The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 186, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 24, 1962 Page: 1 of 6
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Price Five Cents
Volume 49, Number 186
(TP) — Associated Press
Six Pages
1
।
In Air Strike
: ■
Texas-Based
Rusk Asks Russia
Jet Down
To Ease Pressures
r
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Rice Industry President's Comments
Beamed to Europe
Wild weather flailed the Panhandle and Plains
Treaty Organization.
Idaho GOP
Idaho’s
WASHINGTON (PP)
Republican Sen. Henry C. Dwor-
ered with the obsession of suspi-
pieces along the slope.
: •
from the nearest road.
extra cres under common prac-
The tail section of the plane (ices.
sudden downpours
i
Menon said he deply regretted one-day trip to New York was
worth $1,000 to young Jacky Cupit by Jesse Ray Guthrie, 320 West
ARRESTED
333
3
sign a nuclear test treaty that '
would have allowed inspection of
98
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Gen.
in North America.
-
It originally called for the gov-
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and assessments against each sin- individually.
•9
-
Four Missing in Crash
Of Air Force Bomber
Doctors Reopen Doors
As Boycott Ends
Appeal Made
To Eastern
Senator
DworshakDies
Said Facing
Federal Probe
gan to organize the first compul-
sory prepaid medical care plan
part of he wreckage. Parts of not be concerned with the actions
the plane were scattered in small | of some Agricultural Stabilizaion
World Today
Men of Strong Wills
Line Up in Pentagon
Shop at Home
For Best Buys
Every Day
of Longview, Tex. The 24-year-
old Texan, voted the rookie of he
year in golf last year, shot a 31-
34—65 for the first prize in the
national pro-celebrity 18-hole tour-
nament at the Huntington Cres-
cent Club.
WASHINGTON (PP) — President
Kennedy has no plans to add a
direct Kremlin line to the White
House switchboard.
| It wouldn’t do much good, he
I intimated in his news conference
ernmen to operate the insurance
scheme with all doctors in it. The
amended act will allow private
insurance agencies to operate in
cooperation and competition with
the government plan.
The refund system allows doc-
tors to practice outside the act
even if the patient is insured by
the commission.
Most of Saskatchewan’s 928,000
population is already insured by
two doctor - sponsored programs.
Officials of the College of Physi-
cians and Surgeons say most doc-
tors will work outside the act.
The agreement means the doc-
tors’ acceptance of the principle
of universal compulsory coverage,
which many still bitterly oppose
SASKATOON, Sask. (P) — Sas-
katchewan doctors begin reopen-
ing their office doors today fol-
lowing settlement of their 23-day
boycott to the province’s govern-
ment medical care plan.
The end of the dispute came
Monday with the signing of a doc-
tor - government agreement to
amend • the medical care act to
allow doctors to practice outside
the plan.
Premier Woodrow Lloyd is to
call a special session of the legis-
lature shortly to adopt the amend-
ments.
The Saskatchewan College of
Physicians and Surgeons, govern-
ing body of the province’s doc-
tors, will begin dismantling the
emergency service it operated in
41 of the province’s 154 hospitals.
College officials said it will
take about 10 days to return
hings to normal.
Most of Saskatchewan’s 62 pri-
vate practitioners had closed their
doors rather than work under the
compulsory government plan that
went into effect July 1. The in-
surance plan, financed by taxes
Full Leased Wire Report of The Associated Press—World’s Greatest News Service
TAYLOR, TEXAS, TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1962
7 j
29 ■ ■ 3
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City All-Stars
To Face Lions
The Taylor Little League All-
■ u
3 2282
_ A- 1
strand visitors for several hours,
officials reported 17 cars carry-
ing 71 persons were cut off by
(See FLOOD, Page 6)
Blowout Throws Truck
Off Rood Into Post
Taylor Highway Patrolman Tra-
vis Thomas reported one minor
accident Monday night.
A 1960 Chevrolet truck driven
M ----0----
JFK Rejects
aKremlin Line
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CANDIDATE
was found on the southwest side
of the peak. The rest of the
8 3
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By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
PRETTY RODEO PROMOTERS — Tony Malish, president of the Taylor Rodeo
Assn., and a crew of pretty rodeo promotors covered the town this morning
putting out posters proclaiming Taylor’s annual rodeo Aug. 23-24-25. Mary
Pearl Pavlicek and Stephanie Stiborik are showing placing a poster on the
Howard Theatre door, while Carla Sue Snider (kneeling) and Ann Miller
check to see if it’s straight. Lloyd Woodley is the producer of the big show.
—Taylor Press Staff Photo
4888888* :
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so "people won’t be both-
GRANGER’S FIRST BALE — Johnny P. Martinka produced Granger’s first
cotton Monday. With the help of 40 friends and neighbors 2,270 pounds of
seed cotton was gathered and ginned at 7 a.m. Monday. The bale weighed 565
pounds and produced 850 pounds of seed. It was not graded. Shown standing
above from left, are John Nemec, gin forman, Martinka; kneeling from left,
Timothy Hajda, co-owner of Granger Gin and Farmers Supply; Bennie Merka,
gin operator. _ Photo by Jerry Martinets
Taylor said he reassured Wilson
he never had been insubordinate.
Then President Eisenhower sent
for him, asked the same ques-
ion, got the same answer. The
result: On June 30, 1955, Taylor
was named Army chief of staff
and, as such, a member of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Four years later to the day he
retired. In between times three
things had happened.
He had protested in vain against
cutting the size of the Army; he
developed the idea the Joint Chiefs
of Staff as such should be abol-
ished, and he was in deep disa-
grement with the Eisenhower ad-
ministration defense concept.
The book he wrote a year later
was about that disagreement.
Briefly, he felt the administra-
tion put too much emphasis on
“massive retaliation.” Since the
United States and Russia now had
the power to flatten each other,
he felt, neither would voluntarily
start a nuclear war.
(See MEN, Page 6)
WASHINGTON ® — With Euro-
peans watching and listening as
he spoke, President Kennedy re-
buked the Soviet Union for test-
ing nuclear weapons, reported no
recent progress on Berlin and
promised not to reduce the value
of the dollar.
As the President answered re-
porters’ questions Monday, some
of his comments were beamed to
the American Telstar communica-
tions satellite. From its lofy orbit
the Telstar provided the first
simultaneous telecast of a presi-
dential news conference for view-
flight engineers made it clear
they want retroactivity included
in the arbitration of pay and
other economic issues just as he
labor secretary proposed.
The engineers announced plans
to file suit later today in the
U.S. District Court in New York
to enjoin Eastern against mak-
ners’ qualifications without ne-
gotiationg the changes with the
union, as the engineers said is
required by law.
The deadline set by Eastern for
the strikers to claim their jobs
on an individual basis or face
discharge came up today.
The airline resumed limited
operations Monday and said it
(See APPEAL, Page G)
Red Guerrillas
Kidnap Sergeant
SAIGON, South Viet Nam () —
A U.S. Army sergeant and his
Vietnemese interpreter have been
ambushed and kidnaped by Com-
munist guerrillas, U.S. authorities
reported oday.
Another American soldier with
them, identified as Sgt. Carl E.
Brown escaped the trap.
The three were on a hunting
trip Monday three miles from the
coastal town of Phan Theit when
they were set upon by Viet Cong
guerrillas.
A Identity of the kidnaped Ameri-
B in was withheld.
■
83
northeast slope of the mountain.
The residents of the Yellow-
stone Valley area south of Liv-
ingston reported a fire or explo-
sion in he area of the crash about
9:50 p.m. (MST).
Aircraft were sent over the
area shortly before midnight, but
a cloudy, moonless sky and a
hanging layer of dense smoke
from the fire prevented clear
sighting of the wreckage.
An unidentified truck driver
told officers he saw a flaming ob-
ject in the sky and watched the
fiery object smash into the moun-
tain.
Tom Peterson, a rancher, said
he heard an explosion.
and Conservation Service offi-
- i
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in accepting Goldberg’s plan the plans
Flood Threat Posed
By Panhandle Deluge
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
■ 33333 2. •
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Stars’ opponent Saturday night ।
in the first round of district
play will be the South Austin
Lions All-Stars.
The game will be played in
Austin at 7:30 p.m.
Austin Lions won the right to
meet Taj lor last night when
they defeated the North Austin
Optimist All-Stars 7-6 to win
the Austin city championship.
Three home runs sparked the
Lions’ win.
Tajlor’s All-Stars won the
area championship by knocking
off Rockdale 6-1, Hill Country
5-0 and Elgin 8-1.______________
Maxwell D. Taylor got the sec-
ond-best job of his career for look-
ing like a yes-man. It turned out
he wasn’t, and he quit. Now, for
not being a yes-man, he gets
the best job.
This puts two strong-willed men
in the Pentagon: Taylor, whom
President Kennedy called out of
retirement last year and has just
named chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, and Secretary of
Defense Robert S. McNamara.
How they get along will be one
of the interesting stories ahead.
In early 1955, he was called
back to Washington without be-
ing told why. He was ushered into
he office of Secretary of Defense
Charles Wilson.
In a book which he wrote later
—“The Uncertain Trumpet,” Tay-
lor said Wilson rambled around
the bush and finally cross-exam-
ined him on his willingness to ac-
cept civilian orders.
less than one two-thousandths of
Soviet territory per year. And
his was not accepted.”
Menon was the only speaker in
today’s meting for the neutral
group of eight nations which is
trying to bridge the gap betwen
the Eastern and Western powers.
Menon said the Soviet announce-
ment last week was “proof that
the arms race is spiraling.” He
said it underlined an urgent need
for a test ban.
Menon’s spech was essentially
(See RUSK, Page 6)
In Montana
LIVINGSTON, Mont. ® — An
Air Force plane from Texas car-
rying a crew of four crashed in
flames against a timber-covered
mountainside Monday night.
A rescue team from Malm-
strom Air Force Base near Great
Falls said the craft was a B47
jet bomber on a training mission
from Dyess Air Force Base at
Abilene, Tex.
Intense heat from the crumpled
wreckage kept rescue crews from
probling the charred remains for
hours after the explosive impact.
No bodies were found.
Relatives of the men were ad-
vised the men were missing, un-
til a closer examination of the
area was possible.
Dyess Air Force Base said a
B47 of he 96th Strategic Aero-
space Wing was missing on a
training mission.
The Dyess craft was flying in
the Livingson area. It was to
have returned to its Texas base
at 2:20 a.m. (CST).
Crew members were listed as:
Capt. Joseph Faulconer, 29, of
El Dorado, Kan., instructor pilot.
Lt. Lloyd Sawyers, 29, of Cisco,
pilot.
L. David Sutton, 4, of Miami,
Okla., co-pilot.
Lt. Frederick Hixenbaugh, 24,
Burton, W. Va.
The plane smashed into a rug-
ged area at the 8,500-foot level of
Emigrant Peak, part of the Rocky
Mountains about 20 miles south-)
west of Livingston, in south cen-
tral Montana .
The fiery crash started a forest
fire that prevented first search
parties from getting to the main
98
288 :: 333588333 333322 3233:
M* .
is willing to assume some risks
if a workable inspection system
can be found.
Gromyko addressed the open-
ing session of the disarmament
conference which has been in
recess since last week. He stated
bluntly that so far the confer-
ence has “not really moved the
cause of disarmament one step
forward."
He urged a “business-like and
constructive” approach to the
problem, but presented no new
propsals from the Soviet side.
He insisted hat the Soviet Un-
ion must stick to one of the
chief points resisted by the United
States and other Western powers
—that the first stage of disar-
mament include destruction of all
nuclear weapons.
In the first address of he day,
Defense Minister V. K. Krishna
----------o----------
NAVY CHIEF TO MEXICO
MEXICO CITY W) - Fred
Korth, U.S. secretary of the
Navy from Texas, is here for a
five-day visit.
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Gromyko declared the Soviet
national disarmament teams even
if the United States offers to do
so.
In this connection, Rusk said he
understood the Soviet position. He
said the United States is an open
society, whereas the Soviet Union
has “obsessions with secrecy
which lock the door to disarma-
ment.”
Urging the delegates to draw up
HONOLULU (P) — The United
States today postponed its plan-
ned second high-altitude nuclear
explosion for 24 hours.
In Washington the Atomic Ener-
gy Commission said the reason
for the delay was weather con-
ditions.
The announcement by Task
Force 8 officials here followed 10
separate half hour holds that
pushed the planned test right up
to the 3 a.m. deadline that had
been previously set. The shot orig-
inally had been set for 10 p.m.
The test, when it comes off, will
be in the submegaton range,
equivalent to between 20,000 and
one million tons of TNT. It will
be exploded at an altitude of 30
to 40 miles.
"“24
GENEVA UP) — U.S. Secretary
of State Dean Rusk said today re-
peated Soviet declarations that
communism will eventually dom-
inate the world tend to prevent
disarmament.
The United Sates sincerely
wants an arms elimination pro-
gram and a nuclear test ban
treaty, Rusk told the 17-nation dis-
armament conference, and he is
willing to return to Geneva for
any angle on hose matters that
seems on the point of solution.
The American diplomatic chief
appealed to the Soviet bloc to
half what he called “persistent
pressures against the vital needs
of others,” which are holding up
signing an agreement.
On the other hand, Soviet For-
eign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko
accused the Western powers of
blocking progress. He said they
sought through their disarmament
88 3 88883
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gle adult or family, provides med-
ical care for all persons under a
set schedule of fees.
The agrement ended a battle
that began 2% years ago when
Saskatchewan’s government be-
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David A. Cox, a candidate for
governor of Arkansas, has
been arrested in Harrisburg,
Ark., on chages of carrying a
concealed weapon and disturb-
ing the peace. Earlier, he had
been held in jail overnight in
Springdale for being intoxicated.
— NEA Telephoto
Farmers may assign rice allot-
ments to their growers but they
must retain a token interest in
the crop.
The Post said investigators have
found some farmers who osten-
sibly held allotments have been
out of the rice business for sev-
eral years. It added that out-
right sales of allotments, violating
federal crop control regulations,
have been discovered.
Farmers stand to lose at least
$360,000 because of penalties
levied on illegal planting, Durham
wrote. The farmer must either
plow up the extra grain and lose
it completely or he can take alter-
nate penalties, which are almost
I as tough financially.
A minimum of 3,100 acres is
believed to be involved in Mata-
gorda; Brazoria, Waller and Jack-
son cunties.
The Post said Agriculture De-
partment officials felt all federal
employes involved in the acreage
shuffle have already been re-
moved from office, but added
I hat some ASCS committemen
may have acquired some of the
questioned acreage.
The paper said these men will
be removed from office by state
ASCS officials if they are in-
volved.
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Twelfth Stret, Taylor, had a
blowout two miles north of
Georgetown on U.S. 81.
The truck ran off the road
and hit a guard post. Damage
was minor and no one was in-
jured.
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electrical storms.
In Palo Duro State Park southeast of Amarillo, a
Union will never onen I its mili cloudburst loosed 5 inches of rain. Water 8 feet deep
tary bases for inspection bSinter blocked a crossing in the
the Soviet decision to resume
nuclear testing.
Rush followed Gromyko. Rusk
said he regretted the Soviet re-
sumption of nuclear testing and
commented: “I never knew where
the idea came from about the
right to test last.”
“Even after more than 40 So-
viet tests,” Rusk said, “the
United States had offered to
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propsals to create a paradise Monday night with flood raising deluges and damaging
for the spies of the North Atlantic - -
be55,‘
ers on both sides of the Alantic.
For nearly five minutes, before
the U.S. portion of the historic
program exchange jumped to an-
• other spot, Europeans joined the
American audience.
Although the President knew
from a little red light on the
rostrum when Telstar was oper-
ating, there was no timing of
particular questions to the period
in which Europeans watched
They missed later exchanges—as
when Kennedy said a Democratic
gain of 5 to 10 seats in the House
(See COMMENTS, Page 6)
U.S. Delays
High Altitude
Nuclear Test
Hot - Cloudy
Hot days, warm nights with partly cloudy skies Tues-
day and Wednesday.
Today’s Range: 74-100. Tomorrow’s Range: 74-100.
Yesterday’s High: 101. Rainfall: 0.
Sunrise: 5:45 a.m. Sunset: 7:29 p.m.
Moonrise Wed.: 12:55 a.m. .Moonset Wed.: 2:23 p.m.
Lake Levels—Travis: 658.05’. Buchanan: 1003.39’.
U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for
Taylor and Williamson County
occasionally wreckage was located on the
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shak, a staunchly conservative
cion,” Rusk said the United States voice on Capitol Hill since 1939,
is dead of a heart attack at 67.
The peak is in the Absaroka cials reportedly involved in acre-
Range, about 15 miles north of age shuffles from county to coun-
Yellowstone Park. ty, the Post said.
One parachute pack was found it reported the probe instead
by sheriff’s deputies as dawn would concern itself with deals
broke over the area, two miles made by farmers who acquired
Lubbock twice, starting a fire
which caused undetermined dam-
age. More than half the city was
left dark until repairs could be
made.
The power failure delayed air
traffic at the Lubbock airport.
Oil flares were placed along the
runways.
More than four inches of rain
fell at Childress.
At Dumas, lightning hurled Joe
Casas, a high school football
player, to the ground and stun-
ned him. He was taken to a hos-
pital for observation.
Another bolt struck a building
in Amarillo and hurled six brick-
layers off a low scafford where
they were working. None was
injured.
A 1.77-inch downpour within 45
minues soaked Amarillo. The run-
off flooded numerous street under-
passes.
In the Palo Duro park, where
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HOUSTON ® — The Houston
Post said today the entire Texas
rice business faces large scale
federal investigation.
The newspaper reported farm-
ers involved in manipulation of
acreage allotments in four Gulf
Coast counties stand to lose $360,-
000 or more this year.
Investigators checking in three
counties have found enough evi-
dence to warrant a ’through check
of the handling of allotments in
the accepted and legal manner of
the past few years, the Post said.
A continuing investigation would
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His wife found him unconscious
Monday night in the bedroom of
their apartment and he was dead
on arrival at Georgetown Univer-
sity Hospital. A son, Ward C.
Dworshak, said the senator had
suffered heart trouble in recent
years.
Dworshak was the fourth con-
servative Republican senator to
die within eight months. The oth-
ers were Styles Bridges of New
Hampshire, who died last Novem-
ber, Andrew Schoeppel of Kansas,
who died in January, and Francis
Case of South Dakota, who died
last month.
Dworshak’s death left the Sen-
ate alignment at 64 Democrats
and 35 Republicans.
----------o----------
TRIP WAS WORTH IT
HUNTINGTON, N.Y. (P) — A
er Kennedy was moving to es-
tablish such a tie-line for use in
an emergency.
“I have not done that, no,” he
replied. He said the problem be-
tween the United States and the
Soviet Union has not been
one of communications, but of
views.
“We understand each other, but
we differ,” he said.
----------o----------
DROWNS IN CANAL
PROGRESO, Tex. UP) — Am-
Para Deciga, 2, toppled into an
irrigation canal and drowned near
here Monday.
Engineers
Accept Plan
WASHINGTON ( — Eastern
Air Lines’ flight engineers offered
today to accept the latest govern-
ment proposal for settlement of
their month-long strike and Sec-
retary of Labor Arthur J. Gold-
berg appealed to the carrier to
Aconsider its previous rejection
$ the formula.
Goldberg, saying his settlement
plan had been acceptable to the
airline earlier in the dispute
asked the company to reconsider
now that the union has offered to
end the shut-down.
Officials indicated belief that if
Eastern should reverse its posi-
tion and accept the settlement,
the precedent would prove to be
a basis of agreement on the
similar problems existing on Pan
American World Airways, Ameri-
can and Trans World Airlines.
Offering to get back on he
job immediately, the Flight En-
giners International Association,
AFL-CIO, said through a spokes-
man:
‘What all this boils down to is
if the strike goes one more day
it’s Eastern’s fault.”
Malcolm MacIntyre, Eastern’s
president, announced Monday
night that the airline was reject-
ing Goldberg's proposal to arbi-
trate economic issue and ac-
cept terms previously worked out
for solving the knotty jet crew
carrier and the engineers had ac-
cepted earlier—but at different
times—the general plan for a set-
tlement on the crew makeup
point.
The airline said the assent of
Eastern’s pilots was needed be
for the cockpit job plan could be
k accepted. It also objected to in-
Lmluding payroll retroactivity in
.tWjposed arbitration of economic
Eues.
I 1
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 186, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 24, 1962, newspaper, July 24, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523858/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Taylor Public Library.