The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 119, Ed. 1 Monday, May 22, 1961 Page: 1 of 12
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Why Won't
Stan Musial Quit?
Sm Page 9
Comal*ft NEA Strvict
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VOL LVIll-NUMBER 119
" i_
ORANGE, TEXAS, MONDAY, MAY 22, 1961
I. • «•-' M
1
1
L„
—i—-J
To
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Atty.
Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said to-
day 3CO additional U.S. iriar&lnls
are being sent to strift^tom
. MantgOfiiefy^ Ala. Thl« will biipfc
the number there to-between £00
-and 700. _ •
Kennedy - said- many óf tlie
marshals now there have b¿en lip
for 4<Khours, that Alabama is a
large state, and that the Justice
Department wants to be sure
enough marshals are there,
Kennedy made fits, announce-
ment to a crowded n?£- ..confer-
ence. ; >
ri
M
*
Gov. Patterson's Career
Was Born in Martial Law
MONTGOMETtY^Ala. (AP) — c«can bp the'Vice ¿tros which had
Gov! John M. P#ttersa^ls^x)ii'- ■' made: Phenix City a wide-open
V
¡cal carcer was born in hrartioj
law-.
Seven years later, racial vio-
lence led him to call on National
Guardsmen to help federal and
local civilian officers, maintain
order in the capital of his state.
It was the pistol slaying of his
father, a school teacher turned
gambling town.
«.That slaying led then-Gov. Cor-
tan Persons to -proclaim limited
Voa/tial law in Phenix City, -with-
NútionaT Guardsmen taking over
city ana coitnty low enforcement
Young Patterson succeeded his
father as the DemoCraUc nothin >■
and was elected attomejt Rent -
al on tho same vice cleanup
ÜHL
FREEDOM RIDER BEATEN — Jim Zwérg. the only white
male student among a group of "freedom riders." stands bloody in
Montgomery, Ala., alter he wai beaten at the bus station. (AP
Wirephoto) ...
„, a school
^awyer. that launched the ilfgijt- ciatform!
the road to the governor's chair. P„vCrnor. led 13 opponents tn
Patterson and his father,' Al- ..the first primary, and won by a
bért were law partners In Phenix Wide margin In the runoff.
-City, when the elderly attorney. ¿ At 37, he was the youngest
was shot down in 1954. Albert nvan ever elected governor of
Patterson had fastwon lhe Demo- Alabama. AS governor he has
cratic nomination for state at- continued a - vigorous assaúlt
torney general on • promise" to^-c^ainst organized crime. •
Marines, Paratroopers Refuse Order
O
it
SEOUL, South Korea (AP)-A
plit waa reported in South Ko-
rea'! new, military 1 government
today over the division of power
among the military «enrices. ,
A competent source said ma-
rines and paratroopers who took
over Seoul last Tuesday and wero
the shock troops of the coup re-
fused an order Saturday to with-
draw from the Capitol building
and return to their camps out-
aide Seoul.
The marines and paratroopers
reportedly demanded more places
on the 30-member revolutionary
council, which except for a ma-
rine brigadier general and colo-
nel consists entirely : of army of-
ficers; There, is also a marine
colonel in
to
had direct contact-with the junta! About 5,000 uniformed high
since the coup. ¡school students paraded in down-
The government announced 2.-: town Seoul in .support of themili-
0)4 suspected political opponentsltary revolution. As the parade
have heen arrested. | ended. Gen. Chang went on the
Two thousand . Seoul citizens| radip to'order a halt to such dem-
who . violated the 11 p.m. curfew ocstrations. «
were detained overnight in the} "All students, return to your wty we know how," he said, "oni
Municipal Theater.. (campuses! Farmers, go hack- tolfic'ation will come .by itself."
vour farms! Workers return
factories!" Chang said. .
Foreign Minister Kim* said the
military regime" has no intention
of marching on. Communist North
Korea.,
If wé do our Work in the best
When a reporter asked
specific reason for sending more
marshals,; Kennedy replied, "Ob-
.viously we're not satisfied with
the situation'or;'wé ' wouldn't. be
sending more in."
The" federal government is Re-
ported determined to use any
.means available — including a
move-in' of ArmjKregulars if nec-
■j essary to maintain order in Mont-
¡ gom-'iyN.
Alabama Gov. John Patterson
•has declared Tn^rtial law iii
area. -
' Kennedy said the nHv^marshals
would be immigrations-service
men from across the country ^wjio
were being deputized.
He added that - th? marshals
would -stay in Montgomery "until
we: reccive assurances by action
that the situation is under control
in the State of Alabama..'
He said he hoped, lhe Situation
would straighten out--
Kennedy, also said, In response
to a question, that he would thinli
"witliout any questión you would
have had a major bloodshed in
Montgomery" Sunday night if it
Itadnt b^n to^tha U.S, Marslials
He^iajd he had been told that
when the trouble started and wh^rf
a mob stárteíSagainsi the church
where a Negro maas meeting Vas
taking place, there^w^s only a
group of marshals around the
church. ^ ^
He said he talked with Gow
Patterson about that time and
also with city officials and told
them they better take some ac-
r there vrouki be. bloodshed.
The governor previously had
j protested bitterly against U. S.
Atty. Gen. Robert' Kennedy's or-
'rt"r to rush more than 500 armed
IJ. S. marshals and deputies to
Montgomery to prevent further
interference with the bus riders.
In a tense, face-tOrface meetfng
with Kennedy's top assistant, By-
ron R. White, the State's chief
executive threatened to Jail fed-
eral officers who sought to exert
tjiel'r authority in the absence of
a request for federal help.
Patterson In his proclamation of
martial law still insisted that the
To fill in
& V^rS'/- . -'i ■
12 Pages 5 Cent
FINAL EDITION
PAINTING WINS AWARD > Allie Skelton.
a Stark High senior, displays his painting "Night
Shift" awardéd third piace in the HallmJrrk art
taleiTt state contest for seniors. The paint
—Leodti" Phitv by Bllll* Junt^Mtpohi
Orange. Piclured with/Skelton js Margaret.
Christie, chairman of the fine arts division of
the clitK^ Skelton, son of Mr, and Mrs. A. W.
Skelton of '36l'3 Ridgeinont Drive, plans to enter
ASH INGTON^CA P) -- Cuhantniesident^of Johns Hopkins Unl-i prisoner held by Castro.
rebels arranged a^njeeting with'versity/and brother of former¡ Ulises Carbo, spokesman for the
their American benefactors-today President Dwight D. Eisenhower;}piisoners' representative said
to xliscuss Fidel Castro's nij^om; lather is pre sident of the United Castro-had specified International
terms wr-WH. men captureaSin Automobile" Workers Union. .j Harvester or Caterpillar heavy
They were scheduled to meet ..... .
Castro's
fri—l,214 men capture
the Cuban invnsTonTaihire.
Eleanor Roosevelt, Dr.
Elsenhower a/id nnion leade^Wal-
ter Reuther head a drive ¿o raise
m llions of dollars to purchase 500
American tractors or bulldozers
demanded by the /Cuban prime
.minister in exchange for the pris-
oners.
Mrs. -Roosevelt Is the widow of
ihis^afternoon with 10 represen-
tatives-oOhe prisoner Dr. Jose
Miro Car tenar' c hai r m a n of the
Revolutionary Counciinnwl coun-
fil member Antonio, de Varon.aT
The 10 representative^ were par-
oled by. the Cuban government to
work out arrangements to "free
them anil their companions.
"The sons of both Miro Cardona
Told Companions He
Swim
By BERT BREWER | He wás .idenlifiüd^as Herman;sat on the bank while we swam,
... A teen-age Negro trio on a swim-i Brown. 16. a member oMhe party and then he dove in. When he
the cabinet of 15 ofti- mini;, outing yesterday paid the i and-- who resided with. hTs ^step- i came tip screaming for . help we
cers that was sworn .in Sunday, penalty fer swimming in an on ;father, Alvin Anderson, at 133$ tried -to grfcb him, but he. slipped
U. S. Gen. Carter B. Magruder,J guarded area when one of its i 5th St. ., ' ]t í3er and didn't, come hack up.
under whose U. N. command all mjembers drowned in 30-feet of i "He said he coiild swim;" one
South Korean forces are placed,
reportedly demaijtled Saturday
that all the 3^0 troops used in
the coup rptarn to their original
stations
order to mfive out was is
by Lt Gen. Chang Do-young,
the junta chief who alsn is pre-
mier, defense jninistcr and army
chief of staff.
Although the marines and para-
tioopers furnished the troops for
The youths we're swimming in
,U1I ,w tke late jjpiesident Franklin D.
self-styled "freedom riders"-~he1 RoosevrljS Dr Kisrnhow<-r is and De Varona arc among the
called them "agitators"—were to'
(an Convicted Here in 1944
bJame for the race rioting be-
cause oMheir insistence on test-
ing bus station racial barriers.
But, he decreed, "there nqw
exists-. . . a serious emergency,
8 defiance of the cotistitutipn and
laws Of Alabama, a state/of law-
lessness . which th^local of-
ficers aris unable t«v<ubduc."
Despite, a'n'gry federal • state.
bickering earlier/in the day.-U S
officers worketr alongside rity^nd
state policeXnd the baitlc,y5innd WASHINGTON fAp)-The c.=i-'the prosecutor improperly ques-
guardsmer after. Patte>6n Sit- preme Court -split 5>i today Ja!üuned ÜushnMI "to show that he
dered the troops, : reachlng^back almost 17 years in was a merciless person of bad
was built. The -water d®gth *lhfcourt injimctitfn which had sought
|m an account of the accident.
proaches -Mf feet near, the
arid drops sharply off to a
dep'thr The .body - was .w
from deep water by scyefit ydl-
unfeer searchers.. . X ">
The Orange Police^Dcpartnient
received the call jfo'r help at 5:19
p.m. and two/'units were r's-
furnished the troops tor "isnu ion «■ ■ pnvuaeu uw,- vo>u «uiu, j-ihivc. .vih«. not -y patched to th^iííene immediately,
the "coup, the composition of the ordinance, street worjt and repairs Venable that .lots of the animals lUpon aHriiwi, Patrolman Charles
■ < t . t L 4>, /«¡to ' «KM t Un (Ii/.fii fnnnin '1 n s\ Mini m., ntiinnri' ... *
West Orange City Council
Bimonthly Meet Set Today
Discussion of a proposed dof tests from Police .Chief: Harry
Jf
revolutionary council and the tab- to city equipment are, on the were running and'had no owners. Watson attempted to locate Brown
¡net reflected the relative strength agenda- .of the West Orange" City ¡ Venable -pointed out the danger) by awlnfming around over the spot
of South Korea's armed forces. Cdtjncil tfid^y it 7:30 p.m. during,of dogs running on .the sehoolú^,erc he was ]ast geen and drag-
IrBofficW -estimate# .put tfufl arm-v-btmonthb session -a! the c-i^y hall, grounds and without vacctnatjons. > ,,¡„b the bottom with a rope and
at 500,000 men. 'including 3,000 City AOy. John 0- Young and: On the agenda i>re rcpoptr;«n hook. Patnlman Charles. Frede-
paratroopers, thé m?rínés and Mayor Marvin Perkins are' expact-¡.city hall repairs and cojPstr\iCt\oiiyT\£¿ kept .radio contact and sum-
air force at 15,000 each and" the ''d to make reports on dog ordi- of storage buildings fortify equip- moned mofe'Rcip. •
navy 10.000. . nance details. The two were des- ment, repairs to All dozer,, deT; . ShortIv aftcr' the accident wasl^plctely
Despite the reported rift, the ^ñu^ffíSu 'if th« nil" 8 pU |reportei[ members of the Orange
new military -regime pressed ' r ^'s0 with officials of the City | of a street-roller. . iFire ' Department, shfrtff's dl-
ahead vigorously. " • 1 grange_tp-nd volunteer resale
units wer$ J6ir•lhe scene.
Gen-. Chang sent .a"letter to-.Prés-:'j^Pbe^mrhedíaterof"Fi'ciais."sliidtIdir^ted dragline opeíti¿niYfol-
fathers be^an;. iwdy oft Mosquito control operations and '.owing arnval of a boat. Deputy
Míníct v¡m 'Hnnoii Orange might be permitted ta use: m^ifs, of a packer, garbage truck.
. limiiéñ-rnt tó L dor P^und Jacilities pendin;! de-JPurchase of such equipment is
^fnJfíSfiK p^« - ve!opment of West Orange acconi- contemplated hut purchase would ,
•f¿ ; Í? \L h«v- modations ' ¡not be immediate officials, said.!?.
il'.ins Ihp'-'C'ty fartler¿ bejati;.. itu'dy ofi Mosquito control operations and J® r , , ,-. -
ffrwrnmpfit nf Iílw.«í5 Prpmiel'mBans of controlling dogs runnin'g body wrtrk to be done on thé cityjSbcnff Bill Potter also assisted In
John M 1>n3te ouf i'0b0 i£ city confínes after pro-1 police car wilj be considered. | (Se« DROWNS, Page 7)
f trial; and en involuntary "confe:
Bushnell was convicted in 'stta **-.was- admitted is evid
AliARAMA. Page -ll-..- ,JUKI of robbery by assuUlt in. Or-
SlXtí ell - srt ílft^. r lhe ( >nV }f 'QiiiHuialkb fnnrfamnntni
lion, Hushtrf-ll' -sought., to win re-
leas - in habeas corpus proe-. tl- ' ^ n it deprived
inga- in state -cnu-rts. Tlie .-courts ^ <'u* Proc*iS of . law.
U.S. Engineers
Retain Office
The Galveston office of the U.S.
Army Corp of Ehgineé^will m
tain all of- its previous functions
excluding construction, according,
to ..a letter today from Rep. Jack
Brooks.
.PfeVlOuftyr-in;,a<-v-ord •with pap.
eral military ■ cdt'./acks." ihe Gat
veston-office was schf."<luled toLfei
shut down and area Frankfurter an
in state courts.
rejected the proceedings and said
h>; hod not been denied due proc
ess of law. -
An unsigned opinion-bv the Su-
preme Court - today ordered Jhe
Court of Criminal Appeals of Tex-
as tarrant Bushnell ,i h'-arin,; un
his jw-Uttoii for a writ of .habeas "'
corpus."*JuSRce t.1ark-'diw*ntn+ m-: -
a brief opiniori^-toined by Justices
Harvester or
ticctors. He declined comment on
a published report. Castro also
demanded á. large supply Of spare
parts and a five-year guarantee
on the tractors.
Carbo. explained that although
Castro mentioned bulldozers in
making the exchange
really meant tractors.'
The State Department had said
Satirrday the government would
give "most sympathetic consider-
ation" to granting export license
if the tractors "are purchased by
private funds. ..
The United States has broken
diplomatic relations with Xuba
and exports of machinery to
normally are.not permitted.
In Havana, the govemment-con-
11oiled newspaper El Mundo said'
the private fund raising drive was
a move "to disfigure ¿he gesture
Of Cuba's revolutionary govern-
ment ánd-get the Washington gov-
ernment out Of the dileijuna in
which its illegal and aggressive
policy has placed-it,"
Although Reuther said no funds
would -be accepted or solicited un-
tii after today's meeting, dona-
tions and offers of money poured
in 11 . "
Berreller, Associated
Press correspondent just returned
from imprisonment fit Cuba, said
the offer was. "another propagan-
tía trick. It's a form of political
blackmail."
Ian; Justice,
Long Shadow May Be Cast
Oyer JFK, Nikita Meeting
-GENEVA" (AP)—The perennial' tions since World.Waj= II tway-wrf
dispute between the West and the he a central themé of the Ken-
Soviet Union on the issue of c^l^dy-Khrushchev talks in Vienna^
''rtfex^it¿d rM thfe -Western idea that inXhe
P^t of ^20° «nd left "in a ditch SsTond "wasfS w&e^fof
Kim said the contents of the'
letter, would not be disclosed until
rcceipt. But Chang presumably
asked the President to support
the new sjnti-Communist^. ■ pro-
Western regime.
U. S. Charge d'affaires M?r-
shaH Green and <3en. Magruder
t th oublidv Opposed the over-
throw of Chang's elected" govern-
ment, arid the embassy has not
PARTLY CLOUDY
NV-
Data From Uá. Weather Bur-.au
Outlook Partly cloudy and warm
S7
67
High, today
Low tonight
Outlook tomorrow Partly cloudy
and warm
High tomorrow
Sunset tomorrow __
Sunrise tomorrow -
. WINOV so«m t«
h.
TtOÉí
, ....... V¡
7:0# p m.
5:18 a.m.
wind* t to
p.m.; le*
Mah. H:J
4.m a.f
$—Sobtnt: w«h. H 4I tun., It *
law, SrSf ttrtu- W-fm, «ollvor.
H.-3S *m.v t:S* p.mtt bm, 1/U pm„
vesT*aoay — Tw ar«tur«. *•«*■ n
With
east Texas
the tfro-da
needs wei'e to he channeled [Stewart toefk^no part.
through .the fort Wr.rth office. Un I .Bushnell when 25 was om^teted
der the new modification, only the; of a viol nt áttpok on H L. Myerá. -troK to «rt
construction program y^iH be The latter was mbbed at
transferred to Fort Worth. P™t oí $200 and le t in a ditch ipng itadi Kennedy
Th« arranpemeilt also ineludfiis .along -a country .road. mR. «.twem risiat nt nenn-oy
the transfer of construction pro- Percy -Williams, Houston lawyei and Premier Khrushchev.
«ráms from'the Tulsa and Little'for Bushnell, dfscrbied the man Western diplomats in ■ Geneva
ftock districts to the Fort Worth.as ignorant. and«.«nnotiohally dis- feel that: this stuniWins -block of
. turbed at the" time. Williams said virtually all i:gst-West negot
, _ i •' ' r' " '
office.
•1 ,-i
East and West must pjfj
frev
of accords, has "dominated all at-
safeguards to prevenr violation*!
dominate!
tempts to end ttxi cold war.,
Ends on Successful Note
Daring Air, Ski Exhibitions
..fmritirme.d for the first tirne in that would occur.
Des pi te"t""" h'a /. a rd of oily' dime Orange by members of the Orange i However, TKrtfyki
blanketing the downtown water- Community■ BandL^iernhe^
front over the weekend, perform- tion of Joe tBeneke
anees lor the Oranr.e Boatin^ reverberatirtg acrossJthe water |^; not dim
d bv the absence of the
Club's eighth annual Water I-'esti-iing a stiff'wind «ave the effectfcí'eRw
val werp «xecuted to perfection. Hi-Fi stereophonic music. The 50- A,_mefflber of the Demons, LeKoy
,nK-iJlnr« anrt nar- piece band was situated on a'Btfeh
Hundreds of spectators and par . n¡,,rnrm
(leipants from. throughout Sr ^l^Xridií the Sabine
Southwest LoUisl-'
ime jr.. Surprised spectators
which was^by performing a bare-foot skiing
River neir!exhibition on one foot. the. first
^ -time this act has been executed
fiioaijhi
The issue of. controls has pre-
v-nf:d progress in 13 years of
disarmanwrtt. negotiations. It has
Slowed <#rv.h the three-power test
ban Wks here, It cropped up
n-'.-j-n TTt th- síart of the- confer—
... . Laos^.
The West feels the policing of
any agreement between the two
ramps i.< vital to Western secur-
ity. Communist leaders contend
that the Western governments
will use international control ma-
chinery as a front for legalired
tries.
Arthur H. Dean, the U.S. del?:
gate to the three-power nuclear
test ban talks, returned to Wash-
ington ; Sunday to report to Presn-
ident Kennedy on tne Soviet in-
translgeance on the matter or
test ban controls: • -<
Captain Hubert Spradling if tnejj
GIVES WINNING TICKET FOR
Mi McLallon Toket Prizt From Commodors Tim Howard
y show woicn was en- Shortly afierwards,
maxeu with a breath-taking sky- handling exhibition wa^performcd
diving exhibition and awarding of-by LeRoy "Sfeehitio Jjk, Hill Ihrail-
a $2 250 nriw kill and M. A, TSi.nfiy) DeVille Jr. - - - . .. . . HOI.
rá t, Mtüñ.. m-¿m N. •^nglfeáSS. wA
2nd St. was winner of the give- '-p tne vess^ ..at nt^.n speeus in JjBS
away -prize, a $2,250 bo ting .ri|liharP t^"
which was complete with a trailer cr ¡ ,y thj# year
and motor. The award was pre-, Mópoers of the Sabine Area s ■ o had skis on this year/prior to
sented by Commodore Tim How- -owjj/Aqua Demons and Debs ex- lp- •. y -J'
ard at the Orange JHoatihg Club.jjeUtcd their performances to per-
Yesterday^—-aetivit4«*r- " ' "*
centered around the Jack Ta^vr- spins aue w uic s ..../, ruu .. ^"«ch he w-as pulled by a
ange House, began -with ^rhu>;e ter. h „h,~iu,-,.rpd inboard boat fast
, sporting' «goods displaii^on the The Debs, who had secured new, ' h4, *Pt - ....^ « waiPf
pwhn H<> p rKini arai across the In* ladled-whit«> costumes for .-MS
tel. - - X * . v nt w .rf. fnrtwkia wear
s«l at nign speeas in ,,,,,11 urunK .w, reiaies 10 -imt
¡Estops, s'peéd and oth-jP-crfornjed urtusually t > P , beginning at 12:30 a.mi" ea
in"the boat handling the fact that thev had praxis .ed d when the beer ¡0¡nta (
... .- i, . ......„!only once this year and some had ...-. ¡,7
on-the-wati
cohcert
-ar's due to '-(¡ha
discoloration'
1
f tA ITiUllUH W l/x*. ITUVM vi. «■v.
last!10 approximately 40 "feet into the
(Sai SHOW, Page
DEFINITION—From the Or-
ange County Sheriff's Department
.comes this one: "The1 expression,
Drunk .10, relates to* that period
each Sun
close oa
Highway 87, South
HIGHER MATHEMATICS —
One observer at the county court-
house makes this comment: "You
cannot keep the hoiti« circla
square wttn a triangle." His ob-
servation came after viewing •
divorce suit . . . the second man
in the case braienly sat in tha
audienee.
: UÉ,"
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 119, Ed. 1 Monday, May 22, 1961, newspaper, May 22, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143041/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.