Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 152, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 27, 1959 Page: 4 of 10
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EDITORIALS
smmu-----teimm—mam .
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Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
NEW YORK (AP} — Things a
1
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The
15
DlOODB47,
I
Hour Of Charm
HARK TO HARVEY
Tall Or Short, History Will
i
neither Dallas nor Fort Worth has ever
and TWU the su
Remember The Heart’s Size
from the tee Mure
had
is needed because of the
of
to scale otherwise unattainable
fields
agriculture, biolory.
RELIGION
result: a plan for getting
safe transportation method for ra-
spent fuel increases.
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
By Blake
v
He did
t
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ri
THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW
ulYr?
of the
I am not even
1,
Delivered to your home by
1
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elder last
$1.25 per
T
But
cicAnONs
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF
KQi4
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NOTICE TO PUBLIC
I beyond
symbol i
and a
f
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
(and)
give
tors
necessary.
*
1
37
L
N
Symbol Of A Prophesy:
Log Church in Alaska
era and the car makers and the
clothing manufacturers and the ar-
Of Politics
Is Strange
By JAMES MTARLOw
of atomic pow-
and military
61
CF
by Motor Route
$12.50 per year
Pres-
the
and
SPEAKING
By CECIL PRESTON
a
ahead.
5
copvingthe,g-g Hidurd M
Bill 11 Was Hep itlCnAM M
"Two Ton Baker" and turned a
mediocre musical talent Into a
handsome capital gain.
Simarly, "Little Jack Little”
was inspired by his diminutive size
needs at least two universities of Ute first class but is
also capable of supporting thel
Yesteryear
Looking Baek Through
Record-Chronicle Files
COMBINATION MAIL AND CARRIER:
mall on weekdays and Sunday Moral
WORLD TODAY
emmemmepmeeem
- Ike’s View
the party quit
Deal. ——
it never know if he
mail:
spring.
He also left
I
where this service is avail
smust be paid to advance).
T
boss
watched with Interest a growing
number of individuals who have
turned their "disadvantage" wrong
side M.--------------■--------
tlon with the I<
dent Eisenhower has
came to the
loud applause,
d the committee ta
HAL BOYLE SAYS .
9-By-12-Foot Rug Has
11,914,000,000 Germs
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Cemyrigh 1048
■a—Bhafinr-Ta- •t—m
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
"to give us some of that unremit-
Ung political planned effort on be-
half of the Republican pai
to state the long-range
of the Republican party,
- » ■
1.
THE TEXAS LEGISLATURE, whose financial prob-
esehwees w proposal by^Gov^an^el which My
he governor’s tax proposal, as Rep. Alonzo Jamison
iled out in Sunday’s Record-Chronicle, also will
THE DENTON RECORD^HRONICLE mt
-------------------------
ipport both have long
tli hear NTSC called
medicine, shipping. public utili-
tea. genetics and detense.
One problem the group faces,
the Register said, is devising a
d the coxy
I first ever
mos on the
I the Arctic
of a proph-
~cmsEM
Ame;Worfarigwuaruava (-27BLAEE
and why, and whether it
turn left, right, straight
down the middle, or back-
-7
- .p--
SUBSCRUPTION RATES AND INFORMATION
Single Copies: Sa for weekdays: 10c for Sunday '
HOME DELIVERY RATES FOR DAIY AND SUNDAY
BY CARRIER: Delivered to your home by city carrier or motor route
on same day of publication. Me per wook.
BY MAIL ONLY: In Denton and adjninine counties. 11.00 per month.
SOSO per year (must be paid in advance). Elsewhere in the United
States $1.30 per month. $i5.60 per year.
h ■
4-H.
|J
DENTON IN .
ISOLATION
JAN. 27, 1949
Denton was isolated today as
ice cut off telephone and wire
communications to all pointa ou‘-
side the city. At least one death
■
I
P
Xr
C
I
.1
LETTERS
WELCOMED
The Record-Chronicle wel.
Cornea letters from renders on
any subject in good taste
Letters must be signed and
the writer's address gives. We
reserve the right to edit let- ‘
°2
Any erroneous reflection upon the :__
any firm, individual or corporation w
being culled to the publishers attention
The publishers are nut responsible for copy omissions, tpographica
errors or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct
in next iosue after it is brought to their attention. All advertising
Isdera are accepted on this baste only.
f antptisoly successful disk jockey
Many handaome, symmetrical,
"average" men envy his position
o3848
Simpson's slap at Eisenhower that
EAthe most applause and head
Except around campaign time
every two years Eisenhower has
been one of the most nonpolitical
of all presidents. Between elec-
tions he tries to get along with
everyone, including Democrats.
LATE STARTS
Just before an election he gets
extremely busy, campaigns. and
denounces Democrats. He started
late in the IMS campaign, too. On
Nov. 5, the day after the elec-
tion. he had a news conference.
Asked what his role in the i960
elections would be, he said: "My
role for the next two years b to
do exactly my very best to carry
on the responsibilities and duties
wude"3
eP-
spheres.
“While shielding technologies of
the present have been adequate."
he said, "it is easy to see that
the tnereasing complexity of the
field will demand more effort and
coordination in the future."
He said the group would tackle
immediately radiation shielding
in the transportation of radioac-
tive materials, In the movement
of nuclear ships and submarines
and to space rockets and satel-
lites.
It also will try to create safe
shielding for machinery in such
figure out hew to win in 1960. It
was a soul-searching get-together.
Before it was over dissatisfaq-
“24/(6!
52,
I
proportioned Dick Baker
go nicknamed himself
sharacter,reputatignorstandingd
iton will be gladly corrected upon
‘PeuAGRAFEULTOR
wtcun ENSEMHLE
HOOK, UNB AND PAN-
Ceck.EP NEVER
Fed2nl
So that really is what the Legislature must consider.
It must look at the entire higher education picture in
Texas with particular emphasis on the Dallas • Fort
Worth-Denton area. And, above all, the Legislature
must decide whether the state is to duplicate its in*
vestment in this area or whether it should raise even
higher the quality of the institutions it already has.
Texas’ lone state-supported coeducational university
to in the southern half of a vast state that not only
I
only 20 to 90 per cent dissipated | finding a aura for infantile paraly-
and is highly radiogetiwve. ate.
also capable of supporting them. The Dallas and Fort
Worth interests, as well as the Legislature, should
realise that Denton is already a university center and
the two institutions here should be fully recognized as
such. That can be done while still providing the tech-
nical training to industry tor which Arlington State
is recognized.
STRICTLY
Top Scientists
Map Plans For
Shielding Public
IVORYTON, Conn. (APi-Twen-
ty-eight top atomic energy ex-
perts met here recently to work
on the problem of shielding the
public from nuclear radiation.
The New Haven Register, re-
porting the previously unpubli-
cued meeting Monday; said the
group formed an organization
known as the Guild for Shielding
Radiation.
The meeting was a fact-sharing
conference by men representing
all government and industry seg-
ments of the nuclear field.
So as ambitious young man nam-
ed Faircloth. (nobody remembers
weighin
easurins four feet
himself "Peanut
I
years or more.
Did you know a miak coat made
of female skins is supposed to be
preferable to one made of male
skins? It is reportedly finer-haired
and lighter in weight. ____ ..
Beau Brummell, famous 191h
century British dandy, is some-
times credited with being the first
man in modern history to take a
dally bath But, alas for cleanli-
ness—later in lie be became dirty
and slovenly, and died a senile
pauper.
Taking a bath. Incidentally, is
still something of a problem in
some parts of the United States.
Three million American homes
still lack running water.
As men get scarcer, the girls
- FS
©,KIe#eatur
t mu are now well known,
- - posal b
WHAT DO YOU DO?
How do you capitalise on a defie-
it? In business, you merge a pros-
pering corporation with a failing
one and turn tax losses into in-
creased corporate profits
-
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3
The. mate contention for Arlington State’s bid for
senior college status is its sharp increase in enrollment
in recent years. The fall student headcount has risen
from l,258»in 1952 to 4,990 this year, making it sixth
in size among the 18 fully state-supported colleges.
What Arlington State is not publicising, however, is
. the fact that about one-third of those 4,990 students are
only part-time students, based on headcount enrollment
in relation to the actual semester hours taught.
That, of course, Indicate* the role Arlington State
has assumed—and assumed well—in the field of high-
er education. It la located in the midst of the vast
industrial area that links Dallas and Fort Worth. Be-
cause Arlington State has concentrated on serving
those Industries with night classes and courses taught
in the plants, it has become the state’s largest junior
college as far as total enrollment is concerned. Parti-
cularly notable is Arlington’s pre-engineering course.
If Arlington State were the only institution of higher
learning in the North Texas area, the need would be
. apparent for the state to spend huge sums of money to
expand ASC. But in Dallas, Tarrant and Denton
Counties there already are six degree-granting insti-
tutions with 1988 fall headcount enrollment of 25,568.
More than a third (1,141) of those students are enrolled
in the two-state supported colleges in Denton, no more "
- than 40 miles from the Arlington campus. „
By PAUL HARVEY
Men come in assorted rites. Let’s
leaver the ladies out of this; the
subject of physical size is less a
problem to them than its distribu-
But the man uncommonly small
or grotesquely tall almost always
autlers from some paychological
Pay Harvey is six feet two.
Wash basins are too low. Pullman
berths are too short, modern cars
are cramped.
There is a further hazard. Those
of us over six feet tend to alienate
mon under five feet in height. At
least, we invite their suspicion, at
worst we incite them to hostility.
The littlest drunk usually wants
to fight the biggest guy be can
aven by people who do not speak
correctly themselves.
If you wish to make a favorable
impression on others (who
doesn’t?). avoid these errors.
Where is she at? (Say where is
she?) .
He ain't been here today. (Say
hasn't been here).
They can do the work their-
selves. (Themselves),
I reckon a dollar will be enough.
(Think), ------------ ~—-
She don't like to walk in high
heels. (She doesn't).
We don’t hardly ever go to
town. (Wo hardly ever).
It begun to rain as soon as we
left (it began).
This cake is real good. (Say
really good*.
I used to could speak correctly
(Used to be able.
ibis is strictly between you and
I. (Between you and me).
!
—1
g2no!
0 0 0
In an editorial entitled “Power of a Minority” the
Portland Oregonian says: ”The strike of the 4.400-
member deliverers union shut down New York City’s
nine major newspapers for 19 days. It threw out of
work 15,000 non-striking newspaper workers, some of
whose unions had accepted wage offers in the same
pattern as that rejected by the deliverers. It cost
the newspapers an estimated 25 million dollars. It
seriously hurt retail trade in New York and caused
great inconvenience to shoppers. It left a numbing
void in the people’s right to know what ia occurring
in local, national and world affairs, and was stifling
to their .cultural and social life.”
Denton Record-Chronicle
TELEPHONE DUpoat atHI
————————————————————
Published every evening (except Saturday) and Sunday morning by:
Denton Publishing Co., tec . 3M E Hickory St______
Entered as second class mail matter at the postoffice at Denton, Tex-
as January 13, 1921, according to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
which caused heavy damage to
utility lines, trees and shrubbery
The Record - Chronicle had no
Assoclated Press wire today as
all telephone lines were-down.
Western Union telegrams were
being seat by bus. A Denton -
emBeatee was aieetrocmed when. .
he came in contact with a in
wire which cracked under its load
of tee and fell to the ground.
STEAK FOR
17 CENTS
JAN. V. 1929
Weekend specials at Safeway:
coffee, two pounds for to cents:
Snowdrift shortening, three pound
pall to cento; cabbage one cent a
pound; oranges 16 cents a dozen,
bread five cents a loaf, steak item
or Tbone) 17 cents a pound. (Ad-
vertisement) ____
In the nationwide March of
Associated Prebu News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Republican National Committee,
si aching from the Democrats'
shattering victory last November,
met last week in Des Moines to
Higher Education’s Scope:
Just What Does Texas Need? I •
( '
find, and that's usually me.
Conversely, the physically little
men are faced with the indignity
of shopping for clothing in the boys'
department, of avoiding the path-
ological bully and of dancing with
girls whom they cannot see above
the adam’s apple.
The physical extremes frequent
ly alfect unnatural postures, i ‘
ing for the tall ones, elevator____
for the small ones, which serve on-
ly further to sensitize the subject.
NEW GENERATION
columnist might
didn't open his
Doctors, like their patients, often
put off being doctored too. A sur-
vey showed one out of four physi:
clans with hypertension waited
two year before seeking treat-
ment, and 14 per cent with peptic
ulcer postponed treatment for five
quoted Alfred Knapp,
______ Knapp Mills, Inc., of
New York City.
Knapp, an atomic consultant
and manufacturer, said such a
general sales or income tax.
Although the governor’s patchwork tax proposal is
the only quilt to be widely reported, there is another
proposal before the Legislatuire that is just as important
vet is equally as fragmentary in its theory. The pro-
posal would make Arlington State College a four-year,
degree-granting institution.
safe transportation method for ra- Dimes, children and citizens of
dioactive materials as the flow of Danton today were adding co ns to
3 \ 7
hard and was told to do more
himself. But the committee also
warmly applauded a resolutiqn
pproving"the "wise and able
leadership" of Eisenhower and
Vice President Richard M. Nixon.
CONFUSED
The members wound up con-
fused on where the party stood,
what it stood for, where it was
Smith" and bean
ker and roly poly
strong.
Standard Oil of New Jersey anticipates that this
wear’s oil demand will be five per cent above the 1988
level, due to a continued rise in business activity, and
that free world demand will increase eight per cent.
The company had budgeted about a billion dollars for
capital expenditure* during 1959.
his first name anymore)
M pounds and measurin-
elght, called Ir,
Faircloth," moved to Chattanooga,
where peanuts are vital to the agri-
cultural community and became a
chitecta get with ft. the upcoming program is needed
young man is likely to bo a physical increasing growth
Goliath and a mental moos er in Industrial
In recent years, however, I haw
thinking about that election at this
time."
This was in stange contrast
with the dvice he sent the com-
mittee igst week:
"I deeply regret that some peo-
ple look upon our party as a kind
of hibernating elephant who
wakes with a mighty trumpet
blast at election time and then
rests calmly until the next elec-
tion time.
_ EVERYDAY......
"Political activity must be a
mattay af TA
EMUVTT UI UIITCTEWEIHE CI I vT 1. It
must go eh 365 days a year. . . .”
This was too much for Simp-
son, a Pennsylvanian who is
chairman of the congressional
"What we are creating io an
advanced university of teaming
in the field of nuclear shielding."
the Register
president of
and his income.
So it was with "Whispering Jack
pole lint Wal-
"Satchmo" Arm-
The villagers, however, were
thrilled by the thought of having
a church building of their own.
Last spring, 14 village men
pledged their strength and dog
teams to haul the 275 logs needed
for the chapel. The Rev. Mr. War
tes brought in carpentry tools and
a chain saw.
Then began the laborious chore
of felling trees, cutting the logs
to also and packing them by dog-
sled 30 or 35 miles up the frozen
river. Some were so heavy it took
four men to lead them on the
sleds.
As warm weather began to melt
the snow and ice, logs had to be
carried the last several hundred
yards by hand. For a time, the
Rev. Mr. Wartes feared the toga
never would be collected by the
time he had completed his Alas-
kan mission.
"We had climbed into our sleep-
ing bags the night before with the
dogs howling and we wondered
how strong they would be the next
day on empty stomachs. Then
came the caribou. When we awoke
they were all around us. It was
simple for the men to replenish
completely depleted food sup-
plies."
Finally, all the logs were gath-
ered. Slowly through the summer
the 17%-by-24-foot church took
shape. Handmade benches had a
seating capacity of 60. A five-foot
annex In the rear held a pulpit,
a small organ, and the commu-
nion table.
The chapel was dedicated in
September after the Rev. Mr.
Wartes, his wife, and their six
children had returned on furlough
to Seattle.
Behind him he left 43 converts
— neary half the Nunamiut band
of M — in the hands of his re-
placement, the Rev. John Chain-
ban of Scotia, NY., and the vU-
lage postmaster, Homer Mekiana,
are giving them less and less .
chance to get away. The average
engagement period M years ago
was a year or more. Now its
from five to seven months.
Do you share the popular mis-
conception that most actors are
sfasles? They aren’t Many are ex-
athletes and most keep in top
physical condition.
Do you like to lie on the rut
while watching television? Well, ,
cut it out: you may get sick. Some
statistician baa figured out a 9-
by-12-foot rug collects three
pounds of dirt in a year and nests
11,914,000,000 germs
For people who don't like air
conditioning, a trip to the moon of-
fers a fine escape. The tempera-
tore there renges from 315 degrees
above zero by day to 20 degrees
below aero at night. .
If you've ever wondered why
there are so few vine-covered col-
tages around Wall Street. Manhat-
tan's famous financial district
here's your answer: Land there is
conservatively valued at $15,000-
ooo an acre.Aad seats on the New
York Stock Exchange have:ranged
in price from a high of $025,000 to
UM to $7,000 to 1M3.
To get money quickly from *
banker toll him you want it to
put on a second bathroom in your
home. Thu is one of the prolec ts
for whichiis now easiest get a
bank loan.
-It was George Bernard Shaw
who observed, "The more things a
man is ashamed of, the mere re-
spectable he is."
A new generation of Americans
with improved dieto from birth and — —
better pre - natal care even before heights,
that, to going to tower even taller.
Unices the mattress manufactur-
Actuaily,-spent-tuei often»
little lag church,
built by Alaskan :
treeless slopes ‘
Orel
7 1"
more people to ask more people
to vote Republican was approved,
but the committee never got
around to stating why it thought
people should vote for the party.
It authorized the naming of a
committee to draw up long range
qaeto
Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona
had hia own idea. He to chairman
of the Senate Republican Cam-
paign Committee and a longtime
critic of Eisenhower administra-
tion policies. He thought it all
right to approve a plea for ring-
ing doorbells.
PRINCIPLES
But he said: “The moot Impor-
tant ingredient to missing Where
does the party stand? What are
Ito principles?” He said more
than a million Republicans failed
to vote last year because they
didn't know what the party prin-
ciples, if any, wore.
• A 8 ■
HR LLLi EDITORIALS AND FEATURES
ANAKTUVUK, Alaska fAP)—A
small log church, deep in a tree:
less Arctic waste, stands as a
symbol of a new-found faith in
God, end of the curious fulfillment
of an ancient prophecy.
From earliest times, the tale
was passed down through genera-
tions of the Nunamiut, or inland
Eskimos, that a Deliverer would
come to them and he would be
Ataenik, or Lord.
So when the Rev. William C.
Wartes, a Presbyterian mission-
ary, landed his single engine float
plane on the lake at Anaktuvuk
Pass and introduced himself, the
villagers nodded knowingly.
"What took you so long?" they
asked.
The Nunamiuts also had been
tuld Ataanik would come when the
tundra was covered with Katuk,
the Eskimo word for containers.
This part of the prophecy came
true also
The U.S. Navy had explored for
oil in the Brooks Range, Vast ex-
panses of tundra were dotted with
50-gallon oil drums left behind
when theNavy abandoned its
search for oil.
The Rev. Mr. Wartes first vis-
ited Anaktuvuk. about 300 miles
southeast of Point Barrow, in 1952.
On frequent flying trips he taught
the villagers the lessons of the
Bible. In the summer he held serv-
ices outdoors; in the winter, in sod
huts.
It was his dream to build a log
church in the isolated little village
3,300 feet up in a saddle of the
Brooks Range along the migration
route of the caribou.
But the difficulties seemed al-
most insurmountable. The timber-
line was 25 miles down the John
River on the south slope of the
Brooks Range. Suitable stands of
spruce were another 10 or 11 miles
.ama
yOnGe ■— . _______
Men were few and the logs could
only be transported by dog sled
when the river was frozen. Tools
and equipment had to be flown
in, piece by piece, from Barrow,
Colin Turnbull, famous Scottish
anthropologist, spent the last
three years living with pigmy
tribes in the Belgian Conge.
Shortly he will become director of
the African Department of the
Museum of National History in
wa.un Aaua,
EVFW YU re-
The Associated Press to entitled exclusively to the use for publicatiot
of all the focal news printed to this newspaper, as, well‘as all AP
news diii
.l___t
NOW. SeCRBT^ L
SAID NOO WERE TOO
BUSYTO SEE ANYONE
-So ILL JUST TAKE ,
A MINUTE!7
PERSONALITY
What some might have consider-
ed a deformity, they converted in-
to a personality.
From the runt - like Napeloan to
the skyscraping deGaulle. France
has found "giants" come in all
"1 England, they learned the
same thing from Disraeli and
Churchill.
We learned it from Lincoln and
from Poe.
And little men come inallsiz-
ee, toe. But history ban forgotten
to remember them.
In the words of one of last sea-
son’s popular songs. "It's what you
do with what you got . And
I'm going to try to impress on my
own basketball center son, whom
we are accused of feeding under
pressure, that a man’s heart size
to the only one that realty matters.
—(Copyright 1959, General Fea-
tures Corp.)
However, 1
given NTSC,____ .... ,
deserved. For instance, you *l______ ...
a teacher* college while, in fact, it has a 69-year history
and a universit statu in everything but name. Yes,
NTSC still educates teachers—more then any other
institution in Texas. But it also educates musicians,
businessmen, home economists and a dozen other pro-
fessional people in the art* and sciences. Its graduate
school, offering both the master’s and doctor s degrees,
has awarded almost 5,000 diplomas since the graduate
program began almost a quarter century ago. In all,
almost 26,500 degrees have been granted by NTSC,
1,406 of them last year. These figures hardly describe
the general conception of a teachers college.
Anytime conversation grows dull,
ft caa always be stimulated by
asking the question, "What do you
notice first about a person you
meet?'' The answer will probably
be the eyes, the hands, the dress,
the grooming or the figure (if it
is a lady).
Regardless of what to noticed
first, it to safe to say that a per-
son's speech to noticed as soon as
he speak*; and much is revealed
by the voice and the language.
Grammatical errors are noticed
sTana t 1 ■
wes couse zeRMA, 4 1
222z32;a2se. 1*?
which we can stand. ...
eampaign committee and whose
job is to try to get Republicans
elected to the House.
He called upon the White Kouno
TUESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1959
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 152, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 27, 1959, newspaper, January 27, 1959; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453453/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.