Shawnee News-Star (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 113, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1960 Page: 4 of 10
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Shawnee (Okla) News-Star Saturday Aug 27 1960
THE SHAWNEE NEWS-STAR
Issued Mornings "Mee istoaaat
THE SHAWNEE NEWS CO rrbusnrita SHAWNEE OKLA
lika POITI SELL ILLEttIONS COO
N B MIISSELMAN
Editor and General Manager
JACK PEESE MAI:TICE C MOORE CURTIS L BYERS
rims VIM AMWins Manilla Carnation Manager
Mcipbor Asdii Moreau et elusions
Mambos if ilit Aesecistod trome-Atemlate t She Oklahoma Pram Association
The Aseeetatod Prima la entitled eiclualeela to the use tot rerublication at all the
inesi es printed in this res‘paper so well ao nuts dispatches
FATIONAL RePRESENTATIVLSO: Burke Kuirers Mahoney Ina
Neer York Callow Atlanta Dallas Oklahoma City
Illptoced as tho Shame Oklahoma postalleo ma emend-Can Man tinder ad at
March I Ica
How will they handle it?
Only a short time has elapsed since Harry S Truman
personally conducted John F Kennedy on a tour of the
Truman museum at Independence Mo That must have been
quite a sight There must have been quite a lot of
politics in it too since the former Fresident lost no oppor-
tunity to take digs at the party he hopes a Democratic
administration will replace in power Yet there was some
good sense behind the politics
The politics and good sense got mixed up when Truman
show ed his party's standard bearer a succession of displays
illustrating the various tasks a President must handle
"You'll see what you've got on your hands" Harry geld to
Jack But he couldn't resist adding "A President has got to
do them all—unless he plays golf all the time" And here we
can't resist adding OR PLAYS THE PIANO or POKER
Or goes fishing as Hoover did or reads mysteries and col-
lects' stamps as the second and least ROOSEVELT did This
part is all in the way you look at it
But there was the good sense: "You'll 'gee what you've
got on your hands" That is something both Kennedy and
Richard M Nixon should be and are no doubt profoundly
aware of The campaign is not altogether a political game
but an elaborately complex and arduous striving for a great
office There is the great office itself
When the heat of politicking is over for a time one man
Cr the other will take a solemn oath in Washington And
when he does there will surely pass through his mind some
long thoughts about what Truman was showing Kennedy at
Independence—"what you've got on your hands" This is a
thing for both candidates to think about even amid the
bruising political conflict in which they are now engaged
Likewise before this great moment arrives it will be
the time forevery citizen to contemplate too "what they've
got on their hands" and to singly as well as collectively
determine just which one of the two has the biggest hands
with which to handle what they find there For the manner
In which they handle what they find will affect more people
In more ways than ever it can the mere man in the White
rouse We have our idea you'd better have yours
Rome builds faster today
Los Angeles' investment of $500001 to bring the
Democratic convention to that city paid off It counted a
return of more than $7 million spent by delegates and others
on hotel accommodations amusements and miscellany Chi-
cago too did as well or better in the return from its invest-
ment in the Republican convention but then Chicago is an
old hand at the national convention "pay-offs"
All of this spirit of getting while getting is good from
visitors must have been the motivating force back of Rome'a
building of 15000 additional hotel rooms merely to accom-
modate the Olympic Games there Their thinking is in big
terms too fully believing they will get back the entire cost
of the many new hotels erected near the arena in the one
season's contest
That is a long way from the old theory that Rome wasn't
built in a day
News BeaMs
IAd06a60AddaAt
An item in the news recalls that Sir Thomas Urquhart
famed translator of the author Rabe lias lived in the Scottish
village of Cmmarty on Black Isle Ile became so overjoyed
at news of Charles II's restoration that he died in a fit of
laughter Had we been putting a headline on the item we
would have made it Tickled to Death And that's one of the
better ways to go we presume
Shawnee theater manager Johnny Jones says he couldn't
begin to estimate the number of patrons who came to him
after the first day's showings of Alfred Hitchcock's "Psy-
cho" to thank him for insisting they see the picture from
the beginning We have no reason to question that "Psycho"
Is a thriller nor even the veracity of the local theater mag-
nate and yet we still recall a similar vague estimate from
a civic club president concerning the results of his plea for a
special donation for some worthy project or other A later
check with the club treasurer set that number at three
Well it isn't over yet but there is hope comrades there
Is hope Congress shows signs of adjourning next week
without appropriating all the money which we haven't got
left in the treasury
There may be only a few more nights when the satellite
balloon is visible for it is scheduled to go into the earth's
shadow soon Any man who hasn't yet seen it had better get
busy for then he will have at least one achievement to brag
about to his grandchildren "I saw an Echo"
CAKNIVAL-111 Dick Tornkr
"Sur I know its a lawnmower grandpop but how do you
Owl it?"
Boyle-ing it down
Truth about boss:
He has his fun too
By RAI BOYLE
VFW YORK iPI—The average man today
doesn't want to be a bom
Ask him why and he will pi obably say
'Too much responsibility too many ulcers
You never get the job off your mind It kills
you young I'd rather have less pay less
worry—and live longer"
This picture of the modern business execu-
tive as a harried ulcer-riddled tension-ridden
individual who works around the clock and
succumbs early from a heart attack has be-
come as much a part of popular folklore as
Cinderella or Little fled Riding Hood
Bosses have done little to dispel this highly
fictional portrait of themselves After all it
flatters them and impresses the public Why
quarrel with it?
But what is the actual truth about Ameri-
can industrial leaders? Are they really dollar-
mad robots who wreck their lives blindly
staving for a corporation god?
No indeed) Not by their own testimony
A recent issue of US News and World
Report carried some results of a poll of 6000
US executives made by Dr Harry J Johnson
head of the life extension foundation
Dr Johnson found:
Executives worked an average of only 35
hours a week
They worked only five days a week just
as do most union members
Only 30 percent took office work bonle
with them and these averaged only 412 hours
a week at it
In three cases out of four executive fatigue
came from boredom rather than over-work
About 75 percent of the executives were in
good health and as a group they suffered from
ulcers or heart attacks no more than their
underlings in the same age bracket
Only 13 percent complained they w ere
tinder tension from their work
Pointing out that a $20 mistake by a janitor
rould be far more tragic to him than a $20000
mistake by an executive Dr Johnson ob-
served: "The Hollywood concept of the typical
American executive LA far from realistic
they're under no more tension than anyone
else they're just a nice regular normal
stable moderately healthy group"
The corporation executive however does
differ from the ordinary business employe in
one significant way
"lie can afford to dissipate—the lower-
salaried fellow can't" said Dr Johnson "We
have found that executives get too little sleep
77 percent of executives averaged seven hours
or less of sleep per night"
Ilis opinion is that all most executives need
is to get another hour's sleep a night take a
I5-minute walk three times a day and maybe
lose a little weight
Well there you are Now are you afraid
to be a boss? Responsibility probably won't
worry you into a skeleton It is more likely
to make you plump and cheerful—if you've
got enough horse sense not to let the job get
you down
The next time anyone offers you a $50000
a year executive post don't shrug him off like
an ingrate Accept his offer
The hours are short the fringe benefits
are wonderful you'll live just as long—and
think how much fun your wife can have
spending all that money!
Gordon Martin's
n
It's just about this time of year that
certain words you always hear from
mothers who are tired and worn whose
day begins with early morn who see that
hungry kids are fed and comes the night
are tucked in bed lt's then a weary mother
sighs and thinks how soon the sun will
rise on still another busy day with
yelling boys and girls at play But then she
notes with silent glee the month of August
soon will flee vacation days are nearly
gone with bright September coming on
Her demon-minded noisy brood will have
to change their attitude they wont be
getting in her hair for Moms are saying
everywhere with much relief and grateful
heart "Thank goodness school's about to
start!"
Do you remember?
FIVE YEARS AGO
A bank in Illinois had been robbed three
times and threatened to catch up with the
baby's bank Mrs Claude Hendon was
confined to her bed due to an ailment The
teacher at Shawnee highschool and past presi-
dent of the AMJINT was reported improving
Martha Gallaher was making plans for
her departure to Palo Alto Calif where she
would enrol at Stanford university Miss Mar-
garet Tower gave a brunch at her 1425 North
Park street home for Miss Gallaher Mr
and Mrs Dan McKinley were hosts to the
Mo Loud chapter 193 OES for it annual Rob-
ert Morris picnic at theist Dale home
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Abe Lynam city plumbing inspector VIVI
a patient in Shawnee hospital for treatment
of his right eye which had been injured by
a flying piece of tile he was cutting Lloyd
Jamison won Boy Scout Troop I3's annual
swimming meet at the Elks Country club
Members of the Sac and Pox tribe were pre-
paring for their annual powwow at Stroud
Wallace McClellan tribal secretary announced
THIRTY TEARS AGO
Mi and Mrs G C Graves 1002 North
Broadway had with them over the weekend
Mr and Mrs Paul Graves of Macomb Mr
and Mrs Ed W Gaskill and daughter Mar-
garet Jeanne and Miss Ilatelle Bel lisle spent
Tnunday in Oklahoma City visiting friends
and shopping Mr and Mrs J B Ham-
mons had with them Over the weekend Mr
and Mrs J C Huffman of Konawa Mr
and Mrs Joe Kappus went to Michigan for a
fortnight's vacation Mr and Mrs R Othal
Feather of East Ridgewood have had with
them Mr Feather's brother Mark of Duncan
Barbs and briars
When you have a gravel driveway its just
a stones throw to a messed up lawn
Some boarding houses are where pope
pay good dollars for poor quarters
Vacation days are the one time of year
w hen everybody has the get up and go
Some people find hapoiness by making the
best of what they haven't got
tots of people make enemies by complain-
ing too much to their friends
A Kentucky man claims he got three squir-
t els with one shot Sounds more like three
doable shot'
NE
S NEWS
WASHINGTON—The heroic figure of Franklin D Roosevelt casts
its shadow—or sunlight thmending on the viewpoint—over the
Nixon-Kennedy struggle for the presidency although the Squire of
Hyde Park has been dead for 15 years Only Abraham Lincoln
matches FDR in the spnll which a departed President has cast upon
succeeding political generations
For the Democrats the second presidential Roosevelt corresponds
In the Republicans" Honest Abe- and to the bloody shirt" vhich
the GOP bannered to political victories for almost 30 years after the
Civil war FDR has in fact supplanted Thomas Jefferson and Andrew
Jackson despite the annual Jackson-Jefferson
dinners as the pa- earned the title of -Doctor WIn
tron saint of Democratic liberals the War" I have notes in my
Although he is the party's lead- file of this discussion with MR
er Senator Kennedy felt it nece- In my opinion he would have
sary to make two political and condemned both the Kennedy and
penitential missiotiS to Nvin the Eisenhower plans as too limited
support of Roosevelt kin and ad- and as a relief rather than a
mirers With all due respect to medical measure
their age and eminence the nor-
mai political code and courtesy Strategy—ignore Dixie
required that Eleanor ROOSE'Ve t
and Harry S Truman vait upon Senator Kennedy has modeled
the presidential candidate his campaign plans on the same
The legacy of FDR break- the two-term tradition
Senator Kennedy is appealing to
Senator Kennedy's decisive dy-
the same political elements which
feat of Senator Humphrey in the
Roosevelt persuaded to desert the
West Virginia primary which
P i
helped embalm the religious issu GO — labor farmers racial
e
groups: Literals intellectuals etc
in this overwhelmingly Protestant
community was attributed in As Franklin and Eleanor Roose-
large part to the oratory of Frank- veit wounded Southern sensibili-
ties in many vays paying the
lin D Roosevelt jr
path for the supreme court 's 1954
of all the Roosevelt owls v horn
I have known since their teen decision against segregation and
ages Franklin looks and speaks including the abortive purge of
most like his father whose relief the late Sen Walter George of
programs made him an idol to Georgia in 19:18 so has Senator
WeA Virginia voters-141)1'bl- Kennedy shown a disregard for
cans and Democrats this section of the country
The Democrats' platform prom The selection of Sen Lyndon B
ises on social and economic pioio- Johnson of Texas reflects the Bay
lems which FDR would have State senator's recognition of this
pressed had he survived World fact It is generally forgotten al-
war U and then been freed of though he stresses the point that
wartime pressures kiiouid have both Senator Johnson and his
delighted Roosevelt political sponsor Speaker Sam
The more generous Kennedv- Rayburn were valuable Roose-
Johnson medical insurance Iwo- velt agents on Capitol Hill during
gram is an excellent examele of the New Deal era
the tieup with the Roosevelt dy- Speaker Mqburn then
nasty Although his social secul- challiman of the house interstate
it3' advisers ProPosed tlii cform and foreign commerce committee
In 1935 the late presdent d J reported favorably on
dare to includt it in tar 1)!lartl many of FDR's economic reforms
he submitted to congt-c Thpn pffpoi npmilor nf t Fe
S S
Too limited along with Sam
President Roosc“it a:(1
that such a tadica U1iw Life without lather
would cost him votes in the
election ILs tears were 41 ()Lind- The deliberate separation -- or
ks because he earl ed abstinence—of Joseph P Kennedy
state except laine and Ve mom from campaign and even
a2ainst Alf Landoo ot from the Los Angeles convention
Roosevelt sunsequml y tt proceeding5 and celebrations pro-
led in a talk wt) thi wrne !hat vides fortner evidence of the
he had not endorsed the idea of Denocr4tie presidential nominee's
federal financing of I hi nd dmitted need Of Roosevelt votes
costs of the ailing e g r d lie -Father Joe" detested FDR's
planned to propoe ihui e '4(11- radical cioinestic reforms and his
erous program than Senator Ken- pro-British foreign policy when
nedy or President ELicono‘ver the Boston millionaire was am-
have advanced after naador to 1te Court of St James
:Ibeyil Do It Every Time
SATUPDAY NI:7AT AND OTTO:TI-IE
COPNER BUTLI-IER PUTS IN AN
SOS TO 61E HIS VICTUALS
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Go GET IZIGM
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41
Pawn
Strategy—ignore Dixie
Senator Kennedy has modeled
his campaign plans on the same
strategy that enabled MR to
break the two-term tradition
Senator Kennedy is appealing to
the same political elements which
Roosevelt persuaded to desert the
GOP — labon farmers racial
groups: Lberals intellectuals etc
As Franklin and Eleanor Rowe eit wounded Southern sensibin-
ties In many tays paving the
path for the supreme court 's 1954
decision against segregation and
including the abortive purge of
the late Sen Walter George of
Georgia in 19:18 so has Senator
Kennedy shown a disregard for
this section of the country
Speaker Rayburn was then
chicrinan of the houe interstate
and foreign cOnlmerce committee
which reported favorably on
many of FDR's economic reforms
Then an effective member of the
howe Senator )ohnon swung
along with Sam
Life without lather
The deliberate separation -- or
a Os t inenee--of Joseph P Kennedy
from rns sons campaign and even
from the Los Angeles convention
proceedings and celebrations pro-
vides further evidence of the
DenocrfWc presidential nominee's
admitted need of Roosevelt votes
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Opening lead—A K
By OSWALD JACOBY
(Written for Nien Servieet
In addition to being president
of the ACBL Frank Westcott of
North Attleboro Mass is also
New England's ranking life mis-
ter Needless to say he was at the
Southern New England tourna-
ment and his learn won there
One of his partnership's suc-
cessful hands illustrates the use
of the unusual no-trump by a
passed hand Ethel Keohane sit-
ting North had a perfect hand for
this bid Since she had passed
originally her no-trump overcall
could not be mistaken
East jumped to four spades but
nobody shuts out Frank and he
look a deep breath and dived into
five clubs
He did not expect to make this
contract but the way the cards
lay there was nothing East and
West could do about it
Frank ruffed the opening spade
lead in dummy and led a trump
to his seven West held off and
now Frank tried the diamond
finesse cashed the ace of dia-
monds ruffed a third diamond
and led another trump West
made his ace of clubs and East
a heart trick btit that was all I
Note that Frank bid five clubs
not five hearts The unusual no-
trump asks for the minors not
the other suits
Rattlers take to air
OKEENE (P) — The Okeene
rattlesnake hunters who stage art
annual search for the reptiles in
the hills nearby made a special
roundup for the 66th Fighter
Squadron of the England's Royal
Air Force The pilots call them-
selves the Rattlesnake Squadron
and wanted a rattler for a mascot
They were shipped three
By Jimmy Halo 1
17
So -rHE FIX-IT MAN DPOPS
EVERYTHING AND COMES RIGHT
OVER SO-0-0
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The worry clink
Love is an emotion
that can come again
Ton can fall in love several times For
love is an emotion And all emotions tan
be erperienced more than once Despite
Susan's heartache she can soon learn to love
another man even more than the boy who
Jilted her Indeed now is an Ideal time for
her to select her future husband
By GEORGE W CRANE PhD MD
'(SE 7460: Sums L aged 24 is a charming
N-1 girl who teaches school
'Dr Crane for six years I have been in
love with a boy I met in highschool' she
said and the tears began to well up even as
she spoke about it
haTubermrangnagoeumnceendt
and the wedding -L ‘( :
r 1 01
day was set Then e
he informed me that
he didn't want to
get married He said
he guessed he had
changed his mind
"Naturally I was ones
heartbroken I felt 7
I could never out
live the shock
'Tut my parents r
urged rne to teach "
school as a means 116'3 tik
of getting my mind
off myself
'Except for my love for my patents and
my being a Christian I arn afraid I would
have committed suicide For I still love this
boy Would it ever be fair to marry another
man without loving him?"
a a
Susan has gone through such an emotional
shock that she feels drained of all capacity
to love another man
Even if she were to meet Acme eligible
males she cannot imagine herself ever falling
ardently in love with one of them
That's how we all tend to feel when in the
midst of such treat grief
But Susan can fall in love again and be
oven more happy than ever before For love
is not an emotion that you can experience
only once It is like fear and rage and grief
in that you can feel it many times throughout
your life
So I told Susan to pick out an eligible
aultor on coldly analytical grounds Make sure
that he has those good traits and family back-
ground which augur well for success in mar-
riage Love is an educational process It is a clus-
ter of habits each pleasurably tinged which
revolve around a desired individual
Pick a desirable individual as you would
select a good violin or piano in the event you
wished to learn how to play thereon
Then go through the proper motions Go
on dates to the movies or the opera to church
or to school parties
Be lavish with honest compliments and he
will soon begin to return them with compound
interest You will then begin to relish each
other's company
"Act the way you'd like to be and soon
you'll be the way you act" is a truism of
applied psychology that is very appropriate
in the realm of romance
a a
That is why mans Hollywood stars fall in
love so often They go through the proper
romantic motions or speeches with a new lead-
ing lady and soon they fall in love with her
Love is also like music in that it inevitably
is evoked if you simply go through the proper
motions
Strike the appropriate keys at the plane
and you will produce melody and harmony
Do the same in human contacts and you will
not only win admiration but soon fall in love
and be loved too
Poets have too long made tis believe that
love is a magical emotion that envelops us
hut once Instead love is subject to scientific
creation and cultivation
Susan can arbitrarily choose a man and
within six months be ardently in love with
him
enne ciTI enclosing nrhgeml pay stamped Is0ea01 ke- pee ot sint tirh sure tTyuerfinugt hefltoner:neallaoErtp e quality Io
pl:ll'Aemtil'esan:e2rdltiri "c:
sm(htanohnoo niLddr:itd-sa :printing i iwgwo ifoams toty delasrsp7eh andise" instead of culls and
werroi menclosing t e and 20e to cover typing
t when hDe nr ayCebronanntsee4ni:td tlrare
aoamrr epeenodef
addressed enYelope
of his booklets)
Mittok
The man of the house looks disgusted every
time a TV pitchman starts talking about the
family food preparation center"
What's wrong with the word ''kitchen"
he wants to know?
All I can suggest is that so many manu-
facturers of appliances and easy mixes and
frozen dinners have promised to take the
housewife out of the kitchen that they're now
getting afraid to use the word
By calling the kitchen a "food preparation
center" mama is supposed to forget that hor-
rid word -kitchen" Instead of thinking in
terms of a hot stove dirty dishes and dishpan
hands she is supposed to think of herself in
a rarefied atmosphere where like a laboratory
technician she moves quietly about deftly
pushing buttons and setting Inners
co muss no fuss no bother
You see all those people who have prom-
ised to take mama out of the kitchen are
really on a spot Because any woman with a
bunch of hungry mouths to feed three times
a day is bound to spend a lot of time in the
kitchen And this is in spite of every short
cut she can get her hands on
So the next best thing those who dream
up advertising angles must have decided Is
to take mama out of the kitchen for good and
all just by changing the word "kitchen" to
"food preparation center"
But I doubt that many women are going
to be fooled by this subterfuge At least I
haven't heard any housewives I know talking
about "mopping the food preparation center"
or having to tackle a "food preparation center
full of dirty dishes"
So they say
know I'm 90 because this is the third
time I've been in trouble and I only get in
trouble every 30 years--Moses Powell of
Newburgh NY in court on a charge of
Intoxication
With the help of spacenipr T believe I can
carry rnillions of votes hundreds of spy
people are walking the streets—Tlying saucer
fan Gabriel Green of 'Whittier Calif announc-
ing his presidential candidacy
I have never heard of a political
leader being accused of corruption or engaging
in guetionable deals Can this same standard
be applied to rnen?--Mrs Maurine Neuberger
candidate for US senator hi Oregon
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Musselman, N. B. Shawnee News-Star (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 113, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 27, 1960, newspaper, August 27, 1960; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2107026/m1/4/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.