The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, August 2, 1963 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: North Texas Daily / The Campus Chat and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries Special Collections.
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? EDITORIALS
Friday August 2 1963
Airport Debate
Which City Deserves
Air Travel Business?
Foit Worth
1 hi lln- it .i
i\ have Ih-
• airport ot tli.
l-a-l. lint (■.
• * *. W i H
hit - t ilt* a I'I h Il'l
t tli. tutur
D th ailp
• il't - tall f
i-rtamh arconi
mpslat*' th.*
air traffic
Huff come- to
’ t). 1 (alia- 1
t ’ V\ ■ >rl 1;
.u<ii now lint
i'1 v . ill's f r«
m to.iax, I
,ov. Field could
i ' t hiftu.il* ih.- ai. ii -
iiu traffi*
I'* .rt " .rt
• - (it. ;it.
i Southwest In
t enia t iut lit:
\irp.*rt 1
llould I..- pt\ oi
t io tua.iui «•<
mimemal
atrlihi* ii * %
that tt'.u p<»
to Di.lla-
• m i aii>4*
1 <if**at*
f S'.ut hw
e-t Atr|M.r. t
. .nt rally lot
ati*.l a11.1
can -ocx'i* l»otli
. itt* - iM|iutilx II
J (.real*
•r Southxx
o-t Aiijsirt is
at. i hft*fau-
■*• then ;tt
•c not niattx
<.t.s11 upt ion.-
in ti.- pit.
It- path
I* <-\X IT
|"*o|.|»*
li\ inp around
< . t . ii!. t S< m
Hi xx. • A
it pot ' ii.-. n-as.
Hi*- hi.zar.l-
. .1 act’itj.' i
ts.
1 t.if.iti
i Stuffhxx-i
t Airihiit can
ito f* a -. 1 Ik
1 * -11 >• t It of
ff - run xx ai s
• i 1.
I it Iff can
IliftX.' il tllilXI
mum of t\x«.
rutixxiiy -.
w lull i h* Fort
" 'fth air|M>ri fan hutl.i a mans a-
t> I'll* I >allas airport ran |>r<>\ ni*•
a man » pat kiitp 1 a t In- Fort
" Till aifporl
' • • • inV nt" pi • an i di-tail m t In*
point -:
1 Ha < Heater Sout h\\ i t A a p' >rt
t atnl mill w a lot %v . it I - >rt \\ oft li
anil I >i i A a anil it -»•• m mils lair to
maki that airport a t< irional airport
\ t hi- at ilitt mu i . a l-’i a t \'s’« >rt h pet
-"i ha t" Iravi-I nmr*- than no mill
i" rati h at airplain- A Italia - riti/i-n
1 I h> l - i t \\ ■ >rt h aii p<n t ha I . w
<-r pit.I. path ol. i rui t ion- l.deral
A\ at ini \p. m > i \pi rt < hnrlc I
Sh.ti'p -.ml that Italia- -k.xcrnper
P i * \ i -1 i Kon- In lil from hax mp the
ipt imam plid* pat h I -t' Wort h ha
a radio and a IA tmwi in tin elide
path "I ii - t n-lii. Sharp ■ \plaitu-il 11 ■
aid In w ■ aid ri-rumrni-nd t hat t hi- i
111W • I - In Hi |\ 1-d \" "III lippe ted
n.oviup tin- I ta 11 a - k > -< i ap< r
Ninety tour thou and people
i \' 11 ■ 'it1'- I >a II:. I • |- i« 11i. lotimi-
t i - ’ h.' i ; i ir< niiiil 1 la I ft W • >t t h
airport A a n ilt f> \ver p.-opli art-
liothii'iil Its thr mu i "I nt around
' hi- I "i t \\ "rt It airpoi i. ami t > \s i-r
pi-opli would In injured it a plane
vs i in ’" crash
I li Dixon Spi-a . head "t an an
naff nonsuit inp tirm. pointed out that
mli -- loiiper runways are huilt in thi-
■ (•a India and Fort \\ rth ssill has*-
to taki airfreight carpo. to Houston
AircraM Spn-ialist Knit. rl ( Hut
! n |m11ti 1 • a! out that f tun airplane
v II need runssas longer than those
I' at l >\. I' a 11 I'ii. l i t Wtir11
air|K>rt can hutld ntnyxay- a- limp as
l-’.otto leet I hi lonpe-t runssas |x.-
fin* at I,o\ i I n-Id i s jsimi f, rt.
•’» tirealcr Southssi • \ i port can
Imild a mat y a t hi • < rutixx as ■ I >al
las i an Imild a maximum of tsso l ose
Field''- ecund tnajoi runssas is cur
l ent I under con t r .* t a n < (no t hi-
runssas is completed. i,o\« I a id will
i in Tea '• its airplane capacity hy a
i.iMoumi >.i i* I' | m * i reni i.reaier
S'-uthssi t Airport' o mid runssas
ssill imreast that airport capacits
its more than •’><> per rent
*- l.osi Field hop. tu has* ‘J.oon
pMiktnp places Its H'Tn The Fort
Worth an ea '
-pat*-- hy 1P70
7 A noth* f FAA expert aid that
modern e!.u tivnir weather equipment
can he installed more easil.s at the
Fort W ort h airport than at I,ov. Field.
' I >a!la plan - to -pi ml .<17 mil
-n oi I/osa Field to handle tin air
'iaff i> ot Ih.ti Hut I ..rt Worth can
pend • y ' million and <1 ill handle
the an c amount id traffic in lh7o as
I/OS* I- a id
.All tin facts ahold tin tsso airports
' am not hem hfmrht out in thet'isil
Aer- ■! .1 it • Hoard hearinp Hut t her*
'• em» to he little Ihillas call -ay to
prove tin faet that it- airport i- het-
tei It lift isn't '
I It tli II let t
• Dallas
There i- to mole reason to haw- a
- • i vs ,i .<; i p- ■ id its i up I (alias and
I -ut Worth lha.il there i> to has** a
midway administration huildiup -ers -
i i North Texas and I teuton Hiph
School.
I *.i . .m! I -ad W a t I; has I- lit 11*- m
• mm.....- mils. culturallx or eco
t onin alls and ns a n tilt, thes' p**n
< i at• ;i r. •mpleti-ls different quantity
ai : t v pi t air t raff a Kiphts three
m i i rt of t he an t raff le hi t In I >ai
I rt W ort h ai ca i I (alia peiieiat
ed.
I'hi- testifies a New York trai por
tat I o I coll lltaut. I- I tee at I -i' the tsso
rit n■ have "different economic pro
till I’hi i haracter of then respec
> .....nun ii i in h t hiit I 'alia ss ill.
Olll ol III I I - Its. Ilia ke two to four
t mi ii mans air trips per unit of
I pulat ion a does Fort W . >rt h
lln c* m.*' u It a i it f .lame- t Hu.-klev,
sslni ha worked on the problem- of
more than *>o airpirt - in tin* Failed
State and ahroatl, ineludinp planninp
a ipntn. iff - at 2*>. and has imrticipat
nt in appi oxirnatels ho air route pro-
ci edllip-
Iluckles’> analysis I u|»port*-d hy
a I'l-dmal Aviation A perns booklet *-n
titled ,T i oiiiiiui( i'haracter ol t orn
n mities " tin tin- h;i i of 1hi> report
Italia . clas-iliejl a- a "market imr n-n-
tei i n>i nli n-d hs tin 1 \ A to he a
larpi huh -d an tratln Fort 'North.
■ •ii tin- other hand, is classified a- a
balanced" rommiimts and therefore
i- i onsidi-red ;i "small huh "
\t I tallit-t s |m- communities ".‘J.'J
pel relit ol the olipilt «I* t lll.lt fill pa--
*• 11'- * • S' 1! 1 ras e| *i\ i i 7aO mile M
: t ’ W ! * h ! . | s* ri .!!.!■'. U It ii olds
II. per rent ssill travel os er Toll
mile " The ba-ir inrompjit ihilit s of
thi'ii ;in t ran-portat nm i i-qiiireun-nt-
would In- .i harrier to ron-olidation of
m s n e ss 1111 h could hardls he ipnoird.”
aid Ihirkles
Ahandonuieiit of Dallas I .os e I-ield
a repioiuil airport i also ecotnuni
rails un-oiind from both ;i repritmal
and federal tandpoint Data compiled
I s tin- 11.ilia < hamher of Commerce
shoss tliat ieinosal "I rheduled air
line service would mean the loss of al-
most Id,.non iih- and an annual pas
toil ■ ! aim-- ' .<•»"* million to tin- Dal
it erolioniS
Daila Ini-- mes-es which f-ls onl.ose
I • Id for .hi ers ice would also -idler
W " || < irei-nf ield i nmr s ice
pc -111«-111 of the Hepnhln National’
Dank estimat. that it svould cost hi
fiim an additional <17,00(1 annualls it
• is lc*'- iit l.ose Fli-ld ss * ■ re ill-con
tinned "The occupant's rate in our
I Dallas I hotel and motels would he
ermiisls adw-i'sels affe* i d, ’ test
lied .lo- « |dl \ Harper. S ice pl'e id*-Dt
of the 111 It on Hotel ( or|*orn1 ion
Daila* labor leader .h im W Hays
aid that abandonment of l.ove Field
ssould h. "uni- of the luppe-t setbacks
t h;it could es ei happen to urea nixed la
Imil* in I >allas
I hc federal government could save
a pi 11 \ i mail is .< i.d.*io,iniii m insiaiia
ti-ni i harp**- and .< too.ooO annualls iu
operation and maintenance costs if
I "Se Field i* maintained as a repioiuil
airport
rho.-e favorinp’ ;i rep-ional air|*ort
II d ss a s between Daila- atul Fori
Worth * ha re* - tlmt lose Field i- mi
at. and ssill non he obsolete Idle-*-
■ hai -.u an- di-pros ed h\ I \ A re
port that tli* Dallas airport is safe
a'd hs as lation expert ' opinion that
Host Field ssill be able to handle all
I on seen hie airline -ers ice require-
ment - 1 hroiiph the 1Pidi-
1 oft Worth ha- never -flown that it
can support or cs «-n -lynitii ;int Is jiid
in the -iip|it>rt of a repional airjmrt
Ds FI-A -tandards it m-vi-r ssill Dal
'a on the other hand, has prosed
that it needs and deserves such an
airport \ dc. i-ion to maintain Hove
Field as the regional air|H*rt can In
the only equitable solution
I biff I hiniel-
The Campus Chat
Hi«-n '>4 Jun.#»*.- i* i* M
I'M KM v K K It 4 TIW Y
• I. - .<• •#*(»! .Iiairt nlikni i ..*,trr«*-*i
HAN I DCNNP;AN, e«lit*.r
I t Ifi ‘ i r 451! * tt*' «li»U *5-*
M l 4 Ml Hit \N 4 riMKs
I’ni* »t * *r-
HOH Him
gt inn
nil K MKKNh
!»l Kl HANIKU4
nrw»
•Mlitirr min
acti' itlr* ItTUUKWHlt#
*|o*rte
• 44 4M 111 NNAKD
.114 » <. H ^ V
K «lit rid U H<«nl
HitNMI *> 1.4* A N I AMI I .► A III KH VS lM )l»
I» ^ V III • M VI S|> ,lDt\ FIM »MI >IIN
Ft • *>••!.i ■ rr .11 M I'AYNK
H cl l|i*ie 4 Iff I* I
14* *N NI K Sl.OAN iimt airet
IH *f IlKN'N \ KI> cin-mlati**ti
|T»* 4 nit |ai( * «4u<1e • t- , • ■ • -f
IV* tu HiMte i- -r’lnufi'l *•
NA fthd I rt !. *,*
t#*rt» S«*j»trT»(ln»r thr - upt V
, K m,1i ' * i- * !>•'
thro ifh Atiniuit. dtjnr >'
itnudiikiti i*«*r»*»i» ftt-il »id o
► *iD.rt«] Rtituneoti *»f fht » ref-m
th* u|MfiMir, «** st'det ' * rller* nml * *»t ri«n •«-
• arrh that »»f th«- !»*»•#• H4it» T* i\«-r-tti
(rtiftiart
l.rrtKUf I H< M HKAI KNK rh* * hat a .-I
* *i • letten* frimi mnier^ luit ran r\a thr
rtirl ' •** laltt v» hrti no l.rttrc* ultuuM •**•
»tfaaj
I *»• ss matter A|*rll I' V'4t
nt t h« !'•«»» (>4fi, • nt tlaviltir I'mhh ur *l»*r thr
Art f Mar h t .• '
H«*i rau*i ml h) Naltonnl Aihcrtldi r Hrrvt. m
|h« Nil tins M|>1 W»* ratra
• 4« * rwl hy mill iV
The Campus Chat
Teacher Introduces Primitive Navajos
To Names, Manners in Arizona School
A SPRIGHTLY ten* dress. *orn by Rose
Madrigal of Hutchins . . .
AND A KALEIDOSCOPIC straiqht shift
•worn by Donna Linder of Waco, typify
the far out female fashions that caught
the- eye of the columnist below
Natshirley
lt» MSHlii -1 IIP I I iti i;
f lu hitrliss as l ull- nil unit mi. lip a. us er
: t. lulliric hills u| tin \ i* s' a |u Kc-ei-vatfoii.
.itnl the -\in Iwat- liuwn upufi tin- iliisty, sun
pint-lied wasteliiml -treti-tnn*: tn-eie- l> intu
f■,*w lieo Slleep KliUi pi-ai eflills vslieie iiu
• c latiun < an In- -i-i ii uni mit* -niall shei-|i
lieolei -it- iirulei the slunle u) Ins father's
l>IC. Imi
In the ilistariie. a mini hoirun is almost
• ve! with the tup uf the primnil with only
• i ellai like iliim fm aii entrain i- Inside,
-I. hncai i- almost l inen uf . invetiienie-
tie P an made uf -heepskins mi the dirt
fluor Members of the family eat their food
11. • *n the 'lime howl with then hand- and
• ris*• r -e in then natise tororue
i is*11i/.ation seems to he a million miles
away .set it is only a little over 1 <h* miles
tu (.allup. \ M
Siatteri*d in the midst of this va-t sea id
niptine are tfovernnii-nt h,.aolmtr sehools
et up tu edueate and eivilixe the Nasaiu
■ Ido ti, and Mi lilm- tin et,. whu wa- a
,, .... ... VTSf hr * • -k
1 •■pent the past Yea I teaelotii t! \.-ai u|,|s
: the Pinoii itoardinp Sehoul in Imtonti
W hen I fit -1 trot out tin-re, I wanted to
.ill ..nilind and eume Ill-lit hark. she -aid.
it n• *sv I love it I'm really lookin*' lorssard
iruinp hack tin,- fall."
I I l \ I N < I VsSIS
I on, a -uhaireiuy school, ha- elasses
I ruin'll tin- thud piade Tite ' inriculiiin in
udi - readinir, matin-mat ns, Kniflish. health,
"■nee and social Stllllle- \ it lift’ Ilf II
I'.ilei- ii.struets three hei'imn-t classes
1 a first
l! 1 ade-
«. three . op.l prade- and
in thiol
pt ude
Six y.-ai old- ini "bepin
!-< - and
po lilt.
. tile til'st piade tile second
■ • ii t hey
attend
school
1 he children.
dirty and unkempt, arc
roiipht l
o 1 hr
school- by their parents
• a, 1; fall
I’hnst*
vv tu. iiaVe attended seiioo!
Ii. toll hie
ve returm-d to th. way- of their
i-i 'pie duriiur the -timmci and present al
-• a- h,,. a pn.h!..... tin beimil.ei * Hill
i' Mil tln-s has e learned the pa.-t yem -null
• < • oe . hack to them, and they settle down
ml. the routine
II- he i* 1 n Mr I s are llliedinated almost to
ih. rm.int of iiemi* wild I'iiey don't know
1 heii own names, m the name- of their pin
■ ’ hn.thers and istel rtn'S' don't ktluss
then a if rs or birthday- They -peak tmthinv
hut Nava.io, and nut miu-h uf that
< in the first day the name, birthday and
tin i vital statistics of each child an- taken
utn school records and written mi a card
pinned tu tin .liild' liuthini; I a. h leat her
then take tie -Indent a-'iirned t * < hri to
her i-|»l-.-room to Ifet 111 ■ (Ull lilted
\1 > lileell. who pi-ilk- till \uVMJo. -aid
that t ommuiii at ion ss i ipnlr a pruhli-m at
t i-t *’Ilitei preters have to lie ii-ed I’m every
wont td i ■ tivei satuni ut tin- I' lnnitii- Itow
ever, the children pick up Knirlish very
• piiekls and learn to peak it fluently after
us\ bile."
Ihtl'iny the liist few week- of -ehool, the
1‘i-lfintu't - learn then nan and birthdays
and how to write them Most of the children
have i-.ns. tit imia I In t name- hut tiaditnmul
In t name- surti as Sh' ithan and Muleshoe
Since tin eliilrl*vn u-iuills haseii’t hail a
hath all summer, thes are -• rut,tied and
treated fm lie. tile I'i - t das of i hool. Most
of them are not familial with toilet facilities
nm d** thes know how to eat with silverware
I lies VI- tie Ye | Irpt III 11 "'ll Ml til. -e thllll,'-
are included in the education of the chil
dun to help them to adapt to tlm world out
side then isolated existence
:• nitories, ....... - and two"
iui i-iii'. ruin a iiu .mi indent' at i’i non
Nasaiu- who have lumpleted a hiph -ehool
edit, at tun and returned to the iv-eis-ation to
work are in chin ire of the dorms
Separation from lus parents -eems to l«*
le-s diffieiilt fm- the •'■ veai old child than
you'll imairme. Mr- *.*• > n -aid "The Nava
an *i■ • t emotional people hs nature What
they f*-el i hidden . deeply that we can't
see it
Must Nava n patent.* are ap.ithetn toward
edueatimi, she -ail lie main motivation to
•end their children to ehool n the cheek
the cove rinncnt -end- tail family every
month \ leitiiin amount i- paid for each
I lie I Ii .1 a XS .it, in i hi XI 111 in I i.iii--
Knmluin Ihm *-. I'o,.' tu. pn -I'i'i
\ muddied Itic Kiel her, the omniscient
olisel'Vi'i in I ii-ot'ir e tirwell' "HIM," is SMilk
tin- tin Streets -J1 vein heliin hi- tune.
He ha- heen a reality fm several years,
lie mas i» a nun-aim" fm a iiu in firm
like If •! Keviudds T'hiieeo oi t'ampliell
Soup Ih- mas hi a “consultant" fm a milk
company m a "p-vcholoirist” fm a hank
Martin I fir.. . !jk« - to .all him a “hrain
ss atelier
In In.- tir-t full h-nirth he k "The Itrain
XX at'l ei " <it' vieiou -Is uttaek- the $f>tt
million a seat psycholupu al te tinp Indus
try The Ixiok represents over three years of
thm-oiii'h t'- ieareh and study
111 ii", who ha- worked a - editor for -ev
eial sseekls ncsvspapcrs in Ness York, re
pm'- that tiundred- of tliuii-aml- id Xmeri
can citi/i'h- are administered examinations
each seat !■> cmnmeictal testei-
I'lte re-lilts of these tests frequently
praded hs laymen ran determine wiudhei
- lull) m school. In addition, when the do!
dti'ii entei school every Scptcmlicr, they are
measure*! and fitted for iluthmp the ifovein
menl will provide them for the -dmol year
Must of tin Navajo familie- live ott pu\
ei nnieiit aid and what profit they pet I rum
tin'll sheep Very lew. if alii hold ioh- since
there is little work to fie found on tin- res
ei vat imi and it is too far to . nmmule t., a
juh outside it
ii iiixixii < xi* xt i n
Me- tjrei-n feels that the Nasaiu- have
•he -am*- lea in iiijf eapaeity a- people who
live ill lllole model ti - u i round I tip- " llli-y
llist need till' oppmtumt.S tu learn and to -ee
what the lest of the world IS like -iip ex
jilams.
XX hen tin- children at I'uimi i,- emnplet
ed the third I'tade, tfies po mi to t'hmle
Ituaidmp School in t hinle, An/., w-hi*-h edu
eat. - the sttldi-llts throU|fh the i-Veiith p'lllde.
Knuii there, tin more anihitious student- pu
to sehools in AIhuquenpie, I’hoetiix, Kivcr
-nle, Calif., l-'t XX inputc. N \1 . Hi ipham <‘its.
Ill ... I O , , > . I, t..rt
liuol and p.. on to eollei-i
Many students drop out when they hast
eompleted their work ill one school "If
we i an pet them to po on to <'hinle from
here, they usually ssill stay with it until
they've finished the seventh p'rade.' Mt .
(ireen -IIS - "If they do, sse feel we've really
aei mnplished something
"Those that i'ii on to lilph -clloul.- far
from home ically maki u- te, that it - all
worthwhile," she added I'll, y tire the one-
whu ate In -t educated to th. way- of the
modern world and are the Ica-t likely to re
turn te the IH'llllitlVc life of tin Nava lus."
Cover
an appltiatit will pet ol m whetlu-t an
employe’s pu-itiun will n-i m fall
the Inain wat.hei, even thmiifh In- i- u*
t ion - dtle fm admimstei on- th' le-ts. may
■ I may not be a qualified psyeholopist
X«-t he insists he ran accurately measure
a person's psy. ln predict anyone'- - u- • -
and deti-rmtlie who should eventually In-come
a company exccutis'e.
\- the authm point it. Irani svalchinp
today has "In i unu one ,f the mam detei
mutant- of yuut rateei, \mu :<di, your very
place ni society The “personality tester”
claims he can ieduce a man’s "yes" and ''no''
ansss, i- anil othet t. t re pen-. to a mea-
ureneiit of -ueh htimati trait- :i- happinc--
atld apifres-ivelies.-
I’hoiqrh t irons' style is somewhat bland.
In- fan . are fasematinp and often friirhten
inp I’nforturuitely, hi .an otfei no solid so
lotion to the brain svatchinp puzzle He can
only -uppe t that \mencans learn how to
tel) in rum bat tin pec-oiiality te-t- that
then Hip Brothers piv* them
I tick BKKNK
Sack' Shifts Coed's Idea
Of Copying Latest Style
Cover to
Brain Watchers Taking Over
News in Review
3 Agree To Ban Tests
Its Ml I Iff I X ifl l\\
I don’t know tiow we pot alotip hefme
the advent of the-, crazy new tyle Mow
did f I Yet wake Up III th. metl ltlp wit); Ilt
them? Now I just
po oVel to the din
inp room for break
fast and /XI"
There's houtld to be
a purple, red and
moirciita si ri licit
tent dress m a -tuft
with hupi fuchsia
and oratipe dots
X nyone w ho isn’t
(lilted to wakeful
ness by a sip-lit like
this must either
have fmpottoti to
put in hei contact lenses that morninp ot be
went inp- an e<)Ually electt ifvnip muumuu
ill'! seif
I really hav. to admire tin- pul- who w, ai
t he - i modi'h ileiitimi- I’m ehn ken mv« t
With the Alumni
Ex Takes Over
Navy Recruiting
(WIT JIMMIK I S XX MT (|: S . «l »
has as-unied command of Navy recruit inp in
11 xa , t tklahonin New Xb x i V t kan-.is and
I .ouisutnn
Savapi majoted in econonnc* and veceived
tns depti-e heti Is-fuir etitermp the Navy
I'fte I (alias job may seem calm to the
* apt a in compared his action a- ii flirt
dunnp hts earlier na\al career.
He wa- awarded three Ibstinpuinhi-d l-'ly
* rip- ( to- es, -ix Xn Medals, th*- Purple
Heart, a Presidential t’nit Citation with
Hionze Star and the Navy Commendation
Medal
Kurinp the Korean t onfliet, he command
ed a j**t fiphtet squadron
KHVX IN I t, UiHKItm (MB X V.li has
la-eti appointed p*-i -otin*-! direct**! , n th*'
staff of f'dperton, (i«-imeshausen and ltrier,
|n> of Bo,ton, Mas- a leadinp electronirs
res**an h fitni in the ntn I*; t field
It ad started five or six years apo when
the chemise appeared. I simply had to have
one and it had to be bnpht ornnpe
"Hut Mom," I'd moan t naturally -he oh
i < ted i, -‘everybody's pomp to hav. an manpe
sack dn-ss I'll even make you one if you'll
let me."
I'hat show-, how adamant I was It's very
rare that I pet tin- courape t< volunteei for
a limit w ith the s. issoi and the ew inp nm
chine So Mom laiupht -omi- materinl and I
went to work
Fill some Week- I cut Mill stitched, hllp
pily a lit Input mp the day when I would wear
the dress and, I wildly imapmrd, la- the
object of a universal admit mp -tare Final
1 y. aftei my mother had to take ovet to
rescue tfie outfit, I decided to add some ol'lpl
lip! trim t« 11;. "tin rvt . piai n act- X tup
black bow and a matchmp b«-lt around the
hips would ii-allv make it a knockout
(INI KH (>t X I I I VI IMS
\li*l I plies- they did I'he first few tunes
I wore the outfit I was proudly conscious of
la-inp tin* center of attention, even with all
the ot he i chemises inevitably around lb*w
I plowed'
But soon the plow chanped its nature The
dies- seemed to pet hriphtei and loiphter.
and so did my face. I'd tup my short coal
(which by then I always wore ovci the of
fender> to covet up a little more of the
phastly or,-inp. and ptet.-nd it wasn't n-ally
plat inp so obviously and «o leerinply
But I was determined not to pive in. I
would ahandoti pride and keep wear inp the
obnoxious thinp just as a matter of pnnei
file
So I -n> ,iked around ut the hideous • .►
tuttie a few more times until I heard -..m*-
on.- comment U-hmd tnv back tlint h«* hadn't
realized Halloween wa -o elos. I’hat was
all I needed
Since then I've tried to completely forpet
that horrible experience, but I still feel an
occasional panp of pudt about pushinp ffo*
outfit off on some unfortunate (ioodwill re-
eipient I ust hope who.vei pot :t had more
nerve than | do or els** hnd the sense to
tear it apart and make somethinp less re
pulsive out of it
But, for all I know my old dress may Is-
iloinp someone a pood turn It nist mipht («*
takitip the pirn, of a fold shower or a hot
cup of coffee, startlinp somebody • nouph to
roll up hss droop) eyelids early in the morn
IMP
(hi east, old man, -aid the president to
And that’- exactly vvliat th* underseer*-
way i Moscow warmed up July 25 as the
Soviet t'nion, (ii.-rtt Britain and the t'nited
States apreed on a tl.-aty to end till, letit
t. -tmp m the ntrnosph.-rc, outci -|.a. >■ and
under water
The three power- also affirmed that they
will ci.nlinue -trivinp f.u a complete ban on
nut-lent testmp and implied that they vvill
not pive nueleiir aid I nations which fail
to follow the present ban
Sipnift.imtly, neithei I ranee nor Com-
munist China i> in fnv'.t of the nu. leirr han
|n fact, l«>th countries have rcpistcrod stronp
protests. 111. dll V aftei the tleaty Wlls init
ia lei I in Moscow by llarnman. Xndrei A
(iromyko f.o the Soviets and British Sciem***
Ministei l ord Hailshnm, a It.-.l < hirn-se of
fil ial declared in I’ekinp:
“They (the Russians* have no confidence
■ ti t tie11 . ■ xv n strenpth and th* ■'' > i . •
world communism and nrc kowtow mp to the
West "
President t harles de (iiiulle of France
has tated tliat Ins nation will not Is- l»ound
hy the npreement in its effort- to l«- an
independent nuel«*ar power
Perhaps more siptuticant for th** three
fM.wers which have sipned th*- treaty than
the ah-enei of Communist China and France
is ti*.- exclusion of a ban on underpmund
testmp and of a provision for on site inspec-
tion
The Russians put forwa-d the old arpu
n .-nt at each of the to M- -row sessions that
• w I * '
enouph t«> determine whether underpround
testinp wa- Is-mp earne*l out, r**pardiess of
the fact tt at su.-h **«iuipm»*nt - nnriot distir.
puish h**twetn an earthquake and a nuclear
(.last
Khi .shihev bad four coni*a-l!mp reasons
fot wantinp a fteatv and nedinp a treaty
mor. than at any othet tim* sin., nuclear
disarmament talk- were conceived
1 Th** Soviet t’mon's bitter doctrinal
stilus'!*' will Red China upled with the
feat that the No 2 Communist country will
X* * * * 11 Imvt* txti.l •»»• urtiK
*J Thf (iepp Scivi«*l 14»n• of a nu<*lttur
. . . • \\ .... t I !«.i•»•
.; The Russian vsi-h to prove to world
Communist- that coexistence i- feasible.
1 The need to cut down on the coat of
micU'in arms so the Soviet standard of liv
mp may be raised.
Now all that remain- to be done is the
actual sipninp of the treaty, which a British
• dficiai said will occur within tin- next three
weeks, and the ratitieation of th. treaty hy
! h«* I S
Since a treaty requir**s a two-thirds ma-
jority for ratification in the Senate, Presi-
dent Kennedy has already started lus cam
pait'ii fot public - ipport of the apreement.
In a nui oi television address the President
dr.-w four major meaninps from the treaty:
1 It marks a reduction in world tensions
and points toward hroadet areas of apree-
ment
2. It helps to free the World from fears
and danpers of radioactive fallout
! It prevents the spread of nuclear wrap
ons to nations other than the four already
pos-essInp them: the t’nit.-d States Franc*,
Ru-sin and Britain
1 It cheeks the nuclear arms race.
Kennedy even suppested at a press con-
ference that the treaty mipht Is- taken t<»
the (o-neva Disarmament Conference for
the sipnatur. - -ff 17 nation* !f this happens
France will b. hexed in by nations allied by
the treaty and such "neutral#” a* F.pypt.
Burma and India will po on the record as
aupportinp a Soviet sponsored apreement
Kiph* years apo the w rid h. an! alsuii “the
spirit of (ieneva " Four vent apo “th«* spirit
of Camp David" raptured attention. This
year it’s “the spirit of Moscow " But what
about the actual depth of the new ’■spirit"'’
l'ndersecretary Harriman declared Sunday
that the t; **at v "in no way mt .•(>*» the u«e
of nu.-("at weapons in war” But the npree
n ent at -as* appears to Is- a move in the
ripht direction
BARBARA JHifi.l \SS
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The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 63, Ed. 1 Friday, August 2, 1963, newspaper, August 2, 1963; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth772125/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.