Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 301, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1962 Page: 4 of 12
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PAGE FOUR
MOMMY, ILLY 30, 1362
Monday,
Elections
Many Already Decided
WX
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k
89
2
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0 1
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4C4 C
A
&
They^re Smoking More
What Youth Thinks
f
3,
8
3
Teen-Agers Suggest Smoking Remedies
230
stricter law enforcement and fines
(N.C.), Lausche (Ohio) and Mon-
OUTCAST
Yesteryear
Editorials
motion of new congressional dis-
Thailand’s Fear
to
To obt
I
claimed:
I
“What a fine man!
YOUR
ADDRE
TOWN
How M
U/
Hal Boyle
Languages
the United States.
might interpret the shift
—
ALTERNATIVE
Denton Record-Chronicle
i
A caution to the wasteful: "You
J
("the great-nosed ones").
get a bad one, you’ll become
you. Each night it burns the rec-
a
ph i losopher. ’ ’—.Socrates
ords of the day. If you fail to use
Thompson began his work here
suspended relations, too
the loss is
Hungarian revolution.
dilemma—in trying to stop com- Latin America is this:
Chinese.
on anti-Communist regimes, even
civilian — without
Kir
4
1962
1960
35%
25%
4
here, Thompson reportedly anti-
cipates a relatively quiet period
munism— it apparently feels it I
can’t afford to shut, the door
relatively smaller stature of the
Japanese compared to northern
Private conversations give the
impression he feels that Russia
has passed the point of no return
as far as mass terror is con-
cerned, and will inevitably have
to devote more and more of its
Enclose
delivery
The Chinese have another de-
rogatory word for their near neigh-
bors the Japanese. These they refer
to as aiko ("small bandits") or
("dwarf bandits') apparently a
memory of the tl mes when J apanese
pirates used to raid the Chinese
coast as well as a reference to die
V
85
I
I
they're as important as adults."
said one Ohio girl.
World Today
Dictatorship Dilemma
f
$
How long can it keep on
Many
By HAL BOYLE
the form of greater old age as-
sistance and aid to the blind.
The Air Force says it’s still
looking into flying saucer reports,
but it's certain of one thing: the
^.LANGUAGES
G in the NEWS
S By Charles F. Berlitz
and Robert Strumpen-Darrie
though they are anti-Democratic
DISADVANTAGES
(
V
SEPTIC TANK
EYED BY CITY
JULY 30, 1922
Select you
by your bi
«
I
I
1
FEDERAL PAY
DI E INCREASE
JULY 30, 195’
Federal money sent to Denton
County will be increased about
$7,500 monthly starting in Octob-j
like narcotics. "THEY WANT to act big, and
ON THE OTHER hand, Terrence when they see adults and commer-
27
nery salesman
QUOTE
President could not be made an-
swerable to it while acting as
commander-in-chief of the nation’s j
armed forces.
It was Robert Frost who ob-
served, "the world is full of will-
«
%, *5
se
recommended that youngsters stay • Marilyn Fevor, 15, of Detroit,
away from persons who smoke, suggested taking down cigarette
A copy of the Berlitz "Diner't Dic-
tionary” will be mailed to anyone
tubmitting a question used in "Lan-
By EUGENE GILBERT
Gilbert Youth Research Co.
Granted that teen-agers do a
as a
Telephone 382-2551
Published every evening except Saturday and on Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
Entered as second class mail at me post office at Denton. Toxas
Jan 13 1921 according to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - The Associated Press is en
titled exclusively to the use for publication of all local news printed
in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches
BASK SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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 mail (must be paid »n advance) Denton and adjoining
counties $1.23 per month, $12 00 per year elsewhere in the United
States $1 50 per month, $18 00 per year
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONs
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneous reflechon upon the character
reputation or standing of any firm individual or corporation will
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publishers attention The
Dublishers are not responsible for copy omissions typographical errors
or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct them in
next issue after it is brought to their attention All adverising orders
are accepted on this basis only
change in the U.S. position.
Like other top ambassadors
42
The last Marines which President Kennedy sent
to Thailand to counter Communist guerrilla ad-
vances in neighboring Laos have been withdrawn
by the United States. A 2,000-man U.S. Army con-
tingent and the U.S.-trained Thai army remain and
the Navy chief says the Marines can be moved back
in fast if needed.
The withdrawal of the Marines apparently signi-
fies a lessening of concern in Washington over the
security of Thailand’s borders. However, many
“pessimists,” including the Thai government, are
not so confident that the danger is past. In state-
ments to the local press, the government has ex-
pressed fear that the Geneva agreement on Laos
does not provide sufficient guarantees to prevent an
eventual Communist takeover in the country.
This fear is not without solid base. The Geneva
agreement sets up a ruling group of three men—one
a supporter of the West, one Communist and one
“neutralist,’’ who also happens to be the Communist's
brother. The neutralist is top man in this group,
but any one may veto actions of the others.
Such coalitions involving Communists have not
had a sparkling record of success in the past. In
fact, this three-men-with-a-veto idea is precisely the
“troika” plan which the United States opposed bit-
terly when Nikita Khrushchev proposed it for the
United Nations in his fight with Dag Hammarskjold.
It is doubtful that the “troika” idea is much more
palatable to the administration now than it was in
the U.N. squabble, but it apparently was accepted
to make the best of a bad situation. Western control
of Laos appeared unlikely without large-scale fight-
ing.
With the Communists able to veto any move dis-
tasteful to them, it is extremely doubtful that any
measures will be taken to rid the country of its
guerrillas and keep the Reds from feeding them
into neighboring countries.
So Thai fears are understandable and it is well
that the Marines can be moved into Thailand quick-
ly. They may be needed there yet.
Almost half the members of
next year’s House of Represents-'
tives can be named with reason-
able certainty, including 11 pros-
pective new members.
A total of 124 Democrats and
66 Republicans have already won
their respective party nominations
and are either unopposed in the
fall elections or face relatively
weak opposition.
Five Democratic and two Re-
publican senators also have been
renominated and are sure bets for
re-election.
In all, 27 states have chosen
nominees for 272 House and 18
Senate seats, with 23 still having
to pick party candidates for 163
House and 21 Senate seats.
INCUMBENT Democratic con-
gressmen in 31 congressional dis-
tricts that have already held pri-
maries apparently will be without
Republican opposition in the Nov.
6 general election. All are from
Southern states, with one excep-
tion, Rep. Edward A. Garmatz
(D-Md.) from Baltimore's safe-
ly Democratic 3rd Congressional
District. Only one Republican no-
minee, Rep. Robert H. Michel (R-
m.), is without Democratic oppo-
sition, although Democrats have
been threatening to field a can-
didate in his staunchly Republi-
can downstate Illinois district.
No Senate candidate nominat-
ed so far this year lacks major
party opposition in his state. al-
which threw out the president of future I‘ve got,”
Korea in 1961. Before years end 1: ze Uxeu States tries to —
President Kennedy and junta boss intervene on the side of a demo- trying job.
with 25 per cent two years before
—at the height of reports linking
smoking with lung cancer.
In our latest survey, many
teen-agers said they believed youth
((0
64 2$
or dictatorships without some
show of hesitancy.
, ।
1
(19
Easy-
Interpret
... or c
prints. >
ual look.
Its SO!
flattering
requires 2
Vogue Pri
Misses siz
Priced at
Pattern si
All measu
ments.
Just as big as any other dll-
Rut by the very nature of itsjemma for the United States in
roney (Okla.) and Republican
Blue for dunning: Only one ten- personal deck of cards for him
ant in five pays his rent promptly and paid him 1,500 pieces of gold
on the first of the month Land- for the job, more than many an
lords have found they get their American now loses in six months
incumbent congressmen or the for- gers. woe, Wis.
ANOTHER MIDWESTERN girl
—.c+, 410, I 1Lj 1.__.4
20
'Prevent them from being sold | dispensing machines.
lot of smoking, as our surveys to minors," said Jeannie Gardner, An Idaho youth suggested that
ed States is over a barrel.
I
It reacted strongly against mill- , ,
e , „ , shaky democratic
tary seizure of power in Peru last ,, ' . . . .
. , ,, , trying to survive under pressure
week. This probably wont last from left and right.
long. It had similar reactions in |
resources to increasing living
standards.
one cal staff, there are about 250 per-
.sons at the U.S. Embassy in Mos-
cow. Most of them live in a com-
pound on Tchaikovsky Boulevard.
With Russian suspicions of all
American diplomats and a com-
pletely unrealistic exchange rate,
their social life is pretty much
guagee in the Newt.”
dhE
harmful, but not by forbidding it." everybody else does it to be a
Of the more than 1,000 teen- part of the crowd,” reasoned a
8,B
gw
# j.
rent money back sooner if they at pinochle or poker.
mail out notices on blue instead of CAVE WEDDINGS
saucers — whatever they are —
don't seem to be a menace to
tightened the list of eligibles for
new tires, tubes and recapping,
Will Williams, chairman of the
Denton County Rationing Board,
has announced. Illinois, replacing veteran House
Attorney General Biddle, dis- members who have retired.
cussing the validity of the mill- NEW DEMOCRATIC congress- most successful, at least as
tary commission established by men also appear certain to come as personal relations with
President Roosevelt to try eight from Florida and New Jersey, Kremlin go.
alleged Nazi saboteurs, told the while another Republican appears | Premier Khrushchev at
Supreme Court today that the i----- ■ -.........
ton businessmen.
RATIONING LIST
IS TIGHTENED
JULY 30, 1942
New rationing restrictions have
AAAuLD
Oez FieiEnterries,Inc
t/3
5,
start smoking because it makes
......: One southwestern boy offered them feel important, and because
(who this blunt suggestion: world-wide 1 cigarette advertisements make the
it, prohibition, treating cigarettes practice so attractive.
_____________________ . ______ agers surveyed, 55 per cent said ? Georgian, while Dorothy Kennedy,
BECAUSE OF the retirement of cialsi, publicize more of the dan- said Susan Martin, 15, of Manito- they felt something could be done 117, of Philadelphia, gave this ex-
linel » —-----------the t— Sers “C, Wie. to discourage and help eliminate I planation: "One tries, they all try
_ Kathy Langley, 14, of Macon,'teen-age smoking. !and they just never stop!”
tricts, six Republicans and five suggested that a legal age limit Ga., suggested formation of a club The report this spring showed A Bridgeport, Conn., girl, Norma
in ctnm,ly nno.nnHv be placpd Oil gmoking and TJndn tn nroeimf cmnlrinn . or .. . gl, .. A,u0 in i. L. .....
J certain to replace Rep. Scherer
(R-Ohio), who is retiring.
Five incumbent congressmen
have been defeated In primar-
ies this year and will be missing
from the House next year. They
are Reps. Boykin (D-Ala.), Gar-
land (R-Maine), Smith (D-Miss.),
Weaver (R-Neb.) and Kearns (R-
Pa >. All except Kearns were de-
feated by other incumbent con-
gressmen in contests that resulted
from congressional redistricting
action.
Important primaries yet to come
include the Sept. 18 Massachusetts
primary which will decide the
head-on clash between Edward M.
(Ted) Kennedy, the president’s
youngest brother, and Edward J.
McCormack Jr., nephew of House
Speaker John W. McCormack (IT-
Mass.). Also coming up is the
Sept. 6 primary which will de-
cide nominees for New York’s
41 congressional districts. (Copy-
right 1962, Congressional Quarter-
ly Inc.)
Ohio promises to send another By STANLEY JOHNSON
famx6o“asoinstronnPabtersTaft_moscow (AP - Llewelyn E.
. . . .. , , , Thompson is going home after a
tor, who is the heavy favorite - woo-ib, <• . — —.....- ........J. uy
to win the state's new at-large do t nsonw.ashE-sonamsbass blame for Soviei-American crises
ThXe^f"ne prospective Repub. top.Americanaipiomarhaslspen"ke
f / in the ob since U.S.-Soviet rela-
lican House freshmen are from in . 100.
tions started 29 vears ago.
your wash-wear clothing after
and other requirements at the' EW. VEK ’API—Things a laundering, to iron them lightly
1. Give communism anti- Amer-[ embassy commissary. They have Soumnist might never know if he wrong side out. Thatll avoid sur-
ican propaganda an embassy doctor, an American ddn . open his mail: face shine.
2. Add to the uneasiness of priest, garage, other service fa- e,dlanghaghs Wor d has some ROVER
governments cilities and an American school. on earth speak one of seven maor This may be a tough time for
MRS. THOMPSON tongues. Of these English is by far people, but Rover never had it so
Thompson is going home in the most widely understood. good. There are now 3,000 brands
3 Cause skepticism among rather a pensive’mood but Mrs. [ France is considered the inter- of dog food on the market.
o er paces and wound up doing some people in backward coun- Thompson is delighted. national feminine fashion center Wisecrack of the week: Crooner
business. tries about the sincerity of the “There are plenty of ambassa- but a recent poll in Paris revealed Mike Clifford says his girl friend
It didn’t like the military coup United States in their Democratic dors, but he is the only husband that men there spend more money serves him television dinners that
she said recently. She on their clothing than women do. melt in his mouth. (He only wish-
If the United States tries to ! wants her husband in some less Prosperity note: Americans es she’d defrost them first.)
a v,ig spend more each year to buy and Lore of games: Playing cards
Gen. Chung Hee Park were cratic regime in Latin America But President Kennedy did not operate automobiles than the corn oncewere the diversion only of the
reaffirming the two countries’ it can be accused of butting into ! want him to leave until things bined total national income of nobility and were hand-painted. In
"strong bonds of friendship" the peoples affairs, a complaint were relatively quiet, especially1 Canada and Mexico. 1415 the Duke of Milan had artist
When the military in Argentina'the United States would like to about Berlin, for fear some allies . -E DUNS Marziano da Tartona execute a
last March disliked the elections avoid. mih it *
As the Chinese Communist prop- results and threw out the presi-
aganda machine whips uppopular dent, this country hesitated about
to
time. Every morning it credits
you with 86.400 seconds. Every
|night it rules off, as lost. whatever
Our quotable notables: "By all of this you have failed to invest. It
means marry; if you get a good carries over no balances. Each
wife, you 11 become happy; if you day it opens a new account for
feeling agalnsttheWestandAmer giving recognition. It waited three But if it refuses recognition of
tea in particular, it is intriguing to weeks and gave the recognition. ..
consider how anti-foreign feeling a right-wing government, and in West-Soviet relations until aft-
has been prevalent in China in the OTHERS shuts off relations, It abandons er Khrushchev has had his August
past, even to names applied to In other countries in Latin any moderating force it might [vacation and the Soviet Union has
Westerner5 America—Paraguay, Haiti, Nica- have----------------------....
They were generally called yan ragua. Guatemala—it has given to a struggle between the far
wdtu gfforeign ofdJr recognition to dictatorship govern- 'right and communism,
(foreign devils) because of their ments of one kind or another . u ....
pale skins, sharp features and oc- A . ,, Peru, where the military
casional red hair, always a sign of And, among other countries, it take-over is only 11 days old,
a demon in the orient. Other words has diplomatic relations with two American Ambassador James
for Westerners were hun mao Lu 0 the most persistent contem- Loeb has been accused by the
("red haired ones") and ta petLu porary dictatorships—Spain and Peruvian foreign ministry of in-
("the great-nosed ones"). Portugaland has bases on their terfering in Peru’s affairs.
territory. The United States has suspend-
By the very nature of its ed relations with the new regime
policy - encouraging democra- and called Loeb home Other
cies-the United States can’t af- Latin-American countries — Mex-
ford to welcome military coups ico and Chile, for instance—have
Susan Gutman not let their children smoke — and advice: “Smoking can be cured a Wisconsin girl.
T f set an example by not smoking only by showing why it can be “Some people really like it, and
stage, in assessing Thompson, ex-1 Thompson’s success, his col- ern boy. boredom is another rea-
leagues believe, lay in the fact son. Some:said it relieves nervous
that he managed to keep the tension and .givessthem something
He absolved Thompson of any [channels of communication open to do with their idle hands. Others
---6 S--------- . After a 3 -week holiday in the were sure many of the young peo-
ambassador’s native Colorado, the ple simply like it.
I
___Ft j
Gm<Rh} ■ P
8 42 -e
restricted to entertaining each1
| other and fellow diplomats.
They taw virtually all their food NEW YORK (AP)_Things
white paper. Subsurface matrimony: Mera-
___________ .... .. ..g.. ......... uu us .uviet uu™ iiaa Tippling time: Of Californians mec Caverns, a tourist mecca on
asserted and leaves the field run off its new series of nuclear whoenjoy drinking a state public [Highway 66 in Misouri, has jus-
tests. health survey found, three out oftices of the peace on 24-hour call
OPTIMISTIC four like to have glass in hand for nonconformist couples who
As... soviet developments in she telsvisione Wiphwnntntpognamarried on the rocks
optimistic, hompson is guardedly how they got started: Jimmy A caution to the wasteful: "You
Cagney was a hoofer. Ed Wynn, have a bank, and its name is
the timeless comic, was a milli-
er. The increase will come
_ ” J -2V M"J • 41
e t . Lost on purpose: According to the day's deposits
in the aftermath of Suer and the Interpol-International Police Or yours P° '
Hungarian revolution. ganization-there are more than. Opportunity ■ In a recent year
Gradually, the situation im- four million missing persons in only 139 Americans rererent yem
proved until I hompson arranged the world-most of them hus ing a taxable income P a million
recog- for Khrushchev to tour America- bands. 4 De income of a million
nizing dictatorships—military or a trip he still thinks was very How old is your buggy’ The vour sWhydon’t you listen to
civilian- without encouraging worthwhile. - average age 0(’us automobies advice and become
■ more of the same until Kennedy's Then came the U2 incident, the last year was 5.89 years, that of
much proclaimed Alliance for explosion of the Paris summit trucks 7 83 years.
,, . Progress looks like an empty meeting and a series of Berlin: Household hint: Tell vour wiling,,, ’ U
Xet, American recognition a gesture? crises that if wants to "touch upetne PesPbwssnmet"
THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE > * . EDITORIALS AND FEATURES :: :
The citv commission was . - - - , • — -------. — — -r-— o -------- ------o-g-, ------,o-,--------
meet Friday afternoon at 2 30 Democrats in strongly one-party be placed on smoking, and Linda to prevent smoking — perhaps a that 35 per cent of America’s teen- Meyer, 16, said teen-agers use
and decide upon plans regarding areas appear certain to be among May Lewis, 18, of Pocatello, Idaho, sort of Smokers Anonymous, and J agers were smoking, compared cigarettes as a “status symbol"
the city septic tank and possibly next years freshmen congress- * — - -————————“Teen-agers feel they are picked
dispose of other business. men. One of the Republicans and 8 T _ on and turn to smoking to prove
Denton’s colleges and schools three of the Democrats are from 2-4 wA X —AA, -Z — "WE.
will be advertised in the Dallas California, including veteran Dem- E‘A I I V/I I V " G M Z" ( F I fl l ( | |
News Educational Edition of Aug ocratic state legislator Augus- . Y — % U—eI k LLIWLE L
13 thru the contributions of Den- tus F. Hawkins, 55, of Los Ange-. J 05 Edn) smoking.on.a
les. who promises to be the first TI o , dare, or to spite their parents.
Negro congressman from Califor- I hOmnSOn Success in Moscoiv Job [said another youth
nia I < -1 According to a 16-year-old South-
289
By JAMES MARIOW anti-Democratic governments can-
Associated Press News Analyst not avoid doing three things:
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Unit-
though Democratic Sens. Hill [
(Ala.), Smathers (Fla.), Ervin have shown repeatedly, is there 17, of Lynchburg, Va. _________________
anything that can be done about But Catherine Morirs, 17, of should be worked out.
Sens. Hickenlooper (Iowa) and ''T. . .. , River Edge, N.J., said bluntly:
Young (S.D.) appear to be shoo-Theyoungsters themselves are There are too many of us (-
ins over weak opponents divided 0,1 this,but more than half smoke) and if you try to stop it.
Of the 272 Democrats that have of those .we talked to recently as- we‘d do it more."
been nominated so far this year serted that effective steps can be Elizabeth Miller, 18, of Colum-
Ito run for the House, 93 appear taken. [bus, Ohio, suggested that parents Ballowe, 16, of Chicago, had this j cials they must try it too,” said
to be almost certain winners des- fifteen-year-old f
pite Republican opposition. Re- of Vermillion, S. D., offers one <
publicans find themselves in suggestion for helping eliminate themselves
the same enviable situation in 65 the habit: “PARENTS AND TV commer-
congressional districts. ' Cut out enticing TV commer- cials will always be here to lead,"
FAVOR WITH OTHERS family will settle in a house Annette Hooper, 15, of Oklahoma
Thompson and his striking. Thompson bought in Washington. City, gave this advice
It also seems to have been the busky-voiced wife Jane, were aces Thompson is to be succeeded Teen-agers are influenced by
far also with three other important here by Foy D. Kohler who has parents and older people; if par-
the groups—the diplomatic corps, the served previously in the Moscow ents don’t want theirteens toac-
embassy staff and the press. , , quire undesirable habits, they
Counting dependents and cleri- en assy an recently has been an must outweigh bad influences with
assistant secretary of state. j good.”
Su-
6
Aert
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 301, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1962, newspaper, July 30, 1962; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1531736/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.