Shawnee News-Star (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 226, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 7, 1961 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Oklahoma) and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Etta witthe (Okla) News-Star Saturday Jan 7 1981
THE SHAWNEE NEWS-STAR
bend Mornings inept Monday
THE SHAWNEE NEWS CO ECBLISHER SHAWNEE OPZLA
ate noara MILL TELAZMOWN and
N B MVSSELMAN
Editor and General Manager
JACC REESE WitURICE C MOORE CURTIS L BYERS
Minn Nita' Mite:Winn Manliest Cirtniation annum
linalber Audit awes of "Undone 4
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rarzoskt litrilleUrNTATIVis Burke Kuipers a Mahoney Ina
$aw York Chasm Ana tei DslIna Oklahoma City
Intern WI ammo Oklahoma preallino ocoond-ains Mader ned ed
Much A tem
Castro may be serving US best
All the banty rooster-like actions of Fidel Castro in his
Cuban domain may actually be of greater value to the
United States than harm It should bring home to all of us
how hard the communists directed from Moscow are work-
ing to destroy all of the free world the United States of
course as the big target If it weren't for so many people
who are susceptible to the "big lie" technique of dictators
the rantings of Castro and other pip-squeak bigheads round
about would only cause laughs instead of headaches to
thinking people
But Castro has brought home to Americans as nothing
else has the danger from communists and should stir us to
all efforts necessary to protect ourselves from the insidious
threat that is without precedent in our history
- Another example of the communist danger was pointed
out recently by FBI Chief J Edgar Hoover as he said the
Communist Party was in the process of trying to win over
American youth to communist philosophy
On the day Hoover spoke out he said there was a major
organizational meeting taking place in Chicago with this aim
in view
Communizt t-0 P11y gained dangerous footholds
in some of err crsities Lnd elleges Students are both
idealistic awl Atupi ttbzicro:'1t tla(vImunism sometimes feeds
on both these qualities At e congressional hearing in Cali-
fornia last year students doi'ig the work of the communists
(knowingly or unknowingly) prevented a congressional com-
mittee from being able to conduct rorrnal hearings
In practically all of the Latin countries where the people
are poor and emotionally inclined the communists have made
disturbing progress in the student centers We all recall the
news items of student mobs doing communist bidding in
many sore spots of the world even including parades against
- our president in South America and Japan
Parents must take an even greater interest in how
their children are being taught today for if they don't the
communists have a way of boring in with their poison This
goes also for the schools colleges and churches
So if Castro serves to bestir us all he may have been a
divine instrument set up to serve us best That is a charitable
way to put it at least and we can't wait until his hour is up
Some learn better through laughter
An expert recently explained that parents should set a
thoughtful example to their children so far as their own
mistakes are concerned In other words admit mistakes to
children and do not play the role of the perfect human being
The idea behind this advice is that we are not perfect
and that we all are going to make mistakes Therefore when
parents step out of the car doors into manholes or slam the
window sashes down on their fingers children will soon
enough get the Idea that they didn't plan it that way
Remember that your child is also learning and he or
she is also making many mistakes daily A thoughtful atti-
tude on parents' part and a frank admission to children that
they also make mistakes but are trying to do better will
bring about a paralleling attitude among them
To put it plainer they will make mistakes and strive to
do better themselves and more than that both parents and
children can laugh at each other's mistakes—as long as the
person laughing doesn't laugh too much
'
We think we know what an office visitor meant yester-
day when it was suggested she had a frog in her throat She
said it was more like a crocodile
One prediction made in late 1960 has already come true
A fellow said he would really get "stoned" New Year's Eve
and then he'd never touch another drop Ile passed to his
reward rather suddenly New Year's Day
'
Fidel Castro has fraternized so much with Nikita that he
must have learned how communists work That could also
explain why he appears to be afraid of his own shadow and
we hope it drives him to the bughouse
A seasonal wish from this department to each of its
readers is that when they sleep under the new Christmas
blankets they won't find any of them have developed a short
circuit
CARNIVAL—By Dick Turner
What 11 woman's greatest labor-saving device? Marriage!"
wa
Po Id 1
Doyliing it down
Few women rate
bed as important
By HAL BOYLE
NIZTYORK (in—Thing's a columnist might
ver know if he didn't open his mail:
Money really did go farther in the old days
and here's one reason: 50 years ago it
took only five 21 bills to stretch a yard
now it takes six
If you are trying to lose the weight you
gained during the holidays fill up on raw
cucumbers they have about the lowest
number of calories of any food
In Madrid they have an unusual way of
"toasting" the new year As the bells ring
at midnight the Madrileno pops 12 grapes in
his mouth—one to bring him luck in each of
the months ahead
a Did you know that every US match book
- must by law have the manufacturer's sum
t printed on it?
e We spend approxbnately a third of ear
lives asleep but when 1300 women were
I asked recently to name the most important
object in the house only 8 per cent mentioned
the bed (If they queried teen-agers the
unanimous answer probably would be "the
r telephoner)
Romance in bloom: When a Swiss swain
wants to court a miss he slips a love note into
a flowerpot and leaves it on her windowsill
If she takes the pot inside after reading
1 the note well—the cc'utship is on
Our quotable notables: "Movie stars" once
said Fred Allen "wear their dark glasses even
to church—they're afraid God might ask them
for autographs"
How do you like your eggs? Eighty-two
per cent of restaurant patrons prefer them
fried
The okapi an African animal related to the
giraffe is a gifted creature it can wash
I its eyes with its tongue
L Are you an ancestor worshiper? With
I some people pride in their forebears becomes
a form of social snobbery to cover up their
own lack of talent Abraham Lincoln said
"I don't know who my grandfather was I an
more interested in knowing who his grandson
will be"
If you believe that you age at an even
rate throughout life you're wrong Science
' has found we age rapidly at some times slow-
' ly at others (The experience of most of us
probably is that facing Monday ages us more
than all the rest of the week put together)
Signs of the times: Singer Tommy Hazard
reports seeing this one: 'The best reason for
holding your chin 14) when in trouble is that
it keeps your mouth shut"
It has been said that the least beautiful
part of a WOMan'S anatomy is her elbow
but whoever made the remark must have
lived in the days before fat ladies wore slacks
Gun talk: A novice hunter often takes aim
with one eye and squints the other shut
Expert marksmen however learn early to
aim and fire with both eyes open
Wisecrack of the week: "Times sure have
changed" points out actor Oscar Homolka
"Today it's the girls who don't feel grown up
until they've had their first pair of long
pants"
You'd have fewer dental woes if you were
a squirrel or rabbit The teeth of rodents
continue to grow tiroughout their lifetime
Startling news from abroad: Tea long
Britain's most popular beverage is beginning
to lose ground to coffee Our English
cousins in another blow to tradition also are
developing a marked fondness for the Amer-
ican hamburger
It was Kin Hubbard who observed "Money
never made a fool of anybody it only shows
1em up"
Do you remember?
FIVE YEARS AGO
Cliff Stephens stayed home from the
Orange Bowl to help take inventory at his
store but had to go to the hospital So the
second inventory was taken without him
'
Although a Big Town citizen now Mead
Norton came to his Shawnee dentist the other
afternoon John Lukens stood as a man
who demanded that all public officials put
general welfare ahead of political considera-
tion Leo "Lippy" Durorher was held up
in Is driveway of 'his Beverly Hills home
The bandit got only $20 from "Lippy" without
any backtalk
TWENTY TEARS AGO
A low bid of $33499 submitted by Z D
Yeaton city contractor was accepted by the
board of education for construction of new
auditoriums at Wilson and Harrison schools
Gov Leon Phillips predicted that the
legislature would balance the state budget
if the people passed a proposed amendment
to prevent appropriatirr beyond revenues
Wa-P-Ife Study Club met in the home of Mrs
M W Hampton 2222 N Kickapoo with Mrs
Knox Byrum assisting hostess
THIRTY YEARS AGO
High School Principal C P Bradshaw an-
nounced that Oklahoma City Classen had
severed athletic relations with Shawnee
Bradshaw said exact cause of the severance
was unknown to him Leroy Neddeau and
Reed Hollingsworth were presented over
KGFF singing various popular songs of the
time Carlton Weaver Wilburton was
named speaker of the house as Democrats in
the state legislature organized for the coming
session
Gordon Martin's
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Now a wave of oratory is resounding in
the land and a lot of noble promises we'll
hear on every hand For in capitols of all
the states the legislators meet and we'll
get to see a super show and never buy a seat
Not to mention that In Washington we have
the Congress too and we'll be reminded
often that it's all for me and you And I guess
it won't be long until the sound of two-bit
words is so loud that we'll be saying they
should tell it to the birds We will view with
much alarm and we will point with greatest
pride and we oftentimes will wonder if
we're taken for a ride And although we may
that talk is cheap I doubt it any more for
It's bound to bring us taxes that we didn't
have before
So they say
In Moscow I was heartened by the fact
that the Russians got a better understanding
of our position on arms control and I believe
we now have a clearer understanding of their
position One can be hopeful that an
agreement on arms control can be reached—
MI? MIT scientist Dr Jerome B Weisner back
from scientific conference in Moscow
We expect failures We learn from them
and what we learn helps us toward ultimate
success in all our space goals--Dr T Keith
Glennan head of National Aeronautics and
Space Administration
'Nikita said if you need anything else just yell'
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Ry RAT TUCKER II
)N--The prominence of a young Roosevelt-style liberal
— play differs
medv entourage gives encouragement to that faction of
WASHINGTON—The prominence of a young Roosevelt-style liberal
in the Kennedy entourage gives encouragement to that faction of
the Democratic Party which had begun to feel concern about some of
President-elect Kennedy's statements and appointments since his elec-
tion Their ubiquitous champion is 42-year-old Rep Frank Thompson of
Trenton N J He headed the Democrats' make-them-register and
make-them-vote committee and he did a superb Job especially in the
large cities Kennedy owes his election to the huge metropolitan
turnout on his behalf which party
organization accounted for in the gram as well as generous Federal
key electoral states appropriations for social services
Rep Thompson is now engaged health schools relief and almost
In preparing certain legislative complete Federal developrnent of
measures for the incoming admin-
natural resources
istration and also mobilizing the
It shows only scant interest in
80 members known as "Roosevelt the problems of agriculture since
Democrats" under his leadership only 10 members represent farm-
They are expected to challenge trig areas Although generally
the Halleck-Smith array of Re- voting solidly on urban issues
publicans and Southern conserve- they frequently split 50-50 on pro-
tives when the legislative battle viding more generous benefits for
begins the farm population Their con
stituents are consumers
Young men on move
Young men on move
i
Rep Thompson is an able at-
L beral voting record
tractive and dynamic organizer 11 view of the Thompson Sae-
Altar attending' public and pa- tion's anticipated influence in the
rochial schools in Trenton where Kennedy Athninistration and in
he was born he got his bachelor's Congress here is how the 80 have
and law degrees at Wake Forest voted on major issues in the last
College North C a r olin a He few years:
served seven years in the Navy in President Eisenhower's Middle
Pacific waters and received nu- East Doctrine-66-10 in favor
merous decorations He has been Reduction of appropriations for
active in civic and philanthropic the Health Education and Wet-
ventures in New Jersey fare Department's project s—
In short he is typical of the Unanimously against all cuts
youngish and progressive men Grants to states (depressed
whom the President-elect has ap- areas) for public assistance and
pointed to so many key posts unemployment c omp ensation—
His present importance derives 66-2 for public assistance and 74-1
from his leadership of the only for unemployment compensation
cohesive bloc of Dein'iatic lib- To reduce by $70000000 the
trals in the House Kennedy's appropriation for United Nations
legislative program will depend participation in labor health edu
for success in large part on cation activities-64-2 against
Thompson's ability to keep them To defer payment of interest
i
behind the man n the White on British loan-58-2 in favor
House On Speaker Rayburn's demand
for an investigation of the inde-
Urban bloc in house pendent agencies recently assailed
by James M Landis-58-2 in
- His 80-man band was organized favor
early in 1957 because of their
expressed dissatisfaction with gt
uy
Rayburn -Johnson "moderation" screen rights
()
which waa then under fire from NEw YORK 2—A one-act
3
the Roosevelt-Lehman-Butler fac- play 1olly Kazan "The Alli-
ton It consisted mainly of men gators has been purchased by
Metro-Lto" ldwyn-Mayer for trans-
from the great cities with only
one member from the South The ler to the screen
majority represented New York A melodrama about the widow
City Philadelphia Chicago De- of a big-time gangster "The Al-
trod Cleveland and Los Angeles ligators" won critical applause
The group issued a manifesto during its off-Broadway run tan-
of their principles on Jan 30 demed with another Kazan one'
1957 FDR's birthday It was re- aoter "Rosemary"
garded as an attempt to offset
the Southern bloc's conservative The former Geo Greenman &
legislative ultimatum on civil Bros shipyard which built
rights square-rigged ships during the
The Thompson platform is gen 19th century is now the site of
erally pro-labor anti-big business Mystic Seaport Conn a re-creatfavoring
a huge foreign aid pro- ed 19th century coastal village
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By OSWALD JACOBY
(Written ter NIA Service)
A rubber bridge player is only
concerned with his partner and
his opponents A duplicate player
has to consider everyone in the
field
At rubber bridge South would
win the first club in his own
hand play the king and nine of
spades with intention of finessing
West would show out and South
would make exactly three no-
trump At duplicate South would note
that a lot of pairs would be in
four spades not three no-trump
Incidentally South should have
raised spades insteal of bidding
no-trump
The normal play at spades
would be to ruff a club and then
go after spades the same way
This line of play would produce
five odd if West held the spade
queen and four odd the way the
cards actually are
Now how should South play
this three no-trump in duplicate?
He should win the first club in
dummy lead the jack of spades
and let it ride Now he will wind
up making four no-trump for an
exceptionally good score
Of course if West held the
queen of spades South would get
a bottom but give West the
queen of spades and South wasn't
going to do well anyway
Hang up their guns
cHARLarrE NZ (P) — The
kindergarten of Charlotte's Forest
Hills Presbyterian Church sent
the followingnotice to parents:
"Children may not bring guns
of any type to kindergarten"
WIENEVEP ThE
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no worry clinic
Forced retirement -
called un-American
Bishop Magee's ease is a shocking indid-
ment of the bad modern psychology that
started in the 1930s and has been hamper-
ing American progress ever since If Russia
' ever catches up to us it will be due to the
negative thinking described below where
we force idleness upon talented workers
who wish to stay in the harness!
By GEORGE W CRANE PhD MD
VASE G-478: Bishop Ralph Magee aged 80
I shared a pulpit with Rabbi G George
Irox and myself recently
It was to honor the retirement of a famous
Chicago clergyman Dr George A Fowler
for we were all
there to deliver
tributes to his el-
fective ministry
Bishop Magee
calmly announced
his age and then
warned Dr l'owler
riot to get unduly
disturbed at the ' e
idea of retirement t
The Bishop gave
a aterling address
It could hardly be
matched by any
young seminary 6478
graduate now in
any American pul-
pit So this 80-year-old could more than hold
his own with any 25-year-old as regards ser-
monizing! Then why do we insist on retiring talented
men from pulpits and executive posts just
because they happen to pass a certain birthday?
Well it is based in part on the failure to
distingulah between muscle vs brain
True enough Bishop Magee and most °the
men past 65 cannot pitch hay or dig ditches
or put the 16-pound shot as well as men of 25
But physical strength is no longer of much
importance in modern America as regards
earning a living
We have evolved so many machines that
even a frail woman can handle all farming
duties without straining her back!
And the maximum labor in a city office
is hitting the keys of a typewriter or pushing
a pen!
So why shouldn't we get hep to logic and
rate men on the basis of their rich experience
and mental capacity?
That is especially true in the professions
and the teaching field for we are now crying
for more clergymen and tearhers and doctors
and engineers
Some men and women of 65 are mentally
foggy and unable to carry on their former
careers
But alert healthy men like Bishop Magee
though SO by the calendar can still match
any 25-year-old colleague so why shelve such
a talented person?
A bricklayer expends 4 calories per minute
laying bricks but his wife expends 42 calories
per minute just ironing clothes!
So a modern grandmother at the home
Ironing board is thus performing more strenu-
ous duties than a bricklayer who apparently
is doing about as heavy physical labor as
any modern worker
If you wives can thus be expected to keep
on with your household duties till you are 75
or 80 then your husbands ought to be able to
handle their lighter clerical store or factory
tasks too
Alas a false notion complicates the pic-
ture for the stifling idea was evolved in the
1930s that men molt be forced Into Idleness
In order to leave enough sobs for the younger
workers
That penalizes the entire younger popula-
tion however by making them support the
retired folks via heavier social security deduc-
tions from the young workers' pay checks
And it also is like the killing of pigs to
raise pork prices that was instituted irs the
1930s for it is negative!
This world can use all the workers it can
get if we just start thinking positively and
let people work who want to do so
It's un-American to force idleness on able i
men like Bishop Magee! I
In today's mail is a letter from a reader
who feels guilty because she has been less
than frank with her husband in money matters
For yeazz she says she has had secret
charge accounts which have nearly driven
her crazy She has to stretch her household
allowance to pay a little on this account and
a little on that one
This has come about she says because
she dreaded the long discussions that always
followed when she asked her husband for
money for this or that special purchase
Her feelings of guilt are understandable—
but she certainly shouldn't feel alone in her
deception There may not be a lot of women
who have charge accounts their husbands
don't know exist
But an awful lot of wives do mighty fancy
juggling of household money rather than tell
husbands exactly what they spent for a hat
a new sofa or a party dress
It isn't that they are married to skinflints
either Most of them aren't Then why do
they feel they have to do all that financial
finagling?
One reason is probably that they think a
man wouldn't understand the necessity for
some of the things they buy What looks
"perfectly all right" to a man often looks
out-of-date or absolutely hopeless to a woman
Another woman would understand perfectly
—but would a man?
The other reason is that the clothes furni-
ture and knick-knacks a woman's heart
yearns for are often so expensive that her
common sense tells her they are more than
she can afford
She expects her husband to be bowled over
by the price because she herself thinks it is
unreasonable But still she wants what she
wants and so she begins to figure how she
might manage to "finance" it without coming
right out and asking for the money
Perhaps the best way for wives to avoid
the temptation to be less than frank about
money matters is to take their husbands with
them when they shop Men who habitually
shop with their wives don't have to be hood-
winked about price tags
For answers to some of the questions in
husband-wife relationships order your copy
of Ruth Millett's new booklet "Happier
Wives: (hints for husbands)" Just send 25c
to Ruth Millett Reader Service cio Shawnee
News-Star PO Box 489 Dept A Radio City
Station New York 19 NY
Barbs and briars
It seems like we clean our walks for the
sake of the neighbors who don't clean theirs
Definition of a diplomat: any husband who
can convince his wife she looks fat in a fur
coat
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Musselman, N. B. Shawnee News-Star (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 66, No. 226, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 7, 1961, newspaper, January 7, 1961; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2107140/m1/4/?q=music: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.