Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. [103], Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962 Page: 4 of 14
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PAGE FOUR
TRE DENTON KfcWKW-CHKOMCtE : : : EDITOR/ ILS IND FEATURES : .-
FRIDAY. yOFEMHER 30, 1902
k
Government In Everything in Italy
d
By EUGENE LEVIN
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Editorials
The Decision Tor L963
world more cautious.
President Kennedy will decide in the next month
NOV. 30, 1922
Carson interested in the pesticide else’s."
mother as she grew up in a sub- ‘
blue-eyed, 5 feet 4 inches tall,
covery, the Institute became
NOV. 39. 1952
50.6 per cent of the stock in the form in fundamental respects
I
Telephone 382-2551
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
==-
Kuwait
Luxurious Neutrality
Iraq's
still vows he will annex Kuwait
E
plus free food, clothing and medi-
Fun
home "
>
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e“
A Quiet Fighter
Rachel Carson Fights Nature's Enemies
a mixed economy in which the
state is actively participating in
to his ou n troubled country Saudi
Arabian, Jordanian and Sudanese
against the Saudis Jordanian air
force officers defect to the U.A R.
Yul
She
Wo
nationalizing power is in the last
stages of parliamentary consider-
Lake
Slate
in the midst of this frenzy, the
Kuwaitis are quietly trying to re-
duce their protective forces to
only about 120,000 Kuwaitis, will
enjoy this year a national income
of nearly a half billion dollars
Huge amounts go to the royal
family, but enough is left over to
make this the most complete wel-
pens." she notes, "that my voca-
tion and avocation overlap.” Be-
ing outdoors, in woods, or along
Even on this one he said
Let's see how the story comes J
super holding company with
book value of $2 25 billion.
EAGLES SET
TWO DATES
TAX RATE
DI E HIKE
Sei
form
of Fi
ing t
Th
wife
Dente
DEC
Junior
heard
decora
ments
this w
A re
leaf F
and Fl
arrang
both I
memb
ments
in the
is apo
Mrs.
less w
er for
tended
ACET HOXTH
LIKELY
event of an emergency toothache,
dental care.
Oth
a lur
tween the two Communist allies
This. too, is pie-in-the-sky stuff. I
Rusk reduced this to practicality, I
too.
He acknowledged "very serious
League emergency force here to
prevent him.
President Gamal Abdel Nasser
of the United Arab Republic and
g
I f
rE
e
LAK
day ar
man's
vice «
night
The S
night ii
Saturdi
is dint
school
Denton
RECORD-CHRONICLE
Hal Boyle
Pensionitis
J
SE1
TO
what "image" to present to the nation international
leader or domestic reformer
interview televised Wednesday
CAUTION URGED
He tried to be practical, as he
PRESS — The Associated Press is
entitled exclusively to the use for
pubtication of alt tocat news printed
in this newspaper as well as all
AP news dispatches.
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF
CIRCULATIONS
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any er-
roneous reflection upon the charac-
ter reputation or standing of any
firm, individual or corporation will
gladly be corrected upon being
called to the publishers' attention.
The publishers are not respons ble
i for copy omissions, typographical
errors or any unintentional errors
that occur other than to correct
them in the next issue after it is
a war, doesn't mean they’ll back
down somewhere else, if it’s more
laugh here.
The oil boom is so terrific that of pension programs throughout
I
AUTHOR CARSON
*A Great Sense Of Responsibility’
his republican allies in revolution- fare state in the capitalist world
ary Yemen threaten to make war 1 * ------1 --- --
mere tokens They have asked in cal treatment from kindergarten
unpublicized Ara, League meet-1
Even a casual visitor can get
free hospitalization and, in the
mgs that the 2,500 Saudis, 1,5001only in the upper 80 per cent of
mi 3
’■ i
~g
NO NEW SHAPE
trol other firms. Sometimes the. He said "It would be. I think.
Institute has 100 per cent owner- wrong to say that because this
in the postwar struggle for re- to their liking So the United teacher type
a States will have tn be cautious in
n’
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9 1
Mr.
Rose 1
ding t
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The
Janet
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Winfre
is a
School
at Mr
Copper
The
ed in
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eran <
The c
with a
Candel
which
•an, X ,3
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I
MW You INCITED THOSE INNOCENT RIDTERS TO VIOLENCE../'' onstrated that Italy — more than bland and seldom says anything
any other Western country — has startling, wasn't startling in an
my advisers that there was a
J possibility of combining the two
fields" it was presented as an
"irrevocable choice-' and she
made it in favor of biology—only
discovering years later that she
I
1 missiles, household appliances, plane crash in October This Na-1
nht
s-b V.
"cu-e •
p
828
»30
1 Fg-
In
"ad,
81/*
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f fT2n? I
trip, planned by a state-controlled Cuban crisis died down, there has
tourist agency. He traveled on been a kind of national sigh of
state-owned trains, planes and relief and perhaps even elation
ships, and stayed at a state hotel, in the hope now maybe things
He was an Italian, living in would get better because they
"capitalist" Italy today. couldn't have been much worse
He was not confined to using ! But now Secretary of State
3+ (*d!
ship, as it does in the big Alfa situation in Cuba came out the
Romeo automobile plant Some- way it did that therefore a lot of
(times it doesn't other questions are going sudden-
For example, the Institute holds ly to take a new shape and new.
and very reaching" differences
between Moscow and Peiping
But he mentioned that the differ-
ences are not on halting world
revolution but only on how to
bring it about.
t
K ’r
w 12
' station, had a drink at a state!
1 bar and dined in a state res-1
taurant
ICE CUBES TOO
At home, he switched on lights
using state power. He took ice
from a refrigerator built by a
H
kg
Ee— me"
2834:
ROME (AP) — The citizen's heavy machinery, optical goods, tional Hydrocarbon Authority
breakfast included fruit marketed textiles, trucks, radar machine started as an oil monopoly. Now
Some Democratic strategists echo Kennedy's
statement that we have reached a "climactic" state
in the cold war. The Communist bloc is in a state
of economic distress and chaotic change The presi-
dent can seize the opportunity, it is argued, to in-
crease the Kremlin's woes and drive a deeper wedge
between the Soviet Union and Red China. He can
assert U S. leadership and thereby his re-election by
a landslide.
But to achieve these ends, he must have the
support and backing of Democratic and Republican
conservatives who favor a hard foreign policy. Any
forceful attempts to step up federal interference in
the economic life of the nation will embroil him in
a war with the conservatives and antagonize those
whose help he needs in the foreign field It is
joining counties $1,23 per month, world.
1212.00 per year elsewhere in the With its o'* wells pumping rich-
United States $1.50 per month, . . ./. 18
$18 00 per year es into its coffers, this little coun-
try w ants only to be left out of
the epic word battles occupying
its stronger neighbors
only state products in some Dean Rusk has squirted some ice.
.-/AUS cases he could have turned to water on any notion that the
Chici,- Suu-Tmee services and goods provided by world ought to begin getting bet-
859289
582.
578 ge-
0
NOV. 30, 1942
The 1942 43 North Texas State enabling the banks to shed shares a bad place for them to get into
Eagle cageteam will P^y host that were rapidly losing value
to two Fort Worth basketballi waL n, rire
, . n WAY OF LIFE
squads this week when Texas
Weslyan College and TCU journ-
ey to Denton for a four • game
' series.
Approximately 5,000 gallons of
( gasoline, an undetermined quant-
, ity of kerosene, a small ware-
house and a gasoline truck, al!
state company Then he settled AssoEnted
down to watch television — with
only two state-operated channels WASHINGTON (AP) — Back
to choose from. to the salt mines.
Next day he left on a business For several weeks, since-the
noted that the defeat of Republican Rep Walter
Judd lost the president one of the most effective
advocates for giving the White House a free hand
in its conduct of foreign affairs.
The White House palace guard, on the other hand, .
is urging Kennedy to push hard for measures such
as what is loosely called medicare and federal aid-to-
education The small clique surrounding the pre-
sident seems to be advising him to mobilize every
weapon at his disposal to blitz Congress in its early
days into reversing the positions it took in the past
two sessions. Even lax reform, which will require
long and careful study before it can be enacted into
law, must be put aside
The palace guard is convinced that if, by the use
of patronage and ruthless political pressure, Ken-
nedy can score quick victories by the passage of
medicare and aid-to-education bills—before the con
servative coalition can organize—he will break the
will of Congress and establish himself as the undis-
puted boss of the legislative process The rest of
his domestic program will then sail through
Because it thinks in terms of voting blocs and
minority lobbies, the White House in-group has
already committed the president to two moves which
will rally Negro organizations and the labor move-
ment behind him. The first was the executive or-
der against discrimination in housing which Kennedy
resisted for 22 months. This, it is believed, will
bring dissatisfied Negro leaders into the fold and
guarantee their strategic support in the big indus-
trial states come 1964
At the same time. by threatening to cut off de-
fense contracts to aerospace companies which re-
fuse to submit to compulsory unionizing of their
workers, he has done much to revitalize his alliance
with the AFL-CIO in general, and with the federa-
tion's leading activist, United Auto Workers' Presi-
dent Walter Reuther in particular.
The question fo rthe administration, however, is a
touchy one: Can the president successfully send
his political forces into Congress9 if he tries and
fails, then the 88th Congress may well be as much
of a shambles as its predecessor. For failure breeds
failure, and an aroused conservative coalition would
certainly capitalize on any abortive White House as-
sault by counterattacking in force
The more practical Democratic strategists say that
if the 1962 election demonstrated anything, it was
the desire of the electorate to leave well enough
alone domestically Any tinkering with the econ-
omy and any extension of welfarism will not win the
massive adherence necessary to stampede Congress.
Kennedy’s Cuban stand, however he mav have com-
promised it later, reflected the feelings of the
American people
The world is in flux Possibly for the first time
since 1927, when it w as nip and tuck w hether Stalin
would survive, real cracks seem to be visible in the
Kremlin wall. By avoiding domestic controversy,
the president can have a unified American public
behind him should he choose to press Khrushchev
to the wall diplomatically and economically. For the
first time, too, cautious men have reason to believe
that the United States may in the foreseeable future
put an end to the cold war on its own terms—re-
versing the dynamism of Communist expansion
and bringing victory to the West.
This, certainly, should mean far more to the presi-
dent than extending the scope of federal bureau-
cratic control. But this is a decision he must-make
for himself.
I Entered as second class mail at
, the post office at Denton, Texas,
I Jan 13, 1921 according to Act of
Congress, March 3, 1872.
BASIC SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Single Copies; Evening 5 cents,1
Sunday 15 cents. u , By WEBB mckinley
Home Delivery on same day of
publication by city carrier or by KUWAIT CAP) _ Kuwait is an
motor route 40 cents per week. . . . ,.
Home delivery by mail (must be oasis of luxurious neutrality amid
paid in advance) Denton and ad-the current hysteria of the Arab
The State Owns It
ALVI
Cantrel
here w
rm. v
Grisson
Hospita
PSheemays she delved into the msS cAnsoM probably Is
subject and "he -.....eard.charantrrzedbxrtbalvromhehas
• • Almost every phase of industrial
| pgt orvAAy and business activity put it. and urged caution about:
1 y-—- ELECTRIC POWER optimism in fact, he said, the’
Now the state is taking over an- Cuban experience has made both1
-------------------------— other field—electric power A bill the West and the Communist!
Denton County, still trying to Finsider holding company. Fin- “I do think that this experience. By HAL BOYLE 50 or 55 often becomes a kind of was ' getting something to write,
shake off the effects of the worst sider in turn holds 512 per cent has caused an element of caution NEw YORK Ap, i frenzy. about
drought in the areas modern his of the stock in the Dalmine metal on all sides—in Moscow as well " ~' 5 However, in recent years pep- "Each of my books (there have
tory, may find hope in the weath- firms. It is hard to figure the gov- as elsewhere ” observations by a Pavement Pla- sionitis has spread rapidly among been three others-''Under the
er records for the past 30 years ernment interest in companies One by-product of the Cuban to younger segments of the popula- Wind," "The Sea Around Us" une
Chances are that December willdown the line, but government affair — an indirect result that The two most widespread ail- tion Personnel directors report “Edge of the Sea" has been a
be a wet month. control extends over a wider area could not have been planned by ments among mankind are tooth more and more young college great education to me” . i
than the actual value of state the Kennedy administration and decay and the common cold. graduates are as interested in the COLLEGE TEACHES you how
shareholdings indicate perhaps was not even thought of „ . , .. company s pension program as in , , .
Private equity in institute firms at the time- is the increasingly u e mos prevalent disease its opportunities for execute e ad- thereafter each pro^ct^o/cmn
has been estimated at 40 per cent, had blood between the Soviets among American middle-aged vancement ... r_ ,
MAJOR CONTROLS and Red China men today is a comparatively new Except among the rock n‘ roll Pem mil tP,00 Yolme
, institute companies employ 271.- The latter denounced the Rus- one known as pensionitis. set-no one really can understand Lin an informal sense"
non persons. It controls four-fifths sians for yielding so readily to Tooth decay can be treated and what they talk about, or cares- The success of The Sea
of shipbuilding capacity. It turns American warnings to pull their the patient with a common cold pensions are by far the most pop- Around Us - on best-seiier lists
Published every evening except out 55 per cent of Italy's steel-and missiles out of Cuba can at least be made comfortable ular conversational topic any- for 86 weeks and translated Wo
Saturday and on Sunday morning 85 per cent of its pig iron. IRI The Sino-Soviet split could lead while his malady runs its course where in the land Yes. far more 30 languages made it possible
__________ __________ controls the biggest banks to one of the greatest breaks the But so far there doesn't seem popular than old standbys like for Miss Carson to leave her long
Institute firms make parts fori West ever got A real split be- much that can be done for 8 per- baseball, politics, the weather- time job as editor-in-chief of the
son in the throes of pensionitis. and whether the man next door t S Fisheries and Wildlife Ser-
beats his wife
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED
million dwellers, forming the cul- give the elderly financial inde - coast, examining minute sea crea:
A student gets free education, tura l and industrial center of the pendence. tures under her binocular micro-
Middle East in a place that 25 But the trouble with pensionitis scope and then "stepping carejul.
, years ago lived on the sleepy is that it makes a pension not an ly over the kelp covered rocks t
through high school. If he finishes Persian Gulf trade, pearls and the end reward but the actual goal of return the living creatures to their
building of boats called booms, life.
By FRANCES LEWINE (chemicals' which she reports have i Her book fits in with her philo-
The Associated Press been put indiscriminately into the sophy of life
Rachel Carson doesn t intend hands of persons wholly ignorant "We must all have a great sense
That caution has to take three to become a lecture hall crusader of their potential harm of responsibility, and not let things,
ation. directions against the poisonous pesticides A LETTER from a friend who happen because everyone takes the
About 25 per cent of Italy's elec- 1 The Russians were caught she wrote about in her sobering experienced a community DDT comfortable view that somepne
trical output already is produced trying to slip a fast one over new book "Silent Spring” treatment for mosquitoes and else is looking after it."
[ At the adjourned meeting of by state-controlled companies Na- with their missiles in Cuba They She says she’s had so many feared she would be caught in "Someone else isn’t looking aft-
the City Commission tn be held. tionalization consolidates these will be viewed with renewed sus- requests to lecture "if I accept- another widespread campaign er it" she warns, “it is your
tonight an election is to be ord- companies and private industries picion no matter what they say, ed half of them. I'd never write against the gypsy moth got Miss responsibility- yours and everyene
, ' under a single state agency. particularly since they lied about again
ered for some time in January | The power nationalization repre- the missiles A biologist who first won fame
to vote a maximum tax rate for sents another step forward in OPPORTUNITY with hooks about the sea and
the city of $2 50 instead of $180. state industry started by Benito 2 The missiles, among other shore, she intends soon to be back ____ ___._______ . ..
Mussolini things, gave the Russians a browsing along the beaches and the more I was appalled with what
in 1933 he set up the Institute chance to see whether Presidentreturning to a pending book "ex- had happened."’ p, ,
per la Reconstruzione Industriale Kennedy was tough enough to do ploring nature with children. And Miss Carson hopes her efforts . _ s x.muiet.
Institute for Industrial Recon- anything about it He was They’n she $ already thinking about a will have some good results for .men tat every ne.discey
struction) as a depression emer- have to be cautious about testing major bnok on man 8 relationship fellow human beings and the world en she makes ere. But thereS
gency measure it took over in- him again. to.his.environment. ,, . of nature that has been her abid- also3fighting spirit, per haps from
dustrial stockholdings from banks 3. The Russian retreat in Cuba MISS CARSON hardly looks the ing love since childhood "We ScptchIrishaancestorh. n
type for a crusade, anyway—55, simply have to wait and see " Ever since she can remem-
; .......". MAIL FLOODS into Miss Car- ber. Rachel Carson wanted to be
reserved, delicate-appearing, ser- son's quiet Silver Spring Md 8 writer. When she started out
ious-minded—she's more the quiet home, where she has lived "close at Pennsylvania College for Wp-
. , to excellent libraries" since days as $
Hf Iuliang It was only to "put the facts as a graduate student at Johns mjor in English composition I
. of Italian economic life, a any future show down, On record" so the public could Hopkins University in 1932 With thought that was the way to be-
a And Rusk in the hourrions.in make its own decision, she says, a smile, she notes that 98 5 per come a writer."
th inan.fr. a 2 , terview' said this ountry has that Rachel Carson undertoot a cent of her mail is favorable, al- But after a course in bioloy
Its industries are worth much even cautioned our friends from 4%2-year .project to warn about though sh is fully aware there she decided to pursue the study
more than this drawing too many conclusions "poisonous and biologically potent are many critics too of science.
belonging to Ralph Cole of Krum,', nhe institute controls other hold- from the Cuban experience." -----------------------—--------------—------------------— "It's amazing." Miss Carson
were destroyed by fire Saturday, ing companies. These in turn con- NO NEW SHAPE --- _ _ says, looking back now, that "it
"1 ee r r " " , .... ....... never occurred to me or any'of
GREEN PASTURES vgu,wu5, vice and devote herself fulltime
Pensionitis is characterized by I you doubt this, the next time to her own writing
an acute delusion that life is bet- you 8° to a cocktail party step to She no longer has to write in
ter without work The victim bab- the center of the room and an- the late hours of the night, but
bles endlessly about how much nounce in a louddear voice she savs .he works harder than
| greener the pastures will be when "My company has just put in a when she held a regular job, "To
be is 65. gives up his job, and no whopping new pension program be one s own boss is to be mh
on. wil +.n him wbat 1 k.. , and, boy. is it a good one'" more exacting- if anyone made
Jordanians and 104 Sudanese re- will,tel hi “ the ‘ 1 . LIFE OF THE PARTY me work these hours, Id certam-
duce their forces here to 100 each, d , Vsuall he also makes wild You *<11 find this is a far better ly complain" she admits.
They no longer fear Kassem, andeimPos o lesplans. about how way to become 1116 life of the par mSS CARSON has never mar-
and they want to disengage from he 15 8oing to en° his final free- ty than had you merely stood on ried cno time.". She says she
any other involvements in the your head or sat down to the pi- sometimes envies men writers
Arab cold war. - The disease is mildly noticeable ano and rippled through a Mozart who are married, because they
"Our policy toward current in men of 35, deepens in intensity concerto Everyone will flock up have their wives to take care nt
Arab events," said Shiek Sabah in those ovwr 40, and in men past to hea$ your good news I them, provide meals and save
El Ahmed, minister of informa; “ The present preoccupation with them from unnecessary interrup-
tmn is one of strict neutrality, । his secondary school science pensions is a rather sad reflection tions.
AA -wom w More than any other nation. Ku-course or in the upper TO per of something hasically wrong with Miss Carson finds her fun and
ADdel Karim Kassem wait would have much to lose by cent of an arts course, he s eh- * relaxation in her work "It bap-
taking sides gible for advanced schooling .. . . . . " ‘
Its 322,000 residents, including abroad with all expenses paid. Man has always yearned for se-
51 11 . Kuwaiti turns up jobless, curity in an insecure world, and
the government may set him up Iontoq efearedold age be the shore, she finds it relaxing
naxsmall shop or help him buy the 1onely mourMey mer th’ ali 8 and stimulating al the same 3
SL speeches about op.. he poorhouse, or being dependent and stores up writins materiaf i
pressed Kuwaitis get the horse on.the charity of his children A longtime friend and writer on
Social Security and the spreadnatural history, Paui BrOOks,
— ... ------------------- the most revealing view of Miss
city planners have talked in terms our economic system are doing Carson is to see her at dusk at
of an Arab metropolis of three much .° wipe out that fear and to her summer cottage on the Maine
troops still maintain an Arab
by the state. As he ate, he glanced tools, and dozens of other prod it controls synthetic rubber plants,
through his morning newspaper, ucts. ‘81 also controls the state a newspaper, motels, restaurants,
owned by a state firm radio-television network, Italy’s bars and tanker fleets
He dressed in a suit made of, biggest shipping companies and Italy’s major railways are state-
cloth from a state-owned mill. the Alitalia Airline owned and operated by a separate
The car he drove to work was The Institute is not the only big authority. All tobacco products
constructed in a state plant state holding company. In recent are made or imported by the1
At the office, he used a tele- years it has been overshadowed state for sale in authorized shops
phone provided by a state com- in growth by the Ente Nazionale And the state-approved tobacco
pany He lit a state cigarette with Idrocarburi, built by the dynamic shops handle another state mon-
a state match \ Enrico Mattei, who died in ajopoly as a sideline—salt
On his way home, he purchased I
gasoline at a state-owned filling W WTT- m m r m
W orld l oday
More Cautious
brought to their attention. All
advertising orders are accepted on
this basis only.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. [103], Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962, newspaper, November 30, 1962; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1531842/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.