Miami Daily News-Record (Miami, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 199, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 18, 1959 Page: 6 of 8
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PAGE SIX MIAMI DAILY NEWS-RECORD MIAMI OKLAHOMA
MIAMI NEWS-RECORD
IRI-SIATE DISTRICI DAILY
Consolidation of Miami News and Daily Record Herald
Miami Newspapers Inc
Independent Newspapet devoted to upbuilding of Northeast Oklahoma
and bordering countier 01 the In-State District of Oklahoma Kan-
sas and Missouri
Entered at the Miami Oklahoma postoffice as secondclass mail matter
C C Woodson publisher Jess fleck managing editor:
John Worley secretary treasurer Joe Woolard advertising manager
Office of publication 14 First Ave Northwest Phone KI 2-50)7
National RepresentatRes Southwest Dailies
SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL—IN ADVANCE
I Year 6 Mo 3 Mn I MI
Ottawa and Adjoining Counties 11 jg $651 $10A" $153
Sunday Onto $7 96
By Carrier Pet Week 35
I Year 6 Mo 3 Mo I Mo
Outside Ottawa and Adjoining Counties $1224 $663 $459 $1 53
Sunday Only $796
Oklahoma State Tax Included
Outside of State of Oklahoma Sales Tax Exempt
WORTHY SUCCESSOR
The free world rightly felt it a great catastrophe when
the rocklike Ernst Reuter mayor of Berlin in the city's
blockade ordeal in 194S-49 died at the peak of his dedi-
cated service
We had no reason to expect luck to strike twice in
the same spot but it has West Berlin's present mayor
Willy Brandt is cut from the same stout stuff as Reu-
ter He gave strong evidence of that the moment he took
office Yet inevitably we are feeling the impact of his
personality much more now that he is in our midst
Among his more remarkable traits is this: He man-
ages to maintain an attitude of complete firmness re-
garding Berlin's freedom yet he never utters a word
which would have the effect of committing the Western
powers to policies and actions not of their own making
He realizes well that if the question of using force to
protect Berlin ever becomes critical the decision is not -
to be made by the Berliners but by the nations which
have to apply the force
Brandt is an able and wise successor to the fabled
Ernst Reuter
Relentless though it be the campaign for safer driving often
seems to produce too few encouraging results Consequently we
can't afford to overlook opportunities to make substantial jot oads
on the problem
One place this prospect may exist is among our youthful drivers
As a group they are more inciined than their el&rs either to be-
come involved in or to be responsible for automobh accidents
According to the Association of Casualty and Surety Companies
young men under 25 from coast to coast have thc worst drying
records Though they represent just 15 per cent of all drivers they
account for some 25 per cent of all the accidents
Within the younger age brackets differences are less clear but
some studies tend to show that the youngest drivers are the poorest
A Connecticut motor vehicle bureau survey showed that the per-
centage of 16-year-olds nvolved in accidents and the percentage
held at fault were both twice as great as the peruntages tor 11
year-olds
Figures indicate further that the younger drivers tend to oecome
involved in the more serious accidents
Most studies by official state agencies safety orgarizations and
insurance companies usually support these general findings
The accident statistics incidentally do not yield the same con-
clusions for young girl drivers whose record is as good as that of
adults
More and better driver training is of course one big and ob
vious answer Many schools offer it now but many do not Opim
ions vary as to whether it should be a school function though no
one questions the need for the instruction
Possibly we need more uniformity in state laws on the licensing
of young drivers There is wide disparty in this field with 16 years
the minimum in some places despite the evidence of high accdent
rates at that level
Maybe too Amercans as parents need to reconsider the wisdom
of allowing their youngsters to have cars at school A study made
by a Rexburg Idaho high school found no A students driving cars
to school just 15 per cent of B students doing it but 41 per cent
of the C's with cars 71 per cent of the D's and 83 pet cent of the
flunkees
It's become quite the accepted thing to let the 'ad of 16 or a
bit older get behind the wheel of a car—yours or his The question
growing more acute is: "Should it be so readily accepted'?"
OUT OUR WAY
4414 -"""k
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FOR YOU
SUT WHAT
ON EARTH
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JOE PALOOKA
11
FIVE POLL A R S
HOPE YOUR DAUGHTER
APPRECIATES WHAT A
GOOD SPORT YOU APE
2:134
1
ALLEY OOP
YOUTH ON WHEELS
-rmAT UTILE
5N1P ALWAV5
PULLINC SOME
STUNT 10 6E1' ME
OUT OF TH SAT H
ROOM 50 HE
CAN 51-1P
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TH- THANK
YOu FOR ME
BEAtInFuL
CORSAGE'
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DON T MIND HER A MAN PS
AS YOUNG AS THE GIRL
WHO LOVES HIM KNO813-1
-7 PEAR!
WELL GO TO MI COMPANY
DANCE TONIGHTI WANT
ALL MY FRIENDS TO r
-8 MEET YOU-
Tle POOR '---vISLLNA(M FAR I
GUY MUST ENOtkk OUT CC I 00Y
11
BE ALL rviN Nkcw SO lav Ct:
SHOCN IT S4DuLDN'T
uP mivE ANY
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THE VERY IDEA
OF THOSE ZOO
PEOPLE NOT LETTING
Us TAkE OW OUT
OF 1HkT CAGE!i
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) CCP
THERE S
A CAR
By PETER EDSON
WASHINGTON (NEA)—Practi-
cal uses for unmanned space
vehicles are being given intense
study by military research
teams Long before man finds
out how to accomodate himself
to conditions beyond the earth's
atmosphere scientists b e Ii e v e
that satellites can be put to use-
ful work for earth-bound men
The fields which now seem to
offer most promise are military
surveillance communication na-
vigation and weather observa-
tion and forecasting
These things aren't going to
be achieved in the next year or
two — maybe not even in five or
more
This year's program for the
Advanced Research Projects
Agency in the Pentagon calls for
the launchingg of 12 to 15 test
satellites from Vandenberg Air
Force Base Calif They will
have payloads of from PO to
3000 pounds But Roy W John-
son head of ARPA concedes
there will be failure in some
attempts
Top priority is now given to
' military reconnaissance satellies
The firs( of a series of six of
thee "seeing-eye" vehicles is
tentativ'ely Scheduled for early
If an agreement could be
worked out with Russia for the
use of these satellites under
President Eisenhower's "open
sky" inspection proposals they
would be legitimatized Until
such time they might constitute
spying So they are being de-
veloped in secrecy
The major technical problem
is to build accurate guidance and
time scheduling into today's free-
flight satellites They must be
made to go where man wants
them to P o when he wants them
to go there instead of just
circling the earth at random
altitudes
Next to guidance the problem
is one of making sure that
cameras and scanning antennae
are always pointed at the earth
The satellites must be able to do
what high-flying aircraft do now
on photographic missions The
objective is to keep enemy
ground military movements un-
der surveillance
The launching of a melft
missile surprise attack against
the United Staates would neces-
sarily involve the moving of
much equip'-ont in many areas
Any reconnaissance from sa-
tellites ‘k hich would reveal such
preparations would put US de-
fenses on an earlier alert for a
retalitory attack
' HAVINgi EH? OH NO OFFC1Z
71:LIURLETU vS JUST 4TOPPE9
FILLAG? I 10 CHECK OUR
FZEIGHT HE:2!1
The Mooring Most
tim
Goal Now To Refine Satellites
A second use of satellites —
closely related to the first—is for
weather observation Since sa-
tellites can circle the earth
every 100 minutes or so they
make possible fast reporting on
worldwide weather conditions
rhir will provide more accurate
data for weather prediction
A more limited application
from the military point of view
is that guided satellites would
make possible rapid determina-
tion of weather over any target
area against which a strategic
bombing attack might be
launched A heavy cloud cover
would dictate selection of a more
favorable target
Development of communica-
tions between satellites and the
earth goes hand in hand with
development of the reconnais-
sance vehicles themselves A
first crude demonstration of this
possibility was shown in the
Atlas Discoverer
Launched last December it
relayed President Eisenhower's
Little Luxemburg
16 Luxemburg
is a 6
II Click beetle 7
12 Discerns 8
14 Baby's toy
15 Time of year
16 Table scrap
17 Shoemaker's 9
blocks
19 Small (Scot) 10
20 Observe
21 Land measure 13
of Thailand 18
22 Auricle
23 Percussion 24
instrument
26 Detain in port
29 Seine
31 Eternity
3'2 Anger
33 Period
34 Communion 7
plates
37 Jump
40 Particular —
average (ab)
41 Obscure
43 Motor coach 71":1
45 Caucho
46 Danger
48 Drink made
with malt
49 Subdue
51 It —s In
Europe
53 Dress
54 Venerate
55 Comforted
56 Beginning
DOWN
I Shone
brightly
2 Rat-catching
dog
3 Lawyer (ab)
ACROSS 4 Miss Gwyn
5 lelancholy
Luxemburg
(poet)
: a —
6 Fated
lick beetle 7 Employs
iscerns 8 Certified
aby's toy public
ime of year accountant
able scrap (sb)
hoemaker's 9 Disapproving
ocks one
tflail (Scot) 10 Petty officer
bserve 11 God of love
and measure 13 Growl
! Thailand 18 Capuchin
wide monkey
ercussion 24 Monetary
istrument of
etain in port Luxemburg
eine is the franc
GOSH KITTy
YOURE TOPS?
i0
gf
peace broadcast message back
to earth though the reception at
this end was never too good
Another military use of satel-
lites which offers great possi-
bilites is the development of
more accurate navigation
In firing intercontinental
missiles it becomes necessary to
know the exact position of the
launching site and the target
This becomes increasingly im-
portant for missiles launched
from aircraft submarines and
ships at sea
Existing world maps aren't ac-
curate enough for such calcula-
tions One striking reason for
this was demonstrated recently
by study of the Vanguard I sat-
ellite orbit
It revealed that the earth was
slightly "pearshaped" instead of
being a spheroid flattened at
both poles The diffferences in
the earth's diameters at various
points-25 to 50 miles—can now
be charted accurately by aid of
satellite navigation
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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ALL NE KIN DO IS S-STAND
AHEAD n
Hollywood
Glances!
By ERSKINE JOILNSON I
HOLLYWOOD (NEA)— Exclu-
sively Yours: The girl dancing
In a night club chorus line for
Bing Crosby's latest movie is
the girl about whom a doctor
once said
"She'll never skate again and
I doubt whether she will ever
walk again"
That was the day in 1952 when
Alena Murray figure ice skat-
ing star was brought uncon-
scious to a hospital in Montreal
Canada She had been giving an
exhibition one spot of the ice
was soft and imperfect She hit
the spot at high speed and fell
on her left kg
The leg under the hospital's
bright lights was horrible to see
A side bone split in two places
An ankle broken in two sections
completely disjointed Three
broken metatarsal bones Also
brain concussion
Three major operations and a
year later Alera was back on
her feet The orthopedic sur-
geons had done their job well
"But no ice skating" they
said
While still on crutches a n d
then on a cane Alena born in
Montreal but educated in Paris
became interested in acting She
studied with little theaters in
Montreal and when fully recov-
ered she came to Hollywood in
1954
Bit roles led to a term con-
tract at 20th Century-Fox and
now she's hoofing it up despite
occasional stabs of pain as she
plays a chorus girl befriended by
Debbie Reynolds and Bing in
the picture
The occasional pain is worth
it Elena figures because the
role is also a meaty dramatic
one
The film is titled "Say One
for Me"
Words Alena Murray has said
before
Clark Gable was asked by the
producers George Seaton and
Bill Perlberg about a scene for
them in his next film"But Not
for Me"
He's been married to Lilli
Palmer for years when he falls
in love with a young chick Car-
roll (Baby Doll) Baker
In an attempt to discourage
Carroll in the May-December
romance she shows her a photo
of Gable made 20 years ago and
one of recent vintage
The producers wondered if this
was okay with Gable whose old
films are all over Tv
"Sure" he grinned "we can
do anything that TV can do"
Baby Doll chasing Gable
sounds hilarious When he tries
to get rid of her she flips: "If
you think I can walk out of here
without wanting to kill you
without wanting to cut my ini-
tials into every day you're go-
ing to live you're crazy Good-
by and try to forget me Just
try:
He tries but can't
Shirley MacLaine's "Ask Any
Girl" role of a small-town babe
invading New York for a carcer
gives her this slick opening nar-
ration: "They come from all
over the country wide-eyed with
wonder and in a state of com-
plete innocence A lot of them re-
main In New York that is"
PUNCHLINES
Its won't be long until it will
be time to turn over a new leaf
—and maybe fewer cars will be
turned over
A hold-up man pointed a pin
at a woman grocrey store clerk
and told her to act natural
So she screamed
A fighter in the East always
listens to the radio before going
into the ring Maybe it puts him
in a fighting mood
'
Personality is the greatest as-
set of the working girl says a
businessman Competence and be-
ing on time are just old-fashioned
111
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CARNIVAL
NEW YORK (UPI) — Strangel
things hoo-hee were happening
in the CBS mail room last week:
Arthur Godfrey's morning TV
show was papered under by its
greatest volume of mail in five
years
The response was triggered by
five days of talk from comic Sam
Levenson about today's teen-
agers "Teen age is the age of re-
volt And some of them can be
pretty revolting" is the way
Levenson uncorked hir attack and
from there he went on to talk
about such things as sexual ac-
tivity autos curfews rock 'n' roll
and lack of parental discipline
Tuesday night Levenson ap-
peared on the Godfrey nighttime
show and telescoped his five daysl
of morning talk I must confessl
I almost jumped ship at the start
of the show when Godfrey leanedl
his face into my TV tube and
leered something like:
"How would you like to talk'
about sexteen age sex in au-
tomobiles" However Levenson survived
that graceless introduction and
went on to make some unleery
talk about early dating early
marriage and the teen-agers'
worship of mediocrity and materi-
al things Over his six sessions
Levenson has managed to fling
out a fair quota of bonbons and
I have collected a few:
On revolt: "Teen-agers have a
natural urge to be different—so
they all dress alike"
On autos: "This is a generation
that's forgotten how to walk com-
pletely—unless it's downhill"
On sex and autos: "More girls
have gotten into trouble in cars
in America in the last 10 years
than have gotten into trouble in
bedrooms a hundred years be
SEM
I IN V 1 CI
' AMR HOOPLE
WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 18 1959
"That's a little too expensive I'm afraid I wouldn't be
able to get that back from her!"
Ewald Views Video
BY U1LLIA
'THAT'S SEVEN STRAIGAT PASSES
siOU'VE AkADEI THERE'S alasER THN 1--
ODDS AGA!NST THAT A 14
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7-7 on
Ad
M EWALD
fore I think more girls have
been converted in convertibles
than any other place"
on responsibility: ! "TV has a
moral responsibility which it
doesn't always adhere to The
rock-and-roll musicians have a
moral responsibility which they
have Junked completely The disk
jockeys have a moral responsibil-
ity which I question sometimes"
On parents: "The parents have
to have the guts to—to be par-
ents It takes a little courage—to
face up to a kid who you know
is wrong"
Generally Lev e nso n who
taught school for 15 years and
groups favored less permissive-
ness and a stronger parental
ihand And although this may
seem like a rather oversimplified
approach to a complex problem
at least it was voiced in strong
terms over six shows on that
Igreat funnel of pap TV
1 That viewers should respond in
such great numbers I look upon
as heartening It could be the
programmers are wrong — and
that the TV audience wants not
to be lulled but reminded that
after all they are alive
The Channel Swim: One of the
new shows being prepared for
NBC-TV is "Provoke" a half-
hour series which would drama-
tize controversial issues ABC-TV
will ax Dr IQ on March 9—It'll
be replaced with This Is Music
Arthur Godfrey got the nod to
take over the emcee job on CBS-
TV's Person To Person next sea-
son — Ed Murrovv is taking a
year's leave from CBS-TV Mike
Val lice has left ABC-TV and will
launch a syndicated interview
show for an independent outfit
National Telefilm Associates
tr v Nog V Pa Off
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Heck, Jess. Miami Daily News-Record (Miami, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 199, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 18, 1959, newspaper, February 18, 1959; Miami, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2141218/m1/6/?q=communication+theory: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.