Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 97, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1962 Page: 2 of 8
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BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1962
TH
-And Without the Aid of Science---
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MORE PILOTS
Cel
80 Years Ago
R
TOeBEEERAINED
Editor,
. Blanton, Society Editor Harbert Jaster, city Editor and Sports I
ianBcrogin, terror n Editor; Darlene Luedemann, Peggy Drews.
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Demands For Re-examination of
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Norris Rohde
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A
Man
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* may act as spacecraft command-
ers on Apollo missions.” Apollo is
the program to extend flights-ever
farther into space until, late In
ti e 1960s, American astronauts in
own Americas leaders as mak-
ers and movers of American poli-
cy. Vital natiqnal interest is still
Wheel
Balancing
(On
annou
word
Minim
cents
for mu
It matters but little what you
needs may be, a Banner - Press
Classifed Ad will ge‘ the desired
results.
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9
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peace fellow and an enemy of the
good and the beautiful.
Now, however, constuctive cri-
ticism is at last bursting through
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y
“65
80 Years Ago
April 19, 1882 — New Ray—A
3
Blanton, Pubusher and Editor: Carolyn
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-flta
also a highly limited, political
body with the right to explore and
debate world issues and make re-
commendations to sovereign coun-
tries.
It is no more sacrosanct than,
say, the United States Senate.
And its momentary voting major-
ities are no more inevitably"right"
I
%
Hugh Miller killed an alleged math
dog in third ward. It exhibited
signs of hydrophobia and is said
to have bitten several other dogs.
On Sunday another alleged mad
dog was also killed in the third
ward. Ther are a number of val-
uabl dogs in the city which are
Headlines
of
Yesteryear.
-
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5
■
dent and Seeretary.
ID EDITORIAL— Ben
To The
VTH ANNUAL
' Sunrise
And. to repeat the most meaning-
ful point of all, it is coming from
men with notable records as in-
ternationalists and with suitably
"liberal” bona fides.
It is against all this background
that the recent speech of Sen.
Henry M. Jackson of Washington
should be read. His brilliant analy-
sis of what is wrong with the U.N.
HOUS
added
without
Palmer
and fo
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Houston
Califo
Billy Ci
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Ken Ve
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rent to
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Shear your Sheep
And
OK’S PORTRAIT GALLERY
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Sen.
ate Tuesday approved and sent to
the House a bill to set up a na-
tional portrait gallery as a bureau
good. Another is that the increase in Social .
fits may be inducing more older workers to retire. t
3 , -
5
. T • •
lege graduates began looking for jobs. But unemployment rates
may go up again, too, unless there is a business pickup.
Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg cites several possi-
_ ble1reasons for no steady Increase in the labor force.
One is that the campaign to prevent school dropouts may be
doing some ;
Security benel
&
{Copyright, 1962, by United Fea-
ture Syndicate, nc.)
but the city is literally overrun
with flee and curs of low degree,
and the city council will no doubt
soon take some action to .have
them banished from the streets,
where they are a great nuisance.
Kid gloves, button or hooks, lace
mits of the latest and best quality
in all colors can be had atH. Hod.
de‘s.
The Banner is indebted to Maj.
F R. Allison of the Santa Fe
railway for a complimentary to
the Evening Picnic of the Texas,
Railway Employees Mutual Bene-
fit Association, at Schmidt’s Gar-
den, Galveston, May 20, 1882. This
i: the only organization of its kind
in the state, and as its name inv
plies, it has for its object the re-
lief of. its members who may gbe
sick or disabled. -3 ' — ---
LOWESTOFT, England (UPD-
Girls at Lowestoft School here
have refused to take part in a
beauty contest unless they can en-
ter fully dressed.
, B a t h in g suits are "out,” they
maintained.
look at the U.N. —reflects far
more than the views of a single
Senator, albeit a liberal interna-
tirnalist who was one of the first
Frontiersmen. .
What Jackson said amounts to
a distillate of the case as seen
by a large and growing number
of politicians. The last thing they
want to do is to injure the real
UN. But the next to last thing
they want is to allow the U.N. to
go on trying to dominate the for-
eign policies of its members —
particularly its Western mem-
bers.
T h e s e are among the t Kings
they believe:
That the UIN. was never i n-
tended to be a substitute for our
ATHLETE'S FOOT
HOWTOKILL
By GEORGE N. SHUSTER
Assistant To The President
Notre Dame University
(Roman Catholic)
Written For UPI
To borrow a comparison from
the Bible, Lent is a time when
we enter a kind of spiritual gym-
nasium to train once more for a
contest which never ends. The
BUS'
the Ian
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Russell
winning
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been li
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proved
When
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playoff
They’
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pi ecede
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5 to 10 additional astronauts would
be picked next fall to join the seven
Mercury pilots in (raining for fu-
ture flight. programs, including
trips to the moon.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) also
said a third group of astronauts '
would be recruited some time aft- '
er 1965.
The new group may include civ- (
ilian as well as military jet test
pilots. Candidates have until June
1 to file their applications with
Director Robert R. Gilruth of ।
Nasa’s Manned Spacecraft Center
at Houston, Tex.
Under 35 Years of Age
NASA officials said candidates
must be under 35 as of nekt fall
and be no taller than six feet in
addition to being experienced jet
test pilots, they must have de-
grees in physical or biological
sciences or in engineering.
NASA officials said the qualifi-
cations demanded for the new
space pilots automatically rule out
woman candidates. They said no
women now flying could meet all
the specifications.
The new astronauts will work
with the seven pioneer astronauts
in “support operations” for Proj-
ect Mercury but will not partici-
pate in what is left of the Mer-
cury program.
Train for Gemini
They will, however, join the
Mercury pilots in training for the
next flight program, Project Gem-
ini. In the Gemini program, ex-
pected to start in 1964. two-man
spacecraft will fly in orbit around
the earth for periods up to a
week or more.
working needs aa he is well
fuorkE- zu ami=--se
CABINET SHOP
Jr. and Wm. Warnasch
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• BARBS
CONRAN
An Oklahoma man was ar-
rested for throwing a plate of
ice cream in a restaurant.
Sounds like a congealed
weapon.
Ift about time when the
house painting dad put off
last fall until this spring will
be pst off until next fall.
1
By WILLIAM S. WHITE
WASHINGTON — Demands for
a re-examination of America’s
—or rather what is wrong with the jority.
way we deal with the U.N. and -
---24-_m-a —e
Neill F. Amsler, chemist a.nd
owner of the Brenham Labora- well cared for by their owners,
otherwise, a place touched with
. . . - ..a special holiness. It is a highly
the old Darrier of clishe epithets, useful, but in terms of power
Women’s. place to in the
home.rof some neighbor at
morning coftee break time.
Panning a husband it ate
thing but when a wife tMe
a skillet ife something eise
When the recipe calls for flour...
^^>7^ makes it better!
PAGE 2__________________
Brenham Banner-Press
Entered as sec-
- - - - „ ond class mat-
rruxasGFWESSeVsOEAVI ter at
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9 Texas, u n d e r
Tenbec-182AAFMNLZ292 Act or Mal h 3.
20 Years Ago
April 19, 1942 — Sgt. Herman
Caskamp, local lad who left here
with the Brenham National Guard
last year, visited relatives here
this week arid will leave today
for Kansas where he will be in
he officer's candidate school at
Fort Riley. Gaskamp will be the
fust Washington County boy to
become an officer the hard way.
A Chinese army scored a ma-
jor allied victory in Burma today,
but the Japanese assaulted Cor-
regidor fortress in the Philippin-
es with dive bombers and medi-
um planes. American guns i n
Manila Bay replied by knocking
out at least three enemy batteried
and smashing trucks and troops
massed on Bataan.
WASHINGTON—(NEA—Unemployment is still the stickiest
factor in the economy and the Kennedy administration's worst
headache.
March figures just released show unemployment dropped by
160,000 to 4.4 million and total employment rose by 500,000 to
66.3 million, as compared to February levels.
This is encouraging. But the unemployment drop is only
halfway from the 7 per cent level of May 1961 to the desired
level of not over 4 per cent.
ONE CURIOUS ASPECT of the present situation is that the
total labor force of 73 million workers is no higher than it was
a year ago. The labor force figure is expected to rise again to
over 76 million, as it did last June when high school and col-
And they are coming from, genu-
ine but cool-headed friends of the
U N. who cannot longer be fobbed
off by its wet-eyed and excessive-
ly uncritical lovers as "isolation-
ists", or "right-wingers", or oth-
er such bad types.
The hope must be that from
all this will at length come a re-
adjustment in the balance as be-
tween sweetness and light. What
is needed is much less warm
sweetness and far morea cool
light. For unless our official and
public attitudes toward the U.N.
can be made more rational, the
U.N. itself is surely on the way
out as a significant forum.
At this point it needs not hap-
py. adulation but rather the
brisk ■ attentions of practical-
minded critics Such critics have
fot years existed in plenty. Un-
til now, however, they have been
largely silent, for It has been dif-
ficult to say a single critical word
against the U. N. without being
called a "reactionary,” an anti-
race is run against the clever
Mephisto within us — the desire
t. take the easy way out, to get
more fun out of life than the law
allows, to make a pin-up of the
ego. and perhaps to forget that
God is in his heaven and wants
us to keep this in mind.
Forty days of fasting will of
course do no harm. Generally we
eat too much. But the real job is
te stretch out over the horizon as
far as the soul will go- Every
faith has ways of helping with
this. It suggests prayer, good
stiff exercises in thinking of
others who need to be thought
about, and reading the story of
the divine way with man. The
man who keeps at it will be sur-
prised to find at the end how
many things in life there are he
had forgotten about.
® TOUA NEWSPAPER
P B BeritaneotErutba
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teams of three are flying around:day and Friday next are now on
the moon and making lunar land-'sale at Abe Meyer's for seventy-
ings. • five cents a seat. Blind Tom is 8of the Smithsonian Institution.
I The (
■ Angeles
■ . time be
B at n ho
| victory
I ti ans-ce
B -which J
apiee e
' The .
veteran
Cousy,
the res
court.
The (
Russell,
during
the, pla.
30 point
total ol
four of
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take fo
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‘}nidan ' , ■.
——................
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By JOSEPH L. MYLER
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
space agency'said Wednesday that
. I
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I
musical progedy and his perform-
lance on the piano is regarded as
wonderful.
The system of “trimmings" has
been so long in vogue that the
city council is loth to abolish it,
even if there be any authority for
sc doing. In fixing the salaries of
the mayor, marshal and police at
the meeting on Monday the “pre-
requisites" were tacked on to the
stated salaries without a dissent-
ing voice.
Mad Dogs—On Tuesday Mr.
yM7AMe
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relationships to the United, Na. that -e national interest And. it,
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Department in, Washington, not in kg
our U.N. office in New York. ■
That the N.U. with all its values ■
as a forum and its persuasive influ- iM
ence toward peace - keeping, is nF
properly a ' useful inernational
meeting ground. But it is not prop-
erly a place for dumping our na-
tional problems — or for permit-
ting others to usurp our own pow-
ers and responsibilities.
That the men primarily i n
charge of UK affairs, Ambass- ■
ador Adlai Stevenson and Assist-
ant Secretary of State Harlan
Cleveland, are unwise in their
campaigns to give more and more
"executive responsibilities” to the
U.N This kind of responsibility
belongs at home.
Senator Jackson politely d i s-
claims any persdnal criticism of
Ambassador Stevenson. Such cri-
ticism, however, is inescapably 1
involved in the general anxiety •
over UN. empire-building. For
empire-building' is no proper func-
tion of the UK Nor can it repeal
the right of national self-defense.. -
Nor is it, thoigh many1 think
After the Gemini flights, NASA number of, wagon loads of prairie
said, some -of t.z tew a. t-aeNs* e - •.ceeX -whster-
%
lt",eulo
tory, has just received a notifi-
cation from Charles Parsons, sec-
retary of the American Chemical
Society, that he has been elected
to membership in that organiza-
tion.
Mrs. A. E. Niebuhr has re-
turned from Fort Worth, where
she visited her mother and at-
tended her sister’s wedding.
Mrs. Hugh Robertson and her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Schmid of Pecos are
guests of her brothers, Louis and
Oscar Beaumier, arid families.,
WHITE WINGS Enriched Flour is milled fresh daily...
rushed fresh to your grocers’ shelves.
It’s as fine an all-purpose flour as money can buy.
A PRODUCT OF PIONEER FLOUR MILLS
ba CKED ar ill re Ans of a v a i1 r r si me a
Administration Chews at
Unemployment's Hard Core
BY PETER'EDSON
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
5
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A third reason is increase in call-ups for the armed services.
THE ONE MOST DISCOURAGING ASPECT of the situation
is that the number of long-term unemployed—those who have
been continuously without work for 15 weeks or more—is 1.5
million. Those who have been without work for 26 weeks or1
more number 700,000. Both figures are lower than they were
a year ago, but Goldberg admits they are still too high.
Department of Labor s bureau of employment security re-
cently released results of a survey of the long-term unemployed
as of last May’s peak. 4
its most significant revelations are roughly that two-’
thirds of the long-term unemployed weresmen.wi.ae
mediarage of 43, heads of families who had been out‘or
a job for more than six months in the last three years and
who had exhausted their state .unemployment benefits.
This last mentioned factor indicates the necessity of Presi-
dent Kennedy’s request to Congress for renewal of the 1961
Temporary Extended Unemployment Compensation Act for an-
other year, through March 31. 1963, Payments to a total of 2.5
million long-term unemployed are expected to total over $1.1
billion by this date. v
The Kennedy administration has before Congress proposals
to make this extension of benefits to a maximum of 39 weeks
permanent legislation. But with House Ways and Means and
Senate Finance Committees so tied up with tax reform, trade
expansion and medical,care for the aged under Social Security,
they will not have! time to take care of the unemployed except
by another temporary extension.
BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY’S labor market sur-
vey shows that most of the long-term unemployed are found
in 20 of 63 major industrial areas and 105 of 203 smaller areas
which have had substantial unemployment, above the national
average of 6 per cent, for the last several years.
These are the areas on which the administration is con-
centrating to reduce the hard core of unemployment.
8,
NOTICE
Having sold our partnerships intereats, effective
April 17, 1962, Kramer Cabinet Shop is owned and
operated by T. W. Lueckemeyer. We wish to thank
the public for their patronage during the past
years and trust that Mr. Lueckemeyer will be fav-
*.8,- w ’ “4 * ■ -1 ‘l4;‘
WHIIEWINGS I
A/ ■ EPD 3 1
MSSY 1 • "WVAQ)% \
mpmraeom,,.
eemmdllann.%
7 c
_7
All p, % £
Purpose 8
FLOUR
A
day. The new crop of hay comes
in splendid time for farmers who
.are short of corn.
• Blind Tom — Reserved seats-
for Blind Tom’s concerts on Thurs-
drying -4-L, ysar Me
drug store. Watch infect
on. Waich heithy Md
Itch and burning are wone.
at at an Drug Stores.
BUSINESS omes-r W. Proske. Cashier; Mrs. Linda Dannhaus, Mrs.
PMw Danahsus, Mrs. Ruth Broacker.
___ James B. Byrd. Superintendent: S H. Zetik, Elmer
_ Alfred Hartmann, Reinhold Herrmann, Darold Bell, Raymond
CIECULATiQN—Mn Patsy Dannhaus. wue Hertel. W H Muske. Her-
mann Klar. Don Welma, Weldon Finke *
By Mall: Washington and adjoining cpunties $6.12:. Texas $9.18: out.of
state $10.20. Subscription Rate by Carrier One month 3102; Year 110 20.
AU prices include the 2% State Sales Tax.
Published every afternoon except Saturday and Sunday at 223 East Main
•West. Brenham. Texas. Telephones OR 6-3643, QR HIH_______________
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Blanton, Ben F. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 97, No. 78, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1962, newspaper, April 19, 1962; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1566685/m1/2/: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.