Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 211, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 15, 1965 Page: 1 of 28
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Denton Record-Chronicle and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Denton Public Library.
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Denton Record. Chronicle
FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS
2 N.T. TRACKMEN
OF RECORD-CHROXH I E
AT TOP, PAGE 10
TELEPHONE :iR7-3Rl l
ServingThe University Center Of The Southwest
DENTON, TEXAS, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 15, 1965
28 Pages In 2 Sections
5 Cents
62ND YEAR OF DAILY SERVICE—NO. 211
!
Reds Hit By Biggest Raid
1
mam.
Of South Vietnamese War
• E
Wind Storm
3d*
WEATHER
7
Strikes Area
p
During Night
k"
Lh.
4
Q.%
2.
PI™
.1 A KART A.
J. *
MI
Disaster Area
liam C. Westmoreland. com-
Rises
' size of golf balls were report- damaged nearly every building island nation
led. in town, including the school. athletic coach
wa
most of them as
athletic coaches.
communique Indicated
The
By THE ASSOCI ATED PRESS
were homeless in five flood-ravaged states.
protlamt n
en
2 From TCU
Services Slated
FORT WORTH (AP) - Two
As Easter Week draws to an,will speak at sunrise services'
Christian
Sadler and
E
heavy military
guard
A
awaiting execution Is
Still
activi-
IXDEX
/DIM, OF CANCER
Woman Kills Best Friend
Word- .if -mpathy
.slaying
until 1941
i
.L
Wilson, LBJ
Meet Today
On Problems
The board also announced
that Dr. Milligan. president of
the TCU Research Foundation
as well as vice chancellor of re-!
search, has submitted his resig-1
the floods
Melting snow and ice push- SEX RISE PROGRAM SUNDAY
U.S. South Viets
Hit Dawn To Dusk
Johnson’s eves had damped and
he had wiped his nose with the
by the Freedom '
( ommittee of the
DENTON AND VICINITY- Fair tonight
and Friday Cooler tonight and in east
and south Friday. Low tonight 42 to
56.
10
10-12
10
13
9
65
11
41
rises
02
.38
3 84
6 90
8 46
Last 24 hours
Thin Month
April Average
This Year
Last Year
and flond-
ana. 0110 ;
aster
que-t -
Page Sec.
12. 13 2
Classified
Comics
Editorials
Food News
In The News
Movies
Sports
Town Topics
TV Log
Women's News
12
1
1-8
X '
R-C Gauge
02
38
3.84
7 13
10 14
" w aun
RAINFALL
(In inches)
Exp Sta Gauge
Indones-jtoday. But the Communists areese Skyraiders began the bomb-
ing attack at dawn.
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)—An armada of 230
U.S. and South Vietnamese planes bombed a Commun-
8 ist stronghold near the Cambodian border “from dawn
mw# "If
, A
। ception Church. The Texas Wo-
Iman’s University Choir present-
---------------------------------------------- Miss Happer, a Leusua • Lo: ---I ---- ... — -----
to dusk” today in the biggest air raid of the Viet Nam
war.
U.S. Army, Air Force and Marine aircraft based in
Viet Nam were joined by Navy planes from the carriers
Coral Sea and Midway and Skyraider fighter-bombers of
the South Vietnamese air force.
It was the first time Navy planes had gone into action
against targets inside South Viet Nam. Previous Navy
U.S. Peace Corps
To Be Withdrawn
the eves o1 anyone
PSamf ”
"hm
, Ta,
2
--9
I
1
2
I
2
I
J
University,! American agencies left in In- ain s Foreign Office. |
Sadler ond donesia. , Wilson meets with the Presi- field
The United States shut downdent at the White House shortly A ,
services after after his arrival and the two Tinged the field,
demonstrators leaders plan to lunch together. _ Still f......""
raids have been made on
North Viet Nam.
A U.S. spokesman said
' the target was a tangled jun-
I gle region nearly 2 miles wide
I by 3′2 miles long in Tay Ninh
Province northwest of Saigon.
“It was a maze of blotchy
woods, with Viet Cong gardens
I and numerous trails visible,” he
said.
i U.S. Air Force and Vietnam-
—Associated Press
PRESIDENT JOHNSON INSPECTS SHATTERED BICYCLE
President Shown in Toledo During lour Of Ravaged Areas
lister arranged meetings with the getaway motorbike in the
Secretary of the Treasury Hen-1 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in
government also tookry H. Fowler and Secretary of-Saigon. e
commerce John T Connor at Meanwhile, warplanes from
'the British Embassy. I the U.S. 7th Fleet carried out
While the United States is cur-! the first U S. night flight over
'he MissIssippi as ice chunks
Sec I LooDs HIT. Page 2
TEMPERATURES
(Experiment Station Report)
Low this mornins
Migh Wednesday
Low Wednesday
Hish Year Aso
Low Year Ago
Sun sets today at 101 pm,
Friday at 6 02 a m
After Touring As Water
WASHINGTON Ap, pro.. "
bad
Bemsanmsj s
mander of U S. forces in Viet
Nam, had called for a “maxi-
mum effort" against the target,
which lies in the Communist
“C” zone.
“It appeared to be one of the
more lucrative places we have
! seen" one spokesman said.
j The U.S. Army contributed a
! platoon of armed helicopters
minutes before.
damage surv • V -
in till' meantm
al agencies ar"
disaster arras.
The Prenident I-ened he dis
I High winds, thunder and. Today, cool dry air from New
1 lightning sent many area ( Mexico moved into Texas while
| residents scrambling f o r i punishing storms finished sub-
i their cellars Wednesday ' siding across the state.
night as tornadoes were [ Clouds thinned as the latest
ed the Mississippi and its
tributaries over the banks
n Minnesota, Wisconsin. Iowa,
North Dakota and Illinois
The Weather Bureau warned
'he worst is still to come
The Red Cross said 1,700 fam- I
- 1-
V,,
gh ’
Eshs ■
mue a 1aj/4 ; J
| Little Elm had .61 inch mois-! Peace officers in Tarrant and 1 ne communique inaicatea
ture and some hail. Lewisville ! Dallas Counties kept close tab that U.S. aid to Indonesia will
The overflowing Mississippi River swirled across the reported .83 inch of moisture on what they described as a be limited henceforth to techni-l
low lands of Minnesota today on a rampage forcing thous- and walnut-sized hail. huge funnel cloud. It whirled cal assistance to a few Indone-
Other area rain reports: overhead from 10 miles north- sian universities. American aid!
The Red ( ross estimated that more than 31,000 persons ; Bridgeport, .10; Celina, .05; Chi-! west of Fort Worth past Roan- [already has been slashed to less!
...... ' co, .25; Frisco, .75; Decatur, oke, Lewisville, Frisco and on than $3 million a year from a
At least 11 deaths in Minnesota have been blamed on trace: and Alvord, .15, east before breaking up. io lel ~f then ernn
forecast for Denton and vi- round of tornadoes and wild
cinity thunderstorms died away, leav-
I The weather moved through ing widespread property dam-
at dusk and remained for ap- i 86
proximately two hours. Hail ’ One twister battered Perrin,
! fell at some communities while 116 miles north of Mineral Wells, I m m .
others got heavy rains in brief but its 350 residents escaped in- H4 yoAm I M r AI Ac 1 <1
periods. Denton had the light- - jury Observers spotted at least I I tJill LIIUIUIIUBId
est rainfall, reporting only .02 three other tornadoes in Texas ;
of an inch. and half a dozen across the Red
j A heavy cloud formation re-
sembling a funnel was report-
' ed to have passed over the Lew-
/isville area but watchers in the io arms
, hdn..d"ed Indi- unds of persons from their homes,
and Mi’Han mi)" — - - ■ -
To Stop Slow Suffering
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -i tian Scientists. in the city’s Ger-ida said a 22-caliber pistol wa:
WASHINGTON Ap _ which flew cover for Vietnam-
previous level of more than $100 p-"aM; p io., wiisonese spotter planes.
• u- i Prime Minister hlarold WlISOn A, N,n AgA p;1A nA~4W
milli n. i . of Britain flies here today to f sDa) 8 military norrh
Bunker has spent the past two- President Johnson for of S.aigonucd ml iary firing
weeks conferring with Sukarno 1 in .. montbe squad publicly executed today a
and other officials on the de- the co nd ’ " four month ! viet Cong terrorist who tried to
in U.S.-lndonesian During their talks the prime bomb a hotel filled with Ameri-
! minister wants to concentratecan GIs. Applause rippled
on financial and economic prob- through the crowd of 7,000 men,
... -bomitati- dinl tin and children as the
are compieted
Corps, long a target of In- U.S. officials did not expect! presutmablyfrom Viet Cong
-of the hardest hit was Graham donesia’s Communists. Bunker’s present mission to U.S. spokesmen said ground
! south of Wichita Falls. Chunks I Bunker and President Sukar-bring.a xutaany The object was fire was “surprisingly light con-
-- -----------:---------- policies^ ine oojectwas sidering that it is a dangerous
to determine whether the Indo- area„ Two Navy planes re-
nesian government is willing toceived one bullet hole each.
I tain tensions” between the Unit- maintain working relations with A spokesman said Gen. Wil-
I . D t ed States and Indonesia. About the United States. 1 ~ '
Roanoke received .71 inch of At Perrin the writhing storm 35 American volunteers have
I moisture and hail stones the j wrecked a lumber yard and been working in the sprawling
................ masesem
woman at Little Elm said she causing more destruction than out the American Peace “ithetheenntted Stats. _______| presumably from Viet Cong am-
observance, and an youth groups, W111 read scrip* He suffered a heart attack
invitation ha.' been extended to ture passages and offer pray- Feb 19 and was in a hospital
members of all faiths. ers. . f.. :0 :...... ._____ ....
keck "It's ciif in the road " , Dr Harry Sarles, national' Two association - sponsored limited his educational
Twentv-even died in Sunny- missions representative of the observances were held earlier ties. 1 ........
-de and an estimated 2001 were United Presbyterian Church, (this week, Monday, 75 women The trustees appointed Dr harassment.
"/und Sls memhers of---------------------------- attended a programinthepar- James Moudy, 49, executive American demonstrations dur-ister is'known'to be spending Radio Saigon said Vietnamese
ish center of Immaculate n vice chancellor, as interim chief ing the 10th anniversary cele- much of his time coping with his fighter-bombers also were over
administrative officer and bration of the African-Asian country's foreign exchange.North Viet Nam after dark and
named a committee to select Bandung conference, beginning problem. 'they bombed a military convoy. ,
Dr. Sadler’s successor. i--------------------------
Co "
Tin' erincism
for the channeln. in mllions nt
doilars of federa! aid tn he
stricken areas wen' more than
250 persons lost 'heir live-
The exact ameunt of the relt
fund' will be determiner aftep
‘voral oder- in, - were affected in lowa. 4.811
vie hel; in Minnesta, 75 in North Dako-
heard a roaring noise from her ! the vicious winds in places. One J
storm cellar. I of the hardest hit was Graham, j
LBJ Declares More Than 31.000
___ _ 'e aumng ,.e • , .roofs with costi) fury in the next few weeks because of "cer-
•VI •V 11 -towns but did no significant rools Win cosuy fury in me
HAq H 1*0111 HOlllCS damage. southeast part of Graham.
Only a few
ed special Easter music, and
the Rev. Joseph Thomas pre-
- sented the program of the day.
I The TWU Choir was also fea-
tured at a noon luncheon Tues-
day at First Methodist Church
for members of Denton service nation
cluhs „ , , „ . , . Dr Milligan said he wished
The Rev. Finis Jef cry. Meth- devote fll time to his work
odist missionary on leave tromiwith the RObert A Welch Foun-
Korea, spoke to the 117 men dation ot Houston and to affairs
attending._______________. of the American Chemical So-
ciety.
McNamara Hit By Report^.—
• L 1941 There is no reason why
back of his hand as he talked cn, tmilv
with a grandmotherin a, Totlonding already , I
dnleveled suburb o| Tilled’., iddmageccmmatedas2o
110 , . mil ion in Minneta alone
The aging ladv gesturing m
the scraps ot wood and upturned , 1, industriee Were ordered
kitchen range that had been lpedand residents were evac-
home for her daughter son-in- llit’ed 111 St F aul as the rolling
law and three grandchildren. Mmsis^ppi began to force its
said way through and under emer-
' It wa n • just being Im and gency dikes
hurt. That's all we have. There 1,1 Sf Paul and Minneapolis
in ! int anv mere ' 'he floodwatch was intensified
Iohnso who listened intently 11 the many bridges that span
T' 11 the throe
i .men tin’ wa
WNSHIN(iT" I M' \ ine \ea
Freedom of Intormaton Gorn formation
mir'ce charged oday ”i.i' see head'd ho 1
ri tairy of [ im > I-f Rob 11 S agine d
McNamara and 1- intormation I Vew-
chiet confuse me l tense De- ,
, , , , , Mill on 11 book , "i ommit
partment s publie intormation . . ,
' ... . , toe smd, .. a l!G2 m‘ morandum
no lev with tin public relations
* ‘ 1-1 -1 bv
program ot the Ford Motor
‘ sistant secretary of Detense ...
Nrihur ' k. gtor the donart. correspondent is clearly aimed enact .
m rm itmn chief 1epanh not at security matters but at the federal level,' the report j.. 1941 and was
a monito. be dun. controlling what American said cellor in 1959. I
........ onion interviews fighting men say its signers.
ciety of Newsnaper Editor' in. "Such control exceeds any- were Robert P Clark, manag
it' annua’ report delivered ‘o Meanwhile, hwever. their thing done in the darkest days ing editor of the Lewisville,
the opening -e-mn of the 'ocie neVo1e‘ phlonphv has been ot World War II" ’ 1 Kv I Times; Eugene Patterson,
tv thret-day convention Mi ' X’tndtd Horn the halls of the The committee reported that editor of the Atlanta Constitu-
Nam.ua is a lotmer f ord । \rc Pentagon to some military tn the federal bureaucracy is tion; and Charles S Rowe, edi-
utie '-taxation' in Viet Nam the still opposing" hills introduced-tor of the Fredericksburg (Va.)
"It ha- no' brin in rncnm ig report went on by Sen Edward V. Long, D- Free Lance-Star.
was delivered mn,
of Informa' ion n, ,,
' \meriran So tan
states Hi- avion
a" ■ aF%. iWUKi
2 1
--E*.
• ar"a-mtm)Ne
"ws W?!
dent Johnson, mi-ty-eved at
times during a f ur of Midwes
areas devast'ed n tornadoes
a - tiir woman spike, murmured
"Today I killed my best friend, mantown section, was found found in Miss Butts' car.
Mary, who has been suffering so dead by a nurse, Edith Barrett, Capt Joseph Golden of the
cruelly from cancer.” who said she had heard “two homicide squad in Philadelphia
So begins a note written by a sharp cracks,” said Miss Happer came here
woman, who, police say, shot to Miss Barrett said she rushed March 23 suffering from a stom-
. , ,, . , death the sister-in-law of Gen. into the room and saw a worn- ach tumor,
I,”- trcrdom ..I in Th, committec said ,1 shares Mo., and Rep. John E Moss.weshouldano tanokaforwardsto. Maxwell D. Taylor. "N am- an, '"'7 identified as Miss He said MissButts..whoshad
r ’ si"Man IhlulX; tgnerai manager S access ' to EmX8 aS mentsoduring the next quarter took her own life. , her handbag. Lying acrossthe heforc.came.to see S Hap-
"t f’. < hl ’ Hu The Asscitde Press Its re- federal agencies of century: Marv Happer, 61. was shot to bed clad in a slip was Miss Hap- per Wednesday He said they
I"Asddnames ’ "Again we call on ASNE "We have already learned that death Wednesday in a Philadel- per spent most of the morning to-
' Barring correspondents from members to counter that oppo- many individuals and institu- phia nursing home in what The nurse said the intruder gether before Miss Butts took
free access to air bases And sition by interesting themselves tions like to lead to strength, police termed a mercy killing whisked by her and bolted Miss Happer on a long ridein
q ’ « other and -and their own enators and and we have enough strength Dorothy Butts. 49. of Bethesda, throughnifrench doors ontocasthesountryside. They returned
M< Namin 1 As- providing an escort for every congressmen—in this effort to now to attract strong support Md., was found dead of a bullet patio outside. Miss warret abput4Pemd both women lived
an open-records law at He became president of TCU wound six hours later in an auto yelled to the manager Kenneth Police said both womenlivea
........ -■ ' i named chan- outside the Bethesda police sta-Gehret, 44, who went out theiin fashionable, neighborhoodsof
He served as tion Lfrontdoor to try to catch the Bethesda which 15 tt miles
besides Black, dean of Lynchburg College in Police said they found two fTFelng" woman. northwest both had been teach-
Virginia from 1931 until 1936 notes beside Miss Butts' body in Gehret said he saw her get They said both had been leach
and as pastor of Austin's Cen- the blood-splattered car They Into acar in asnearhy parking '72.”? IXoHr^0^-.
iral c......- Church from 1936 said one of them told 01 the iprandsdrivevass “C “Pydat'caranerHpperdot El
Bethesda resi- struck once in the head and Paso. Tex , who police identify
Easter Weekend Are To Resign"" . .
g. . M I m n • • Malaysia. Sukarno, backed by lems, authoritative diplomatic women
GAE, 6aArI I on Vogitiong the powerful Indonesian Com sources indicated. .young Communist slumped at
6 V 1665 IULOC I h •3-UIII munist party, is pledged to1 Wilson will leave foreign poll-1 the stake.
crush British-backed Malaysia, cy issues (or the most part to Le Dau. 24, showed no emo-.
FORT WORTH ( AP) — Two Withdrawal of the Peace his companion, George Thom- tion as soldiers bound him to the
top administrative officers of Corps eliminates one of the last,son, a minister of state in Brit- stake in front of a sandbag par-
Ta.03 Christian University,! American agencies left in In-! ain s Foreign Office, apet on the Da Nang soccer
""11 ..r .1uiin Illinois and 820 in Wis- end. two events remain on the, to be held at 5:30 am. Easterly
1 , .7 ,, ,, ' 2 calendar of observances spon- Sunday in McKenna Park. 'Chancellor M I
/" 1 ' ' iledil soredzthis,scarbytsthe DentoncThesericessaretasdointsprg. Vice Chancellor.of Research
Tr prwgclamatihs cvie m Indiana. 54 in Ohin.risteraltdgsqtoneRevtion and the "yuth of Den-Wreous'Snahave resigned, itsminformation ______________________________________________,
Welengs.n"wcan l "ai" !'’,"\'!7!”Sn'a l"l'.?.77™^ Mlerson lull reseni tons churches. They mil be, Dr. sadier who has attacked them and the Indone. I in the afternoon the prime min- Nguyen Van Hal..27.who drove
shortly after .ohnen rerurnen iiii ' i " 11 Good Friday sermon in the open to all Denton residents, served TCU for 24 years, sub- sum government halted their
to Washington fol! mwin a hart ,n ndndt worst-hit ‘10 Mt Pilgrim C M E Methodist During the service, Rosca . mitted his resignation at a spe. operations.
ly arranged trip tiirouuh pat’. ,1 Wn 0 punnyside nnir nad Church The Rev Mr Jeffer- Adkins, Frank Camp Jr. and. cial meeting of the university’s The
of Indiana, Minesta and (1 - "09 )OM tnert 15 son has stressed that this is a Nick Kiger, representing church trustees Wednesday “ over nominal control of Ameri-
After completing tin 111 n ”■ W e have one home standing, city-wide observance, and an youth groups, will read scrip- He suffered a heart attack can rubber plantations and oil
Preoident said , out H’s not where it chould be." invitation has been extended to ture passages and offer pray- Feb 19 and was in a hospital properties.: after Communist rentiv^tess concerned" with^ts North Viet Nam Wednesday
r • ......a" " Brane " I " ud Peputy Ser......... members all faiths. ■ for JV?" Sineehen he has domnnatrntionihdrewh ZS becausnight. A spokesman said no
...... ................. ....... IV rather than submit to Red the outlook is promising and. bombs were dropped or bullets
.aaosnic.. because of the more pressing fired because no targets were
" Sukarno called a halt to anti-1 Viet Nam crisis, the prime min-seen... .........
n to hr snending
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 211, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 15, 1965, newspaper, April 15, 1965; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517698/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.