Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 295, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 19, 1961 Page: 4 of 10
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HANDICAP
*
A Premature Celebration
9
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?
HAL
BOYLE
(2
88308 W 8
8886336880963503/8 ■
e-
June Grads
a
Job Placement Improves
""1
-22,’
WORLD
the lights on—and the front door federate colonel, his estimate of
Editorials
TODAY
Three-fourths of the 60 engineer-
sur-
of all their job seekers by grad-
mus D. Keyes, West Point ’32,
Finns which had interviewed
uation. At two-thirds of the busi-
Taxes On Minors
Suddenly, while the hot noon-
terviewing schedules earlier in the
Yorkers with a smattering of reg- ingtonians and their ladies, spread ment calls has continued at many
year. Averages reported by most
hard.
field, Beauregard was still con-
gy estimated in early May that
90 per cent of its available en-
Russell, reported:
TThe neighbors are going out with
did. Oh, my! Is not that first June re-check found 90% per Electronics, missiles, aircraft, che-
lems.
by midnight without fail, but the
‘We’ve whipped them on all and liberal arts: actual score, 90
crossed
and Wisconsin brigade
Bull Run and fell heavily on
kin! The congressmen shook hands
with each other and cried out:
LETTERS WELCOMED
uates had been placed excepting publishing were frequently men-
months. But he aas been seen in
teau known as Henry Hill. domi-
STAT1ONS CLOSED
Jury Duty
tow retired to Henry Hill under
Denton Record-Chronicle
as. The Denton Experiment Sta- Thomas J. Jackson, West Point
Jury duty is an experience every-
Shep-
case things get rough around Ber
lin — Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
BASIC SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By this time Beauregard, hav-
offensive plans, and the worried
ton last year for highway pur-
flective and thoughtful analysis’’
Gerald Stockard.
essity to let the American peo-
ple know what alternatives they line stiffened and held.
face in Berlin.
McDowell, two, was on the field,
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(
■'.'-fretu
(010,
Keeping Up
By JAMES MARLOW
Yesteryear
Looking Back Through
Record-Chronicle Files
Burnsides' Rhode Islanders New
Hampshiremen and New Yorkers,
staggered and fell back reform
ed and advanced. A second bri-
gade, Col. Andrew Porter’s New
ulars and Marines, burst out of
the woods to Bumsides’ support.
TV broadcasts, one by himself on
national security, one with his
lays. It was 2% hours late when
the spearhead brigade, Col. Am-
brose E. Burnside, West Point
'47. came out of the woods and
ment of candidates ranged from
75 to 100 per cent. Nearly all
schools in the survey anticipated
practically complete placements
regard, his red-trimmed zouave
cap glinting in the sun rallied
the embattled Southerners. Their
ers calling back for additional
men, though all job-seeking grad-
head, a lull came over the battle-
field. It was as if both sides, heav-
herd today arrested two men af-
ter a chase which ended when the
pair's automobile wrecked at the
comer of Congress and Bolivar.
Hie two men were wanted for in-
As trouble increased for him—
Laos, Berlin and his trouble with
Congress in getting his foreign aid
bill through—there were repeated
suggestions that he talk directly
tioned as active markets for bus-
iness and liberal arts people.
GEN. BEAUREGARD
Offensive Minded
In this same length of time
Kennedy has made one direct TV
talk to the nation: His report on
his Vienna meeting a few days
before with Premier Khrushchev.
After his successful TV debates
with Vice President Richard M.
conferences with aides but, ex-
cept for the talk after Vienna,
nothing direct to the country.
Now as the administration con-
poses, according to a judgment Johnston arrived on the scene,
issued by Denton County Judge The sight of their beloved Beau-
tion escaped the economy move.
PAIR CAUGHT
AFTER CHASE
waited for the attack. They wait-
ed more than two hours, feeling
very lonely indeed on the extreme
left flank of the Confederate line,
before it became apparent that
Tyler’s fuss and fury was only a
diversion. The main attack would
come elsewhere. But where?
I
I
I
But the celebration was a lit-
tle bit premature.
Associated Press News Analysis
WASHINGTON (AP - Presi-
dent Kennedy has kept busy, but
not as an explainer. He’s being
urged to start talking.
ran headon
fire.
bered, began to waver.
Meanwhile, three miles from the
bath, but at the last minute I got
so rushed — you wouldn’t mind
would you?"
"We only pay 35 cents an hour,
but, on the other hand, the ex-
perience you get will prove high-
ly useful later when you have a
home and children of your own."
“Yes, I suppose it is all right
if your boy friend comes by so
you can help him with his home
work. But. remember, leave all
mand nearly a mile to the north-
west. There, protected by woods,
it dug in and waited.
—The attacking Union force had
left Centreville at 2:30 a.m. and
disturbing. Three brigades from
the Army of the Shenandoah were
sent left to stand by.
EVANS WAS in real trouble
when his first reinforcements,
Brig. Gen. Barnard E. Bee, West
Point '45, arrived on the field.
The first Union regiments of the
division of Col. Samuel P. Heint-
zelman. West Point ‘26, were com-
ing into action.
The Confederates—Evans' Com-
mand, Bee's farmers from Ala-
bama, Mississippi and North Ca-
rolina, and Col. Francis S. Bar-
after a May advance estimate of
85 per cent.
University of Houston estimat-
ed 85 per cent placements by gra-
duation of all its employment can-
didates in engineering, business
mical, rubber, electrical equip-
ment, petroleum, utility and com-
munications industries were all
active markets for engineers and
technicians this year.
Wholesaling, retailing, banking,
insurance and the service indus-
tries in general took a large share
of the business majors. Corpora-
tion management training courses
took a heavy proportion of busi-
ness and liberal arts men. Ac-
countants were in record demand
both by accounting firms and gen-
eral business, at a prevailing sal-
ary bracket of $450 to $500. Food,
pharmaceuticals, advertising and
the June class by autumn. With
equal to or above earlier esti-
mates. the report concludes that
these expectations should be fol-
filled.
The general level of starting
salaries edged up only slightly—
nated by the stone house of the
85-year-old widow Julia Henry and
the wooden shack of the free Ne-
gro James Robinson.
tea uknown as Henry Hill, domi-
Letters must be signed and the writer's address given,
serve the right to edit letters when necessary.
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JULY 19, 1941
Denton patrolman Jack
some with imminent military ser-
vice.
4
t.
open.”
1 “I do hope the children won’t
Baby Sitters
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP) - Remarks
that make a taeen-aged baby sit-
ter wish she belonged to the
Peace Corps:
“I'm sorry, but you won't be
able to use the phone, Susie.
There seems to be something
wrong with it. And the TV set
IT IS EMfNTiAL
THATWEATRACT
NEW INDUSTRIES
TO THESE AREAS
OF OEPRESSION!
ComMERCE SEc.A2
JULY 19, 1921
A joint appropriations commit-
DEXTONITE WINS
COURT JUDGMENT
JULY 19, 1911
HORRORS OF WAR—All the excitement and suffering experienced by first-
time soldiers are depicted starkly in this old print of the First Battle of Bull
Run. Soldiers comfort their wounded comrades in the foreground while the bat-
tle rages behind them. ________________________
m-M. I montns. But ne nas been st
The Record-Chronicle welcomes letters from readers on any action—on the White House
subject in good taste.
but his luck was bad. He order- strong in June. Late returns fil-
“The spectators were all ex- gineers would be placed by grad-
cited, and a lady with an opera uation; actual placements were 93
glass who was near me was quite per cent.
beside herself. . .‘That is splen- University of Minnesota in a
not so far that they couldn't hear ed back and asked to be put in
the sounds and see the smoke of touch with additional personnel,
battle—the spectators, the Wash- The increased pace of employ-
‘n’tlefield, tnwerine
perhaps 100 feet above the level
By this time in his first term But here is a nice Beethoven sym-
Eisenhower had held 13 news con- phony my husband and I have
ferences. So far Kennedy has had been planning to listen to ever
only 12. His 13th comes today.
never been explained he has
avoided such a step, preferring
to send messages to Congress or
otherwise getting his ideas out.
THE TREND
Yet last Dec. 31 in defending
his plan to have his news confer-
ences televised live, Kennedy said
it was part of the trend for great-
er communication of presidential
views to the people “who are
very much involved in his deci-
sions.”
This is the second of thre
articles on the Battle of Bull
Ras, fought IN years ago this
week.
Berlin crisis.
Humphrey said he suggested
this to Kennedy—but got no re
sponse--in a report he submitter1
after his recent trip to Europe
The senator said there is a ne
NEWTAK
J RMENUE
MLNEEDS
to give the country a “sober, re-
3
4*
Most of the sample re-checks
showed improvement over earli-
er estimates. Based on final re-
turns the report concludes that
better than 90 per cent of this
June's engineering and scientific
graduates available for employ-
ment were placed by commence-
ment time, and a substantial part
of the remainder had offers but
gural address, which was shown
on TV last January — it was
thought Kennedy would make a
lot of use of TV.
He has perhaps been seen on
TV more often than Eisenhower
in his first six White House
movement, the main Federal at-
tack, had been spotted.
Quickly, Alexander flashed word
of Evans and the doughty Con-
Telephone 382-2551
Entered as second class mail at the post office at Denton, Texas,
Jan. 13, 1921, according to Act of Congress, March 3, 1872.
Published every evening except Saturday and on Sunday morning by
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
Riley Cross, President and Publisher
Roy Appleton, Jr, Vice President and General Manager
Tom Kirkland, Secretary and Managing Editor
Fred Patterson, Treasurer and Business Manager
Milton Leazenby, Circulation Director
Ed Walthall, Advertising Director
George Avery, Mechanical Superintendent
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - The Associated Press is on
28558
%AgEAS.
Shi
la
ger, said he would be holding
news sessions “more often than
they have been held in the past
eight years.”
Single Copies, Evening 5 cents, Sunday 10 cents.
Home Delivery on same day of publication by city carrier or by motor
route 35 cents per week.
NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneous reflection upon the character, of what th* country faces in the
reputation or standing of any firm, individual or corporation will “ “
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publishers' attention. The
publishers are not responsible for copy omissions, typographical errors
ar any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct them In
next issue after it is brought to their attention. All adverising orders
are accepted on this basis only.
titled exclusively to the use for publication of all local news printed
in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches.
Home delivery by mail (must be paid in advance) Denton and adjoining
counties $1 per month, $9.50 per year, elsewhere in the United States aiders some mobilization—just in
$1.30 per month, $15.60 per year.
A jury finds facts. It hears and
weighs evidence and then comes to a
verdict. It does not make the law—
the legislature does; and the judge
“charges” or instructs the jury con-
cerning the law applicable to the par-
ticular case it is considering.
The judge will tell you not to find
the accused guilty until he is proved
so .under strict rules of evidence. If
you have any “reasonable doubt”—
not imaginary or far-fetched—acquit
the accused.
Civil cases do not demand a moral
certainty, merely the “preponder-
ance" of what you regard as reliable
and believable evidence.
(This newsfeature, prepared by the
State Bar of Texas, is written to in-
form — not to advise. No person
should ever apply or interpret any
law without the aid of an attorney
who is fully advised concerning the
facts involved, because a slight vari-
ance in facts may change the applica-
tion of the law.) *
it’s Experience Everyone Ought To Have
duties, especially as jurors.
Time was in Texas when women
could not serve on juries. They still
cannot in four states.
tween $400' and $460 for liberal
arts bachelors.
With the supply of engineering
graduates in a diminishing trend
for the next few years, “space
age" research and development
number of engineers, mathema-
ticians and physical scientists.
“Loud cheers suddenly burst
from the spectators as a man
dressed in the uniform of an offi-
cer,. . .galloped along the front,
waving his cap and shouting at
the top of his voice.
to the people on TV. — ------- — -----, ----- ------
But for some reason which has tural experiment stations in Tex- the protective wing of Brig. Gen.
24
k
*3
us and they are leaving their four
Cabinet to discuss national prob- children here, too, so altogether
PAGEF
—-
Actual job placements of June
college graduates have fulfilled or
surpassed earlier spring forecasts,
says the final report on the 26th
annual survey of college employ-
ment made by Northwestern Na-
tional Life Insurance Co.
Employment demand accelerat-
ed during May and continued
you have—let me see: three and
two and four more make—oh. I
never was any good at arithme-
tic."
"Hello, Susie. I'm calling from
the country club. I know I told
your mother we'd get you home
Tyler confirmed, made the move vun au.n was vau. a uue- - ,
that may have saved the whole ed Tyler’s division to cease itsed by some of the schools in the were still "shopping,
give you much trouble. Susie. The confederate army. Leaving a ‘ * . . ----"" i-......hilnet------* — , , .L
rain kept them in all day, and scant four companies to watch Ty-
they have been rampaging around ler, he shifted the bulk of his com-
the house like Indians on the war-
tow's little band of Georgians— points,' he cried. ‘We have taken per cent,
were holding their own when a
„ or greeting visitors - not SIX EXPERIMENT
e re planatory talks to the nation.
'46, who until that moment was
known chiefly as one of the dull-
ist mathematics prefessors in
the history of Virginia Military
Institute.
Jackson’s brigade, Virginians
all and only recently arrived from
the Valley, bore the brunt of the
Federal onslaught. Virtually alone,
although sheltered by woods and
high ground, they stood off what
amounted to two Union divisions.
AS HIS BATTERED brigade re-
formed behind Jackson, Bee rais-
ed himself in his stirrups, wav-
“Look! There is Jackson stand-
ed his sword and shouted:
ing like a stone wall!”—and the
stodgy math professor became
“Stonewall” Jackson.
diversion and get into the fraysurvey, together with last-minute
but the bulk of it never crossed telephone re-checks on some of ing schools reporting in the
Bull Run. One brigade, Col. Eras-,the earlier-reporting schools re- vey placed 90 to 100 per cent
veal that: of all their job seekers bv grad.
-ily-engaged for the better part spring have since requested oppor-
of three hours, had decided to tunity to interview any candidates
into Evans’ withering pause and catch their breaths for who might still be uncommitted.
what they knew would be the* de- A considerable number of firms of any remaining job-seekers from
cisive phase of the battle. who had filled their spring cam-
Far behind the Union lines—but pus quotas have subsequently call-
As the Berlin problem intensi-
fied there were many presidential vestigation.
path.”
“Oh, dear, I know you teen-
agers get so hungry—and there
simply isn't a thing left in the
crossed the stream but inexpli-
cably wandered off into the woods freely but delayed making actu- ness schools and nearly one-half —-
and never really reached the field, al job commitments, begain hir-' of the liberal art schools, the '
..._______________________ Suddenly, while the hot noon- ing extensively as evidence of an number of job offers by com-
immediately bogged down in de- day sun beat down from over- upturn became clearer. mencement time was equal to or
Firms which had canceled in- better than last year, and place-
____J......... ... aaunaapuney, Ray Hunt of Denton will receive
D-Minn., Monday urged Kennedy $12,300 plus interest for payment . ,
of land taken by the City of Den- ing reluctantly given up his own
When Sherman tipped the scales
tee of the House and Senate has against them, Evans, Bee and Bar-
eliminated six of the 13 agricul-
In his eight-year presidency Ei- “Little Eloise can't go to sleep
senhower had 192 news confer- unless someone reads to her from
ences. President Truman 324 in her favorite book, ’Bunny Rabbit
a little less than eight, and Presi- and His Forest Friends.’ Here it
dent Roosevelt 990 in 12 years, is—only 112 pages. If she doesn't
BEHIND fall asleep the first time, read it
At the rate he's going Kennedy j to her again.”
won’t match any of them. i “You only had three children to
In his first six months Eisen- baby sit the last time you were
hower had made two nationwide here. Since then we had the twins.
rate? I guess we will be in cent of its available engineers
(Richmond this time tomorrow.’actually placed at graduation time.
line, on a height of ground call-
ed Signal Hill, a Confederate sig-
nal officer, E. P. Alexander, scan-
ned the horizon with his glass.
Far to the northwest, he spotted
a flash of light. And another. And
another. Sunlight glinting on brass
cannon. McDowell’s flanking
refrigerator except two carrots
and some lettuce. Do you like
lettuce?”
, . . „ “Don't tell me this pretty young
After almost six months in office thing is baby-sitting the kids! You
he's made less use of press andgo to the movies, honey, and rn
TV than President Eisenhower instay home and sit with the sitter.”
the same time to get his ideas "I‛m afraid we don’t have a
across to the people. rock ‛n‛ roll record in the house.
minal superior, was getting jit- thoritatively of the battle that he. Georgia Institute
tery. The tumult to the left was became known as “Bull Run"gy estimated in es
Crackpot letters are a dime a dozen in newspaper
offices, but we are in receipt of one from a 20-year-
old California student which makes more sense than
the average. This young man complains that he is
taxed without representation and his special target
is the income tax. He wants to know how the U.S.
government justifies the imposition of an income
tax on minors—or, as the orators usually classify
them, “our citizens of tomorrow."
These citizens, our young correspondent insists,
are being “taxed to death” today and the prospect
for tomorrow is even worse. In lofty indignation,
he asks: “Is it not fitting that we, the ‘underaged',
should oppose with every possible method these
taxes which our forefathers condemned as unjust?
Must we allow this government 'of the people, by
the people and for the people’ (we, apparently, are
not people) to take from us the earnings for which
we have so long labored; those which are for our
education; those which are to provide security for
our families?"
Allowing for certain youthful exaggerations—
such as the extent of those earnings for which a 20-
year-old has “so long labored”—there is much jus-
tice in the claim that young citizens lack represen-
tation in law-making bodies. The tendency of to-
day’s lawmakers to saddle future generations with
a fantastic government debt continues, and not
even token consultations are held with the prospec-
tive debtors.
Latest proposal is to make the government re-
sponsible under the Social Security system for the
medical care of people over 65. What this alone
will cost the young man in California, if it is adopt-
ed, is simply unpredictable. We do—we really do
—make free with the rights and resources of our
children and grandchildren. They may forgive us,
but mostly because it will be too late then to do any-
thing about it.
is broken, too.” WELL ro THE SOUTH of the
“I meant to give Mary Ann her
their linen cloths and opened schools following graduation, as
their picnic baskets. It was a firms seek graduates still in the two to three per cent—from last
Evans’ Command, vastly outnum- gay crowd for, according to word market. J * — 3 L; *
that had reached them, the bat- As a result, advance spring esti- schools in the survey ranged be-
tie was all but won. mates of percentages of place- tween $525 and $565 for engineers
aciu, -am-gu- wu — -— William Howard Russell, cor-'ments by graduation have fre- and scientists, from $425 to $480
cerned chiefly with an offensive respondent for the London Times, quently been exceeded, as post- for business graduates and be-
of his own. But Johnston, his no- who wrote so extensively ard au- commencement figures come in.
At---U_.S--1„ -e L- Leu- -L-t L-l c -i- T--ua, of Technolo-
body ought to have.
In a criminal case 12 jurors have a
duty to do justice as each one sees it,
and yet be unanimous. In most trials
both sides have much to say, and the
evidence is conflicting. The 12 jurors
vary in their ability, temperament,
character, education and their experi-
ence in the world, and in the question
at stake.
Yet a jury made up of both sexes,
with wide age and educational differ-
ences, jobs and origins must all come
up with the same verdict. Upon their
verdict much depends—the life or lib-
erty of others, and the public good. So
it may take them days of talking A
among themselves, all to agree.
Jury duty calls for insight, common
sense, courage, tact, fairmindedness,
patience, (especially toward the jurors
who disagree with you), good humor,
tolerance, balance, willingness to hear
others out and change one’s mind,
readiness to go over and over the facts
to find something to bring agreement.
In short, jury duty demands a “decent
respect to the opinions” of others.
More and more women share civic
since we bought it at the super-
Yet before Kennedy took office market. Let us know if you enjoy
his news secretary, Pierre Salin- it."
“I'll kneel behind her when she
isn’t looking, Sis; then you get in
front of her—and push her real
CAuhe,
ePci-
■
Nixon last year-and particularly party is just getting. . ."
after his highly applauded inau- __________________________
all their batteries. They are re- Stanford University in a post-
new element, Sherman’s New York treating as fast as they can and commencement report mentioned
and Wisconsin brigade crossed we are after them.” noticeable acceleration in employ-
“Such cheers as rent the wel- i ment during May and early June,
‘ with a number of early recruit-
Ttrm THE DENTON RECORD-CHRONICLE: : :
"Bully for us! Bravo! Didn't I
of Bull Run, rose a rolling pla- tell you so.' "
I
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7 EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : t WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1961
Battle Of Bull Run
- g"chhk. ■ huut
They were a cocky, informal $
crew, led by rough and tumble 3
Col. Nathan G. Evans of Marion, 9
S. C„ West Point '48, who had 9
become a legend in the frontier 9
army by taking on two Coman- 9
che Indians in hand-to-hand com- 9
bat and killing them both. S3
With the dawn, Sunday, July 21, 5 5
1861, came the heat, the sun, the -
dust, and, unexpectedly, the roar "
of a 30-pound Parrot rifle, fired 4
from across the Run by the di- d
vision of Brig. Gen. Daniel Ty- A
ler. West Point '19, the fighting H
great grandson of the colonial d
evangelist Jonathan Edwards.
Evans' Command braced and La
It was going to be another scorcher. another day of "
oppressive heat, sun and dust. That was obvious even
before daybreak to the Confederate soldiers of Evans’
Command, men of Louisiana and South Carolina, stand-
ing guard at Stone Bridge where the Warrenton Turn- aan
pike crossed Bull Run. 5
g~.
t, I
uu
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 295, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 19, 1961, newspaper, July 19, 1961; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491704/m1/4/: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.