The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 62, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1964 Page: 4 of 6
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4 THE CUERO RECORD, Frl., March 13, 1964
Editorial—
Force And Schools
There are mounting indications in New York City
of an awareness that pupil boycotts are not the answer
to public school problems | D ik . . i i.r it rt d
For one thing, the Citywide Committee for Inte-1 | l> I, I H (Ml O
grated Schools, led by the Reverend Milton A. Galami- j B> pt»LLi Mow kk tun
son, is'showing signs of disintegration. K----
A February boycott was staged by Mr. Galamison’s ,n a ^cenl~ * th* Hou-
group but other groups which participated are having ston Chronicle there appeared
second thoughts j a nice picture of Jane and John
Thirteen local NAACP branches decided recently to• \VhT*m-e 'lllbrahng
withdraw from the citywide committee. While not re-1 their
treating from their integration demands, they evident-
ly have had enough of the Galamison brand of leader-
ship.
Much the same, goes for the New York Urban Lea-
gue which, while maintaining its independence, cooper-
ated with the city-wide group. The league, however, is
not prepared to commit itself to a second boycott.
Perhaps the most forthright statement has come
from Gilberto Gerena - Valentin, executive secretary
of the National Association for Puerto Rican Civil Rights, i or>min8 in,° lls °"'T1 because it
is proven nutritious and non-
His group, he says, will make its own decisions and fattening,
will do nothing which runs counter to the organizations’
first obligation: to do what's best for the Puerto Rican
community.”
Such a view is understandable. However, the first
'I WANNA HOLD YOUR HAND!"
wedding anniversary.
Jane is a former Cueroiie, the
daughter of Mrs. E. V Tully.
Phylma Bush left this morn-
ing for a weekend visit in Red-;
water. Texas with tier nephew 1
Charles Bush and his wife
Patsy. ’I he town is located
near Texarkana.
NiNttr
$CzS ANOrffa
SCRIMP
AMD
SAVE
A PfMNY
SEED'S
A
EAC
• ^ MW t>0
Jo f™*
National Rice Week.
15th thru 21st. Texas
March
rice is
Nat.io.ial Poison Pre\ ention,
Week coming up with , (he slo-1
gan "Children »ci quickly and,
ms does poison". This is the1
obligation of all these groups ought to be to do what ^
best for public education in New York City, and problems poisons <-wi ^ j^.ach of child-,
ol leadership and intimidation, in both New York and' ren. If the observance of the
Chicago, indicate that force attempts by minorities are ^ r(rTimimitj it „,yi *
not necessarily successful in solving school issues. | worthwhile.
Pilate Judged by Jesus
TWO CONTRASTING EPISODES DURING CHRIST'S
LAST HOURS AMONG MEN
Bonpture— Matthew 37:11-36, John 13:1-17,34.31; 18 38-19 38,
By K. H. RAMSEY arwc of Anna*, the aped High
THE DISCOURSES ant pray- j Priest of the Temple and Gaia-
er, beginning with John 13, con- | phas, his wm-in-1 w.
tain the most profound, Inti- \ In his first i ter view with
mate, lofty and inexhaustible Jesus accusers, Pilate *sk» the
truths ever expressed by Christ, nature of the charges against
Because they were spoken only Him. The Jews uvc; J s direct
in the Upper Room, or nearby, 1 answer, saying if Chris’, were
w#/Can assume they were in-J not an evil-doer H" world ret
tended for the disciples. /They j be before Pilau. Keehgr.iting
have come/ down to us, how- j the flippancy of the ans er, Pi-
ever, through the Gospel of i late tells the accusers t" lake
John, one-third of which is de- I Jesus and judge Him according
voted to a vivid and minute de- | to their own laws. The Jews an-
tailing of Christ’s last twenty- I swer that they have i.o right to
four hours among men put a man to death. <Th<« power
In the opening verses of 1 had been taken from the Jews
Financing Frills
I Outugnp t urations to the Milton,
i Rinzes wlio are observing their !
| 15th wedding anniversary to-1
1 day
chapter 13, the disciple reveals
something of the omniscience
of Christ. His know ledge of the
past and the future shows clear-
ly that His will and thinking is
one with God. Now, the One
who shares omnipotence wph
the Father, performs an act
which makes this divine majes-
ty the lowliest of servants He
rises from the table where sup-
per has already been served
some twenty years previously
when Judea became a Roman
province).
Now Pilate turns from ques-
tioning the Jews to Interrogat-
ing chnst. asking Him if He is
the King of the Jews. Witho it
directly replying to Pilate,
Jesus bares the basic antago-
nism of the people and rulers
to Himself. He affirms ills k.ng-
ship, .end at the same time, ex-
lays aside His robe and washes plains how He is a Kmg. Truth
the feet of the disciples, literal-
ly performing a slave's task.
Why'? On the way to the
Upper Room, the disciples had
again been quarreling over
which held the greatest place in
is His reslm and in this, every-
one who has a connection with
truth recognizes His kingship.
Realizing Jesus is no political
intriguer, Pilate holds a second
Interview with His accusers. MU
GOLDEN TEXT
'•Pilate therefore soul unto him Art thou a ki iq thent
Jesus answered, Thou gayest that 1 a.-king. To fM* end
was / bora, and for this cause come into the world, that
1 should bear witness unto the truth Kerry one that u of
the truth heareth my voice."—John 18 37
Every so often in the weird wasteland of Washing- Swam
ton somebody is still able to point a finger straight stores’
enough at the squandering of tax dollars to get some- right
thing done to halt it.
A case in point is the one-man crusade of Florida’s
freshman Representative Sam Gibbons, in which he took
on the Navy’s highest brass over a case in which Uncle
Sam was about to pick up the tab for a Disneyland ex-
cursion of 12,000 defense contractor employes.
Gibbons didn't ferret out the facts in the first place
It started with a story on the front page of a Washing-
ton newspaper recounting how the firm Aero-Jet
General Corporation had included the bill for the
Disneyland trip in its accounting of expenses on a de-
fense contract.
suit-- arc our in local:
But swim weather is
around the comer.
There must be an artist be-
hind every- Ifush in Texas. We
are receiving invitations to
■show in Houston, Bren ham. Go-
liad I/i redo. Beaumont and
other place*. It would take a
mint of money just to send or
carry pom tings around to alt
the shows
*s2Si~ '’t™60®0*
Pmn th« norH ptiblUti'*'! by Dcnib^Uy A Co . I»r
Copyright I M3 by Mtldr*4 Gordon »nd Gordon
Gordon. Distributed by Kin* Kmturw drndicstn
Christ's kingdom And for one tempting to have Jeaua releas'd,
to waah the feet of the others In not instantly ordering the re-
waa to declare himself the serv- lease of Jesus, Flint* lower*
ant of them all himself to ihe level of the Jews.
So. Jesus waited to see what Then he attempts to placste
they would do. When it became them by having Jesus scourged
apparent that thev would do and mocked Following the
nothing, Jeans, Himself per- scourging, Pilate Is again con-
r
* rtf
Jack Hoc erhm • having a
birthday yesterday and spend-
ing must of tire day at the bull
park seeing that it wax in per-
■j feci shape for the opening
’ — — - of the season in the af
! game at the season
It justified the outlay as a morale - builder and ex-: r,nwon
plained this was merely a different type of outing than
earuer approve., expenses.
the story, and birthdays today.
what had been covered in
Maybe a lot of Congressmen read
■mavbe some raised their eyebrows. .....
Gibbons acted. He filed a protest directly with Navy(^
Secretary Paul Nitze, and fired off a second one when -messy when greasing cake
pans, cookie sheets or cas.se-
mle.s. Slip your hand imo a 1
waxed hag ' mitten", pinch of!
a piece of butter or margarine j
and grease. It's easy to get in-1
to all the comers. Wlien you
ane through .just tons youi dis-
posaiile mitten away’
QUOTES FROM
THE NEWS
he didn't like the answer to the first.
Upshot is that the expense won't be allowed.
Gibbons didn't stop there. He demanded and will
get. a House Government Operations Committee probe
into the question of defense procurement policy, to see
how many other frills the taxpayer is financing. It s
something that seems long overdue.
We d suggest better floor attendance and more at-
tention to votes on legislation.
Few of the rest ol us. get paid for not working.
It is amazing how men who drink copious quantities
oi alcohol know that alcohol doesn’t hurt them.
* * H-
Then there are the people who want you to do some- ^ pr<!p,rinfc
thing for them that they can well do for themselves.
* * V
Surprising as it. may seem, the other fellow who
argues with you so much is probably right about half of
the time.
if- ¥ *
Hard work makes almost any job easy; backing off
and delaying the job makes any undertaking impossible..
if if- ^ "I'm catching
c 9. r»i. on
I nltrd Pres* International
By
WASHINGTON
B. Everett .Ionian.
Tie Seriate Rule*
to close
Chairman
D-N.C. of
CHAPTER 10
HER bedroom Patti Ran-
dall tound Zeke Kelso walk-
ing aimlessly about.
DC. had moved from the bed
lo tlie cheat of drawers, where
he had barely enough room to
place the body between her ooe-
metic* He never yet bad
knocked a bottle over. He was
washing his while-coated tall.
If he had any one outstanding
virtue, It was perseverance.
Z*Ke naked. "Doesn't he ever
do anything but take baths?"
She laughed softly. "Not no
loud, please." She crossed to
the closet to gel a dream.
"You've given me quite a repu-
tation Our next door neighbor
overheard us talking last night
and told everyone I had a man
In my bedroom."
He was concerned "Ml have
a talk with her when thta ta
over:'
"What about the others* Mr.
Balter’" She laughed again.
"I'll tell you. You can hang a
banner across the house, ft waa
Only an FBI Agent, Not a
Man "
Zeke said, “If her ears are
that sharp, I'd belter move the
equipment Into the close! so she
ran t hear me talking over the
radio” |
The cuckoo peeked out. ntek-
Committee ooed eight times, and shut the
the Bobby; door after himself. DC. aroused
Baker investigation despite ol»-1 and, after several yawns jumped
jeotions by the Republicans:
"P’s i:ke playing the same
record, over and over again."
DAlJxAS I>efense attorney
Melvin Belli in the Jack Ruby
murder trial explaining why he
lias delayed in bringing pi whi-
ne rr New York psychiatrist Dr.
to the stand:
on to Texas
Health Hint It won't do you any good to know what, customs: I’m keeping him for
caused'you to suffer a physical collapse after your health "
to the lied and walked to the
window at the far side to look
out. Not a bad night not had
at ad.
He stretched one hind lag aa
far as it would go. then the
other, and arched his hack.
There was nothing like a good
day's sleep to tone your muscles.
He yawned again. He might aa
well take a swing around the
neighborhood. see what he
her nght tide her arm under
her head to lift it from the pil-
low. In the living room Dan and
8anr.my were talking, quite low
but still loud enough for her to
catch the conversation.
Earlier they had switched
oft the air conditioning, decid-
ing the night was too cool to
operate it without someone
thinking It atrnnge
A hull-hour ago she had come
ito bed, and been so exhausted
that she had had to struggle to
■tay awake. But she had re-
I slated sleep, thinking she might
overhear them For the first ten
minute* she pretended she waa
restless, which was normal for
her, and then hud turned as
usual from her left to her right
side before simulating sleep.
Now Dan was saying. "You
don't just lose s watch. I've got
a smell for these things. You
remember the Johnson job, how
w# cleared out of there two
hours before the bulla broke the
door down, because 1 smelled
them coming?"
Sammy coughed: he smoked
too much. "Big thing The
broad lose* a watch So what?
I lose things and don't And 'em
for weeks ''
'1 don t know where else we
could’v* looked." She could
hear Dan walking about thump-
ing a chair, the wall the way
he did when he waa disturbed.
"If I could just figure 1L . . ."
Sammy was striking a match,
the box kind; he didn't like the
packets. "That dame up front
will be nosing around soon, sure
as hell ”
*TU stall her.”
“You're kiddin1 yourself Once
one of those dames gets started
—1 tell you we got to move fast
and without Jenkins. We got
to get her off our backs You
could mooch and check Greg's ! Mt around thinking, talking, do
is ruined. Take it easy now.
SJljp (llufro Serorii
Established In l»#4
Published Each Sin-moon E»cepl katurrias and
Sunday Morning _
WASHINf iTON Rep Paul
Findley. R-I1I referring to po-
• iitioal consequences of con-
•gressm-’h' raising their own pay
;n ai elect km year a- called
ftr in the
service porch And if he found
another duck, he would keep »t
for himself this time
He looked at Patli out of
liquid amber eyes and meowed
softly He might he an old rou*
going out on the town, but he
proposed J546 million; carried it off with a nice touch
Bv THE it FRO PI BUSHING <«
119 E Main I Hero less*
becond class postage paid s' Cuero Texat_
TEX)
►RESS ASSOCIATION
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspapet Publishers Association
JACK HOWERTON _ ------- President and Publtsm
J C "PEThi’’ HOWERTON__________- - - Ytce Premden-
MRS IACK HOWERTON ....--Secretary Treasurei
MILTON L. BINZ _ Assistant to the Publisher Sr Adv
LIN MILLS____- — - Managing Eddc.i
National advert!sin* Representative*
Texas Daily Press League Lnc.. jt>0 Hartford Bldg.
Dallas
Subvertptlon Rates
Dally A Sunday: Home delivered by earner On* Xwt UA ■*.
six months K.25. 3 months J3.25 1 month SI. 10 By mad tr
DeWirt. Victoria Goliad Karnes Gonzales l-aveca and Jack**'
Counties, one year Sh.50 six month' 14 50 one month 75c Hs
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Official Organ at the City of Cuero and County of DeWitt
TELEPHONE CK
'edera! pay raise Mil:
' We may try to tiptoe
through this hut it i an I hr
done Our foo’-vpy are going
to echo
’.NEW YORK Robert M
Malien, national coordinator of
I th* D aft t/xlge Conmittee. i
; knocking down the theory that !
Ambassador Henry Cabot tod-
ge won handily in New Hamp-1
shire because he was a favor-j
*e son:"
"They're, going to find out
ie's the country's favorite son j
and not only in New England.” ]
j I
j NEW YORK The Res Jo-
seph H Jackson,' president of
Lie riartoi.'a largest Negro or-
ganization the Natonai Bap-
' tut Convention, U 5 A com-
menting en militant Negro j
i leader Malcolm XT call for
Negroes to form rifle clubs:
I "It u my belief that our civil;
rghts «:rugge is an American
-UU“.e and can only be won
Ihrough the American way of
of Innocence. Pstti stooped to
rub ms ears and he moved
away
Affectlor was something to ,
he exchanged a' the proper'
time and in th» proper place
such as after * good meal, hut
not when he was going out and
had other matters on his nvnd
Patti followed him ou* of the
room One thing he had taught :
them well waa to open doors or
command.
Zeke whispered into the mike.
"All units, all units. Informant 1
leaving house. Will follow and
advise"
ing nothing, and we're going to
get meaecd up for sure ”
He coughed hard, then con-
tinued. ‘‘It's easy. Nothing to it.
We drop her in one of those
bins I was telling you about,
over tn the alley, back of the
stores. What can happen driv-
ing over there? Four blocks.
No stop signal No cops hiding
around at that time of night
The newsstand closes at eleven
the theater a block up the street
empties shout the same time
We li pile a lot of cartons on
her and nobodyll know until
they pick up the boxes at nine
the next morning."
She broke into a sweat and
s roar filled har head A step
tapped softly on the floor, com-
ing her way. She clenched her
flsta so tightly ahe waa like a
board She sensed that the ntep
stopped In the doorway: She
least she had a chance s smalt
one.
But her body balked, con
trolled by her reasoning, which
prompted her to breathe long
and slowly, long and slowly, &>
It she were sound asleep, lo
keep her eye* closed no mattei
how much they wanted to open
The step receded, and she
sagged One of them had wanted
to assure himself she was still
sleeping.
She tensed again at the sound
of Dan's voice. "1 don't like any
part of it."
"She's gotten under your skin
That's bad "
"Knock it off, Sammy." Dan's
tone waa deadly. "You know we
play It my way. That's how we
set It up. My way. Real close."
"A guy who plays it too close,
maybe he's just plain . . ." Ssm
my thought better of It.
“Plain what. Sammy?*
“Nothing, nothing "
"1 asked you, Rammv. plain
what?"
"Cripes, If 1 could just get a
drink. 1 tell you. I'm stir craay
1 could punch a hole in that
wall, like a guy 1 knew once
He punched a hole dean
through a wall. We got all this
money, and for what * No
dames, no liquor, no golf, no
fresh air Dammit, we re in s
stinking, lousy jalL And her In
there, ahe’s going lo have the
screaming willlea. You taken a
good look at her eyes* What're
you going to do when she starts
yelling? Yeah, what you going
to do? Put a shot through her
like some goofed-up kid who
loses hi* head? And get
knocked off making a break ?"
Dan said slowly "Maybe you
got a point there ”
Sammy continued. "It* not
like thered be any blood Few
minutes after ahe* saleep I'll
lay her away, and we’ll have
ten nours before they find her
You tell the landlady ahead of
time we got a job in another
town, so she won't get all
stirred up when she And* us
gone. We can make five, six
hundred miles.
"What If she screams?"
“I've never had one vet |
These Angers, they move so
tast. You should see em And
strong You wouldn't believe tt.
They could strangle s nnr.'e
! Comes from my ms making me
] take piano She used to say,
I T’U (five vou good teamin'
start you right- No. Dan. she
won I scream "
They never knew how done
she came to It at that aecond.
"ire ke had barely gained
the cover of a shmb when a
shotgun blast roared through
the night, so close by that the
explosion deadened hl« hear
fonned the lowly office the
disciple* were too proud to di-
cliarge
Instead of chastising them
for their pride and stubborn-
ness. Jesus forgives them, lay-
ing down a gn at fundamental
law for all of life aa lie ban
set the example, so should they
all follow. Then He add* one of
the greatest statement* con-
cerning Christian conduct found
1 anycvhi re in the Gospels (John
13 34,35) "even a* I have
j loved you, that ye also love one
another "
The aecond half of today s
lesson deal* with the trial of
j Jesus before Pilate. Pontius
! Pilate was a Roman citizen
who had been appointed pn>-
I curator of Judea by Tiberius,
Emperor of the Roman* From
the start of hi* administration
; he had incurred the wrath and
i hatred of the Jews. But, though
they opposed him, he w a* nole
to rule, thank* to the conniv-
fronted with Jesus. Listening to
Him, ho becomes convinced of
His innocence and greatness,
and :ie or.ee mure sought tn
hate Him released.
" lie .lews will have non* of it.
ral.ch Pilate in a trap, and de-
mand Christ's, death To save
hi* own position, Pilate has no
other choice but 'a deliver
Chris! fur crucifixion
Now Pilate i -hid only to In-
sult and provoke these Jev »
who had driven him into a corn-
er. and mad* !dm, a Roman of-
ficer, give an innocent m*n up
lo crucifixion A* was. cus-
tom's rv t <i j>: 11 a , L' b’ >' over lb#
crosyoi every cruivmsj Indicate
lng Hie charge agonist h.m, Pi-
late ordered the one . r Jem*
to rend .Jem* of Nasareth,
King of the Jew*" Infuriat'd
by the tit’e; the chief pries’ de-
manded it be i 'moved, Pilate,
erijoylng the linger and resent-
ment of thnee who had I rapped
him, re used
hum an eopyrlslirtil oedinti iiradurert *r lh* Dnaloe of CrirliOnn Kawouu,
National council nr r nunfco* of Chriai in u - t; * a aivi 0*4 by ^srmim.su,
' ibuted by kJnc Keetuie* Sjsdi. ata
DAILY CROSSWORD
2 Worship
3 Yearn#<J
i FVnring
■w. • r* I
f» n
Tlrtn H<»up
7 Storm
ft A woriinn
KTfUiUAt **
Sick
10 Knx»<J of
phritfuinTN
Ift Souk up
lft Small
expliMiive
20 A imam
silkworm
21 Mono !
23 iCr^nl
24 Ketualo
3ft
»
40 4^.)nd#rt
4’ Pile
4 2 i^K)k
4 .
44 P^l
* * * battled s compulsion to make a
|_JEI-EN JENKHVa extended dash for the front door ff they
* her hearing as lar as no* shot bet down wouldn't It be / log " The story continue*
slbie She wns stretched out on better than waiting here? At here tomorrow,
from the nove' published Doubled** A Co lnc Copynshi C 1963 by Mildred fiord or and Gordon Gordon
Oiatrtbuted by Km* Feature* bynd..'ate
man E.
tacking
ion President, announcing ap- j
peal plan* follow ing his sen-1
tence lo eigtil years in a fed-
era! prison:
"1 h8ve treen In fights all my
i life a no tfiiough couimitment Lie Ini, going in >vin this
to tire lederal Constitution one sun 1 m going to stv*.' )he
world I'm nght '
CHATTANOO.A Term
jjimes R. Hoffa, Teamstar lin-1 WASHINGTON Sen Her-
ailment reflecting
he had died:
"It's weird, man,
on report*
weird."
Talmadge, D-Ga., at-
the administration's
in a prepared
Senate speech :
"As free people, we will work j OUT OFF BKATLF.S
on) solution' if up are allowed' MlIMXiETOWN. Cc-nr.. lUPI)'
to BarlieiV have served notice
that tlie Beatle haircut is out.
NEW YORK - Ia/7 tnimpel They said Thursday, we tol- i
playet ' 'Sstchrno; Arm- 'rate 'duektails' and Detroit* ' |
strong heeqr.iaiired with a leg tsri this Beatle i* too far oul. i
AURORA
1 Strong
wind#
6 Mum of
nerve 1 issue
in skull
; II Take as
onr'a own
12 Revive
j 13 Cash
!4 Immutiirr
seed
| 15 Incur
i 16 Branch
i 1". CJolf Irrm
I IS. Excla-
mation
t 19 Hini’s lull
22 Iwt fail
24 Hindu
garment
| 25. Iske
27. Overhead
2k. Thus
j 29. Pronoun
j 30. Theater
seat
32 Yowl
34. Prirkly
eeed coat
35. A while lie
36. Water
god pos*
39 Auspices
41 Circle
of light
42 Auxiliary
verb
44 God of the
sea. Teut
myth.
45 Artist’a
stand
46 Estimate
47 Paradises
4k. Unrolla
DOWN
1 An entire
rang*
DAILY CRYPTOQLOTE - Here a hfm to tomrl It;
AXYDLBAAXR
»* LONGFELLOW
On* l*«#r aOnply stands for another In this mjnplo A Is used
for the three La, X for the two Os, etc. Single letters, isnes-
trophiea, the length and formation of the words ora all hints.
Each day the code letters are different
A Cryptogram Quotation
PDX OXTNXP MV GLTTXOO HG
TMYQPCTTI PM KLNEMOX.-FHQ.
N C X K H
Yesterday’* Cryptoquote: IT IS NOT EVERY QUBSTION
THAT DESERVES AN ANSWER PUBLILIUS SVRUI
C 1*64. Klim Fotturo* Syndicate, lac.
HAND* ItjfiMlUKIIOS COUPON - UiT AND MAO.
CUERO RECORD «.\iero lrxat
Please enter my aubecntnion to Qm O CUERO DAILY
RECORD or □ the SEMI WEEKLY RECORD Mall papa mi
-uhscriDlion statement to.
Name
Address
City or
□ This is a renewal order
O I am not now a RECORD
1
1
J
4
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A
7
6
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14
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if
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Mills, Lin. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 62, Ed. 1 Friday, March 13, 1964, newspaper, March 13, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth697586/m1/4/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.