Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 300, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1947 Page: 4 of 8
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BOYLE’S NOTEBOOK
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By HAL BOYLE
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HOLLYWOOD
theInwu
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No Alternative
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SUN WORSHIPPERS
State’s Nudist Colony Plans Expansion
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Olivia DeHaviland Will Leave
Hollywood To Attend College
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THE BOUT--
HERES SOUR
HALF "smm
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roo*rr vou worn
DADDY I KNOW YOU
EVER DID ANNTHING
. REAuY WRONG. J
BEAVER ARE
LEANIN" ,
CRO551‘d
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’see what
TAET’RE up
. D,NICK‘
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1DRUNG THE
6HOVEL,RED‘
WHERG DO
WE DG .* >
THE EMPIRE STATE 3
BUILDING MUSTA GONe
.DOWN TOGETHER / —
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"1 MOPED"
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days and practice nudism, and to-
day the club, after having been in-
vestigated by the national organi-
sation for more than two years.
Wilkinson said. has 18 members
from Galveston, Houston and Har-
ris county.
Membership is limited to people
of good character. Married couples
are preferred but single persons
are admitted on probation but are
dropped from membership if they
have Dot introduced to the group a
Ort Oar Way
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3.
5*,
Birthdi
Miss F
Mrs.
her bon
afternoo
sCODL
HOUW>
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V
says his o!
a 100-acre
can build th
The club
eating a sit
particularly
traffic patt
craft.
THE HAYLOFT
planning ax
Percy T.
technician 1
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HOUBTON, Tex. —(— Texas'
Jy chartered nudist colony is
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Socialization, Taxes
Change England Fast
By DEWrrr MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
The English lad's dream of becoming a prince
of industry has received another dash of cold
COME ON. LiTTlE
DEAVSR: I WANT To
LOOK AROUND WHILE
NO ONE NEAR TE.
I $
hr
A.
6
p 73
f The heavy stuff
can jweit till you get
< warmed up! /
"02
IB civilian board I--------
m acted. It remains to be
5-.4%,
_ qu—-
0 "H” 42, je. ' 7232,4
.__. . . •
i for ----- . u ezzaiuvy, sxunu
i td avoid an onerous burden of ex-
peen needing a group
icy for two years. Now
be President named a
planning
members •
JR WIC‘A‘
rove wta^evws t m age V * ftp. qw
—fe
upon M
(That's right, Hazel.
k Yu just carry the.
nhght things^/
amd..VAVI\K EEh 1U
S,
adwnoc
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t to develop those
ttransports and put
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lane manufacturing and transport in-
tries as a whole wound up badly in the
maniils — such as economics and
government — in the belief that %,
the midshipmen should study tech-
nical specialties in the navy post-
graduate school.
"But of course me curriculum
is still pointed toward a sea ca-
reer,” a senior officer pointed out
The importance of air combat is
also being increasingly stressed,
and one officer said:
"It’s not that we plan to train
mm to lo-
area that
from the
yig alr-
g '
Ee,
‘ow, ARTHUR, %
THIS CANT Knot!
YOU AN ESCAPED
CONVICT/WHY DONI
XVUTILME2A
I
Oommittee against public heaifngs on monay bilis.
These hearings were held behind closed doors as
hr the past and tiie testimony made public when
each appropriation bill was handed to the House.
The law also noted that four members—Speaker
Martin (R-Mass), Republican leader Halleck (Ind),
Democratic Leader Rayburn (Texas) and Rep.
Marcantonio (AL~NY—were not elected to mem-
bership on any committee. Monroney says the
thr • lcaders probaMy should have been exempted
in the U.W.
9e7g
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• THE NATION TODAY
i Congress Streamlined
Partly Under Law
By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL
(for James Marlow)
;rM iay this for Al Mogul; when h«
gave his family the whole story of
his past, he gave It to them cold.
If you’re always trying to let everybody
know how much sense you have, you
haven’t any.
~y
El
r f
applications a day.
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WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 —Rep. Monroney
iD-Okla), author of the leglalative ieorganization
a, A.
ANNAPOLIS, Md., —(- Mid-
Saipmen at the U. 8. naval acad-
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' itiato he hoped that the two boards will
co-ordinate; co-operate, and avoid thejeal-
des, jurisdictional disputes and politics
it could foul the whole operation.
"wo principal jobs are facing these two
rds. They must work out a Tong-range
. pan for a national-air defense system, and
'4h«y must map a future program for a
“2—1 air transportation system.
e defense category a decision has
adeon how much of a production
Midshipman at Annapolis Getting
New Version of Old Discipline
so to placing new emphasis in the
Annapolis curriculum on the hu-
pilots here, but they must be ■
thoroughly indoctrinated in the 1m-
portance of air as a second ocean.” B
Air must be tn their soul just as |
the sea was in the soul of the old I
salt water sailor.” |
Old line admirals need have no ■
fear that the midshipmen are be- I
ing coddled. The normal high acad- ■
emy discipline is being maintained. I
but Holloway feels that the mid- B
shipmen will develop qualities o! I
leadership better if given more g
personal responsibility in their con- ■
duct. I
One custom that has been aban- ■
doned is tht of marching silently I
to classes in drill step formation • ■ (
of the beating of a drum. The mid- I
dies are also being allowed more ■
week-end leaves, enabling them to I
kep in closer touch with civilian B
life. I
Midshipmen and cadets spend I
two weeks each summer in Joint I
amphibious landings, and also each I
midshipman in his final year now I
spends a week-end at West Potntt. I
and each graduating cadet comes I
to Annapolis for a similar stay. I
“It's really helped morale,” I
smiled one commander. "Two of I
the Army cadets have already I
married the daughters of naval of- |
fleers here.” ■
C “
A
'wetrbotI-MEARED-
HOU WAS AST TO ABOARD
METW TODAY. WT
. TWeV DO AT THEM I
h vow-wwe? 4
eatures
vriday. August L 1947
MEASURING HIM fOR COLD,
STORAGE WHEN VOU YELLED
"UPPERCUTP"AN* 1 TURNED
MN HEAD'-- ME .AD .
“8
A KAYo§
r," DOESNTGET
THE MAJOR
aDOWN=
2-
fiance within six months.
Applicants who make use of al-
cohol are turned down and tobacco
is prohibited durinv club meetings.
Wilkinson, wno is 3 eet 10 inches
tall and weighs 175 pounds, says
Club Naturel has as its purpose to
develop "healthy minds and
healthy bodies through use of sun-
shine while at work and at play."
Present members, he said, range
in age from 85 years to five
months.
Mmggee -
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is;
ide
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. Terming the law about half successful and half
a 1eW da¥8 Q”0** -flop," Monroney added to • reporter: -
—— -- ------- — -J seen —Now we’ve got to carry it out fully or abandon
whether two sets of heads are better than and repeal it."
-"-MT----- The Oklahoman said the mopt conspictous ef-
.... 2 . . , j fort to use it was in setting a leghtslative budget.
With all the work there is to be done, The law saye congress must work out its own
ia to be honed that the twa boards wil Egozgarpronpabevgpqcvrnmandangomana"prehe
dentlal recommendations.
This is to be done by a special committee made
up ot senators and representatives from the appro-
priating and taxingcommittees of both branches.
Phat happened last sesslon was that Congress
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 1 — (P) —
Olivia de Havilland is going to
leave Hollywood behind to go to
college.
As son as the star finishes "The
Snake Pit," she and her husband,
novelist Marcus Goodrich, plan
to build a home in Rappahannock,
Va., where his forebearers settled.
Olivia, who has never before gone
to college, says she"ll take classes
at nearby William and Mary col-
lege
George Murphy is getting itchy
feet. He is urging MGM execs to
find, a dancing role for him. Also,
he 'would like to take the road
in an appearance tour which
Our Boarding Homne
EOAD, BURKE / YOU MSTNST
LET THAT FREAK KNOCKOUT
TONIGHT DETER Yu/-. WE
REACH 6UCCE55 AND FAME
ONLY BY HARD KNOCKS---
LET DS PERSEVERE ONWARD
AND UPWARD TO THE
PINNACLE - HAR-RUMPA!
IAM NOT LICKED.
< 4mcMI
/ WE GOT $30 FORZ
a
, VA ___
’ Lt
Caldsturlorcongres
gg Thie 80th Congress, which didn’t make
•too impressive a record in its first sem-
" worked hard to bring up its marks
e last few days before vacation. One
‘ "hiseffort, which certainly de-
lid star, was the passage of a
r a ten-man joint congressional
____licy board.
60 -nlu
e,o
emy are being treated less like
prisoners and more like men these
days.
The century-old center of Ameri-
can naval training to streamlining
Its teaching program and giving
its midshipmen more reedom in
order to prepare Uncle Sam's fu-
ture fleet offices for the broader
demands of the post-war world.
The old tradition of rigid disci-
pline that practically ordered
every moment of a midshipman's
life from the day he entered the
academy until the day he grad-
uated goes back many decades.
It developed slowly from the
founding period in IMS, when
cadets were roisterous and diffi-
cult to control. For evening fun
then they often grabbed up pokers
engaged in pitched battles with the
Annapolis citizenry.
The cadets of that day took their
shore education so lightly that only
260 of the first 1,200 admitted ever
graduated.
But the thumb of authority grad-
ually came down more heavily as
standards were raised. Some crit- .
ics complained that the martinet-
like discipline tended to iron out
the individuality and initiatve the
midshipmen would need if they
ever commanded ships in battle.
They said there had developed too
big gap between the rigid and
precision-reguiaied life the mid-
shipmen led in the academy and
the more flexible human give-and-
take life that awaited them in their
future careers.
Rear Admiral James L. Hollo-
way. Jr.? present academy super-
intendent, wants to close that gap.
A forward-looking educator, he al-
| ANYTHING
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E-l’amgek’ln
| Yin MUST TOuVoNG A BACKMAAHl]
1 GO AND THI TNI I MTS STARTED, MRS.
POLICE AU ABOUT J MOGUL, YUU CANT STOP1
A7d
2.,
M 0 lo,
stick, rouge, face powder, eye-
brow pencil, cold cream, and
mascara. The average to three
-hea ' ,
g-tbder
m
•V--as
.A •few’ll
VDuH-#-W.
AW.NUTTIW,
FOP... $us
TAIKEP ABOUT
THEIR EVES
L AN' nose» )
CONGRATULATONS, DUCHE65. ~
The board VO[E o UNANINOUSYIn
1 GNE Tod THE _« GLAD,
SCHOOL CONTRACTESs gM.,
8^- —----26e‛« A 5% VG5*
,8 ■
9tc280
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EdAMi
A3
®|i yACCOSTOMED A { 7 HAT LL NEVER \
IM HE 6 TOBACCO / t I BE A NATIONAL
CHEWERS, THAT k / PROELEM-THE k
ACTUALLY AMAZES \ I CRAVNJG DEMANDS
k THE OLD BOy--THAT‛S ) I MORE AN’ MORE, F
* AN EXAMPLE OF / \ BUT PFOPLE AIN’T I
NOT HOLDIN’ YOUR ) \ GOT TH’ CHEEK? J
hh TOBACCO WELL.’ / 32 P~—_
feature his old song and dance
routines. Such talented toes as
George s shouldn't be kept idle.
Anne Baxter and John Hodlak
have one practice which they think
will help preserve their marriage.
They spend as much time away
from Hollywood as possible...
Glenn Ford surprised everyone
when he did a bus-driving scene
in "The Mating of Millie.” He per-
formed beautifully and didn't strip
a gear Glenn worked for the Bay
Cities Transit Co. while studying
dramatics in Santa Monica.
Shirley Temple will get a week's
rest betwen "Mary Hagen” and
"War Party' ____________
with... Maior Hocole
DID YOU SEE THAT GOOFY
HAYMKEg GROGAN TAGGED
ME WrA an I WAS JST
—t
iL..x.c02 1)
bkq
us aircraft manufacturing needs,
may plane factories are to stay in
esaand how many must liquidate or
ifo other lines of worka full-time
gas moat of' themafe doing part-
Etoday. ", 2 ' $ 1
will be up to them boards to decide
modern a military and commercial
orce this country must have. How
Ja the United States going to pursue
| otner nations in developing, new types of
engines and planes, and in mass produc-
tion. Are we going to spend the hundreds
. of millions
mueh-talkeL - _____-_____---
2a certain that his can’t be done under
present conditions. Last year, both the
law, estimated today that it baa been about SO per i
can; effective in ’streamlining" Congress.
The session Just ended was the first to operate . ;
under the act ,
)uhX
/W" Uf
e
has got to be planning and money ANALYZING THE NEWS
ireh on the manufacturing side, ~ - --
—____r general airway development in
m=— operations. Such divergent things as air-
I port expansion, all-weather flying and
I other safety measures and payments for
9 2 carrying air mail are all parts of the com-
’ — picture.
Ke the world is in the state that it
lore must be thought given to a pro-
ftGBt program fa case of emergency. urther "maJor natonaization by The •That means weacadtlo cate
and efficiency, small oerozatpandmntmmateacdge"0zc02opooabo.one “S, Natusel.ortatnaly “•
need for more Dower " can Sunbathing Association in
Well, if nationalization results in unification September, 1944, and is only
— one of four Texas nudist organiza-
tions, Wilkinson said, to be so af
filiated and recognized by the na-
tional organisation.
He said nudist groups also met
regularly at Bl Pso, Fort Worth
and Dallas, but that none have
completed requirements to receive
a charter from the parent organi-
zation.
Club Naturel was conceived by
Wilkinson in IMO when he had a
nervous breakdown and after, he
ports), civil aviation and overseas communications sald, ^*5* spent months in visit-
(inland comunications were taken over by the ing physicians and doctors with-
state long ago). The eoclalist program still calls outsuccess.
for natoazizaton of iron and steel, and the coal- , "8omeone told me sunshine and
gas indurt& during the remaining three years of fresh hir were the finest treat-
—•—— ------- - — . , ments for nerves. I took off my
________________wfk wimn ac- clothint and eoaaed up all the sun "
cording to government estimates, the nationalza- 1 could ” Wilkinson said.
tion of 20 per cent of business, leaving 60 per ‘ And I learned there was nothing
nan! in priyto hands. like sunshine for relaxing the
Bociafist Prime Minister Attlee’s government has nerves." he added.
been adhering to the nationallztion program J w“ so impressed with the re-
which waa approved by the voters at the last sults.that... wrote a. letter to a
general election that brought about the snsational nudist publication and asked how
overthrow of the conservative Churchill govern- 1 could start A.club, he in
mmt. Attlee is well aware of the danger in over- explaining the history of his Harris
mum. reaching while carrying out such a revolutionary county «rouP. ____ <-
11K Project Irdescretion not only might result in My letter was pybltohM and
catastrophe for the Bocialista at the next election, within a short while I received re-
.toe but a mkjor mtot^m in nationalization might rtose piies tnM approximately topeopie
tated havoc with the economy of the country. . who expressed interest in fotming
Whatever else may be the oatcome, the oon- A club in the Texas coastal area,”
sensus ia Britain seems to be that the I days of he sald. ..
industgial prmices are over. Some great fortunes Members began to meet at pri-
m0 still exist, but death duties will wipe them out in vate homes on weekends and holl-
* due course, and no More can be created . . ~
■Ha Socialization and taxation are remodeling Eng- all fob BEAUTY •
220 land fast " six varieties of cosmetics are
used by the average woman: Up-
10881006%8;
muqusmke W RENISTicT EITMER We h _ ----
m“MEAWB ADNT PVBLICI iTS BUSTER,
mpommswNAND BUT HiM Qfw
•G EAOE
/ i “k I • - f• 2--
e. and organized for quick and orderly
naion need for more power
iat is a big order. How wen it is filled , We.i nationaliationresuita.in unification
Aenena - L. .n Ll ■ L i or ™’tains electric companies it will be a boon
AePena-on. now well the two boards to the country, dreams or no dreams. In London.
Ze the potential advantage of their tor instance, many separate concerns serve this
P. Ideally they can perform a liason worid‛sgreatestimetropolis,and thereslsntleuni-
"2
aible. If they can agree and work to- it was DC. This means that all the electric
GT, much valuable time can be saved, machines have to be changed over at much cost and
time needs to be saved, for the crea- Besides electricity, the Socialists have now
H° tese boards comes at the end of nationalized the coai mihes, the Bank of England,
—3 aimless years during which America inland transportation (ra, motor, waterways,
gcihas fallen behind in the aircraft parade. ii
' jut* t ’
A Texas man, arrested for drunken
I idriving, claimed the cops smelled hair oil. _ - _ - . -
="instherhe
, -----
Denton RECORD-CHRONICLE
t V me pentn MMfc, Company:
15•2 r -a-e
l- ’
got a $37,500,000,p00 budget from President Truman
and never agreed on one ot its own. The House
voted to trim $6,000,000,000 from the presidential
total, the Senate $4,500,000,000. They never com-
promised. And Republicans and Democrats are
still arguing about just how much the budget was
cut
To make the plan work, Monroney said, Con-
gress should have experts working with govern-
meat ageneies during the summer and fall as they
work out their budgets for the coming year.
ihen, when the House Appropriaions Com-
mittee to ready to start operating, and the legis-
lative budget committee meets, the experts could
have ready-made plans for large, medium or small
cuts. . .
Bit Monroney said he sees little chance this
win be done.
Monroney daased as an outright disregard of
YLITUE DEALER’S
1 601NG T TELL
}U5, 5HERIFF:
N-e5 *dd
34
=
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 300, Ed. 1 Friday, August 1, 1947, newspaper, August 1, 1947; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1475398/m1/4/?q=Wilson+pottery: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.