Mt. Pleasant Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 90, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1966 Page: 1 of 6
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VOL. MO. 47
am"tla _ e ■_ _____'______
Treatment
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Bombers Hit 4 Torped
It Says
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ere
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sites in North Viet Nam
2
continues.
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- times
-times
have
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. been hu-
SERIOUSLY ILLHar.
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5 Major Airlines
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the same as other prison
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daily.
48,
More than 35,000 members
had
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ties for unloading and storing
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pumping
the first
not Y
der and military discipline."
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They were seized in New
York Thursday night while on
furlough and brought here by
2
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.,. • P
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iju X1
Is I
AUS
of the
2
At his Texas Ranch, Presi-
dent Johnson deplored the
failure of the union and air-
lines to reach agreement on
wages and other issues. He
ordered the Civil Aeronautics
Board to work to minimize in-
in North Viet Nam — not ge
food and medical attention
U. S. measurement, but ahi
on a par with that accor
Asians,
I [
8
I
a week.
Both U.S. and Vietnamese
Li
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a
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By VERN HAUGLAND
WASHINGTON i - A ma-
chinists union strike crippled
operations of five major air-
k
4
VICE PRESIDENT ON HAND TO ADDRESS
NAACP—Roy Wilkins, right, executive director of
the National Association for the Advancement of
said
wifi be able
uP
■’W’
2
t
.",.8
3
North Atlantic Treaty Organ-
-
mg#
m Meae
Thursday, dodged Commun-
ist MIGs and missiles and
V, the
inviti
RE bc (
P{iF4 5C
Si A it S, > a, R} gon’
. WA
•. • 22
2 if
0.
-of
2
•g
Post-
2
$
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1
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‘f
narents and a teenxga of AFL-CIO International As-
' plandin “ 66 0« iepyousgaegan
.2).
4‘f -4 k
fl
k,
A
I J
has threatened to refuse
all U.S. mail bearing this
L -
& i
‘ eva
L ■ Ta
L.
" -
r 0
boesl
LastY
with lb..*,
tion on the m
SAIGON, South Viet Nate
U - U.S. fighter bombers
blanketing the United S
and spanning the globe.
Last-ditch
ed to reok
The problem is sensiti
for U. S. stategists becau
it directly involves Ameri
lives — and because th
have found no sure way r
safeguarding the prisonel
welfare.
But even with this dra
282s8203
es formed at New
iington and other
the populous East
of the nation at 6
t
on
, a
war
d
few years ago my brother had
the MT. PLEASANT TIMES
- REVIEW sent to me, and how
11 have changed! Some-
!
co so
with
, the
sister, were planning an m
ernight outing on the lake ..
31,300 men
1.585. stat
said today.
1
e. •,
NUMBER 30;
......
shows 34 U. S. servicemen
are in Red hands and 233 are
missing. The outlook is for
World
[ Briefs
By The Associated Press
LUSAKA, Zambia1 e -
limnN
glten
gc
V,o
.1
1
&
—-4
stamp honors 1,000 years
of Christianity in Poland..
It goes on sale in Wash*
5 in July 30. (AP
11
military beadquarters report-
Four G l's
y . ■■
■
■
: I
I
HAVE AT ONE TIME OR
THE OTHER ... boon hu-
miliated in front of our hil-
me
ow
P*
k f
b
Loe
| men were in jail he
fter their arrest in
ing of a Breckenru
a. m. EDT. The strike then
spread westward from one
time zone to the next.
The five airlines normally
carry more than 250,000 pass-
engers daily, according to an
year ended with
ant’s unofficial
7.740’
, "3 I
L. T 2
K. g
f.
1-
ng a r #
--
I
■
rs.
it its 1
Hain
gbeL-
gb gg •' 1 ' 9
barge. ” .
tified son i
hen
•0a
my investigates
r conduct has
icial to good or-
arwise, with a
199 in nine bull
tied withijthe C
I can’t recognise one
'familiar name. Nevertheless,
Fit’s always good to get the
THews from dear old Mt.
Pleasant each week.".....
i -MUST OF US OLD FOLKS
5-cent postage stamp, a
government source in
Washington said. The
8086" Servica e Sales
l
■ in
iam
pti ■ ne
Colored People, greets Vice President Hubert
Humphrey in Los Angeles as he arrived to address
the NAACP national convention. Humphrey called
for more local effort in solving civil rights prob-
lems. (AP Wirephoto,)
-
• 1
I
s
‘ 1
r I
i
ed only miner skirmshes in
the ground war in South Viet
Nam. A U.S. spokesman said
there was no significant con-
tact with the enemy in the
lumber slow i
x
Are Held For
Investigation
POW's Pose
> I " ' * ■ ■ . J
Touchylssue
J
(.0
ast of Haiphong,
ee also reported
3 boxcars, dam- at
' ; s
I ithe 1
4 M
itorre
tAirisht
WASHINGTON in - Diplo-
matic sources indicated today g
that France may agree to the •
continued use of French air
space by Allied military"
planes, despite its break with _
the military structure of the j
e Pfe.
of pvt
35 miles north of Hanoi, an-
other 43 miles southeast of mit of
* Seven 1
Mount Pte
a? of Am
the
A-A f
FT. DE
soldiers ft
past M hours. edi
Mt"TheNavy reportet
SAM RAYBURN LIBRARY I
VISITORS . . . recently have I
dicluded MRS. R. L. TURN-
ER, KIT McCONNICO, and
LINDA and JANESS TLLEY
■D of MT. PLEASANT . . .
They saw the books, papers 1
and the historical mementoes
collected by the late Speaker
J Sam Rayburn during his
more than 50 years of service I
□phis country . . .
-A SATISFIED READER
MRS. FRAN STEW-
ART of ANN ARBOR, MICH-
IGAN . , d.she writes, "A
• •
- -a0--
a
35
U
_____,_____building permit. I
stations — following ward the.$1 mill
attack there 10 days : June was the
c4manAAn month ,
sirucuon monui ‘
ter
: military police because -
t Dix is the closest major
i my installation. They w
restricted to quarters.
Three of them had said
New York June 10 that ti
would not fight in Viet N
e
r Force 2
W mto I
—----- — R. Hoffa sat more firmly in
IRES POLAND—Poland lithe drivers seat of the giant
union today afterbeing voted
a new fiveryear term and per-
haps the greatest power ever
held by a labor leader.
day weekend, a young couple
became engaged just before
the th o July. -nestodayn.
4, the boy’s family, consisting
i when we ma
of a blunder on
_18 that the _
===™ Crippled by Str
hand, so I will just suppose T “
way it happened
I the recent holi-
— -Q • ■' _ '
Boats; Oil, Rail Sites
-yomr ■ ' a . ua-.. . “ • _____ " -
By ROBERT TUCKMAN
labor dis-
. last year.. i
—
HOUSTON UB-Eastern and
National Airlines suspended
beached and burning. It was in,
the third attack on North Viet- W;
namese torpedo boats within
Home Minister Mainza Chona
has canceled a visit to the
United States in protest a-
gainst U..S. policy in_Viet
Nam, the government owned
Zambia Mail said today.
MIAMI BEACH, Flam-.
Loc :7 hr
Teamsters President James
8
AF
b r
"i-
t i-/
F
about 30 miles southeast of
Matphong The Navy said the
crmoudlaged boats opened
h Three - attack flights were
launched froh.the carriers
Constellation and Hancock.
They reported sinking two of
the torpedo boats trying to
flee, heavily damaging anoth-
er and leaving the fourth
ry F. Byrd, Sr. (above),
who served 33 yeans n
the U.S. Senate, » ser-
iously ill at his home in
Berrtville, Vaa Byrd: 79,
retired last November.
(AP Wirephoto.)
d m. local time. A half hour
J later a spokesman an nounced
* the five airlines -^Eastern,
*15
. -
A" ’
9 . -
V. r
. ••• 1
ago. The announcement indi-
cated only about six per cent
of the installation still re-
— the fofidwup Ha^
'strike,
Uday blasted an oil dump
be pilot was rescued un- 2
red from the sea by heli- iz
ter was identified as Lt J
dr. William J. Isenhour of ■
back, U. S. officials cautio
ly acknowleged that Am
can GI’s in North Viet N
dp not appear to be gettt
the worst possible treatm
from their captors, ■
A number of reports fill
ing out indicates that I
Americans are faring ab
Itohtwi
I behave,
■ Texas this
AAt AAlleasant Times
zsichindtlmmilin'tlcsstu-'.
MOUNT PLEASANT, TEXAS, 5455. FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1966
Hixhezdlo0aM4An"dreumhu.sdidd.asEvebzizht.tr"litllnliomiillif__‘M_
pzeeps
Eastern serves Houston to
cities in the East and Canada
with-31 flights in and eat
359. This is up
ly from the sami
peripdmn tr.
er. > ’
"4a an
1 tom W
| tion, two American planes
I were shot down. The pilot of
[ one was rescued; the other is
missing.
The four torpedo boats were
* spotted by reconnaissance
* planes near a coastal island
biezerhigures " the & oummanar-
ported. i i
i In a day of furious air ac-
dailv from
। i
PANKY . . .
how tall mon
- • MAMAN
myouwa
r bemking in •
. there is no
hanky-panky
you, why don
many others
■
t Quota
ielcc ■
Is Cal
4/. 4
"ye.
woulfmain
Johnson ais
iS of New York, and I
rs nis Samas, 30, of
Calif, t -I ",
By LEWIS GULICK
WASHINGTON i -
nol’s latest parading ip <
tured U. S. fliers
lined again for
policymakers one of the
sensitive issues thus far of—-
Viet Nam war—the treat
Ha
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Mt. Pleasant Times (Mount Pleasant, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 90, Ed. 1 Friday, July 8, 1966, newspaper, July 8, 1966; Mount Pleasant, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1484082/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mount Pleasant Public Library.