The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1965 Page: 4 of 16
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PROSPECTING
Alt
Conclusions Regarding LB J’s Foreign Policy
By HAL BOYLE
99
55
1
2d
G
Big District Concept Favored for Orange County
some.
hardly enough in this world to
make you a hero. Whoever built
er gives-his bride a diamond
sev-
Last year he called the Su-
wants more cash.
WNfBSsNeysTrue Life Adventures
7
A
By BENNETT CERF
E
t
i
>
>1 : 1
)
I
him, trying to spear the dive in
the glass. Finally the bartender
grabbed the toothpick and har-
Pooned the oliva at his first
sauer-
ng for
Try and Stop Me
ACROSS THE EDITOR’S DESK . . .
New Look in Hairdos Will Bring it Down
Bt J. CULLEN BROWNING
against the limited nuclear test-
ban treaty, medical care for the
aged through Social Security,
civil rights, domestic Peace
Corps, federal aid to education
Late in the year the estimates
rose above $2 billion, with many
gd
on some social and economic
measures
.The bartender at p J
Clarke's watched patiently
while an inebriate lunged vi-
clously but vainly with a tooth-
Paring his request for foreign
aid appropriations to the lowest
and foreign aid for the past
eral years.
Moment of Meditation
• Continue steadfastly in prayer, belng watchful in
it with thanksgiving;—Col. 4:2
day because they can’t find
three other guys to make a four-
Johnson last year. Long, how-
ever, had campaigned for the
President'there.
An example of his position on
some major issues: he voted
MIXED MENU
7b mOzeT
AwASHA
SWIMS AL WITH
WNE-OYEN MOUTH.
Speaking of Your Health...
----By LESTER COLEMAN, M.D__
W "
E
-8
I
I
d
you could make if you happen to travel in July
could prove profitable in a business way in October,
late November and-or December—the latter month,
incidentally, also propitious for travel and for job
promotion.
/You may have to guard against emotional
stress for brief periods in June and November,
but this you can do if you will relax and “count
your blessings,” as the saying goes. You have no
cause for anxiety. Look for interesting romantic
developments during the next two weeks, in late
May, late June and late July; stimulating social
experiences during the same periods; also in Sep-
tember and December.
ag
Most wives, asked if they
. . . . . could live their lives again say
Just holding things together is they would again marry at the
same age. Most husbands say
they’d remain bachelors at least
five years longer: .M
It is possible to forgive a
friend any success' he achieves
in life — so long as his kids
have lower IQs than yours.
8
There has been criticism of President
Johnson because of the manner in which
foreign policy was soft-pedaled in hi* State
of the Union message. It may or may not be
justified—thia remains to be seen. But it
raises a provocative question that the Ameri-
THE BUSINESS MIRROR . . .
Foreign Aid Cut
Would Help Johnson
By SAM DAWSON
VINTON
Altar Soc
Catholic
at a mee
coffee Jai
Mr*. D.
East St.
Women
general p
call betw
noon. Mri
assist Mn
ess dutiee
baked goc
fit of the
Mrs. B
opening f
L. Breat
prayer.
The soc
I
THE WORLD TODAY
-- Was Election Mandate for Change?
By JAMES MARLOW
operate. The foundation keeps crawling to the top
and none of the rest of it can remember to stay
where ft is put when combed.
Well bless my soul. I left the office for a while
in the middle of the paragraph above and Pete
Parker's repairman returned the old Underwood.
Now maybe we can start having fun again.
The news release I was writing about before
the interruption suggested that 1 consult my eos-
metologist about any hair conditioning I may need.
I den’t know any cosmetologists so I guess III
have to write a letter abort my problem to
HEwbe,
And speaking of Helolse, there was a letter in
the mail from her today. It resulted from the col-
umn I wrote for inclusion in the album of letter*
from editors presented to her along with the Silver
Lady award. This is what shs wrote to me:
“I want to thank you with all my heart tor
your congratulatory letter in your column.
unpopular
The President'is asking Con-
gress'for $1.17 billion for arms,
and $2.21 billion for economic
aid. Of this 8500 million or more
Ml
ACI
Take PR
want tern)
aches ani
ness oftei
ritis, Rh
Lumbago,
ful Musc
discomfor
At Tom V
Green Av
NEW YORK (AP) - A cut in
foreign aid spending will be
doingsits bit in helping Presi-
dent Johnson find funds for his
"Great Society” and stil hope-
fully keep his bdget under $100
billion. Just how' he would do
this has been a question tickling
, the minds of many awaiting the
budget's final unveiling late this
month.
That's why a wise husband nev.
Early last month it became
apparent that this deficit was
climbing again after being
trimmed in the early part of
1964. Estimate* for the total ,
5
E98
***h
M
And last year he managed
Johnson's successful Senate
fight for an $11 5-billion tax cut.
House Democrat* changed
nothing The)- re-elected their
old leaders, starting with Speak-
er John W. McCormack of Mas-
sachusetts.
more did than Washington
would have.liked.
’Your kind and most amusing words are
mounted in my Silver Lady album and will be '
treasured always.
"I fully realize that if it war* not for YOU
being such a wonderful boss, I would never have
been able to achieve the honor awarded me.
“Bless you always.”
New that was real nice of her and I shall
redouble my efforts to locate somewhere ta East
Texas the Mad of a black-eyed pea farm which
Helolse baa aald sb* weald like to retire to when
she gives up columntating.
YOUR HOROSCOPE
The Stars Say
FOR TOMORROW
If you can control disappointment and dismay
when unexpected change* of plan occur, you should
have » highly satisfactory day. Postponed activities
often work out better if they are carried out a lit-
tle later. You should find much compensating
pleasure in the congeniality of associates.
FOR THE BIRTHDAY
If tomorrow is your birthday, your horoscope in-
dicates that you should make excellent headway
in job matters during the coming year; also some
gratifying monetary gains-especially between now
and the end of March, in September, late October
and late November, Some valuable contacts which
there will put this part of the
request in a different category ,
in congressional minds, from
the rest of the aid to other na-
will go to Viet Nam and Laos.
The fighting and U.S. casualties
NE
a statue to a paper clip?
A woman always should have
something to look forward to
i
The ORANGE LEADI
u - . ' . -- ■
-J FRIDAY, JANUAKY 15, 1965
EDITORIAL PAGE
H
1
8
Laird, who calls himself a
"creative conservative,’’ helped
put together the 1964 Republican
platform which so pleased Gold,
water's supporters In getting
Ford's old job, Laird beat out
Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen, 48,
of New Jersey.
Frelinghuysen, considered
more moderate if not more lib-
eral, than Ford or Laird, was
not discouraged. With the back- (
ing of Ford he then tried to get ]
the job of Leslie C. Arends. 69, i
ot Illinois, the assistant leader i
for 21 yean.
The conservative Arends was
sum asked since the program . --------------
was launched shortly after predicting that the drain would
World War II should in itself prove to have been $2.5 billion
raise only a minimum of dissent at least.
In Congress. The annual foreign Just how many more dollars
aid request has usually been went overseas in the final
unpopular on Capitol Hill, months of 1964 than returned in
payment for U.S. exports or as
returns on U.S. private invest-
ment hasn’t been announced
yet. There are signs that a lot
WASHINGTON (ARI - From
the way Democrats and Repub-
licans in Congress have chosen
their top leaders in this new ses-
sion you’d never guess the 1964
election might have had some
political significance.
Yet, when President Johnson
drowned conservative Sen. Ban
ry Goldwater in history's great-
est plurality, Republicans lost
» seats in the House and two in
the Senate. Was this a mandate
for change?
Apparently not among Demo-
crats or Republicans in Con-
gress where change is slow, ma-
neuverings are intricate, old
favors are remembered, friend-
ships can be stronger than ide-
oligy, and politicians in both
homes seem slow to learn
In the House, the depleted
Republicans threw the conserv-
ative, 64year-old Charles Hal-
leck out of his job as their lead-
er — he had held it six years —
and replaced him with equally
conservative Gerald R. Ford,
51, of Michigan.
Ford's supporters gave this
reason for wanting the change:
They thought Republicans need-
ed a younger and more forceful
‘ "image” than the rather lan-
guid Halleck who, after his de-
feat, said: "That's how the ball
bounces.”
Ford had been chairman of
the Home Republican Confer-
ence, or caucus. Promptly
House Republicans filled it with
Melvin R. Laird, 42, of Wiscon-
sin.
# =
8
2
who drinks a glaksof
kraut juice every morni
breakfast. 6
5239222639"#,
Heeee=-6Se-esE
based on population.
allsssbimsel an “eco-
nomic liberal” and had the sup-
port of some liberals in seeking
Humphrey's old job. In the past
. h: had joined forces with them
communities, will be pared.
And since the Congress has a
record of giving less than the
President asks for foreign aid, deficit tar.thwen nr. ~
theuitimate savings should help Vised upwarae year
the education, on job °traxnnnd . For a time Washington had
transportation, and other pro hoped.to. keep 1964‛s defiit un-
grams for which the Pfestdent dhe 323 «n.«, rmpared gota
and dollars in 1963.
But I am reassured by word that the new hair
- styles are decidedly ladylike, with a flair of chic
that has a dash It's quite possible that this will
make their heads more intriguing than their knees.
It's also inieresting to learn that there is more
to haviog * pretty head of hair than jest washing
it wits a certain brand of shampoo as some of
the TV rows ■tori al* would have as behove.
The association says, “Of vital importance to
the season's new hair styles is a softly controlled
professional permanent wave. The seemingly simple
- lines of the new styles and the action they fea-
! ture, make it imperative that your hair has the
soft but necessary foundation needed to bold the
memory of every was*- line confidently"
This may apply to women but not to me. I use
oceans of greasy kid stuff in an effort to control
a natural permanent wave but it still won't co-
/
A \ ,
m'uz thaya, 22Snazt'xma
as for the New Jerseyite.
One House Republican, Albert
H. Quie of Minnesota, a leader
of the younger members of his
party, said this setback for Ford
was “something 0 a disaster
for the already weakened par-
ty.” •
THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
You Ever Jump
To Conclusions?
In the Senate, the Republicans ,
changed nothing. They kept all 4
their leaders, beaded by Everett ■
M. Dirksen of Illinois. He has
become famous on television tor ,
hisprose, sometimes doleful but
always embroidered with elassi- |
cal allusidns or nimble imagery. ,
But the Senate Democrats ,
didn't pay attention to the elec- i
tion results, either;kwhen it ;
came to leadership. As expect- ,
ed. and there was no contest
they re-elected the mild bukpreme Court iustices «gere.
The fight was over the assist- must be' br ’ 8 : ■
ant leadership, relinquished by ' But he call
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey after
be was elected vice president
Here the contestants were
Russell B. Long of Louisiana,
Jota O. Pastore of Rhode Is-
land.and A. S Mke Monroney
of Oklahoma Pastore and Mon-
roney had supported far more
major Kennedy-Johnson pro-
grams than Long.
But the 46-year-old Long won,
even though his native Louisi-
ana was one of the five Southern
states which Voted against
52
9,
0
<
-fhis fact 1* well known. But he also has
learned from experience that it can have bad
results if ill-timed or improperly done. From
this has come his general policy of riding
along with any situation until he feels confi-
dent that a given course of action will get
the desired result .
It also is well known that the President' '
will go the limit in the use of persuasion to
avoid arm-twisting And this i* rm a to be
, th* current phase of his efforts to cope with
the country’* knotty foreign relations
problems.
There is evidence of it in the manner in
NEW YORK (AP) - Jumping engagement ring until their »h
to concluslons: _• wedding anniversary.
A leader is a person born with The average beggar i* about
asnnrgpbsnsut"nbsabrityendn
world. manager — but he can make
Most great leaders in any quicker judgements.
field — whether they be politi- It’s high time universities
cians, soldiers businessmen, gave a courea in “footballeese ••
evangelists, artists or rock ‘n’ the gibberish in which spors.
roll singer — are to ome ex- caste describe the art of
tent megalomaniac. This pushing, kicking, or passing an
means they have a mania for inflated pigskin up and down a
great or grandiose perform- gridiron. It certainly is the most
ance, plus a feeling of personal rapidly growing language in
omnipotence. . America, but I have yet to meet
There are two types of me- • fan able to tell me in English
galomaniacs — the noisy ones ' just what a "flanker back” is,
and the quiet ones. It you have and how he earns his living:
to work for one or another — What makes many of s so
and most people do — it is bet- neurotic isn’t that we can’t have
ter to work for a noisy one what we want but that we are
You can always tell when faced with so many choices we
you’ve satisfied the ego of a can’t decide what we really do
noisy megalomaniac; with a desire. The world was just as
quiet one you’re never sure. happy when ice cream came in
No person is truly educated only three flavors — vardlla
unless he looks up a word in the chocolate and strawberry-
dictionary at least twice a week All hobbyists become public
You hear a lot about ro bores with their bragging ex.
mances between millionaires cept the fellow who secretly col-
and hatcheck girls. But when it lects French post cards
.comes to marrying, most hat- You don’t have to perform
. check girls wind up with musi- great deeds to become well,
cians or bartenders, known. One of the most talked-
Being cast up on a desert is- about fellows in my neighbor,
land all by yourself is pretty hood has a simple distinction
dismal, but the loneliest men in He is the only guv in the Work
Civilization are those who play
golf with their wives on Satur-
* mih
even without any previous,, exceeded
known al- Q: I* there any way of pre-
lergyi: it is dieting whether a person will
Lv!’?”.to be sensitive to a drug?
den unex- A: If a patient has had re-
netted or un- actions to other drugs before,
r-sss -
Dr. Coleman have -a tower For some drugs, like penicil-
drug tolerance than others. , ■ there.sare skin tests to check
Highly allergic patients often for sensitivity before the d r u g
tend to be sensitive to drugs is_actually. given. If the skin
that would normally not be dis- test indicate* an allergic reao-
■ ---- tion,. toe drug can then be
n avoided and a substitute drug
may be used instead.
Q: Can a person suddenly be-
drugs tend to accu- come sensitive to a drug that
he body. When they he.has taken before without any
are taken at too frequent in- noticeable reaction?
tervals and the body receive* A: This can, and often doe*
more than it needs or can ab- occur. The intricate body mech-
sorb, this can cause a sensitiv- anisms which produce sensitiv-
ity reaction which might not oc- ity or allergy are extremely
cur with smaller or less fro complex, and still a scientific
quent doses. puze not completely solved.
The dosage prescribed by a Whenever there are any signs
doctor is usually based on theof unusual reaction to a drug.
----- even if it has been taken safely
before, discontinue its use, and
consult your physician.
THE ORANGE LEADER
neon Wm* Mn M sunan. Manure
to Me-
Oreng Leodur Pw/tantng C*. Orel
200 w. Frent Av, r. o. Box 1021, Oronge, Texos nun
Jome B. Qvtgtey, traMM and Piollshar
Ta
memeer ASSOCIATED PRESS
The aaegdetee frn> n nUvUralr enmmeg 1 »• tor
wrd"Ashprsa."mi prinied * newtbocer
subacriptin Rete? 315 UanOJr ar SUS* tar Yeor /
KPiw SW, Sei To wher Apotlcobi» /
THLEPHONES
Genaret ome end Ceuained -------------- TUsamn
Cirevtetton Deportment________Tu Mau
omu m wcond cM> morter
can people need to examine in complete
candor: Has this country had too much for-
eign policy in the past 1
Th* President obviously thinks that it
has He seems to believe that there ha* been
excessive involvement of the United State*
in the affairs of other nations and that it
- has been detrimental to progress at home •
- This is not to suggest that Johnson is an
isolatienist who believes we can build a nu-
■ dear wall around America and ignore what
is going on in -the rest of the world. He is
too much a realist for that
What he does seem to believe is that Theo-
dore Roosevelt was very wisein his admo-
■ nition that the nation’s foreign policy be one
of walking softly but carrying a big stick.
This, we have concluded, is the course John-
son intends to pursue.
At no time since he moved into the White
House has he brandished the big stick. It
isn't necessary, and he know* this to be true.
The whole world is well aware of our mili-
tary might.
He also knows that a good many of our
troubles abroad have been due to a failure to
walk softly Unpleasant as the thought may
be, it must be admitted that the U.S. has
- been guilty on occasion of being too insistent
that other countries bow to its will.
Johnson is not above arm-twisting and
tions’ defense and economies
The some $2.8 billion left for
toe rest of the world .that the
United States still aids in either
arms or economic grants will
more .small bit -only a little doubtless come under fire as
more than $100 million, unless usual N
Congress cuts still further. But on. h-e. ... ao
requests for this long-time pro- One charseis that it contrib-
gram of arms and economic utes to the deficit in U.S. inter-
assistance to other nations, national money dealings.
along with defense spending in a
number of classifications and
8.
Q: What are th* symptoms
of a drug reaction?
A: There are many different
types of reactions.
Welts or hives on the skin,
stab. "Great work, Boy,” ap- skin, rashes, itching of the skin,
plauded the inebriate, "but you sudden running of the nose,
gotta admit I had him so ex- or itching and swelling of the
hausted. he couldn't get away ” eyes are only * few of the re-
----- actions which may be indica-
Doctor Seligman told a cranky tions of sensitivity to a drug,
old patient, “I think an opera- It must be remembered, how-
tion is indicated—and this very ever, that many forms of Ill-
week, if we can get a private ness may produce these same
room at the hospital." "But, symptoms It is therefore un-
Doctor,” quavered the pa- wise to make a self-diagnosis
tient, “how will that affect my of drug reaction.
hobby?" "Your hobby?” echoed Q. Can drugs cause severe
tbbbdstorsavg monels, and dangerous reactions?
the patient ‘ A: Reactions to drugs can
_____ vary from minor annoyance to
Bill Dana tells of a quack prolonged discomfort,
who peddled “old Indian rem- Immediate discontinuance of
edies" at state fairs. "It’s in- toe drug, followed by intensive
fallible, claimed the quack to medical treatment with anti-
investigating officers "-that is histamines, cortisone and ACTH
(Or anybody who's troubled by will usually prevent any serious
old Indian*,” ) complicationa.
8,3
TO
The final decision 1» up to" the legislature
but as things now stand Orange County is
either going to remain in a congressional
- district dominated by Jefferson County or
go into one that is bigger than some of the
American states.
It has to be one or the other because of
the distribution of population in East Texas.
And it is our opinion, based on bitter experi-
ence, that we would be better off in the big
district.
Its upper limit would be Henderson
■ F County, which is 200 mile* from Orange and
where Rep. John Dowdy of Athens live*.
This makes it likely that if we are placed in
the proposed 19-county district, Dowdy
would be our next congressman.
We have no objection* to that. Dowdy is
an able, experienced lawmaker and we feel
confident that he would represent us- well
pezENe norPAorsnmperrsmugs.noa
% ANV other -FLOTSAM A JEeAM.
It was real pleasing to me when I learned
that the nation'* women are going to let their
hair down. Not to terms of having a high-heeled
time, but in the physical meaning. <
The National Hairdresser* and Cosmetologist*
Association has sent word that beehiving, teasing
and the other goofy thing* women have been doing
• to their hair for some time is passe’.
The 'association's tub thumper got downright
lyrical in describing the new styles, which the hair-
dresser* and cosmetologists have lumped under
the general term of "Swingbeart." They are de-
•eribed as being "gloriously carefree and
lighthearted.”
And I am very glad to learn, as the inode
tion says all of ns will be. that the new style*
“really make good tense." To me, any heir
feshion that makes a woman look like a woman
tnsteed of ■ creature from Mars is good tense.
Some of the pictures accompanying the news re-
lease show coiffures not too different from those
wom by women in the days when flappers were
in fashion These, I suppose, are to keep the eyes
of man away from the knees that ar* begining to
be displayed by the new length in dresses which
the fashion eun have decreed.
This will make it tough on dedicated girl watch-
er* It's going to be difficult to center attention
" on the knees when the girl is wearing an evening
hairdo which the association describes as a “dra-
matic exaggeration with voluptuous combing into
waves and curia.”
"s
3k
i which he is dealing with the political crisis in
Viet Nam. The objective there obviously is
first to encourage the establishment of a
। stable government then to pursue the war in
whatever fashion it* progress, or lack of it,
seems to warrant.
There also was evidence of it in his State
of the Union invitation to the Soviet leader*
to come and see what we have accomplished
in the U.S. The conclusion we draw from
this is that Johnson believes the knowledge
they would gain from such a visit would dis-
pel some of the Russians’ fears about us
it also culd cause the U.S.S.R. to move
along faster with its developing program for
applying the principles of capitalism to their
economy and this wbuld further ease ten-
• sions between that country, and ours.
Our present feeling about the whole mat-
i ter is that the American people should re-
• serve judgment on Johnson's approach to
foreign policy until there is time for it to
I show results.
"ELG
in Congress despite the distance of his place
of residence from Orange County.
The proposed big district would be one that
could not be dominated by any one county
ax in the case of the one we are now in. it
also would have good balance between rural
and urban votes as well as between agri-
culture and industry.
The very size of it scares some people but
in this day of fast transport and rapid com-
munication that should not be too much of
a problem. Certainly not enough to offset the
disadvantage under which Orange County
and the other less populous counties of the
2nd Congressional District are laboring.
We hope, therefore that the people of
Orange County will express themselves as
being in favor of the Texas Legislative Coun-
cil’s Plan B.
+*_-0UVA
pick at the martini in front of
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, January 15, 1965, newspaper, January 15, 1965; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619274/m1/4/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.