Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 71, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 24, 1956 Page: 1 of 16
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DENTON, TEXAS. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 24, IMS
54TH YEAR OF DAILY SER’
*
^GVARD DOWN
Anti-Reds Flare
Ike Will Make
a
Reds Stand
To Lose All
Dallas Speech
A
I
k
53 Said
Pastor Defends
Adlai Claims
Two Churches
1st Church in Dallas
I
to address a Bap-
tist, convention.
But eyewitnesses arriving in Vien-
"I doesn’t mean we hate each for influence in Asia and the Mid-
other. We love each other.”
Boo REDS, Page 2
Poles Demand
- way near Greenville. Another large
I ’
the dozen were
through the
REMEMBER WHEN
X
SOUTHMAYD UB — Quick think- extinguishers and had it under
eh".
small Grayson County commun-
Born Dec. 8, 1939 at Lewisville,
t
of
erica. He was vice
Methodist Youth Fellowship.
Mr.
T. McGee of Lewis-
—
1
1 . 2
2
...4-5
+
4
1
Ae .
Hundreds Reported Dead
In Armed Budapest Riots
Wind Sweeps Front
Toward Local Area
Dead In
Morocco
You had to walk over a stile
to enter the campus of the
Normal College (now NTSC?)
The second aim—and probably
more important—was in the field
of foreign polcy. Relaxations in-
side the Soviet Union and in the
satellite countries were intended
to free the Soviet Union of the
taint of colonialism—the weapon
with which Khrushchev was going
to belabor the West in a contest
of Graford.
Hall Ceme-
after be
announced
50 SAVED BY
CALM ACTIONS
Test Required
For Peace-Ike
Full Equality
With Russia
ity.
The explosion's fury and fire
fatally injured a 65-year-old jani-
tor, E. L. Dinwoodie, and a high
school junior, 16-year-old Larry
McGee, a native of Lewisville.
and Mrs. Edgar Laney
Burial will be in Old
under heavy
argents were
CO, Page 2
Thursday
thimon
year: 221
yeas: 224
2
2
1
2
>
2
al campaign
concludes the
today.
NEW YORK w—Adlai E. Stev-
enson said today the Eisenhower
administration has “confused gen-
uine friendship for business with
snuggling intimacy toward a few
arrived. •
The building was heated by gas
radiators. However, officials said
members of the security forces”
were slain in wild, riotous fighting
which burgeoned from peaceful
demonstrations against Moscow
last night. The revolt dwarfed the
anti - Russian demonstrations in
There have been reports ■ the
President will conclude his cam-
paign on election eve, Nov. 1, with
a major address in Boston.
Hagerty said the original plan
had been to make a two-day trip
out of the visits to Florida and
Virginia. Those plans were re-
vised. he added, because of the
situation in the Soviet satellite na-
tions.
4
3-
Western states sent temperatures
tumbling more than 30 degrees in
some areas compared to 24 hours
earlier.
Considerable blowing dust was
reported in the Central Plains,
with wind gusts of more than 50
m.p.h. at some places. The strong
winds were expected to continue
during the day in most of the area
from western Oklahoma to Ne-
braska.
WARSAW, Oct. 34 —Premier
Josef Cyrankiewicz reminded the
Russians forcefully today Poland's
relations with the Soviet Union in
the future will be based on full
equality. His address to Parlia-
ment followed reports that Soviet
Communist boss Nikita S. Khrush-
chev had backed down in his quar-
rel with the Poles and apologized.
Responsible sources also report-
ed Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, the
Roman Cathglic primate of Poland
will be released hr a few days if
the situation in Poland continues
quiet. The informants said the
cardinal's release was discussed
yesterday by Wladyslaw Gomulka,
the new party boss, and a delega-
tion of Catholic Parliament mem-
bes who expressed general sup-
port for Gomulka’s policy of in-
dependent socialism.
Cyrankiewicz, scheduled to fly
to Moscow this week, indicated
Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky
remains in good standing in the
Communist party, despite his oust-
er from the politburo last week.
He asserted, however, that in the
future Russian troops in Poland
will be restricted exclusively to
bases granted by treaty.
Rokossovsky, installed by Stalin
.....6
.02
.....2
.....3
......
Classified ........
Comics ...........
Editorials ........
Farm News ......
Picture World ....
R---♦
•POEV w -,* •••••••••<
TV Leg ..........
Women’s News .
the five were kei
guard. But the i
See MOI
P
,6
8,3 ' —
, Jr': ..
IN TODAVS PAPER
Page lee.
I J I
SELL “DON’T NEEDS"
WITH A LOW COST
WANT AD. DIAL c2551
In addition to his parents, he is
survived by his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. B. T. McGee of L *
the First Baptil
was in London
they did not know what caused |
the explosion.
The school has 13 teachers and 1
200 students.
Heroes of the near tragedy were ECi
two teachers who smelled escap: g
ing gas, and the elementary school K
principal, Mrs. Carl Biggers, who |
ordered the building evacuated. m
"I smelled the gas while we •
were having our reading class,” E
said Mrs. John Cumming, first F
and second grade teacher. "I
knew we had propane gas and I
when you smell gas there is dan- MM
ger."
Mrs. Cumming alerted the other .U
teacher in the building, Mrs. A. C. nh
Gilmore, who taught second and M
third grade pupils, and the prin- ■
cfpal. E
She told her pupil*; "Pick up E
your books and cometoutside with E
me.”
“They thought it was a fire ■
drill," Mrs. Cumming said. Si
“We were outside about five or W
eight minutes when we heard a 22
muffled explosion. I saw smoke
but no flames.
See BLAST, Page 2.
satellite Poland.
A Westerner who reached War-
saw from Budapest said ISO per-
sons were reported killed as
tanks fought the rebels outside the
Hungarian Parliament buildings.
See BUDAPEST, Page 3
ing and calm teachers today were
credited with leading 30 small
children to safety Tuesday before
a shattering gas explosion and fire
damaged the elementary school
—Eid E DCTEN
LETS GO VIA 24
Highway 24
Group Pushes
in the raucous atmosphere of an
old-time political meeting updated
for television, Stevenson took off
the gloves.
He said Eisenhower showed
“resentment” that he should be
held accountable for actions of his
administration.
When he called Nixon Eisen-
hower’s "hand-picked heir” who
had been “subjected to a remark-
able process of face-lifting and
hand-laundering,” the er r o w d
broke in with a thunderous "boo.”
Stevenson suggested that Eisen-
hower was offering the country "a
press agent’s peace." He accused
Dulles of “blundering vacillation"
in the Middle East, contending it
resulted in the Sues Canal crisis.
... wmu--
• a6u‘ ker
tm .■ 1
While rejecting Stevenson’s ar-
guments, the President said he
remains “profoundly hopeful" that
a properly safeguarded system of
world disarmament will come to
pass. But until that comes, he de-
clared:
"We must continue . ,. to de-
• volop our strength in the most ad-
vanced weapons — for the sake of
our own national safety, for the
na said the tanks blazing through
the war-scarred streets of the
Danubian capital were Russian.
A desperate Hungarian Commu-
nist government. unable to smash
the revolt, had called for help
from the thousands of Russian
soldiers stationed in the country.
The fighting swirled through
downtown streets, through apart-
ment houses and public buildings
and through huge factories.
But despite the Russian army’s
help hours passed without the
surrender Communist leaders de-
manded.
The fighting started last night.
As it swung around the clock and
toward early dusk on the Danube
the Budapest government broad-
cast that all citizens must continue
to remain indoors. The order pro-
longed a strict curfew from 3 p.m.
today until 6 a.m. tomorrow.
During this time people were
"ordered to remain indoors and
to keep the doors of your houses
locked." The government said
these restrictions were necessary
"because the city has not yet been
fully cleared of counterrevolution-
aries."
» •
Chronicle
Growing Newspaper For A Growing Area
Russian tanka by tl
reported rolling ______
streets and firing on blazing build-
ings. Budapest radio reported
in 1949 as Poland’s defense min-
ister, has been reported on the
verge of ejection from his office
under the new leadership, headed
by the once-purged Gomulka.
"We want to base the relations
between our nations and parties
on- the principles of equality and
rid ourselves of anything which
could contradict, these principles,”
in this
" 3
COOLER
rk •ee -
‘n.v ■ ’ ■
LONDON (—A noted Dallas
pastor defended segregation in
Southern churches in the United
States, saying yesterday the Gos-
pel is not denied by having one
church for whites and another for
Negroes.
The Rev. Dr. W. A. Criswell of
A
PEN
form of city government was over-
whelmingly approved Tuesday by
Denison voters who tossed out the
mayor form of government in fa-
vor of a council-manager type.
Approved by a vote of 1,690 to
689, the changeover will be com-
pleted Dec. 4 when a slate of five
city councilmen will be elected. ,
The council’s first duty after
taking office Dec. 11, will be to
name a trained. experienced ad-
ministrator as city manager.
Councilmen. will serve without
Both were burned as they at-
tempted to raise windows on the
second floor of the brick building.
The janitor died gen route t o a
nearby Sherman hospital, McGee
died some six hours ister.
High school boys and men teach-
ers fought the fire with hand fire
Cnnthie"nextgeew days, he said, and killed two persons
all Russian troops will be sta- C------ C—*"
tioned exclusively at bases whose
in the top picture is a model of th huge 8-by-24-foot sign that the Highway 24
Assn, plans to erect at the road’s eastern end of 24 near Greenville. The sign plan-
ned for the western end, to be placed near Old Glory, will bear the words “Texar-
kana, Little Rock and the East,’1 for the words in the lower right hand corner of the
pictured sign. Below are shown severa members of the association. From left are
= O. L. Fowler, Denton, secretary; V. E. B aldridge, Bridgeport; I. J. Hartsell, Bridge-
port; Roy Appleton Jr. of Denton and J. A. Ferguson of Decatur, co-chairmen of
the advertising committee; V. L. Denmon, Greenville, chairman of the association;
H. A. Crain, Jacksboro; John Killough, Graham and E. R. Marchman, Graham.
(Record-Chronicle Staff Photos)
sign, with the words "Shortest
Route to Texarkana, Little Rock
and the East," will be placed on
the western end near Old Glory.
Two smaller signs will be plac-
ed several miles in front of these.
As explained in the Tuesday
meeting, the large signs, to be 8
by 34 feet, will cost the group $26.35
per sign per month, while the
smaller signs, to be 6 by 13 feet,
will cost $13 per sign per month,
a total of 378.70 per month.
"What we need," explained V.
L. Denman of Greenville, chair-
man of the association, "is money
in hand. And the only’way to get
that to to get the towns along the
highway to contribute."
TO VISIT TOWNS
At the suggestion of J. A. Fer-
guson of Decatur, co-chairman of
the advertising committee, it was
decided to send a representative
of the group with one of the mo-
dels of the sign to meet with each
chamber of commerce or service
club in cities along the highway.
They will explain the group’s aims
before asking for contributions.
See HIGHWAY, Page 3
A cold front puffed chill winter
weather toward Texas today, the
Associated Press reported. The
front was due to reach the Den-
ton County area sometime Thurs-
day.
The front was expected in West
Texas Wednesday night and the
Weather Bureau said it probably
would go all the way across the
state.
It was expected to touch off
scattered thunderstorms over all
but West Texas. Winds were pick-
ing up and some blowing dust was
reported in the west.
Strong winds, with gusts esti-
mated up to 35 miles an hour,
swept Denton County before noon
today. The winds were expected
to shift from southerly to north-
westerly by midnight.
Predawn temperatures Wednes-
it the look of a regime which engaged in the despzrate struggle,
would be liberal in comparison " “ *t* "" —
with the iron rule of Stalin.
g
western Montana. i.g-.___,_____.
The cold air which invaded the "numerous soldiers, citizens and
E ■ ME $ < o.h. uui i ville and Mr. and .Mrs A J Mc-
mM W | "acA WBh.t.s boammee 1 Curley of Carrollton formerly of
mB. ’ “amamamddhfs., EAfa Lewisville; and three half -broth-
mE2 emr2y WBkm ers, Richard Wayne McGee David
m m M >■ ■ B McGee and Eddie Laney
' _mNka V•.• The Rev. Philip Walker, pastor
mmsssra W meE-amamu- ae of the Sherman Methodist Church
Mamadha • u ‘ •7"* ' and former pastor of the First
522281 ‘ ‘ m Mrk 1% „--a Methodist Church of Denton, will
mdd Tb\ W P Officiate services for the youth
dMMMuhmgeuML--e1 also wil be held at 10 a.m. Thurs-
SOUTHMAYD TEACHER MRS JOHN CUMMING ’ daatSputhmaydnsean
Tuesday She Smelled Gas, Today Shea A Hero baa charge of arrangements.
control before fire departments d
--------
WASHINGTON (— President
Eisenhower said last night the
United States could “suffer a ser-
ious military disadvantage”' if it
stopped its tests of nuclear weap-
ons and then found that Russia
was continuing hers.
Without naming his Democratic
opponent Adlai E. Stevenson, Ei-
senhower said that one of Steven-
son's contentions in the campaign
debate over continued bomb test-
ing “is based upon apparent un-
awareness of the facts.”
Eisenhower issued his second
. formal reply to Stevenson’s re-
peated calls for this nation to take
the lead in working toward an end
to hydrogen bomb testing.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
The White House announced to-
day plans for six /campaign
speeches by President Eisenhow-
er next week, including a Wed-
nesday airport talk at Dllas‘
Love Field.
In a frank bid to keep Texas in
the GOP column for the second
successive presidential election
year, President Eisenhower to
scheduled to arrive in Dallas Wed-
nesday at 13:30 p.m. for his air-
port address before flying on to
Oklahoma City for a talk at Will
Rogers Field about 3:25 p.m.
Next week’s speeches will take
him into Florida, Virginia, and
Pennsylvania in addition to Tex-
as and Oklahoma. There will be
three separate speeches. Includ-
ed are talks in three of the four
southern states he carried in
1952.
Eisenhower campaigned in Tex-
as in 1952, but before he received
the Republican Party nomination.
On his Texas swing then, he stop-
ped for an hour's rally on the
court house square in Denton be-
fore going on to Dallas for a press
conference.
The Associated Press reported
that James C. Hagerty, presiden-
tial press secretary, emphasized
that Eisenhower will return to
Washington at the end of each
day’s campaign next week.
The President will do that,
Hagerty said, primarily to keep in
close touch with the "fast break-
ing developments in the (Soviet)
satellite nations.” That was a ref-
erence to the unrest in such coun-
tries as Poland and Hungary.
Here to Eisenhower’s campaign
schedule for next* week:
MONDAY-He will leave Wash-
ington at 8:40 a.m. and fly to
Miami, Fla., speaking at Inter-
national Airport there at noon.
He then will fly on to Jackson-
ville, Fla., arriving there at 3:06
p.m. for a talk at Imeson Wirfield.
The next stop will be Byrd Field
at Richmond, Va., for an airport
address about 4:40 p.m. Then he
will return to Washington.
WEDNESDAY—He will leave
Washington at 8:30 a.m. and ar-
rive at Love Field in Dallas, Tex.,
at 12:30 p.m. for an address at
the airport.
Then he will fly on to Oklahoma
City for a talk at Will Rogers
Field there at about 2:25 p.m.
then return to Washington.
THURSDAY—Eisenhower will
make a major nationwide address
on television and, radio—NBC-
from Convention Hall in Philadel-
phia at 8:30 p.m. CST. He will
travel to Philadelphia by train
from Washington, leaving the cap-
ital at 6:30 p.m.
Eisenhower will return to Wash-
ington that evening but there has
been no decision yet as to whether
he will return by train or plane.
Hagerty made It clear that Ei-
senhower will be making addition-
. I
"2
In Europe
By WILLIAM L RYAN
AP Foreign News Analyst
A Khrushchev experiment her
blown up in the faces of the Soviet
Communist leaders.
Unless the Russians take force-
ful measures to guard against
new outbreaks like those in Po-
land and Hungary, they stand to
lose their '"satellite empire even-
tually. The policies of Communist
boss Khrushchev have paralyzed
the Soviet Union.
The Kremlin today to likel
undergoing an agonizing reapp-
praisai. The result can mean the
end of Khrushchev as the boss,
the re-emergence of Georgi M.
Malenkov and a vindication —
from the Soviet viewpoint — of
former Foreign Minister V. M.
Molotov.
The Khrushchev experiment be-
gan early in 1955, and events in
Poland and Hungary prove that
the restless stirring which finally
burgeoned into open anti-Russian
revolt dates from that time.
TWO AIMS
Khrushchev’s experiment was
with relaxation of controls, not
only over populations, but over
the parties in the satellite nations.
The experiment had two aims.
One was to secure the new post-
Stalin regime at home by giving
sake of all free nations, for the
sake of peace itself . . .
“There to nothing in postwar
history to justify the belief that
we should — or even that we could
dare — accept anything less than
sound safeguards and controls for
any disarmament arrangements,"pay
80
Youth's Rites
Set Thursday
me Amend LEWISVILLE (Special) - Fu-
f Emd , I neral services for Larry Fred Me
wam I Gee. 16 former resident of lewis-
■mr. • ville who was fatally injured in a
school blast at Southmayd Tues-
day will be held at the Lewisville
Methodist Church at 3:30 p.m.
Thursday.
Young McGee was the son of the
Rev. Fred McGee of Southmayd
I. 71
—
High afternoon temperatures
Tuesday ranged from Presidio’s
94 to Amarillo’s 77.
Wintry weather hit sections of
the Northwest today, with snow
and freezing temperatures.
The storm moved northeastward
through the Central Plateau re-
gion and central Rockies, dump-
ing up to 4 inches of snow at Rock
Springs, Wyo. Snow flurries con-
tinued during the night and early
morning in sections of Idaho and
E • *d*e l ’ ( . e
- --
hi
ECO
-ucoavina-
-
I I
A" .
-' —2
GOP Confused Sign Program
1 Lack of money—the problem that
faces nearly every new organiza-
tion—was the main topic discussed
Stevenson himself had drawn
some scattered boos among the
cheers from a small crowd of by-
standers as he left his hotel to
drive to the Garden. But the audi-
ence in the hall gave him one of
the biggest welcomes of his cam-
paign.
LIKES TEST IDEA
Introducing Stevenson, Gov. Av-
' erell Harriman supported the nom-
inee’s proposal for ending hydro-
gen bomb tests. He said Eisen-
hower, in his opposition to the pro-
posal, had “fallen into the Krem-
lin propaganda trap.”
Asked how he could still be a
Christian and support segregation
even in churches, the pastor re-
plied: •
"You put the colored folks and
white people together in one
church and 100 respond. Separate
them and 1,000 respond. Which do
you think to better?
"If a colored preacher can
reach more colored people with
his own church, and a white
minister more white people, isn’t
that better?
. day ranged from 53 degrees at
Dalhart to 73 at Galveston. *
The Denton Experiment Station
recorded a low of 58 here this
_ morning, High Tuesday was a
" mild 83 degrees. •
1 L. ."1 । ll . I'.LIUIR—W—■
***** 11 PAGES
In F ierce Attack
. ”t’’ -1 ' * . . ' . .
VIENNA, Austria (AP)—Many hundreds of persons were
reported killed in an anti-Russian, anti-Communist revo-
lution gripping the Hungarian capital today. Soviet tanks
and troops went into action and Communist machine-gun*
ners and warplanes waged a fierce battle against the
rebels.
Austrian travelers arriving tonight from Budapest said
"many hundreds” had died. They reported Communist
jet planes joined the Russian tanks and machine-gunners
to hattie students and workers who defied a government
ultimatumto surrender.
The travelers said many Hungarian soldiers refused to
fight against their countrymen and actually gave the reb-
els active support by letting ammunition trucks fall into
the workers’ hands. f---------------------------
33s 333g • J
at the noon meeting of the High-
way 34 Assn, in the Southern Hotel
Tuesday.
But method* of erasing that lack
were also discussed and approved,
and beginning today, will be put
into action.
The association, whose purpose
is to increase tourist and business
traffic on State Highway 24. de-
cided to approve an intensified ad-
vertising campaign directed at ci-
ties along the highway.
The group’s immediate aim to to
get enough money to enter into
a three-year contract with a sign
company, -which will erect two
large signs at either end of the
highway directing east-west traf-
fic along the highway.
MODEL SIGN
One sign, a model of which was
shown at the meeting, will bear
the words, "Less Traffic-Smooth-
er Sailing on Highway 34. Short-
est Route to Lubbock, Roswell
and the West” and will,be plac-
ed at the eastern end of thd high-
of its giants."
"We Democrats . . . reject the
idea of an America in which
everyone isron the payroll of a few
giant corporations,” he declared in
a speech prepared for a luncheon
of businessmen supporters.
T he Democratic presidential
nominee contended, at the start
of 12-hour schedule of rallies in
the city and surrounding counties,
that because of Republican poli-
cies small business to being
“squeezed by the growing giants,
buffeted by the merger movement,
strangled by high interest rates
> dh — %
HITS FOREIGN POLICY
Stevenson’s shift to discussion
of Republican economic actions
came after a whip-cracking as-
sault on President Eisenhower’s
foreign policies, and on Secretary
of State Dulles and Vice President
Nixon, before a cheering throng
in Madison Square Garden last
night.
T he partisan, banner-waving
crowd filled all seats affording a
view of the speaker. Democratic
leaders said 18,000 were on hand.
Several hundred seats, blocked
off by platform installations, re-
mained empty. None were turned
away as in 195s when Stevenson
spoke in the Garden.
The crowd alternately cheered
. sallies against Eisenhower and
booed mention of Dulles and Nix-
PhutKdayoudXowm ™ rou
TEMPERATURES
(kkperiment station eportt
Low this morning ....... I
■ . t ■
_______________________________________________________________________._______________________________
"q . • 3
WEATHER
—
DENTON and VICINITY: pair,
warn and windy thU afternoo
and tonight. hurday partly
cloudyand colder. .
WEST TEXAS: Partly cloudy, windy
and warm.
EAST, SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS:
Budapest radio announced
the rebels defied the latest
Hungarian ultimatum to sur-
render and the battle, which
began with peaceful demon-
strations last night, roared
on into the night »
Direct telephonic communica-
tion with the city was cut off,
but it was evident that casualties
in the fighting were mounting by
the score. A Westerner who
reached Warsaw after traveling
from Budapest said 150 persons
were reported to have been killed
when Russian tanks were brought
into fighting outside the Hungarian
Parliament building
Radio Budapest did not identify
the nationality of the warplanes
■ '■ < 4 22522%
' 1 WMMMEN I
. .
, a
existence stems jrom internation-
al treaties. Reflecting the ever-
present Polish fear of German re-
unification,
Denison Approves
Council, Manager
DENISON — A new, modern
Riots Touched Off
By French Seizure
Of Five Top Rebels
RABAT, Morocco u—At least
53 persons, mostly Europeans, to-
day were reported killed in Mo-
rocco in rioting touched off by
France’s seizure of five top Alger-
ian rebels.
French and Moroccan armed
patrols uncovered more and more
burned and mutilated bodies in the
city of Meknes where angry Arab .
nationalists struck yesterday.
Moroccan . troops and French
Legionnaires mounted guard in ’
the European section of Meknes
while the search went on in the
native quaHters for more bodies.
In addition to yesterday’s riot-
ing in the town, French sources
said 38 farms, mostly European,
In the surrounding countryside
were wholly or partly burned by
rampaging Moroccans.
ACCIDENTAL SHOT
The actual cause of the rioting
in Meknes appeared to be the ac-
cidental shot fired by a Moroccan
trooper who wounded himself. The
shot enraged demonstrators and
the bloodshed was on.
Eight bodies of Europeans were
found this morning near the Por-
tuguese bridge on the main road
to Rabat, 100 miles east of
Meknes.
Meknes to a city of 150,000,
more than 30,000 of them Euro-
peans.
Rioting ended yesterday and au-
thorities spent the night looking
for bodies.
PLANE ORDERED
In Tunis, Morocco’s Sultan Mo-
hammed V glumly ordered a plane
home. He and Tunisian leaders
broke off talks Interrupted when
France seized the Algerian rebels.
’ Mindful of the ruse France used
to capture the leaders of the Al-
gerian rebellion, the Sultan’s
household made dear he would
not travel in a French plane.
The Sultan had come to Tunisia
to confer on a purported pin to
bring peace to Algeria and weld
it into a new union of North
Africa.
The French trick which diverted
the planeload of rebel chiefs to
French run Algiers and waiting
French troops instead of their des-
tination in independent Tunis
kicked up a storm on both sides
of the Mediterranean. The action
touched off riots and protest
strikes in both Tunisia and Moroc-
co. Arab mobs killed nine persons
—eight of them French — in the
Moroccan town of Meknes.
FORCES PREPARE
French security forces in Al-
geria braced for reprisals as the
Premier, Guy Mollet flatly refused
Arab appeals to free the five rebel
leaders.
An upsurge in rebel activity al-
ready was noted in Algeria, where
■ ' ■
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am he was a junior at Southmayd
•2 High School where he was captain
kEmmddd of the football team and a mem-
k 288188312382 ber of the Future Farmer* of Am
— -a : 4.
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 71, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 24, 1956, newspaper, October 24, 1956; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1453269/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.