Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, June 17, 1966 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: City of Stephenville Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Dublin Public Library.
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eon* have known loneliness.
CHILDREN
UNDER It
EMPLOYABLES
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FOR CHILDREN
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have acquired mere IM
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SUPPLEMENTATION
w.
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mrmrrr florist trlboraph dcuwkv association .
TARume
Dr. Sam
CHI RO
139 N. Columb
■
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WALKSR
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CASH A CARRY
S% Off Beg. Price of Pickui
and Delivery.
STILL CLEANERS
aa N. almon — Phone AVTT
Very Im
people,
clooeta,
eling in
room wi
reduced
I
Under
double
stove,
heat J
riiiiy- wr-.-iq|
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MEAT PROCESSING
for Home Freezers
Sc LB
1029 W. Washington
WO 5-7552
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O CAAPNT
• ORAPSS
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• UNOLEUM
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a CABINET
• FORMICA
lonely can come some offJta
lent new undeHtandtag
world in which wotas^
eople with wheat W
ind the God Of ta* tafr
■ » I »-■
MONMAENTS ;
H. V?COLLINS
YARD
'■ ‘ (Chub) Peabody. Mc-
I
Service Bey
Srath CMnfcr
‘>ir improve
ference to reaffirm the IBM and
1M2 agreements.”
It seems time that we sould
conduct our affairs in such a
way that those who want peace
may come to us instead of our
doing all the going.
rp
=r
at *17,500.
Located c
bricks, goi
2 A3 bod
Ihavtini
.; ft
■
■mmHAMhi
t-
IFFaR'’. ’vAio ■
‘W
not bring his 60,000-men
back from Yemen is the
t*111 ttH*?
»ge. SU.000.
Duffau w K
meat Uvo
2 bedroom I
tane, |
Only t
22 aen
a few,
Clean I
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L ...
USED PARTS n
.... i,. ,Ut,,
, I. DAVIS
WATER WELL SERVICE
Windmill Repair , .
Duffee, Tea.
Fame hm»
..........
rr- pears to them to be a stale-
mate in Viet Nam.
The forces of history have not
changed. Despite the introduct-
ion of nuclear weapons, a nat-
ion is not regarded as a great
power if it shrinks from the use
of its strength when attacked.
It is doubtful that under such
conditions a nation could ex-
pect allies to flock to its side
when it is said we only have
“limited goals” and those goals
not clearly defined.
England’s Winston Church-
hill did not rally the free world
to Britain’s side by calling for
reltraint against the Nazj|s or
giving the half-V sign.'
These are the things which
make it difficult for our friends
abroad to understand. Voices of
the “no win” policy for the Unit-
ed States are loud and clear.
They were mistaken by a well
known Canadian newspaperman
and Canadian Parliamentarian
who recently visited Washington.
Before coming they thou g h t
“American public opinion was
shifting toward disengagement
in Viet Nam and some kind of
a reapproachment toward Red
China.”
After being in Washington a
few days the Canadians found a
different view. “Right or wrong,
the vast majority of Americans
still cling to the opinion that the
war in Viet Nam must be fought
to the bitter end, that Commun-
ist must be contained in South-
east Asia and that it mus be
stopped there ifwe do not want it
to come over here,”
Certainly most people would
like to seea peaceful settlement
in South Viet Nam, but who can
imagine a “peaceful settlement”
under prevailing conditions and
attitudes.
Indications are that Mr. W.
Averell Harriman will soon set
off on another round of travels
to other nations to explore the
possibility of a negotiated settle-
ment.
Mr. Harriman’s trip had added
significance by statements from
Ambassador Arthur Goldberg,
calling for “mutual cessation of
all types of hostilities in Viet
Nam and a new Geneva Cott-
diplomatic reports he told Nas-
er: “Yoat are of course free to
adopt any attitude you wish, but
I would advise you to handle the
United States carefully. For I
have to tell you officially that
we will unfortunately not be able
to take over from the United
States the grain supplies which
it has been sending you."
The entire Afro-Asian world
will be watching what the United
States does regarding Nasser,
partly because he is not popular
in many parts of the Arab world,
partly because the renewal of
the food agreement will be a tip-
off as to whether other leaders
relief b posed to Nto
i for New Yerk Qly
during Juno 1M5 ore broken down in
lotion b rooched by public i
■MBMKMHKKMKMWBMKKMKMKMKBffKMKKIMMBM
★ WASHINGTON COLUMN ★
Ted. Kennedy's Hot Potato:
Infighting in Home Staff*
BY BRUCE BIOSSAT
Washington
Newspaper 1
*»**W HMB tMMMBM OvSO
DOUGLAS PIANO
SALES and SERVICE
MS Sa. VlrsNmi SL _ WO S4»
R*l a y~>y ~ ~wary auoar
Q—Has mood pulp awr
been used in our currency?
A—There is no record of
its having been used for this
purpose.
Q—Who was the firtt vrtti-
dtnt to receive a plnraUty of
popular votes but jailed to
win the election^
A—Andrew Jackson in
i -—...........
"That Jimmy Thompson’s Idoa of a Dutch treat b for
. ma to pay my half and loan him ttto other haif|7 _
'I ..1 S
the eariy-book f
much of their b
dates agsinst K<
hauRDRnVKta
peied. Extra I
U()0.00 deem.
1300.00 down. I
C. J. Jefferies
1 Merris Couch I
Bill Stafferu I
i
at 314,200 I
la walking
School 3 be<
A built in e
Double gar
move in. P
New: 3 be<
kit. large <
Living rm.
..nlv Si; L-oo
ry large lot
Secrei
Food to Nasser I
If Nasser cannot get grain about Lynda Bird's choice of
riK
x 4^,
-y *
' ■ ■
There orb some vogue answers when the question of just who gets relief b paced to Nto
As on example of the facts, the figures tor New York CNp
i the above chart. About 7 per cent of the pop**
assistance of one kind or another. There are 54^242 ponoto
segment, always, b aid for dependent children. <> ■<
Save markers
1 M
1 MONUMENTS
TERMITE
CONTROL
Prompt and efficient ser-
vice. Satisfaction guaran-
teed. For free estimates
'u/liiu^wSPS ele3v"«SFwwS
'mrXn^SK^'i!"L.w^tw2*E
indent
s Assn.
BOSTON (NBA)
Massachusetts Democrats have gotten themselves into such
a fuddle this spring that they seem sure to be seriously handi-
capped in their autumn quest for a U.S. Senate seat and the
first four-year governorship.
Several months ago, Mayor John Collins of Boston looked
rather well-set for the Senate nomination, and Edward Mc-
Cormack, nephew of House Speaker John McCormack, had
a large edge for the governors spot.
Now, as the party rushes toward its
convention, Collins to1 ,___1Z________
against a former governor, Endicott (Chub) _
‘ very hard by Maurice Donahue,
Sen.
LOUTHEREACK
GRO. A MKT
nos W. Long St.
Phene HUI
totontan.‘
son has deliberately or I
ly destroyed moM
grooved life into aod
interest that it to tap
to understand ooeni ta
or even to hear him.
When a person under
his loneliness, eontea
and recogntaw that It I
be evaded, he could ta
threshold of a MWCMI
wonder for hto Eta 1
ness can be an oefl JM
can be the result <11
all of our trust ta am
selves, in our own MM
and in our own ectada
can be the loneUnem <
person who refuata toll
anyone.
It is one thtaf to
alone in one’s convictk
is another thins to Isola
from the possibility of
hearing what our nd
says. This can happen
country as well as to
dividuaL Can a Button
alone?
Loneliness can be a t
00(1 of torture. Jcsm
who ase this planet as a lone- 1W»7 “one in ortgr to
new compaiuonsmpi H
terribly alone and ggto
companioned.
Out of the senstthrtty
, ------
of to
the ]
work ____
verse and the age»-
in the pants and still get Amer-
ican aid.
King Faisal oi Saudi Arabia,
who arrives in the United States
next week, is no friend of Nas-
ser’s. Nor is King Hussein of
Jordan. Both have been threat-
ened with Egyptian invasion and
both have received U. S. Arms
to protect them from the man
whom the United States is feed-
ing
Despite this. Secretary of
State Rusk is reported to have
recommended another $150 mil-
lion in food to Egypt. The final
decision will be up to President
Johnson.
Note — One man who will
have his eyes glued on the out-
come of this debate is President
Sekou Toure of Guinea, most
pro-Chinese country in all Afri-
ca. He uses SOO Chinese advis-
ers, has made ex-President Nk-
rumah of Ghana honorary pres-
ident of Guinea, foments revolu-
tion against hto pro-American
neighbors such as President
Tubman of Liberia and Presid-
ent Houphouett-Boigny of the
Ivory Coast. Yet the Untied Stat-. >
es this year subsidized him to
the tune of $30 million.
Merrh-Ge-Round
The President isn’t too happy
. l- _ r '" ■ .........1 .
quick quht
Q—What Echo* mog haw
been the mauM amttoMd
MtheBibte?
A—Cup moss, • staple food
Df the natives of Middle Asia.
4 STEPHENVILLE
Daily Empire
Stephemrtne, Texas
Friday, June 17, IBM
RUFUS HIGCS JR.
jrx“
cy<?i.toWMnT
MRM8SR OF THS' f
Th* AuociaM Pnm
•r •• m w ar
naw* prMad In IN*
M m* AF MW* %
JUSCaiFTION RATWS: carrter in
ynjyato***
®°vWy*par y**r, w.W; *y
*r jiN adur eMr*****, Me
? HNDINO T‘
The Uplift of
i' • :■ ’toff? MSU
by RALPH W. 1
Newspaper Kate
fogs empha-
‘TCu aH
t semanticist
irica. In most
_ of that conti-
Wesley Sadler,
o word for “lone-
ice everyone is a
a family or a tribe.
ie alone but you’re
er observation Is
from Thoreau’s Walden. “I
have never felt lonesome, or
at least oppressed by a sense
of solitude, but once, and that
was a few weeks after I came
to the woods, when for an
hour, I doubted if the near
neighborhood of man was not
essential to a serene and
healthy life. To be alone was
‘ a unnlnn—nt ”
to
taking, feeling per-
to’tte loneliness of
the President, musing over
decisions to be made.
There to the loneliness of
the narachutist dangling in
silence between aky and earth
There la the loneliness of
the man who has wrecked his
career rashly.
There to the loneliness as
generations try, and fail, to
understand each other.
There to the loneliness of
u.
Beyond these to the loneli-
ness of those who have come
to a new understanding
universe in which we In
solitude that comes to
am
K
■I
■I
R----, r
: 4
r 5
F* I
Es
r • '-'L ' .. i
US Lacks Enthusiasm in Viet Nam
I’s choice of
Hamilton as “Charley” Hamil-
ton; is irked over bls draft re-1
cord. Actually, Hamilton has
been deferred six years, long be-
fore he met Lynda. When he got
his deferment he was not afflu-
ent. Now he is making $125,000 a
year. . .No one has any explana-
tion for the fact that Hamilton’s
trip to entertain the troops in
Viet Nam was postponed— or
cancelled. But it was a smart
move. GI reaction in Viet Nam
would have ranged from vigor-
ous to violent against the Presi-
dent’s family.
.'I
QTON — The quest
ther to continue feed-
mt Gamel Abdel Nas-
ser and the United Arab Re-
public to being debated stertt-
ly inside the State Department
and to likely to break into the
open soon on Capitol Hill. A
Xe next 10'day^ainc^NaMM^ es gently. According to reliable
good agreement with the United J’ * *“
States expires June 30.
Most people don’t realize it,
but the United States has sent
food to Egypt valued at almost
double what Russia has contri-
buted to the more widely pub-
licized Aswan Dam.
The decision to continue send-
ing food involves much more
than merely feeding people,
so-called United Arab Republic,
now no longer united with Syria
Basically it involves the quest-
ion of whether or not Nasser to
to continue as the head of the
oy any other Arab state.
Diplomatic cables from the -
near East report that Nasser to|«an continue to kick Uncle Sam
in a precarious political posit-
ion, and that failure to get Ame-
rican grain would cause street
riots, probable rebellion by the
army, and his downfall.
The Egyptian army, already
smarting over having been led
into a military impasse in Ye-
men, is reported fed up with the
debonair colonel who has ruled
Egypt since King Farouk was
kicked out in 1952.. It’s even re-
ported that one reason Nasser
does
army
fear that these troops would re-
volt against him. >
Desperate Financial Plight
On the economic front, Nasser
has not been able to pay the
French for the first load of Fre-
nch grain delivered under the
Franco - Egyptian loan agree-
ment.
Egypt receives a total of $700
million in foreign currency per
year, including Suez Canal tolls
of $290 million and 80 million
pounds received from the tour-
ist industry. However, it needs
far more than this if it is to im-
port basic foodstuffs, including
flour, beans, lentils, meats, Hus
spare parts and a certain
amount of machinery.
This means that Egypt would
be in a desperate plight if the
United States decided to cut off
shipments of grain.
The United States has subsid-
ized Egypt to the extent of more
than $500 million in food since
1954. Last December, however.
Congress rebelled at this contin-
ued subsidy of an Arab leader
who has publicly insulted the
United States; so the State De-
partment substituted its long-
term agreement for a six-mon-
ths food loan totaling $55 mil-
lion, which expires at the end of
June.
If it is not renewed, African
experts predict Nasser will go
the way of other Afro-Asian
leaders recently kicked out of
office— President Nkrumah of
Ghana, President Ben Bella of
Algeria, the ruling clique of Ni-
geria, and President Sukarno of
Indonesia, who while not actual-
ly dethroned, has been demoted.
Kosygin Is Practical
The State Department has
continually argued that the exit
of Nasser would mean his re-
placement by a more Anti-Ame-
rican, less stable leader. But tn
other African-Asian countries
the reverse has been true. They
have substituted more stable
leaders, friendlier to the United
States.
Free Teletype Service tor
Hard-To4et Parts •
LIFSTIMS MUm.BR* -|
SOUTHLAm BATTBRICS
wiiffirsss!
mm ‘
oa* MN* a* F«rt WBMN Wmv I
--------------------r
By OMA RBURLESON, M. C.
17th Distric, Texas
WASHINGTON, D. C. Fut-
ure historians will undoubtedly
mark September 2, 1945, as a
significant turning point in the
affairs of the United States, as
well as the world. The history
of World War II ended on this
date with the surrender of the
Japanese, but there is also
another important significance.
At that exact time the United
States stood alone on a pinnacle
of power. No other nation any
where on the earth could chal-
lenge us.
Both allies and the vanquish-
ed had to turn to us for assist-
ance. Russia could not have
saved herself without the equip-
ment we had given her. Europe
could not have rebuilt itself
without our wealth. Smaller
nations everywhere had no other
place to look for help except to
America.
Also at this exact time it seem-
ed that we developed a sort of
complex of half apologizing for
having won the war in the first
place. Ever since VJ Day it
seems some self-consciousness
lias bitten deep into us and has
affected our foreign policy. At
times we have seemed to apolo-
People do read
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gize for our power. This appear-
ed to be the case with Berlin,
Korea and the Middle East,
which were dealt with by sev-
eral Administrations.
This is what sets Viet Nam
apart from other periods of act-
ual wartime. Other wars, with
all their -agonies, were made
bearable by an enthusiasm for
what we felt was right and a
confidence in our ability to
bring victory. What we knew we
had to do was to rise up and
fight.
This attitude seems to be lack-
ing in our conduct of the wat in
Viet Nam.
The evidence of this Is now
beinfe demonstrated in Geneva
where Secretary of State Rusk
is trying vsliantly to gain sup-
port from European leaders for
the United States* position in
Viet Nam.
Secretary Rusk admits that
our prestige is down in Europe
because “it has been so long
since the United States has had
a resounding success or vic-
tory.”
Europeans have observed the
hesitancy and reluctance of the
United States to use its power
in.Berlin, in Korea, at the Bay
of Pigs and now what ap-
BMUL
STEPHENVILLE FLORAL AND GREENHOUSES
Mr: and Mm. J. H. Ferguson, Stephenville Texas
Cut Flowers, Pot Planta, Floral Designs a Specialty
MM. WO H** AU Tvn, «> MM»M MAim. M
cIMlUT WAftk----
WANTED
Comont Wark
Specializing In
Sidewalk and Patio
Ballard Day
715 W. Frey Phone
I -.....................
Cormack is
•tate Senate M . ....
’The interest for the country to that • national figure, Sen.
Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, to bound to be entangled in these
quite untidy situations.
Despite anything you may have read. Kennedy has not east
his weight for anybody, including the third runner in the
^rtee^hnFPKeim^ynneth °’Donnell» ^*®er top aide to the
YET THE SENATOR’S POWER and prestige In Massachu-
oetia tin hardly escape involvement. If two scarred nominees
enter the autumn lists for the Democrats and do poorly ta
November, some are likely to blame Ted for not trying to
£&K&hta ve,> “«• ««*>>’•.
hto viewpoint, using power within the state to not
th** Mo1?1®- from sweeping, in hto case. He might
cast his strength for a man only to see him lose the nomina-
^*2? in November. That naturally gives him pause.
Politicians ta Massachusetts are of different minds on the-
subject. At least a few think that failure to use his strength
in major 1966 races will tend to move Kennedy away from
hto early Image as a power-wielder toward the ‘loner” posture
John Kennedy maintained ta Massachu^etto polities.
AGAINST THIS BACKGROUND ft would be helpful to TM
if he could find a way to carve r few strong strokes in the
races of 1906.
The tightening up of the Senate and governorship popnin*.
tion struggles compounded Kennedy’s difficulties.
Collins has come on with a laje rush against Peabody, who
gurprtoed many with his evidently commanding spring bad.
Victory in convention for McCormack would presumably
eliminate Donahue, who says he will accept thedelegates* ver-
dict (though ft is not binding). A Donahue couvgntion triumph
would insure B three-way primary fight for the governorship,
otace OTlonnell says he will go that route ta any event
How these battles finally come out ta September seems less
Important MW than the fact that Coffins and McCormack,
Writes, proved so .vulnerable in the late
ft is that the Democrats appear to have lost
pe that they could find two strong candi
publican Gov. John Volpe and the GOP
Attflmoy fieAeral Edward Brooke*
CITY
ELECTRIC SHOP ,
E. L Stephan*
W* ar* SMPsria *» *l*ctr1c*l utrtas. N* '
tok *M isrss fr »*• smaH.
J4« W. Green—WO 5-4141
■ --------—----
INSURANCE
"-377:, , - ,0—--' -
‘OWYNDOUH.
WOLFE
ORHBKAL IHSUKANCI
tM.H. MtaM Mam MAU -
diminishes some types Of com-
panionship.
The opposite
mss that coma
i'
aome dust moat ta the vast-
ness of infinity. 1
Loneliness come* from
achievement and it also comes
from alienation. To come into
a new area of responsibility
panionship.
cornea when a per-
*.«; fieta tite United State8? he” ha* boy friends. He refere to George
the world wide grata short
age. Premier
him of Wis <
visit.
Kosygin is a practical man.
After listening to Nasser deliver
a violently anti-american speech
the Soviet Premier cautioned
him to deal with the United Stat-
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McCullough, Gordon. Stephenville Daily Empire (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, June 17, 1966, newspaper, June 17, 1966; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1351326/m1/4/?q=Homecoming+queen+1966+North+Texas+State+University: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Dublin Public Library.