Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1957 Page: 1 of 12
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CLOUDY, MUD
DENTON, TEU1, WEDNESDAY AFTERNOO\ HAY 8, 1957
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SENATE OKAYS
SESSION PLAN
Eisenhower gave his personal
of Education in a
3.4 per cent fa one
was
year,"
Surgery Sia
man needs to get the true facts
story of
a better
vita owner.
CRASHED ROAD BLOCK
tacks at two points.
Rains Slice
hundred Nicaraguan troops at-
WEATHER
electrical consumption was
a doudi-
■. But the
total shows
because of "legislative pressure."
“The University was the
ta the South- to integrate.
Daily Texan quoted Jeffers as
expected until August; peak wat-
and
142 CLUR—3:00 P.w„ KDNT f4o.
was not considered critical
corded 75 of an
a month age.
\
v
I
ih.
vwkoenvonih ■
II
" hT
night: “What I
guy in Sterling
cuts can be made only
an easing of world teh-
about 130 miles west of the Indian
village of Mocoron, where the
rect that the administrative deci-
sion was arrived at because of.
High Water Threat
To Coastal Plains
and Sai
sponsor
r. The conference was
by the Denton Cham-
.. The Boar
special meet
Panamanian and two American
officers to Cifuentes to investi-
gate.
legislative
CAST
Wednesday,
and other
ing down a bit earl
but Oyster Cree
ng of N
icly and
poet on language suggested for an
amendment to Senate Bill No. 497,
which would reconvey surplus land
around the takes to original own-
ers.
By terms of the suggested lang-
uage, a new owner would have a
chance to protect his property
against shoreline separation by
and possibly to some small busi-
ness enterprises.
On the other hand Eisenhower
streams in the area were still ris-
tag.
the past
as Total
K
FOR GOOD RESULTS
and low rates
k-
2%5
State Rep. Joe Chapman of Sul-
phur Springs said he asked that
Miss Smith be removed from the
opera because, as he put it, “the
people of Texas don’t want mix-
profits will help to build
business climate in each
so and whites pub-
______University of Texas
should not do it from that stand-
point."
MeMMMeTeeMAnibtbitwmnett
AUSTIN, Tex. -A University
of Texas music major plans to
see an undergraduate opera even
though she was removed from a
leading role because sho is a Ne-
Woman Injured
While Huntin
County Lakes
LEWISVILLE - Drunk drivers
ol boats in Grapevine and Garza-
Little Elm Lakes will face stiff
court fines, Denton County Sheriff
Wylie Barnes warned here Tues-
day night in efforts to make the
two takes safe.
% Barnes, speaking to members
Two roads were closed in the
area. Highway 35 between Angle-
ton and West Columbia was under
two and three feet of water. The
old Angleton-Clute highway was
covered by the slowly spreading
muddy waters early Wednesday.
FAMILY EVACUATED
Stover said one rural house was
evacuated during the night be-
cause of the spreading waters of
Oyster Creek. But he said there
were not many homes in the area.
Crews were banking a small
levee located about 3% miles
southwest of town on Highway 35
in an effort to protect Angleton
from the floodwaters. ~:--
true facts of free enterprise and
in trying to ease the twin strangle-
hold of federal spending and gov-
ernment controls
Chairman Leroy Jeffers of the
school's board of regents as say-
ing the administrations decision
to remove Miss Smith was not
“We have tried to handle it rea-
sonably and sensibly. It is not cor-
■ ■ • Co ' ... smb.m
a son-in-law, Leroy Butler. Neigh-
bors told of hearing shots and seo-
in a cloud
Bogota Leader
Due Election
Despite Riots
BOGOAT. Columbia g-Pres.
dent Gustavo Rojas Pinilla's hand-
picked Constituent Assembly was
moved to Page 1
WOOL. LAMBS play a grow-
ing role in Denton County’s
varied agricultural industry.
Page 6.
summertime — almost--
and a group of puppies is hav-
ing fun. Page 11
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras yn-
The Organisation of American
States moved today to head off
new border trouble as Honduras
accused Nicaragua of breaking
felled him in the station driveway.
FROM BIG SPRING
Held at San Angelo were Mike
damage was set at 85 million dok
tars yesterday.
The Brazos spread to a width of
13 miles in plares. An estimated
US families fled their homes.
NEARS ANGLETON
Water inched to within two
miles of Angleton in Brazoria
County, some 48 miles southwest
of Houston. The town lies 13 miles
from the normal banks of the
river. w
Deputy Sheriff Smokey Stover
said the river appeared to be go-
STERLING CITY, Tex. -Four
boys, 12 and 13 years old. crashed
a road block shortly after, a fillig
station attendant was shot to death
last night, and one boy admitted
he was in the slaying group.
All four were held by officers
today. Three of them were injured
when their car crashed the road
barricades
They were taken Into custody
after running a road block at San
farmland were flooded, washing
out spring crops and adding to the
mounting flood and tornado dam-
ensmgumgsipnisnotexpgctodun
Brothers Contractors of Denton for
the construction. The Denton firm
was the only company to submit
a bid for the addition, which will
also house two rest rooms.
under "Which American oil com-
panies and other firms operating
in foreign countries are able to
l
l'
Work is expected to start June
1 M l new two-classroom addi-
tion to Danton's Jefferson Davis
Eekal '
acnoo ,
Tuesday night ap-
roved a $26,454.10 bid from Davis
Informants said the junta in-
sisted that Nicaragua pull her
troops from the area of the Seg-
ovia, or Coco. River. Honduras
A total of 3,881,300 kilowatt hours
consumed this April — 52 -
ratt hours fewer than in
same to-day period of last
tacked Cifuentes early yesterday.
A government communique said
nesa with rain
EABT, STH CNTRAL TEXAS:
Considerable cloudinens a nA mild
through Thuraday.
TXMPKRATIUH
WosurcMMEN-
it wouldn’t be long before it got
to Angleton."
Stover said Ramsey and Dar-
rington prison farms were com-
pletely surrdunded by high water.
Prisoners worked all night build-
ing dams to protect farm build-
ings. where the water had not yet
reached, he said.
LEVEES PATCHED
Levees were patched up in an
effort to hold the rising water.
National Guardsmen and state po-
lice were standing by to evacu-
ate flooded residents.
Other rivers and streams in the
state were down, but the Weather
Bureau forecast another day of
light rain today for most sections
of Texas.
. Sea. Ottis Lock, methodical
eran of five Senate
Filibuster By Lock
Narrows Possibility .
Of Good Water Plan
AUSTIN «_An effective water
conservation program, the pre-
session "must” legislation, today
was backed into a dim corner of
the Senate with good possibilities
it might be overlooked in the
frantic finish.
st profit of all
United States
less kilowatt hours in April of 1957,
the 1957 running total is above that
of IMS. •
storms.
Temperatures are expected to re-
main mild. Tuesday’s high was
71 degrees; this morning’s low
was 56
A trace of rain was recorded
at both the Experiment Station
northwest of Denton and at the
'Record-Chronicle At neither place,
however, was there enough rain
community, the speaker said.
Tentative plans were made by
the Denton chamber to sponsor
business education clinics, an an-
nual business education day and
similar programs.
.38 of an inch
wide has re-
j began last week,
source said several
New York. •
The Daily Texan, student news-
dead of gunshot wounds in the left
chest.
The three injured boys were
taken to Shannon Hospital in San
Angelo after their car overturned
in running the road block.
It was there that young Wright,
lying on a stretcher, asked last
The M members of the associa-
tion present for the meeting pledg- .
ed full cooperation with law of-
ficers and resident masagen of
the takes.
The owners discussed the desira- '
bility of equipping n boat with the :
sapne wave-length radio as that .
of the Denton County's sheriff’s 1
department as one means of as- ,
Martinez, 13, named by one of his
companions as the boy who fired
the fatal shots; Herman Lae
Wright, 13, and Doyle Hail, 12, all
hospitalized; and Mickey Rocha,
13, fa the juvenile detention ward
of the Tom Green County jail. All
four are from Big Spring. 43 miles
northwest of Sterling City.
Sheriff Bill Green of Sterling
County said Garrett was alone in
the station. where he worked for
*
Assn., said, “We’re going to throw
the book at drunks who insist on
driving motor boats on the takes.
They will be taken to Denton,
where we’ll file charges on them,
and they’ll be subject to fines of
from $50 to UN."
"HUGE CROWDS
“With boat-to-boat crowds like
last Sunday's, we’ve got to crack
down to make the takes safe," he
added.
REMEMBER WHEN
A public letter-writer had an
Water Usage
Rains combined with cool wea-
ther during April to cut by almost
one quarter the amount of water
consumed by Denton homes at
this time last year.
According to Acting City Engi-
neer Robert Courtney, total con-
sumption during April amounted to
60,777,000 gallons, which pushed
the year’s total to 241,014,000 gal-
lons. The 1957 running total, how-
ever, is 78,608,000 gallons, or 34.6
per cent below the 319,622,000 gal-
lons of water consumed by Denton
reeideots at the end of April, 1956.
Meanwhile, Courtney reported.
1 To.be same construction before the public. Telling this true
as the present Jefferson Davis ■ ~ — - --
AUSTIN “—‘The Senate today
passed a proposed constitutional
amendment calling for annual ses-
sions of the Texas Legislature and
17,500 yearly salaries for legisla-
tors.
The Senate voted 22-7 on final
passage of the measure (HR 1)
which has cleared the House. The
resolution was amended and will
have to go back to the House for
concurrence. •
SALARIES UPPED
As p steed by the House, the sal-
aries would be 34,500 a year. Both
Ike Opens
profits net about N per cant,
the UX chamber official report
ed.
“Many are surprised to learn
Mat the average net
businesses in the U
that deep
if there is
sions.
and he said: ■ *
“I knew we shouldn’t have done
it Mike shot him. I didn’t know
what we were going to do.
"Mike shot him six times. Then
he ran to the car, pulled the gun
and said, ‘Let’s go on." Then he
U
Business Idea
10
i 11
. 4
.. 4
silting enforcement.
SURPLUS LAND
Four Boys Held
After Man Killed
the Nicaraguans were driven off
"without a single casualty on our
side.”
Denying the Honduran accu-
sation, President Somoza Mid in
Managua only five Nicaraguan
policemen were in the area on
his side of the border.
Honduran officials also charged
Nicaragua had received a ship-
ment of planes and other equip-
ber of Commerce.
HOW MUCH PROFIT?
The general public does not un-
derstand the ideas of business
and the free enterprise system,
Flexner reminded his audience. For
example, a survey showed that
some teachers and a majority of
school students believe business
- *mrsmm
1
Cloudy Weather
May Bring Rain
That cloudy weather is back
age inflicted dur
stormy month in
Tuesday night's business leaders
conference, led by Lester Flesner,
district manager of the Houston
district of the United States Cham-
bemerafomerenesune, hela m the
Starlight Room of the Southern Ho-
tel. attracted approximately 75 bus-
inessmen. including chamber of
commerce leaders from Lewisville
this year's 17,807,300 to be 2,349,-
ON Kilowatt hours, or 13 9 per cent,
more than the 15,458,300 kilowatt
hours used at the end of April.
1956. h
“Years ago, Nikolai Lenin, Rus-
sian Communist leader, predicted
the United States would spend
itself into bankruptcy," Flesner
Mid.
Today, social planners, labor
unions, the Farmers Union and
other groups are asking for more
government spending in the form
of more public works and more
federal aid on all fronts, he ob-
seved.
“They want federal aid for every-
thing from housing to education."
he added.
STUDY ISSUES
Flesner advised President Mar-
vin Ramey and other members of
“It seems to be holding all
right,” Stover said. “But if water —----—-.Q
should come through that levee, the three-say-old truce with at-
*
Nicaragua quickly denied the
charges. A spokesman for Pros!*
dent Luis Somoza declared his
government “sticks to its com-
mitments" to the cease-fire the
OAS team negotiated last week-
end.
OAS officials rushed investiga-
tors to the border last night after
Honduran Foreign Minister Jorge
Fidel Duron protested that Nic-
araguan troops had assaulted Ci-
fuentes. He also claimed the Hon-
duran border town of Las Manos
had been subjected to a mortar
attack.
Cifuentes is on the frontier
In other business, Hugh Steger,
chairman of the ( association's
legislative committee, made a re-
Free enterprise and what it has
meant to our democratic nation
will be explained to the public
by the Denton Chamber of Com-
merce through a long-range busi-
ness education program.
Initial steps to tell the true story
of business were taken at a break-
fast meeting of chamber of com-
merce leaders here this morning.
The session was a follow up to
Work Set For
School Rooms
SPENDING JUMPS
Each local chamber of com- 1
merce should work with the U.S. 1
chamber fa combating the steady 1
increase in government spending 1
and the federal stranglehold on 1
free enterprise, Flesner indicated.
In 1927, he Mid, federal spending
totaled only 26 per cent of the
nation’s total, while city and state
spending amounted to 74 per cent.
Today, city and state spending to- ,
tals M per cent while federal
spending amounts to 73 per cent,
he explained. '
The Brazos began dropping at border fighting
Richmond in the north central An unofficial s
IN TODAYS PAPER
PLANNING TO throw a
highball at your wife? One
Honduras Says _______
p _ _ * said he would go slow about
Truce Broken
A..
again, and according to weather-
men, the Denton area can prepare
for more showers and th under-1
7. • ■' -
______ dr
MAN REPLACES MACHINE ,
Lacking modern machines, manpower is put into play in the rebuilding of Port
Said, Egypt, with these laborers using their backs td carry heavy building mater-
~ ials. The British-French bombardment and invasion in November, 1956 demolish-
. ed many sections of the city at the northern end of the strategic Suez Canal. Mo-
dern buildings are replacing many of the slum areas destroyed during the inva-
sion. (AP Wirephoto)
-----------------------------------------------------------
about holding steady with __
year’sjuse. While Pentonites used
charge off against their U. S. tax —
liability taxes paid to the foreign Jone
countries. pistol
Officials at Flow reported this
morning that Mrs. Lewis is fa
“good" condition, and “slept
well.” The wounded woman was
admitted to the hospital around
midnight
MeHMaWaHMmMW
gro
"Of couros Fm going to see it,"
. said Barbara Louise Smith, 19,
: Pittsburg, Tex. "We support these
cut off most special tax writeoffs.
He took his stand in answer to
a question which mentioned the
fast amortization grant given Ida-
ho Power Co., for two of the three
proposed private power dame on
the Snake River.
Eisenhower himself did not
mention Idaho power.
IKE AGREES
Elsenhower eAid he agrees
thoroughly with Secretary of the
Treasury Humphrey that the law
grantlag quick tax writeoffs
should be revised to limit such
Eisenhower gave his personal Hundreds of students were report-
support to moves in Congress to ed arrested.
the Denton chamber of “study
_ ____ the issues, talk to Congressmen,
Garrett talk to your community and un-
derstand yourselves” in telling the
N3Pdg”
“ aa Eld
MOM OF THE YEAR
Mrs. Hazel Hempel Abel, 68, of Lincoln, Neb., named
American Mother of 1957, gets a hug from her daugh-
ter Alice, 32, at opening of annual Mothers Conference
. at Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. Mrs. Abel
has four daughters, one son and six grandsons. (AP
Wirephoto)
program.
The news conference fol-
lowed the regular weekly
White House meeting of Re-
publican leaders at which
bullet from the pistol grazed his
leg before hitting his sister. He told
deputies John Jackson and Oita
c ■
on.
—om
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Floodwaters of the muddy lower
Brazos River already swirling
over a 100-square-mile area of the
coastal plains southwest of. Hous-
ton. continued today to menace
rural areas and towns.
Thousands of acres of rich
DENTON AND VICINNIrY: Con-
siderablejcloudiness and mUd
' through Thraday with few scat-
teredshowers and thunderstorms.
A
> . -
property held by some other pri taxpayers in the Denton Indepen-
dent School District.
The three-man OAS group coo- ..0 , .0.0.. .00
S moitardsuntt"sbudtoop paper * th unfversity. quoted
withdrawal.
SEGREGATIONIST
Chapman is a leader of a bloc
of legislators demanding stronger
segregation measures
University officials refused to
comment. President Logan Wilson
was attending a convention in
REPumnn niii wiF mFk:
A reporter for the San Angelo
Standard-Times, Don Coppedge,
said the Wright boy’s eyes clouded
—- —, ment from the Dominican Re-
man did-andgot away with public.
it. Names In The News, now The OAS commission flew a
i that he was snapping the .
pistol and thought it was unload-
ed.
made me give him more bullets."
Hospital attendants said the
_ _ ____Martinez boy suffered face
the Experiment skull injuries, “ “
id JI of an tach chest, and m
1 de
Big Drive
For Budget
1. .
President Seeks Support Of
Nation In Planning Speeches
WASHINGTON (APPresident Eisenhower launched
a personal drive for his legislative program today with the
statement that only a relaxation of world tensions will per*
mit real cuts in spending.
Eisenhower put up his budget defense at a news con-
ference at which he also announced he plans to make two
radio-television addresses to back up his budget proposals
and other elements of his*--
. ' Flew Mid, The-speaket
used this misconception, as one of
the main reasons why the business-
(xperiment statlon Report )
High 71
Low landne. -.a.i M 1
High yeer ago 1
Low year ago ,................A.u..... 68
Auaysia.mFRiges I
bua nAiNpAu .. - ;
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23 ■ 3' 8383888
“He died,” a peace officer re-
plied grimly.
part of Fort Bend County after
hitting a crest.
Asst. Warden Bob Cousins of
Darrington Prison Farm said
more than 50 per cent of the
farms' 6,770 acres were flooded.
He said all crops were a com-
plete loss.
Mrs. Bobbie Lewis, 1410 8. Lo-
cust, was scheduled late this morn-
ing to undergo surgery at Flow
Memorial -Hospital to have e bullet
removed from her right hip as the
result of a bunting accident.
The woman was wounded, ac-
cording to reports from the sher-
iff’s Office, during a rabbit hunt-
ing trip etest of Denton Tuesday
night when a .22 caliber pistol
went off.
Billy Waldrop, the woman’s
brother, also of 1410 S. Lbetist, re-
ceived a minor wound when the
Angelo, 48 miles southeast of here
fa West Central Texas, two hours
“tuidp amttt,4nt mendam. Iacsbtrgraayazuna
died after a fusillade of shots - - -
_
Chances
DrunkBoaters Public To Get
lace Fines Ur
contends the river forme the boun-
8 dary in the east Nicaragua
X Iclaims both sides of the stream
TVLognnnanm...
Women’s News ............ 1
building, which Davis Brothers
built along with a previous addi-
tion. the project must be complet-
ed by Aug 31, according to the
specifications.
School Supt. Chester Strick-
land emphasized that no construc-
tion work will begin on the build-
ing until classes are dismissed for
summer vacation on May 31.
The construction will be fi-
nanced from bond money voted by
.a P n . "1
L--gm _
„e Denton Record Chronicle
______________________________ A Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
। A
-2-2 ‘
-
versions would give the lieutenant
governor and House speaker $12,-
500 a year and all lawmakers $12
a day expense money.
Voters will have to approve the
measure at the polis in November
1958.
Voting against final passage
were Sens. Neveille Colson, Dor-
sey Hardeman, Wardlow Lane,
Ottis Lock, George Moffett,
George Parkhouse and R. A. Wein-
ert.
Earlier senators, many still
groggy after a past midnight fili-
buster, gave temporary approval
to the controversial urban renewal
bill which had been considered a
dead issue several weeks ago.
SURPRISE
The surprise move, which would
put the state in partners with the
federal government in slum clear-
ance projects, halted when a 33-7
vote was just short of the four-
fifths vote needed for final action.
The measure (HB 70) apparent-
ly was killed by unfavorable com-
mittee action several weeks ago
but after much behind the scenes
discussion the bill was brought to
the floor on a minority report.
slated to give him four more years
fa office today without an election ;
despite continuing demonstrations
and strikes idling some 30,000
persons fa Bogota.
The 90-member assembly al-
ready has suspended articles of
the constitution preventing a pres-
ident from succeeding himself.
Some of the President’s Conser-
vative followers are divided on
the issue, but the walkout of 20
assembly members last night was
not expected to stall the session
today to name him for a 1958-62
presidential term.
Student demonstrations against
Rojas continued in Bogota yester-
day. Again they were put down
by police pouring streams of dyed
red and blue water on the crowds.
cut off his filibuster at midnight
after winning his goal of blocking
passage of part of the program.
He had held the floor continuously
since 11:10 e.m., for 13 hours and '
51 minutes.
SENATE ROLE
The Senate can only consider ;
House measures on Wednesdays
and Thursdays and Lock's filibus- l
ter was on a Senate proposal. The i
resolution (SJRI) would have the
state sell 100 million dhars in ।
bonds to buy space fa federal
water reservoirs.
Senator Parkhouse, reversing
himself several times during the
night, told newsmen after the fili-
hurter that “den’t think her water
program is dead.” He did not in-
dicate when he would make an-
other run, but Monday looked the
best bet. .
Earlier Parkhouse had said he
might junk the 300 million dollar
bond program allowing local
agencies to build dams if the stor-
age amendment failed to pass the
Senate. Lock, elong with practi-
cally all the rest of the Senate,
was in accordance with the dam
building amendment but the Dal-
las senator said he would not
push it if Lock killed his other
proposal. |
BILL SAID DEAD
Several senate re, including I
Parkhouse at one time, said dur- l
tag the afternoon that if Lock
talked to midnight the storage i
amendment “is dead.” With a log- '
jam of high priority legislation yet :
to be acted upon, many senators I
might refuse to vote to lay out (
the plan again with the threat of
another time killing filibuster by
Lock. ।
.K".N)
t • ddee > gc2
• ■ 33288836383 ® 83 737
tmthrmeiwN
' 07a1.
mod to that
7".
Some M Negro students were}—
admitted to the university on the i
undergraduate level for the first
. time this year.
" the for a bunch of lent-w
saying from his’home inHouston.
was removed from th
served notice that increasing mail
volume may require expanding
the postal budget by millions of
dollars.
Summerfield Mt ta on the ses-
sion with the GOP chiefs to state
that view—in the face of the con-
gressional budget-cutting drive.
Along with his general defense
of budget plane, Eisenhower
adopted as his own those fiscal
policies which Democrats have
assailed as a “tight money" pro-
gram.
- NO CHANGE
Eisenhower Mid the policies
are his own and no one under
him is going to change them.
Eisenhower said it will be poo-
sible to make some minor reduc-
tiens in his $71,800,000,000 budget.
It would be strange, he said, if
Congress with its experience could
not find some places to save. But
he wes vigorous in contending
Negro Coed Plans
To Support Opera
benefits to companies dealing di-
rectly with the national defense
the monthly and yearly
' USE
48
"2’
Other members of the cast and
students to the university’s music
department thus far have an*
swered reporters’ questions with
"No comment."
- Miss Smith was reluctant to say
specifically why she was taken
out. She Mid only that it was not
because of her staging ability.
“Don’t you know that if it was
my singing ability," she said in
an taterview, “I would never
have been selected for the part la
the beginning.
"I know now that it's too late 7
to keep it quiet, but the less said
the better. If anyone else wants
to say why, that’s their business."
The opera "Dido and Aenaes"
was scheduled for performances
Friday end Saturday at the uni-
versity. Miss Smith was to play
the lead role of Dido, founder and
queen of Carthage in a Greek
myth. _ x
to ADMITTED nh •
9
-t
Claneifled .................
Comies ............ «•
Editorial ....... ..........
MTHYEA| OF DAIL Y SER VICE-NO. m
6, i i
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 236, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1957, newspaper, May 8, 1957; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1458815/m1/1/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.