Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 195, Ed. 1 Friday, May 29, 1964 Page: 5 of 10
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4
1 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Friday, Mey 29, 1964
1
I IKVET <
art planting Pensacola Bahia
newly-created position of rate
grass for
States Telephone Co. in its gen-
s
9JE FTZGERALDKHNED-V
said. They follow the latest re-
The Kennedy fve-eent postage stamp.
activities in the areas visited as
his honor, at Cape
mark named
HIS GOAL: PEACE
and throughout the
the
I
on the tour was
Experiment
lished in the territory of South
Station at Titon, Ga., orgina-
.
Man Placed
On Probation
■worldwide.
in hearts of
For Threat
by Quincy
Aad stml they pass before the fame.
Demo Picket Lines Planned
4
O
2
a d
peace force in Cyprus.
s
Maceo Turner, Negro presl-
We can furnish 3,000 or 4,000
329
vancement of Colored People,
was
Lest We Forget
),
3:2-
1,
i "
i
WE WILL BE CLOSED
SATURDAY. MAY 30th
Loan
Southern Savings
Memorial Day
“ axowxwooD. TIAS ASSOCIATION
Dial MI 3-4571
9
I
I
ed in Brownwood
Of the 59 persons
Johnny Rogerson Joins
Firm As Rate Engineer
lege in Abilene and East Tex-
as Baptist College in Marshall.
He received his degree from
Stephen F. Austin College in
Johnny L. Rogerson Jr. of I son worked eight years for
Longview has bean named to the Southwestern Bell Telephone
Most outstanding ranch and
farm seen on the tour, accord-
Active in civic affairs, Rog-
erson is past president of the
Longview Jaycees, past vice
eral offices in Brownwood
He will be in charge of the
preparation and issuance of all
company tariffs and rates for
turned to Texas.
Coleman said the group saw
several farms and ranches which
E H. Utzman, commercial sup-
erintendent.
A native at Longview. Roger-
J. L. ROGERSON JR.
. . . Rate engineer
-
Fredonia, was convicted March
10 and committed to CO days of
observation at the Federal Bu-
reau of Prisons Medical Insti-
tute at Springfield, Mo.
Michaud was convicted of
making the threat in a call from
a service station telephone
booth in Kanab, Utah.
The probation sentence was
handed down from Judge Willis
W: Ritter Thursday in U.S. Dis-
trict Court in Salt Lake City.
By ROLAND LNDSEY
or The Bunenn ft"
Briefs
HOUSTON (AP) - U.S. Sen.
Ralph Yarborough will be given
a Gulf Coast appreciation dinner
here June 15. Tickets will range
from *25 to *100.
HEMPHILL, Tex. (AP)— De-
Witt Vickers, 50, was free on
$3,000 bond today after being
charged with murder tn the
shotgun slayings Thursday of a
father and son. He was charged
in the deaths of Levin Wilson,
50, and his son, Randall Wilson.
30, in a shooting near Milam, 8
miles north of this Southeast
Texas town.
X
t
3
r
» ■ ‘
7
I
r
i .
“46
• T
"HEADS OR TAILS, AT THE TOSS OF THE COIN . . .
COM'SE COM'SI . . . LEAVE IT TO LUCK ... TO BE OR
NOT TO BE . . ." THESE ARE THOUGHTS AND CLI'CHES
NOT TO BE FOUND IN THE FAITH AND ASPIRATIONS
OF THE MEN TO WHOM WE OWE SO MUCH. THOSE WHO
HAVE GONE BEFORE US WE'RE A DETERMINED LOT:
READY AND WILLING TO LAY DOWN THIER LIVES IN
ORDER THAT THIS NATION AND WAY OF LIFE MAY
CONTINUE UNHAMPERED IN ITS INSPIRED AND PRE-
DESTINED COURSE THROUGH HISTORY. THEY WERE A
STRONG LOT: MAINTAINING THIS COUNTRY, ITS
IDEALS AND PRINCIPLES, IN THE FACE OF AWESOME
AND FEARSOME FOES. IT IS WITH THESE THOUGHTS IN
MIND THAT WE PAY TRIBUTE TO THESE MEN . . . OUR
HONORED DEAD. WE PRAY THAT THEIR EFFORTS HAVE
NOT BEEN IN VAIN . . . AND THAT OUR STRENGTH
AND FAITH MAY BE FOUND AS THEIRS ... IN GOD.
trip. 57 were from East Texas
and only Coleman and one oth-
er from the Central and West
portion of the state.
ting, but he • did
this country " He
gent once credited with carry-
ing the world on his shoulders.
U Thant is a slightly plump
5-foot-8 Burmese who weighs
103 pounds. Because he is U.N.
secretary-general, he is active-
ly juggling a dozen or more
politic*] pyramids.
The United States has suggest-
ed making him an umpire in
the dispute started by Cambo-
dia’s charges of aggression
lodged against the United States
and South Viet Nam in the U N.
Security Council
DODGED REQUEST
That came up recently, just
after the Security Council had
dodged an outright request to
him to be an umpire in the In-
KROss
5
headache when he took over the
U.N. job, and his pyramid jug-
gling included bond sales, eco-
nomy campaign* and mapping
steps to coordinate technical as-
sistance programs as well as
trying quietly—but unsuccessful-
ly—to collect from Soviet bloc
countries. France and others in
arrears on peace-keeping financ-
ing.
But he shows no outward nerv-
ousness in his juggling act
An intimate said he is rein-
forced by his Buddhist faith,
which give* him calm in hand-
ling his problems from day to
day, and the pyramids do not
interfere with his digestion or his
sleep.
ers.
He has not been too success-
ful and the situation there has
become complicated by Yemen
Republican and Arab League
campaigns to drive the British
out of Aden and turn the Federa-
tion of South Arabia over to Ye-
men.
He still bosses a 5,000-man
force keeping peace between Is-
rael and Arab neighbors in the
Middle East
He played an important inter-
mediary role between the United
States and the Soviet Union and
Cuba during the missile crisis.
SOUTH AFRICA
Thant is directly involved in
dealing with South Africa’s rac-
ial segregation policies and it*
trials of apartheid foes, and with
trying to get » U.N. technical
1UR ANCESTORS
Kennedy Imprint Deepens
John Fitzgerald Kennedy had -in Arlington. in Washington,
a scant three years as presi- in Berlin where a square is
U THANT
... Expert juggler
He proudly held our torch
aloft,
His lady by his side.
And so it was, this soldier
f*U.
A martyr to our creed.
He championed our cause
in Hfe,
And dying. crowned his deed*.
He would not, could not
compromise
Our dream of World Set Free.
If angelf walk upon the earth
Then tartly such was he.
pickets if they need them. We
can make the line so long and
At the end of June he emerge*
from another military peace-
keeping operation, in the
troublesome Congo. The U.N.
force is to be withdrawn June
30 and Thant has been shrink-
ing it slowly. But he still will
be actively involved in continu-
ing U.N. civilian aid to the coun-
try.
IN FIELD
Thant has another personal
representative in the field, trying
to dampen down the Republican-
royalist war in Yemen by en-
dent of the local branch of the
NAACP, said his chapter hadn’t
decided what action it would
take this summer but indicated
it would join the picket lines.
There is no local CORE branch.
ipants, though not all have
formally committed themselves
James Farmer, national direc-
tor of CORE, said one of the
civil rights demands would be
fair and full employment, with
a minimum *2 wage and a mas-
sive works and training pro-
gram for jobless persons He
said the Democrats would be
urged to give no convention
committee chairmanships to
Dixiecrats.
•They liked the sample. Miss Rota, and ordered three
and a half million more!"
UNITED NATIONS, L...
(AP i—Atlas was a muscular
tool of Kashmir. The majority
of the council wanted him to
take over that task but India
opposed it. The Soviet Union
supported India with its threat
of veto power, and the council
withheld the recommendation.
Thant is already ankle deep
in Southeast Asia. He acts as a
post office for Indonesia and
Malaysia in their complaints
against each other over Indo-
nesia's threat to crush the new
federation of Malaysia. He is
directly concerned in arbitrat-
ing a border dispute between
Cambodia and Thailand.
Heading the list of pyramids
is his direction of the U.N.
By TOM SEPPY
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP|
—Delegates attending the Dem-
ocratic National Convention in
August may be met by civil
rights picket line* on the board-
walk as they enter Convention
Hall .
Mass nonviolent demonstra-
tions are being planned by the
Congress of Racial Equality in
an attempt to point up alleged
racial discrimination in the
home states of the delegate*.
s
month-old heifers with five-
month-old calves at their sides.
He added that the cows weigh-
ed about 1,150 pounds now.
Coleman emphasized that the
main item expressed by all the
successful farmers and rancher*
was management of the farms.
They do a real fine job of ma-
nagement in those areas," he
Boles Home
Singers Due
Nationally known Bel Canto
Singers of the Boles Home at
Quinlin is scheduled to sing at
Austin Avenue Church of Christ
Monday at 7:10 p.m.
Boles Home is a home for
children supported by members
of the Churches of Christ. It
is composed of two units, with
the original one located at Quin-
lan. where 255 children live,
and the Foster Home at Ste-
phenville. with 32 children.
The singers are currently on
their 15th annual summer tour.
First half of the tour includes
appearances in Texas and New
Mexico.
Programs are presented free
of charge as a service of Boles
Home and the Churches of
Christ? and no contributions are
taken The program is open
to the public.
midnight in midday ."
"We can give them enough
pickets to block every entrance
into Convention Hall that offi-
cials would have to recruit po-
licemen from all over the State
of New Jersey,” he said.
"There’s a brand new jail in
Mays Landing and we certainly
could fill it for them."
Maya Landing, some 11 miles
to the west, is the Atlantic
County seat. The new jail was
special services, according to Nacogdoches.
---- He is a veteran of five year*
service in the Navy.
I Bahia Grass Among Sights
I In Texas' Tour Of South
dent to make his living n
upon the memory of this na-1 Kennedy and throughout the
tion. But in the six months United States.
since he died. hi* imprint seems The Kennedy five-cent postage
Cecil Moore. Negro president opened in February
of the Philadelphia NAACP ”
chapter, said recently: "Well
to have deepened by the day stamp is being issued today at
On his birthday today , you the Hyannis Port, Mass , Post
can find it in countless places Office on Cape Cod. on what
uaunvrammm would have been Kennedy'* 47th
Edhas
U Mav 29 1917
" TWMMsM Tie following tw verses are
a from John
d kenret ’• M- I F Veda
vueeea Reese
wi the president s assassina-
M ton Nov 22 1963 and deemed
Gkiuzandd appropriate tor today
"2 PB Hut hriqht end ,h7 n-mor
m 2a 2 Was not designed hy mon.
az His curage uar the ", f
euu= The shield uithin his hond
maTTTde He lighted fires of freedom
West Africa as a first step to its tion point of Coastal Bermuda
independence under a Bantu -- - •
government
jor pasture crop in the state The Bahia grass was just one
This year, Stuart Coleman of, of numerous new farming and ______._______
Brownwood was among the de- ranching experiments and im- commendations from their ex-
legates making a similar trip provements viewed by delegates periment stations, and they have
through the two Southern states, on the five day tour through probably the finest grass expert- BIRTHDAY TODAY
but the new grass inspected by Alabama and Southern Georgia ment station in the nation at TH --------------------------
the touring group was not re- sponsored by the East Texas ton
Coleman said color slides of
mainly those in the South
CORE is expected to be joined —r-, -- - —ne
by demonatratonnfromthe Na wor*insorerat"orowithrn
placed on five years probation.
Norman P Michaud, 43. of Jian-Pakistani dispute over con-
Thant inherited a financial ing to Coleman, was the Wads-
worth Brothers farm in Alaba-
engineer with Southwestern view, Tyler, Dallas and Cisco.
_ ------------ .. . He attended McMurry Oak
ma, Coleman said the three bro-
thers. all living on the 4.10# acre
ranch, had won practically every
agricultural award offered by the
state of Alabama.
The three inherited the farm
in 1934. when it was practically
bankrupt and power equipment
included 11 “old broken down
mules.” The farm is now com-
posed of 3,100 acres owned and
1,000 acres rented land. Crops
include cotton, timber. com.
wheat, oats, rye and clover.
The brothers have some pure-
bred Angus heifers and some
Hereford*. Coleman said they
crossed each breed with Santa
Gertrudis bulls and got what the
term a “vigorous hybrid.” Cole-
man said the group saw 100 27-
The group left Longview May the tour were made and when
17. and returned May 21. processing was completed that
Coleman described farming a program explaining various
activities in the areas visited as phases of the trip would be stag-
■ 1 president of the Cisco Chamber
’ i at Commerce, and has also been
» 4 active in the Elk* Lodge. Lion*
H Club and Knight* of Columbus.
# Rogerson is married and has
18 a daughter, Joan Carol
Student Non-Violent Coordinat- — ..0
ing Committee and local partic- so black they would think it
| Ten years ago, delegates on an not like H
' East Texas Chamber of Com- described the grass as similar
! merce pasture and livestock tour to nut grass, only growing larg-
Mi of Georgia and Alabama came er Mixed with other pasture* he
. back to Texas with tales of a said, it would choke out Coastel
new grass—Costal Bermuda- Bermuda It grows well under
■ which has now become a ma- Pim trees, be added.
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah
(API—An Arizona man convict-
ed of threatening the life of
President Johnson has been
Texas. Among the crops were
Thant Plays World ‘Game‘=-5
... - . Among stope on
N.Y., couraging the United Arab Re- assistance representative estab- the Costal Plains
—public and Saudi Arabia to endu-h — i.™ •f Snath . —
active support for the contend-
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Gage, Larry. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 195, Ed. 1 Friday, May 29, 1964, newspaper, May 29, 1964; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1483084/m1/5/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.