The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 180, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 31, 1962 Page: 2 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 28 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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I
Gadgetry in Child Bearing
Quanta <Ga.) Journal and Constitution
A New York psychiatrist, appar-
ently with trauma aforethought, has
made a case for parents' relying on
their instincts in much of child raising
instead of seeking expert advice. The
psychiatrist, Dr. Maurice Linden, cited
the cases of two women. One asked
what she should do about her child’s
kicking the father, and the other was
worried about what she thought was
her husband’s overeagerness to play
Tuesday, July 31, 1962.
tempting to win a judicial verdict from
an international tribunal.
For some, that was more import-
ant than the issue itself.
The court4 only considers matters
that have been voluntarily submitted
to it. Since 1945, it has handled only
30 cases.
Instances are a dispute over the
ownership of two English Channel is-
lands between Britain and France,
rights of foreign nationals in certain
countries, territorial disputes, freedom
of the seas and, recently, the owner-
ship of a lt2h-century Brahmin tem-
ple in Cambodia.
Thje court’s decisions have been
“Once You Get Used to It, It’s Easy!”
*• Wfth
small son.
w^**^*™ tra-
Of both women he said they would
have been better off if they had never
agtended a mental health le.cture or
rild an article on child rearing. The
naturalness of love and discipline to
guide a child’s development is some-
thing that cannot be replaced by gad-
getry—for gadgetry it is when parents
think there is a formulated answer on
tap for all the problems of child rear-
ing.
After all, psychology and psychi-
atry have not been around very long.
Before their advent children appar-
ently reached adulthood with at least
as much normalcy as they do today.
Trial by Drought
It is a tableau going back to the
dawn of time when the first tribesman
scratched a hole in the earth, and
planted the first seed: The farmer
standing beside his withered crops
with his eyes on the horizon looking
for a sign of rain.
And it is as new as today’s sun-
rise because it is going on right now „
in a great arc stretching through
Pennsylvania, New York and New Jer-
sey. Drought conditions go back to
April. Milk production, the big farm
venture in this area, is in great peril.
Water holes are dry. There was al-
most no hay crop and some farmers.
are being forced to purchase *it from
outside the area. The season is so late
that rain now would only be a pallia-
tive.
Already 77 counties have been de-
clared by the federal government as
disaster areas. Half of New York
state’s 80,000 farms are affected, as
dne example.
The farmers’ comments range from
“I don’t see how I can hold out” to
*Tve been through a worse drought
than this one.”
Each year in our widespread land
there are some of those in agriculture
who face the drought crisis. In these
days of “sharp-pencil” operation in
any business, including agriculture,
such a misadventure is perilous indeed.
And it is a credit to those farmers who,
as did those who tilled the soil, before
them, pull in their horns and somehow
or other worry through it.
dition.pf respect for the court and the
moral weight it carries that augurs
well for the U.N. decision, despite
widespread resistance to it.
The United States has announced
it will support moves to suspend the
voting privileges of delinquent nations
and has prepared warnings for several
Latin American states. The purpose
of this is to establish a precedent that
will bring the more serious debtors in-
to line—among whom are the entire
Soviet bloc, most Arab countries, Por-
tugal, France, Belgium and South Af-
rica.
These nations, especially those be-
hind the Iron Curtain, will undoubt-
edly try to ignore the decision. But
the prestige of the court, backed by
World opinion and a little arm-twist-
ing. may eventually bring them into
line, if only partially.
The continuance of the United Na-
tions itself depends greatly upon it.
Moving fairways to the rough and the
rough to the fairways would cut down golf
scores. -
★ WASHINGTON COLUMN *
On Diplomacy’s High Wire-
Prince Souvanna Phouma
BY PETER EDSON
Washington Correspondent ;
* -; V, **• •
nn
§r
) ■ \
Miewr.lwfe n
Summer is the time of year when it’s
wonderful to be alive, like all other seasons.
• Go ahead and destroy every fly in the
house — you have swatters’ rights.
Some little kids who sneak away to go
fishing don’t catch a thing until they get
home.
SENATOR
Yarborough’s Report
Washington, (NEA) —• When Premier Souvarina Phouma
of Laos returns to his capital in Vientiane after conferring with
U. S. officials in Washington, he will have to play one of the
most involved games of diplomatic intrigue in history.
In June 1961 the three Laotian Princes—Rightist Bouh
Phouma—met in Zurich, Switzerland, to set forth the principles
-on which a Laotian government of national union might >vork.
It was agreed then that Laos would establish diplomatic re-
lations with any government that was friendly. This principle
is still supposed to stand.
But right after Premier Souvanna Phouma set up his new
neutralist, three-way coalition government on June 23 and left
for Geneva to sign the 14-nation treaty, his half-brother Prince
Souphanouvong pulled a fast one.
As vice premier and leader of the Pathet Lao Communists,
he announced that Laos would establish diplomatic relations
with five CommunistiCountries—East Germany, Poland, Czecho-
. Slovakia, North Viet Nam and Red China.
When Souvanna Phouma heard of this in Geneva, he order-
edhis^acting foreign.minister...to hold up the -recognitions. But
while Red China> Avoiy was cooling his heels in Vientiane,
Nationalist China’s ambassador to Thailand raced to the royal
capital of Luang Prabang and presented his credentials to the
king. And the game was on.
Back of these recent developments is a long, involved story.
While serving as premier in 1956, Prince Souvanna Phouma
went to see Ho Chi-minh in Hanoi, North Viet Nam, and Mao
Tse-tung in Peking, to push for Laos neutrality.
Mao at that time is supposed to have agreed to stay out of
Laos if Souvanna would not establish diplomatic relations with
Nationalist China. Ho was worried about close relations between
Laos and South Viet Natn. Souvanna Phouma therefore agreed
he would never exchange accredited missions with South Viet
Nam, if Ho would stay out of Laos.
-- In July 1958 however, Souvanna Phouma was ousted as
the Communist Powers always Premier. And from his point of view, four mistakes were made
Underestimate — is the dream by the pro-Western governments succeeding him:
of all American parents, that 1. South Viet Nam and Laos exchanged ambassadors.
their children will grow up to 2. Laos and Nationalist China established consular relations
a better life. It. is more than a the United States opposed it, fearing Red China retal-
< m .mi. ts a (living oiu in jatjon Then premier Phoui Sananikone and Prince Boun Oum
the American home, r ellow
Texan, for young people to- wen'; to Formosa and agreed to an exchange of ambassadors.
3. The Phoui government was overthrown in 1959 by “young
^^mmmmm day the |<ey to the future is
Many doors to higher educa- ahead — showing the damage knowledge. “An educated mind Turk" officers. A provisional government took over until elec-
__^ tion are being shut today in being done right now. i-s the guardian genius of de- tions could be held in i960. But in this government, all leftists
If vou’re lookintr for an alibi for vnui- the faces of many of our young This "report said that of the mocracy,” as Mirabeau Bona- were eliminated. Souvanna Phouma feels this destroyed all hope
poor golf score hang it on a hook VmAe' !’00’000 June’ 1961’ hi*h schoul pa?* Lan'ar said; AnA * is a,s" for a neutralist Laos at that time.
. ___!_[____* , This is a *reat "“tional prob- graduates who did not go on to * dnvrng force for betterment 4 Under the 1954 cea8e fire agreement for all Indochina,
, lem, even greater in Texas college, 126,000 were still un- To* the tamilj.. ,, .... , . ,
A man explained a black eye by saying than in most other states, be- employed and looking for work The GI Bill, which is co- Franee was ^horned to keep 3,500 military personnel in Laos
his baby stuck a spoon into it. He knows the cause our state ranks 32nd in four months later. This is an sponsored by 36 other Senators to train the Laotian army. Prance never exercised this option,
baby is too young to talk. the nation in per person income unemp loymtnt rate, among w'th me, is one way to turn So, at the invitation of Laos, an American Programs Evalua-
------ per year. Texas badly needs the these high school graduates of this American dream for a l?et- tion , Group—a disguised military assistance mission—moved
Fireworks were not allowed in some olaees h«rher level of education to 18 per cent, as compared to an ter life for our young people into train the arm. Rusaia, Red China and North Viet Nam then
on July 4, but on their foreheads a lot of rea'c? itR ri*htful Place amon* ,,vera11 unemployment rate at into living reality educa- stepped up aid to the Pathet Lao.
. «„ L , V , ioreneacis a lot of thl, ieadin(J statcs in the na- the time of 6.5 percent. tion under the GI Bill would 1______
gals still had their .bangs. tion. Only about one-sixth of the take young men from the
--- -r——- '•'phis is one of the reasons June, 1961. high school grad- ranks of the unemployed, and school teachers. These are thg.of age in the nation — the age
Give your job- the best you have and. .ifc that I am working hard to get uates in the nation who did aim them with the weapons of leaders of today. We need to when most of them enter the
I i . . 1 a . ” 1 1 .1 . A- i ’ll 1 1 4 a . i i a. U, a, . L, aa.-. 4 /. a, 4- /. w a a aaM/vaar laana.l. « ........ .. M i. .. .. u 11
won’t get the best of you
A woman bit a youth who tried to rob her get an education,
magazine store. She was armed to the teeth
a GTBiJ! passed to. help young not enter college, were attend- ^dedge ,t ha t will enable train kadws. f o r ^morrow. wo* force or go ^ on college
post-Korean Conflict veterans iftg a school to learn a trade
them to help themselves, their And the records show that — will be about fifty per-cent
families and their rmintrv in those trained under previous higher than in 1960. Workers
GI Bills pay enough in addi- under 25 years of age will ac-
tional taxes, because of result- count for nearly half of the
The (.1 Bill of World War ant higher earnings, to more labor force growth during the
One Step Forward
No immediate, sweeping changes in
the behavior of sovereign nations can
be expected from the World Court’s
recent 9-5 decision that United Nations
members are legally obligated to pay
the special assessments for peace-
keeping operations in the Congo and
Middle East.
The ruling was strictly an advisory
opinion: the court has no means of
forcing nations to abide by its finding.
Yet many observers hail it as the
court’s most important decision since
it came into existence in 1945 to su-
persede the old Permanent Court of
International Justice.
The case involving the U. N. as-
sessments was the first time that the
Soviet Union had presented an oral
argument before the court. The Unit-
ed States presented a counterargu-
ment, and the world witnessed the
spectacle of the two great powers at-
or skill. For those who drop ,
I recently read a disturbing out of school, what chance is Years “head.
---—---— report by the Bure^i of Labor there in a job market that de-
Keeping a power mower well oiled results Statistics, showing how the mands increasing know-how for II and the Korean Conflict gave than repay the cost of the
in its making less noise, which is not true of Pro^'em unemployment of survival? this nation 259,999 doctors and training programs,
humans. young people is going‘to dam- To me, one of the cherished technicians; 135,000 scientists; By 1965, the number of
__________ our economy in the years American dreams — one that 459,999 engineers and 367,000 young people reaching 18 years
Car sickness may come when driving over
a bumpy country road or when a payment
comes due.
11 11 i
cu
O
cu
luued it 228-80 Main Street, Sulphur Springs, Texas
•rery afternoon (except Saturday) and Sunday morning. ^
at the Poat Office in Sulphur Springs, Texas as J
second class mail matter.
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repuolication of Special Dispatches are also reserved.
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Calif., St. Louis. Mo., Denver, Colorado.
Telephones: Business, Adv^ialnffTcjassified Ad. EdStorjai
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The publishers ars not respefhsible for copy omission
typographical errors, or any unintentional errors that may
occur in advertising other than to correct it In next issue
after is is brought to their attention. All advertising or-
ders are accepted on this basis only.
F. W. Frailey, Editor and Publisher
Jos Wooeley, Managing Editor
o
(/)
5
cu
KIT OUR WAY
By J. R. Williams
I THOUGHT YOU SA.’P YOU WERE <5<jNNA
•WRITE YOUR 61RL FRIENPALETTER/ I
HAVEN'T HEARP A CLICK OR A CLACK FOR
AN AWFUL LONGTIME.' WHAT'S
W'/' *THE MATTER— CAN’T YOU
w i &L L THIWK OF AKIYTHINO
TO SAY?
OH, I KNOW 1
WHAT I WANT
TO SAY, BUT
BY TH’TIME
I FINPTHE
LETTER I WANT;
1960s. This is our great na-
tional resource — the brain-
power of American youth.
The responsibility we face
today is to plan ahead, to make
education available for all our
young people. I think enact-
ment of my GI Bill will go a
long way toward giving them I
an education.
HOW MUCH IS THAT
OLO YELLOW CAR.
OVER.THERE,MR.'
HAWKS?
# 175.40 MORE
THAN IT WAS
YESTERDAY/
WHATf
[wwr
WELL, IT USED TO BE A TAX/
AMP THE Meter, is STiLL.
-» RUNNING/
r„v,
Jti 1U2 by ffig. he. T.M, B«g. 0J. Pst 08. 7-9/
1 FORGET WHAT
THE WORP IS
WE TAKE A 5MALL WAD AT TH'l
[/ DIO YOU EVER RECALL
U THAT BULLV’5 NAME
“ ‘ NIGHT WASH?
ALMOST* IT’5 OH!
TH’ TIP OP MV )
rOWGUE.HE-WWT!'-
5W!EP.„that'5 rri;
GYPSUM SNEEP'l
br NC«. Inc, T.M, Rtg. u.8. sn Mil
...AND I PONY THINK
VOU VE GOT A NEW
BRAIN/ IN fiACT, I
THINK YOU'VE
Texas Units
Due to Move
To Ft. Chaffee
Fort Smith, Ark., July 31 W*
— Five Texas army units will
be moved from Fort Hood and
Fort Bliss to Fort Chaffee in
the establishment of the Third
U. S. Army Corps of artillery
headquarters at the Arkansas
post.
The Army unveiled the plan
in a special message to the U.
S. Continental Army Command
headquarters, at Fort Monroe,
Va., and all . ini tallations af-
fected yesterday.
The message also said that
warning orders for activation
and movement of the units in-
volved will he issued as soon as
possible.
Texas units alerted for move-
ment to Fort Chaffee are:
Headquarters Battery, Third
Corps Artillery, Fort Hood;
Second Missile Battalion, 30th
Artillery, Fort Bliss; Headquar-
ters Detachment, 185th Ordn-
ance Battalion, Fort Hood;
85th Evacuation Hospital, Fort
Hood; and 418 Medical Com-
pany Fort Hood.
Also three Oklahoma units,
all of them from Fort Sill, will
be moved to the Arkansas post.
The Fort Sill units are: Third
Battalion, sixth Artillery;
Headquarters D et i^c hme.n t,
62nd Artillery Group; and First
Ordnance Company.
Three units now stationed at
Chaffee are scheduled * to re-
main after some 6,000 Army
$ Reservists and National Guards-
men who were activated last
fall are returned to civilian
... ]ife_—• .....-
The units remaining will be:
4003rd U. S. Army Garrison,
the 66th Military Police Com-
pany, and the 62nd Ordnance
Detachment.
The Army indicated that
total strangth of the post will
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 180, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 31, 1962, newspaper, July 31, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829487/m1/2/?q=El+Paso: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.