The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 47, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 1, 1958 Page: 2 of 6
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Tuesday, April 1, 195*
~ i
o Apartment
Iding De Luxe
st Waseda
University and president of the
By AKT SAKAI I New Design—
( ...e«l Press Stall Correspondent Dr. Takeo Sato, former profes-
T0M\'0 tt'Pi - One of the f'v °t architecture
most modern apartment h»uldings1J an Architec, Academy,
In the world is rising vuthm s ent dpsi d the buildlnK, ,md.ed
of the ancient Imperial Palace io(js rtment buildinKS aU over
Krounds. Its builders claim it will 1)io fnr VMra M<yn makinB
f»e the most de luxe in the world.
It will cost SS,300.000.
The combination
building and apartment hotel, to
be known as the Sanno Kokusai
BETTER SCHOOLS - - AND YOU
-by HENRY TOY. |r„ FimUmI .
National Cl'lMM Canactl *•» ••n*i IMl
WE NEED MUSICIANS AND DIPLOMATS ALSO
According to the department of Lehor, there are 30,000 ways of
making a living in the United States No one on earth could deviaa a
tingle course of ttudy that would be the proper preparation for
each one of those vocation*.
HOLLYWOOD
FILM SHOP
the world for years before making
the plans.
The result was a new apartment 1
,T!.T ", building design, a structure hsv-1
ing six tections with 24 sides to
that every room of the apart-
Haikan. will be a 12-story wo me>nt-s 411 unltl, wdi bave plenty!
stories underground i ferroron-
crete building with a total floor
space ‘of 468.000 square feet.
Construetion work began last
October at a site near the Diet
building and the Imperial I modern gas
grounds. It is scheduled to be
completed in April, 1959.
Building consultant P,obert Ya-
manaka, a S.in Francisco Nisei,
of sunnshine and natural light.
The building will be earthquake
and fire-proof, will have complete
air conditioning, running hot and
roW water, individual telephones, j
•nd electric appli->
ances and the most advanced san-1
itation facilities.
Apartments start at the third
floor. There will he 15 types of
gnw^malmg^Tokvo'thelr JaP‘lne*e and »«tern llyle apar,‘
semi permanent residence and to
well-to-do Japanese.
The building is financed by
Japan s four largest "Zatbntsu,7
(financial combine) — Mitsubishi,
Mitsui, Sumitomo and Furukura.
rtOORAM LOO
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ments, ranging from three rooms
a total floor space of 360!
square feet, to de luxe suites of
seven rooms, including three bed-
rooms, totaling a floor space of'
‘ 1,210 square feet.
I Each of the six sections of the ;
building is serviced by separate
! elevators.
I Barking Space—
I Half of the apartment units are
for rent, ranging from 1100 a
| month for the three-room unit to
1 $350 for the seven-room suites.
I The other half are for outright
purchase. Purchase prices range
roughly from $10 000 for the small-
er units to about $34,000 for the
sui'ec.
And yet, even in the face of
that statistic, there are those
who today
are trying to
do something
very like thaL
State and na-
tional spokes-
men. as well
as communi-
ty leaders, are
advancing crash programs to
deal with our shortage of scien-
tists and engineers. “Let every
high school student study math
and science for four years,” they
are shouting and they have sug-
gestions for binding laws and
regulations to push through
these ideas.
Fortunately for America, there
are other spokesmen They admit
the technological lead of Russia
but their view is a longer one. In
the race to the moon, they're say-
ing, let's not forget the things
that made us free. Some of these
voices bear repeating:
Defense Secretary McEtroy,
who knows where we are in the
technological race with Russia.
says*this: "Out country will be
as great and as strong as the
minds and will of the people w ho
live in it, who operate ,its busi-
nesses and its improvements,
and whose standard of living is
keyed to the kind of education
U*ey receive."
Detlev Bronk, president. Na-
tional Academy of Sciences, ap-
pearing before the Senate hear-
ing committee in January, said
this: "There is far greater need
for an educated people here than
By RON BURTON
j United Preta Staff Correspondent
J HOLLYWOOD- (UP)- A family
i in Connecticut recently had what
| turned out to he a very, very live
! "Mickey M use b” show.
I The family, along with other TV
! Mouseketeer fans, was aware that
! the series it filmed months in ad-
in Russia where they are told
what to do... Our people must
have an educated mind to make
decisions wisely.”
In his Oklahoma City speech.
President Eisenhower said this:
“We must also have a people who
?verykfie|Pd. leaders''whoV^ meit I vanc* *howing, so they hardly
inlri,-al« human nroblpms with expected tO ICt IT TlbCTS Of the
show.
The Rocco Gallicchio family was
watching the program on TV when
someone knocked at the door.
"Someone" turned out to be four
stars of the show—Jimmy >xld,
intricate human problem* with
wisdom and courage. In short, )
we will need not only F.insteins
and Steinmet7.es, but Washing-
tons and Emersons.”
I remember a couple of years
ago, talking with John Hersey, {
Pulitzer-prise winning novelist.
••Certainly we need scientists,” 'A lette. Tommy and Doreen,
he said. “We also need leaders. ' "I guess it v surprise,” Dodd
And we need poets. Who else can said. “We were on tour in the New
spenk to us of our needs?" j England area the time and go-
•-« ,h «*™>»"•■■“r
day from night. They have dif- 1 thought thtt it might be a nice
ferent abilities, different desires, I it a to r‘op and say ' 'llo to some-
and different contributions to1 one at the' home."
make to the world What they Dodd said 't hnu much
need is an education that will I o{ ;blem deciding where to
JssjraSsj.'r”.t’sssffl !•«* ■"»«<* ^ «•
may lead If we force science
down the throat of a child who I gram
Japanese style. Adjoining the gar-
den will be a children's play-
Tublic facilities include a 400- *™lnd <*nd a Police range,
car parking space, an outside j
swimming pool and the "best OOIAVR NT STEM WOILD
night club in the Orient," Yarn-! CURB SPEEDING
anaka said. He said the night
club would he equivalent to the
I Coconut Grove in Hollywood.
On the ground floor there will
he a plush lobby having a floor
space of 10,800 square feet which,
Yainanaka said, would be the
largest and most elegant in the
Far East.
Also planned are Chinese, Euro-
BUFFAI-O, N. Y. -(UP)- A
Buffalo motorist has proposed a
plan to curb the number of speed-
ing violations and to make traf-
fic enforcement easier-- thanks
i to a difference of opinion with
a motorcycle patrolman.
William H. Butler, a school de-
partment assistant engineer, de-
force science ;,ale signs assc J- ’ with the pro-
i
y
.m historian or a diplomat or a . ’"’iat I mean is that we looked
musician or a political leader, we for a private home ^ Hartford
Tble h°.^mm ,rr'P,r* ! u i,h a ^ *"»««» «»l sign* that
thee were ' "dren around,”
BETTER SCHOOLS BUILD I »*1d said. "Then we we- up to
the door.”
When they went inside they
J found the two youngest Gall' hlo
kids , Cherly, 2 and Danny, 4,
betted EAUUilMiTift ! watching the program. The family
BETTBK tUMMUNITIlS rouJd hard,y what th<y
I saw—or thought they were seeing
DEI I CIS ivnvvu DVIIV
and seven other color patterns | un^d assured them they
to signify other speed ranges.
The system also calls for all
highway speed limit signs, direc-
tional signals and other warn-
ings to be painted with the code
color of its speed zone.
Butler explained that the
speedometer would control light J pictures fo
panels along the dashboard and j them about
front and rear bumpers of
automobile. The driver would Seven Dwarfs’ and than had to
match the lights wilh the color leave."
were Mouseketeer* paying a so-
cial call.
Actually, we'd always wanted >
do something like this," Dodd
said.
"Ge" they sure gave us a great
reception. We yed long enough
to have a snack. We signed some
the '"’-'liechios to ’
the tour of ‘Old
health hints
I, Dr I'Onk G rlovd". *•••<)•'’*.
Not.or.ol Cn.roprott.c AlMX.ol.or.
LEOPOLD ON THE JOB—Nathan Leopold (second from left)
walks about ground* of the Church of the Brethren project
in CaaUUter, Puerto Rico, where he flew from Chicago to
take a gl<Ka-month-and-keep Job. With the 1924 thrill slay-
er, who apent 33’A year* in Illinois' Stateville prison, are
Ralph ToWnscnd (left), project director, and (from left on
other eMeof Leopold) Dr. W. Harold Row, Brethren Service
comiiiisston executive director, and Dr. Marvin Snell, one of
the Castifler hospital doctors. (International Soundphoto)
Wa liked them, and they liked j acres of swampy land into a trout
Uf the genial master of cere-; hatchery that he parlayed into a
monies said,
guess.”
"That's even I
pean and Japanese restaurants agreed with the patrolman as to
operated by the leading restaur-
ants in Tokyo. The ground floor
will also have a snack bar, a
post office and shops.
On the first basement floor will
be a turkish baths and a bowling
alley. The second will house a
high-class department store.
Another public facility' will be a
i roof garden built in traditional
just how fast he was driving. As
a result, Butler devised a system
of speedometer lights that would
tell a driver — or a policeman —
Instantly whether his speed was
above or below the limit.
The basts of Butler’s idea is a
color code for various speed
ranges — blue to represent 26 to
30 miles an hour, yellow 31 to 35,
of the road sign, and thus stay
within the speed limit.
The light panel* would not op- j concerned,
erate at speeds under 25 miles
an hour, Butler said. He sugges-
ted that signs governing 15-mile
an hour school zones be display-
ed with white letters on black
backgrounds.
There's only one drawback to
(he system. Butler admits he
hasn't solved the problem of col-
or-blind drivers.
WET FARM LAND
BECOMES AN ASSET
WHITEWATER, Wis. -(UP) -
an | Yeller1 jind 'Snow Whit* and the Edward Hamilton got stuck with
a piece of land too wet to farm
when he moved to the country
from the city.
He didn't let that discourage
him. He simply turned the 80
Dodd said the visit came about
even on both sides, as far as he's
private fisherman's paradise.
Hamilton was a Chicago howl-
ing alley owner when he Ixwght
the land. He and his wife were
nearly ready to sell the unfarm-
able acres at a loss when strang-
ers started asking about his land
and making proposals to buy it.
Hamilton investigated and found
that his spring-fed "swamps" |
were ideal places to raise trout. ‘
He started stocking trout irt the
Common Mistokes Abou*
The Common Cold
In the 16th century', epidemic*
w.th symptoms like our “com-
mon colds” swept K rope It
V „s believed tru> were imported
by the crews of sailing ships It
was known as "nautical lever.
In 1919. following World war I,
it was dubbed "the Spanish In-
fluenza"; in the .pa.-t year its
new alias is "Asian (or Asiatic)
Flu ” But a roe by any other
name will still make your nose
r '‘there are symptoms which
are often diagnosed as colds but
these symptoms are the result of
something which has happened
to the cold victim long before
the affliction occurred Normal
body elimination is important in
provontinfr a cold. If these* rlmii-
nat.oris are normal, the proper
rmstnnrr against colds is pre-
sent If the flow of nerve energy
which controls the bowels, kid-
neys, colon, bladder, and pore*
of the skin is reduced by inter-
ference. these organs are weak-
ened and prevented from work-
ing at the task nature assigned
them Resistance is lowered; the
organism cannot put up a tight,
and often this results in a “com-
mon cold.”
The chiropractor attacks the
rouse of the cold and removes it.
The average citizen may often
use aspirin, or a.pirin passing
under some similar name. The
doctor of chiropractic, with his
soothing corrective treatments,
soon increases the flow of vital
nerve force to the eliminative
organs, brings them to the point
of normal elimination and capa-
ble resistance by establishing
normal nerve flow to the affe*cted
organs. Aspirin deadens the
nerves, "drugs'' them, but the
ccruae of the cold remains. Tem-
porary relief rnav result, but the
real cause of the trouble has not
beer approached in the right
manner and will recur at the
slightest provocation
ponds mid now has an estimated
more than 130.000 fish on his
property. And eager anglers rqm«
from Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio,
Iowa and other places to pay for
the privilege of fishing in the
ponds, which ho calls Rainbow
Springs.
A rattlesnake can strike at a
distance of 18 inches.
Southern - Wilson Mobil Station
Located Comer Of Esplanade & Broadway
IS NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS!
This Station Is Under The Dealership Of
Frank Wilson - and - Dennis Southern
And Features Quality Mobil Products
In Addition To Friendly Mobil Service
Our Mobil Service Includes:
Washing - Lubrication - Polishing
Stop By Soon And Give Us A Chance
To Serve You . . . Your Business Will
Always Be Appreciated.
Southern - Wilson
Mobil Service Station
Esp's'. d* Aid Fro d . y
■ T.-yc. ; •<
' ?
Alert Businessmen, Like Progressive
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 47, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 1, 1958, newspaper, April 1, 1958; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth696135/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.