The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 277, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 21, 1972 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Ennis Daily News and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Ennis Public Library.
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2—THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS—Tuesday, November 21, 1972
le Ennis Daily News
Member, 1972----------n
: TEXAS I PRESS ASSOCIATION :
BRUCE BIOSSAT
"Mirror, Mirror. . . Oops!"
President - Manager.......
Charles E. Gentry
Editor
Floyd W. Casebolt
Campaign Nixon’s
Best-Hardly Any
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
Associate Editor.
Fay Casebolt
Advertising Manager
Joe D. Newman
NEW
MANAGEMENT
STORE HOURS: 8 A.M. - 7 P.M.
HALL’S DRUG
GENE SORENSON
PHARMACIST & OWNER
115 S. Dallas St.
87 5-3854
:00
:45
:00
:15
: 30
:4S
:00
:30.
8
WFAA
ABC
The Wrong
Number"
Phyllis Diller
Bob Hope
Reasoner, Smith
ABC News
News 8 on
The Move
Temperature's
Rising
Movie Of
The Week : /
"Brian's Song"
James Caan
Billy Dee
William
Marcus Welby
News 8 on
The Move
Dick Cavett
News 8
Alternatives
A KDFW
4 CBS
r WBAP
O NBC
11 KTVT33
KBF
39 KDTV
Green
Acres
Dragnet
Walter Cronkite
News
Eyewitness
News
Young Dr.
Kildare
Maude
Hawaii Five-O
I Dream Of
Jeannie
Truth or
Consequences
Inside Area 5
NBC Nightly
News
Area 5 Texas
News
To Tell The
Truth
"West Side
Story"
Natalie Wood
Richard Bevmer
Flintstones
Gilligans
Island
Leave It
To Beaver
(Love
Lucy
Dick Van Dyke
Wild. Wild,
West
News
Interview
News
Interview
News
Irving News
4 H
Goals for Dallas
Deeper
Life
Movies:
"Naked Gun"
Funz-A-
Poppin
High Chaparral
The Virginian
Big Valley
Movie:
"The Gargoyles"
Cornel Wilde
Jennifer Salt
Eyewitness
News
Late Movie:
"Hunters Are
For Killing"
Burt Reynolds
Melvin Douglas
Sign Off
Willard Parker
Mara Corday
Gomer Pyle
Area 5
Texas News
Tonight Show
Father Knows
Best
Sign Off
Petticoat
Junction
Movie:
"House Of Cards"
George Peppard
Inger Stevens •
"Moontide"
Ida Lupino
Claude Rains
News, Weather
Movie
(Cont’d.)
Club 33
Movie:
"Shadow Of
Football:
Oklahoma
vs.
Kansas
Hogan’s Heroes
Ponderosa
Movie:
"Georgy Girl"
James Mason
Lynn Redgrave
WASHINGTON (NEA)
It is a strange thing to say, but it is true: President
Nixon’s last campaign was his best not simply because he
smashed a whole host of records and came up a big win-
ner, but because he campaigned so little.
The elemental fact is that the President is free now of
doing something that he never in his life has really en-
joyed. Says a good friend:
“He hates to campaign, and he always has. Oh, he
would go out there and do a lot of things he thought he
had to, or was told by his people he should do. But he
didn’t have any zest for it."
I reminded this source that in 1945, at a background
session with the late New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey,
twice a presidential nominee, I had heard the governor
forcefully express his distaste for the labors of the cam-
paign trail. The President’s friend agreed there is a strong
parallel between the two men in this regard. He added:
“I know, as a matter of fact, that Dewey and Nixon
once commiserated with each other on this score."
In observations I set down in columns during the 1968
campaign, I noted one of the great ironies of Mr. Nixon’s
life. He chose for a career a field of endeavor for which
in a crucial way he is seriously ill-suited. At root, politics
for the politician is a thing of human relationships, and
Mr. Nixon has never mastered the art of easy human
contact.
So that part of it has indeed always been for him a
matter of forced labor. It accounts for much of the observ-
able stiffness in his public manner, and the seeming
artificiality of his attempts to be the jovial good fellow.
It is without question a key ingredient in the oft-heard
response of people who say: “I don’t know just what it is.
but there’s something about Nixon that I don’t like."
Nothing I have ever heard from people around the
President over the years suggests he has any illusions
about all this. He understands well his difficulties, and
his natural tendency to shrink from wide human contacts.
In this sense, he is one of the most complete loners ever
to engage in national politics.
In this sense, too, he has never been a good politician
and in spite of the legend of his mastery. How could it be
otherwise when he was consistently drawn back from the
real human engagement which is the central arena of
politics played at its fullest?
'flhWW
EDITORAL COMMENT
The Cat"
Andre Morell
Barbara Shelley
Tue
Variety
Answer to Previous Puzzle
RANCO
SEI H’
N
ORK Roberts Electric Service
ED.co
Specialists in AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION
212 N. Dallas St.
875-3790
Q WFAA
O ABC
A KDFWE
CBS W
WBAP
NBC
11 KTVT
33 KBF
39 KDTV
F:00
/:,S
/ :30
0.45
News 8
Etc.
CBS Morning
News
Today Show
(7:25) Wthr.
Today Show
Slam Bang
Theater
Wednesday
:15
30
:45
Capt.Kangaroo
:00
Movie:
"Nice Little
Bank That
Should Be Robbed'
Tom Ewell
Mickey Rooney
(8:25) News
Today Show
New Zoo Revue
The Funhouse
NOV. 22
:M
: 15
Bewitched
Password
Split Second
News 8 at
Noon
Let's Make
a Deal
The Newlywed
Game
Dating
Game
General
Hospital
One Life
To Live
All My Children
Movie:
"Dr. Cook’s
SHORT RIBS
The Joker’s
Wild
The Price
Is Right
Dinah's
Place
Concentration
Gambit
Love of
Life
Where the
Heart Is, News
Search for
Tomorrow
News, Weather,
Sports
As the World
Turns
Sale of
the Century
Hollywood
Squares
Fury
Lone
Ranger
Batman
Addams
Family
Jeopardy
Who. What or
Where Game
Noon
News
Three on a
Match
Perry
Mason
Early News
Stock Market
Tone of
The Markets
News:
Observer
Tone of
the Markets
News:
Observer
Tone of
the Markets
Guiding Light
Edge of Night
Days of
Our Lives
The Doc tors
News
Weather
Cartoon
—Carnival
Afternoon
Movie:
"Dark City"
Charlton Heston
Noon
News
Tone of
the Markets
Love Is Many
Splendored Thing
See ret Storm
Another World
Lizabeth Scott
Merv Griffin
JOAN = ARC IS
ON HER WAS HERE.
BUGS BUNNY
LEGALEAGLE
PATENT
ATTORNEY
Return to
Peyton Place
Lucille Rivers
Stock Market
Observer
Toneof
the Markets
Market
Observer
President's Office
WrapUp
Somerset
Andy Griffith
Show
Abbott &
Costello
Popeye
Patty Duke
Show
Dennis
The Menace
REALLY ? GOOD.
LEGALEAGLE
PRIVATE
II-21
NANCY®
E Ord MBCPOU
•gia
3
GET AWAY
* FROM THAT
CANDY
BOX
HOW DID SHE
KNOW WHAT I
( WAS DOING?
5
WHAT S HER CRUSADE
THIS TIME ?
I DON'T SEE
_ TH EM —:__.
ACROSS
1 Wallace’s
state (ab.)
4 Kind of
recorder
8 Cicatrix
12 Conducted
13 Dismounted
14 European
shark
15 Stuff
16 Kentucky
Derby equine
18 Soviet
satellite
20 Possessed
21 Variety of
lettuce
22 Love god
24 Facts
26 Unruly child
27 Priority
(prefix)
30 Awn (bot.)
32 “Shooting
star”
34 Engaged in
a tumult
35 Muse of
astronomy
36 Flog (coll.)
37 Capeland
39 Trumpet’s
mouth
40 Roman moon
goddess
41 Land parcel
42 Different
45 Scorched
49 Liked better
51 Hawaiian
pepper
52 Civil wrong
53 At this place
54 Negative word
55 Remain
56 Chances
57 Golf gadget
DOWN
1 European
mountains
2 Jump
3 Act of
bringing
forward
4 Mountain
pools
5 Jai----
6 Chooser
7 Summer (Fr.)
8 Packs
9 Preserve
in brine
10 Church part
11 Bamboolike
grass
17 Owl
19 Banquet
proposal
23 Jaw part
1
2
3
12
15
18
19
21
24
30
34
36
42
49
52
55
by Frank O’Neal
WOMEN’S LIB.
11-21
ONEAL
by Heimdahl & Stoffel
I-21 @‘!
25
43
44
40
By Ernie Bushmiller
—BUT YOU MUST
HAVE EYES IN
THE BACK OF
YOUR HEAD
SBEilP
AllIRMELMD
GIRI A NIA D
MA
OP
86
HARE
D RLUD
DATE
LLER
=[=]
IE1=3
24 Australian a southpaw
pompano 41 Dips
25 Operatic solo 42 Chooses
26 German state 43 Horse’s gait
27 Capable of 44 Olympian
entering
28 Vex
29 Epochal
44 Olympian
goddess
46 Group of
whales
31 Holding right 47 Cry of
33 Timbrel bacchanals
38 Consecrated 48 Palm fruit
40 Nickname for 50 Greek letter
4
13
16
22
23
9
10
11
31
37
14
As the Open House
Moves Along
A delightful day this was- a day when folks young and old dropped in at
this company's- United Publishing Company's- Open House to have a spot of
coffee and a donut or so, pay a friendly visit and look over our remodeled and
redecorated building.
Actually, it was the first "party" this company has had since our employ-
ment began back in 1948, and truly it's mighty enjoyable for us, and we know
will be most enjoyable to its conclusion the 30th.
We who work here feel that we are justifiably proud of the improvements-
a new front, all "decorated up," lovely paneling and lighting and fixtures and
furniture on the interior- and, in the composing room, a modern offset plant
of the latest type installed only a little over a year ago.
So President Charles Gentry thought the homefolks and others interested
might like to drop by and share it with us- and this they're doing. They're our
friends and neighbors here in a town the size you love to live in- and wonder-
ful folks, with whom you like to rejoice in their good fortune and sympathize
with when the going isn't so good. (How can people like to live in an imper-
sonal big city is more than we can figure!)
Also, we feel real lucky to have chosen a profession where you have an op-
portunity to perform services, from time to time, for people. Of this we have
thought hundreds of times. It is really a personal blessing, for which we'll never
cease to be grateful. (Incidentally, it is the Ennis Daily News' 80th year of ser-
vice to the area.)
And so it is a time in which we here at the News and UPCO hope those who
drop in for visits have as good a time as we do. . .If you haven't come by yet,
how about dropping in soon?
26
50
53
56
38
45
17
20
27
28
29
The Ennis Daily News
IN THE EIGHTIETH YEAR
2
35
41
46
33
39
51
54
57
47
48
THE BORN LOSER
ALLEY OOP
THERE'S TH' PALACE
UP AHEAD, KID... I
GUESS THIS IS WHERE
WE PART COMPANY/
1-21
CAPTAIN EASY
I DON'T UNDER-
STAND .WHAT
MAKES YOU THINK
MY DAD WOULD
COME BACK
HERE?
Owned and published daily except Saturday
by the United Publishing Company, Inc.,
which also publishes The Weekly Local and
The Palmer Rustler, Dr. Gene Nowlin,
Chairman of the board: Charles E. Gentry,
President and Manager.
Entered at the Post Office in Ennis, Texas
as second class mail matter under the Act of
Congress of March 3, 1872.
Office 213 North Dallas Street, Telephone
875-3801.
All communications of business and items
news should be addressed to the company-
to individuals. Any erroneous reflection
AW, THAT'S OKAY,
MR. OOP...I DON'T
MIND WAITIN'
WHILE YOU TALK
THING GUZ
BUT I THOUGHT
Y’HAD SUMPIN -
ELSE T’DO
ME?
NAW...
ROYAL
PALACE
OF
MoO
WHAT BETTER PLACE TO
PRY OUT EL DIABOLO‘5
SECRET THAN INSIDE
THE TOMB ITSELF 7
upon the character, standing or reputation of
any person, firm or corporation which may
appear in the columns of this paper will be
gladly and duly corrected upon being brought«
to the publisher’s attention.
SUBSCRIPTION
By
One Year
Six Months
One-Month
Carrier
in.
RATES
City
$18.00
$9.00
$1.50
Special Farm Rates by Mail In Ellis County, 1
year
One Month
$9.00
$1.00
by Art Sansom
SEASICK! WHAT DO
YOU MEAN, YOU’RE
~ SEASICKZ
by V. T. Hamlin
...I JUST CAME INTO
TOWN BECAUSE THIS ( OH, I SEE...
IS WHERE YOU
WERE GOING/ ,__/ --T
...I THINK.’
1 AND WHAT
, BETTER HIDING
PLACE-TO KEEP
FROM BEING SPOT-
TEP... OF COURSE,
THE CRYPT WAS
LOCKED-
BUT EVEN MY FATHER WOULD
ADMIT. LOCKS WERE NEVER ANY
BARRIER TO THE GREAT PANZINI!
by Crooks & Lawrence
HMPH... CONFOUND IT: .., COULDN'T
YOU AT LEAST LEAVE ME UNDISTURBED
UNTIL I FIGURE OUT HOW THE )
n TRICK WAS STAGEPZ! D 1
1972 by NEA, Inc., T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
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Casebolt, Floyd W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 277, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 21, 1972, newspaper, November 21, 1972; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1695631/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.