Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 202, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1965 Page: 4 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1965
PAGE 4 : : : : EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : : THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE : : :
1
If lt'» Any Comfort, Lyndon -
7)
/
I
By JAMES MARLOW
turerers that lend themselves
-8
the able plastic formulations for field castings went into produc-
models
However,
u.
$*
4
'I
Business Mirror
line in the steel mills, the tough —
(
Yesteryear
ed downfall, because like all of
gin playing a small part in the
General de Gaulle has been wide-
or
interfere with the reasonable
use
write job in a House State Af-
. , Six Air Force ROTC
cadets left North Texas to at-
the Arnold Air Society in Wash-
j
V
l
i
/
i
i
I
I
I
A
L 9
B
\
Even the much publicized and
troublesome rate of joblessness
special program at the school
to aid the school lunch program
fairs subcommittee composed
of Reps Terry Townsend of
Brady. Don Garrison of Houston
and Jake Johnson of San An-
tonio. Johnson declined to sign
the subcommittee report, and
the bill was reported to the
House of Representatives with
a recommendation that it pass.
The bill was originally pre-
pared by the State Health De-
partment to set up a method
of controlling air pollution, with
the use of federal aid Going
through copies of the original
diers of Napoleon's Grande Annie
when they could not get a Russian
peasant or prisoner to ting local
Russian songs for their amusement.
Dowanne Huggins
NTSU Lab School
Thank You
self as a new state agency.
Instead of representatives
from industry, labor, agricul-
by the Cossacks, a new word came
Into French — the well known bistro.
Butro meant 'quick* in Ruttian,
and Paris restaurateurs, not averse
to making a few francs during the
occupation, would entice the Rus-
sians into their zestau rants with
and complicated problems be-
setting the international mone-
tary framework and the re-
serves of U.S. gold.
hw is one of 25 letters re-
ceived from that class con-
cerning the tour.
have improved, but it didn’t get
much worse. Hopes for a settle-
ment of steel labor negotiations
were voiced in some quarters,
despite the union's stiff de-
mands and management s reac-
, tion.
) President Johnson’s plan to,
THE
WORLD
TODAY
I
(
I
1
•I
I
^.LANGUAGES
S in the NEWS
“e By Charlos F. Barlilt
end labart Strumpen-Davrie
GOVERNOR SIGNS
BILL FOR CA.A.
APRIL 5. 1925
The Russian word shval means
’a good-for-nothing,' and is trace-
able to the French cheva,, "horse."
Another Russian word for "no-
cooperate in a paper drive to ly quoted in the French press as
be taken at each home., , . saying that the Russians, too, be-
The play "Mr Pim Passes By" long to Europe and may someday
opened in the North Texas become part of a European sys-
in the city election Tuesday, voters are not con-
fronted by controversy. The same situation, gen-
erally speaking, existed in last Saturday’s school
board election.
Once again, the public should be reminded that
it is a genuine privilege to be able to vote in this
country. Ours is one of the few nations of the world
where men and women are free to vote without
dictation or fear We should show our gratitude by
casting our ballots in every election, regardless of
whether our emotions are unusually stirred.
OTHER OFFICES: Capitol Press Room, Austin, GR 3 1686; 116 S. State
Decatur, 62/ 3112; 209 Hutfines Shopping Centet, Kewisville, Ft 9 2223 C
Entered as second class mal at the post office at Denton, lexas, tend the national conclave of
which ‘ materially injure or nor approves.
Instead of being empowered
, heavy frost descended on Den-
ton in a belated cold spell. ...
All the residents of Denton were
; urged by mayor Lee Preston to
of animal or plant life or to make rules to prevent air pol-
lution anywhere in Texas, the
THE
READERS
WRITE
famous families, was to speak tiges of the first invasion, under
at TSCW (now TWU) about Napoleon I, in both French and
Russian.
Jan. 13, 1921 according to Act of Congress, March 3, 18/2.
BASIC SUBSCRIFTION RATU
Single Copies: Evening 5 cents, Sunday 15 cents.
Home delivery on same day of publication by city carrier or by motor
route 40 cents per week.
Home delivery by mall (must be paid In advance) Denton and adiqininn
counties $1.25 per month, $12 per year, elsewhere in the Uni’ed Statet
$ 1 50 per month, $18 per year.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIAIED PRESS - The Associated Pres’ is en
titled exclusively to use for publication of all local news printed in
thi newspaperas well as all AF news d '.patches.
.. .8 ... . .....
other month in its history. Steel town paper, since being station-
war effort against Japan. . . .
, Nazi radio stations announced
•that Russian forces had fought
their way into “greater Vienna”
and were hoping to encircle the
city
Denton Record-Chronicle
Telephene 387.381 1. Area Cede 811
Published every evening except Saturday and en Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
MAKING ADDRESS
Boi 369, Denton, Texas 76202
Report From Austin
After Committee is Through With Rill, You Cant Recognise It
p Where the original pul the board would be prohibited from
whole operation under the making rules respecting air
State Board of Health as a di- conditions inside of commercial
Homegrown Industries-3
Fast Sailboat On The Dry High Plains
-JUT THINK WHAT
THEY'D Be GAVIN6
IF I WERE THE ONE
MAKING THO<E
SAME
section has been added. Any
employe of the board who di-
vulges confidential information
filed by any firm would be sub-
ject to fines from $200 to $5,000,
end from 2 to 10 years in the
penitentiary.
The needs for the legislation
is due to the fact that strong
pending federal legislation is ex-
pected to be warded off if the
states undertake to regulate air
pollution.
This results in lobbyists for
the industries to be subjected
to regulation working for pas-
sage of a law to regulate them,
but to tailor it, quite naturally,
so it will be as little trouble as
possible.
vision of the State Health De- and industrial plants. Operators of cattle feed lots
partment with an advisory instead of having appeals will be pleased to know that
board the new version places from board decisions vested in the new version struck out the
it under a new board all by it- Travis County, where most at- original proposal that odor was
tacks on state agency orders one of the things the new agen-
are filed, jurisdiction would be cy would be allowed to control,
in the home county of the per- Hay fever sufferers will be
A'gemnes
53/ £A5/A
and the revised version, these ment
changes are interesting. i Instead of a majority vote, it
Instead of declaring to be bad would take six of the nine votes
dust, fumes, gas, mist, smoke to take action.
or vapor which "are injurious Instead of being empowered
to human, plant or animal to accept grant from the U.S.,
health and life" and which un- cities, private sources, cities
reasonably interfere with the and counties and other state
enjoyment of life and proper- agencies to carry on its work,
ty. the bill now says that such the board could get money on-
things can be controlled only ly from other state agencies
if they “appreciably injure hu- with responsibility for air con-
man life beyond inconvenience" trol, and only that if the gover-
Or the caution has been
traced to reservations that since
at present the economy is so
good it can't get much better.
Some of the problems have
quieted down in recent days
The Viet Nam situation may not
son or firm making th attack, unhappy to know that the re-
Instead of fines from $50 to vision struck out pollen as one
$1,000 and up to a year in coun- of the things for the agency to
ty jail for polluting the air in control.
violation of board orders, the But at any rate, HB 362. in
new bill limits it to a civil pro- its new clothing, is on the House
ceeding and a $50 per day civil calendar for action What hap-
penalty pens now to the proposal will
But a new criminal penalty' be interesting to watch.
ture, engineering, medicine, cit-
ies and three citizens, the new
board would include represen-
tatives from engineering, indug
trial management, industrial
medicine, cities, two citizens
and the neads of the Animal
iHealth and Industrial Commis-
Isions and the Health Depart-
5 aV°R,
*2
mtgr
RARi6-5
N_36e3ssdFE
Associated Press News Analyst particularly well to small be- ment _____, ________ ______ ..
wAsureI ,n, c . ginnings. Another industry that with good thermal insulating when he decided to put his long economy of East Texas, is the
i> th* yH-N ; Spring an also be carried on success-1 properties. Polly-Craft designed experience in the plastics indus- Marshall Car Wheel and Foun-
45, 6, gue me in Washing- fully in a small shop is plastics a unit with a sealed air pocket । try to use. The line of "Royal dry Co., Inc. Established in the
wonetauDHiyrDusy period when fabrication. to minimize heat transfer. Garden Foliage” fabricated by 1870’s, the company originally
. , -aqong and ttie ,s fin- A fast sailboat might seem Since then the small firm has Barrier includes an astonish- produced castings for the saw-
Dut ,* springs havethe last thing needed on the expanded to other specialized ingly convincing jungle of rub- mills of the East Texas timber
u dry High Plains of Texas, but fiberglass products, including ber plants, philodendron, fems, belt. Later, as Marshall grew as
io begin with, President John- a developmental model of a fi-' hydroponic tanks for "chemical fiddleleaf figs, and other orna- a railroad town, railroad brake
son has four big proposals pend- berglass-in-plastic sailboat, re- farming" mentals with vinyl leaves set in shoes and other cast metal pro-
ng in Congiear medical care cently tested, is one product of Other major Texas boat build- rough textured stems and ar- ducts for the Texas and Pacific
.10 the aged, federal aid to ed- Polly-Craft Designers and Man-ing firms, of course, use some ranged and potted in small system were added to the pro-
ucaton, a voting bill to make ufacturers, a small Levelland of the same plastic molding buckets of plaster. More prosaic duct line. With the coming of
sure Negroes can go to the I firm. The company was found- techniques for regular produc- Barrier products include spray- the East Texas oil boom, oil-
polls, and some measure to curb ed to put in production a light- tion models However, t ri__L _______hl * "1 t * —- -- J
the Ku Klux Klan. | weight canoe capable of nego- state's four largest boat build- corrosion protection of steel tion at the Marshall plant. Two
But more vggue than anything! tiating the rapids of mountain H J____ -____ 2_. .. _____r_*, " “
is the unfinished business in streams. At that time, fiber- Texas and Triumph — all are chloride resin mixtures
By STUART LONG
Austin Bureau
AUSTIN - Watching the way
a proposed law can be chang-
ed as it goes through the leg-
islative process is a fascinating
thing.
Sometimes a fairy prince
can be turned into an ugly
duckling its parents would nev-
er recognize.
Such is the turnabout which
happened to House Bill 362 by
Rep. Don Cavness of Austin,
which started out to be a bill
to give the State Health Depart-
ment authority to undertake the
job of keeping the air above
Paper Tour
EDITOR'S NOTE - Re-
cently the sixth grade class
from NTSU Laboratory
School toured the Record-
Editorials
Spread The D ord
Denton residents, starting this month, are receiv-
ing their utility statements in a new form. Each
statement will contain an interesting fact that is
unique to Dynamic Denton. Citizens are urged
to keep these facts at their fingertips and use them
to help "spread the word about their city. Each
piece points out that active and enthusiastic sup-
port by the residents of Denton will multiply the
effect of the planned program to make Denton an
even finer place to live.
John Thomas, chairman of the study group co-
ordinating the program, said, “Denton has a great
story to tell and we feel that our best ambassadors
to the ‘outside world' are our own citizens. There-
fore. the first phase of our program is designed to
recruit the support of .the people as a whole and
arm them with all the unique facts that make Den-
ton the most unusual city of 32000 in the nation "
The Dynamic Denton program, which is a joint
effort of the Chamber of Commerce and the City of
Denton, is designed to thoughtfully guide the growth
of the community, rather than leave its future pure-
ly to chance The program is being paid for by
the Denton Municipal Utilities System, which is pub-
licly owned by all the citizens of Denton
Cracking The Crime Barrier
The appointment of a presidential commission to
make an intensive study of crime is-reassuring, as
is the proposal that the attorney general be au-
thorized to make grants to establish or enlarge
programs and facilities to provide professional train-
ing for state and local law enforcement personnel.
There is greater need than ever before (the FBI re-
ported an increase of 13 per cent in serious crime
in 1964) for men of skill and dedication to combat
crime President Johnson properly called it “en-
trenched national industry."
The Justice Department is still seeking a law
that would allow investigators to tap telephones
under court order for limited periods to gather in-
formation about certain serious criminal activity.
This frightens a great many people, no doubt the
guilty most of all. Justice officials also want the au-
thority to grant immunity from prosecution to cer-
tain witnesses, and to have those who refuse. to
testify punished for contempt of court Certainly
these are loopholes in our laws. In recent years the
Fifth Amendment has ben the Rock of Ages for
(riminals
Legislation that seeks to prevent and solve crime
is above politics and personal ideologies Whatever
Congress decides to do about the president’s mes-
sage on crime, the war on crime is long past due
There will always be a criminal element in any so-
ciety, hut a major federal offensive is bound to’reap
rewards. A war on crime is needed before we may
.attempt a Great Society.
Go To The Polls
—-w, ----- unuouuny , _ _ . „ ins. If wide lapels and pleats
quiet, too, and all this only adds in by next
to the guessing. arn In IU now — ana am -dVH18 ____ ....
the time of my life. 1
। To be stingy you don’t have to Easter parade,
be a mean-tempered miser, To the properiy suigy u
skinflint or tightwad. All you nothing is ever really out
have to be is sensibly thrifty. 1
। Printing and specialized food other fiberglass and plastic, ings. and custom - formulated established in 1952.
processing are two manufac- products. plastic mixtures A. L Barrier, One pioneer homegrown in-
The next important develop- founder of the company, was dustry in Texas, which has
was a plastic skylight living in Mineral Wells in 1954 adapted itself to the shifting
contemporary life in Russia.
CHI RCHILL QI ITS
AS MINISTER
... • APRIL 5,1955goodni- is shant rapd, which
i W inston Churchill stepped Comes ftom the French expression
down as Prime Minister of Eng- - -r
I land after being urged to do so
by his wife. Clementine, and
his doctor, Lord Moran. Flash-
ing a smile and the famous
“V" sign, he left Buckingham
Palace after giving his resigna- When General Winter (Centra!
tion to Queen Elizabeth II. . . . ^and) joined the Russian General
IN DENTON: The upper ele- Staf andthe French were en entually Texas dean and healthy.
, mentary grades of the Jeffer- chased A the way back to Pans I The bill got a complete re-
son Davis School presented a - - - * "
March to 13.9 per cent from 14.4
per cent in February. To The Editor:
In March the auto industry Just a short note to tell you
get all three ih a form still sat-
isfactory to him, and perhaps
even more far-reaching than he M k x ■ ■ ■ m xs, xa x ivb ■ ■ ■ uyI g, „ ..
requested . — i NEXT: Meeting a national
All of which is a great tribute shortage of one resource by sub
to his extraordinary ability to AP Business News Analyst Record employment figures. proach of the May 1 strike dead- stituting another.
get Congress to see things his I NEW YORK (AP) - The record profits by leading corpo-
wav an abilitv WLich indhiv. stock market in recent weeks rations, record output by the
"romn tngwhshinvotveshad seemed unsold by all the auto and steel industries, rising
al! members ingswithm Lr roptimistic predictions for busi- use of consumer installment,
mnmeerso-ongressPer- ness. But in the first two days of credit by a confident public
sona telephone alls and mes-this month, at least, it appears have impressed some of the
T„vndvisits from his aides, to have responded finally to the wary investors.
set mst y president was able to outpouring of records and to Their caution in recent weeks
getsjs tones ofithose pieces ° assurances that some of the has been described as a concen-
815 tionthrough.in any one threats to continuing prosperity tration on the threats to a fur-
it m say ad ° education — may be more apparent than ther spread of prosperity:
it would have been considered a real. Fighting in Viet Nam. the ap-
great triumph. 1-------------——“ 6 Kl
teresting and up-to-date.
I think that after our visit
, ■ . .2.. c t we have all learned how im-
j ment stresses that the rate for "9 L“ nanor ie and most
paper grocery bagssenoughto unemployed mamried men Ktawt.be
top™' the paper.
Chronicle facilities. Be-
(tl ne) chanttra pas— "he won't
ling'—said with derision by sol-
IN DENTON: Ice and a
main auditorium under the tem.Franco-Russianrelations have
sponsorship of the speech de- not always been so cordial.
partment. . . . Countess Irina; France hu twiceinvaded Rusia
i Skariatina, a descendent of one during the last 150 years, and to
I of Russia's oldest and most this day there are linguistic ves-
...... ’ , ReGMAuninc}
But to get aid to education TFT -m -- -
and medical aid through in this | | — I | > ,E
— one year will be a dazzling per- EE 5 I Eb(b% 1 (
The signing of an emergency formance. --I y I
appropriation bill by Governor The crack-down on the Klan is •
Ferguson carried an item of stillinits babystage ifonlvbe-
$45,000 for the College of Indus- cause the House Committte on NEW YORK (AP) — Sidewalk That’s why the stingy man
trial Arts (now TWU) and pro- Un-American Activities is coins comments by a Pavement Pla- avoids bores. They aren't worth
vided for the paving of Texas to investigate the Klan and not to: his time. get American businessmen and
Street and Bell Avenue. . . much in legislation can be ex- There’s fun in being stingy. ' Saving is the chief character bankers to help cut ‘he deficit in To The Editor:
Premier Harriot of France fac- pected until that is finished. Try it and see. istic of the stingy stage. You the U.S. balance of international Thank you very much for
ed downfall, because like all of It is in Viet Nam that the In his youth, man is a waster have to save something Saving payments was reported to be .showing our class around when
his predecessors since the end country is left cuessinc and and a destroyer. He likes to tear money, of course, would be having early results, with per- we came to see the Record-
of World War I. he failed to there are no Irohets , down things, throw things away, nice, at least from the viewpoint haps as many dollars coming chronicle.
find a way for France to stay glibly or confidently predicting He believes he is surrounded by of your heirs, but the govern- home as are going abroad I thought the most interest-
a major power without having the outcome there ' a limitless plenty. ment has made that unpatriotic And the statistics have taken j thing was the printing
to pay for it. ..in the past few weeks there "After all,youcan‛t take it if not impossible. anevenbrigh ter turn.. . I press. It was interesting to see
IN DENTON: The city wide have beenrumors around wash- with you" he says. Many people first discover fast the press goes and
clean up campaign ended here ington _ perhaps rumors is not But after the free-wheeling they have entered the stingy lercentign o? [he labor force the amount of paper used
and was termed by city officials as good a word as murmurs - years pass, a subtle change stage by noting they have start- Jut of work to have drooned 1 like to read the paper be-
a success. . . . Emphasis was that the North Vietnamese Com- comes over, most people. The ed to save string. Th s wodd put a more Sid cause all of the articles are in-
placed on poetry as an art and munists would like to start talk, squirrel side of the i-nature 1 haven’t around tondtinduPutr“tousiness
a cultural factor at the colleges ing about a settlement. comes to the fore, and the ant in string yet. But you should see ThedeLatr Xari
and woman’s clubs in accord- But there is nothing definite'i their .makeup replaces the my fine collection of brown ‘ 5Pa 1
ance with Texas Poetry Week _ publicly known, that is _ to grasshopper. ppigo.gig- -----eh
■ • Dr. *»• Y. Benedict, dean indicate any such desire by the' One begins to measure his stock a small supermarket.
of the College of Arts and Sci- Reds who have been stoically success by the number of things I also hoard Christmas wrap-
encesat the University of Tex- under American bombing as one he can accumulate children ping paper, political campaign
as, addressed a meeting of the week of it follows another. and chattels, cars and mort- buttons, old ry duty notices,
W.H. Bruce.chaptero Texas The bombing has had the ob- gages, a home with crabgrass warning letters-kgomthe public among teen-agers dropped in
Scholarship Societies in the au- vious purpose of pressuring the that he can proudly call his library about oVerde books.
ditorium of the Teachers Col- North Vietnamese into seeking own. toothpicks that have been used
85: a settlement. As time goes by, At 50, a man is known by hi only on one end, and messages -_____„„
RI SS/I DFNOINCF^ and the Reds show no signs ot possessions. But whether he be found in Chinese fortune cookies produced more cars than in any how much we enjoy our home-
\ CI to 4 1 IpV tr’T bending, the Johnson adminis. poor, rich, or merely getting eaten over a 30-year period. other month in its history. Steel town paper, since being station-
N El 1 KALI I J AL I (ration's inclination to extend along, he probably is no longer But my special prize is my mills turned out record ton- ed here with the U. S. Navy.
APRIL 5, 1945 the bombing ever deeper into the carefree spendthrift he once clothes closet. There rest in nages — some of it admittedly 7th Fleet, in California
Soviet Russia denounced its North Viet Nam seems sure was: honored glory such treasures as for inventory buildups as a My husband received our
neutrality pact with Japan, ac- At this time the Soviet Union Now, seeing the years closing a jacket I bought when Adolf hedge against the strike possi- subscription as a birthday pres-
cusing the Japs of helping Ger- and Red China, despite some in on him, he feels a blind, in- Hitler was still in power and bility, but a lot of it for current ent from my parents, Mr. and
many to war against Russia. So- grumblings and half-hearted creasing urge, to hoard some- pair of slacks I got in Bombay use by their busy customers Mrs. H. A. Chapman. .Aubrey
viet arms were expected to be- threats have been unusually thing against the long dark. ■ 1945 IF wide lapels and pleats Plans for increased govern- It’s almost like a daily letter
"in “Imin" - —"miiht • • "i-----*-"e----inn"’ * • • ment spending in the months, from home.
and even years, ahead are tak- We think so muc 6f Denton
month, I'll be the hit of the ing shape as Congress acts on and the fine people there.
------u- programs for the Great Society. Thank you for your excellent
To the properly stingy man State and local government coverage of news events and
j of spending is rising, 'personal interest in the people
; ; .. 10 Businessmen have caught the' and events of Denton County.
That’s why the stingy man date. He lives by the motto. To spirit and raised the amounts Mr. & Mrs W. D. Countess,
stays out of night clubs. They each his own.” And he keeps they’ll put out for new plants daughters Kammi and Kristi,
aren't worth the money. his. and equipment_____ s__ Long Beach. California
ington D.C.....The annual promises that they would beserved
Distributive Education bapquet quickly. This, the Russian word
was held in Hubbard Hall at for "quick" became the word for the
TSCW (now TYU) to honor em- Frenchman's popular comer
ployers of Demon High DE stu- restaurant.
dents . . . Mrs Harry Farber in modern times, another Rus-
was elected president of the Han word hat invaded French and
City Federation of Women’s i other languages. In Freoch,(K it
Clubs \lsspotMuh 4-20
i
1 ,
ers — Glastron, Lone Star, and other metals and polyvinyl:years ago the company discon-
_____________... —____________2 . '______ ____________ . _____J for tinued production of cast-iron
Viet Nam. 1 glass-reinforced plastic was a. located in metropolitan areas, molding, casting and coating, soil pipe and fittings because of
Johnson probably never ex-1 fairly unconventional boat build- An even more highly spe- Because plastics firms tend to an unfavorable competitive sit-
pected to get medical care, aid ing material, but its strength cialized plastics fabricator is rely on one another. Mineral uation in the industry. With the
to education and the voting bill and light weight answered thelocated in Mineral Wells This Wells bids to become a substan- slowing of new development in
in precisely the form he asked, requirements of the moment. is homegrown Barrier Coro Ual fabricating center, accord- oil fields and railroading, it
and he is not likely to since While the canoe never became • P . . nM , , might be expected that the
some revisions are inevitable a large • scale production a maker of artificial foliage ingto Barner. Id st o Marshall foundry would be look-
after full House and Senate con-' model, it set Polly - Craft on molded of plastic, and also of Mineral Wells fabricators is ing forward to further diversi-
sideration. its way toward the making of' vinyl plastisols, protective coat- Southwestern Plastic Pipe Co., fication, but with continued sta-
But it seems certain he will ■ ' --------—-------- ble demand for its major pro-
ducts, no immediate expansion
into other lines is foreseen.
1 / I
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 202, Ed. 1 Monday, April 5, 1965, newspaper, April 5, 1965; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517689/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.