Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 67, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1961 Page: 4 of 20
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" Economic Independence Has Yet To Arrive in The Congo
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Editorials
and 21 per cent of the girls were
opposed to spanking, mostly for
E.35398 ■ 3l
PERCENTAGES
United Nations figures show the rod on their own children.
Further, at this time when Red
litical situation. As a nation, the
Norwegian, Nei,
Whites, mostly Belgians, have
Nome—No ma’am."
tar."
Do you find it hard to under-
The Vital Link
was
Yesteryear
’Sewuz—He lack to scwuz her
a world communist state.
And
is no reason, because na-
also was favored by 47 per cent
beet alternative to spanking. Eigh-
"Umbrellie—What a true hill-
us-
ing during arain shar."
For the millions of Americans
"Varrus- Virus, Aint Mary had
ror. Most of them recall the ex- profess to despise romanticism.
periences only with some degree
There's the ABC of mountain of displeasure. Sheila Abrams, 16.
in thinking that if there were a
Texans in D.C
Congressional Races Stir Interest
lis.
from a country famous for its
strength of the Republican party
Selection of a successor to Rep.
in that long-time
sukiru said. In the first six
Excerpt from a newsletter of
Currently, the spotlight is on the
Nov. 4 San Antonio contest to
choose a successor to former also is stirring interest.
Congo economy. Almost all busi-
Jessup a recess appointment to the establishments, are in the hands
On a Washington visit a few
United Nations.
of Belgians and other non-Congo-
'Lone—His wife sayze if he
weeks ago, Goode drove to Gettys- Pampa came to Congress. He had
i
/
But it is my belief that they
are th? great romantics of history
JUSTIN STORE
BURGLARIZED
MOSQUITOES
PLAGUE CITY
You can walk into that trap
now by dreaming of enmity be-
tween Russia and Red China over
little Albania which, besides Yu-
goslavia. is the only Communist
ian. No; German, Nein; Swedish.
Nej: Czech Ne; Polish. Nic; Hm-
Nations, during which the Rus-
sian representatives have made
n vet the most widely understood
word in the Russian language.
About 53,000 members of the $5.44 million compared with 819
United Mine Workers remained million in the same period of 1960.
based on pride of race and not on
aspirations for social equality.
STATION ADDS
PASTURE LAND
By EUGENE GILBERT
Gilbert Youth Research Inc.
much less than a majority, but
more votes than any one of a
large field of Democrats. Guill
The assumption is that Ikard
won't resign until after Nov 14
when the new Texas election eta-
cent of the girls said they intend
to spank their own children
Among those who disagreed with
this theory, 53 per cent said they
Where there is nationalism--
with all that it involves in the
way of trade, development. ex*
blockaded because of the feud be-
tween the Gizenga government in
Stanlyville and the central gov-
ernment, is again in operation.
'Walled-Wild, thet girl of hern
was too walled for mah boy.
teen per cent suggested punish-
ment in some other form, and
15 per cent said it would be better
ville and on by rail to Matadi.
Agriculture is lagging far behind.
Marcel Bisukiru, minister of
foreign trade and a leftwing Lu-
mumba follower, has described
the trade situation as tragic. He
reported in a recent survey that
the Congo in the first six months
were 4,000 Europeans in Stanley-
I ville.
term for anyone who doesn’t quite
get the message.
is believed the mosquitoes are
more numberous this year be-
cause of the long drought.
President Warren G. Harding,
speaking in Birmingham, Ala.,
was still in the fold, the Congo
exported 400,000 tons of mineral
products. The figure for 1961, aft-
er the political and military ex-
travaganza that followed inde-
pendence. is 2,500 tons.
United Nations economists are
Rep. Paul Kilday, now a Judge
on the U. S. Court of Military
Appeals.
Hal Boyle
Ozark Talk
Force.”
“Grain—A color, she was grain
with envy.”
“Hep—He can't hep it, he was
homed attaway.”
"Int—int she a purdy lil ol‛
to death."
"Slang—It's easy to get your
nack in a slang."
"Thanks—He thanks he's so
smart ”
World Today
A Dream World?
employes is being formed. *
POLITICAL HATE
burg with Sen. John Tower and
talked with Eisenhower
The GOP hope is that the Eisen
hills."
"Wove—He wove at a girl and
lack to got in trouble.”
By TEX EASLEY
The Associated Press
Texas congressional races have
begun to attract unusual atten-
19
a
1a
OCT. N, INI
The Bond Grocery Store at Jus-
tin was burglarized and the
What has heppeaed to life to the Congo amid the chaos
that came in the wake of independence won 16 months agof
This revealtag dispatch, last in a serise of three on the
Congo today, tolls what has happened to the economy and
the people.
The Land Of Chaos
Crawfordsville, Ind., remembers Russian area for its enormous
a spanking she got when she was population.
four years old and decided to sit It is then that serious, and per-
BORROWED MONEY
The central government contin-
ues to live on borrowed money.
Its deficit runs about $16 million
monthly. A good deal of this mon-
ey goes to pay salaries to gov-
ernment employes, including the
army. The Congolese have waited
a long time to reach the white
man's standards of living and
(
I ()C6
41
come.
There are some signs of im-
provement. but everythnig in the
ers. Democrat, in the next gener-
al election.
v‛
(Deet tamt ward in the language ing impetus to the economy. Stan-
puzzle you? Put your question to leyville, once down to a few score
"Langunges in the News" in euro of whites, now has approximately
this newspaperJ Nw 1,000. Before independence there
mentioning that one of the federal
plants to convert salt and brack-
ish water Into fresh water soon
would be under construction at
Roswell. N. M.:
"The first such plant we author-
ised earned its spurs after hurri-
cane Carla by supplying the bat-
tered city of Freeport, with fresh
water when wells were contami
nated.”
799,
a
cepting Katanga) in 1959 were
about 11 per cent of the total na-
tional income. In 1961, the first
hower appearance will provide the then was defeated by Walter Rog-
growing margin needed. ‛T
•/.
cause you don't, your wishful
No Communist country yet has
shown any desire to lose or
merge its national identity in
anything which might be called
victory such as occurred in 1960
when Republican Ben Guill of
i
nt
"Whenever my mother loses her Communist world it would be a
temper, everyone is terrified." quiet one.
_L N‛YET‛
gemeeh,,, - -
_-LL AAA'
Coffee exports during the first
six months this year brought in
Teachers from all over Texas this week have
been finding out in Denton all about the hordes of
new items to make teaching—and learning—both
easier and more rewarding.
The workshops going on at NTSU on new teach-
ing equipment and methods again point up the vast
changes taking place in education.
Most of us when we visit schools these days are
amazed at the new techniques and equipment avail-
able even in the small classrooms. Where once the
biology classroom equipment consisted of a few
well worn charts, a blackboard and maybe two mi-
croscopes, you'll likely find today a laboratory more
like what you would expect in a pharmaceutical
house. Changes of the same magnitude are often
seen in other high school departments, whether it’s
speech, industrial arts or foreign languages.
But no matter how much is added or invented in
the years to come, the classroom teacher still will
remain the central link between the student and
his realm of knowledge.
So we hope teachers never reach the point where
they forget that No matter how much equipment
he or she may have, the teacher must still be the
teacher. Equipment must never be allowed to over-
shadow the human
• .«2
President Truman gave Philip C. mm concerns. except for smaller ute there, stranger."
‘Kin-seedaybreak."
tionalism has such deep roots, to
, . ____- think that it will disappear in the
of the total survey group as the foreseeable future
who would like to travel through the varrus and lak to passed on.”
the Southern Highlands and un- — -- - -----
River traffic on the Congo, once derstand what is said to them.
Everybody’s Confused
We had been feeling pretty sorry for ourself the
last few weeks in trying to analyze even on the
surface some of the activities of the Kennedy ad-
ministration.
The more we looked, the more confused we got.
The more we heard, the more confused we got.
Shrugging this off as a professional malady, we
just gave up.
But now things are looking bettr.
Former President Eisenhower says he's mixed up
about the goings-on in Washington.
Eisenhower is confused about Kennedy’s financial
policy: "One day the nation is told the federal bud-
get is balanced, and the next that it will produce a
$6-7 billion deficit.”
Eisenhower is confused about the purpose and
need for the Peace Corps: "They (peace corpsmen)
don’t even know what an underdeveloped country
is ... if you want to send a man to the moon, send
a Peace Corps member up there. It is an underde-
veloped country."
Although he didn’t say so, Eisenhower must
surely be confused abou‛ much of our foreign policy
declarations, each seemingly calculated to confuse
both those with whom we are allegedly dealing and
those of us back home who are paying the bills.
Eisenhower also must be confused when he thinks
back just a few months to the presidential campaign
when he was accused of heading a do-nothing ad-
ministration.
But, on second thought, maybe the do-nothing tag
couldn’t honestly be placed on the Kennedy Ad-
ministration thus far. For the present administra-
tion has been very, very busy—spreading confus-
ion.
months of 1960, when Katanga flar do you put in your biscuits? stronghold.
— . -m--m Her boy was a flar in the Air r —
Denton Record.Chronicle
Telephone 382-2551
Entered as second class mail at the post office al 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
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - the Associated Press is en-
titled exclusively to the use for publication of all local news printed
in this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches.
BASK SUBSCRIPTION RATU
Single Copies. Evening 5 cents, Sunday 15 cents.
Home Delivery on same day of publication by city carrier or by motor
route 40 cents per week.
It is a city where a few Con-
golese skim past in shining lim-
ousines and thousands are with-'
out jobs. As in so many other re-'
cently freed African colonies, a
new affluent class of government
By JAMES MARLOW Stalin threw Yugoslavia out of
Associated Press News Analyst the Communist bloc in 1948. After
Stalin's death Albania lined up
WASHINGTON (API- its easy with Red China in finding fault
to kid yourself about communism, with Premier Khrushchev's ideas
You don t like it and, just be- on communism and the cold war.
demonstrations. The 125 acres before independence
were purchased from Walker El-
By HAL BOYLE (don't mow the front lone she'll
.. .... whup him over the head with a
NEW YORK (AP )—“After Billy We rnn, ..
I WCI IVPC•
i Bob dumb the nar lath of the far "Mortar—He did it all right, but
tar. he was too lard to fix his flat they made a mortar out of him."
Leopoldville today is a city lese. The Congolese have difficul- pate in the business life of the
where the fragrance of tropical ty accumulating capital to partici-1 country,
spring flowers blends with odors
from a decaying sewage system.
By LYNN HEINZERLING , .
LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo;
(AP)—The Jacaranda and frangi-
pani trees are bursting into gor
geous blossom, but not much else
is blooming in the Congo.
I and Robert Strumpen-Darrie
I he Russian word tor "no"— . .
n\ei is familiar to all those who they want it all at once,
follow proceedings at the United What they are seeing instead “ , . . ,
a sharp increase in wealth and This may wind up hurting you Only per cent of the boys
P living standards for a few thou- . end ” per cent nf the cirle were
1 1 sand Congolese employed by the Y 8 people -------- -----
4 government and the same old me, but it appears the wood shed reasons similar to that
shacks and dirt roads for them- is here to stay. en Alter, 17. of Newton, Mass,
selves. Something of the same de- We questioned more than 1,000 "It only gives the kids fear. not
velopment is taking place in other teen-agers across the land and respect."
newly independent countries of discovered most of them were to The teen-agers were i
Africa such as Ghana. Guinea. Ni- favor of spanking as a means of vided, however, as to whether
geria and former French colonies, discipline, felt their behavior had teachers should be allowed to
Democratic Frank Ikard of Wichita Falls,
who is quitting Congress to be
on the railroad tracks. haps even fatal splits. in the
TuE MAJORITY M the teen -Communjnwoldhenemosnelka
agers (71 per cent of the boys ple word which the Communist
and 65 per cent of the girls’ see world denounces but ardently
no harm in spanking, and 69 practices: nationalism.
per cent of the boys and 72 per
duMani. Nahin; Portuguese. No; - • .
Hungarian. Nem; Dutch. Ncen; Congo depends on the tense po-
Turkhh.Nok. Greek. Oh-khee; old Belgian colony cannot survive
Japanese. rye; Hawaiian. Aole; unless Katanga with its immense
Hebrew. Lo; Arabic, La; Indo- copper profits comes back into
nesian. 'I idak; Chinese. Boo-shih; the old
I Lingula, Ie; Swahili. Hapana; . , - ..
Um. Bor. Korean. Anin, been pouring back coun-
try and they may succeed in giv-
tion because of the
OCT. 26. 1941
Supt. P. B. Dunkle today said
come executive vice president of Sen. Clinton Anderson, D-N.M.,
the American Petroleum Institute.
One economist Mid that while! The alternative to developing a
the Congo won political independ-Congolese class of business men
ence it was completely colonized could be nationalization. There
economically. has been considerable talk of this
Six commercial banks in the possibility particularly of certain
Congo finance Belgian commerce key industries. It seems a cer-
Nobody finances the industry and tainty if leftwing Lumumbists
commerce of the Congolese. I came to power.
s
Dale Freeman of the Springfield
(Mo.) News and Leader, has com-
piled a guide he calls “How to
talk pure Ozark in one easy les-
son."
As Dale is more interested in
spreading Ozark learning than
making a fast buck, here it a
quick digest of regional mountain
folk talk for those too cheap to
buy his dollar book:
“Absence—A franch drank. al-
coholic."
"Adam- -That adam bomb is go-
ing to blow us all to hail."
“Backer—What the oldtimers
taka a chaw on."
"Chew—Chew to go to the foot
washin' at the braintch Sattidy?"
“Dork—What it gits when the
sun goes down."
“Errol—Brother Rodgers has a ;
TV errol on top of his house." ,
"Flar—A rose is about the pur- ,
tiest flar they la. What kind of ,
2,22225
zttahh
said Negroes should have greater . . . ,
economic, political and education- The first cargoes of tin have
al opportunity but it should be moved down the river 10 Leopold-
-3
2-5,
Former President Dwight D. Ei- tute requiring a majority vote
senhower is scheduled to apeak in tor victory will be in effect. The
the district in behalf of Republican law will prevent a minority vote
John Goode.
of 1961 exported only 2,300 tons of
125 acres have been added to the cotton compared with 27,000 tons
Denton Experiment Station and during the same period of 1960—
will be used to expand pasture The drop in mineral exports
At the congress Khrushchev de-
... .. . . 1. nounced Albania. His exact pur.
thinking takes over when cracks. is not known. He may hav
show up in the communist wall. had a special reason for it. Or
You begin to have visions of fatal he may have used it as an excuse
splits and big collapses. to chastise Red China for its past
„ ..... differences with him.
I You can walk into that trap ,
I But Red China s Premier Chou
En-lai responded by rebuking
Khrushchev for his denunciation
of Albania. Then he flew back to
Peiping. The exact reason for this
is not known, either. There’s been
a lot of guessing.
concerned about another phase of thing?"
"Jist-Jist a dadgummed min-
Home delivery by mail (must be paid in advance) Denton and adjoining
counties $1.23 per month, $12 00 per year, elsewhere in the United
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NOTICE TO PUBLIC - Any erroneous reflection upon the character,
reputation or standing of any firm, individual or corporation will ___________
gladly be corrected upon being called to the publishers’ ttention. The thieves made off with 888 after
" omisr’onan‘ypographirommroz breaking open the -■
next issue offer If is brought to their attention. All adverising orders
are accepted on this basis only. \
X"""81 - "in
ONLY 18 per cent of the teen-
agers recall their childhood spank-
PAGE FOUR t :»
felt taking away privileges would there
be more effective. This method
idle today despite an appeal by
President Roosevelt that they go buried riches was a scandal, Bl-
back to work.
' . ,NN
N 2"
, W w
The reconciliation between
the Communist-supported Stanley-
ville regime of Antoine Gizenga —
and the Leopoldville government'
is hardly skin deep. The hearts
that harbor hopes of peace are
matched by others hardened by
tribal distrust and political hate
A slow deterioration is reported
from other provinces. In Stanley-!
ville, diplomatic reports My. wa-
ter and light facilities are faulty.
Garbage collection and street
cleaning have been practically
abandoned.
In Kivu and Equator provinces
the larger plantations are begin- j
ning to resume operations, but '
smaller ones are being slowly
throttled by jungle vegetation. In
Equator, it is reported, the seed
rice has been eaten and there
cannot be another harvest until
1963.
M5,d,
4=d4
conflicts.
TThis has been the history
There's a lot of walled life in the ings (administered mostly between of mankind. Communists pride
the ages of 10 and 12) with tar -themselves on their realism and
1 wlS
1 ‘ 4R8
l 10 4
Iv *".3
"t"‛
- .
Do you find it hard to under- ‘ Ormy—Junie is a soldier boy
stand that sentence? If you do, in the ormy."
you probably haven't been to the "Pank—The color of the old
Ozark Mountains recently, and lady • bloomers."
"Rang—When they got married.
it’s time you went there and re- - -
freshed your know ledge of the he put a rang on her finger, it
in Leopoldville, hotels are queen’s English—the English of • double-rang sirmonie."
crammed and some are forcing the first Elizabeth with crown. ---F 1h “
rons to double UP intheir But the meaning is clear even
“ Many oftheol d,V! to most Midwest flatland hill-
-partments have been taken over!.....
by newly rich Congolese. Belgians D ....
hesitate before moving into sub- "After William Robert climbed
urban homes too far from police the narrow ladder of the fire tow- upe wam a uue ,
nc „ 1021 protection. Villas outside Leopold- er, he was too tired to repair his billy wouldn’t be caught dead
i ville have been subjected to re- flat tire." • ing during arain shar"
A great number of mosquitoes peated burglaries.
is plaguing Denton residents. It
r - CARGOES
• ‛S& U I
RI
{L,8aug
zG g =
■ 2 “3 s • 3- ■—
Here is how to say "no" in 24
languages. (Note how many cun- full year of independence, these
lain the initial letter "n") wages will represent at least 31
French, Non; Spanish, No; Itul- per cent of the total national in-
<: ■ 9
35
V ASana
828/
talk. If you can't understand it of Philadelphia, was an exception
you’re plain "igernt," an Ozark Said she:
M-LANGUAGES
(S in the NEWS
By Charles F Berlitz
-8 ‘
o, A,
}. YY
*892881 W
wgApN
R RkN
NN
¥ T- E , f........ 1 M
' "guph.ga02a0
sbo-e
E468oanFMEd
country in Europe not under Rus-
E-- sian control and leadership ,, ...... , .
= .. , lH.t It s possible he had a further,
- Eighty-three Communist parties more private, quarrel with
around the world last week sent shchev. It‛s possible he went
" representatives to the Soviet Com-; back home for consultation with
munist party's 22nd congress in other Red Chinese leaders on
Moscow, but not Yugoslavia orwhat 10 J? and will return to
Albania Moscow before the congress ends.
-------------------------------------1 Perhaps, because so little is
- _ _ _ known of what happens within
SW 7| l %7 1 E_ T | Al • 1 _ the inner circles of the world
w hat Y outh l hins nm
between Moscow and Peiping.
g But, until more evidence is
Simnkine, Seems Here I o Stay available, it is romantic to think
" ~. - so—at this time
I was wrong, and it also helped school." reasoned Helen Loehr, I From its start with die Bolshe-
me remember to be good." ] 17, of New York. vik revolution communism has
ALL EXCEPT 13 per cent orgrown increasingly stronger and
-W - thosewhohadbeenaspanked.landuive stage. " is still "largely «•
of Steph-, percent 0 them had been) pied with internal growth
"-M.felt they deserved it, and they _ . .] * "
" were about equally divided be- This, hasn ’ stopped Red China
nt tween boys and girls and Russia-particularly Russia
,। "I mus have deserved it or x-from expansionist ambitions,
sharply di- wouldn't have gotten it," said Mar- But. Russia had a bi head start
‘ -hh callene Ann Wilmoth. 16. of Bel-on.the others in building itself up
. . ,0 lington. w Va. Others, like Susan' internauy,
improved as a result of being spank unruly students. Eighty per Gitner, 18, of Mattapan Mass.. The Red Chinese, at this time
spanked and didn't intend to spare cent of the girls were against it; had similar respect for their par- when they are drowned in prob-
----- ------- „ tis --2 - hl -- -h--. 76 per cent of the boys in favor ents‛ judgment "My parents nev- lems of feeding their people while
that wages for Africans employed ierie, 17. of it. ' er spanked on false charges," said trying to, industrialize in a hurry,
by the central government and SPEAKING from experience, 17 "They take the place of par-susan need help. And Russia is the
provincial administrations (ex- year-old Margaret Gray of Port-ents," argued Bill Sitko, 14. of Sixty-four per cent of the boys closest and biggest Communist
land. Ind., gave a typical remark: Glassport, Pa. "it tends to make and 57 per cent of the girls said helper.
"I know it helped me to realize a child more rebellious and anti- their behavior had improved as a Further, at this time when Red
----------—------—--------------------------------------- result of the spankings, which China lacks nuclear weapons but
were administered for a wide va- when its expansionist aims in
riety of reasons Southeast Asia may bring it into
Judy Johnson, 15, of Bellefonte, conflict with the West, it needs
Pa., was spanked for being sas- Soviet military backing.
sy; Gloria Jean Fador, 15, of Bel- In time, when Red China has
lington. W. Va.. got a licking when solved its military and domestic
she knocked over the china closet; I problems, it will not need Russia
and Nancy Ann Myers, 17. of In fact, it may want some of the
7
1,Weh
.1Hme
THE DENTON RECORD^URONICLE t t s EDITORIALS AND FEATURES t : t THURSDAY,'OCTOBER 26,19d
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 67, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1961, newspaper, October 26, 1961; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491789/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.