Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1964 Page: 3 of 6
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1964
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
PAGE 3
1964
Castro Kicks
er
Off 6tfi^Year
r
With Parade
than two years in Axis prisoner-
7
-
4
as Social Security financing
a
The measure is based cut iw
David Westheimer
More Public Education
the
Express-lsAtion.
hi
but the a
tion Beyond the High School,
The administration medice_________
the EPC says that the goal of
individual
ii
ttled up in the House
versal unity -fr-duca- Twa
years of free pubi
-
BOUNCE BACK WITH
1
2.
ri
i
ga egac
7
]
MameN
NO SALE... ‘
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+
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I
a
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r v
-
B
C
07pu
Cl
ape Fear Memrial
f .
TO
-
5
3j
OFF!
OFF!
CHILDREN'S
NEUTRALIZES ACIDS
COATS
REG. 6.98.11.98
1/3 OFF!
1/4 OFF!
3
' SALE OF
4, I“Ba AEIB . .
Width 45" to 56"
WAS
NOW
2.00
CALL
Me
mission says.
1/2 PRICE!
For Want Ads Cal OK 6-343
z
1
a-
■ 4
2.98 - 3.98
1
3.98 - 9.98
{
L
‘2
1.00
,,
i
NEW LOCATION
IN
am IIMMI |—1»
A
\
1
Giris -------
Ladies
cause
ways.
Group 2
2.98 Values
1
»
Clan at
Hospital
2
9
the teaching of all subjects be
designed "to develop the ten
dency and ability to define prob-
lems as well, as to solve them,
’to relate a fact or idea to oth-
few
ris-
red
rial
ela-
MENS A BOYS
JACKETS
REG. 7.98.16.98
1/4 OFF!
I
I
a n
his
eal-
MISSED ‘63 DEDUCTION
WILMINGTON. N.C (UPD-
A boy, weighing 8 pounds, 43
though the ice and fell into the
lake.
SWEATERS
REG. PRICES
3 in
inn-
W.
Eng-
ams,
from
she
tside
npty
■by.
take at least two years, the re-
port says, for the thirst for in-
tellectuar growth to become self-
generating within most students.
As toncurriculum in the two-
year program, the report says:
"No subject or group of sub
jeets guarantees the develop
ment of the ability to think."
- - X:'
If living high on rich holiday
food has left you feeling
low, bounce back with
buttermilk—a frosty glass
of Borden‘sBuittermilk!
You’ll like Borden’s A
tb
Iph,
th
leal
Un-
of
HELPS RESTORE _
ALKALINE BALANCE
S "‘ •
ears
nau.
■
V
_ LADIES m
3 SKIRTS
Wool and Cotton
Values 3.98 to 7.98
1/3 OFF!
1
< -
GRAND
IEADER’S
e r
ing-
hn-
। in
ore
led-
€ommission on Health Cure for
the Aged formed in 1962 at the
suggestion of Sen. Jacob Javits,
R-N.Y.
A
rv.
Ital-
their
legal
mak-
of a
ata
tanta
lie education could capitalize on
students' emerging maturity, the
report says. “Many four-year
college! today devote the first
two years of their program to
general education with specia -
freed education initiated in the
third year Junior colleges offer
two years pf general education
ave
em-
may
LADIES
SHOES
DRESS SHOES
Values 4.98 - 6.98
uM=senet====
"Is
LADIES
HATS
VALUES to 8.98
L
9
LOW IN *
CALORIES
.59
.66
99-
1.19
1.99
ACKER
RUG CLEANERS
GR 6-2510
LADIES
BLOUSES
REG. 2.98
TTTTT,
. e
10 financed from general treasury
funds.
Early Schooling
The Commission reports that
EDUCATIONAL SAIL—it may or may not be true that travel broadens the mind, but it
is very true in the case of the University of the Seven Seas, a floating university shown
here anchored in Port Said, U.A.R, it is the only seagoing U.S. college and it is stopping
at some 22 ports on its cruise.______________________________
I
increase
taxesis
W ASHNG TON t UPIL—Six _
Republican senators are. push-
• i,
g-
LADIES
DRESSES
, REG. 4.98 - 15.98
p
1
K,
AND THREE OTHERS, TOO!—There are a million volts of baby charm in these two Fischer quintuplets who have left
St Luke s hospital in Aberdeen, S.D., for Christmas at home. They are Mary Margaret, left, and Mary Magdaline.
tide
low
ton,
yto -
his
MEN’S and BOVS
SPORT
SHIRTS
Priced 1.98 - 3.98
LADIES
DUSTERS
Quilts anil Fleeces
REG. 4.98 - 9.98
1/3 OFF!
RUGaCARPET
CLEANING
3
rry-
! to
are
tied
lien
of-,
uld
LADIES
COATS
PRICED 9.98 - 50.00
1/4 TO
1/3 OFF!
Men’s .......... 5.98 - 9.98
Boys’ .h 3.98-6.98
1/3 OFF!
LADIES
SLEEPWEAR
REG. 2.98 - 3.98
1/3 OFF!
...ONLY 85
CALORIES IN
AN 8-OUNCE
—GLASS
enlisted in 1941 and eventually 1
found himself in the Middle
East, navigating an Army Air
Force B-24 against targets i n
much greater ability to t hi n k
and a much greater understand
ing of self and the world than
ma be commonly assumed.-------
And. the Commission says, a
high school education alone is
not enough to produce these
ends They call for maturity be-
yond adolescence and education
at a higher level than can he
. attaihed in most high schools.
' Two More Years
proposal for, financing health
care for the aged through^-nrr
parade, which starts about
am EST.
In December, 1942, while on
his twenty-ninth mission, he was i
shot down south of Salerno, It-
aly. and taken prisoner. He Was
not liberated until .April, 1945.'.
During these long months i n
misgzydtedttmva"im
"mmmmzmanmvo
--a.. • • • yndi
Eh..(. r
$
Ee
$5s.
FROZEN FIRE ENGINE
SILVER LAKE, Wis. (UPI—
Silver Lake’s volunteer firemen
were thawing out their new
$13,000 fire engine today.
A Texan who spent more
Bondeye
i FR"
—.......
SMAEE
- we .
tKosphere of the storyN
authentic,____
Opening
trashed near
ized it at the tineuNon-Ryan’s
'Von R
Lcatedtihe
I B 24— which
Senators Pushing Houstonian David Westhein
Medial Bill ! Writes Book of Ilie Month
enough high-quality geachers.
"The value of devices like tele
vision and programmed instruc-
tion is not the prospect they of-
lemo more’ than twenty
. ago-Lawrence C. Ketnede
captivity Westheimer b e
accumulating materiaL-
novel, although hechardly
the great opportunity comes.
ing a public private plan’ of
GOSPORT England U PD
For High School Grads
-ewamom
-----
to be high,” the Commission
says. "Efforts to raise funds
from every possible source, in-
cluding private business, will
need to be strengthened." The
Commission adds that the "ma-
jor share of this increase must
come from governments, for
society as a whole derives much
of the benefit ”
"At all levels of government
there should be an increase in
the support of the entire e n -
-terprise of education,” the Com-
FABRICS
ul ~um« -Hwg-mV "
iK——- A __________—
ing and Novelty Dressy
Materials.
dubhimVon.Ryan‘ba.
of his, strict disciplinary
But it is he who. when.
MONDAY, JAN. 6, 1964
206% E. MAIN (the old Fay’s
Beauty Shop over Frank’s Barbershop)
Main your appointmment noww GR 6-4545 \
The Farrows have one other
child. -
। seizure of power in January
1959, with a Soviet-style’ parade ....
through Havana’s Revorution ommendations: of the National
Square."
EASY TO DIGEST
ASLEEP AT SWITCH
GOSNE, Ind (UPD — Police
called to investigate a car
stopped at a railroad crossing
Tuesday found the driver bent
over the wheel.
They woke the driver and he
told them he apparently dozed
off while waiting for a long
freight train to clear the cross-
ing. v%i
the ability of college students
to progress toward independent
and self-motivated thinking d e -
pends in large part on their
earlier schooling One of the
most important steps a college
can take to improve its own
program, the Commission says,
is to help the elementary and
secondary schools to improve
their capabilities.
The two-year colleges, it ad-
vises. should not be selective in
admitting students and should
exist everywhere possible They
should expand their range be-
yond their immediate environs
through radio, television, self-
teaching device!, extension pre-
programs and correspondence
courses, the-Commission says.
Sponsoring the legislation with
Javits are Sens Clifford P.
Case, R-N.J , John Sherman
Cooper, R-Ky:, Kenneth B
Keating? R-N.Y., Thomas H
Kuriuil. 84 uld and Murgurm
Chase Smith, R-Maine /
"hundreds of thousands" of of-
listalj'i1 i unti'wllid Cuban ........It ।
ers n revolution square for the
fresh-churned country ,
--------flavor, rit‘ssmoothand7
. just tart enough. A
• That’s why people M
who know how W
taste drink Borden’s. •
, . -.4
, J
WASHINGTON, DC— Ameri-
can youngsters need two more
-------- years of free public education
aimed at intellectual growth
after they- graduate from high
school. _____
Piat was the statementtoday
by the Educational Policies
Commission (EPC), an organi-
zation jointly sponsored by the
National Education Association
and the American Association of
School Administrators.
In a new publication. Uni-
LADIES
SLIM JIMS
: / REG. 2.98 - 3.98
1/3 OFF!
■Social Security
1 /
fer of solving the teacher short- ounces, was born today to Mr.
age. and their contribution toand Mrs. Clyde D Farrow at- '
. sbe-guality--pf-instructioni-Ascone-second past midpighta- -p
.2-- - ePeordimg-tothes Mt r II IMIMi.,,.^;
problem will remain, says the
report. — -• ------1-
.79
.98
1.49
1.98
2.98
rs. —
- z- —
mysa«-—«GEE-LEr- Erm--—
cational subjects. Otherwise
they would drop out of college,
finding no meaning in an aca-
demic curriculum But. the Com
mission warns, learning a job
skill may be self-defeating: "In
an accelerating technology, a I -
most any specific skill is apt hi
. become obsolescent u .
"The education which is post
useful equips one to attack com
plex new problems and tp a'c-
quire complex new s k ills
throughout a Hfetime The ro +d,
struggle between practical and
liberal education is less igni
fican as. the ability for ab s -
tract thinking becomes theckey
1 to both..”
As educattorf beyond the high
school becomes more wide-
spread, getting and keeping a
high-quality faculty will be
come a problem, t h e report
skys. But the problem m u s »
=-=*-*. n-ae zpm ■
be faced, it points out. without
giving in to the easy solution-
simply increasing the number of
students per teacher.
For despite new teaching aids,
high-quality- teaching demanas —
elalSecuriiCaresfor-thasen-They
under Social Security would be
— The Story opens in an Italian
PW camp. About a thousand
British and Americans are con-
centrated here .The foodS
poor, living conditions are bad,
morale is low. Then, one day. a
new prisoner arrives — a young
s p i t-and-polish West Pointer.
Colonel Joseph Ryan, U.S A A.F
Colonel Ryan takes over intern-
al command by virtue of his
rank.
many students advance signifi-
cantly toward awareness of self
and the world,” and, says the
Commission, the education-o f -
fered at this time must be de-
signed to enable, students t o
think, to develop a "rational
grasp" of their own lives
Less than two years of a d -
ditional education beyond, t he
high schooL- says the report,
would not be enough It would
ers i n new and significant
ways," and "to. apply special
ized knowledge to more general
situations.”
Self-Awareness
Study of disciplines can con-
tribute to sell-awareness and
knowledge of the world, b u t
some students are ill-equipped
for such study. For them, i t
may be necessary to-offer-ve-
Ways & Means Committee.
it has' encountered sharp op-
position from some Republicans
and the American Medical As-
sociation, who say it would be
a step toward socialized- medi-
cine.
The Javits measure Would
provide hospitalization, skilled 1
in a srafernent*' W«TrH-sday ' press, by David Westheimer.
the GOP senators -sald they Westheimer was born, reared
would .introduce legiutazion in an-d educated in Houston. Grad-.,
. , |yated from Rice Institute, he
the new session of Congress .to “ ■ ----
u of makjoe -nonaiNeL “hile the. firemen war
er---- nafing rik"thetngmf-orok
nursing and home care for—dH—The—otherprisoners t e sen+ -
citizens over 65 covered by So- ■ him and begin to hate h i m
John Lynes, a 23 veal r-old sail-
.or. has gone on a two-day hun-
ger strike at the submarine
base here because. British navv
officials turned down his appli- ■__,
cation to buy himauirnororma----—
service, officers said today
You’D meet modern meth-
-eds-eut—at-MHLS- eu..36—
North. -
1.98
Pus tax
LADIES
PURSES
Group 1
1.98 - 2.98 Valueg»
mne - - '*r . 51 • l 4*-,"
a.Uu.
Plus tax
a school principal inPhoenix,
Arizona t'
Castro, apparently confident
he cannot be overthrown as long
as he has solid Russian support,
faces a possible new diplomatic
challenge later this month.
A five - nation investigating
committee is expected to make
public. the results of tts probe
of charges: that the Castroites
smuggled - 3 tons of arms into
Venezuela for ,uae Jag-Xonunu-
snist terrorists. —
Latin - American diplomatic
quarters say substantiation of
the charges could lead to unit ^
ed hemisphere sancunffs against
Castro Five Latin nations still
maintain relations with his rev-
olutionary regime.
Top Sommunist leaders reaf-
firmed Russia’s pledges to aid
Castro against “U. S. imperial-
ism" in year-end statements
from the Kremlin
The government ts- mobttizing
ays that the goal of to students who then LeaveFiNe-Commissten suggests that
freedom - requires HTschool or turn to specialized
study in this two-year period.
■ MIAMI (UPI) — Premier
•4 Fidel ( astro ,starts his sixth
•w year in pwer. teday. with a
4 speech andagigantic" par
ade, probably featuring his re-
82253
2 ’
1-
dE
■ dthernnxelsamangmthamwSsimam
mer on the WuTer—end—T h-e----
Magic Fallacy A newspaperman
by training, he- has served as
TV Radio Editor of-the Houston
Posh He has a Iso. seen further----------
active duty, with the Air Force
and at present holds the rank
forTteutenant Colopetirhe
Air FOm—kese lie
healthbenefits they believe willjof-war camps has written an
. . , . .. action-packed prison-camp novel
provide a basis for ending the I Which is the BOOk-of-the-Month
congressional impasse over ! Club Selction for February
medical cars tor the aged- I The. novel is Von Ryan’s Ex.
make full use of private Ye
sources and initiative as well
V"
-j
4"
gime’s made-in-Moscow military
might
____The 37-year-old premier
marks each anniversary of his
HELPS RENEW PEP
AND ENERGY
oMA"*- ---#- Ten -
makes them feel and act like
men once more, instead of like D
a defeated rabble. /
The opportunity comes sooty
after Italy is-kneeked out of t
war. The Nazis jam the pyKon-
ers into a railroad train-wenty -
four—elesel—guardeMMhexears-—-
headed north, soothe Nazrs
Dxink.fenapeer-HW. 4o-t in- - 3, ,
GermanyFButconefryn: ■
the "pure martinet complicated
by intelligence,” has a daring
escape idea—and the exciting
climax of the book proves him
shrewd as well as during.
* Enjoyable
Clifton Fadiman, reporting.To
Book-of -the Month Club mem-
bers, calls Von Ryan’s Express
"one of the most enjoyable ae -
tion-escape-suspense stories t o
hrve come out of World Wat
IL"__._ -
David Westheimer has Written
INEZ’S BEAUTY SALON
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Blanton, Ben F. & Blanton, Carolyn W. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 99, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1964, newspaper, January 2, 1964; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1556074/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.