Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 192, Ed. 1 Monday, May 27, 1963 Page: 1 of 8
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K Costs To
cloudy
EIGHT PAGES TODAY
Solons Air New Test Ban Plans
V
I
r
Meredith
k
Visits Bob
For Talks
x:
record of "deceit and bad faith"
today.
and maintain its testing facilities
He said they talked about Mis-
CAMP BOWIE: A BONUS FOR BROWNWOOD
resume nuclear testing in the at-
Mills. Along Stephen Austin Boulevard,
kind that would af-
ood residential de-
relation to B
any risks. Humphrey, in his pre-
dential develop
by Willis Creek and
a strip of agricultural land.
(Aerial Photo by Fred Nobs)
call until noon. This was taken to day night and again today.
about the Pope. Operators replied:
At the Vatican press office there
Lee Metcalf, Mont.; Wayne Morse
weakened by recurrent hemor-
was no statement on his condition, dition.
the Pope's apartment. The bishop Frank E. Moss., Utah; Edmund
L’Osservatore Romano, the Vati-
Informants said the Pope had a
Ran*
restful night.
ibicoff.
His
program.
Cardinal Cicognani is the Pope's Conn.: John Sparkman, Ala.;
an
closest collaborator in Church
meaning that the
more leisurely.
IMPROVEMENT
again at noon today.
Republican signers were Sens.
Belgian-born Bishop Pierre van
improvement in his condition this
Lierde, the
have absolute rest
The
daily also reported Pope
aw his secretary of state,
Democratic leaders said they
(See DECISION on Page 1)
Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Sun-
Ray, Erwin
By ERNEST STROMBERGER This session probably will closely
Women's rights — The Senate
when 14 vehicles
on the New
of bills and left behind more duced were passed
of the victims were dead
Those dead at the scene were
tapped junior
at the scene. A sixth died three identified as:
teg
The second committee failed to
Morning ses-
Annette,
blaming the fog.
store will bs to the county court- Mrs. Ira Ray
room, with field trips to nurser-
first with her cotton school dress.
thier, 43. of Port Huron, Mkh..
ies and homes slated each after- Linda Kay,
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mrs Finis
Johnson" May
unary dates to
with her wool suit.
J
ware moved
August.
Rqbinson, 26, 0
, was admitted
-
charge of the session.
cuts.
petition June 21 to Stephenville.
esas.
1
I
58th Legislative Session
Follows Familiar Pattern
Senators Propose
Fresh Red Otter
Decision
Near For
Alabama
Turnpike Crashes
Prove Fatal To Six
Muggy Weather
Seen For Texas
Run A City:
See Page 8
tivity before closing down late
Wednesday for an extended Mem-
This aerial photograph of the Camp
Bowie warehouse area shows the loca-
tion of the preposed industrial area in
mean that at the least there was
no worsening in the pontiff's con-
District Juc
To Mako Ri
more opportunities for Negroes."
Meredith, a transfer student
Dillard
City, N.C
stamps. got so little sup-
vy died in subcommittee
ter of Mr. and
of Early, won
Landscape Study
Begins Tuesday
Primary dates — The house kill-
ed 97-44 early in the session an
the controversial meas-
in the House. After one
velopment and agricultural leases. Di-
rectors of Brownwood Chamber of Com-
merce have recommended consideration
of the warehouse area and a 163.82-acre
tract along U. S. Highway 377 for acqui-
sition as an industrial area to attract
more industry to the city. Practically all
of the area included in the lower two-
thirds of the photo are included in the
recommendation. At lower right is a
water reservoir owned by Brown Coun-
ty Water Improvement District No. 1.
Just north of the reservoir are Texas
Feathers, Inc., and Rock River Woolen
just above center of photo, are Lamkin
Brothers and, at far right, a large ware-
house included in Item 21 of the auction
brochure. At upper right can be soon
the now Brownwood High School and the
residential development in the area be-
tween Avenue K and Slayden Street. The
industrial area is separated from resi-
Mid he never saw the wreckage
to front of him.
He told newsmen he drove into
hter of Mr. and
Brownwood, took
from July to May in 1959 to allow
Johnson to win nomination for re*
election as senator early enough
to campaign for the presidential
(See SESSION M Page 2
Blake SL Marie, 34, of Sarnia,
Ontario, Canada;
Charles L. Hatch, M, of Rich-
mond Hills. Ga.;
Ronald D. Pyle of Butler, Pa.;
noon.
James J. Franklin, lands
horticulturist with the Texas
DETECTABLE TESTS
Humphrey and Dodd did not see
Proposals which died this ses-
sion include;
Heavy Schedule Gloom Hangs Over Vatican
Faced By Solons
day Low tonight 60 to 74 High Tues-
day 85 to M.
Maximum temperature here Sunday
98, overnight tow M. Sunset 7:36, sun-
rise 5:32.
J.
eMaalk
OPPOSITION
Others, such as a bill to tax
By ERNEST B. VACCARO
WASHINGTON (AP)-Sens. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn.,
and Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., teamed up to a sur-
prise move today to suggesting the United States offer
the Soviet Union an agreement to ban atmospheric and
underwater nuclear tests.
me---
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS, MONDAY, MAY 27. 1963
hours later at St James Hospital
in Newark
About 10 persons were injured,
one of them critically.
Police would not speculate on
WEATHER FORECAST
BROWNWOOD AREA: Clear to part-
entries and Linda Kay Erwin of
Early 4H Club took first place
honors in the senior division of
ELIZABETH, N J. (AP) — Six other track just before plowing Mexican farm labor program for • .
srthspmaapmntofzsfddpangand"cucttna"mrqgamadgmeaweammaaressobeTop Entries
Jersey Turnpike. leased after treatrner*
are readily detectable."
Dodd Mid “there is at least a
serious possibility that certain
types of atmospheric tests could
not be effectively monitored from
outside the Soviet Un-
George F. Smith, 3». of Glen
Burnie, Md., died at St James.
The sixth victim’s identity was
■A
• ic
POPE JOHN XXIII
t« « Reported improved
sissippi in general
general. Asked whether he had of-
constantly to be ready to adminis-
ter extreme unction.
PHONE CALLS
The Vatican switchboard re-
ceived hundreds of phone calls
the cause of the accidents beyond and . w-
‘:__‘ “ George J. Anderson. 42. of •“ Wednesday.
One of the injured A. J. Gau- Jackson, Mich. -- ‘
nue to meet spending plans.
Others, such as a bill to re
combination or "pooling" o
leases, ran into such strong <
sition that its sponsor droppe.
rhages. Pope John XXIII was con-
fined to his apartment today.
Annette Ra’
Heights 4-H Ci
apparently drove the last truck
a. SA - '*----
into the pileup __________________
Gauthier, driving a truckload of withheld pending notification of
fish from Detroit to New York, next of kin.
Ralph Yarborough, Tex.; I
J. McCarthy, Minn., and
Kefauver, Tenn.
140 f l I m SEIVide
, P.O. Box 8066 M _
Brownwood Bulletin
day promising warm, muggy
weather for all of the state.
The Weather Bureau, however.
from the university in August,
said he still is the subject of or-
ganized ostracism by segre-
gationist white students at the
university but study conditions
are not too bad.
“It’s still a bad situation.” he
said of the university picture in
general.
___ __ Seven girls entered 12 gar-
25, of Siler tension Service, will conduct the ments, all hand-made, in the con*
— to St school. Miss Annie Lucy Lane, test Aprons and dish towels
velopment. The view looks northward
from near the center of the Camp Bowie
cantonment area. The entire area, ex-
cept for National Guard and Army Re-
serve property, will be sold at public
auction starting at 1 p.m. Thursday, June
20, at the U. S. Army Reserve Training
Center Building, seen at lower left of
photo. The land has been idle for nearly
2S years, except for some industrial de-
of Woodland
who is scheduled to graduate pared speech, declared that "at-
......mospheric and underwater tests
% “58 a m
WASHINGTON (AP)—James H
Meredith. the first Negro ever
knowingly enrolled at the Univer-
sity of Mississippi, met Atty. Gen.
Robert F. Kennedy briefly today
and later celled for stronger civil
rights legation.
The ten-minute session in Ken-
nedy's Justice Department office
was the first between two of the
principals in the 1962 racial crisis
at the university.
Two persons were killed and
hundreds injured in rioting which
marked Meredith's admission to
the university under court orders
backed by federal troops and U.S.
marshals.
Meredith said Kennedy called
him Sunday night after the Ne-
gro student's appearance in a
television interview. NBC “Meet
the Press” and invited him for
a visit this morning
in the television appearance
Meredith said federal troops
should be used if necessary to in-
sure the admission of two Negroes
planning to enter Alabama cot-
leges next month.
AUSTIN (AP) — The 51th legis- parallel the 57th legislature, when passed in February the proposed
iature passed a healthy number 551 of the 1,614 measures intro- constitutional amendment to pro-
--- . -- . “*---------. discrimination because of
fared any suggestions to Kennedy
on racial problems, Meredith re- . __. - _
plied. “I said I thought there mosphereor underwater.”
should be stronger legislation
LIGHTS OUT
All through the night, the lights
were off in the Pope's third floor
apartment overlooking St Peter’s
Square. This indicated he did not
"Mztinntion the palace shortly
after dawn and Gasbarrini did not
stains from them.”
But it specifies that in commit-
ting the United States to such a
moratorium this government
By BENNET M. BOLTON
VATICAN CITY (AP)-Gravely “A little better."
This precaution was taken fol- N ^yT"w&sond LAprty.avts;
canceled several engagements in
-a stop-gap increase in the na- Rome. He was reported remaining
personal physician. Dr. _
Gasbarrini, who was called general improvement—above
'* - “ •m him Chi.c+ira » — w +hat
district home demonstration agent also were judged. First place
from Stephenville. will be to winners will enter District I com-
Apparently Cardinal Cicognani Wyo.; George S. McGovern. S.D.;
and Bishop Van Lierde were Lee Metcalf, Mont; Wayne Morse
among the few prelates allowed in and Maurine B Neuberger, Ore.;
said the only rain expected was trad
a few showers to East Texas and port
to scattered sections of Southwest -
ire report. The measure was support-
oil ed by the governor.
po- PRIMARY DATES
Extension service agents from the Brown County 4-H Dress Re-
the 20-county District 8 will at- vue. Garments were judged Sat-
tend a landscape school Tuesday urday and today.
night. It was the sixth successive
night Marroni had spent in the John saw
tional debt limit to tide theTreas- in or near the Pope’s apartment apostolic palace. Alm
dikcusmande naipewfinmktnnnd shoula bear in " Soviet
Some measures, such as bills to sex, but
increase college tuition, died when ure died
became unnecessary The house committee bottled up the
Hugh Scott, Pa., and Peter H.
Dominick, Colo.
feet civil rights development and entirely eye-to-eye on whether the
“ agreement they proposed involved
a fog bank and the last thing he of the right leg and numerous
saw was the brake lights of an- —
ury over for the next few months.
The present $305-billion ceiling
would be raised to $397 by the
bill until June », and thereafter
to $309 billion temporarily.
The House has a light schedule
for the week. Its only announced
business is a bill to extend the
— -iature passed a 233 million_____ _____ ____
tax bill, which added enough reve- transfered it to a new committee.
ng another hemorrhage Sun-
(See GLOOM on Page 2)
Up for Senate debate Tuesday
The pace in will be the second of the regular
and school to in a state of constant readtosm
so it win not be caught napping
if the Soviets should “suddenly
affairs. Today was the third suc-
cessive morning that Pope had re-
The Pope's doctors found further ceived him, despite strict orders ._____ _____
...........from his doctors that he must Clifford P. Care, NJ.; Kenneth
rn Bishop Pierre van Another papal doctor, Piero
Pope's sacristan and Mazzoni, kept vigil near the —--=----------
1 for Vatican City, Pope's bedside throughout the morning, the paper added.
V, --3
aN
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Sen- knew of no strong opposition to 1 _
ate faces a three-day flurry of ac- the measure — a high-priorityifined • .. . -
item on President Kennedy's 1963 Concem grew about his condition.
A Vatican source said plans for
President Kennedy to see the 21- tonic
year-old Roman Catholic pontiff here urgently Sunday from his subjective,'
had been suspended. Kennedy was home in Bologna, saw the Pope Pope felt better
VOLUME 63 NO. 192 10c PSI COPY
. an Annt. mon, ne th. . —- „„__. ,2 money bills for the next fiscal due here abut June B
at an Atlanta rally or me rooea An $840-million nrewram dealing . engemini.n T-tepiAI n. “E -- m.
amszse - •j-s -
to prevent integration of the uni- r / 40 <.,7,5? etmtnnp aSenate leaders.Plan to. follow
" heeds the Senate s list today, this with a must bill for this week
Other sponsors of the resolu-
tion were Democratic Senators
E. L. Bartlett and Ernest Groen-
ing. Alaska: Quentin N. Burdick,
Nb.; Frank Church, Idaho; Paid
H. Douglas, m.; Joseph S.
Clark, Pa.; Clair Engle, Calif.;
Philip A Hart, Mich.; Daniel K.
Inouye, Hawaii; Gale W. McGee,
can newspaper, said the Pope’s would be the prelate to administer S. Muskie, Maine; Jennings
An- condition Sunday night "showed sacramentsjo the Pope _ dolfph, W.Va.; Abraham Rih
The two Democrats, who differ
sharply over the adequacy of Ken-
nedy administratio i proposals for
a comprehensive treaty banning
all nuclear weapons testing, found
common ground on a firststep
proposal.
MOSCOW OFFER
They proposed a resolution ask-
ing Washington to offer Moscow
an agreement to halt tests that
"contaminate the atmosphere or
the oceans." Twenty-two other
Democrats and six Republican
senators signed the resolution
with them for introduction to tbs
senate.
Humphrey and Dodd empha-
sized the resolution would impose
no restrictions on underground
testing or on testing in outer
space which would not contami-
nate the atmosphere.
Dodd, in a speech prepared for
Senate delivery, paid high tribute
to Humphrey, assistant Senate
Democratic leader, as “a cham-
pion of peace and disarmament."
He called the Minnesotan “the
logical candidate" for the next
Nobel Peace Prize.
U.S. COMMITMENT
The resolution stipulates that if
the Soviet Union refuses to sign
the first-step agreement, “we
commit ourselves before the
world to conduct no nuclear tests
in the atmosphere or underwater
so long as the Soviet Union sb-
ivle-2T---
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2
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measures than it passed.
A total of 1,608 bills and several
hundred resolutions were intro-
duced during the 137 day session.
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Gage, Larry. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 192, Ed. 1 Monday, May 27, 1963, newspaper, May 27, 1963; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1483004/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.