bers. of the legislature, become
when he worked 64 hours a week eligible for membership in the
for the firm for $3 50 retirement system with resulting
it is now 10 50 am. It is time benefits if they reach 60, years
to hand the boss his golf clubs, and ave been employe v t e ship in the system: Wardlaw
thump him fondly between the state for 10 yeors of creditable Lane, Center; Jep s Fuller, Port
Arthur; Huber t R Hudson, j
RATES GOING UP p,pcwiyy,. n. v 1, Willie .rt । • - .
Mong with the increased benefits 5 • ,k i j c . t i easy „ , found bv setting up two shifts cent of the boys will put their mon-
Aonewnn me mcreasedpenents Worth; Jarrard Secrest, Temple; Well, not quite, for many of J
will Vn an inerahco in fka mam. c. . . .. n .
speak English?"*
_ . Soy norteamericarto (soy
number of new members of the NOHR-teh-ah meh ree-KAH-noh).
retirement system will number "I'm (North) American." (None-
more than a third and probably I americana(NOHR-teh-ah meh ree-
- ----- h— - eet --------- KAH-nah), if you are a woman.)
tQuifn habla ingles aqull
(k’yehn AH-blah een-GLEHS ah-
KEE) "Who speaks English here?*
eComprendeP(kohm-P REHN-
Of those who didn't work, about
VAIIH pHIHNnG one ' fifth attended summer school
‘ and half just vacationed.
ent House of Representatives questions, a good tnex poruc is.
have served the four terms that Porfavorcontestesvoconsoona
would make them eligible to re- |
ceive retirement benefits Eleven’
WHEN PRESIDENT Grover Cleveland made Lab-
or Day a national holiday in 1849. most American
laborers took their vacation from a plow or a carpen-
ter's bench Today, they are more likely to leave
a machine, a computer or an assembly line.
The average working man in 1963 takes home an
annual pay check of $2,000 plus for a 40-hour week;
his counterpart in 1850 erned $405 for a 70-hour
week
JOBS AVAII.ABLE today were not even heard
of in the early part of this 20th Century and they
may have disappeared from the nation’s job descrip-
tion list again within the next 50 years—replaced
by automation, modernization and new kinds of
endeavor
Because that is true, the education a worker must
have to equip himself for work is vastly different
from that which would see him through a lifetime in
1900 As a result, educational programs face new
responsibilities
FIFTH YEARS AGO, more than 30 per cent of
all workers were on farms compared with fewer than
10 percent today During the same time, clerical
occupations increased from 5 to almost 15 per cent.
* Technical and semi-professional jobs requiring
one to two years of post secondary education make
zup the fastest growing category in the labor force
4n the last decade over two million new jobs were
■created in that field for a growth of 40 per cent
A RECENT STUDY shows that nearly 600,000
technicians were emploved in industry in 1959. It
5s anticipated that more than 800,000 additional tech-
nicians, canable of workin*1 with engineers and scien-
lists. will be needed bv 1975
Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz supported these
figures with more facts about college training when
lie declared "Graduates of rapidly growing colleges,
technical institutes seeking to enter the labor mar-
ket are generally finding good employment
The very thing that is happening todav was un-
heard of yesterday, and tomorrow will brirrg still
further requirements in a rapidly changing world
mmsssfite-. 32235-2- •-1
LOOKOUT/ HE'S GETTING ALL PUFFESUp.»
should be done to make more of the girls and one - fifth of the Leonard Vandlith, 18, of Hart-
jobs available to high school boys are banking part of their ford. Conn.: "Jam more mature
A whopping 83 per cent of the] What do the teen-agers plan to . ...______- -
teen - agers think s o m e t h i n g do with this money? One-fourth on the benefits of working, by
to the firm's endeavor, and that By HARRY BENGE CROZIER expired last Jan. 8 may qualify 16 years in the Legislature, could
beneath his gruff exterior there Record-Chronicie Austin Bureau for retirement benefits by pay- pay up his $169, and then wait
beats an honest heart: _■
wi ...» »u n . AUSTIN — There will be good
First, put gin in the office water . he __ Seb i . ,____ , _ _ _____
cooler to help generate a friend- e"s in 5 ma 5 come PePt their monthly salary for the eight month for each year of service. ■ „ . - . ..
ly. relaxed atmosphere for a number of old workhorses months of 1963 prior to Sept 1 Fnrmpr 1 w in . . 1 our party?" A and Moslems slaughtered one an-
w. Ii ....... । PE . : in state government who have . „ , K. P.i Former Sen Weinert, who like It. is now 95 years and one other.
Wrap huntin F n gay, been turned nut to pasture be-and s2 for membership in the Willis was gone from the Legisla- month since adoption of the 14th
•........ .1 , cause of the relentless turn of the .1..■ ture and has nothing to do with Amendment made the Negroes
per Cent ody cut a olunta 'da calendar that has brought them ", ons itu ion T'l'L a passage of the law covering leg- citizens beyond question and guar- Wednesday's civil rights march
InM that he sta^M retirement. For on that date mem herso thek 0 Se Q fRepre islators, will be eligible to receive anteed them protection from any drew near Then the violence dis.
in. j. * Endt nr Stand at the head . , _ . _ sentatiVes arc eiccted for two gge , a „Agil 4,, Lg, oc. I,,., 1 .- , ,
of the line during both the first a revision 0fthe Employes Re- years from the date of the pen- 8263.33 ’ month ior his 26 years violation of their rights
and second morning coffee tirement Act becomes effective eral election”. but senators are and four months service zens.
breaks J** increased retirment bene, elected "for a term of four years"
, “ ".." 6" And on that M an g " Summer’s Blues Attack
ginning of a biennial session of the
as citi- appeared as if to let the march
dominate the scene. It s over now.
(v“
ter reputation or standing of any
The 1953 gridmen at NTSC take firm, individual or corporation will
their first step on a tough 13-week qladly be corrected upon being
journey Tuesday morning when called to the publishers attention
.i . . . . . The publishers are not responsible
an overall squad of between 47 for copy omissions, typographical
and 50 men report for fall train-, errors or any unintentional errors
ing camp Twenty three letter- I that occur other than to correct
men will be on deck. them in the next issue after it is
Odus Mitchell, wh will be start , brouohtto their atention. All
ing his eighth year as head mas Sd h4„, on members of the present Senate
ter of fontball nt - NTSC, plans could qualify for benefits.
three weeks of tall camp. I ’ 1 Six senators whose membership
over the limit when they were, T() BE T 41 KPI)
attending tn emergency cases He
sad he did not think removing AUG, M, IBM
of the parking limit would be Preliminary steps will be tak- Home delivery by mail (must be
injurious in the business interests en toward forming an organize- paid in advance) penton and ad
and stated that the law in his tion of Denton County farmers oining counties $123 per month the new prospective beneficiaries
nrinin is 15 v< ars ahead of and ranchers who are in favor of 212.00 per. year elsewhere in the shall •'elect” to become a mem-
opinion is 13 years anead oi United States $1 50 per month . . 1 1
the town continued farm price supports and {jgoo per year ber or elect 1101 10 become a
Commissioner Curtis said that a "floor" under beef prices 2 , member as of Jan. 1, 1963 before
the rule is an inconvenience to Wednesday at 6 p.m in the Den- ,pMEMBER-.OFA TE. ASspciArE Oct. 1, 1964 and file their notice
the jitneys and that they were s ton City Hall auditorium. . entirledexclusively’totheusetorof so electing with the Retirement
Announcement of the public publication of all local news printed System board of trustees
meeting was made yesterday by in this newspaper as well at all it is not anticipated that the
i/j 2
U2
84
1 E42.5
k P8e
l Es;b
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : t 2
Keeping Secure
With Foreign Aid
FOREIGN AID in fighting made news in the House
of Representatives last week, as once again the Ad-
ministration said its requests for money could not be
cut without crippling Free World security.
It said the same thing before the House Foreign
Affairs Committee trimmed the original proposal
by $850 million to about $4.1 billion. It will be said
again this week, now that the House has cut the
figure to around $3 5 billion The same thing,
in the same sweeping terms, is always said when
foreign aid comes up.
THE TROUBLE IS. "foreign aid” has been so
vast, so sprawling, and so interminable that almost
anything said about it is both true and untrue.
"‘ Foreign aid” helped save the sophisticated peoples
and economies of Western Europe under the Mar-
shall plan, no doubt about it But "foreign aid"
Commissioner Gray argued in
favor of the parking limit law
and said that when automobiles
were parked in front of n store
al day, the store lost business.
RROXCO GRID
S/HRDILE
AUG. 29, 1943
With preparations underway to
open the Denton Senior High
School Bronco gridiron training
cimp Wednesday the tentative
schedule of games for the season
was announced Monday.
Eight games are an the Bronco
ed program into effect got clog- they pay the 5 per cent of their
ged in the machinery of the 57th $400 a month salary into the
1 Legislature but came through system until they leave legislative
REoRy-CRoNiIE last May in the 58th Legislatureservices. No further payments
J ' without opposition. Along with 181 would be required after they leave
members of the legislature these the Leislature, but they would
other officials are now eligible have to wait until they reach 60 to
for membership in the system: begin collecting benefits.
Published every evening except governor, lieutenant governor, it For example, former Sen Doyle
Saturday and on Sunday morning torney general, treasurer, comp- Willis of Fort Worth, who served
Y (roller, land commissioner. com —------_ —-— ——
Although curtailment of mater DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY missioner of agriculture and rail- m
ials prevents the building of new ......... ‘
streets, general street repair is 314 Eatt Hickory
underway in Denton. Entered «» second class mail at
students. And they have some ---------------------
suggestions that experts studying
this nationwide problem might „,,,m nm wrir,
consider KEEP VP W IT H
wondered whether his split-level
' yacht was worth the price of it
all.
This is particularly true since
the government has begun even
to question his right to use the
yacht except when he can prove
he is employing it for the sole
purpose of fishing for more com-
pany business.
If the idea of a national day to
celebrate the role of management
in the economy catches on, many
will be puzzled just how to ob-
sery * it.
What is the best way to honor
the boss? I
Well, since the worker abstains
from work on Labor Day, it would
appear that management should
be allowed to refrain from man-
aging on national management
day.
<3
Me,-
By HAL ROYLE
i NEW YORK 'AP—6ome one
has made the suggestion that,
since we have a national holiday
for labor, we should have a na-
tional holiday for management,
too.
Sounds fair enough, doesn't it?
If we have a national hot dog
month, a national week in which
to ponder the juicy virtues of the
dill pickle, certainly we can all
pause in our tasks long enough
to celebrate a national honor the
boss day.
Bosses could use a little moral
encouragement, some heartfelt
appreciation, an annual pat on the
back.
The employer class has been
taking it on the chin for some
time now Caught between the de-
mands for increased pay by un-
ions. and demands for increased
As they marched and stood in nation.
the sun for hours the massive "Those who hope the Negro
quietude of perhaps 180.000 Ne- needed to blow off steam and will
groes was amazing, when it is now be content will have a rude
remembered how much in Amer- awakending if the nation returns
can life has been denied them, to business as usual.
But this performance was fur : REVOLT TO CONTINUE
one day only. . “There will be neither rest nor
The warning of brief quietude, tranquility in America until the
if white Americans continue to is’granted his citizenship
deprive Negroes of equal treat- The whirlwinds of revot
ment, came from one Negro will continue to shake ‘he founda.
who above all has preached non- tons of our nation until the bright
volent resistance. Rev. Martin day of justice emerges.”
Lut e King r He could not have given a clear-
5 sa .c eppue er warning of turmoil unless the
K) , 5AKi, I wrongs are righted. Not all Ne-
it would be fatal for the nation have accepted Ki
to overlook the urgency of he « of nonviolent resistance to
moment and to underestimate the Iitic. . .vi
determination of the Negro " “niusty hare shown they y
All but one of the speakers in some’of their violent outbursts
this gigantic petition for redresssince he first began to use non.
of grievances" talked with re- violent resistance, and success-
stramt about the desire for equalfully, with his peaceful boycott of
justice and theNegroes hope that the Montomery, Ala., buses in
Congress will help them get it 1955-56
The exception was John Lewis,
the militant head of the Student SEEK JUSTICE
Non-violent Coordinating Commit- Only a comparative few at any
tee time have accepted this philoso-
He revealed the bitter im- phy from a leader. To believe it
patience just below the surface in requires complete conviction it is
himself and others with these the only right means, to seek
words . just ice
“This nation is still a place of Millions of Indians practiced
cheap political leaders who build nonviolent resistance ynder the
their careers on immoral compro- guidance of Mohandas Gandhi
mise and ally themselves witn without believing it, as their later
open forms of political, economic violence showed. But even Gandht
land social exploitation. himself hadn't always practiced
RIGHTS VIOLATED it
' "What political leader can stand in India in his time it just hap-
‘ shoulder blades and tell him,
take the rest of the day off.
chief Happy putting.” nvp wumuuuuunwortn: jarrarad secrest, lempie: Well, not quite. lor manv oil \ , .. ’ - •
Then all the employes tush to will go an increase in the con- Crawford Martin, Hillsboro; R A, the nation's teen-agers, at better wages to accommodate ey toward school and college,
their desks and work like beaver- tnbution rate Jor those persons Weinert. Seguin; Robert W Bak- Nearly half of the thousand more student "o ers WORK DID THEM GOOD
doung all the they tbepttteenromersmdoustongoniy-lansnaFwln K andboys answeringttheasdgtootbeeannngBtopeen"tn, Butnor all the youngsters are
theit nd alary. Preparation for the ert had served' long enough tptestnn find jobs, although X and so a week this summer. The takinarweirrmaneyroueogucircula
expanded retirement system be- be entitled to receive retirement C" "i I ,L.d 2im" 2.0 . next largest group earned from .... .
---------- ;■ ’ ean with a .hUu ku th ... empem • .Eee remmven jper cent of them claim they , ... l nearly one-fifth of the boys plan
time to go out and join him en gan with a study by the Texas pay and only Weinert has reach- ob hunting $10 to 525 a week, !n 0 „„ citl.e huvinc ere.
masse on the 8th tee Research league and subsequent ed the required 60 ears of age - n 1 8 , ■ som 13 ner cent were in the 10 80 0 othes. uying sprees
ma on me am "e dontion uv 25 Ut.e i. , me.remuied. Ve, oi 85 Regular j o h s occupied 16 per some 13 per cent were in tne spend monev buying or fixing up
National honor the boss day? adopt ionsby the,; for retirement though Lane lacks cent of the g i r l s and 35 pers51-$71 bracket, 7 per cent receiv- cars _ the magnet that perenia-
It s a grand idea. Why hasn t any- ember 1938 of a constitutional only a year of attaining the nec- cent of the Part time work ed $75-$100 a week, and 2 per
body thought of it before? What's amendment to permit elective of- essary age. was ' _ -
— good for the boss can be even ficersaincluding,members of the More representatives already in girs and 33 cent of the boys.
_ better for the bossed. : legislature to participate in the office will be eligible to retire 6 K ‛
and boy. Learnings, and 11 per cent say
pooou" ubana wm"indroma,.Sumpmertlime. and tme isAntwirom "nrtgrdecfiumn zt
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 61, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, August 30, 1963, newspaper, August 30, 1963; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517685/m1/4/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.