The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 197, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 22, 1965 Page: 1 of 58
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Football Previetc
Back
See Tabloid
15 Cents SUNRISE EDITION
AUGUST 22, 1965
1 "'.'i f 11
VOL IX
¡Sil
£2R?is.
ffliiSSSP
a
Itoro
———
Construction Vetoed
POST
SCRIPTS
to áe
N
S
By BOB AXESLON ~
'SI Orange voters consider a
£ monthly pay hike sufficient
• majority of the rank and
file in the local police and fire
departments?
That's what
5 per cent
raise is worth
for first class
members of
both depart-
ments — most
of whom fall
In this cate-
«orr r «
proposed m
a recommend-
ed 190MB fis-
. . cal budget
Axelson i prepared by
City Mgr. Archie N. Walker.
, tt's 030 shert of the desired
SM increase in the base rate
tor all police aad firemen to
be deicded by local voters in
an Aag. SI election. If ap-
proved, a substantial tax rate
boost is inevitable.
Up to this point, the Issue
and a tax rate hike, hasn't en-
gendered exactly what you
would call flaming interest. Re-
member too that the balloting
is only 10 days away.
I wouldn't be too surprised If
a lot of people go fining en
this day with the outcome de-
cided by the ability of the police
and firemen to muster a small
but concentrated yes vote. The
fishing aspect is based on the
assumption that while many
folks am favorably inclined
they're not too interested in pay-
ing for it
At the same time, they dent
waat to vote against the pro-
posal either. Tus same line
of thought is bene est also
by the handfnl of absentee
votos cast to date. Aettaa la
the absentee box is also s food
indication mi voter Interest in
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-
dent Johnson signed Saturday
the $l-biHion military pay raise
L but vetoed a $1.78-billion
military construction authoriza-
tion bul on the ground it in-
fringed upon presidential pow-
er .
Johnson noted that the mili-
tary pay raise voted by Con-
grass is more than twice the
amount he recommended but
said in a statement: "In this
critical period, however, in the
light of the alternative available
to me, I have concluded that the
public interest will best be
served by aigning the bill."
I would guess also that the
bulk of the city employes would
vote in favor of then
It abo would assure them of
some readjustment in this per-
centage factor if only to insure
equality of treatment
And there the matter rests
at this point, it is
that both sides are
last minnte barrages of
(See P.S., Page 11)
The increases it provides
range from a flat 6 per cent for
all officers with more than two
years of service to a high of 33.7
per. cent for a corporal or a
Navy petty officer third class
with less than two years of serv-
ice.
In vetoing the military con-
struction authorization, Johnson
said in a veto message am to
the clerk of the House that he
has been advised by the attor-
ney general that "certain provi-
sions of the bill are repugnant to
the Constitution," and «bat "its
enactment would represent a
fundamental encroachment on
Completed
On Roads
Condemnation hearings
Friday and
readied in five
being beard
County Courthouse
land on Tulane Road, CoñneU
Road and Jap Lane.
Hie land is being
for the eventual widening
those roods.
The proceedings were handled
by three condemnation commis-
sioners acting for the county.
The commissioners were B. A.
Gunn, R. L. Sims and E..T. God-
win. ■
Mr. and Mrs. Asa Mansfield
were awarded $210.75 for 2.18
acres of land on Jap Lane. Since
Mansfield is a county commis-
sioner, state law requires a for-
mal hearing. Commissioners
are not allowed to sell land to
the county.
Judge and Mrs. Sid J. Calila-.
vet were awarded MB for
.1 acres of land on Council executive
Road. Caillavet is bound by
law to sell his land only after..
condemnation since bo is a
county Iudff6f •• ^
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Bald-
(See ROADS, Page 11)
E. MILLER
one of the great principles of the
American constitutional system,
the separation of powers be-
tween die executive and legisla-
tive branches."
Johnson spent most of the day
reviewing the two bills and oth-
er legislation with advisers. fi i
Among those with whom, he
met were Secretary of Defense
Robert S. McNamara, Deputy
Undersecretary of Defense Cy-
rus R. Vance, Deputy Atty. Gen.
Ramsey Clark and White House
special counsel Lee White.
"It was the' «Meo of that*
officials that the President take
those steps," press secretary
D. Movers told newsmen.
Moyers also reported that John-;
son consulted by telephone with
* - leaders of both
well as members of
committees primarily con-
cerned with the two bills.
Johnson, in vetoing the con-
struction authorization bill, ob-
jected to h section which pro-
vides no military camp, post,
station, base, yard or other in-
stallation or facility shall be
. *v-'
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- Wk
H i t <
Barn flattened - J. 0. Denman of
thePine Grove community south of Newton
points to a steel pipe dented as high winds
flattened his cow bam Friday about 5:30
n.m. Denman said fingernail size hail and
high winds accompanied heavy rains in the
locally severe storm. He believes a
twister must have struck the building. The
barn was enclosed on only two sides but it
had survived Hurricane Carla, he said. 11
only other evidence of wind damage was
broken tree branches in a few areas, he
said. The Denmans operate a grocery store
at Pine Grove.
tially reduced in mission until
ass.! t Torn by Riot* Earlier
ftlwrmMi Services committees of:
Paul Pearson Now Heads
School Accreditation Unit
Paul
School
of the
Stark High
*1, has been
of District 7
Southern Association of
ad Schools.
Pearson was elected at file
district's annual meeting Fri-
day at Beaumont
The new chairman will serve
for two years as he«d of the
association, which includes 17
area counties.
Pearson will conduct the
nual district««gf of the as-
sociation as well
ecutive commit
The committee is in charge ~of
making evaulation reports con*
accreditation
Jack McClin-
of Cottmrn Ele-
mentary.
Pearson has been Stark High
principal since 1MB. He re-
ceived his bachelor of arts de-
gree at North Texas State Uni-
versity and his master of aria
at Texas AMI University. He
has done work toward a
law degree at the University of
Ifcgt «waldan
range Rotary Club, former
of city recreation ad-
J. E. Miller-
To Head GG
Chemicals
The appointment of J. E. Mii-
¡ident, as
of Good-
rich-Gulf Chemicals, Inc., ef-
fective Sept. l was announced
the board of direc-
i the House and Senate.
~ He noted that a furtfcar re-
striction is that such reports
could bo submitted' only be-
tween Jan. 21 and April 30 of
each year. If Congress adjourns
sine die before ISO days pass,
Johnson said, the report must
be resubmitted to the next regu-
lar session of Congress. {
"These limitations could seri-
ously interfere with and ad-
*jr affect the administra-
tion of our military program
and our efforts to
ager
D. L. Matthews
of Goodrich-Gulf
resigned his post «(•
o Aug. *L Matthew* will
Mn the Gulf 00 Corp. the
following day as vice president
Miller served as plant ma
of the Part Necbea sty-
- butadiene rubber plant
from IMS until March IMS when
be accepted an It-month as-
signment as deputy «tiiwfru of
the synthetic rubber progri
under the RFC in Washingtc
Upon completion of this wort
he was trsnafsrred to the boose
office of Goodrich-Gulf in Cleve-
land where he was appointed aa
vice preaident in charge of
Ho servad in this capacity un-
til two years ago when he waa
elected executive vice presi-
Jrich-Gulf is currently
n multimillion-dollar
rubber
flmwlMl Bow.
Eerie Quietness Settles Over Watts
i track-
radios,
Xti
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Watts area, where deliberately
set fires raged, gunshots roared
and rioters looted stores s week
ago, waa reportad "quieter than
normal" Saturday by still wary
hr 1.200
Guardsmen, continued to
12-hour shifts in the Negro area
Social and material recoo
struction was starting slowly in
lb* wake of six days' violence
Police have repeatedly denied
the charges.
Police trucks continued to re-
cover goods looted from stores,
fwii Sems wsre left on side-
walks and alleys. Soma resi-
dents of the riot-torn
Sheriff's deputies and notice, calling to report finding itema in
reforareed by IJOO Niflcwal thelTWAyardi or driveways,
police said
Investigators estimated UN,-
worm oi smjicti mercnanaise
has been recovered. At a
storeroom of the police property
^ struction was starting slowly in hss been recovered. At a huge
' !* • . eo"®? the wake of six days' violence storeroom of the police property
Pf^ that brought death to 36 per division, where much of the loot
required by thk bOl, to delay m waa brought, Cmdr. Larry Wal-
action necessary to meet- the courts tosk s weekend recaes ton said: "I would guess we
realities of the troubled world in foTtearint chares s5S have 50,000 item. hetÍTcount-
realces of the troubled worid in
which we live.
'*Bgr the ConsUtntlon. the ex-
ecutive power is veeted in the
president The president is
mandar in chief ef the
forcea. The president
sign into law a hill which
fi
sign inlo law a
deprivea him ef power for eight
" of the year even to pro-
a reduction of mission or
ef any mOitaiy in-
and which prohibits
him from closing, abandoning
or substantially reducing in
mission any military facility in
the country for what could be a
year ar more and must bo tM
days. Iba times do not permit
It. The Constitution prohibits
It*
This was Johnson's third veto
of a public law — a law of gen-
eral application — aa distin-
guished from private bills, gen-
erally designed to provide finan-
cial raiiaf to sn individual.
«— l.„_
1D6T0 MV9 ;
of private bins.
from hearing charges against have so,000 itema here
2,000 of more than 4,000;less television seta
tef an
arrested during the vk>-
John A. McCone, former Cen-
tral InMligence Agency i
said ha will call a iimeling
eight-man investigative
"at the first oppoXHtf,
bUb «aalu
■wy eany nexi wem,
McCone waa named by Gov.
Edmund G. Brawn to band the
group, which will seek causae of
the turmoil.
Lt Gen. Rodsrick L Hill,
commander of the California
National Guard, told n
color
by the
portable models
io to '
the hundreds, a track-
eer. There are re
_ men's suits, tires,
clubs, dressers •• any item
a department store would selL
A police apokeaman said: "A
lot of people are ■* —«>—11
"¿loot — they don't want to be
caught wtth It" "
County Assessor Phil Watson
on Frid*y estimated riot dam-
age to jnivate property at |4B
million. Gene Davia, disaster
section chief in the county ad-
ministrative office, said n sur-
vey indicated public property
damage of H« million.
These Dims acaled
previoua official eatimatea that
total damage would ran aa high
as $175 to $200 million.
On Bank9 Request
er
will
Orange achool district
"Millions of tftam in gam- M Tuesday nt 7:30
fe would have been averted Igfeu a regumt from Coumy
the national cuard been National Bank to reconsider the
-« ^ ^ -q- o if ■■i [i lili m i
contract on a seno® oeposiiory.
hi a day aooner."
The riottnc brake out a week
ago Wadneaday night Iba Na-
tional Guard waa called out two
About 1*¿00
ore at the
ef file rieta
t Nograea' repeat-
«m .r P^*..bruUlity'
Hill aald: "1 personally saw no
evidence of "*"** *
11 bowl win bald lts^reg^
N. 15th
at 505
a two-year contract to
National T**«* and
t^nfli Baric to serv
tory banks aa in the paat
iSe contract states that First
mi *
First
"lite
New members elected to
three-year terms on the execu-
tive committee were Dr. Eu-
gene Todd.
tendent at
crawioro
and W. T
British Visitors in Orange
National will
MORGANFEELD, Ky. (AP) ^
n," and fear at
Cooper and Conrad bad
planned to eject the satellite,
back off for 52 mllea and then
return for n rendezvous, but the
loss of power scrubbed this
scheme. The aatoBta (lotted
alongside the space craft for
serení «bits.
T this disa
what ílight director
C. Kraft had said in into
noon still stood aa fim beat sum-
mation of the flight's prospects.
During the sixth orbit, Kraft
said: '
"I think we fed we are In
reasonably good *hape to con-
tinue on for the next day, and
we have reasonably good con-
fidence that we're going to be
able to go on from there and
; the intended duration
of flight -• nmrplnf ♦* «*
all other systems continue to
function properly are neces-
sary to the safe conduct of the
bafea ,; .
The immediste gad: lt
hit Before these are mm plot
od by around noon Sunday n de-
cision will ho w"** on whether
to continue.
First there waa optfaniam bo-
cause of a fine, on fime blast-
off. si a.m. (EST) bom
Ksnnedy. This
gloom as the power supply went
down and stayed than.
- u
certain (ha flight would have to
be ended, the announcement
for en-
came:
"We are committed
other day."
_ officials
sot
Kraft said the
parently are In no diaromfort,
and a roeerve batte
surea that they will
power to descend safely in
any filing falters.
If the flight is ended after IS
orbits, the astronauts win come
back to earth at about 12:1S
p.m. Sunday in the primary At-
(See GEMINI, Page 11)
act
deposi-
tory tor all tax-related funds
and Orange National for achool
activity-related funds.
Thursday board members
held an informal scailon with __ _
resents ti ves of three banks WOT 07 rCOCC
to- j. adl. — ,.iti i m ■ .1
o 1scus5 ui© digs sunvntttea
at a July 27 regular board meet-
blA decision on County, Nation-
al's reconsideration request is
cpected to be made Tuesday.
The bigs are as follows on to-
teresi 10 do piyea on Dorrowea
money: County Natkxiait 2 per
está; Orange National, 12 per
jü-ftlll Vint National, 111 per
' '■■■■
MANNED SPACE CENTER, Houston, "feat,
Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper Jr. and Charles
Jr. whirled steadily but almost silently around the
world Sunday, still surmounting power trouble that
had threatened to bring their flight to an
Their powár troublea
were so acute they kept
their radio contacts to the
absolute minimum. In con-
trast to other flights, this
was strictly business, literally
unearthly quiet.
By 11:10 p.m. (EST) Saturday
the space center announced
they had entered the 10th orbit.
The astronauts planned to
continue at least to m^lday
and they had high hopes that
they may yet become the first
to spend eight days In
space.
But one prime objective of the
— a rendezvous with a
— had already been
Theirs Is the story of a Jobs
suited ip a riot Friday.
As the six crossed a dusty
field toward a Red Cross hut
«d>ero they would ask for a
transfer to another Job Corps
center, one said: "I ain't going
to stay here and got my throat
cut"
Another added in reference to
the "protection racket" that
they and Job Corps officials said
existed at the camp:
"After I got off the bus (on
his return bom a weekend trip)
they asked me if I had any
'life insurance' and I said, fHell
Another student told of watch-
jog • beating in the mesa hall
Wednesdayi'-™
"They just took Ms head,
tin a plato of food, then
Us te In."
a tew of the camp's 630
s remained en the cam-
pos during the weekend. Many
were in the nearby towno of
Bvansvfflo, lad., and SOmhraon
*0 what hocfMngd at.
Ibo bora are staying to mo-
tels and notáis. The six boys
said their stay at • Henderson
ho« Friday night was paid by
the adonl government.
Earlier Saturday, seven
youths wan arraigned. Charges
of public drankenees en govern-
ment property were dismissed
in UA District Court at Owens-
bora, liny ware ssnt home and
told tbsy had been dismissed
from the Job Coma, bat could
reapply from their -
The students and some staff
riot, partici-
80 to 150youths,^was
and no ata-
can bé
they point teas
* of the rii
the main sources of the riot
— The protection racket which
Oto six boys said was "nipped
to the bud," in their dorm area
but may nave continued else-
where at file cantor.
The boys said they
(See JOB CORPS, Page 11)
Heavy Cong Losses
Will Fane Decision
By LEWIS GULICK
WASHINGTON (AP) - John-
son administration officials said
IW Viet Cong bat-
, indicate the Reds
will have to choooe between
tntenstfrtng their war effort or
The olKs said U.S. inteffi-
B52 atrito, killed 21 Viet
and captured 52 at the cost
only nine wwimtort.
, morale
Is dearly en the riae, and ao are
reportó of lopsided victories
over the guerrillas to numerous
- The Reds had been expect-
ed to move toto a new strategy,
units in con-
a
;
Bids on interest to be
unn Deposits were
4 par cent en maney
30 to «9 days
w^mris mmat 9a*.m aa <ja■■ m
per cent ior w aays or
M
per cent from 30 to 4*3*. 4
per cent from M days to •
months and 4% per cent for
C months; and
cent on 30 davs
to 00 moñtha and 4 oar cent tor
mr*
Si ether business Tttaaday the
for
Nederland; Week a
Silabee principal;
Hawthorne, principal
By EDEE fiOLLEMAN
While hysterical Hettsten
ware swatting the
quartet from Uvar-
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
N. Kb St, Biwwi;'
toga plana
WWII.
Just Mora riHt Liverpool,
a couple on the
The boy had beau!
t_ • ..l
cura Bttucn preiuer
hair of the girl ha i
of Forest Park In Beaumont.
■know how debate
toner councils at
^■■^■and that
thav are unwüBnn tol
which pathfl
■Must when.
servingon thecom-
(Sae VIET NAM, Paga 11)
mmé nam
at Port
Leonard,
ORANGE JUICE
Davtos'
Clugstrom,
Norma, 21, got
AirDort. Mm
u5Tl9Mi«*fSlT.
^ ta,<T" 4
Whet it wan like."
Oaviea bad
SI
& offi-
that
BF^Wint to
V. Marito ■
a study at
in Om
mm mi u wn fooa
WEATHER
Walters of
■Mm
Outto^PaHiy donate
Viet Cong
about furni-
i miffnt be
outside the
tudy the
*Éw m llZlSLil
Mrit navios aaia
uvea at uie airpon
s
a a e * a on
mm
.... : p.m.
0:0# a.m.
Beetle
heir was
ained.
Her
that the
colon ore purple
'A
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 197, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 22, 1965, newspaper, August 22, 1965; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143120/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed May 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.