Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 53, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 3, 1954 Page: 1 of 54
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54
NTSC 15 Miami 19 Texas
20 Ga. Tech 10 Rice
40 Tex.A&M6 Arks.
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Miss. So. 7 Baylor 13
7 Cornell 20 0. A&M 13 N:
44
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SUNDAY
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VOL. 52
NO. 53
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VIOLENCE
ERUPTS IN
BALTIMORE
■ '
-
* J,
ine
con-
i
The Big Four — Secretary of
, turbance and were fined $25 each |
The Denton Senior Optimist Club
Gov. James F. Byrnes of South
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 —The t or more than four afternoons of
curring in areas with relatively
officials in Florida, Georgia, Vir-
Denton boys will benefit.
I
ALLIED CO SAYS
WEST PREPARED
so
Gruenther talked with newsmen
See UNITED FUND, Page 2 ence that the Western Allies prob-
' no avail.
and leave the Western
_ weapons
I Allies at the mercy in Europe of
Reds Hit By
Dollar Day Set
Weather
I.
^.T1
his
Staff Photo).
r
■
Wyatt Food
Store Eyes
Denton Site
Formal Inking
Set For 8 A.M.
Price 10c
Par Copy
T wenty-Year-Old
Expectant Mother
Raped In Dallas
DALLAS, Oct. 2 (P— A 20-year-
Broken Leg Ends
Difficult Night
For Denton Man
For Tony Veneuva of Denton
CITY POLICE OFFER ‘ASYLUM’
TO SELF-STYLED COMMUNIST
dared at President Eisenhower’s
headquarters today that Russia
WINES
WOMAN,
TVS HIM
fined $100 for hitting a Negro pupil
leaving Southern High School. Jack
Zimmerman was arrested on the
spot and fined before the day end-
j wherever integration is tried, re-
gardless of what kind of decree
j the Supreme Court hands down,”
said Louisiana Sen. William Rain-
ach, chairman of a joint legislative
committee to continue segregation.
Georgia’s Democratic gubnera-
ing into a political straitjacket.
The food deficit has been grow-
ing several years and the situation
hap now become so bad that Com-
munist leaders and the Red press
Resistance To Mixing
Students In Border
Areas Viewed As Trend
they were questioned tonight or
their experiences, in Red captivi-
Thl» is one of a series nt stories
about participating agencies in
the Denton County United Fund
campaign thia year.
Chevrolet, had become lodged in
a muddy ditch on Highway 24 early
Friday night. And Veneuva’s ef-
! forts to get it out atone Were to
armament in the proposed new
alliance against communism
F 2
.ad
High Saturday .
Low Friday ...
High year ago .
Low year ago ..
" ■
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State John Foster Dulles, British
Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden,
French Premier Pierre Mendes-
France and West German Chancel-
lor. Konrad Adenauer — will meet
Photo)
45 BOYS WILL BENEFIT
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (m - U.S. WOLF
cal no longer ignore it. In fact,
the U.S. Information Agency came
up with evidence tonight that they
are talking about it throughout the
satellite area.
ed for punching 14-year-old Leon
| Thompson.
in Denton for the mobile unit, Mrs.
Kathlene Henderson, executive vice
president of the Denton County TB
Association, said.
The Denton County TB Aisocia-
MEET OUR PERSONNELI C. P.
Whisenant. Mrs. O. O. Bell, Mrs.
... 88
.\;u
....93
JUNIOR OPTIMISTS—Above are members of the Junior Optimist Club in Denton
which is a member of the United Fund campaign this year. The Club is sponsored
by the Optimist Club. Playing and watching the checker game, from left to right,
seated, are Sam Dandridge, Joe Dandridge and Dwayne Foster. Standing are Connie
Hutcherson, Mike Cashon, Rodney White and Buddy Franks, (Record-Chronicle Staff
Ten Barges
Junior Optimists Destroyed In
Share In UF Drive Memphis Fire
Two other white men and a Ne j
gro were arrested in the same dis-
T
V <4
atomic bombers like the American
B47 would win the war in the long
run.
The chief of the North Atlantic
By JIM KOETHE
• Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
U
' for disorderly conduct.
2 I—
_ _ legal and technical detail re-
Supreme Court Set mperjbe "anfit " "
For Fall Hearings
T. J. Tinney of 111 West Syca-
more in Denton waa hooking hia
1951 Ford pickup to the stalled
auto when a 1950 Chevrolet driven
by Dennis A. Green of Shepard
Air Force Base came along and
piled into the two can.
Nothing was damaged except the
See BROKIN LIO, Page 2
old expectant mother said she was j
raped twice early today by a me-
dium-built man who told her he
would kill him if she screamed.
The woman, expecting a child
within a month, said she awoke
when the man entered her apart-
ment by unlatching a screen door
before her husband returned from
work.
2
LONDON, Sunday, Oct. 3 (AP)—The nine-power con
ference announced settlement of all major disputes and ar-
ranged for a wind-up session later today to sign historic
i agreements bringing West Germany into the Atlantic pact
as an armed sovereign nation.
This comes as the climax of 72 hours of almost cease-
less diplomatic effort entailing concessions by both fearful
France and ambitious Germany. .:d .
The conference now has advanced through its crisis to
i within a penstroke of final success. » .
"I do not anticipate any last minute hitch," a British
Foreign Office spokesman said, echoing the optimism of
other delegates. . a 1
The nine foreign ministers arranged to meet again oh r .
When the Denton Junior Optimist League teams; a basketball tour-
Club receives its $2,500 share of/nament for Junior High boys; a1
the United Fund this year “ 1.......
In Denton Monday
Monday is Dollar Day in Denton and there will be
plenty of bargains in downtown Denton stores all day. A
check through advertising in today’s paper will point out
the values to be offered.
NTSC opened its home football season Saturday night
and the account of the game with Mississippi Southern can
be found in today’s sports section along with Denton High’s
story plus all of the county games and national sports
topics.
‘ U ----
From front page to last today’s Record-Chronicle offers
ths best in Denton and Denton County coverage plus en-
tertaining features, color comics and news of the state,
nation and world.
: " __________________- ___________________________________
in Paris perhaps the day,before
the nine-power' conference to ap-
prove similar details on restora-
tion of German independence.
The Council of Ministers of the
North . Atlantic Treaty Organiza-
tion will hold a special meeting in
Paris on Oct. 26 to formally admit
- • ' •
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ne w.w units uI A now sPrae small Negro populations and might
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Denton City Police weren’t sure what they had on their
hands Saturday.
A young man driving an old-model auto approached a local
motorcycle officer during the morning hours.
The Hometown Daily Newspaper for Everybody in The Denton County Area
will tell their story at a news con
ference at Nuernberg Monday
They were not permitted to talk
to newsmen- today.
They were driven to the border
ip two limousines. Both were
spruced up for their release with
haircuts clipped close to the side
of the head—the tradioit lanzeCch
of the head—the traditional Czech
army style.
m. «,
torial nominee, Lt. Gov. Marvin
Griffin, shared Byrnes’ view.
Western Europe now.
Gruenther’s prediction came as
Gruenther spoke of the proposal ।
aS a “divisive’ tactic and said
Mobile X-Ray Unit Starts
Operation in Denton Monday
sociation, talk over plans
which starts at NSC 1
MEMPHIS Tenn , Oct.
would be "beaten very badly” if it
A-e
7103
adoption of it would strip the
United States of its war-deterrent;
MAKE PLANS—J. W. (Dad) Pender, left, president of
the Denton County TB Association, and. Dr. J. David
Thomaa, president of the Denton County Medical -
“for the TB
night session Saturday and re-
cessed shortly before midnight.
Partly Cloudy
a"i, eb/ "weev
“Such episodes
Denton Record Chronicle
open to more boys.
At the present time the club
operates almost entirely on the
$2,500 received from the United
Fund. However, if the expansion
program is carried out, more
money would be needed, Duncan
noted.
He added that much of the
equipment used around the gym
See X-RAY UNIT, Page 2+
1 ammeaummnmumem
DENVER, Colo , Oct. 2 Gen Treaty forces cautioned that the decision last May 17 that their
Malenkov regime in Russia is i school segregation practices are
“much cleverer" than the old Stal- unconstitutional.
I NT through 3 p.m. Thursday move
to the old Palace Theater on the
, -
: - i
will spread
Supreme Court opens a new term
Monday, faced with the problem
of finding a way to put into effect
its decision against racial segrega-
tion in public,schools.
Chief Justice Warren and his
eight associate justices, back from
summer vacations, will be con-
fronted with a docket of about 400
cases. But the No. 1 issue Will be
how to accomplish desegregation.
In an unusual pre-term confer-
ence the court reached unanimous
agreement that the week of Dec. 6
| be set aside for hearing further
arguments and reports on the
school racial question. This was
the earliest time available on the
court’s argnment schedule.
Both sides in segregation cases
from Virginia, South Carolina, Kan-
sas, Delaware and The District of
[Columbia will have one hour each
to present followup arguments for
I and against the court's unanimous
a 3
; ghgdeN
Passive resistance Saturday had
forced 11 Negroes out of a pre-
viously all-white school in Milford,
Del., but violence broke out as
demonstrations against mixing
white and Negro students spread
to six Baltimore schools.
This somewhat unexpected resist-
ance in the so-called border areas
was viewed by some leaders as an
indication of what might happen
in applying the Supreme Court rul-
ing against segregated schools to
the Deep South states.
A boycott, promoted by Bryant
Bowles, president of the National
Assn, for the Advancement of
White People, kept nearly two
thirds of the pupils out of Mil-
ford’s Lakeview Ave. School where
11 Negroes were registered. At-
tendance jumped nearly back to
| normal Friday after a new school
' board rescinded an order admit-
' ting the Negroes.
After one Baltimore demonstra-
tion a 24-year-old white man was
, the third December in three
just before reporting to Eisenhow- AT NTSC
er on the military aspects of build-
has been serving local boys through two miilion. gallons offuel Carolina was the first to point out
the Junior Club since 1947 and has ( flared skythigh today ina spectac- last week that incidents were oc-
I maintained a gym since 1949. । ular waterfront fire touched off
The $2,500 United Fund allot- j when a leaky hose sprayed gaso-'
• Russia’s tremendous manpower start
superiority, chest
The general called the Soviet pro-
shop to the gym in the near future
the Junior Optimists will be Alfred M. Gruenther, supreme Al-
lied commander in Europe, de-
With an agreement in hand,
Mendes-France, running a high
temperature from influenza, left
the French Embassy residence. A
doctor said he was very uncom-
West Germany aa its 15th member.
The ministers worked late in < ty.
E2
m
Associated Press Leased Wire
“They’re after me—the FBI’s after me—would you lock
up?” the man said.
“I’ll do my best,” the officer smiled as he took his
COPENHAGEN, Denmark,
Oct. 2 — Add hazards of the
TV age:
A Copenhagen businessman
told his wife last week that he
was off-for an important busi-
ness conference.
retaliating against any massive,sia‛s new proposal in the U.N. for
She ana ”ehAmleunoberwhelm .prohibition of atomic and hydrogen
ing air superiority in long range
Oct. 21 in Paris to confirm
the details which experts will
work out after the signing of
I agreements today.
A mass of complicated
Gruenther told a news
fessing charge to Headquarters.
The man confronted Chief of Police Jack Harrison with, “I’m
a Communist—lock me up.”
The chief assured him the local department would co-operate
and told the man to lay out his belongings. He did—bringing out
a wrist watch and a pair of sunglasses. Picking the sunglasses
back up he studied them and without change of expression
smashed them against the wall.
“I’m ready,” he announced.,
Officers escorted him to a cell occupied by recuperating
drunks-and other assorted characters.
The self-styled Communist halted and sked, "Can these
guys be trusted?”
"Yep,” said the officers as they locked him in.
Late Saturday the man was still being held in City Jail—the
city having granted him political asylum.
---------- ---------- y< a 1 sissippi river barges lined up at
. 45basketball team.madeupofsey- the. Esso Standard bulk oil, plant ginia. North Carolin, and Luisi-
! enth grade students in the club, dock. Some 10 men aboard leaped;
j trips to the State Fair, Shrine/for their lives, plunging into the
Circus, and Fort Worth baseball I water and swimming to satety.
games; overnight camping trips , No one was killed.
and.wiener.roastsia track meet M J- Marchand. 26. New Or-
for boys between 0 and 13 years leans, a crewman aboard the tow
‘old; boxing, and other club activi boat "Esso standard,” was report-:
1 Part of the money is used to ed missing. Several others were
maintain the gym, which is open burned,apparently none critically:
all year, and another part is used Fifteen firemen were overcome by
for tab: tennis, checkers, chess, ”e,t ,B° smoke.________
Two grim-faced Czech army of ’
ficers accompanied 1st Lt. Richard •
H. Dries of St. Albans, Long. Is-
land, N.Y.. and Pfe. George Pisk
o Austin. Tex., to thespot.where
away German Feafmament such as Th.mA™7 sasanbsrim anbepis
US Soldiers, . I
Held 2 Weeks, .
Freed By Reds 1
WAIDHAUS, Germany,Oct. zu . |
—Two American soldiers sporting
zech-tyle military haircuts az
souvenirs of two weeks* imprison . 1
ment in Communist Czechoslovak
ia as spy suspects were set free
at this West German border point
toda. - ,"7
, U.S: intelligence agents hustled
them to nearby Weiden: where "
getting their free, annual square, where it will remain
X-rays from the' Texas through Oct. 16, and then operate
With Treaty Signing-
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS e ■'
X-rays from the ____ _
State Health Department mobile .three days on the TSCW campus. 4
tuberculosis unit at 8 a m. Monday While at NTSC the unit will op- ।
as the unit moves in for its long-1 erate out of the old education an- .
est stay in Denton—15 days. i nex. across from the Student Un- d
The mobile unit, sponsored by J ion. Appointments for students have 1
the Denton County Tuberculosis As- been arranged for the four-day
________________________ service, which will offer its free :
conference in London that the
Allies had agreed on a formula
Ei
A 2
X-rays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
' X-rays are compulsory for all Tbe%
Denton college students.
The unit will open at the old 4 s-
Palace theater at 8 a.m. FridayS
and will operate from 8 a.m. to -5,0
5 p.m Monday through Saturday 4
through Oct. 16. 4 Ex
Denton and Denton County resi- .7
dents over 15 years of age will reg- l \
ister at the theater and will be X- d,
rayed—a process which takes on- Pdfe 310
ly one minute No unrobing is re- Tman=d
E
( hildren under 15 will be given a
patch testing in Denton and Den-
ton ( ouintv Schools in the spring V
If any disorder tuberculosis or V
DENTON AND VICINITY: Partly j
cloudy Sunday and Monday with
widely scattered thundershowers;
not much change in temperature.
Denton county rainfall so far
‘ this month: 1.27 inch, so far this
year: 17.73.; this time last year:
22.06 inches.
Number of days with tempera-'
ture 100 degrees or over this
month: 0, so far this year year: 52.
Sun riaea today at 6:24 a.m.,
sets today at 6:11 pm. Fiahing
today: poor.
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Italian Rapart)
DENTON, TEXAS, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 3, 1954 ***** • Forty -Eight Pages in Four sections
i " rmpt
Germany Joins Allies
. • sra * ghg,mi,,pe ulhz.
AT ,
. A t x™
.
a a"
legal debate. ••
The Topeka, Kan., Board of Edu-
cation-defendant in the Kansas
case—has informed the high tribun-
al there is no need for further
court action in its situation because
desegregation is advancing "as
rapidly as is practicable.” Segre-
gation in Topeka schools will be
terminated by September, 1955
“with full public cooperation and
acceptance by white and Negro. . . _ ... . ..
pupils, teachers and parents, the American and British sources
board said. ' said an expert • report on the key
Desegregation also is advancing ' hurdle "
rapidly in District of Columbia _ - . . . .,
schools. In Delaware, strong oppo- France feared was not approv d
sition to integration has developed. [ at the night session only because
Virginia and South Carolina appear; it still had to be,translated nito
to be standing firm in their oppo- official languages English. French
sition to mixing Negroes and and German
whites in schools. Translators worked through the
All these states and the Districtnight to get the gdocument S in
of Columbia have until Nov. 15 to 1 shape for formal signing at 2 P.m.
file briefs, preliminary to the (a.m. E J,* . . e
December arguments. Dulles and most other foreign
Fixing of the Dec. 6 date pro- ministers arranged to leave -on-
vided an interesting coincidence,; don for their home capitals late
since it meant that the court for-this afternoon.
ing a new defense in Western
—--------——————— | No notification will mean "ev-
SAVE MONEY, BETTER AUTOjerything’s o.k.”
Finance Terms. Waldrip’s C-4054 ' - This will mark the longest stay
’ Europe against the Communist
confer- threat.
.. ... He took note today, however, of
ably would lose the first phase in la development since then-Rus -
ri | O] I posal a clever piece of props
rood shortage canda_____________
bers and is free to the club. “Dr.
O. O. Shaw, a senior member,
makes lots "of material - out of
otherwise, is disclosed in an X-
ray, the X-ray will be sent back
to the person's family physician,
who will then notify the person,
an official of the drive said.
See GERMAN Pact, Page 2 there was just no end to trouble
---Friday night until he waa admit
ted to the Flow Memorial Hospital
here with a broken leg.
Veneuva’s. automobile, a 1942
»
Y •
Wash.St. 14 Georgia 0 TCU 13 SMU
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dominoes, basketball equipment
and upkeep for the radio and tele-
vision set in the gym.
According to Travis Duncan, '
the size of the club is limited to
45 boys. "We just don’t have the ;
facilities yet to maintain a .larger I
club,” he said.
Duncan noted that the club |
hopes to add a boxing room and
41 T. Tech 13 Purdue 27
is made by senior Optimist mem- for controling West German re-
Syzwp-CoskMrs d.R.oreomone 1
Bailey Mullins, Denton real es-
tate agent, and City Commission-;
ers met in special session Friday
afternoon to investigate the pos-
sibility of erecting a storm sewer
over the creek bordering Parkway
street—a step that might mean the
building of a Wyatt supermarket
here.
Mullins told the Commission
that the Wyatt Food Stores were
considering putting a store here
and had been negotiating for about
four months for suitable property.
If they located at the intersec-
tion of Parkway and North Elm.
Mullins said the creek would have
to be covered to hold a part of
a large parking lot and driveway.
City Commissioners made no de-
cision on placing the cover on the
creek but referred the matter to
City Engineer Grady Creel who is
to report back with - a rough es-
timate of cost next week.
Mullins told the Commission that;
the city would only be asked to
do part of the construction.
The Wyatt property would ex-
tend into the creek and it would
npturally pay its part, Mullins in-
formed Commissioners.
Mullins said the Wyatt execu-
tives have assured him that the
building would be built by Den-
ton labor if they decide to put
the store in. In operation, the air-
conditioned supermarket would em-
ploy about 65 employes, Mullins
said.
“They will buy their property
and build their own building,” Mul-
Uns said.
“It will represent about a $400,-
See WYATT STORE, Page 2
But he happened to be in a
« . .. . picture broadcast later by the
orSuPplemedtngttheepsAemrort. government-run television sU
fleeted in calis by the Communist S hm saweatin resteumer
leadership for production. showed him sitting happily with
fulfillment of assigned quotas and a girl at a champagne-laden
the like seemed to stem basically table.
from three causes. Now wife has sued for
divorce. And he has prepared
a suit against the TV statton.
By JAY ROGERS I sociation and the Women's Auxi-
R •cord-Chronicle Staff Writer liary to the Denton County Medi-
A mobile health service will roll cal Association, will remain at
into town Monday.
And students at NTSC will
— officials reported today that all IIII
Eastern Europe is suffering from W l 1 it
a severe food shortage due in part IIDI
to bad weather but primarily to H lr F
Communist attempts to force farm-!
, 4
A , ’
.."82ouAoon:
wleduu 04," ‘ en32gh
in government was. And he de-' In addition, North Carolina, Ar- straight years is giving its longest
clared "only old Malenkov . . .kansas, Texas, Florida, Maryland, i argument sessions to the segrega-
who sits back chuckling” would, Tennessee and Oklahoma have per- । lion problem.
cut loose an all-out assault against1 stand to benefit by the Soviet mission to present arguments if In December 1952-during the re-
Union's latest proposal to ban pro-! they wish, and Atty. Gen. Brownell gime of the late Chief Justice Vin- fortable but not seriously ill.
duction of atomic and hydrogen is expected to argue for an hour. I son—the court heard arguments on The other delegates left Lancas:
word arrived from the nine power bombs. This adds up to a possible 18 hours,1 the constitutional issue itself It1
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Monday. (Reco
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WEATHER
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 53, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 3, 1954, newspaper, October 3, 1954; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430909/m1/1/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.