The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 177, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1961 Page: 1 of 18
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Y
The Orange Leader
Bay* Sell Trade!
Reds Like Trips
P
J
See Classified
To Milwaukee
See Page 8
Pogos IX 13
Pj
OkANG, TEXAS, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1961
FINAL EDITION
VOL. LVIll—NUMBER in
3se 7 -
JFK
Paris
Meeting in
4
/5
Under
1-
n"
%
I
*
I
involving the United States, Brit-
a.n, France and
Ild
begins Aug 5. It may lead to a
st
:k
dangerous."
%
Hammarskjold Calls Delegates
the lending
ttee
a brushoff. Couve
» fience
block of Asian
Meanwhile, a
council to back Tunisian demands
mission at Red China to the
A letter sent to JEd Conqelly
HOUSTON
a right to eat
th
with
the state paying $1.6 million of
Ji
m
Other legislation on the House
The water board reorganisation
h
l
as
of desertion by
today on
une Hermione.
Pease said no one doubts the
from Cuba.”
Arkansas Cowboy Top Man
the
his Cabinet saw him off at the
Soviet astronaut closed out his of-
during first
as
by Orange Jaycees.
The rodeo.
19
year' here Performances also are
scheduled today and tomorrow at
1
19
The
with Castro in
Bureau Cqy,
From U.S. Weather
event with a
..... Same
itlook tomorrow
able to The Associated Press
7:11 p.m.
to
tomorrow ——.5:34 am.
J
K Mgh St
up on the key ones.'
h
»
i
t
V"
59
99
19
,9
Board of Water Engineers Revamped;
Teachers' Sick Pay, Blue Law Studied
Legislative Tax Struggle
Centers on Five Senators
Rusk Expects
Cuban Answer
-On Airliner
holders unless a court issnes war-
rants.
Gagarin Set
For Visit
To Brazil
e off
bases
gave
Notte-
Reds
■p to
man's
in the
the
ire of
nt to
" said
I. wno
world
Mow
d eold
henng
on the
■ other
rt the
at the outset.
“However." he adds, “my owa
tween proposed new
the new money need
*
her family.
REPORT SIDESTEPPED
' try on our side to find opportuni-
ties for a peaceful adjustment of
the situation which could be very
••
and shapely
sghest task I
GENEVA (AP) — Britain today
sidestepped a definite announce
hours Wednesday as Castro an-
nounced plans for a Communist-
style single "united party ot the
Socialist revolution "
Possible future moves on the
military side include sending re-
inforcements to NATO defenses in
Europe and speeding up the mo-
bilization of U.S. strength « cir-
cumstances seem to require.
urea
h
vie-
toe
a the
was
i Sul-
ark er
omer.
game
San
who
with
lie in
By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Kennedy administration
was reported today to be holding in reserve a wide range
of military and diplomatic actions which may be taken
by the United States and its European allies as the
Berlin crisis develops.
Secretary of State Dean Rusk wiU try in Paris next
Other conclusions:
In any prolonged major East-
West clash in Germany the West
will resort to nuclear weapons to
ism, and thanks to the i
of all Socialist countries,
and to act as commission execu-
tive.
House members passed on voice
vote a bill underwriting five days
ever, the Western powers have
expressed willingness to curtail
propaganda activities in Berlin, to
put a ceiling on Western troop
strength in West Berlin (it is
around 11.000 men) and to give
assurance that the troops would
piece in every r
except one last
/ A. I /
Rusk told his news conference:
"We expect that negotiations will
la fact at some stage take place
and that we and our allies will
t
lovely fee
face their
game
Dick
i tie-
iser.
Cubs
ed as
: out.
in in-
i wild
d Er-
inten-
if the
man
BEAUTY CONTEST _
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AB, —
adges at the Imternatiomal Benu-
rCongress. dazzled all weak by
Comonete aaa serygas
Manaw An i awes Prea
Eby Cuba.
& said that 25 Cuban air-
Thave been involved in such
: since 1959. He said that 18
one were hijacked and seven
■ were seized by the author-
here under orort order.
t
f
signed in part, at least, to
give the Western powers
some initiative in dealing with
the Soviet Union on the Berlin
problem.
The foreign ministers meeting
Ultimately if East West negoca-
tions over Berlin produce any
progress toward ending the crisis,
diplomatic exchanges could lead
to a summit conference with So-
viet Premier Khrushchev. At the
urn v nil he II III! III
the unaccustomed
obviously tired
The measure, aimed primarily
at closing discount houses on Sun-
, was introduced by Sen. Wil-
to win third place.
Bo Lowrance of Beaumoht
(See RODEO. Page 11)
( ORANGE JUKE l
FRUSTRATED—Walter Eks.
bills enacting economy meat
to make up the difference
As for air power, Pease says
its adequacy cannot be judged
’ out Information now held «e-
DESCRIPTIVE — An Oranse
city hall employe commented
-a3E
. GRANTED DIVORCE
LONDON (AP) — Randolph
Churchill. W. son of Sir Winetoe
- ■ — ited a divorce
up by the Soviets in the post-war
years, can head them off by a
anywhere near the same when R
comes back to the fail committee.
Many legislators believe Lane
will propose, and the Senate
pass, roughly the same tax bm
as senators approved in the reg-
ular seaside. This , the House re-
jected by a 72-72 tie vote.
The House tax cotesniMae won
expected to approve today three
tax bi gap.
Nowee State Adtairs C i Rill
actiaa pieced oe the Howse rates
ooetrovarsml om aimed at
restrictions on lobbyies
measure (KB 24 requies
-
airport.
The I
anch of the government cannot
erfere with judicial procedares
en a ctban plane has been at-
phed by court order in a case
calendar includes a bill giving
Latin American students lower
tuition at state schools.
The Senate spent more than an
hour in heated debate over a con-
troversial Sunday blue law bill
but adjourned until Monday with-
out taking action.
ban revolution will succeed over
ny attempted aggreroion ”
they
of the
ecover
m bi
On the diplomatic side, concern
in the State Department and the
White House now is centered on
the development of specific pro-
j which the Western powers
___make tn-the Soviet Union for
a way out of the Berlin crisis.
Rusk refused at a news confer-
ence Thursday to give any indic-
tion of what form these proposals
it take. But in reply to a
SRms. Wana GaIfiUian of Beau-
mont, rodeo secretary, said Emet
son took first place in barcback
bronc riding with l» points in sad-
dle bronc riding, with 169 points,
bullriding with 173 points and steer
dogging with a time of 5.2 sec-
WORKERS READ BERLIN SPEECH RE-
PORTS—Construction work*: ia West Berlin
take a break from work to read reports of
President Kennedy's speech on West Bcriin. The
tin is
Amer-
ald be
met era
‘t run
parormpnoinscatemmoon.wiras
- In showers. ... , ..
S - sabine: hiqh,$i01 d.m
law. »:» am. *e am "otivar:
40 o.m. 43 p.m-1 te, 122 p"-
By A L GOLDBERG
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)
— Secretary-General Dag Ham-
marskjold today summoned the
French and Tunisian delegates for
separate talks on the Tunisian
crisis in advance at Security
WASHINGTON (AP) — Secre-
rotary of State Dean Rusk ex-
pects a reply from Cuba today
aw Saturday to the U.S. request
for return of the Eastern Air
Lines plane which was hijacked
and flown to Havana with its pas
j nengers and crew last Monday.
' Ah aboard the aircraft have
been returned to the. United
i States except the hijacker. He
itook refuge with the Castro gov
ernment.
Rusk told a news conference
As aritansR. drawe by R«
charleg "Banman, the Mil
would make about "tor
available for spending ia
ISL yK dhe.
ieicelie
.c-g3,.
•CASTRO’ HUNG ON HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD—A seven-
foot dummy depicting Fidel Castro is hung from a lamp poet it '
Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street. in Hollywood aa a group at
about 20 Cubans observed the anniversary of Cuba’s 26 at July
revolution by hanging the Cuban leader in effigy. The Cubans,
wearing black arm bands, said the were members at an organ-
ization called the Latin American Anti-Communist Bloc. (AP
Wirephoto)_______________________________________________________2
sogram Monday after trimming
Cefnedy’s request for this year
0.$346 million.
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
fansfield at Montana plans to
all up the measure tonight, hop-
nr to open debate Monday.
Senate Republican Leader Ey-
sett M. Dirksen of Illinois said
kepublicans will offer various
mendments on the Senate floor
(See GOP, Page 11)
reported.
BRITISH BONDS FALL
LONDON (AP>—British govern-
ment bonds fell to record lows aa
the stock exchange today wnile
stock prices also suffered wide-
spread losses
The selling wave was attributed
to the Conservative government s
new austerity program which won
an overwhelming vote of approval
in Parliament hursday night de-
spite aroused feelings on the part
of wage earners.
OPPOSE RED CHINA
meet
on a
rope
be re-
States'
newspper the workers are reading. Bild Zie-
tung, has a headline which says. "Kennedy: Be
Prepared to Fight for West Berlin.” (AP Wire-
photo via radio from Berlin)
station restaurant.
Cutrer said today police win 22---
make no arrests of Negro ticket 06.225 o
Western summit conference of
President Kennedy. French Pres-
ident Charles de Gaulle and Brit-
ish Prime Minister Harold Mac-
millan.
Foreign Minister
told him pointedly his views were
pro-Tunisiana.
Hammarskjoid was expected to
open the council session with a
report on hs disappointing mis-
bill separates the purely engineer:
ne ing tasks from such quasi-fudicia!
of jobs as granting water rights. It
gives the chief engineer power to
administer all technical programs
fkoar — Temp
: Thursday that the request for re-
turn of the plane had been made
to the government at Havana
through the Swiss Embassy, Swit-
zerland being the nation which
has represented U.S. interests in
dba since this country broke re-
lations last January.
"Rusk said he was aware of
news dispatches from Cuba quot-
; mg Prime Minister Fidel Castro
I as saying that he would return
I the stolen aircraft only if the U.S.
Egovernment "promises from now
Budman mid the aim at Du
tee OoinanMos is to save about
$o mine through economy
meneares that cm be pesed
qmcy to the Senate to fmthe
■ .. ... _ .. observations of our field forces
boyish, smiling 27-yearold Icad me to doubt that any pro-
--* — - * cle-a n..* h: n nF • ■ •
sestion
sqiad
■I Bur-
week to get firm agreements
with allied foreign ministers he willing to negotiate with the
on a' succession of steps de- Soviet Union. In the past, how-
present, however, that is more a
possibility in the background of
official thinking than a serious
long-range prospect.
Administration- informants said
Kennedy’s Berlin action program
laid before the nation Tuesday
night was only a starter. They
said that what Kennedy and Rusk
Maurice that France pull her troops out
— --- of Tunisia and give up the huge
of paid sick leave for teachers day, ________
in school districts having no tlqKJiam Moore of Bryai
JACKIE'S BIRTHDAY . ----- ------- .
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Presi- United Nations.
dent Kennedy plans to fly to A letter sen to J. Ed Congely
Hyannis Port, Mass., today in of Abilene, chairman of the State
time to help his wife celebrate
her 32nd birthday.
The First Lady will have a late
afternoon private celebration with
Cutrer has
in the Eu who hold 1
S. Has Reserve Berlin Strategy
Rusk Will Attend
. HOUSTON (AP>—Texas Repub- Churchill, was
. Means have asked Texas Demo- tiz.--
crats to join them to opposing ad- his wife.
1 1
leave program. The program
of Western policy
eeping any clash small
Havana beat
Patrick Dean. 2 .
His meeting with French dele-
gate Armand Berard was his rst
personal contact with a French
official since he flew to Tunisia
last Sunday to try his hand at --
settling the French-Tunisian dis- sion.
returned pute over Bizerte. Hem------ - .--- ..
He sought to confer in Paris and African nations pressed the
with President Charles de Gaulle couhci to back Tunisian demands
cret. But he quotes Maj. Gen
imperial- H R Spicer, commander of the
solidarity 17th Air Force at Ramstein: "I
. the Cu- have enough aircraft to strike all
of the first objectives and double
centemplate is a series of steps
which will be put into effect as
the maneuvering between the
Couve de Murville, but received Western powers and the Soviet
a brushoff. Couve de Murville Union over the future of Berlin
takes its shape in coming months.
71-Year-Oid Man
Has Good Punch
CHICAGO (AP) — A n-year
old man with a sharp counter-
punch took time out on his way
to see a doctor Thursday to quell
a 37-year-old troublemaker on a
bus.
When Roosevelt Walker began
cursing the bus driver. elderly
Fred Parker scolded. "Yo
should be ashamed of yourself,
talking like that."
Warner swung at Parker. The
agile elder eluded the haymaker
and countered with a short
punch that sent Walker sprawl-
ing to the floor of the bus.
Police found Walker sitting on
the bus floor holding his head
and groaning. “I don’t want no
more of that old man."_______
i .
_• =_ = “■ not be provided with atomic wea-
Was
offset the tremendous advantage
held by the Soviet Union in the
manpower and concentration u
weapons.
There is hope that the Western
powers, despite the admittedly
formidable military machine built
itted States
Th House Edncatiom Coteo**-
tee favorably reported for debate
a bin tass^sR be tew on rewte-
img kindergartens to pa bl le
schooks. Present law reqires, a
petition of » parsons wit e
282
petition at 5 per cent cd. the ya*-
Ified voters in a school distric,20
cal an election to determiee
whether a kindergarten should be
established . ._
The tax bill before the Senate
sub-group is estimated to PP
(See LEGISLATURE, Page "L
AUSTIN (AP) — The House . -
passed 108-2 and sent to the Sen- would begin Sept 1, 1963,
ate today a bill reorganizing the ---
Board of Water Engineers and million annual cost
changing its name to the Texas the 32 million annual cote.
Water Commission.
________ ,_________ HAVANA (AP) — Yuri Gagarin strong defense.
n to return every plane hijacked left for Brazil today after a four- T----
- ” day visit that dramatized the So- desirability
To this Rusk replied that in the viet Union's support for Fidel aimed at ki
* ‘ " executive Castro’s revolution. Castro and ■—
a claim for payment by ficial appearances here Thurs-
rican citizen at debts daylight with a television show
at Havan University. He side-
Council debate.
Hammarskjold, who -------
Thursday night from Tunis, also
conferred with other key dele- -----
gates, including U^ Ambassador and
the county auditor, is the woMa
nas unluckiest amateur horticulrer
Tinkle Urban of Goliad placed he says. To prove it, he wiH E
“ ’ -- -- a vile other amateur garden ens^lo
s™son 0 “ bomS0setsfguvbe"mhqddeinerttos
bareback the bugs jute eat.it and invne
-f their friends over.”
naval base at ---
sYugoslavia joined 36 o the 46 rosais
Aslan-African nations in the-ua-canm
in a letter to the council
dent. Leopoldo Benites of
dor, demanding that France, as
a first step, obey the council’s
pasitiony""etrg"hna "BPreto iastseRles of questions he wuldnot
urgea
to acknowledge Tunisia's right moving "irritants ’ to the Soviet
"not to tolerate the presence of Union in the operations of the
foreign forces or foreign military. Western powers to West. Berlin
base" and to call for quick ne- Rusk .declined te sescify even
gotiAtions. ________________what "irritants" the West might
L-
" e
E4
/ ■
U
A
5L/
Democratic Executive Committee,
also asked the Democrats to jota
Republicans in oppositiom to dp-
lomatic reoognition at Omer Mon-
gohia. _______
HOUSTON RULING
AUSTIN (AP—The legislative
tax struggle centered today on
They are the subcommittee ap-
pointed by Sen. Wardlow Lane to
study the House-passed tax bill
(HB 20) and report it back to
the full Senate State Affairs Com-
mittee — probably with drastic
changes.
“I'm referring it to the same
subcommittee (as in the regular
session) for them to bring back
as sorry as possible," Laae said
L WASHINGTON (AP) — Re
blicans have laid plans for an
pack on the way President Ken-
My proposes to finance his long-
gm foreign aid program.
PThe Republicans plan to launch
peir attack on the Senate floor,
■ere the program faces a close
bee They hope to turn it back,
p at lest to curtail it sharply.
EThe program may face even
bugher going in the House,
mere debate probably will start
Cxt week.
The administration seeks au-
dority to make up the $8 8 bil-
qn in loan commitments over a
veyear period. Of this total,
ennedy wants to borrow $7.3
•lion from the Treasury without
pecific year-to-year congression-
l appropriations. The balance
fould come from repayment of
cut-war loans.
The House Foreign Affairs
ommittee gave the program the
reen light Thursday. The action, .
y undisclosed vote, was tenta-
Ive. but formal approval is exe
acted Tuesday.
The committee also okayed $4.
55,500,000 in foreign grants and
zans for the current fiscal year.
407 million less than Kennedy had
3keed.
The Senate Foreign Relations
For Separate Talks
Charles W. Yost and Britain’s Sir
at the close at the committee’s
second full afternoon of hearings.
Along with the bill the subcom:
m i 11 e e was given a proposed
substitute embodying the gover-
nor's tax program.
As when the House sent over
its tax Mils at the regular ses-
sion. Lane named himseif and
Sens. Dorsey Hardeman, Bruce
Reagan, Tom Creighton and Jep
Fuller as his tax writing subcom-
mittee.
Tie hfl k sot atpected to took
longed period of conventional war |
could follow a major clash be- I
tween Russian and West European I
or American military forces. I
“In the European area, the I
Communist conventional forces
are more than seven times as
large as ours. In general they are
better equipped and enjoy the
priceless advantage of central di-
rection and control.
"The best—possibly the only-
way to keep the Russians tram j
massing tanks and artillery, or , ]
even the infantry, to achieve this
local continental superiority
would be atomic explosives on
Russian concentration points.”
To meet this situation the U.S. '
At Opening Night of Rodeo I
n nlliszunewynrpxanSeaaramma"n."”u"pan. o
Emerson of Tayfor, to* first Qari gniian of Bsaume6:
— tumble event scored 106 points in.buinrdinE.to
one sas runt during first take second ptace while Bo Asbop
performance of the Southeast Tex- of Houston placed third with 4B
Championship Rodeo sponsored points a
- ----— Placing second In the calf roP:
Ing event was Ernest Cook .2
rnncher-cnttleman Laurence Win- Beaumont with 17 j secwtagH
frte. is now in its 13th consecutive gene Johnson of
- ---•------•---> and tied his calf in 20.4 seconds
AP-Maro, Le^* y mrie1,1 de
passengerthickemegav LEgnltur and twice yearly am
bat in the anion retdroad therwmektsmac
O session. Ihe reports WO •
elude itetailed accounts, at items
: “ -’ more Legislatoes me
cetving retainers also would here
to report the nomen of persons
and groups peyipe hhe rebninems
ment to its partners 1
ropean Free Trade Association oe
whether it plans to join the boom-
ing rival Common Market, a
source at the EFTA conference
first in the calf re
Hltpocemiasnd veg the-bartet
race with a time of 17.4 seconds.
Others placing in the rode
. events are as follows: Le
l bronc riding—Lewis Davenport of
B Tnree Rivers, Tex., second with
i54 points and Clyde Galey of Lees-
. -------—-----------_----. ville. La., third with 148 points.
—Legder Phk Steve mettug" Coming in second with 167 points
CoWBoY sTayssWuoBuGKINTWII Stromrraret JS 2 san”asaktna
. .vUluJUI, Army in Germany ‘some 200, ,000-
exertions of keeping up Plus strong, keeps its atomic wea-
■ pons at the ready. Where a mis-
sile or an airplane is described
as nuclear capable, it nearly al -
—---..—■ - Tit ivoay, Castro sent a message ways means they are nuclear
Scattered thundershowers to the people of the Communist armed.
lay----------------- M world in conneciton with the an Pease wrote a series of .articles
-k " on his findings for the Milwaukee d
Journal, which made them avail-
on Tunisia
NATO To Try
To Keep Area
Of Fire Small
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)— If
shooting starts on account of
Berlin, the United States and its
NATO allies will try to keep the
area of hostilities as small as
possible.
This is one conclusion of Hrry
S. Pease, a reporter for the Mil-
waukee Journal, who has just
ended a six week survey in Eu-
rope assessing the strength and
strategy of the United States and
its allies.
14 Poges S Cents
picking the winner.
Besides the honor, the gill chos
ea aa Miss iterational Beauty
receives a $10,000 cash prtze.
stepped political questions from
a panel of professors, students
and Cuban newsmen.
However, in an allusion to the
United States, he said his space
flight “cooled the hot heads of
some persons who thina only in
terms of war."
.Gagarin came to Havana to
help Castro celebrate the eightn
anniversary of the start of the
26th of July Movement, He re-
mained on the platform tor seven
.-7 niversary.
ri "We want to thank all our
■ M brothers who are helping us so
- much for showing immense soli-
ae wiU. -— emaldarity with the Cuban revo- _ —
NP Mm5 cuon." pog mearagasarqtdaganhe without
North American (US ) imperial
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 177, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1961, newspaper, July 28, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530338/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.