The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 269, Ed. 1 Friday, November 10, 1967 Page: 4 of 18
eighteen pages : ill. ; page 21 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
9
1
t
GONE TO “POT”
S
Teachers, Likp^fu^flhinf Must Have a Dream
22230
More
1)
a:
P
Apsut
J
THESE DAYS. . .
«
i
By/JOHN CHAMBERLAIN
What Will We Worry About After Year 2000?
This is the season for debat
dor city from Houston to New Orelans.
e
eterans
N
True Life Adventures
20
*3
69
Ee-K
umaT
EME-
#1
1110
2=-
fine to preserve our heritage of freedom.
. may we pay tribute to those valiant
NEW YORK
than a billion
seat belts to be buckled,- then
passed out sticks of chewing
Al He-
ineback-
Phillips,
id Gene
11 be the
NEW YORK (AP) - In his
economic message to Congress
this year, President Johnson
stated: “The coexistence of job
vacancies and idle workers un-
able to fill them represents a
land con-
simon.
bl record
I back 91
hwestern,
out 100
pd scored
you
nth.
like
an beings are
wretchedness in
Of
ke a
adi.
■■ Em a 21-7
n North-
■he over-
Evorite.
■ng heav-
■g of tail-
1
age in w
Fyd
-z=
mee--m
i ' ■■ •
THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
Memory Like Gracious
Necklace of Human Spirit
By HAL BOYLE
rOtumans
retchedness
id
erh /' '
ON THE LINE ...
More Than Billio
Buried Deep ipW
tesMaa
)i
tung's men the run of the lounge
. by Manhattan's East River.
If all goes according to the
Arthur Godfrey declares" that
the greatest demonstration of
V"Mission," published
Society tor the Propaga-
the Faith, spells it‘out
tient what they eat for dinner,
a well - heeled physician ex-
plained. “That's a question of
paramount importance. I base
I get this confounded gum out
of my ears?"
many men never wore except
when courting, going to church,
or attending weddings and fu-
my fees on my clients' menus." - nerala.
the very court of Mao Tse-tung
and Chiang Ching, who knows
who will be ruling in Peking to-
Try And Stop Me
-------By BENNETT CERF________
1
s
QUICKIES:
The automobile may have re-
placed the horse, but the man
who drives one ought to stay on
the wagon "—Coir F. Duffy.
Asked why he asked every pa-
Finally. the teacher must have a sense of
destiny. He must be, able to see through the
yawns of the bored athlete to note the
potential of a one-day engineer . . .
He must be able to pinpoint stars and
help his students see the road to success
more clearly.
His reward? Let us return to Magellan for
• an answer. He did not make his goal but
" there will be switches and "ah
stentions” the other way.
It would be a supreme irony
if the pro-Albanians in the UN.
were to gain their poiot and
bring “Red China” to the East
River glass house only to dis-
cover that the Mandate of
Heaven in Peking was passing '
to an antiCommunist coalition
including representatives of the
Taiwan Chinese The odds may-
be against this happening, but
it could happen. What would the
Albanians do then, poor things?
Just at the moment there
THE BUSINESS MIRROR . . .
Unemployment Statistics
Underscore Tragedy9 Waste
By JOHN CUNNIFF
find out who was being tried for
what and to discuss with his old
cronies how the elected officials <
were wasting the county’s mon-
ey.
Whenever you saw a lad with
a bandaged thumb, you knew he
had burned himself while trying
to learn the esoteric adult art of
must have a dream, and like the seaman
they must be sure of a definite goal that
exists.
As a guide of youth, the teacher cannot
chart his course on textbook knowledge
alone. His dream must be built on the belief
that each young person in his charge is im-
portant, and he must build that belief on love
—a desired practice, often spoken, but too
seldom implemented.
Magellan also had determination and gave
his life to his cause. It is not the fate of
teachers to sacrifice life and limb for stu-
dents daily, but If we give up our determina-
buried d
this wor!
by the8
toy6 I
BBIFPLR SEALS
YKEFEK A c*WVEV
NM1SHBOKHOOV.
one defect—you couldn't blow
bubbles with it.
The cultural center of the
American home was the family
piano. Mother or sister played,
while everyone else gathered
around and sang.
Father always rather hated to
have’ company for dinner, as
that meant having to eat in the
dining room rather than the
kitchen, where it was more re-
laxed.
One of the big warning signs
that inflation had arrived was
the doctor's decision to start
charging $3 for home calls.
It was a mark of gentility to
eat store-bought bread. In most
small towns women still baked
it at home.
A wife who couldn't turn out a
real tasty pie was regarded as a
slipshod homemaker and defi-
cient in character.
A prosperous farmer proud of
his stature in the community al-
ways had the hired hand oil the
harness until it shone before
TELEPMONES:
Gentret orne m closatnted ______________ an
Circulation Department -----__________ TU 34409
Entered at Oronge, Texas. Post ffice ot second Ooh mater
under oct e Congress March 1, 1079.
k
K
i
g
v
in
■
<
ACROSS THE EDITOR’S DESK ...
Hand of Gratitude Qwed to All Our
By J. CULLEN BROWNING /
In this complex world of today, no group
of Americans faces a greater challenge than
our classroom teachers Most of them are
keenly aware of that fact and one expressed
their feelings about it in a magazine article
You have strung yourself
quite a necklace if. you can look
back and remember when-
. If a child was often cranky
and listless, it was suspected
that he probably had worms.
You were pretty sure an el-
derly man had false teeth if he
consistently declined to eat an
apple in the presence of others.
During summers the street re-
pair crews would give every kid
in the neighborhood a piece of
warm tar to chew. It had only
axes to grind, reports that Wang
Li, who has been Peking’s prop-
aganda chief, is being assailed
by Red Guardists as “an ele-
ment” of the Kuomintang If
true,' this is a most curious
piece of intelligence. For nly
last July Wang Li was being
feted in Peking after his release
by anti-Maoist troops in Wuhan.
Wang has been one of Mao’s
close comrades, and the inti-
Also in the crystal bal are the widespread
use of paper clothes, the declining use of
cash, and life spans of up to 150 years.
pphically in its current issue.
/The text, Illustrated by a
stark photograph of a ghastly
shantyown, taken by the great
Henri’ Cartier-Bresson, is as fob
lows- —
"This is life for 1,250 million
people If you lived here, you
would have to:
—Take out all furniture, ex-
cept a few old blankets, a.mat,
one table and a chair.
—Take away all clothing, ex-
cept your oldest dress. suit and
one pair of shoes for the head of
the family.
—Remove the pantry and
kitchen; leave a small bag of
flour, some sugar, salt, a few
moldy potatoes and a handful of
dried beans for tonight's dinner.
By Carrier
By Mali _
ment next July, September and October. Don't .
offset gains, however, by indulging in speculation
this month or In January, or indulging in extrava-
gant whims during the latter half of December
and the first two weeks in April. Rather, retrench a
bit during those periods, since you my be faced
with some unexpected expenses.
Look for happy personal relationships through-
out most of the next 12 months, with strong em-
phasis on romance for the balance of this month
(an all-around good period for all natives of Scor-
pio); in January, May, late June and late July.
Most propitious cycles for travel and making inval-
uable contacts through social activities: The period
between now and mid-January, next July and
August.
A child born on this day will be endowed with
the qualities required to succeed as an educator,
scientist or financier — depending on his leanings.
BROWERVILLE, MINN., BLADE: “The govern-
ment spends more than MM million a year on
public information, news, views, and self-pleadings •
—more than double the outlay for news-gathering by
the two major U.S. news services, the three major
television networks, and the 10 biggest American
newspapers Much of this huge expenditure as re-
ported by the Associated Press. . . is devoted to
convincing Americans (with their own money) what
the government does is for their welfare."
•V
d
•n
l
t
1
died short of it. But, in history books and in
students' minds he still sails around the
world — even if it is occasionally reverse
course. . - ■
sumably accounts for the purely
pro forma flavor of the pros and ----------- — — —
cons about giving Mao 1 Tse- mate friend of Chiang Ching,
■ ‘ ■ Mao’s actress wife. If suspicion
of treason now reaches up into
Informing the passengers of a in San Franck
westbound jet that some turbu- lady summ<
lence was expected shortly, an
on-the-job stewardess ordered
spontaneous joy he ever beheld
at an air base was the day
some fool officer of the day
posted this order: “All women
pilots will wear dark blue or ’
.black stockings only. Anyone
wearing anything else will he
subject to immediate disciplin-
ary action."
predictions, the Taiwan Chi-
nese. who hold a permanent
U.N. Security Council seat as
the legitimate Republic of
China, are in no danger of be-
ing ousted or fobbed off with
demotion to the General Assem-
bly this year. The Russians
don't really want to help Mao
Tse - tung get new prestige,
~ which is why Red Chinese spon-
sorship is left to the Albanians.
Some of the Arab nations,
who are mad at the U.S. for
its pro-Israeli sympathies, may
switch their vote to favor Red
Chinese inclusion But the Ma-
oists haven't endeared them-
selves to Indonesia. Burma and
certain other Afro - Aslan na-
... tions during the past year, so
The Orange LEADER
EDITORIAL PAGE
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967
1=52e
—Dismantle the bathroom,
shut off all water, remove all
electricity.
—C a n c e l aU newspapers,
magazines, book-club subscrip-
tions. Your family is illiterate.
There is one radio for the town,
—Remove the postman, the
firemen, any service. Move the
school al least five miles away,
cut it to two rooms, enough for
less than half the children.
Move the nearest clinic 10 miles
away. Replace the doctor with
a midwife.
—Throw away bankbooks,
stock certificates, pension
plans, insurance policies. Leave
the family, a cash board of $3.
—Move the family to a tool-
shed. Take away the house; re-
place 10,000 neighbor hood
houses with shanties.;
—Lop off 25-30 years in life
expectancy.”
How's your champaigne hang-
over?
Caesar. Hannibal, Napoleon,
Wellington, Grant, Lee Foch.
Pershing and MacArthur will be
tion we have given up too soon.
When at the end of a teaching day we
come in with an aching back, blistered feet
and a splitting head, it would be easy to
trade an overcrowded classroom for an easier
Guessing about the year 2000 is a popular
form of recreation these days. It has attracted
layman and expert alike and is providing
lots of material for the various “think tanks ’
that have grown up in the last few years.
One such excursion into crystal-ball gaz-
ing predicts a U.S. population of 318 million
enjoying high family incomes and living in
places like Boshwash, Chipitts, Sansan and
Houno \
Boshwash is the giant urban concentration .
that will stretch from Boston to Washington.
Chipitts is the megapolis from Chicago to
Pittsburgh, Sansan the one from Santa Bar-
lighting a kitchen match with
his thumbnail.
When a single lady over 30 got
herself a cat it was thought she
had given up hope of landing,
herself a husband and had be-1 .
come reconciled to the idea of
being an old maid.
An Intellectual was anybody
who subscribed to the Literary
Digest magazine. After 40. a
majority of Americans rarely
bought or read any book except
the Bible.
A necktie was something -
YOUR HOROSCOPE . . .
■ The Stars Say
FOR TOMORROW
Saturday's stellar influences suggest caution in
all matters. Be especially careful in financial trans-
actions and do not exceed your budget by yielding
to extravagant whims. During the P M . avoid need-
less arguments.
FOR THE BIRTHDAY
If tomorrow is your birthday, your chart prom-
ises some pleasing developments in both your per-
sonal and business life during the coming year.
Start making plans for taking advantage of fine
opportunities immediately facing you — where both
job and monetary interests are concerned—since
excellent results for your efforts are indicated by
March 31st. Gains promised on both of the afore-
mentioned fronts should fire even loftier ambitions
and serve as a springboard to further advance-
morrow?
And even if the guard changes
in Peking, what about the Chi-
nese provinces? Would there be
a single ' ‘new guard" every-
where? The China-watchers say
there will be famine in parts of
China this winter if there is no
distribution of Canadian or Aus-
tralian wheat.
Well, how can there be “dis-
tribution” if communications
are in chaos? A mysterious
ranking military officer who
goes by the name of "Tsai"
has been accused of plotting to
cause chaos in Hunan. Maoists
have organized rallies in the
Hunan provincial capital of
Changsha to warn against
“Tsai.” But, as in the case of
China’s “President” Liu Shao-
chi, nobody dares touch the per-
son of “Tsai.” They don't even
dare call him by his right
name. .
So who has power and legiti-
macy in Red China anyway?
And, should the “nation" be ad-
mitted to the U.N., how would
the delegates be accredited?
Some of them might even
turn out to be “elements" of
Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang.
It would be deliciousMTunny if
“Formosa” were to meet at the
U.N. both coming and going.
NEW YORK (AP) - Memory
is a rosary of recall.
It is a gracious necklace of
the, human spirit. Each bead is
a past event or precious experi-
ence kept shining with the fade-
less luster of the mind.
t.
6 N6S
MIOtl
3-2603
driving his horse and wagon
-lemo_the Boston into, fown o" Saturday. After
loned the stewardess • buying his supplies, he usually "
in some embarrassment. “My went over, to the courthouse to
two grandchildren are waiting "n •* "ha kin- *ied
to meet me,” she said. "How do
gum. A very proper lady from
Boston announced, “I never
touch chewing gum,” but the
stewardess told her, "We're go-
ing up to 39,000 feet, and the
gum definitely will keep your
ears from popping at such a
high altitude/'
Just before the plane landed
FAMILY —
AFFAIRS -
,53#-
enough, but it is likely to persist,
and even grow as the economy
continues to mechanize and au-
tomate, and thus nearly elimi-
nate much of hand labor.
If you need a reminder, try to
recall the hundreds of pick,
shovel and rake men needed to
build a road in the 1930s. Com-
pare that picture with 1967, ‘
when a few men clustered
around a few machines can do
the same work.
The fact is that unskilled la-
bor, no matter how willing and
adaptable, is just about the
most difficult commodity to sell
in the marketplace. It is utterly
defenseless in a recession. And
it is sinking relatively lower on
the social and economic scale as
more people develop skills.
MEMSER asSOc(ATEo PRkss
The Aneeloted Prm ii exdluMvely mmw w n, w m
repuolicetlon «I Oil Wool New prKM M mu ne"
oi *<ii oi oll ar dlspotchek "" "Po"
The author is Betty J. Hendrick, a tacher
in the Victoria School System, and this is
what she wrote for the November issue ot
T Sumiki r-om" of t2t the puha
' wyinetzsmhgsirqiterMabsethan"onm Mm m,abeeSundas:waywgv1i9
S ^heVo^’^ out
It was a hilarious incident tq my charges these attitudes right away, but he knows if
and I, too, laughed. ..2 he keeps on keeping on, tomorrow Sally may -
But then how much-like that explorer, in smile and Tim may become an angel. Deter*
a sense, teachers need to be; .mination — a trait much coveted, much
in the first placed that explorer had.a ’needed,
dream; across the water somewhere was the
coveted trade route. Like Magellan, teachers
bitter human tragedy and an
Inexcusable economic waste.”
The tragedy and the waste
were underscored this week by
the most recent unemployment
statistics. At the very time
skilled workers were demanding
and getting higher wages, the
unskilled found it harder even to
find jobs.
This situation has produced a
strange contrast, for these poor
exist side by side with the most
materially comfortable workers
the world has seen.
Unemployment In October,
the Labor Department an-
nounced, rose for the second
straight month to a surprising
high 4.3 per cent of the labor
force, the highest percentage in
two years.
Compared with some other
postwar years this percentage
, still might be viewed as rela-
tively healthy, but like the shiny
red apple, the outer layers may
have to be peeled to reveal the
core.
Probing into this 4.3 per cent
figure reveals that joblessness
among white collar workers re-
mained at 2.5 per cent, but that I
for every other category of
worker unemployment was I
greater than the overall aver-
age. - -
Among blue collar workers
the percentage rose to 4.9 from
4.6, service workers to 5.5 from
5.1, and non-farm laborers to 9.2
from 8.1. Negro unemployment
—skilled and unskilled combined
—reached 8.8 per cent. The J
white rate was only 3.8 per E1
cent.
This disparity between the
skilled and unskilled is bad
on the U.N. on the proposi}
bars to San Francisco and Houno the corrl- 'that Red China ought . be
■ — - _ . seated in the good o}‛parlia-
ment of man, with, without
v our national goflicts.
Over million of them made the supreme
sacrifice. The 26 million we salute tomorrow re-
man the living symbols of the life pulse of our
dmocracy.
A Our very democracy pulses with the stout hearts
of the veterans who fought that it might endure.
We owe them far more than a day of tribute.
We owe, them that day;‘which we ourselves are
living, and enjoying!
There is no typical veteran. He is a youg man
who perhaps has not voted yet, just back from his
tour of duty in Vietnam.
Or he is in his upper eighties, sitting on the
. front porch, dreaming of long-ago gas Hghtsand
horse-drawn carriages. He is a World War I vet-
erans or one who served in World War II.
Whoever he is, and whatever he' is, we owe to
him or her the hand of gratitude — and that we
offer tomorrow.
Moment of Meditation . . y
Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the ear,
where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thjKes
break through and steal. —Matthe
soldiers who are still striving to attain the ulti-
mate goal of world peace.
< In the last week, 15.000 servicemen and women
have become veterans, swelling the number of liv-
ing veterans we honor tomorrow to more than
26 million.
Have you ever counted up to 26 million. Of
course not Undoubtedly. no human being has.
Someone has estimated that it would take 28 weeks
of 8-hour counting days, and no coffee breaks or
weekends off, just to count to 26 million.
Then how do you honor 26 million veterans? Ob-
viously not individually, much as we might like to
salute each veteran personally, from the youngest
veteran of Vietnam to the oldest campaigner of the
• Spanish-American War, and give him our share of
the nation's gratitude for patriotic sendee rendered. 1
We must never allow the figure of 26 million
living veterans to become commonplace.
Since we can never hope"to meet and greet
that many individuals, let uis study other ways
of coming closer to them.
Our veterans live in all the so states and the
District of Columbia and 130,000 of them live in
outlying areas of the nation: in Puerto Rico, the
Canal Zone, Virgin Islands, American Samoa,
Guam, and in the Philippines Forty-one thousand
live in other countries. , .
Three out of four of our veterans live in cities
or suburban areas One out of five lives in a rural,
nonfarm area. One out of 20 lives on a farm.
With their families and dependents, veterans
make up about half our national population
if .public concern expresses the' heart of our
democracy, how much moreso do our veterans
themselves? In all, since the founding days, some
38 million men and women have participated In'
THE ORANGE LEADER
Pvoltahee weex Dg ,009 sundey Merning
Oronee Lroder PueliNing Ca. cine,
200 w. From Avg P. 0. Box 'sn. Orong,, r.«M »as
Jmn a. Qulgiev, Prentdenf eng braN ■
60
okizD
-k2=-gDe2Mwa ’
Wlange aRASwALEMN
HEK CALF VO NOT NNTEKMIN1E.
ITS eTen A FAM A#AK.
surprised — wherever they are . ‘ I
— by the following announce- ■
ment by Dr. Nicholas A. Be- I
govich, vice • president of the
Hughes Aircraft Company; ‛,1
"Any future global conflicts -1
in which electronic command ■
and sontrol systems are used I
will be won by the nation with
the best computer programs I
and programmers.”
You may compute when I
ready, Gridley!
“I don't see Cam Ranh Penin- I
aula as a ‘hot, barren strip of I
sand,’ as some of your fellow I
correspondents have described I
it,” writes Daryl F. Kayl, an I
American' in construction work ‘ I
in Vietnam.
"I see it as the site of the 1
most modern and beautiful city
the world has ever known. I see -1
industry on the bay side and, - I
above the green and blue wa- -1
ters of the China Sea and those
beautiful beaches, the hotels,
the high rise apartments and
the office buildings to support
the industry of a great ‘free 2
port’ in Southeast Asia.
"Teddy Roosevelt’s dream of
harnessing the great power of I
the Mekong watershed would
provide the muscle as well as
the glue to weld all the states of
the Indo-China peninsula into a
federation that could hold up its
head in the world, after so
many years of being servile to
others.
"We can win the war much--
sooner bybuilding such a
dream city and showing these
people we can and intend to do
more than just kill. We can dis-
pel the mistrust that is a part of -
their nature and was best ex-
pressed to me recently, by a
Vietnamese intellectual who
said, ‘Please be patient with us.
You skin is the same color as
the French and many of us still
cannot realize that you are here ■
for a different purpose.’
1) ENNaose,
W 1 55 24
( X
Eas,
Raq
seems to be a lull on the China
mainland But according to the
China--* atchers this is because
Mao Tse-tung, or those who
control his person, have ceased
for the moment to press the
cultural revolution.
The theory is that Chou En-
lai, the Chinese Talleyrand, is
trying to cover all she splits in
the Red Chinese fahric with pa-
per, which brings up the image
of the one-armed paper hanger
with the hives But the quiet
will hardly last the winter.
Radio Moscow, which could
be speaking the truth even
though it has its own Chinese
But what rea 11 y concerns the future-’
watchers is the effect of a short work-week
in the year 2000. The annual working period
may be only 147 days, leaving 218 days for
leisure. ;
The problem, as has been mentioned many
times, is just what Americans are going tpo
with all that free time. Perhaps we will all
be guessing about the year 2100. M
Annual Farce oirKed China Due at U.N.
L00bj..0.
ga
,27
2
kMdcuzo
SUBSCRIPTION'RATU
—1,1*88
By B9B CONSIDINE
the acquiescence fthe Taiwan
Chinese,
Since niobo really knows
whether Ked China, as Red
China ./Clill exists after a year
and/ore of the cultural rev-,
p)dion, the arguments ate
bound to sound farcial. It is a
< good question whether mainland
China today has one govern-
ment (in Peking) or twenty
governments in as many war
lord headquarters scattered
from Hunan to Sinkiang, and
Manchuria to Tibet
When the U.N. was started, it
was supposed to be for nations
which did not act like a bunch
of Kilkenny cats. Though the
rule has been forgotten by-
crazed governments, the repre-
sentatives of the member na-
tions at the U.N. aren’t really
crazy as individuals, which pre-
Tomorrow is Veterans Day nationwide and elec-
tion day in Texas. It’s also the opening of deer
season
While there are no personalities on the ballot in
our part of the state, I hope all qualified voters
in this part of Texas who haven’t already voted
absentee will cast a ballot on the six proposed con-
stitutional amendments. . M
Kt the father of three former membersd our
armed forces, two living and one dead, LHope also
that all of our readers will join in the’observance
of Veterans Day in some manner/
We should reaffirm our pledge not to forget the
dead who have served this, as members of
its armed forces. Their comributioha can never be
forgotten. .
And may the cins at America remember the
sacrifices and sotributions of all living veterans
who conducted themselves with gallantry and cour-
- • 8
•KM4E---- — -
68S29Aa. ==—
H6EeRF2-;- .
32e--1
—f2s-
225
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 269, Ed. 1 Friday, November 10, 1967, newspaper, November 10, 1967; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619912/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.