The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 111, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 6, 1954 Page: 20 of 28
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gp THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
0-D Abilene, Texas, Wednesday Evening, October 6,1954
EDITORIALS
... if we desire to secure peace ... It must be
known that we are at oll times ready for war
George Washington to Congress, 1793
Trieste Laid to Rest
One of the touchiest situations in all
Western Europe, a dynamite-filled issue
dating back to 1»45 directly and to a
much remoter period than that indirect-
ly. has finally been settled in a way satis-
factory to both parties to the dispute
Italy and Yugoslavia have reached
agreement on division of the free terri-
tory of Trieste. The accord was to be in-
itialed in London, where the U.S. and
Britain have been pounding away at the
disputants for a settlement for months
Under the terms agreed to. Italy gets
the major part of Zone A. including
port facilities, while ’Yugoslavia gets
Zone B. the hinterland, plus some small
pockets out of the south side of Zone A.
The Yugoslavs already occupy the ter-
ritory, and have since 1945. Italian
troops soon will take over from the 4,-
000 American and 3.000 British troops
who have been holding Zone A for years,
and the Anglo-Americans will be reas-
signed elsewhere.
Premier Mario Scelba, who broke the
news, says he believes the Italian Par-
liament will ratify the treaty promptly.
It will be interesting to watch the re-
action of the Communists in the Ital-
ian Parliament, who understandably
have no use for Tito of Yugoslavia, who
broke with Russia. In addition, the
Communists would normally oppose
ratification because the treaty is a vital
step in building up the West against Rus-
sian imperialism, since the settlement of
the controversial Trieste issue will en-
able Italy to join Yugoslavia. Turkey
and Greece in their mutual security trea-
ty against aggression.
Ratification by Yugoslavia will be au-
tomatic. if Tito says so,
Thus, within the span of three days,
and in both instances at international
gatherings in London, the West has
scored diplomatic victories of vast sig-"
nificance.
In both cases, ratification by the hich
contracting parties will be necessary,
and in two vital areas at least the Com-
munists have representation in the par-
liaments—France and Italy. How much
mischief these minor but noisy and skill-
ful groups can create remains to be seen
and the pedestrian himself is confused
by the multitude of lights of varying in-
tensity, coming from all direction*.
The state law makes a differential of
5 mph between the driving speed of
daylight and darkness, and it could very
well be changed to 10 miles. Similarly,
in city limits, drivers should adjust to a
speed 5 or 10 miles below the 30 m.p.h.
permitted in daylight—for their own
sake and for others' sake
The greater mortality of nighttime
traffic is all the more apparent when
you consider that daylight traffic is far
heavier than night. Most of the multiple-
death accidents seem to happen in the
quiet hours of midnight, when traffic is
lightest and the lure of speed and care-
lessness is most pronounced.
Dusk and dawn should be respected
for their effect on vision, and speed
should be adjusted accordingly Special
alertness at the wheel is incumbent up-
on every driver, and every pedestrian
should have special care in these per-
iods.
"Slow Down at Sundown” is a good
slogan, but more than a slogan. It is
something everyone should practice
conscientiously
Safety for Children
We read somewhere the other day how
a parent taught his toddler to cross the
street safely. The child had run across
the street to play with other children
and hadn’t bothered to look in either di-
Slowdown at Sundown
We are at the beginning of the most
dangerous time of the year, traffic-
wise, as days grow shorter and the home-
ward rush is complicated by poorer and
poorer visibility. Seventy percent of
traffic fatalities occur after sundown,
and visibility reaches its nadir betw een
sunset and dark, when the twilight
distorts and falsifies vision. The very
word epitomizes its effect on vision—
"two-light.’’ when the lingering light of
the sun mixes and mingles with the
earth’s dust.
Fatalities increase as the day grows
shorter, and twilight comes more and
more to coincide with the homew ard
trek of millions of Americans from their
places of employment.
So the slogan Fort Worth police have
put on placards around the city—"Slow
Down After Sundown"—really means
something. Drivers see only half as well
in the confusion of headlights and the
natural low visibility of dusk. A driver
cannot see a pedestrian in dark clothes.
CAPITAL COLUMN
ATTLEE
OUT
Business as Usual
rection for traffic. So papa called him . pepApe
back and made him cross the street ROBERT ALLEN REPORTS
twenty times, making sure that the child .
looked both ways each time before start-
ing.
It sounds like a sensible thing to do.
Learning by doing stays with a child a
lot longer than learning by merely be-
ing told. *
A great many grownups cross the
street with their beads down and with-
out looking either way. But a child is
impressionable, and if the lesson is
borne in upon him with sufficient ade-
quacy. be usually gets the habit of be-
ing watchful and becomes trustworthy.
Verbal ding-donging, sometimes ac-
companied with threats of a spanking or
withdrawal of privileges, is of dubious
effectiveness when the child is left to his
Special Session Is Possible
By ROBERT S. ALLEN
W ASHINGTON, Oct 5 - Presi-
dent Eisenhower is considering
calling the House of Representa-
tives into special session on Nov-
ember 8.
That's the day the Senate is
scheduled to begin consideration
of the McCarthy censure report.
Under the plan being deliberated
by the President, the House would
be reconvened at the same time but
for a different purpose That
chamber does not act on the Me-
It would greatly strengthen the
Administration’s hand in seeking
Senate confirmation of several
hundred presidential appoint-
ments. among them around 150
stalled postmasterships, the recent-
Iv/-named member of the atomic
Energy Commission, several jun-
ior cabinet selections and nume-
THOS. L. STOKES...
Split-Ticket Repeal
Aid in California
LOS ANGELES Politically, Cal- party. That was inspired initially
ifornia seems pale this year. by the removal from the scene of
That is, if you knew it in its Governor Warren to whom So
picturesque and often rowdy past, many Democrats were loyally de-
Back in the depression of the voted, and was helped along by
1930‘s, for example, when it was the requirement of party designa-
under the spell of novelist Upton tion on the ballot. The new hope
Sinclair and his “end poverty in within the party itself encouraged
California" (EPTC) movement, formerly warring elements to try
and of old Doc Townsend and his to bury their factional differences,
old-age pension crusade, and of the so that the party is more harmo-
ham - and - eggers and their thirty nious today than in years,
dollars every Thursday. Lucky we This new spirit has foundIanout-
are that those furies are dimin- let. California is being washed by
ished though there are still pen- the'tide of upsurging Democratic
sion movements here — and plenty strength noted elsewhere, and
active, inchiding Doc Townsend Democrats are prepared to ride
still and George McLean. a com- the tide here.
parative newcomer. The tide hardly appears strong
There was, too, the era after that enough yet, however, to unseat the
when the mountainous Earl War- Republican governor, the affable
ren, as governor, dominated Cal- hand - shaker and man : about -
ifornia’s politics and beld the state. California, Goodwin J. Knight, who
in thrall with as near one - party moved up from his practically per.
government as is possible for so petual role of lieutenant governor
mercurial a state. Democrats to top place when Governor War-
flocked about that Republican ren quit to don his black robe in
leader. Washington. But the tide seems to
The stage here seems empty threaten the Republican Senator
now. California’s leading actors Thomas H. Kuchel, who was ap-
have moved to Washington for pointed to the seat vacated by
their stage There Earl Warren Vice - President Nixon. That is a
presides over the Supreme Court loss Republicans could ill afford in
and the two younger men. Rich- their closely fought battle to keep
ard M Nixon and William F. control of the Senate.
Knowland, are respectively Vice- Democrats Hopeful
President and Administration lead- While Democrats recognize It
er in the Senate. California is con- would take a real tidal wave to
stantly conscious of both the young unseat Gov ernor Knight, they have
• men because of their rivalry to hopes that their candidate for the
control this great state, now so im- Senate, Rep. Sam Yorty of Los An-
portant in national politics — and geles, may defeat "Tommy" Ku-
in choosing Presidents. chel who lacks the dramatic cam
Rack home here. California is in paigning talents of the Democratic
a state of transition politically. congressman. The Senator has not
Old Law Modified made much of a splash in Wash-
It seems.to be moving away ington; but that is understandable
from the semi - non - partisan, - when you consider he has been
mixed party system that the late
Hiram Johnson gave it 40 years
Abilene
own devices But if the parent takes the Carthy issue.
trouble to start him off right by some Republican National Committee
such method as the father mentioned leadens. Whoner doMMMEPlan.
above employed, he has a better chance nouncement be made around oct.
of survival in his adventurous prowlings ober 15.
around his neighborhood. President Eisenhower has dis-
Survival habits perhaps should be cussed the matter by phone with
driven home to the child in kindergar- Vice-President Nixon, Speaker Joe
ten and the first few grades of public Martin, other congressional lead-
school Precept and example should be ers and members the ite
held out before him, until habits of safe-
ty become second nature.
It can be done, if people would take
the time and patience to do it.
The Praver For Today
(From the Upper Room)
Let lobe be without hypocrisy. (Remans
12:9° A.S.V.) Read Romans 13: 7-14.
PRAYER—God of love and creation, we realize
that all Thy creation is good. So strengthen us
in our love that we may love even that which we
have a tendency’ not to like. May our lore be so
perfect as to include those whom we call our
enemies In Jesus' name Amen.
McCarthy and Senate Role
” By DOUGLAS LARSEN'
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON — (NEA) —The finding of the
Senate committee that Senator McCarthy
should be censured an two counts is about
the equivalent of grand jury action.
Final Senate action will be that, of a jury
if there's a “guiliy” verdict the Senate will
that act as a judge and pronounce a "sen-
tence.”
At this point the analogy breaks down be
cause a Senate “sentence” can be almost any-
thing, an demonstrated in the following anec-
dote
A furious debate raged in the Senate be-
tween two members. Eloquent vitriol was
hurled back and forth. At one exciting mo-
ment it seemd that fisticuffs threatened.
When the inflamed oratory ended a man in
the gallery rushed down to congratulate one of
the senators: But when he got downstairs he
found the antagonists, of a lew moments ago
strolling arm-in-arm toward the door engaged
in the following conversation
“Why don't you come along in my ear to
the dinner and save a cab?"
"Fine," replied the other, “and let's pray
that Mrs ---doesn’t have Shrimp curry again
because I'm no a diet”
Later: the amazed spectator buttonholed the
senator and asked him how it was possible
to be so i gry at a man one minute and so
palsy with him the next.
“That’s the first thing we learn in the Sen-
ate,” the senator replied, “if you let your per-
sonal emotions get mixed up in these issues
you’re sure to end up with ulcers and a lot
of enemies."
Practical Attitude
This pracitical attitude on personal relations
among senators is the key to the “sentence"
which M likely to result from any censure
Committee has long been at odds
with Pentagon leaders. That fac-
tor is attributed as largely res-
ponsible for the refusal to clear
him,
Fall-out
Dr Lincoln LaPaz, noted met-
eoritics expert of the University
of New Mexico, has begun a far-
flung search for a giant fireball
that roared through southwestern
skies a few days ago. He has re-
ceived hundreds of messages from
a number of states about the phe-
nomenon. some of them as far
east as Tennessee and as far west
rous other officials. The House's
presence is not needed for this
purpose, but the argument is made
it would help “psychologically and
politically"
With the House functioning, it is
also being claimed, public atten-
tion would not be focused com-
pletely on the Senate during the
McCarthy censure fight, it is con-
tended House sessions would help
to “diffuse” the headline monopoly
that will otherwise automatically
fall to the Senate.
This last point is being strongly
stressed by National Committee
strategists. They are also of the
as California The Townsend
Old Age Pension plan is celebrat-
ing its 21st anniversary, and Dr.
Francis Townsend, founder of the
movement, has issued an optimis-
tic "coming of age" announce-
merit predicting early congression-
al enactment of his proposal .. ..
The Pentagon has purchased the
entire first edition of Charles S
ago, in an impulse of idealism,
and is moving toward two-party
government and responsibility
While the cross - filing system still
is retained, whereby candidates
can seek nominations of both ma-
jor parties, it is modified now to
require party designation of candi-
dates which was used first in the
primary this year with the result
that only three candidates — all
Democrats — won both nomina-
tions. Usually many more do.
In a fashion, this shook the
Democratic party free from its
moorings with the Warren all-in-
clusive party as it existed for so
long. The Democratic party now
has re - asserted its independence
and is standing on its own again.
In that you can sense a feeling of
pride. 1
The outstanding impression of
California politics now, in fact, is
the new vigor of the Democratic
there only two years — and take a
look at the competition in the War
ren - Nixon - Knowland combina
tion.
Democrats talk of picking up two
to four seals in the House, though
they are being hard - pressed for
one seat they now hold — that oc-
cupied by Rep. Robert D. Condon
who, you will recall, was denied
official party support by National
Chairman Stephen A Mitchell be-
cause of the Atomic Energy Com-
mission’s refusal to give him clear-
ance on the ground of alleged past
associations of a questionable na-
ture. For those who are curious,
it can be reported that James
Roosevelt, who likewise was denied
party support by Chairman Mitch
ell because of family difficulties,
is virtually certain of election in
the district formerly represented
by Sam Yorty which is overwhelm-
ingly Democratic in complexion —
'Copyright. 1954, by United Fea-
ture Syndicate, Inc.)
HENRY McLEMORE
Nixon expressed approval Mar-
tin withheld judgment.
He explained that he isn't
against the House's recall. but
wants to give, the proposal more
consideration. The House leader is
making a campaign swing through
the Midwest and will consult with
GOP colleagues and party chiefs
in that section. Martin expects to
confer personally With the Presi-
dent during this tour.
Bringing back both branches of
Congress after the November 2
election is being advocated on a .
number of grounds Chief among
those placed before the President
are:
Revision of Laws
It would open another opportu-
nity to obtain Senate approval of
the House-passed bill to legalize
wiretapping evidence The Admin-
istration is extremely anxious to
get such a law in order to revise
certain old espionage cases and
voting for.». days while their cases were J— measurer is pinainaTin
debated. the Senate Judiciary Committee,
In spite of this action the Toters gave where it was stalled largely by
Tillman two more terms. McLaurin did not the late Senator Pat McCarran.
run again for other reasons. Senate Parliamentarian Charles
The most quoted case of censure is that of Watkins has advised Vice Presi-
The most case oi censure ■ dent Nixon that concurrence in
Sen. Hiram W Bingham of Connecticut in House legislation is barred unless
1929 He got his wrist-slapping from slipping a that chamber is also in session,
lobbyist onto the staff of a Senate committee Thus the only way for the Admin-
He was not re-elected, istration to put through this bill
i . is to recall the House.
Before him the Senate censured Truman The same factor applies to a
Newberry from Michigan for questionable cam- number of other Administration
paign practices, and Newberry resigned measures left hanging on the
Not finding Senator McCarthy guilty of the vine in the Senate when Congress
charge of “incidents involving abuse of col- adjourned late in August. T** re-
*PROOF O the RMStoWY EToMs to up MPsuerouue
avoid being quarrelsome or vindictive in pri- wise they are dead and will have
vote in. some clubs catting one member in to start from scratch again when
effect a brainless coward and another aa aged
lunatic would be the most censurable thing
you could do
conviction
The record varies on the “sentence far a
member of the club. 4a 1902 Senators MeLaur-
la and Tillman of South" Carolina got into a
fist Bent on the floor and were censured
Both men apologized and were held up from’ in 1958
Would Remove Chairmanship
Even Senator Flanders (R-VD who brought
the whole censure action to a head and who
was called "senile" by McCarthy has indicated
that the worst he had in mind tor the Wis-
consin senator is taking sway his chairman-
ship of the government operations committee
He has stated his primary objective in such -
theoretical terms as exploding the McCarthy
myth of invincibility."
The fact that it took a lot of outside pushing
la the first place to get the Senate to act on
the censure, plus the action of both leaders in
putting off a final decision until after the elec-
tions indicates that the majority of the mem-
bers will be happy to avoid “ulcers and ene-
mies” on the question
It’s possible that McCarthy could apologize,
escape with a suspended “sentence” and even
keep the chairmanship of his committee. He
might not even have to apologize
On The other hand a censure could lead to
efforts to unseat him from the committee job
It could lead to a reopening of the investiga-
tion of his finances. And it could defeat him
at the polls if he’s a candidate for re-election
the new Congress convenes in Jan-
uary.
The Unseen Audience
opinion that an announcement the Sullivan's highly readable “The
House will be called back into Basic Principles of Military Law "
special session to provide Congress Written in laymen's language, the
another opportunity to complete book explains in detail the new
the President's legislative pro- military justice code Defense of-
gram would be good ammunition ficials are enthusiastically laud-
for GOP candidates, ing Sullivan’s excellent volume as
New Hitch “the best thing of its kind on the
Senator Joe McCarthy isn't the market" - (Post-Hall, Inc ) '
only committee chairman having
trouble obtaining security clear- JANE EADS
ance for members of his staff ________________%
from the Defense Department. w L:I xx
Senator Styles Bridges tR-NH’, Washington Letter
chairman of the Appropriations .curat .
Committee, and Senator Homer WASHINGTON — Its a wise
Ferguson (R-Mich), head of the parent who knows what to do
Armed Services Appropriations when there’s one exceptional, high-
Sub-committee, have run into the ly talented child in ^ family,
same stumbling block - When there are three, you’ve got
Last August. Shortly after Con- Toukeep axour thinking cap 00 24
gress adjourned, they jointly an- - it i with the
pounced the appointment of Julius whose son clay. 186 ““ ithe
National Guard, as : special con- ^'"‘Ai’!^^"^
-
But when Klein asked the De- TV shows and as a model.
fense Department for clearance in In addition, all the children
order to have access to classified make top grades in school and all
material, he didn’t get it. are good artists. Clay wants to be
Ferguson and Bridges, much , doctor. He's a voracious reader.
embarrassed by this rebuff, asked an expert rifleman, loves basket-
for an explanation. The Defense ball, baseball, swimming and ping
Department answered that Klein pong Nancy sings, wants to
"didn't meet the required qualifi- study voice. Judy has been paint-
cations" - ing since she was 2 and will study
This turn - down did not keep ballet this winter
him from going abroad With the Max Hall, father of the brood,
full backing of the two Senate a Nieman Fellow at Harvard in
leaders, whose Committee to fin- 1949-‘50 and now with the Foreign
ancing the trip, Klein went any- Operations Administration, had
way .. this to say about Clay: "If we
The former Commerce Depart- didn't think Clay could handle the
ment official under President Hoo- play as well as the new situation,
ver and one - time defense advi- we would have discouraged the
ser of the Republican National project. We think it can be quite
- harmful for children if pushed.
Irritating Husband
Way to Live Longest
I read the other day where a
group ot eminent psychologists had
come to the conclusion that the
best way, for wives to keep their
husbands young was to irritate
them •
"Keep husbands stirred up.” the
psychologists’ findings read, "and
they’ll never settle into .the dol-
drums of middle-age and more."
This was without a doubt the
most cheering news to come my
way in a long, long time, and the
same must go for tens of thou-
sands of other husbands who saw
the story, because if the report is
true I’ll be around long after the
weather has erased Washington's
face off the Black Hills of Dakota.
Cities now standing will be but
dust, and even Tennyson’s Brook
will have dried up But I'll be on
hand to answer the suns morn-
ing roll-call
I'm already making plans for
my 200th birthday I figure on be-
ing so young in 2154, thanks to wife-
ly irritation, that my guests and I
will play drop the handkerchief,
pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey, run-
sheep-run. and leap frog And I
can see my presents now A drum,
a jackknife, a sand pile, and a
cowboy suit.
Unsensible Soap
While I was writing, this.
Mary — bless her' - irritated
ten years mere to my life by com-
ing in from shopping with one of
those boxes of fancy soap that
wives are always buying You
know the kind - round about the
size of golf balls, and impossible
to get a grip on, so it is always
squirting out of your nand — and
• wunsrin CLAssac
A LITTLE CLOSER TO Tie ME, }
( PLEASE. jure woT NERVOUS )
7 ARE yuP”"wo. "AND WAT S (
, YOUR NAME? AMOS TORPID 1
5 ANO WHERE Do You LIE 1
■ • Yhup STREET EAST LATER
\ .enxou. wucos’ lyes *
( GLDREN. YES Two.How CLD)
( ARE THEY P* the 80Y IS 5 yAnsR,
) me GIRL 3 YARS TWONTHS 1
( WHAT ARE Them wAe? 805/
■ i RALPH AND THE DIAL’S 1
IS CL ARIEL
( OUGHT To MMkE
Notes ON TAs. To
FEEL PRETTY SILLY
ToMonRow MORNING
IF I COULDN’T REMEM-
BER THAT ADDRESS
AND ALL whose NAMES
AND AGES .
The AUDIENCE
PARTICIPATION
SHOW-
Knowing Clay, we think it will be
a broadening educational and ma-
turing experience."
“We lost some sleep trying to
deckle the right thing to do,” said
the children's attractive mother.
Elizabeth, who is somewhat ex-
ceptional herself—a writer of nu-
merous magazine articles, a for-
mer dramatics teacher and an
artist who has taught European
folk art to adult classes here
“We decided that if we let the
children accept these opportunities
and find it harmful, or that it's
going to be harmful, we can stop
it,” she went on “But if we don’t
do it, the children may one day
regret our decision."
Mrs Hall has leased an apart-
ment in New York near the Pro-
Sessional Children’s School which.
Clay, Nancy and Judy will attend
from 11 am to 2:30 pm, on that
they will still have time to get in
lots of sleep, recreation and sun
shine. T f
“Our children are not really
“The main reason they are in-
terested in so many things is be-
cause we have been When ex-
posed in their parent’s interests,
some rubs off. More parents
ought to take up hobbies ft really
stimulates their children’s in-
terests”
it costs about twice or three times
as much as sensible soap.
Tonight at dinner — and I ima-
gine the same thing will happen to
husbands all over the country -
I’ll have another decade or two
added to my span of life. Well
eat in a dining room that will re-
semble fifteen feet inside a cave
on an overcast day This because
wives abhor electricity and adore
candlelight for eating Most men
like to see what they’re eating,
but women, like to grope for their
food So. naturally, we men are
forced to grope along with them.
A constant source of husband Ir
ritation is the positive belief held
by a great majority of wives that
their husbands become •partially,
if hot totally, blind the moment
they get behind the wheel of an
automobile.
1 "Look out, there's a truck." they
call, as if their husbands couldn’t
see the side of a barn on wheels
half a block ahead They keep him
informed on turns, stop lights, pe
destrians. and everything else 1
have often asked Mary why in the
world she is crazy enough to get in
a car with me if she is so sure that
I couldn't see a three story house
being moved down the middle of a
street.
—And Even Worse
Another good irritant stems from
the behavior of a wife in a car
driven by her husband, as com
pared to her reactions when any
other man but her husband is driv-
Ing. She'll all but swoon from ner-
vousness when her husband goes
over sixty, but let. another man
but her own be at the wheel, and
she'll relax and chatter away,
even if he is going 75, driving
on the wrong side of the road, and
passing cars on hills
But why get mad at them? They
just do things like these, I sup
pose, to keep us with them a long
time—( McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)
THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 111, Ed. 2 Wednesday, October 6, 1954, newspaper, October 6, 1954; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1649606/m1/20/?q=%22~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.