The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 167, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 14, 1963 Page: 26 of 30
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—mt 14, 1963
SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1441
'Birdie Comes To Orange
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Don’t you read before you buy?
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THE ORANGE LEADER
on TV and in
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India Is a Study in Contrasts
Between Rich and Very Poor
Rampant Population Increase
Is Basis of Economic Problem
Rhythms of Bossa Nova
Are Still in Circulation
8
"Sayonara" for which she
won an Oscar.
/a
*
Who Better?
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) —
Seba. a pet mountain lion. needed
a new den at the Natural Science
Museum. So who volunteered to
build it?
The San Rafael Lions Club,
that's who.
' -A
A
- .
. J
to lock into the matter.
The bobolink to a geat mi-
grant, traveling allthe way to the
Argentine pampas to spend the
winter.
Everything
Went Sour
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—They
who only stand and wait are bet-
ter off than thicy who light a bon-
fire of newspapers to keep warm
while waiting. three teen-age boys
have learned
Fire Prevention Bureau offi-
cials said the trio started the fire
in an entryway to a temporarily
closed school to warm their hands
while waiting for their girl friends.
No flagrant violation was noted,
but a juvenile court judge ordered
each to write a 1,000-word theme
on "The Danger of Fires."
They learned their waiting was
all in vain, too. They were at the
wrong bus stop to meet the girls.
'BIRDIE' STARS
Van Dyke, Miss Leigh
vilian kiss. to the dismay of boy
friend Bobby Rydell. And then,
into Sweet Apple rolls the song
writer and secretary. Birdie and
his entourage, TV'technicians to
televise his "last kiss." and sun-
dry other guests.
_lrv'"* Brecher penned the
darling. From that point
it was but a sti
but mostly he sticks to songs that
were bom as bossa nova, includ-
ing those two standards, "One
Note Samba" and "Desafinado. ”
Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd are
credited with launching "Desa-
finado" on their topselling "Jazz
Samba" LP. Now Getz, this time
with guitarist Luiz Bonfa, follows
up with "Jazz Samba Encore."
(Verve)
All the melodies were written ei-
ther by Bonfa or Antonio Carlos
Jobim (they collaborated on the
"Black Orpheus" score) and some
of them are sung by Brazilian
Mana Toledo.
For those who like their bossa
nova warm as an Amazon sun,
this is the warmest.
Pig)
film
When you add it all up, print advertising—
the kind you read in the pages of this new*
pspre m ibn Sanaa.
And because it measures up to the buying
habits of first consumers, print makes salez
Moot people read—and then buy. Don't yout
Hill Village, Mrs. Wayne, even
when replying to questions about
herself, kept bringing the subject
back to Johinmy.
After 16 years d marriage, she
says, she still laughs with gusto
when he wakes bar up at 1
o'clock in the mare leg to tel her
Buddhists7
Sentiment
Stirred Up
By DENZIL PEIRIS
COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP)—Bud
dhist sentiment is being stirred
up against Roman Catholics in
Ceylon in the wake of South Viet
Num's religious troubles.
Yellow-robed Buddhist monks
have led big processions through
tropical Colombo is recent weeks
protesting events involving Bud-
dhists in Catholic-ruled Viet Nam.
2,000 miles away.
The monks demand that Bud.
dhist rights’in Viet Nam be pro-
tected and that "Catholie action"
im Ceylon be investigated by the
ep to fame
the movie
9,
TORONTO (AP)—"Most peo-
ple ttink teat living with a come-
dian would be nothing but joke,
joke, joke,"" mays Mrs. Johnny
Wayne. "But it isn't”
"Al home, Johnny’s work is re
garded as bus is rm. just as if he
were a doctor, lawyer or carpen-
ter.”
Beatrice Wayne hastens to add.
however, that her husband-half
of the internationally famous
comedy team of Wayne aad Shus-
• ter-cah be just as funny la pci-
sate as in public.
Their three sons, Michael 15,
Jamie, IX aad Brian, 10, are tar
from blase about the talents at
cheir father
"Johnny is quite quick and witty
aad the boys realize this and ap-
preciate him."
Sitting in the simple furnished
Hving room of their handsome
eighe-mbemhouee in the-fashion-
able Toronto suburb of Forest
screen ploy The musk, supervised
and conducted by Johnny Green. . .
includes such tunes as "The Tote-
phone Hour," "One Last Kiss,"
"Honestly Sincere." "Rosie."
"ids," "One Boy," "How Lovely
To Be a Woman." "Put on a
Happy Face" and "A Lot of Uv-
By HENRY S. BRADSHER
NEW DELHI (AP)-John Gal.
braith slouched in his chair, feet
on a coffee table, in an effort to
keep his 6-foot-8 frame from tow-
ering too tall
"I never was very starryeyed
show the economic problems of
India," the Harvard economist
said "The fascination of India to
an economist is that the problems
are so stubborn and serious.
"They're going ahead It's a
slow, hard struggle, but they're
going ahead.”
Fascination with the struggle of
India to get ahead economically
brought him here as the American
ambassador. Now.-after two
years, Galbraith is returning to
Harvard seminars and writings
that asave made him one of the
best-known modern economists.
As for her own activities, she
has gone back to the University
of Toronto to get her master’s
degree in chemistry and plans to
do research work there.
They met when Johany was la
his first year at the umiversity
and she was finbshing high schooL
Her brother intmodued them.
When she entered tea university
her interest in Johany led her into
a reporter's job an tee school
daily. Staff parties were lmited
to those working tar tea paper and
tee only way tea eauM accompany
Mm was to jato tee staft. She
remembers that Johmny rewrete
her first story.
By linking the two, the monks
evidently aim to convince Ceylon-
eee Buddhists that the Catholic
minority could oppress them as
Most people do.
They count on advertising in print to give
them the information they want on products
that interest them—information on features
... designs .. . and prices, for example.
People not only read about products and
zervices, they show ads to their family and
friends; they dip coupons for information
and samples; they tear out ads to take along
when they go shopping.
MISSIONARY DISPLAYS SOUVENIRS OF INDIA So"
Miac Stone Wear* Silk Sari, Shows Hand-Carved Rosewood Table
But Make Certain
a He’s Not Trackman
1 MIAMI (AP)—A worried Miam-
ian wrote a Miami News column-
ist recently asking what to do
about her husband, a professional
football player who shouted sig-
nals in his sleep all night.
The reply: try firing a blank
cartridge and maybe he'll think
the game is over.
The picture is based upon the
Broadway musical play for which
Michael Stewart wrote the book
Charles Strouse the music, aad
Lee Adams, the lyrics. Edward
Padula produced the original in
association with Brown.
Winner of four Tony Awards
from the American Theater Wing.
"Bye Bye Birdie" ran more than
600 performances on Breadway.
The original cast record album
held the cherished top position on
national lists for weeks Touring
road companies performed it in
major cities of the United States
and^ia Canada, Australia and Eng
It has been performed countless
times by little theater groups
across the land — including nine
performances by the Orange Com-
munity Players last November.
Prisoners
Won't Mind
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -
Someone put the jail cell doors
inside out.
Sheriff Don Gemung said an in-
spection at the new $6 million
jail - courthouse revealed work
men had hung 70 per cent of the
steel cell doors so they opened in
instead of out. "Very inconveni-
ent.” he said.
between Hindus and Moslems
have stirred between the two
group* hatred so bad that riots
and bloodshed bare resulted. Ac-
cording to Mins same, though.
Christian missiomaries are seldom
involved in medligioas violence.
"We have bare dhreatened," she
admitted, "W aa ome has ever
made any attemge to do as bodly
harm."
"Most at tea Cristian groups
have bound themselves together
late the Church e South---
Romeo Returns
Like He Said
MIAMI (APX-"Hl be back."
proclaimed the angry suitor.
Thomas Bishop, 36, as he marched
out of his living room leaving a
distressed damsel sitting there.
He was.
Bishop backed out of the drive-
way, put his car in the wrong
gear, and smashed through his
picture window.
In the living room once again.
Bishop said, "Told you Td re-
turn"
homes are made out of mud. They
have thatch roofs and cow dung
floors. That sounds horrible. I
know but," she matter-of-factly
stated, "when if dries it doesn’t
smell at all and it’s really quite
effective."
Children's church is somewhat
similar to the American style Sun-
day school. “We teach lessoms,
have flannelgraph presentations,
teach the Scriptures and sing. In
our adult Bible class, we do much
the same thing. We even have
contests."
Teaching is done in the Tamil
language. Miss Stone doesn’t
speak* it fluently, so much of her
talking with the natives is done
with the aid of an interpreter.
"Schools in the city teach Eng
lish," she said, "but in the coun-
try, the people are quite illiter-
ate."
There is a language school in
Bangalore, but Miss Stone did not
take the time to attend it "We
have so much to do.”
The 36-year-old Orngeite said
she felt God called her to the work
in India. She asked her church
here in Orange to send her and
with the financial aid of other Full
Gospel churches she was able to
go.
In Bangalore she lives in a
stucco building, with tiled roof and
modem bath. 'The windows have
no screens so we sleep in beds
covered by mosquito nets.” She
said that the occupants of Indian
homes include—besides people —
rats, flies, bats and roaches.
Bangalore is a city of some one
million people. "They are quite
used to Europeans,” she said
"The Indians are a friendly. hos-
pitable group. We try to gain their
friendship first and then we relate
the gospel to them. We don’t re-
fer to ourselves as missionaries
but let them say what we are.
“Mostly we wear our American
clothes Occasionally we put on
toe sari of toe Indian women — for
special occasions."
The small-boned soft - spoken
missionary said the hardest thing
far her to do upon returning to the
states is to get readjusted to see-
ing so many white people. At least
Ae won't be called upon to name
any dead ones.
Miss Stone is presently staying
with her mother M M V. Park
Ave. She has a year's furlough
which will ba spent lecturing and
showing slides. Already, she says,
she has more invitations than she
can handle.
ons at a swim . „ tell _ suit . — .. San-Jims
mmmsenm
I
■
Sentimental Orangeites have a
special feeling foi "Bye Bye
Birdie:” it's more or less a home
town product produced and fi-
nanced originally by Orange'peo-
ple.
L. Slade Brown was associate
producer of the Broadway hit.
Among its "angels” were Brown.
E. W. Brown Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Joe M Powell and Mr. and Mrs.
Ward Stephenson.
Now the musical finally has
reached the screen and will open
here at the Strand Theater Thurs-
day.
The Columbia Pictures release,
in Panavision and Eastman color,
stars Janet Leigh. Dick Van Dyke,
Ann-Margret. Maureen Stapleton
and Bobby Rydell. Jesse Pearson
stars as Birdie and Ed Sullivan as
himself. Van Dyke and Pearson
both appeared in the original pro-
duction
A happy, zestful show which
pokes gentle fun at the younger
generation, the Elvis craze. tele-
vision and various other American
fads and follies, "Bye Bye Birdie"
is especially notable in that it to
largely about teen-agers who are
not juvenile delinquents.
"Birdie" tells the twin stories
of a songwriter and his secretary,
and a small-town Ohio girl. Vital
to all three is the fact that Conrad
Birdie, the nation's hip swinging-
est singer, is about to be drafted.
To the songwriter, this is a
matter of financial and romantic
disaster. To the adoring little Ohio
girl and her millions of fellow
fans across the country, Birdie's
imminent entry into the service is
complete tragedy.
Janet Leigh is the secretary who
does something about it all. She
talks Dick Van Dyke, her song-
writing boss and would-be hus-
band, into writing a new song —
"One Last Kiss" — and talks Ed
Sullivan into letting Birdie (Pear-
son) sing it on his TV show to one
of his worshipful fans.
Amr-Margret, the girl from
Sweet Apple. Ohio, is selected as
the recipient of Birdie’s last c-
are net num* m. tamer m
“We do most ot our work in the
," Mims Stone Mid. Th*
stops they make include
trips via a Hiadaataa Landmaster
Much of their liac'n s^eat in
Shaminagar, tar most of their
work is there. Ma Stone said
that they conduct a children's
church for all ages of Indian
youth and a Bible lass for adults.
Church services are held in Gov-
indapalayam in a stucco building
with a tile roof. Strew mats are
strewn carelessly about the floor
for the congregation.
“In the rich villages most of the
homes are built o stucco,” she
said. "But to the poor am, toe
BEGLRADE BEAUTY
Coming up last in the
acting ranks is a green-
eyed, 20-year-old Bel-
grade beauty with the
unlikely name of Beba
Loncar. Currently, she is
playing the sexy role of
a Viking princess in “The
Long Snipe” on location
in Yugoslavia.
> t.
-
' Fred Kohimar produced the Mm
and George Sidney directed.
in population, insufficient prog-
ress in raising farm production,
low industrial efficiency and com-
petitiveness of exports, and lack
of jobs.
Galbraith first came to India
for three months in 1956. studying
and offering advice to Prime Min-
ister Nehru's government that
controls the economy in a loosely
socialistic way. After helping
Jqhn Kennedy win election. Gal-
braith asked for toe ambassa-
dors job here.
“I’ve become aware of a
variety of problems that perhaps
were not fully appreciated be-
fore.” he commented.
The greatest problem is the in-
crease in population by about 10
million a year. The Indian econ-
omy has to run hard just to keep
up with this rising demand, and
run even harder to improve low
living standards.
"They’ve got to cut the birth
rate drastically," Galbraith said.
But present birth control efforts
are not really touching the prob-
lem. he went on.
"They've got to get people out
village by village, state by state.”
teaching birth control. "If this
were agriculture, they'd get the
money, but this is being treated
differently," Galbraith said.
On agriculture. "various minis-
tries create toe impression of dis-
persion at energies. They should
conccntrate massive energy on
fertilizer, water, plant protection
and possibly alpo improved varie-
ties of plants The capacity of the
Indian village to receive new
ideas should not be overtaxed.”
Farmers could be encouraged
to produce more if greater incen-
tives were held out to them in
the form of goods they can buy.
Bicycles, once imported but now
produced cheaply here, are an ex-
ample. Industrial costs generally
are not low enough, however.
"India must become a low-cost
producer of goods. This certainly
is not the case yet,” although
there is progress.
Although progress Is slow—the
..____government’s target is a per cap-
it is accused of doing in VietWam. ita income in 197* id only Jill JO
Catholics form only about Iter -the important point is progress
cent of Ceylon's population of to itself, Galbraith says, with a mere
million. Buddhists M per cent equitable spread of it across the
about the same as in Viet Nam. country than exists now.
But Catholics long enjoyed prefer- "They’re certainly going ahead,
ment in Ceyionese public life out despite the birth problem, and
of proportion to their numbers, getting some increase in the mode
They still hold some key posts- of living."
the commander in-chief of the
Army, for example, is • Catholic.
AH of this came about under
British rule because Catholics,
many of them descended from
European colonists, took pains to
educate their children in English,
toe language at government.
After independence, the vast
Buddhist population awoke politi-
cally. Its leaders began political
action to replace non-Buddhists in
government posts.
Buddhist bhikkus — monks—
By WANDDA NOBGES
Intea Ito lead of contrasts'
The Hindus burn their dead on
hill "Ml pyres. The Parsees expose
their tomd an towers to be de-
voumed by vultures
AM Mias Herman Stone. a mto
sionmny to teat coumtry, prewemly
• home in Orange on furlough, me-
callshaving to name a dena mian
so thet he might receive Christan
buria
“Imaat at the strangest ex-
gni—s Tee ever had," ate
said. "This old Indian man M
dead to the front yard at the mis-
sionemy •Milan. I was the only
one home at the time *
"Awrumugam, er Six Faces, was
a Christian convert from Hindu-
hm tee dfat. I guess, at old age.
His wile wanted him buried in the
Christian cemetery but there is a
rule that an who are buried there
must have Christian names.
“Site asked me to name him so
he culd have a Christian burial
J gave it a great deel of
and named him Samuel."
Naming the dead is but one of
the umusual situations an Ameri-
can missionary to India may ex-
periemce. Miss Stone has been
serving her church, the Full Gos-
pel Temple, in Bangalore, South
India, since January, 1952.
Refigtate differences to India
Galbraith leaves (Monday for
home. He reflected on the prob-
lems of India's Ml million per-
sons. The average person has an
income at $70 a year
Galbraith listed the basic prob-
kltos as an uncontrolled increase
TME OKANGE LEADE snen—.auvme
helped elect Solomon W. R Ban-
daramaike prime minister in 1956,
on a platform of benefits for Bud-
dhism. These included replace-
ment of English by the Sinhalese
language in government work, to
the detriment of Christians and
Tamil-speaking Indian Hindus on
the island.
Mrs Si rima vo Bandaranaike,
who became prime minister after
her husband was shot by a dis-
gruntled bhikku, was persuaded
several years ago to take over
nearly all Roman Catholic schools
for the government.
Buddhists have gradually been
replacing Catholics in top posi-
tions.
Accompanying this has been a
whispering campaign against
"Catholic action." The Catholic
church uses this term for lay-
men’s religious work but in Bud-
dhist slogans it takes on a sinister
meaning of political conspiracy.
The whole situation has been
just great for the Communists.
Their line is that the United
Stales and President Kennedy, a
Roman Catholic, are responsible
far anti-Buddhist action in Viet
Naa, because they are keeping
President Ngo Dinh Diem. a
Roman Catholic, in power there.
Of Texas
Explained
Did you know you can drive on
U.S. Highway » in El Paso, Tex.
and see Old Mexico with one eye
and New Mexico with the other?
It's true. The Testas Highway De-
partment today explained two of
Texas' strangest "tall tales."
Old Mexico is an island of land
bordered by U.S. M, and New
Mexico is a section rd that high-
way, but they both lie within the
heart of El Paso . . . giving El
Paso a claim that no other city
in the country can rival! It has a
foreign country and another state
right within its city limits.
These tall tales are rooted in
Texas history, dating back to the
1800 s when the rampaging Rio
Grande wandered hither and yon
causing boundary disputes and
settlements galore between Mex-
ico and toe United States. Cor
dova Island is the story of peace
ful negotiation, but the story of
the New Mexico highway is a
story at controversy that was
carried clear up to the Supreme
Court of the United States.
You have to snatch closely, or
you might blink and miss the mo-
ment when you cross state lines
in El Paso. But if one follows
U.S. Highway 80 along the Rio
Grande River, going northwest
from the business district, he will
cross 1,272 feet, or about one-
fourth mile. of the state of New
Mexico before he reaches the
north city limits of El Paso.
A road has existed here as a
wagon trail since before recorded
history. In 1898 El Paso County
designated the road as a county
road because the road was as-
sumed to be entirely in Texas, as
the recognized boundary between
Texas and the Territory of New
Mexico was the center of the ex-
isting river.
224. .2.
A CI BOOST
When lovely Miyoshi
Umeki sang her heart out
lor lonely American oc-
cupation troops in Japan,
she soon became their
By MARY CAMPBELL
Bossa Nova. North American
jazz dancing to Latin American
rhythms, may very well turn out
to be a perennial belle of the ball.
More than a year after its U.S.
debut, bossa nova hasn't yet
pressed its roses in a memory
book and tiptoed away. Instead it
has developed a lively repertoire,
admirers on two continents, tunes
which already are considered
standards and listings high up in
the 100 (top singles and albums).
Among the very newest LP re-
leases, bossa nova is popular too.
"Jazza Nova," one of the good
new ones, was recorded in Rio de
Janeiro, late in 1962, by Paulo
Alencar and his Brazilian All-
Stars. This sextet has a good bass
(you'll especially like it if you
have stereo) and the percussion
gives a feeling at rolling internal
motion even during a slow’ tune,
such as Alencar’s "Why Do I Re-
member?"
Most of the selections on, this
At co album haven’t been recorded
in the United States.
But the sound, though It is pre-
sumably "authentic," isn’t a great
deal different from the U.S. sound
of "Contemporary Latin
Rhythms" on Reprise or "Ole!
Bossa Nova" on Capitol.
Barney Kessel and a group of
11 other jazzmen provide the
bossa nova on "Contemporary
Latin Rhythms " They do some
Latin songs and give some strictly
non-Latin songs (even “Blues in
the Night") that south of the bor-
der beat. Kessel exhibits his great
jazz guitar, notably on "Days of
Wine and Roses."
Laurindo Almeida, Brazilian
guitarist, and the Bossa Nova
All Stars (19 American jazzmen)
follow their successful "V i v el
Bossa Nova" album with "Ole!
Bossa Nova."
They specialize in the new rec-
ord on American pop songs played
in Latin rhythm, and feature'in-
strumental solos — guitar, tenor
sax. trumpet.
And for something different
they throw in an organ to take the
lead in "What Kind rd Fool Am
I?" and a sheet of instructions
diagraming the steps for dancing
the bossa nova.
"George Shearing Bossa
Nova" on Capitol has Shearing on
piano and sidemen (unnamed) on
woodwinds and rhythm. This al-
bum does have a different sound.
It isn't the usual stylized Shearing
but neither is it quite the usual
bossa nova. It's more like bossa
nova without a strong pulse.
On his first bossa nova album.
Shearing does do "Black Satin,"
*** BWB tat onanee uao
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 167, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 14, 1963, newspaper, July 14, 1963; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1530943/m1/26/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.