The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 97, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 24, 1969 Page: 3 of 6
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On the community health team
Working
with Your
Doctor
for You
As a college - trained professional
member of the community health
team, the registered pharmacist
.works hand in hand with the physi-
cian, bringing skill and experience
to the important responsibility of
compounding doctor’s prescriptions
accurately, promptly.
4CL1CKA DRUG CO.
101 E. MAIN *»•«
CENTER PHARMACY
700 N. ESPLANADE *15-5!
I .«* Jli w- J
arn at your service
around the clock, for
Ion need*
r,ihmJiR
. UNDER COMMAND OF DIE
LOaNIESIN-RESIDENCE
.. A student .militant at the Uni-
versity of North Carolina is
h«c}jcd because Mr. Nixon has
s$i4 the, federal. Government
tiylll no longer lavish your tax
money on arsonists, vandals,
burglars or vagrants enrolled in
our great institutions of higher
learning ■ Chearp guy
It. i« tha oponion of the young
man at Chapel Hill, N.C., that
-academic freedom ) equires you
ted. me to-keep this bum alive
and in good health so he can
-outrage, us without having to
pause to make a living.
• Academic freedom has been
one of my hangups. Twenty,
♦wenyt-five years ago when Boh
Hutchins •*-> now the head guru
of a Fiord Foundation think
tank-ln California — sVas presi-
dent «f the University of Chica-
go, he aaid -academic freedom
meant that the asylum should
ha run by the guards. It was
his judgment that the boobs who
paid the bill*, weren't bright
enough to make any intelligent
decisions about the university
tad that they were being Insuf-
ferably pushed if they made any
suggestions to the Ph D's as-
sembled.
Hutchins wanted the faculty
to run the show, and his defini-
tion of academic freedom held
tip until recently when the stu-
dents decided A. F really
meant bumping the faculty and
administration from the saddle
tad putting the bin under the
exclusive command of the loon-
ies-in-i'esidence.
'Tt’s reallv hot so much a mat-
ter of who runs the school' as it
Is how the school got into so
trmch ■twnfflPT'CbuW it possibly
be beoaiisa, w;a bought the Hut-
chin's Postulate r qmtttr of a
century ago, .and agreed we
would be -Impossible boors to
lahict ourselves on the acade-
me, insisting on making the
arithmetic £dd yp,«s if a school
were some kind of store or
factory? Men grown rich and
maybe a little nutty within the
ftamaumck^of a-free-enterprise
system, seal their boys off to
private colleges where they
1A OF 27 KILLED IN PLANE CRASH—A propeller of a World War n vintage plana Uaa on
the runway near the smouldering wreckage (background) after the plane crashed at
New Orleans International Airport, killing 16 of the 27 persona aboard. The plane was
taking prominent members of a Tennessee sportsmen’s club on a bunt In Central America.
were tutored by economic and
moral wash-outs with venomous
hatred of the system which saw
Sam Goldwyn (“Include me
out!”) making a few million a
year while an expert on Eliza-
bethan Literature was lucky to
make $7,500 per. The academic-
ians counted this a colossal In-
equity and an indictment of the
free market, and they counsell-
ed the young lions accordingly.
It was a cuckoo system —
teaching your progeny to sus-
pect and detest the sort of econ-
omy and morality that made
their ease and comfort and ed-
ucation possible! — American
Way Feature*
HENDRICKS SIGNS
BALTIMORE <UPD - Ted
Hendricks, second-round draft
choice of the Baltimore Colts
of the National Football league,
signed with the club on Tues-
day and will attempt to switch
from defensive end to linebac-
ker. Hendricks, an All America
from the University of Miami,
is 6-7 and weighs 215.
40 Million Americans
Find Health, New Joy
By Just Going Walking
Wo don't oxpoct your stroll will toko pee to avcli oa
unusual spot as this-but by fust point *•» «*toH* In your
area may prove an Intern sting. Instructive adventure.
•y OROVIR BRINKMAN
Central Press Association Correspondent
LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Perhaps It waa the Welsh-born hiker,
Colin Fletcher, who started it alL Fletcher walked from one end
of the Grand Canyon to the other, achieved national fame doing
It He also revived a “lost art," walking.
Today, more than 40 million Americana have a new-found joy
In just walking. When this many of us walk for the sheer fun
of stretching one’s legs, there must be something universally
good behind the idea In addition to Us health benefit* There la.
Today walking seems to have caught on faster than the recent
epidemic of Hang Kong flu. And let’s not forget tho Joggers
and cyclists.
Suddenly the open trail had a new meaning. The crest of the
ridge, the high places, tha sea-
shore, the desert—the walkers
wars there. They not only have
found a new face of America,
they have gained as well a new
peace of mind and relaxation
that waa a startling new ex-
perience.
Winter or summer, walkers
insist, the trail la equally at-
tractive. A raven eoars over-
head in a sky blue as indigo; a
squirrel scampers, across the
path, a hickory nut clamped in
Its Jaw. It is quiet. The soli-
tude has Us own pattern of re-
laxation. Perhaps the dedicated
walker can achieve this same
feeling of exhilaration in the
city. But if he does, he must
labor harder st it There are
too many distractions, too much
noise, even in the parka
• • •
IF TOUR home Is near any
rugged open country, you can
emulate John Muir by walking
the many ridge trails. Each
type of country has Us own
special enchantments for the
walker, The walker observes
nature In Us many forme—a
new flower, a wild strawberry
growing from • elaybank, the
nest of • Idlldeer.
Any walker will soon be Im-
pressed by one other thing: the
clean earth. The America we
found waiting for us in Colum-
bus’ day waa a clean country,
unspoiled as to tree and stream.
Now man has dirtied It with
his junk piles, air pollution, re-
sult* of his greed. But the
walker, working away from
man’s world, soon finds the
cleanness that was the original
America.
Especially Is this so In the
desert in the mountains, in the
vast open places and public do-
main areas.
Walking is not only s health
exercise, it is an education. *T
find I am remembering a blue-
jay,” one walker confided to me,
“picking seeds from a sunflow-
er head, then flying up to the
nearest perch, holding the seed
firmly with one foot against
the twig while It pecks out the
inner kernel. You cant quite
believe it but you’ve Just seen
It, so it's feet.”
Sherwin-Williams Paints
HOUSE PAINT
BONUS BONANZA
BUY YOUR HOUSE PAINT — SWP — A-100
AND KEM-l-COAT NOW AND QUALIFY FOR
THE 3 GREAT BONONZA BONUS.
BONUS NO. 1
Buy your house paint from us and qualify
hr refund drawing to be made May 31st
August 23rd and September 30. 1969 In
uero. Full purchase price will be re-
bndrd <o each whiner.
BONUS NO. *
We’ll rent ladders and walkboards for a
PENNY -A-DAT with the purchase of
house paint.
BONUS NO. S
Charge all your purchases. Take up to
Owe month* to pay with no Interest and
no carrying charges.
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO.
202 E. Main
CUERO
275-2861
CANADIAN FULLBACK
PROVIDENCE (UPD — Steve
Wormith, Brown University
fullback for three seasons, has
signed with the Ottawa Rough
Riders of the Canadian Foot-
ball League.
Wormith, 6-foot 220-pounder
from Samis, Ontario, had a ca-
reer rushing total of 796 yards.
He also lettered in hockey, la-
crosse and track while at
Brown.
RETURNS ID JOB
EL PASO RJPB — Don Has-
kins was head basketball coach
at the University of Detroit for
two days last week, but today
he was back at the University
of Texaa at El Paso and school
officials said he never actually
left his job.
Haskins was “rehired” TuaW
day. The school’s athletic coun-
cil met Monday and decided
Haskins never officially resign-
ed his old job because his res-
ignation had not yet been for-
warded to the board of regatta
at Austin.
CUERO RECORD P**« S
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 75, No. 97, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 24, 1969, newspaper, April 24, 1969; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth702633/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cuero Public Library.