The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 81, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1964 Page: 2 of 16
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Washington—(NEA) — With tha passive concuctf^e of
the V. 1' Treasury, a number of European and Asiatic coun-
tries have worked out a way to undercut U. SL producers in
the American market, even when production coats »r* the
maw ■ ■ _____________ ., ,T jtiM
This unhappy story is especially pertinent as U. ». negoti-
ators leave for Barope to get ready for a new round of tariff
cuts.
American fimm. naturally, am crying “feuL"
Bepressntativss of affected U. S. companies ha*0pade
private viaita to Pvaaidant Johnson and U. S. Treasursyt of-
ficinia to present their appeals, but to no avnii 4t„b
Take the afept of one Luxembourg atoll pm4«mt;,,fS an
This Urns arils ito steel for s high price in Lturtmfcourg
regulated market These markets are eo heavily protected by
tariffs and Other barriem that U. S. firms can’t compete.
Hip u—fMiy *nkee enough money eff these hates at
7*^Tt , U a -mn. however, any they can ttojtte.
arrests of Communist and ana. ia *»■* «•••• «»*• *«»«* * todjttla in
picioua leaden may well he. **• Treasaiy regulations. , rf)
justified. But'most Brasilians These regnlafto— htocify then’s "dumping” and ft'penalty
— the everwhelming majority « the «iw» that export to the United States aril a ■asnsldm--
— am not Commnnisto. Thoy aria amount of their product at homo or abroed'et prtaathaark-
ere ementtolly[ good - netured. edly higher than they eel! hem. ; to!
m eL»p^mentdbTtoeir %m!» *Bt ^eontWam which handle each otherlr prod
K’eve^riSt they wilfbe^i?: on*’ *"•* cohtpanla. will hxndto'msToMto kl«*-prJ
lag to wait indefenitely. flrnjj^dl* th* United
^ 1 __ Then, on the surface, none of the firms have a* aatonaive
TOnaVinflKlOrV two-Pric* »ystem; soma of the firms sail far high
X Vila J UlUHftUl J prices, other, tell for tow. But the combine — nil of to* firms
B. - pu_ «*• Wgh profits from the sales la pmtoetsdteftrketa
Today to Tuesday, April 7. “d *”» ** lo~ from
the 9«th day of 1M4. Thare ~ ..... ” '
are 268 dags toft in the ywar. eluded the present atete of tleaWp—the Ysenate—«fl Kyu
On this date in 1781, a granp
s an immense po- of Revolutkmery War officers
it has remained e from New England founded
stion. It>* an in- wlut vta to be Marietta, Ohio.
a tough time of it It is an northwest under Mm authority . tIIM,l||llll ntsi. a!T|.
indictment that the country of Ore ordinance of 1787. ■
has not been- able to improve On this date - - - - *•** Eighth Army in Tunisia.
Hs tot in recent yearn. In 1718, congress 'established In 1640. American carrier
There ere Communists i n Mississippi territory which in- planes sank Japan's largest bat-
• m> a to, ia tsl as to tf
aimed at merging the
Hons into a new Uni
Republic,
Though* fas Tai
Life does not coast
-*-or even largely—of
happiness. It consist
of the storm of thou
is forever blowing
ofte’s head—Murk Tv
toosd st 228-SO Mata Street," Sulphargprt*
ew*ry afternoon i except Saturday; and Sunday
Entered at the Peat Office in Sulphur Spring*.
Nothin* shal come between ue.
That wan our voeddinta VOW;
1 wiwrTbCHtoiee
Itorbmt L, Gaddis, «
officer for 10 years,
shot to death In ft b
Ito home in Grand I
terday. ' ’v <
He died of a shot!
in the head.
'"SAialSSF
as police chief at Rc
USIhJB A
BAMDA<3
UPA FEV
VOU <301 i
WHEN] fO
X WHAT-
JUST TO COVER. OW MYSELF, IS ALL—I KWOW 1
SCRATCHES J YOU’RE BOKJKlA YAWP AT ME TO
d YOJR HEAP f C HA MCE TH' BAMCACE EVERY ,
FELL POIVM rj TIME IT BETS DIRTY SO I V
rHElDEAt y MERELY UMWIWDTHE OUT-
m—i—-^1 3?* ^^'S^rnoFF,
mu,irdk
THE DisfLY NEWS-TELEGRAM . Tuesday. April 7, 1964.
Editorials
Things Sulphur Springs Needs
Hospital Expansion
Cooper Reservoir
A Health and Sanitation Pro,ram
Continued Industrial Development
Mom Parkin, Facilities
Building Modernization
Intensified Trade Promotion
Expanded Fire Protection
Public Library Modernization
A More Prosperous Agriculture
A New Armory
Enthusiastic Citizens
ALL MEN’S GAINS ARE THE FRUIT OF
VENTURING — HERODOTUS
Irresistible vs. Immovable
constant by October, when another
general conference will be hold. Previ-
ously it was thought this couldn't be
done before 1966.
In another matter, the Consultative
Committee on Standards for Measuring
lionizing Radiations agreed to recog-
nize the curie as a special unit of ac-
tivity equal to 3.7 x 10 to the 10th
power disintegrations per second.
(But what is a second?)
Kidding aside, these matters are of
vital concern to scientists and, since it
is the scientists who are transforming
the world, will affect all of us sooner
or later, whether we understand them
or not.
We should not be so foolish as to
think that when the bell next tolls for
the meeting of the International Com-
mittee of Weights and Measures it
does not also toll for us.
—THe Wonderful Wizard of 0*~
The roots of the Cyprus problem
ultimately reach far back into human
history, at least to the foundings of the
two great religions represented on ihe
island. *
a Human beings being what they
are, there is apparently nothing that
can be done about the religious-na-
tionalistic antagonism between the
Turks and Greeks. Men seldom put
aside their hopes of bliss in heaven
merely to lessen the hells they create
on earth.
But somethnig eventually must be
done about the immediate causes of
the present strife, one of which is the
Cypriot constitution.
Under this document, which went
into effect in 1960, the vice president,
who must be Turkish, has the power
to veto fhe Greek Cypriot president. In
other words, the Turkish minority of
18 per cent of the population can over-
rule the Greek majority of 82 per cent.
The rights of the minority must be
protected, of course, but doing it a4r
the expense of the majority is a clear-
ly unworkable procedure. A function-
ing government requires the willing
co-operation of both sides, and this is
the one thing they are unable to give.
Further complicating matters, at
least from the Western viewpoint, is
the fact that fully 40 per cent of the
Greek Cypriots are believed to be Com-
munists. Thus is of great interest to
the Kremlin. A Cuba-style or, at best,
neutral Cyprus could mean the pos-
sible loss of two British NATO bases
on the island.
Cyprus is a headache the NATO
allies could not cope with. The most
that can be expected of the United
Nations peace force, for a long time
to come, is that it will hold down the
bloodshed.
The Literary Guidepost
By W. C. Rogers
THE BELLS OF BICETRE. By George
Simenon. Harcourt, Brace. $4.95.
This is a psychological novel. . It gets into
the mind of a man and if it has a sort of tape-
recorder accuracy, it also has a certain unob-.
strusive subtlety.
Rene Maugras, 54, a well-heeled and.influ-
ential publisher of a major Paris newspaper,
suffers a paralytic stroke and is hauled off to
a hospital. One side of his body is paralyz-
ed ; his speech is gon*. j
it is a situation in which his mental pro-
cesses keep probing behind the wall of his ill-
ness, his mind given a sharper perception be-
cause of its seeming isolation from his body.
At first — and this seems to be an effect
of his illness—Maugras is depressed, feeling
that his life has been an empty answer to the
question of “what is the point?”
Gradually in his convalescence he begins " ll"
to sort out the meanings behind the events of DIFFERENT EVALUATIONS
his life, to evaluate his personal relationships,
to see his friends in a new light.
His memories come to him in a haphazard,
incoherent fashion, and so the reader learns
about his first wife, his alienated daughter, his
mistress, his pathetic second wife. He is no
very great hero.
Inevitably, Maugraa gets out of the hos-
pital with a more sobered view of life than he
had experienced before.
Brazilian Revolution
Brings Out Views
They have waited patiently for
By LEO ANAVI The fact remains that Brazil •* toyrwrwnant In their «m-
Waahington, Apr. 7 tfi — is hot out of the wood* polite- «tlon. It ia not at all ant*,
Simenon wrote many top-flight detective There have been dozens of as- cally or economically. There is howaver, that they wiU bo win-
stories before he got into “serious” writing, sesaments of the recent mili- a vast job to be done to keep “R to wait indefenitely.
What he has inscribed is an incisive study of tarF - civilian revolt in Bra- the country alive, so to apeak,
a man’s life and its crises. To some it may be **l> th« wvolt which ousted It is not at all sure that tha
too esoteric. But to those who care about such ^res‘^®nt Goulart and which current group is about to seek
thimrs it has a sharn anneal Put a morn conservative re- betterment of this kind.
gime in power. Some govern- This ia an aspect which must
be taken into account In this
Ju*t a Second (?)
There are so many international
conferences these days that an import-
ant one slipped by wit^ hardly any-
one being aware of it. 1
vThe International Committee of
Weights and Measures, which super-
vises the work of the International Bu-
reau of Weights and Measures, which
originated with , the Treaty of the
Meter in 1875, which was first adopt-
ed by French revolutionaries in 1791,
convened last October to discuss some
problems associated with weighing and
measuring of interest to all scientists.
Don’t feel badly about it, though,
for Science, the magazine of the Amer-
ican Association for the Advancement
of Science, has just got around to re-
porting on it. ' ’
One of the recommendations made
by the committee involved a redefini-
tion of the liter. It was supposed to
be identical in value to the cubic deci-
meter, but recent discoveries revealed
that the two differ by 28 parts in a
million.
The committee also set wheels go-
ing that may lead later this year to a
redefinition of the second. The Con-
sultative Committee for the Definition
of the Second hopes to be able to de-
fine the second in terms of an atomic
ments hxxe expcwNM RMjilto
When a political candidate catches a cold tion unofficially, of coiinw, and country and this continent. No
his nose is running, too. others have expressed doubts, revolt of the right can be dfv
--The latest evaluation from scribed as good unless It to
When robbers broke into two laundries in Brazil itself Is that the revolu- committed to progress of a
a Michigan town it was the places that were t*on came *n t*NS nkk of tMp kind,
cleaned. • • • 0Be montb before a pi*®* Brazil has
_________ ned Communist' TptfXli against tential but
,, _______. „.. ~ .... . . the government, Another «*ri- backward nation;
you must whip a naughty child into uati0» to that the Commuatot dietment of aorta that the little _________ _____ , , „
shape dp it bv reasoning things out. danger did not figure much in people in ftll regions . . . agri- Thoy t** Ht*t died
the revolt, It
just that the
Some day we’ll be able to live on air, says military and righBri and eon-
a scientist. Many a married man has almost servative groups just did not
died from it—-yakity-yak 1
A Bible Thought for Today
want to take a chance on furth-
er deterioration of the political
fiber.
If any man will do his will, he shall know.
—John 7:17.
God reserves His revelations for thoae who
are ready to obey at any cost
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#. W. Frallsr, toHtoe~aaiI tekkaSaT
Jo- Woes ley. Managing Editor
OUT OUR WAV
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 81, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 7, 1964, newspaper, April 7, 1964; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824073/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.