Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 21, 1958 Page: 5 of 40
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1 , •
-
Texas will shift
Dallas and par-
ed into the
,*
-
4
•NN
The Higher Education Center in Dallas: Denton is well represented
■
Discussions now
• explore deep i-
racia intolerance.
sues, such as n
classes. And a
INTELLIGENCE
tion.-
life.
intelligence
education t
a girl at Oxford can be a
same form of scholarships They
Other Fields
I
2m
NEW SPOKESMAN
ing the Genesis account of thei
per copy or
Among
bob- says confidently:
came
ADVENTORE-I
nN
8
-emuiKusHaml -
-
1
I
k
l
-1 "
=
a
E
v,
each
table
she de- matter of a qu
nest in- sail over mass
THE COVER
ToL l. Ne. 1
the
arts
od thing too, say
ve that Oxford
and then Brown was a
ly into the water. The E3
too fast er im-
L (The Associat-
to Parton's words. ”te mankinds be
whole creative accomplishment." $3.
There will be no business, finance.
The "Aachha" first felt water 28
on Benbrook Lake on a day filled 6
with adventures First the mainsail -
g
itory
the
will be transform-
tier Education Cen-
tls
3 .
k
aad the
► get you
who have the same interest.
ADVENTUROUS DAY
lim0.
tent with just the thoughts
ing. He put his thoughts I
Egece8‘
_____u A girl has to be bright,
and be willing to work hard. But
ed by disillusionment over events
in Hungary in 1956. The British
Conservative. Labor and Liberal
parties are thought by many to be
too much alike to be worth a de-
bate. Primo Minister Macmillan is
regarded as boring as Kari Man.
supported to solicited-I was the editor's job,"
ences” heads. Male explains:
*
very strict selection processes"
About ‘eight of 10 studen's are
supported, wholly or partially by
- ".
rr-P
' vA
sport for those
iddle a bit, says
capital punishment and homosex-
uality. To show how they feel on
the racial issue undergraduates
raised 1,400 pounds ($3,920) toward
a scholarship for a non-European,
South African student. A political
party which passed the hat would
get a few pennies. The university
b full of the new angry young moa
who vaguely feel thwarted and find
little hope in conventional politics.
In former years it was the prac-
tice for a student to live a year
I
the boat was apprex +
) although Brown
ey and titles no longer can
into Oxford,” said an old-
'Now you’ve got to have the
Editor Joseph J. "Thorndike Jr. creation,, why climb .a mountain,
2.., had been urging on U>» D** RepuMte to Rs heyday.
him for some tens “a better guide who likes what kind of art, what a I
"____________ wrnne with the •hent enneratinn • '
themselves to cope with the diti-_____ _________________ .
cult world. vate schools. Trinity and Christ highly rated accomplishment. The gle freely with the mon students.
The new kind of student makes a Church cling stoutly to the tradi- most earnest discussions were- There b a changing fashion even
subtle difference in behavior, and tions, and do their utmost to pre- mostly political with the old uni- in the misdemeanors of students,
to some extent has caused divvisions serve the Oxford accent, without versity taking pride to its contri- A common offense in the days of
in the university. Some of the coL of course seeming to do sa. buttons to Parliament and the min- the pure Oxford accent was some
*— - ..—■ • .—— —- Pu ------ hu- -i *-t-- —nd- racy adventure with a girl.
many who _
needs more contact with every day
I
la
ticularly to the Margo Jones arena
theatre.
The buildi
played in another hobby — flower
arranging — which extends to
sal. -
.s
lh.s
", •.
if
j .
11
, on whom Oa that he says. "We’re betting Thorons a great variety of ma-
... . -es derived that you don’thave to talk down terial in this issue, cultural fea-
from stil another hobby: cooking. to the American poepb. ] am sure tore stories, odds and ends of all
Bl - - WA
Et85
. a year.
(The Associated Premi
MM HFA MWMUU, e “45 VVHHAUU K.
er, live on Sanger Road. A native appearins..b
Dentonite, she completed her B S. But. its feld
at TWU (then TSCw) in adver- ----
tising art, speech and English in L----
24 sactsatf WSm amsmnsniaueumuta aa
Herhobbies are many and var risky. Parton, an intent and per- the first bone of Heritage. It has
led One which she finds particu- suasive fellow with a firm belief 152 pages, 5 pictures in color, 135
larly interesting is working with to a possible Renalssance U.S.A., w to black and white. Among
tile mosaics. She shares this hob- says confidently: mabfoutere thia than ace* M. R.
mor's Glue and help," she laugh-
ed. Presently she is working with
Italian mosaic tile and has
Hda
are lively youths, ready for pranks.
But their first business is to equip
day That isn't possible now be-
cause the physical plants of British
universities simply do not grow
fast enough to house such a rash of
new students So "digs," furnished
rooms, now house most of the stu-
dents. and the city of Oxford takes
over the educational process after
___lb general culture gry mind We want to stir up «m-
past and present around the world, troveray. but we have no ax to
E a day whee even some - “‘nrst issue, h. s even
foot beam and a 152 square foot E
sail area. The materials used in •
the building of the boat include £
Philippine mahogany, marine
plywood and sitka spruce from .
which the mast and boom were 1
fashioned. About 15 gross of brass *
screws were used. The sail was
made of Dacron and the ropes of -j
nylon.
The cost of the materials used fl
• ,,5
*** w-ambiaemWed —E 4
Dr. Brown’s sail boat: he built it himself
The Fun Of Sailing
■■ l ‘ .
- <
rl
tEH-A
POLITICS likely as not a pretty but quite
________ _ Now the political parties have unacceptable "town girl.”
_______ For one thing, the subjects of tent their attraction to undergrad- Today the common offense has
Trinity aad student talk have changed marked- uates. Students traditionally are something to do with automobiles
considered ly. Oxford always was a center of radical and progressive, but the -parting,
ties have tost their bold hero, proper reg
» communist party b deed. kill- ed Press)
A-d
cost of a boat of this size already
built would be around $1,500. This
' to an attractive saving to those 6
t
into the »- cultrarrottedhingtsornoamen vine »•
ST inerega"mmpersarmo Wue"HertanHem-atyioq
seums, orchestras and. opera com-
board
A,, ", - :
. msraemrmrmm
■ . g
dumped . - -
dunking came about when some-
one else wes handling the t i 11 e r
and he was on the rail of the boat.
A brisk wind was blowing that
day, and a sudden turn of the
boot left him suspended to mid-
air with nothing but a lake beneath
him.
Since then, the boat has been on
Lake Worth and Garza - Little
Elm. it is used for family recrea-
tion on weekends. Brown's wife
Cordelia and three children Chris-
topher, 11, Timothy, 8, and Aman-
da, 5. all share in the work of
sailing the craft. ...
----- Of sailing Brown says, "It’s an
' activity to which everyone on
ART WITH CHARCOALMrs. Joe Sherrill, right,
new art teacher it Denton High, checks charcoal still
life with Susanne Sparks, standing and Mrs. Sandra
Morrow, 630 Woodland. Miss Sparks is the-daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. Dade Sparks, 510 Roberts.
teuri
But.
dares her fistand
terest Is la bar fam
she tries out new re
gt "
didn’t keep an exact account. The
Teaching Art
Extends Into
• r
■
— SUNDAY, 22,1958:
----------------
mgenqgnyegmmmeqgeuamg_poapmmaaggeemggeam
.Iu
■ ly. much to the moaner of the di-
==e Angry Young Men At Oxford
A fifth camera "inside the thee- ~ • • -
president and publisher, and Joseph J. Thorndike Jr.,
vice >^1^-
issue er Horion, the new magazine of the
2
E. ■ 585
"E 7
" r I
iteuthesboats.so things that surprised me," she r“dursmnbttwi Plmnsustathatoshe The brightest red covered maga that it you give the publie th- sorts — how to travel by baloqn
‘3 * ss d5 ’ ■“ * i
are not signed up for art. and wiU week with the printing of almost a Editor Josep
feature training for which there quarter million copies of the first says parton. I
isn't time during the regular class. issue: i„„,.. auuu ... - -
Lettering aad poster design.” she Horizon, Volume L Number L than now exists in America” to wrong with the "beat generation,
added, ho mention a couple of I‘s a twin. cultural activities as a whole, sr This "magazine of the arts” will
items MOTHER OF TWO Four years ago publisher James
as uabhdcjt jss .
I SxQg* THRepdres a
_____ ever in the autumnal sun-
I ezu a-i
■ University, The University of Tex- chattering in the quadrangle
as, Texas Technological College, the aristocratic Oxford accent
Navarro JuniorCollege,,Sam is diluted or even missing.
= =a=
wete"fexasrsttefehcedersscuthseatofpolitelearninginEngiand
torn San A Mate Junior Coeze A few year ago 3,000 was re-
In Your Own Boat #-==
________ . t» sent from’NISC, Baylor”” folks - bakers
By BOB PORTER board can participate. Sailing can An old sailor’s yarn says that a Tech, Southern Methodist Univer- — P9 .............
RecordChronicle Staff Writer always be improved by everyone true sailor can be determined by sity, Hardin - Simmons, Bishop
lt'i a cod soul whose heart helping" caUouaad hands from handling the College. Wylie College Maty Al
doesn't rare a bit faster and whose The boat can carry six people mainsheet If this presents anac-len College, Texas College, E—
madinatin isntexcited"bi"te comfortably and as many as curate test, then Brown’s sailing Texas State. University of Hous-
thought or wrestiing thewid and eight when the wind is ighe. ('“ ‘ i • -
wTh a ZaUtogcraft. SPEED sensation
And Dr. James Brown. 1108 While sailing to slow compared old.
Panhandle, who teaches English to motordriven boats, the sensa- _______________________ _
at NTSC, to ode who wasn't con- tion of speed is great. The boat said: “Give a man a boat he can be given
. _ silently through the water, and sail: And his rank and wealth, hie East Texas
ARRANGING.____ _
_ — . phenomenal success of Heritage, articles when writers dual even
serving as president of the Denton It began with a. 100,000 - edition know the maystoeexiatod ter
Council of Garden Clubs and she and now reports more than 300,000 them to contribute to?
further to expecting to be certified subscribers. Besides, he and hie "Wo got sons from books. One
* the National Ama- editors are experienced at aagftag come to cold and we took it at
■CHRONICLE t :
tor (ase picture at right). The two- ■
1 week tribute to Texas' 101 col- ■
E leges and universities, including ■
| the two in Denton, also will ex- I
tend into programs and exhibits in ■
A the Garden Center, the Museum of IE
. Heaun and Science, the Museum ••
.. of Fine Arts, the Hall of State, «
• the Magnolia stage and many 2
1 commercial exhibits.
TELEVISED
I AU productions inside the High- .«
I or Education Center will be oa E
I view outside through closed eir- M
I cuit television. Four cameras F
I mounted overhead in the theater
I will give viewers on the outside \
I tomes and in the lobby and )
I lounge a continuous view of per- Wl
I formances. Visitors will be able
I to see and hear the action from
2257 "W
-edoam. hcabu
UAI mA Ag adv. vyI.-a — Le u, Limm pz,4,,., EOT OF FI N
the pathways of Oxford have been the pirate roads ^"fun
of the rich and high-born. But today the sons and
daughters of bakers and policemen also trod college the ratio in the student body now
grounds amid ’ beauty such as this walk beneath Hart- is one girl tosreenboys. and dates
ford Bridge. are no problem - ides .sexbat
--“T tiers have been lowered under the
new students’ imnact. so girls min-
or two in college rooms, exposed
to university inuences 14 hours a
.Mo ’
n
(clun 02 ‘18
amgn J
The campus fad at ths beginning
of the scholastic term is fancy
vests and tight cavalry twill trous-
Fas. era for man. and shapely sweaters,
swmwrtsi #edrsimmdssstamtoh
iou*u and “5 B sauor 9 College dance groups will rep- under . graduate frivolities, but
g . resentSMU and TexacSouthmost this year there are quateHte of
And it was James Thomson who College. Informative toctures will brains behind the light hearted ca-
___ _ _ _ -dueie-trthecLe dm by representatives of pen
i of sail- cuts silently through the water, and sail: And his rank and wealth, his East Texas State. The University
into ac- especially M night you feel that strength and health on asa nor al Texas and Wayland Baptist -Mone
you are moving fast The soft, sbovo‘shall fail." Collage. St Marys University will get you
----- he's hose an arm- silent movement of me boot is a Could bo. send a public discussion group. timer. "I
chair mOot for the post tew years, thrill hard to compare with any- --‘-----
Brown got his first taste of sail- thing.else.
ing as a teen-ager, and has had Sailing is not a
the desire for a sailing boat of his who don "t like to fit-------.
own since then. Brown. It takes about 15 minutes
Last year he decided to do some- to get started, you can't jump into
thing about fulfilling that desire, the boat and speed away as you
be decided to build a sail beat can in a motorboat, but the sense
himself To do - it - yourselg fans, of participation you have with a
this represents quite a task To sailboat add* to the excitement -
Brown. It represents 11 months of The name "Aachha” is a His-
labored love that reached its dustanl word meaning good or fine.
' fruition this summer with the and is similar to the WORM d>. ' MMflflflMMMMflBflM|M||fl||flMflMMflflfll__________ _ ____. _______________
launching of the “Aachha," a trim The word was recalled by Brown in the university. Some of the col- of course seeming to do so. buttons to Parliament and the min- the
MM boat in U. Petrel class, fromhiszservice days in India By CHARLOTTE RATLIFF class. more than twice as leges have attracted large num- collegesgsbulge with istries. _____
BORROWED PLAN -- during.the r-”- “ h... M DHS Journalisn Student many as we expected signed up!” bers of.the middle Cl—M. which new oers.. f*” * new
Starting with a plan borrowed Several Pentonites, haxe ex- She added that the IT students, until lately haven't been conspicu- flavor to Old Oxford
from Dr Alan Woods. . Denton pressedian.interest.in, Erown’s "Teachingtat Denton High just including some tri? have had no ous at oxford.But a tew of/the old-
, veterinarian. Brown began work boateandoneeDr:ConradiKinard, seems, tog * be true," says previous art training, were show- S
on his boat last September Hia has started a boat of his own from Mrs. J. W. Sherrill, new art teach- ing "tremendous talent ” Christ Church, art _____... _ .
garage was his workshop and of the sameplans. , . . er strongholds of the public schools, bright conversation. Light, clever
.the construction Brown says, , Brown has thought about form- Her enthusiasm stemmed from . -WEAVIFG.. a, which in Britain are expensive prL and often immature debate wot a
•Boat buildingto anartl They teli ing a sailing club, "not to race, the fact that DHS to her Alma .In the program oferedsduring ------------------------------------,---------
vou how to em out hut not how but to have a place to sail and Mater She was graduated as Car- this, year of toachiaL sho _ _ __ A —4 _ _. A
CULTURE GAINS A
and weekends of work. -, _ ____.bona fide art course. ing.charcoal drawing, composition A “ ----- •
Brown began with the hull, build- .Brown’s boat is a bit smaller Her sparkling blue eyes and glis- and designuiscuipture and
tag it upside down, then turned it than .the. lightning class boat tening brown hair gave heranex- ing-She alsouplans t make
•over for finishing. The hardest whichisdesignedtor racing,There cited look of anticipation as she whristmnoneudncnrations and cards
ter be thought he was finished. It size and build of racing boats, the plans tm the course, “One 01 the ' tar.trom leaving these ah
took six weeks after this time be- idea being to,^ua “
fore he had really completed the that salling,ski..1
job. the winner inIFF
The "Aachha" has a six m-msuaemunmeun
’ Denton Will Give Vp
Educational Center
Title Next Month
- Denton, which likes to call it-
self the educational center of the
1 Southwest, may have to give up
that title for two weeks next month.
During the tate Fair of Texas,
the center of higher education in
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MNS, PUCKS & TWNGS 11: t ruE i)
J Higher SB.
Learning 65
iLi; in Texas 45075750177
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 21, 1958, newspaper, September 21, 1958; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1467573/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.