The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 193, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1963 Page: 4 of 26
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Moment of Meditation
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Political News Notebook
Goldwater Gets Jump on Foes
Worried by Those Empty Seats
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THE DOCTOR SAYS
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You Are as Old as Arteries
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
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and silly u they do it. It would be a big step in the
right direction.
Or we might pass a law that every driver and
passenger must sit la an individual bucket seat. That
might just do it!
magazines, radio and television, and other
media.
A spokesman tells the story: “This is
You are as old as your arteries, according to an
old saying. Although everyone’s arteries become grad-
ually more brittle with age, more than just time is
involved.
The body can function well in spite of a surprising
amount of arterial hardening, but the infiltration of
fat Into the arterial walls carries with it another
serious bazarJ s celadon in other words, the more
fat that is deposited m these trails the narrower the
space for the passage of blood becomes. Since this
Q—Which was the first southern
state to be readmitted to the
union1
A—Tennessee, also the last to
secede.
Lets concede that romance is wonderful.
It is obviously popular, is undoubtedly here to stay,
and nobody in his right mind is going to knock it.
But lovers. PLEASE—not behind the wheel of a
moving car ia today s traffic. There just has to be a
better and safer—place to neck and nuzzle!
Yet there to increasing evidence that the driver’s
sent to replacing the davenport. the park bench and
even the movie balcony as a favorite sparking spot
No one has any figures so far to show how many
accidents have been caused because a driver was
smooching instead of steering and wooing instead of
watching. But you don’t have to be a safety expert to
know that high horsepower love can be lethal.
Let’s forget any bed taste involved and consider
the problem from the standpoint of safety alone.
Surely no one can seriously believe that a young
lover—or even an older one can keep his mind on
traffic when he has at least one arm around a cud-
dling cutie and to driving cheek to cheek.
Q— What kind of blood does a
crab have?
' A—A very pale bluish blood in
common with all the crustaceans
and most mollusks.
tangible evidence of our continuing faith in
’ —-F From
WASHINGTON (AP)—"If we must disagree," said
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, as if cheering up
a debating society with a fairy tale, "let's disagree
without being disagreeable"
This was his message to California Democrats al-
ready fussing among themselves a year before Presi-
dent Kennedy runs for re-election. Southern Democrats
didn't get the message. Republicans won't, either.
The Southerners are so mad at Kennedy for his
civil rights efforts that Mississippi gubernatorial candi-
dates ran last week as anti*Kennedy men and Sen.
Richard B. Russell of Georgia said: "I'm a Democrat
but I have no intention of getting out and knocking
myself out to support the Kennedy administration
next year.” ‘
Russell not only has voted against the President on
a good part of his domestic legislative proposals but
will lead the expected SouthertTfiiibuster against Ken-
nedy’s civil rights bill.
Kennedy was caught in a political revolving door
on this one. $
He had to be pushed into offering the bill—by direct
action of Negroes North and South—and while it will -
cost him heavily among white Southerners it would
have cost him among Northern Negroes if he hadn’t
But the Southerners will have trouble deciding
which way to turn if New York’s Gov. Nelson A
Rockefeller is the Republicans' 1964 choice to oppose
Kennedy.
Rockefeller, whose state has a large Negro popula-
tion. to plugging for civil rights legislatiog, too. He al-
ready is taking swipes at the one man who seems to
have the edge on him at this moment. Sen. Barry Gold-
water, R-Ariz.
Goldwater, idol of the conservative and far right
Republicans, was recently admonished by Rockefeller,
who can hardly be disturbed by the thought, that if he
doesn't watch out he'll become a captive of the
radical right
The New Yorker accused the Arizonan of writing
off the Negro vote before the 1964 campaign begins
Goldwater, who has made some strong statements
The World Today
California Demos Already Fussing
By JAMES MARLOW
"Just Leave the Loot—We're Above It All!"
Television, like radio before it but to a
far greater degree, has brought about major
changes in the advertising picture. It has
been an aggressive competitor with the other
media, and its appetite for the advertising
dollar, with the cost of producing even
Grade B programs running to comparatively
astronomical sums, seems insatiable.
But the power of the written word still
gets top recognition.
An announcement from Sears, Roebuck
and Company will interest those who like to
read as well as to stare. It expects to spend
more than $60 million for newspaper ad-
vertising this year. Last year the figure was
$58 million, which represented 71.2 per cent
of Sears' total retail media expense. The
balance went to advertising through circulars.
5380956884228/5- wRF=
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HC cOME FRoM Hie ENEMIF®.
arhhsssk2F. He MES
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The problem facing the international air-
lines can be simply stated — too many empty
Sicenum82 I - — — —
THE ORANGE LEADER
mom oom Dep are Sumi muiku
vote and accused Rockefeller of encouraging political
cannibalism.
He said Rockefeller was trying to get Republicans
to eat Republicans and complained the governor was
using the "guilt by association" technique in identify-
ing him with the "radical right."
And at this very moment some of the Republican
leaders in Congress have been cautious not only about
the civil rights bill but about the limited nuclear test-
ban treaty Kennedy recently got from Khrushchev.
While they hemmed and hawed, a Negro leader-
Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National As-
sociation for the Advancement at Colored People—tried
to build a fire under them with a little warning-
"I am inclined to agree that the Republicans want
the Negro to be free, but free somewhere over yonder.
"If they are worrying about getting Negro support.
Instead of carrying on a negative campaign on the
civil Aights bill they should adopt a positive policy and
out-Kennedy the Kenned ya ”
While white Southerners would be confused if they
had to choose between Kennedy and Rockefeller, North-
ern Negroes will be confused if Kennedy should now go
less than all-out for his civil rights bill and they have
to choose in 1964 between him and a highly conserva-
tive Republican.
Yet, if Kennedy loses Southern white votes over
civil rights, his nuclear test ban treaty will get him
votes elsewhere, which is something the Republicans
in Congress can hardly be unaware of in deciding how
to vote on the treaty.
Things ought to be getting more disagreeable right
along now.
—----
Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
Stack Doesn't Want
Another Series on TV
By HAL BOYLE
BI
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th
522pn
»iry.
Want to live dangerously, financially speak-
tag? If ao. go looking for an oil well'
Some little time ago the president of the
Independent Petroleum Association of
America presented compelling evidence be-
fore the House Committee on Ways and
Means. Here a the substance of one section
of it:
On the average, there is only one chance
in nine of finding any oil or gas, at a cost
of about $90,000 for each exploratory venture.
And even when some oil or gas is discovered
it is more apt than not to be unprofitable:
The odds against finding a profitable small
field are 50 to one — and against finding a
large field, the kind people dream about,
they are 1,000 to one'
This tremendous risk element is of very
real importance now, in the light of certain
THE BUSINESS MIRROR---
Old Family Fuss
Echoing Loudly
B. --- DAWSON
carried has increased year after year and
the volume has considerably exceeded that
of Economy and First Class.
The service to Hawaii, according to plan,
will go into effect next Nov 1 on a daily
basis. But the traveler who is interested in
visiting Europe isn’t advised to wait to save
his $103. pleasant as that would be. inasmuch
as an international route is involved, the new
fare must be approved by the International
Air Transportation Association, to which all
the governments involved belong.
There will be dissension, beyond doubt.
It is to be hoped our own government throws
its influence behind the plan.
As the Seattle Times says, “Pan Ameri-
can should be allowed to demonstrate to
the world it serves that private enterprise
can set the pace for a lowering of inter-
national air fares."
Q—Who was the first printer in
British North America?
A—Stephen Day (or Daye). In
1640 he printed the "Bay Psalm
Book."
Q—What type at cheese is Tan-
zenberger?
A—A Limburger - type cheese
front Carinthia. South Austria.
farrhe inoduction of over-ocean Thrift
Class service to Europe and Hawaii marks
the extension of a service on which Pan
Am has operated for seven years on routes
to Puerto Rico. And this run has justified
Pan Am's belief — the number of passengers
in
a*
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is
« SO THEY SAY
We have already limited the
presidency to two terms, and.it
strikes me that what is good for
the president might very well be
good for Congress —Dwight D.
Eisenhower, recommending that
senators be limited to two terms
and representatives to four.
Television advertising is a catch-as-catch-
can affair — you have to be looking at th»
set at the moment and it’s gone in an in-
stant. Print is durable and the prospective
buyer can scan and consider it at his leisure.
all the GOP regulars. He is on the move, calling on
national and state committeemen to line up responsible
leaders.
White is a New York political science teacher and
public relations man who has dabbled in politics since
1948 as a Dewey, Eenhower and Nixon backer. He
played a leading role in blocking Rockefeller's presi-
dential ambitions in 1960 He wouldn't be averse to
doing it again in 1964. •
Some GOP state committees have a rule that their
chairman must be a neutral, not backing any one
candidate for political office before the primary or
state convention.
In other states this to a ruling of the state executive
committee, a custom that has been followed for years,
or a personal preference of the state chairman himself.
In all such states, O Donnell, White and their co-
workers are forced to look elsewhere for Goldwater
state and local chairmen and committeemen. But they
are recruiting from the ranks of responsible Republican
citizens aho have the Goldwater conviction of conserva-
tism—not the crackpot extremists.
There is no assurance that Goldwater will allow his
name to be entered as a candidate for the Republican
presidential nomination in the New Hampshire primary
next spring.
If he doesn’t allow it, a group of his supporters may
try to present his name anyway.
The Importance of all this effort is that the Gold-
water backers have obtained a big jump on
supporters of Rockefeller and the other GOP
a-c-Nin.
PO SS I OH 11 it 5•
Rockefeller, speaking before a few hundred rich
Californians at Bohemian Grove, will make ano appeal
whatever to the rank and file Republicans he needs
to win.
The Republican Citizens Committee, meeting at
Hershey, Pa. even under President Eisenhower's
sponsorship. Is just as far removed from the great
mass of voters.
the potency of newspaper advertising,
the day Sears opened its first retail
the company has made greater and greater
use of newspapers. It is obvious that Sears
store managers continue to regard the news-
paper as their major medium for more than
historical reasons. Their evaluation is based
on the day-to-day results in their stores.”
1
mil
a
NEW YORK (AP) - That old
family argument over when's the
time to stop paying repair bills
on the old car and start making
monthly payments on a new one
is echoed today in offices of cor-
porations that have their own
fleet of trucks.
An estimated 7.3 million trucks
are now operated by manufac-
turers, wholesalers and retailers,
most owned outright but many
leased. ,
Northwestern University’s
transportation center says 18,000
companies have fleets of 10 or
more trucks.
Industry sources say the aver-
age age of commercial and indus-
trial trucks that are company
owned is now 6.8 years, com-
pared with 4.8 years in 1941.
Truck makers contend that
some of the age increase is due
to sturdier qualities of the new
models.
Truck leasing companies argue
that much of the stretch-out in
usage is due to the increased
number of companies now own-
ing their own fleets and to a yea
(just like that of a family budg-
et manipulator) to get a few more
miles out of the old vehicles.
Both makers and leasers of
trucks (common carriers as well)
stress savings they see if obsolete
equipment is ditched.
James W. Millard, manager of
General Motors' transportation
productivity research department,
estimates industry might shav
its material handling costs by.*1*
billion annually. If it modernized
its transportation and material
handling equipment.
He says that GM research
teams have yet to complete a
study of individual truck fleets
without finding a savings poten-
If he can, he just ain't much of a invert
if he can’t, he ought to get out of the driver's seat.
What to do about the problem ?
Legislation? Let's face it, you can't outlaw love.
You would have to put a traffic officer in every car
and keep him there as a chaperone For unlike alcohol,
romance doesn’t show up on the breath in a balloon
test or in a traffic spot-check.
Seatbelts? Do you think these lovebirds would use
'em—unless someone invents one that will buckle the
lovers cozily together?
Public opinion and education? Probably the best
hope. If only a fraction of these immature exhibitionists
could be persuaded that they are inviting death and
seats.
The solution proposed by Pan American
World Airwaysis an eminently reasonable
one _ lower fares. It wants to establish a
new Thrift Class service which could send the
happy traveler from New York to London
for $160. This is a whopping 39 per cent, or
$103, for the going charge. A similar service
would be provided between California's gate-
wavs and Hawaii at a one-way fare of 8100
as compared with the_present Economy Class
NEW YORK (AP) - People
told Robert Suck. “Pretty easy
work, isn't it? All that money for
just making faces at the cam-
era.”
“But Stack. after a four-year
grind during which he appeared
as agent Eliot Ness in IM epi-
sodes of "The Untouchables,"
savs be wouldn't want another
television series now for all the
prestige or money in the world.
"I'm a pretty fair athlete.”
seid the actor, who stands an
inch above six feet and at 44 is
stil as trim as a boxer, “but
there to a physical limitation to
how long you can go on Frankly.
I couldn't have gone on for an-
other year.
"It's a never-ending deterio-
rating kind of work. You finish
a show Tuesday, then start a new
one on Wednesday.
“You develop a deep, deep fa-
tigue. You have no residual
strength to to the simplest
things.”
Stack finally turned in his re-
volver after he felt his eyesight
was beginning to fade, and a
hemorrhage of a vocal cord left
him unable to talk for two
months.
“I sold my interestin the se-
ries." he said. “I don't want to
keep books on something unfin-
ished."
recommendations made in the administra-
tion's tax proposals. One would impose an
additional tax of $280 million a year on U.S.
oil and gas producers. That is equivalent to
the funds needed to drill about 5,000 walls.
And such a reduction in the number of wells
drilled each year, based on the average ex-
perience of the industry since World War
* II, would mean a loss of 350 million barrels
of oil reserves and 1.5 trillion cubic feet of
gas reserves. Moreover, such a drastic change
in tax policy could have a cumulative effect,
resulting in far greater reductions in drilling
and losses in reserves.
More rather than less exploration and
development is essential to meet increasing
requirement in the years ahead. The pro-
posal amounts to a tax wolf parading in
sheep's clothing.
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tial greater than 20 per cent and
are convinced that 10 per cent
would be the minimum saving. -}
Armund J. Schoen, chairman of’
the American Automotive Leasing
Association, says the number of
leased tracks has increased from
240,000 in 1958 to 400,000 today.
He credits the drive by corpo-
rate financial officers to cut costs
in all operations. But he adds that
they face a new cost, that of
obsolescence.
Shoen’s own company, Wheels
Inc., reports its study of 2,347
companies operating 47.841 trucks ‛
shows that gasoline driven ve
hides 5 years old or older had
operating and maintenance costs
that averaged 3.1 tents a mile
more than for younger trucks.
For diesel units the excess op-
erating cost of the older over the
younger trucks averaged 1.7 cents
a mile when driven between 200.-
000 and 300,000 miles and 2.6
cents a mile when driven longer
distances.
The leasing company president
figures this out to a loss of
$31,000 a year per million miles
for gas units and $26,000 for
diesel fleets.
The ORANGE Leader
TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1963
EDITORIAL PAGE
• *-3*-
"THgreWFEE2E
wWHvmemNAKA.5
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WASHINGTON (NEA)—The National Draft Gold-
water tar President headquarters in Washington will
announce the names of its first state chairmen and
state orgainizing committee members within the next
few weeks.
All will be regular Republicans with experience and
recognized standing in the GOP.
The political importance of this strategy can hardly
be overestimated. It will refute the contention of
New York's Gov NtNonRockefeller and others that
the Goldwater drive B-che work of right-wing
extremists on the lunatic fringe.
There is no disputing that most of the enthusiasm
for Goldwater now comes from grass roots supporters
and political amateurs. There have been local Gold-
water for President clubs in many communities for
two years and more, but they have been unrelated,
unofficial and outside the Republican party.
The second big job of the National Draft Goldwater
Committee—to be done concurrently with setting up
state, county and city organizations—will be to co-
ordinate these independent local clubs with the regu-
lar party.
Many of these local clubs have been circulating
their own petitions urging nomination of Goldwater as
the candidate in 1964 Draft Goldwater headquarters
also has petitions out, and it asks all signers for a
dollar as their contribution to the cause.
There are around 100,000 signatures on these pe-
titions now. The Men to to bring them all together.
There to a blank state chart to Draft Goldwater
headquarters now, waiting for insertion of the first
state totals. The hope is to run the total number of
signatures into the millions.
Peter O'Donnell Jr., national chairman of the Draft
Goldwater Committee and F. Clifton White, its execu-
tive director, head up the job of building this
organization.
O’Donnell, well-to-do young Dallas businessman and
Republican state chairman in Texas since 1956. knows
But Bob retains a fooling of
warm appreciation for his role as
Eliot Ness, the name he is still
best known by to millions.
"The fun of a successful tele-
vision series is that the set be
comes a little world of your own,"
he observed.
"la a way ou have more free-
dom than in motion pictures. You
don't have to check with a bank
to see if a certain actor is ac-
ceptable for a part. You can pick
completely unknown actors as
leads, and give them a chance to
show what they can do."
Stack recently completed his
29th film. "The Caretakers,"
which costars Polly Bergen and
Joan Crawford. This winter he
will make in Europe "Cross of
Iron." based on a German war
novel.
A local boy who made good.
Bob has known Hollywood nota-
bles on a first-name basis since
his youth, when he first won re-
nown as a national champion
skeet shot Later he served as a
gunnery instructor for the Navy
during World War II.
"Will Rogers was my father's
best friend,” he recalled, "and
Mack Sennett bounced me on his
knee as a kid. Growing up,
through my skeet shooting. I got
to know Gary Cooper and Clark
Gable well."
True Life Adventures]
FINAL ,
FUGHT ■. C-
' Romance Popular... Here To Stay
off of the Weed supply to vital tissues.
When this occurs in the brain the results are similar
to those of the so-called little strokes due to small hem-
orrhages A person who has always been nest becomes
careless of his appearance. A person whose behavior has
been restrained and proper may become profane, ob-
scene or subject to violent outbursts.
When the blood supply to the heart muscle is cut
off, the victim suffers a heart attack Whether this is
mild or severe depends on whether the occlusion was
gradual or sudden and on the extent at the area sup-
plied by the occluded vessel. Over half of all deaths
in the United States are now due to disease* of the
heart and blood vessels.
We doctors recognize other factors which produce
arterial hardening:
One to overweight There to a natural tendency in
persons over 43 to become physically less active. Since
few of them cut down on their food intake they begin
to put on weight especially if the years have made
them prosperous. All persons over 45 years «* Age
should make an all-out effort to keep their weight well
within normal limits.
Increasing blood pressure goes along with heightened
nervous tension the drive to get ahead and failure to
get enough restful sleep In its later stages high Wood
pressure may become a serious disease in itself and
require special treatment. It can produce hardening at
the arteries.
Excessive cigarette smoking can cause hardening of
the arteries by abnormally onstricting these vessels
Atoo. heredity appesrsto play a part -I you come
from a family in which hardening d the arteries oc-
curred in several members at aa early age don't be
You cant control your heredity but you
the other factora, to add uselul aad •
years to your life.
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 193, Ed. 1 Tuesday, August 13, 1963, newspaper, August 13, 1963; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530968/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.