The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 190, Ed. 1 Monday, August 11, 1975 Page: 2 of 8
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2—THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS-Monday, August 11, 1975
iEttnia Batly Nmus
★
MEMBER
I975 ASSOCIATION
IN THE
EIGHTY-THIRD
YEAR
CHARLES E. GENTRY, President-Publisher
JOE D. NEWMAN, Advertising Manager
Owned and published daily except Saturday by
the United Publishing Company, Inc., which also
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Rustler, Charles E. Gentry, President and
Publisher.
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gress of March 3, 1872.
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FLOYD W. CASEBOLT, Editor
FAY CASEBOLT, Associate Editor
in the columns of this paper will be gladly and
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TU ES DAY
August 12, 1975
Don Oakley
Apollo-Soyuz
and detente
'Oft K' Electric Service
JBM8SVSpecialists in AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION
* 212 N. Dallas St. 875-3790
O WFAA
O ABC
* KDFW
4 CBS
C KXAS
0 NBC
n ktvt
39 KXTX
■7 00
/15
• / 30
/ 45
Peppermint
Place
The A.M. Show
CBS Morning
News .
Today Show
(7:25) News
Today Show
Slam Bang
Theater
Tennessee
Tuxedo
Mighty ,
Mouse
OB
01?
-
Captain
Kangaroo
(8:25) News
Today Show
New Zoo Revue
Addams
Family
Bozo^
Lone
Ranger
QB
T 30
V 45
Mike Douglas
Show
Spin-off
Gambit
Celebrity
Sweepstakes
Wheel of
Fortune
Favorite j
Martian
Petticoat
Junction
Dennis the
Menace
Flying
Nun
10s
The Brady
Bunch
Tattletales
Love of
Life
High
Rollers
Hollywood
Squares
The Untouchables
Lucy
Show
Hazel
111
Showoffs
All My
Children, .
The Young
and Restless
Search
For Tomorrow
Marble
Machine
Jackpot
Perry
Mason
” ! '
Andy Griffith
Father
. Knows Best
m
Ryan's Hope
Let’s Make
A Deal
Eyewitness
News
As the
World Turns
Area 5
Texas News
Days of
Our Lives
News
Cartoon ;
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Reason
Guiding
Light
Edge Of
Night
The Doctors
Movie:
“Union Station”
William Holden
Jan Sterling
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One Life
to Live
Price Is
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Another
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Impossible
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Lucy Show
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Happy Days
ABC Movie:
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M-WH
Baseball:
Texas
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vs.
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Big Valley
OS?
01?
Ice Rip-off”
Lee J. Cobb
Gi^ Young
Hawaii
FivfrO
n
Detroit
Family
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700 Club
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QB
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Marcus
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Jones
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Movie:
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Gregory Peck
ft
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News 8: Scene
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Tonight
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News
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cont'd.
A New Day
K. Kuhlman
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(repeat)
Movie:
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Chris George
Movie:,
Major Adams
•
121
Wide World
Mystery:
Ni^ht Life
Joel Grey
Jack Warden
Tomorrow
»
“The Crosby
Case”
Wynne Gibson
Sign Off
Even as America’s three astronauts and Russia’s two
cosmonauts were preparing to wing off for their history-making
link-up in space, the question of how far a free society can, or
should,cooperate with a totalitarian one was being sharply etched
ed by two very different men.
Exiled author and Nobel Prize-winner Alexander Solzhenitsyn
has been touring the United States with this message: Don’t trust
the Communists; don’t help them solidify their iron rule over the
people of Russia in the interests of “detente.” Stay strong,
because you are the hope of the world.
“The Communist leaders say, ‘Don’t interefere in our internal
affairs. Let us strangle our citizens in peace and quiet.’ But I tell
you, interfere more and more. Interfere as much as you can. We
beg you to come and interfere.”
Whenever America helps the persecuted in the Soviet Union, he
says, it is defending not only them but itself as well. “You’re
defending your own future.”
As a prime victim of the Soviet system, Solzhenitsyn’s creden-
tials are unchallengeable. But also impressive are those of the
chief architect of detente, Henry A. Kissinger. In one of a series
of speeches he has made outside of Washington in recent days,
the secretary of state bluntly challenged the critics of this policy.
“What is the alternative they propose?” he asked. “What
precise policies do they want us to change? Are they prepared for
a prolonged situation of dramatically increased danger? Do they
wish a return to the constant crisis and high arms budget of the
cold war?”
The United States will continue on the course on which it is em-
barked, he pledged, “because it offers hope to our children of a
more secure world.”
He pointed to the Apollo-Soyuz mission in space — an area in
which 15 years ago we thought ourselves in almost mortal rivalry
— as symbolic of the distance we have travelled.
Symbolic of something else, fortunately, was the decision by
President Ford, on the advice of Henry Kissinger, not to receive
Solzhenitsyn upon his arrival in this country, reportedly because
it would have been “disadvantageous” to U.S. policy. This would
seem to be the very kind of misuse of detente Solzhenitsyn warns
against.
On the other hand, Solzhenitsyn sometimes gives the impres-
sion that he is a latter-day Peter the Hermit, going around whip-
ping up enthusiasms for a crusade against the infidel. There are
limits to what the United States can do on behalf of Soviet
citizens.
Also on the other hand, Kissinger has told the Soviets that U.S.-
Soviet co-operation must be a two-way street and has warned
them against “selective detente.”
Thus though their approaches, as well as their responsibilities,
may be different, the two men are working for the same goal.
It is true, as some critics have charged, that the joint space
mission is more a political than a technological spectacular. It
may also be true that whatever new scientific knowledge is gain-
ed from it will benefit the Soviets more than ourselves.
Yet the significance of Apollo-Soyuz as a symbol, as Kissinger
pointed out, should not be minimized. The greatest need of the
world for as far into the future as we can see is to prevent a war
between the two superpowers. The joint venture in space is a
tremendous step away from war. At the very least, it has made
one small crack in the wall of ignorance about the outside world
behind which the Soviets keep their people.
They cannot maintain this wall forever. Each year, each
decade, each generation U.S.-Soviet detente is actively pursued,
more such cracks will appear. If we truly believe in the superiori-
ty of our system, if we truly believe that freedom, not ideological
slavery, is the natural state of man, the great dawning of liberty
in Russia Solzhenitsyn dreams of must eventually come.
Near and Far
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Near
6 Far
13 Detecting
device
14 Baltic country
15 City in Florida
16 Study of
versification
17 Husband of.
Gudrun
(myth.)
19 Designations
20 Come closer
24 Narrow road
25 503 (Roman)
26 Dance feature
28 Man’s
nickname
29 Discourages
31 Constellation
33 Sault Sainte
Marie (coll.)
34 Distant
38 Soviet Socialist
Republic.
<abi
41 Young
socialites
(coif.)
43 Russian city
44 Abound
46 Marine sparoid
fish (2 wds.)
48 Vessel’s lowest
deck
50 City in
Phoenicia
51 Closest
53 Pronounce
57 Sanction
58 Filched
59 Come in again
60 Golf strokes
DOWN
1 Blood money
2 Resinous
substance
3 Harem room
4 Fixed incomes
5 Muse of lyric
poetry
6 Portray
7 Equal (comb,
form)
8 British gun
9 Sum
10 Creature
11 Of ancient city
in Asia Minor
12 Cups (Fr.)
18 Lariats
20 Say further
21 Dessert
22 Abyss
23 Rumor
27 Before (comb,
form)
30 Slender bar 45 Feeble-minded
32 Small cupid person
35 Raw metal 47 Skirmish
36 Social event 49 Sprightly
37 Shade tree 52 Compass
38 Kitchen gadget point
39 Calm and bright 54 Exceedingly
40 Bail again 55 Wapiti
42 Of higher 56 Legal
quality point
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
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12
13
14
15
16
17
18
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19
20
21
22
23
■
IL
25
■
lL
■
28
29
30
■
3,
32
33
1
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
1
42
■
43
44
45
B
46
47
48
■
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
U
Two-fisted campaign
14 in i: - ffiPJ f ‘w* 6
— EDITORIAL COMMENTS —
I Iniforl Fnnrl Time fnr Fnni
United Fund Time for Ennis
Time rolls around again to shape up, in the Bluebonnet City, “for the Ann-
ual Campaign of the United Fund."
It is a fine organization performing an eminently important service, chiefly
of charitable nature, for the community and, thus, indirectly for the area.
It is a fine organization performing an eminently important service, chiefly
of charitable nature, for the community and, thus, indirectly for the area.
Numerous outstanding institutions owe debts of gratitude for their well be-
ing to this time - honored agency to which so many have given time, thought,
effort and substance.
Because of its scope, a considerable number of citizens will be called on for
assistance.
Let'sserve willingly this essential institution which is a leader in our good
town!
WANT ADS PAY - TRY ONE TODAY
MONDAY
August XI, 1975
8
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(repeat)
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Screamer
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CBS Movie:
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Very Much’’
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Michael Cole
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Wild Kingdom
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THE BORN LOSER
THIS PARTS 6 PRPTTS D01UHOMPV
...WHAT SAN \)^ HAVE OlF MORE
by Art Sansom
ituBFnoucW
W MISFRA&LE
LITTLE worm!/ fcOLLV, vou'
EVEN SOUND
LIKE HER!
ALLEY OOP
by Dave Graue
HOLD ON, MISTER.'
YOU OWE ME FIVE
DOLLARS FOR
LJO MINI I nilNO / lA^W.Mrw
THEN WE'D better! three-beee
OH, ALL
RIGHT..
V
By Ernie Bushmiller
AUNT FRITZI —
MAY I WEAR
MY EXPENSIVE
NECKLACE
TODAY ?
YES, BUT BE
CAREFUL THAT
THE STRING
DOESN'T
BREAK
DON’T
WORRY—
I WON’T
•'■'-7 LOSE
ANY
BEADS
CAPTAIN EASY
£agy hag
JUGT RESCUED
LIGA FROM A
LEOPARD AND
CARRIED HER.
BACK TO CAMP.
AND-- WELL.IN-
THIS MOMENT OF
HIGH EMOTION..,
3-
s -//
© 1975 by NEA. Inc
T M Reg US Pat Off
OH. EAGYL..WHV DIP I EVER.
WANT TO RUN AWAY FROM YOU?
by Crooks & Lawrence
BECAUSE I
. DN’T REALIZ_
TILL NOW JUST
HOW PRECIOUS
k
i
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Casebolt, Floyd W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 190, Ed. 1 Monday, August 11, 1975, newspaper, August 11, 1975; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth777812/m1/2/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ennis Public Library.