The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 197, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 28, 1961 Page: 4 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Norman Daily Transcript and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Our Point of View
High Standards
Heeded by Youth
The condition of America's youth
continues to be a subject for warm
debate
Many will argue that the phenom-
enon of delinquency is considerably
exaggerated and that to the extent
it does exist it is at least as much the
fault of parents as of their children
Some say that we adults are badly
underestimating the young genera-
tion that its rebellion where it exists
is in fact a protest against not being
taken seriously enough
If there is any great substance to
this contention light could be thrown
upon it by more exhaustive inquiry
into the causes of unemployment
among young workers
Rather astonishing it is to realize
that of our current sizable total of
unemployed 3 in every 10 are less
than 25 years of age
One might be tempted at first
glance to take this in stride simply
as evidence of the rising number of
young job seekers But the disturb-
ing facts are that far too many in
this age group are both uneducated
and unskilled at a time when the
economy's demand is for just the re-
verseāfor highly trained individuals
And all signs suggest that as the
Increasing numbers of young people
hit the labor market their proportion
among the total jobless may also rise
The only thing that can prevent this
is a Vast improvement in training and
education of our maturing youth
'Whose fault is it that they come
now to the labor market so badly
prepared ? Certainly this is one
demonstration of the failure of our
school system to meet the demands
of the day But that is not all
Many American families do not
set standards of hard work They do
not put the eyes of their children on
the pursuit of excellence This pursuit
need not be in professional business
and other white-collar tasks There is
dignity satisfaction and financial re-
ward in the development of manual
and mechanical skills in this highly
technical age
Many trends in present day life
work of course toward doing it the
easy way The acquisition of skills is
not easy Without parental urging
and example countless youngsters
just won't make the effort
' The family is always the unit of
resistance against any sort of weak-
ening trends It is the bulwark that
must hold out It is the keeper of
tradition the preserver of strength in
any society
Let American families once more
set the achievement of excellent as
their ruling star Let parents urge
their youngsters to toil in its pursuit
in all walks Then we shall indeed see
whether we are underestimating
American youngsters
Wanted: New Image
The high living standard of Amer-
icans i3 a mixed blessing In many
countries business leaders and gov-
ernment officials report we're con-
sidered smug and "superior" That
hurts our prestige abroad
In view of the fact that we have
doled out billiona all over the globe
to provide technical aid and military
assistance to bring security and a
better 11 ao millions of people this
analysis seems notably ungrateful
But perhaps these foreigners have a
point Maybe we need a fresh outlook
and attitude Good will is difficult to
buy envy is easy to incur and smug-
ness hard to stifle
Perhaps we pro i7 -t smugness un-
consciously Despitt Communist ad-
vances hi Asia the Middle East
Africa and South America the idea
of "catching up with the Russians"
may seem a little droll We're miles
ahead in highways railroads homes
agriculture and general abundance
Do e want to go in reverse?
And Fidel Castro so this attitude
holds is just a fanatical little Caesar
we can crush any time we choose but
won't have to because the Cubans Nv
overthrow him American know-how
and hustle have always won through
To a certain extent these things
are true But the concern a'oout our
image abroad is one for all to heed
We face a dedicated ruthless and
able foe and should not be comforted
by reported friction in Communist
ranks We need all the friends we
can muster Self-satisfaction will not
win them A complacent attitude will
not hurt anyone but ourselves
We talk so casually about billions
of dollars ever consider what a billion
looks like? The Bell System mused
over it since its earnings are over the
billion mark A penny stack it dis-
covered would reach 230000 miles
high Counting out in dollar bills
would take 50 years on a 40-hour
week basis It couldn't be counted or
stacked in thousand dollar bills Only
660000 of these have been printed
4 Tuesday February 28 1961
The Doctor Says
Food Fads
Overlooking
Major Fact
By H T HYMAN M D
Newspaper Enterprise Assn
We're certainly a nation of food
faddist Not so long ago red
meat was in disfavor because it
was alleged to raise blood pres-
sure and contribute to arterial
hardening Then mixed meals
were opposed We were told to
eat our protein foods at one sit-
ting and our starches at another
Next came a big honey boom
because unlike our table sugar
it was a "natural product" Soon
salt was replaced on our tables
by substitutes And now we're
to give up butter cream ba-
con and eggs and replace them
with synthetics And not much of
those
-Aleanwhile the sale of 'health
foods" and vitamin-mineral sup-
plements goes on apace Its sour-
ed milks for "auto intoxication"
heat germ oil for fertility and
most recently a mayonnaise
dressing that can also be rubbed
on the face to improve the com-
plexion and remove wrinkles!
There is at least one basic fact
that gets no consideration in all
this metabolic hocus-pocus That
is the fundamental observation
that each substance we eat and
digest has first to be broken down
In our bodies to what chemists
call the "building blocks"
From these relatively simple
'blocks" the many factories in
these wonderful bodies of ours
then construct the substances vie
require
Just as pigs manufacture bacon
fat from swill and cows produce
milk from grain and hay and
sturgeon yield caviar from what-
ever it is that fish dine on so do
we construct whatever it is we
particularly need at the particu-
lar moment
And the wonder of it all is that
what we manufacture bears little
resemblance to the raw products
that went originally into the hop-
per We can do just as well with
sweet milk as with soured milk
at many times the price
Just as well with granulated
sugar as with honey at many
times the cost And just as well
with a mixed meal of proteins
and starches as with separate
meals for each
Rarely do I get a letter telling
of some persistent complaint or
illness that fails to state that
the ailment of whatever nature
continues despite vitamin "shots"
and vitamin-mineral supplementations
Se
'Yet except for sƩvere vitamin
and mineral deficiencies rare
ly encountered in healthy per
sons who consume the average
American diet there is not an
illness complaint or ailment that
requires these supplementations
or that can be expected to im-
prove as a result of overdosing
with these admittedly important
accessories to the diet
If you've been wasting your
money On faddist foods how
about making a two-week trial of
nothing but dietary staples?
Bread and butter bacon and
eggs cooked cereal tea or cof-
fee with sugar and cream
meat - fish or poultry with a
baked spud and a green and a
yellow vegetable: ar pie pie
with a hunk of yellow cheese: a
pared apple a peeled orange and
an overripe banana for an encore
or between meals and just plain
cow's milk or cocoa to gash it
all down?
2-Year-Old Out
For Tavern Visit
TUCTN Ark (Al-itāTwo
year-old Bob Darlington reported
missing from bis home was found
to be out with some of the boys
Little Bob was located hy police
sitting on a stool in a tavern
drinking a glass of water and talk-
ing to a group of customers The
bartender said Bob just strolled
in arid hopped up on the stool
Out Our Way
aNMEI$VE
&OOP 606H 4VOi Tne
BilMS RUSH i rrs t-o-r
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MAPPUjilP TO OPEA
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Most Pressing SubjectāPopulation Explosion
GRAMPAW
School Aid Bill Due
By PETER EDSON
WASHINGTON ā tNEMāFull
''states rights" are provided for
in the special message and pro-
posed legislation on federal aid to
public grade school and high
school education which President
Kennedy has sent to Congress
The hope is that this will re-
move au i objecilons by people who
think the federal government is
trying to take control over edu-
cation away from the states
If legislation is approved checks
would be sent directly to he
states to do with as they ()lease
for either construction of schools
payment of teachers' salaries or
both
There will be a certain amount
of bird-dogging by the government
to keep the states honest says
Secretary of Health Education
and Welfare Abraham A Bible() ff
He says he thinks there is lit-
tle chance that federal aid to edu-
cation will develop into another
highway fund scandal
Ile believes state education of-
ficials and school boards are hon
est fellows viho will use the mon-
ey for purposes intended
But it's a tempting lot of jack
āwit million the first year $766
million the second $866 million
the third The total is $33 billion
just for classrooms and teachers
No matching fulids will be re-
quired from the states for new
Demise of
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (ANāCall us an
old sentimentalist if you will but
we hate ttl see the decline and
fall of cash
Cold hard cash has given way
in importance to warm soft
credit
Money is disappearing from
public life You hardly F-(' it any
more
Remember when you were
pressed by someone with a bulg-
ing wallet you'd whistle and say
"lie has a roll big enough to
choke an (ix"? Today the roll a
real big shot carries would hard
ly give hiccups to a mosquito
A man is no longer known by
the company he keeps but by the
number of credit cards that keep
Anyone who flashes a big wad
of bills now is automatically put
down as a pitiful showoff a
bookie or a counterfeiter
Sensible counterfeiters must
have quit making fake money
years ago and turn ād to manufac
J R WiNiIrt14
NE WE IL t4OW IS IT velti e75T HA PPEt4EP
tioi To OPEN THE 010E IN BACK Or
-:r eqAWDPA WHO) IT -15T
-
:hI HAPPEtlEP" To BE A WIMPY
VAY ANC HE e7151 HAPPENEP
To Fe vORKIWC7 OW Hit
r j)
rtAmp coa e crioN
41
Vai" SETTER C1ET OM
CP Sia-IT I LI HE HA&
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1
expenditures This was a feature
of the bills passed by both Sen-
ate and House last Congress ef-
fective after the first year
Lack of such a provision is one
of the main objections to the new
Kennedy proposals This opposi-
tion is increased by the fact that
the program offers the states such
a tempting dish of government
gravy for state officials to spot
their vests w ith
On a grant per pupil in attend-
ance in public primary and secon-
dary schools the South would be
the greatest beneficiary Arkansas
would get tte most $2118 for
each enrolled pupil per yzar
compared to $15 per pupil in
nine of the richest northern and
western states The national aver-
age would be MM
The basis for allocaiion of aid
is need and inability of the poor-
er states to pay their own way
The practical effect is politicalā
to win suport from Southern con-
gressmen If they don't vote for
it it's dead
The present outlook is that the
bill will have no trouble :n the
Senate but it will be close in the
House It be tougher going
because t!er -e 22 more Repub
lican repā 1atives this yar
Most are likey to oose the Ken-
nedy program
To be perfectly blunt about it
the opposition this year as last
will be based not en educational
tilting fake crtdit cards That
mould seem to be the real mas
market
The trend away from the public
use of money must havt' Ire!
other :mpacts on the crim sal
world
V -1 pickpockets still filch
hunoteds of men's wallets each
year 'n Manhattan but it taust
be n lv from force ot haot or
bec:iw vyy are simply too oH
to k71 a new trad: In most
cases thq ceuld probably earn
more by picking the gold horn
omn teeth
More m as a time when the
marking Mall on payday mould
carefully hide his earnings in his
socks so muggers couldn't rob
him on the way home Not any
more Ile usually brings his pay
checkāor what's left of it after
all the deductionsāhome in his
mouth like a dog fetching the
newspaper Ile is no longer worth
robbing
The 'avorite targets of mugtters
now are little old ladies They
retain an old-fashioned penclimit
for cash aild often have a wad
of it stuffed somewhere in those
huge baggage-sized pocketbooks
they lug around
But the motto of practically
everyone else appears to be
"Take the credit and let the cash
go"
Only bankers cling to money as
such in large denominations
They still keep their vaults (du1
tered midi the big green stuff
but this may be merely out of
respect for tradition too
As space gets more valuable
they may have to buy money
shredders to get rid of it or force
Congress to store it somewhere
at government expense
Beliefs Combined
India's Slkhs practice a faith
combining both Hindu and Moslem
beliefs Like Moslems they wor
ship only one god and oppose
caste barriers like Ilindus they
eat no beef and cremate their
dead
Big Fight
theory or political science but
on racial and religious grounds
Kennedy proposes federal grants
to public schools only This is in
keeping with his campaign state-
ments that the issue of separation
of church and state was settled by
the founding fathers in the US
Constitution and that's that
Mady Catholics now contend
however that if the issue of
federal aid for parochial schools
were brought before the US Su-
preme Court today the decision
would favor such support
On this and other bases some
Cholic learierzs fedeee0V
Lhh ttlittbis inchiderrittr'
aid to education legislation No
one can predict the outcome on
this
On the question of denying fed
eral aid to school districts not in
compliance with court orders to
integrateāRep Adam Clayton
Powell's amendment ā Kennedy
is in effect taking the same posi
tion Eisenhower did
This is that segregation in pub
lic schools is a separate civil
rights issue which should not be
solved by enforcement clubs in le
gislation to aid education !it oth
er words the proposed bill would
permit federal aid to segregated
schools
Extreme liberals don't like this
a little bit The fight will be on
this line Nobody can predict how
this battle will come oat either
Hard Cash Mourned
Yes money itself has become
a nuisance It has :ost caste It
has been replaced by that new
trinity of financial prestigeāthe
checkbook the instalment plan
and the credit card
Yet now and then we confess to
a nostalgic feeling for the dais
when cold hard 'cash ruled the
land
With ready money you knew
exactiy kliat it would do and how
far it would go But how about
ready credit? Just what will it
do and how far will it go?
Money was in style for a long
time It might come backāthat's
why we sometimes wish we had
held on to some
Side Glances
i
Your Pocketbook
Job Change
Can Affect
Your Money
By FAYE 11ENLE
Newspaper Enterprise Assn
We're a fast moving people
This year one American in five
will change his residence 33 mil-
lion of us will move to another
home
Libor mobility follows the pet-
tern It's estimated that 85 mil-
lion people a year leave one em-
ployer to work for another New
York's Chase Manhattan Bank
in its bulletin "Business In
Brief" points out that almost
50 per cent of these job switches
involve a change to a different
industry and a different occupa-
tion Another 20 per cent shift
to a different industry but per-
form the same type of job while
a per cent move into a different
type of job in the same industry
Work histories of more than
three million persons covering a
decade showed that two-thirds
changed jobs at least once in
that period and that more than a
quarter changed jobs three times
or more
Young people do more job
switching than older folk Those
in the 25-34 age group are twice
as likely to change jobs and resi-
dences than either younger or
older people
What have these shifts meant
geographically to the family in-
come dollar?
A partial answer is offered in
"Money Matters" issued by the
Institute of Life Insuranie It
reports:
The wealth of rural nonfarm
families is on the increase while
thz't of urban and farm families
is on the decline In 1950 the ur-
ban family had 715 cents of the
family income dollar Ten years
later it had but 653 cents
The rural nonfarm family had
192 cents of the family income
dollar in 1950 281 ceats of it 10
years later The farm family had
94 cents of the family income
dollar in 195n only 66 cents of
' it 10 years-late!
The number of families living in
urban areas increased by 18 mil-
lion between 1950 and 1959 In
the same period the rural non-
farm tamily increased by 43 mil-
lion while the number of families
on farms declined by 893000
As you move from area to
area as you change jobs keep
careful watch over your person-
al affairs Make certain that:
You leave a forwarding address
with the local post office
You change your address on all
Insurance policies Check to see
how soon any new group or health
insurance policies become effect-
ive Don't forget that small savings
account that you or junior might
have opened years ago Take it
with you
Make certain the Social SeCUN
ity Administration knows of your
new job or residence This Tr
be a good time to check whetii7g
you are receiving full credii on
your earnings Mail your request
to the Social Security Adminis-
tration Baltimore 35 Md giving
account number birth date and
address
Make certain you get W-2 forms
for federal income taxes from
your former employer
By Galbraith
had in mind something not quite so
wholesome-looking!"
Name Preserved
NEW YORK (AP) ā The presi-
dent of the American Scenic and
Historic Preservation Society is
preserving a historic name him
self He is Alexander Hamilton
a descendant of the patriot leader
Capita! Background
Subcommittee's
Actions Rapped
By ROSCOE DRUMMOND
WASHINGTON ā On the basis of its lat-
e4 public actions the Senate Internal Se-
curity Subcommittee is creating some in-
ternal insecurity and blurring some of its
solid work
It is doing so by issuing one-sided half
the-story unevaluated reports of limited
testimony of men overly intent upon finding
a villain whenever foreign events have gone
wrong
It is true that on occasion there may be
some purposeful disloyal public official like
Alger Hiss who may deliberately contribute
to disrupting American policy If there is
any such evidence it should be fully in-
vestigated But fragmented releasing of reports
charge without rebuttal and accusations
without chance of reply are not the way to
do it It is confusing not revealing It is a
disservice to the country to the Senate and
to the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee
itself
The Subcommittee's objective of inquir
ing into the "Communist threat to the Unit-
El' States through the Caribbean" is proper
welcome and valuable What is unfair and
unjust improper and hurtful is to release
fragments of testimony either without re-
buttal or without releasing it simultaneously
so that the public can have the full story in
one piece
The Senate Internal Security Subcommit-
tee whose two most active members are
its chairman Sen James O Eastland D
Miss and Sen Thomas J Dodd D-Conn
has in recent months issued the testimony
of three witnesses: William D Paw ley for
mer ambassador to Peru and Brazil and
Earl E T Smith and Arthur Gardner for
mer ambassadors to Cuba
The substance of their testimony is that
Fidel Castro did not primarily come to pow-
er because of the unpopularity of Batista or
because of his own force and popular back-
ing but because "a group of St le Depart
ment officials" helped Castro and the Communists
The principal official accused of this "ca-
bal" (denied by former Secretary of State
Christian Herter) is William A Wieland for-
mer head of the Caribbean and Mexican
desks in the State Department Others citcd
as contributing to Castro's rise at least as
"dupes" are Roy Rubottom former assist-
ant secretary of state for inter-American
affairs under Fr sident Eisenhower James
R Webb under secretary of state under
Truman and Thomas Mann currently as-
sistant secretary for inter-American affairs
Secretary of State Herter was never in-
vited by the subcommittee to give the gov-
ernment's side of the story
Testimony from the accused officials has
either never been taken by the subcommit-
tee or never released
Such one-sided testimony should be read
not merely with "some caution" as Sen
Kenneth Keating R-NY has warned but
with total reservation until the committee
hears and reports the other side
Without questioning motives what is real-
ly wrong with this performance by the
Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security?
It eagerly takes testimony on one side
and reluctantly takes testimony on the other
It rushes to publicize part of the testimo-
ny and withholds otlicr testimony It does
not permit accused officials to confront their
accusers does not invite them to be heard
promptly after they have been accused and
does not publish their replies simultaneously
with the accusation
I would like to see every circumstance
every fact every judgment bearing on the
"Communist threat to the United States
through the Caribbean" brought out fully
and coherently It seems to rao thq the
Senate subcommittee discredits its own in-
quiry discredits its findings and confuses the
public by publishing reports before complet-
ing its hearings and by either refusing to
invite or holding back the testimony of
thoile officials whose work Is being im-
pugried In several of its recent investigations the
Senate Internal Security Subcommittee has
acted rrodently and properly Its Cuban in-
quiry however shows an urgent need to re-
view its procedures I would thiak that we
could expect something better from this com-
mittee which is undercutting its good work
by bad methods in certain cases
(Copyright 1961 New York
Herald Tribune Inc)
Thoughts for Today
Ahab said to Elijah Have you found
me 0 my enemy? He answered I have
found you because you have sold yourself
to do what Is evil in the sight of the Lord
āI Kings 21:20
He who commits a wrong will himself
Inevitably see the writing on the wall though
the world may not count him guiltyāMartin
Tupper
ESTABLISHED JULY 13 289
fti ' ''6
IIS as Comanche Street Norman Ottienome
eleOnone JE 4-1W1
The Norman Transcript
Fred E Tarman Editor and Publisher
Harold R Belknap Associate Publisher
Dale F IletkendornManaging Editor
Don M FrensleyāBusiness Manager
Robert N IterrAdvertising Director
W G Black Circulation Manager
Member of the Oklahonta Prcss Associa
lion The Southern Newspaper Publishers
Association and The Audit Bureau
of Circulations
Member Of tne Associated Pr Est the Associated
Press IS xclusiveiy itntilled to The A1 tOr reDubhica-
tion flfW1 dtSpatChet CrPalted to tt not otherwise
c edited co Mis paper and also the local news pun-
ilsr ed the elm
Accuracy ano Fair Play: errors will be promptly
Corrected end compiaints ot unfair treatment in Me
c-lumns ot Mis newspaper wilt be dlusted it coiled
le the attention et Met alter
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Tarman, Fred E. The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 197, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 28, 1961, newspaper, February 28, 1961; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2129182/m1/4/?q=technical+manual: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.