Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1961 Page: 1 of 12
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BARG.ACN JAMROREF SPK IAIS
SEE PACE 9
—
DENTON, TEXAS. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 28, 1961
12 PAGES
PRICE FIVE CENTS
kkkkk
Asians, Africans Back
‘1
L"-
Up Tunisian Demands
GANGLAND STYLE
8
Witness Is
Of French
X
Rubbed Out
— Associated Pren
Berlin Agree
ents
To Be Fired
Rusk refused at a news confer-
chusetts.
WEATHER
Outsider In
warm
■ )
through Saturday, except for isolated
Wheelhouse
Afternoon thundershowers
1
At Chrysler
U.S. SUPPORT
Many legislators believe Lane agement positions with the com-
Last 24 Hours
pons.
founded the auto firm in 1925.
EXPERIENCE
will enable him to keep his stock
Ballman said the aim of the options <45.000 shares at 152.49 a
with the British. At his urging,
be passed gible for his Chrysler pension
bureau of the Dallas News.
MILK STRIKE
The measure <HB 2D requires had fired its previous president,
lobbyists to make monthly spend-
William C. Newberg, because he
ing reports during sessions of the owned half interests in two com-
NEARS BREAK
Legislature and twice yearly re-
ports when the lawmakers are out
Tough China
one
Policy Eyed
29 that the corporation spelled
bert and the directors by dissi-
dren under school age. The bill
pay raises despite government
pleas to hold the wage line.
FINANCIAL EXPERT
The letter was signed by Tad
for the nation's prosperity.
dal expert who only joined the Smith. GOP chairman from El
duce from $254 million to $328
Townsend's elevation came con-
million. mostly from a 2 per cent currently with the company’s
an-
million profit in the second quar- recognition by the United States
ready has a long start toward' Some bond issues were down as
4
I
I
/
I
I
f
l
Vaa
It
II
Legislature Tax
Struggle Centers
On Five Senators
Tunisia Asks
Withdrawal
Britain Sidesteps Query
On Common Market Move
A Republican senator has made
public a letter from the national
cumstances seem to require.
On the diplomatic side, concern
available for spending in the next
two years. He said the measures
panies whose sole business was
making parts for Chrysler. New-
as senators approved in the reg-
ular session. This the House re-
to report the names of persons
and groups paying the retainers.
The House Education Commit-
tee favorably reported for debate
a bill changing the law on creat-
The action came exactly one
year after Chrysler disclosed it
also asked the Democrats to join
Republicans in opposition to dip-
share. slightly above the present
market price’ and to remain eli-
two striking dairy workers' locals
labored to end the wage dispute
which has shut off 90 per cent
of the city’s fresh milk supply.
Some 2 million quarts of milk
ished the rest of Colbert's jobs,
even to reducing the number of
board members by one—to 17.
For Colbert they created a new
l 62
206
18,58
17.91
This Month
July Average
This Year
Lott Year
car were found on several roof-
tops as far as half a block away.
tax committee is to save about
$50 million through economy
95
69
9*
72
out the reason.
After Newberg. Chrysler tried
servative majority held together,
beat down a censure motion and
voted 346-236 to approve the gov-
ernment 'program.
Tops For Teens, The 1440 Club.
quickly to the Senate to fill the
tax bill gap. ♦
House State Affairs Committee
action placed in the House calen-
dar a controversial bill aimed at
tighter restrictions on lobbying.
tive step toward political associa-
tion last week in a move in-
terpreted as a deterrent to the
British.
much as $4.90. Par is $280 but
many have recently sold at less
than half that figure.
Approval of Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan's government
Nothing Serves The Community As Well As The Local Newspaper
(Experiment Station Report)
High Thursday ...........
lew this morning ......................
High year ago
low year ago
Church News
Classified .....
Comics .......
Editorials ______
Sports ........
Town Topics .
TV Log .....
Women's News
Subcommittee Expected To Make
Drastic Changes In House Bill
AUSTIN (AP)—The legislative tax struggle centered
today on five senators.
They are the subcommittee appointed by Sen. Ward-
low Lane to study the House-passed tax bill (HB 20) and
report it back to the full Senate State Affairs Commit-
tee—probably with drastic changes.
“I’m referring it to the same subcommittee as in the
regular session for them to bring back as early as pos-
sible,” Lane said at the close of the committee’s second
full afternoon of hearings.
Along with the bill the subcommittee was given a pro-
The United States supported
the council resolution last Satur-
R-C Ga@e
.None
2.10
2.06
22.75
24.33
($92,250 a year when he retires
nine years hence’.
NEWBERG FIRING
EXPLOSION RIPPED CAR, WITNESS APART
Blaney Was Killed As He Turned On Ignition Of Auto
summit conference of Exp. *’* Gauge
None i "
south. Low tonight 70 to 75. High Sat-
urday 92 to 99.
TEMPERATURES
DETROIT <AP) - Outside di-
rectors—men who hold no man-
counting for all of their acti-1 ~
vities Thursday and Wed-
nesday nights
V. he
-
day it 5 38 a.m. Fishing: Excellent.
RAINFALL
Sen. Hugh Scce of Pennsyl ' may be taken by the United
vania implied that the directors States and its European allies
Page
. «
IS
11
. 4
8
. 2
. s
. 5
.... outside directors set out to find golia.
whether a kindergarten should be a new man. Townsend, a finan- T
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—An ex-convict who testified
against three men tonvicted of a bizarre burglary was
killed in gangland style Thursday by an explosion which
ripped through his auto when he turned on the ignition.
Police later questioned and today released two of the
convicted men and a shapely woman night-club owner
awaiting trial.
Police Capt. David Brown said Lillian Reis, 33, owner
of the Celebrity Room, Ralph Staino Jr., 27, and John
C. Berkery, 30, were questioned and released after ac-
Opposition
for his resignation. But the Coi-
CHICAGO (AP) — Inside dairy .metropolitan area But not
workers reached an agreement quart was available today. Stores
ment to its partners in the Eu- barrier against the rest of the Gaulle sees the Common Market
world as an opportunity to unite con-
an overwhelming vote of approval
in Parliament Thursday night de-
spite aroused feelings on the part
LONDON <AP’—British govern-
ment bonds fell to record lows on
the stock exchange today while
stock prices also suffered wide-
posed substitute embodying
the governor’s tax program.
As when the House sent
over its tax bills of the reg-
ular session, Lane named himself
21
H. Poulson. 25, a third man con-
victed in the burglary in Potts-
ville. in northeastern Pennsyl-
vania. which authorities claim
netted nearly a half million dol-
lars in cash. John Rich, a wealthy
coal operator whose home was
burglarized, has maintained only
$20,000 in cash and jewelry was
taken.
Immediately after the explosion
Thursday police questioned Rich-
ard Blaney's wife, Joanna. 24,
and residents of the neighbor-
hood. Police said they shed little
light on the slaying.
The blast ripped Blaney apart,
in extreme
—--e 0
The three voluntarily sur-
rendered for questioning Thurs-
day night some six hours after ex-
convict Richard Blaney was killed
outside his home on his 27th
birthday when his automobile was
ripped by an explosion.
Last August, Richard's brother-
Vincent, 27, who had been ex-
spected to be a prosecution wit-
ness in the burglary case- was
slain in gangland style.
Brown said Mrs. Reis, an at-
tractive divorcee who at one
time danced in chorus lines,
Staino. who at one time managed
her nightclub, and Berkery de-
nied any connections with the
slaying of Richard Blaney.
................ —
I i e.
-M
1
(Tex) Colbert as chairman, pres-
ident. chief executive officer.
and Sens. Dorsey Hardeman,
Bruce Reagon, Tom Creighton
and Jep Fuller as his tax writing
subcommittee.
The bill is not expected to look
anywhere near the same when it
comes back to the full committee.
’Their cumulative experience long-range prospect.
represents approximately 28 years ! Administration informants said
(Ap, _ Th Europe and speeding up the mo- can make to the Soviet Union for
5 bilization of U.S. strength if cir- a way out of the Berlin crisis.
IN TOD ATS PAPER
THE U.S. and its allies in-
tend to keep the battleground
as small as possible in case
shooting begins over Berlin.
Page 3.
LEADERS WIN again in
tight major league baseball
races. Page 8.
day calling for a cease-fire in
Tunisia and for both sides to with-
draw to pre - battle positions. The
Tunisians complained because
Washington did not pressure the
French to give up the Bizerte
base immediately. And France's
cold shoulder to Hammarskjold
embarrassed the Americans fur-
ther in view of their long record
of support for the secretary-gen-
eral as a peacemaker and medi-
moving ‘ irritants” to the Soviet
Union in the operations of the
Western powers in West Berlin.
Rusk declined to specify even
what ‘ irritants" the West might
be willing to negotiate with the
Soviet Union. In the past, how-
ever, the Western powers have
expressed willingness to curtail
propaganda activities in Berlin, to
put a ceiling on Western troop
strength in west Berlin (at
post—chairman of the board of
probably would be pared down by Chrysler of Canada, Ltd. This
Benton Record- Chronicle
. ■ 4 ' I' -I a - ■ ... - ' ....
assurance that the troops would gine, hood and other parts of the
not be provided with atomic wea-
ance with Civil Service regula- viet Premier Khrushchev. At the
tions. present, however, that is more a
0vl V"VIVE 44IMJVI A‛J1 -AOM II y•
pec ted. But groups of teachers, ing kindergartens in public
- - schools. Present law requires a
of session. The reports would in- berg had been Colbert‘s personal
elude detailed accounts of items choice and close friend.
Newberg was dismissed June
without success to lure top men HOUSTON (AP’-Texas Repub-
from other auto companies as licans have asked Texas Demo-
president with Colbert to remain crats to join them in opposing ad-
as board chairman.
were fired because of political the Berlin crisis develops,
reasons. He did not mention that Secretary of State Dean Rusk ’
one of the exceptions— Welcome will try in Paris, next week to
Wilson of the Denton Southwest • get firm agreements with allied
ern headduar tel S - already has foreign ministers in a succession DENTON ano vicinity. Fair and-
resigned. of steps designed in part, at
FIRING DATE least, to give the Western powers
killing him instantly. He was
around 11,000 men) and to give blown into the back seat. The en-
is anxious not to he shut^y under French leadership and
- —1----. —-1 is not anxious to share the reins
reeling an adverse balance of------.---.. :------2-----
trade and curbing domestic infla- on spending-felt in nearly every
tion.
Investors hastened to get rid of
their government bonds The gov-
ernment program, among other
tomarourethegwdiffernce h chief operating officer and di- ator.
w een proposed new spending and rector. Ambassador Adlai E. Steven-
of $25 or more. Legislators re- _
ceiving retainers also would have 30, 1960, but it was not until July
will propose, and the Senate pany—have taken control of the
pass, roughly the same tax bill Chrysler Corp. for the first time
since the late Walter Chrysler
NO. 303
plan by Parliament, with its Com
servative majority, had been ex-
Charles Ballman, the bills
would make about 97 million
mission of Red China to the
Meanwhile lawsuits against Col- United Nations.
dent stockholders complaining otloAAlettersenturmdn Ef honsell
colony of Soviet Russia known at
sales tax on construction mater- nouncement it had made a $6.2 Outer Mongolia should be refused
Solon says Rusk To Seek Fir:
CD Chiels
ials, utility sales, power and mo- 1____.__.____,__. _
tor driven objects, restaurant ter of 1981. Chrysler lost $21 9 and admission to the United Na
meals and items of $5 sr more, million in the first quarter. itions," ths letter said.
some initiative in dealing with
According to the letter made the Soviet Union on the Berlin
public by" Scott, five regional di- problem.
rectors will be by The foreign ministers meeting
OCDM director Frank Ellis. involving the United States, Brit-! -
Ellis, in the letter, said that it ain. France and West Germany Sun sets today ” 7129 P m ‘Satur-
is necessary that regional direc- begins Aug. 5. It may lead to a
tors "shall be individuals suita- Western .......... ..lzcc.ce .a
ble to the appointing authority President Kennedy. French Pres-
(the President • and persons whom ident Charles de Gaulle and Brit
he considers best able to deter-; ish Prime Minister Harold Mac-
mine and reflect the policies ol millan
his department or agency." j Ultimately if East-West negotia- wy J y THLV 1CHNI
Sen. Scott said all regional di- tions over Berlin produce any " f Anl*
rectors have Civil Service status progress toward ending the crisis,
and have served their probation- diplomatic exchanges could lead
ary period of service in accord- to a summit conference with So-
ef the conference was said to have • • * • • •
-—"BRITISH BONDS
Ian is to outline the British posi- _ .. _ __
Mandy.tana"oprecamlonemmamaIN RECORD DIP
lieen taken to prevent a leak be- 1 ---- --
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(AP) — A bloc of 36 Asian
and African nations pressed
the U.N. Security Council
today to back Tunisia's de-
mand that France pull all
her troops out of Tunisia
and give up her huge naval
and air base at Bizerte.
Secretary-General Dag Ham-
marskjold was expected to open
the emergency council session
with a report on his disappoint-
ing peace mission to Tunisia. U.N.
sources said he would criticize
the French, who refused to con-
fer with him.
Yugoslavia joined 36 of the 46
Asian-African nations in the U N.
in a letter to the council presi-
dent, Leopoldo Benites of Ecua-
dor, demanding that France, as
a first step, obey the council’s
call to withdraw her troops to the
positions they held before last
week's fighting.
NEGOTIATIONS
The council was urged further
to acknowledge Tunisia's right
"not to tolerate the presence of
foreign forces or foreign military
bases" and to call for quick ne-
gotiations.
Hammarskjold returned Thurs-
day night from a flying visit to
Tunisia that Tunisian officials
said did little to bring a solution
to the explosive crisis.
French military authorities in
Tunisia refused to even see the
secretary-general and the French
government declined to invite him
to Paris for talks. Hammarskjold
made his trip on the invitation
of Tunisian President Habib Bour-
guiba, and the French treated it
as a private mission.
possibility in the background of
official thinking than serious
the six-nation group took a tenta- 'measures that can
miners. engineers and telephone ; . ..
operators made plans to press for petition of 25 persons with chi
T"G •a
7
,4 ~
forehand
After a cabinet meeting in
Laborites shouted established .... .......... —,, t------ ---------- —---------
The tax bill before the Senate company in 1957, was told early Paso, and Mrs. G. M McDaniel,
sub-group is estimated to pro this week he was their choice. vice president from Borger.
"We believe the province and
son, chief U.S. delegate to the
U.N., already has scheduled talks
in Paris this weekend with Pres-
ident Charles de Gaulle and other
French officials. An American
source said they were not orig-
inally set up to deal with the Tu-
nisian situation but that dispute
now appears certain to be dis-
cussed.
The French agreed to the
cease-fire after seizing the city of
Bizerte, three miles beyond the
sprawling Bizerte naval-air base,
but clung to their gains in defi-
ance of the council’s pullback or-
der. The French are demanding
assurances their lines of commu-
nication to the base—particularly
the water channel which runs
through the city of Bizerte—be
guaranteed before they pull their
troops back into the base.
the new money needed to finance ,
it The directors installed Lynn A.
, . „ , , „ Townsend as president and abol-
As originally drawn by Rep. - -
jected by a 72-72 tie vote. j Following a meeting in New
The House tax committee wasYork Thursday the corporation
expected to approve today three announced the resignation of L. L.
bills enacting economy measures
are sold daily in the Chicago to drive out of town to get some.
director of the U.S. Office ot Civil WASHINGTON
and Defense Mobilization firing Kennedy administration was re-
all regional OCDM directors ex- ported today to be holding in
cept those in Texas and Massa- serve a wide range of military
and diplomatic actions which State Department and the tion of what form these proposals
’the develonment of soecific pro.might take. But in reply to a
as P 85 P series of questions he would not
< rule out any possibility. The ques-
tions raised such matters as re-
GENEVA <AP)—Britain today completely free trade among the British market will be sacrificed,
in the field of civil defense and Kennedy's Berlin action program sidestepped a definite announce-1 six nations and a common tariff - French President Charles de
some of them have come up laid before the nation Tuesday " • " ‘ - ....
through the ranks of government night was only a starter. They
service, the senator said. said that what Kennedy and Rusk ropean ree, ra 5 ssociation on Britain, which must export to’tinental Western Europe political- the committee
"The proposal to fire these re- contemplate is a series of steps whether it plans to join the boom- live, i - - .
gional directors comes at the which will be put into effect as ing rival Common Market, a off from the 200 million potential
same time that the President has the maneuvering between the source at the EFTA conference customers in the Common Market
requested additional appropria- Western powers and the Soviet reported. countries. At the same time she
tions of $207 million for civil de- Union over the future of Berlin There was no other word on does not want to undermine the
fense," the senator was quoted takes its shape in coming months, what Edward Heath, No. 2 man {economies of the commonwealth
as saying by the Washington Possible future moves on the in the British Foreign Office, told countries, who fear their privi-
military side include sending re- Britain's trading partners but the leged trading position in the
-------------------------------- atmosphere at the opening session
_ , „ Police Thursday night were try-
ence Thursday to give any indica- ing to find for questioning Robert
with milk companies today in the reported heavy sales of canned London Thursday, Home Secre-
first step toward ending a strike and powdered milk. Sales of soil tary R. A. Butler told the House
that has shut off 90 per cent of drinks and ades spurted. of Commons the government had .
the Chicago area's milk supply. Mrs McGregor, mother ol settled its policy toward the Com- sPrea 05565
The agreement was readied three young boys, said: "My hus- mon Market and would canvass The selling wave was attributed
during a day-and-night conference band and I quit drinking milk conservative members for sup- to Che Conservative government's
in City Hall. The milk firms and and cream. The boys need what port. new austerity program which won
the drivers who transport their little we have left. My husband It was generally understood
products then sought to come to and I are drinking iced lea Macmillan's government, despite
terms. 1 in suburban Glenview, Paula opposition at home and from oth-
Prospects of a milkless weekend Fassnacht commented: "The er commonwealth governments, o wage earners.
have worried, parents. milk was all gone at our store, is ready to link up with he The program is aimed at cor-
"I never realized how the pow- so were using frozen malted Common Marked if France _
er to paralyze a city and disrupt milk Mrs. Fassnacht said hermits certain Sessions to com-
our routine is centered in so few daughter, Laurie, 4. just loves )lh t
hands,” commented Judy Me- the stuff and always preferred it
Gregor of suburban Hazel Crest to regular milk." EFTA is composed of Eritain,
As she spoke representatives of Mrs James Saxon. mother of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Swit-
the Associated Milk Dealers and six children including two sets of zerland, Austria and Portugal.
twins. said: "The kids are just and Finland is an associate mem- things, raised the Bank of Eng-
having a little picnic dunking her. The Common Market is land interest rate to 7 per cent
fruit juices, except the young made up of France, West Ger- from 5 and made other invest-
twins who prefer milk. If milk many, Italy, Belgium, the Nether- ments more attractive than g°Vt
doesn't come in soon. J'll have lands and Luxembourg and al- ernment bonds.
----
^AR OF DAILY
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER 1 inforcements to NATO defenses in posals which the Western powers
3:00 p.m. KDNT 1440, (Adv.)
,------------ ------ approved Thursday (HB 56 would the management began to pile up. Democratic Executive Committee,
Macmillan told Commons that authorize a school board, upon
the tax increases and other curbs petition of 5 per cent 0the Tuai
on spending—felt in nearly every died voters in a school district. 0 Last fall a committee of the lomatic recognition of Outer Mon-
household in the land—are vital call _ an election to determine
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 303, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1961, newspaper, July 28, 1961; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491712/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.