The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 221, Ed. 1 Monday, September 3, 1962 Page: 1 of 6
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he Caplor Daily Press
Cotton Receipts
Price Five Cent!
(A) — Associated Press
Volume 49, Number 221
Six Pages
Iran Quake Toll
Moves to 10
J
/
-
Lt. Ali Allosache,
2633
Horror Grows
guerrilla Wilaya (Zone) No. 4
. ..
ie
3 3
■—Taylor Press Staff Photo
Dellinger Construction Co. of Corpus Christi.
For Students
well inside the defense perimeter Wednesday.
The legal entrance' age
for
Representa-
CHICAGO (P
attacks carried out by B52 and
At about 12:30 p.m. Saturday ready for action.
became pastor of Christ Lutheran day, Aug. 20, showed 256 traffic
Venus-Bound Mariner
The morning practice was
rou-
rest break every 30 minutes to
a
Completes Maneuvers
railroad Commissioner Ben Ram-
At the height of the riots, police register the second time. How-
it on earth—sending a powerful Laboratory, builder of Mariner 2,
tell their buddies it was $300, they side their house.
walking, it was reported.
afternoon.
JFK Interrupts Holiday
For Visit to Father
Police Probe
Attempted
Shooting
Wins Claimed
By Guerrillas
In Algiers
Clashes Are
Indecisive
The midcourse maneuver will
be on an order from the ground.
An official of Jet Propulsion
OVER HALF FINISHED—Work on the widening and re-construction of U.S.
79 from Bull Branch in Taylor, near where this picture was taken, to seven-
tenths of a mile west of Thrall is nearing 70 per cent completion by J. M.
gie Grob was “about the same . . .
still in a serious condition.”
Guards Jim Besselman and Lee
Hensley were in the hospital mere-
ly for observation, Casner said.
Coach Darrell Royal visited the
three after the morning workout.
Bales Today .....
This Year......
Sept. 2, 1961
To Sept. 2,1961
guerrilla command claimed that
its troops repelled attacks by reg-
ular army forces at two points
south and west of Algiers early
today.
Gov. Mark Hatfield called out
the National Guard, but the dis-
turbance dide down by Sunday
night.
fives of the Chicago and North
Western Railway and its striking
telegraphers scheduled Labor Day
peace talks today as the five-day
work stoppage on the nation’s
third largest railroad tightened
its pinch on segments of the Mid-
west’s economy.
Both sides clung resolutely to
their rival positions in a three-
hour negotiations session Sunday
Bind federal mediator Francis A.
^O’Neill Jr. held out little hope for
a quick settlement.
women. Both women deny shoot-
ing at the man.
A weapon—that police are pos-
itive is not the weapon used in
the shooting—was found.
Police continue to investigate
the matter, Chief Schier said.
Some 40 mythical ICBMs were
launched at North American tar-
gets, complicating the problem of
defense forces.
In an accident not related to
the defense exercise, a civilian
Laboratory in Pasadena.
The antenna maneuver was per-
fatalities, 43 killed in boating ac-
cidents, 54 drownings and 85 killed
in miscellaneous accidents for a
total of 438.
Traffic .........
Boating ..........
Drownings.......
Miscellaneous ...
Total ..........
473
23,764
854
5,426
. 392
. 19
. 35
. 62
. 508
is six years on or before Sept.
1, 1962. No child is admitted who
is not of legal entrance age,
Johnson stated.
Requirements for entrance to
the Taylor schools for the first
time are:
1. A birth certificate, and,
2. Proof of smallpox vaccina-
tion, and a record of all diseases
each child has had.
--o-----------
were married nine years ago. A
crowd of 50G was on hand, held
back by police ropes, as the Pres-
ident and Mrs. Kennedy entered
and left the church near down-
town Newport.
Afterwards the President took a
swim in a heated pool at Bailey’s
Beach, which fronts on the ocean
in the section filled by Newport’s
famous mansions.
The President issued Labor Day
statements and goals of American
working men, and announcing an
international conference to pro-
vide more trained manpower for
economic development of other
lands.
The international labor confer-
ence is to be held in Puerto Rico
Oct. 10-12 under sponsorship of
the U. S. Peace Corps.
Full Leased Wire Report of The Associat ed Press—World’s Greatest News Service
_____TAYLOR, TEXAS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1962__
The crash occurred during the
time when non-military aircraft
were supposed to be grounded.
(See DEFENSE, Page 6)
----------0----------
Wilson to Resume
Private Practice
AUSTIN (P) — Atty. Gen. Will
Wilson said today he will resume
his private practice in January
and has no plans to run for an-
other political office.
Wilson, defeated candidate for
governor, has been active in the
Billie Sol Estes and slant hole oil
drilling investigations.
He said his statement was made
in reply to a report published
Sunday in some newspapers spec-
PASADENA, Calif. (P — Scien-
tists said today that U.S. space-
craft Mariner 2 has successfully
completed the first of two key
maneuvers en route to its Decem-
ber rendezvous with Venus.
Mariner swung a yard-wide an-
tenna around Sunday and focused
give gridders a chance to drink
a small amount of water and gulp
a salt pill.
“The mark we make as the
Department of Texas, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, in 1962-63 depends
on the mark you make in your
own communities” was the chal-
lenge to the Fifth District VFW
encampment here Sunday from E.
J. Krenek of Austin, junior vice-
commander of the Department of
Texas.
Commander Krenek reported on
the national convention in Min-
nesota, quoting Secretary of State
Dean Rusk as saying “The VFW
knows the price of freedom” and
continued to warn the large aud-
ience of the dangers of Commun-
ism.
As a final shot, he urged every-
one to get their shoulders to the
sey.
“I will enter the practice of
law in Austin in January, 1963.
I have no plans to run for any
office in the future and positively
will not be a candidate for rail-
road commissioner,” Wilson said.
Wilson, once a member of the
Texas Supreme Court, was de-
feated earlier in g race for the
United States Senate.
-----------0-----------
Former President
Continues to Gain
NEW YORK (P) — Former Pre-
sident Herbert Hoover, recuperat-
ing in Columbia-Presbyterian Me-
dical Center, had a good night a
spokesman for the medical center
reported today.
Hoover, 88, underwent surgery
last Tuesday for the removal of
an intestinal tumor. He is taking
everyone in each post.
The meeting was opened by
Fifth District Commander Elbert
Groves of Schertz, and welcomes
were brought by Mayor R. E.
Kollman for the city, and Com-
August Rainfall
Under Average
August tried hard to make the
rainfall “batting” average late
Friday afternoon, but only a trace
of rain fell.
Total rainfall for the month of
•“a
radio beam back across the 1.2
million miles now separating Ma-
riner from its home planet.
Space scientists pondered the
data coming in from Mariner to
decide when to have it perform
the next maneuver: the firing of
a rocket engine to aim it into
Venusian skies. This may be done
some time today.
The rocket is needed to correct
Mariner’s course through space.
On its present course it would
miss Venus by 33,000 miles—too
far for the experiments Mariner
is to make as it nears the solar
system’s most mysterious planet.
The midcourse maneuver can
correct the course to bring Ma-
riner only 10,000 miles from the
cloud-shrouded planet, according
to experts at the Jet Propulsion
88
K1
Partly Cloudy
Partly cloudy this afternoon, Monday night and Tues-
day. Isolated afternoon and evening thundershowers,
mostly to the east of Taylor Monday and Tuesday.
Today’s Temperature Range: 73-100. Tomorrow’s: 74-98.
Yesterday’s High: 100. Rainfall: 0.
Sunrise: 6:09 a.m. Sunset: 6:50 p.m.
Moonrise Tues.: 10:50 a.m. Moonset Tues.: 10:15 p.m.
Lake Levels: Travis 654.84’. Buchanan 998.56’.
U.S. Weather Forecast for
Taylor and Williamson County
official local weather observers.
The average for August is 1.95
inches. The trace of rain that
fell Friday was not measurable,
Patterson Bros, reported.
There were 31 dry and very
hot days in the month of August.
A record of 110 degrees was set
on Aug. 9, breaking a 26-year
record.
Then, on Aug. 10, the temper-
ature soared to 112 degrees, a
new record that many sweltering
Taylorites hope will never be
broken.
a customer in McCrory’s Depart-
ment store saw a Negro man take
money from one of the store’s
cash register.
The man left immediately after
taking the money, and there was
little the witness could provide
Taylor police as to his descrip-
tion.
However, the same man return-
ed to the store later and was
spotted by two clerks. Again, he
robbed a cash register. One of
the clerks grabbed his arm.
He dropped the money and fled
the store on foot.
The manager gave chase and
a Taylor police car was in the
immediate vicinity.
Police are not certain how
much money was taken from the
Pastor Zoch
Receives Call
As Chaplain
The Rev. G. A. Zoch, pastor
of the Trinity Lutheran Church
fo rthe past 13 years, has re-
ceived a call to serve as institu-
tional chaplain in a three-county
Fort Worth and Dallas area.
However, he says that he has not
decided as yet to accept the call.
His work as chaplain would cov-
er some 150 hospitals, nursing
homes, homes for the aged, and
several jails in Tarrant, Dallas,
and Kaufman Counties.
All the schools in the Taylor In-
dependent School District will
operate a full day on opening day
Introduced were commanders
and presidents of a dozen posts
and auxiliaries, each head ris-
ing with the delegation from his
post and auxiliary.
Gus Keilberg of Smithville, past
national commander from Kansas,
where he had lived formerly; Mrs.
Keilberg, past national assistant
secretary; and Mrs. Frances Sum-
mers from Austin, past president
of the Department of Texas VFW
Auxiliary were recognized. Mr.
and Mrs. Keilberg live in Smith-
ville at this time.
The morning session was closed
with the memorial service, pre-
sented by district and local of-
ficers and presided over by the
District Five chaplain.
The encampment opened with
a dance Saturday night, and in
the Sunday afternoon sessions, the
VFW and Auxiliary met separate-
ly and transacted official business.
Taylor police are investigating
an attempted shooting, and have
in custody an alleged cash regis-
ter robber.
The attempted shooting occur-
red just after midnight Monday
in the 100 block of East Walnut.
A Negro woman shot at least
twice at a Negro man.
Police Chief A. E. Schier said
it was believed the man was
her estranged husband.
The man was not hit by the
dent Kennedy interrupted his La-
bor Day weekend today to take a
helicopter flight to Hyannis Port-
Mass., for a visit with his ailing
father, Joseph P. Kennedy.
The President planned to join
his father for a cruise on the
family yacht, Marlin, and return
to Newport late in the afternoon.
The President went to sea Sun-
day despite rain and clouds,
boarding the Coast Guard ocean
racing yacht, the 62-foot yawl
Manitou, with Mrs. Kennedy and
a large party of guests for two
hours on the water.
The voyage aboard the Manitou
took him out to the area where
the yacht races for the America’s
Cup start Sept. 15, with an Aus-
stralian challenger, Gretel, meet-
ing the U. S. defender, Weatherly.
of SAC’s bombers we’re held
had to use nightsticks. Some
heads were bloodied.
All told, some 60 rioters were
taken into custody, and 40 of
them early today. Bail for each
was set at $300.
“We’ll hold them until they rot,
if need be,” said Mayor M. W.
Psyher. “When they go home and
■. ;. :
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::23::::222322233333333223333333333333333 : : :
spokesman of........*
(7.nne) No 4 888*:88588888338883888388888888
Youth Has Final Fling,
Police Get Final Word
Tuesday and Wednesday are
opening days for over 2,350 par-
ochial and public school students
in Taylor.
About 350 students will begin
classes on Tuesday at St. Mary’s
parochial school.
Approximately 2,000 students
start classes Wednesday in the
Taylor Independent School Dis-
trict.
Elementary school students will
report to their respective schools
at 9 a.m. for enrollment.
St. Mary’s school classes start
at 8:10 a.m. Student Mass will
be celebrated daily at 11:45 a.m.
Supt. T. H. Johnson announced
that the faculties of the Taylor
III while virtually all civilian
planes were cleared from the
air from 2 p.m. until 7:30 p.m.
EST.
This is the third time in as
many years that Norad has
matched its intricate defenses
against the might of a simulated
agressor employing fleet bombers
and mythical intercontinental bal-
listic missiles.
Norad and Defense Department
officials never have made known
their highly classified evaluation
of the exercises. But they say
each Sky Shield operation has led
to the development of new tech-
niques and electronic devices that
improve the defense posture of
the free world.
Gen. John K. Gerhart’s state-
ment came at the end of a 5%
hour exercise in which U. S.
and Canadian interceptors, direct-
ed from Norad’s headquarters
NOT CONFUSING — Six-year-old twins Ladell
Robinson, left, and Ranell, right, of Salinas, Calif.,
circle their twin moles to show how they can be
identified as they prepare for the opening of school.
To make matters easier, Ladell has the mole on
her left cheek, same as the first letter of her name,
and Ranell on her right cheek to match the ‘R‘
her name starts with._________________—nea Telephoto
Defense Benefits Cited
After Mock Air Battles
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. W — Mock air
battles waged at supersonic speeds over the North
American continent will be of lasting benefit to defend-
ers of the United States and Canada, says the command-
er of the North American Air Defense Command.
More than 1,600 aircraft carried out the grim
make-believe warfare Sunday in Operation Sky Shield
g
said, “The earth acquisition ma-
neuver was carried out success-
fully, and results are being evalu-
ated.”
“Earth acquisition” is the term
fdr pointing Mariner’s directional
antenna at the earth. The antenna
can transmit a narrow beam of
radio signals up to 64 million
miles—but it has to be pointed at
the point in space where the sig-
nal is to be received.
Up to now Mariner has been
sending signals from an omni-
directional antenna which has a
range of only 8 million miles.
Mariner has to travel more than
180 million miles on its long, loop-
ing journey from earth to Venus.
When Mariner reaches the vicini-
। ty of Venus in December it will
be 36 million miles from earth.
children entering the first grade August was recorded at 1.21
inches by the Patterson Brothers,
are going to think.”
Home for a high percentage of
them, said a Seaside official, was
neighboring Washington state and
Seattle in particular.
At Ocean City, Md., some 500
college students and teen agers
milled around the boardwalk on
the Atlantic Ocean early Monday,
and police slapped a curfew on
(See YOUTH, Page 5)
count.”
American engineers constructing
an Iranian army barracks near
Hamadan, which was rocked by
the tremors, escaped without in-
jury, the U. S. Embassy reported.
The government announced an
official toll of “more than 3,316
dead”—but indicated it is expect-
ed to be much higher — 5,000 in-
jured, 100,000 homeless.
Army water tankers sped across
dirt tracks to the devastated area
about 100 miles northwest of Teh-
ran. The United States handed
over four light planes to fly blood
plasma and relief supplies.
An official at the Geophysical
Institute here said if the quake
had been centered in Tehran
“more than a million would have
died.”
The wail of prayers, screams of
terror and the stench of death
hung over the mud-house villages.
Injured, dug from the debris,
were brought to overflowing dis-
trict hospitals and into Tehran by
train, bus and trucks.
The quake lasted only one min-
. ute Saturday night with the worst
. devastation over a 23,000-square
. mile area centering around Tak-
istan, 100 miles northwest of Teh-
ran and about 20 miles southwest
more nourishment, silling up and Saturday night and again Sunday
Traffic Toll
Nears Record
For Weekend
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
of Wilaya 4.
Allouache said heavy rifle and
machine-gun fire continued for
some hours at both Ain Boucif
and Charon, but he had no infor-
mation on casualties on either
side.
Ben Bella apparently had or-
dered the regular troops to halt
any attack meeting stiff re-
sistence, in an effort to avoid
bloodshed.
The gun and grenade clash in
the Algiers casbah was the worst
fighting so far between the rebel-
lious guerrillas of Wilaya (zone)
No. 4 and Ben Bella’s supporters.
Reports said a guerrilla patrol
See WINS, Page 5)
Settlement Dim
In Rail Strike
B47 bombers of the United
States’ Strategic Air Command.
In case any aggressor nation
might have picked the time to
make a real attack, about a third Dr. Stanley Casner, team phy-
sician, said sophomore guard Reg-
GOLF CHAMP DIES
HOUSTON I® — Mrs. Louise
Wohlfahart, 64, a golf professional
who three times was champion of
Texas, died today. She had been
a pro for 31 years.
-----------o-----------
MISS TEXAS ON WAY
DALLAS (® — Penny Lee Rudd,
Miss Texas of 1962, left for At-
lantic City Sunday and the Miss
America contest.
NEWPORT, R.I. (® — Presi- The Kennedys attended Mass at
St. Mary’s church where they
public schools will meet Tuesday wheel, saving that officers can-
not do the job alone. It takes
Threaten as
The eight school buses of the
district will make their usual
rounds. The cafeterias will begin
operation on opening day.
The cafeteria at St. Mary’s
will open on Sept. 10.
There is no specific provision
for “late* registration” of students
in the Taylor public schools,
Johnson explained. However, if
the student has the proper cre-
dentials, he or she will be regis-
tered, Johnson said.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Youth had its fling on the last
big holiday weekend of the sum-
mer, but in seaside resorts on
both sides of the continent police
had the final throw.
More than 200 college-age cele-
brants were tossed behind bars in
the wake of Labor Day riots in
Seaside, Ore., Ocean City, Md.,
and Hampton Beach, N.H.
However, in Lake George, N.Y.,
high in the Adirondack Mountains,
nearly 1,000 young persons milled
about early Monday, I hen scat-
tered without incident in the face
of chilly temperatures and an
extra-heavy police guard.
Seaside, an Oregon coast resort
community of 3,700, was hit by a
riot of 1,500 to 2,000 youths over
the weekend. With some partici-
pants drawing courage from
liquor, the rioters erupted onto
the principal street, Broadway,
This morning, they found their
mailbox destroyed with holes
through both sides.
A federal offense, the case
was reported to Taylor postal
authorities, and to Constable Ned
Fails.
The Wall hers said they heard
a car with loud mufflers leave
last night, but thought the shots
(See POLICE, Page 5
of Noack.
Learning of a need of a Luth-
eran Church of the Missouri
(See ZOCH, Page 5)
formed by Mariner on command .
of a timer aboard the 447-pound ulating thathe.wouldirmagainst
craft. lun--— —--------------- ----------
aircroft crashed at Everglades, -- ----- f------
Fla., killing its two occupants, tine, Royal said .except there was
Classes Open DistrictVFW Challenged
During Week At Meeting in City
mander Wallace Snider of the
Sidney Pierce Post.
of the major rail city of Kazvin.
The Iranian Red Cross said the
quake killed 3,000 of the 4,000 in-
habitants of Dan-Isfahan near
Takistan.
The village, set on a foothill of
an 8,385-foot mountain, was left a
mass of mud and debris. Sur-
vivors ran screaming for help as
a rescue plane landed on the
fringe of the village. Of the 322
houses in the village, only one
mosque and one brick building
still stand.
A few half-destroyed walls stand
as ghostly remnants of the trag-
edy.
Prime Minister Assadullah
Alam, touring the disaster area,
said: “Unfortunately the tragedy
is bigger and greater than at first
reported.”
An Iranian newsman telephoned
(See QUAKE, Page 6)
Heat Fei is 3
At Horn Drills
AUSTIN (® — Three Universi-
ty of Texas football players felled
by heat exhaustion were in the
hospital Monday.
Traffic fatalities across the na-
tion mounted today at a pace
that threatened to set a new rec-
ord for a Labor Day holiday week-
end.
The National Safety Council
controlling Algiers, said the regu-
lar forces supporting Deputy Pre- l
mier Ahmed Ben Bella attacked
at dawn at Ain Boucif, 75 miles
to the south, and Charon, 150
miles west of the capital.
Allouache said the defending
guerrillas put up determined re- :
sistance and the regulars with-
drew after brief engagements.
The reported clashes continued
a pattern of brief, indecisive en-
gagements between the Wilaya 4
guerrillas and regular army
troops which entered the Wilaya
territory in central Algeria Satur-
day to end the guerrilla com-
mand’s rebellion against Ben
Bella.
In Algiers, however, more than
100 persons were reported killed
or wounded in a two-hour battle
Sunday night between guerrilla
troops and supporters of Ben
Bella.
Allosache said the regulars
south and west of the capital were
“feeling out our defenses all
-around our borders to try and find
a point of weakness.”
Ain Boucif is an outpost on the
Sahara fringes east of Boghari
where a skirmish between the two
forces ended with a local cease-
fire Sunday.
The bulk of the regulars at Bog-
hari — about 600 mien — with-
drew and tried to encircle Boghari
by moving up a desert track to
Pin Boucif.
■Charon is a small market town
"6n the Oran-Algiers highway some
15 miles west of Orleansville. The
reported engagement there indi-
cated that Orleansville remained
Shots, and no one was hurt.
Police arrested two Negro here, rose to challenge simulated
TEHRAN, Iran (® — Epidemics
threatened Northwest Iran today
as the horror of a weekend earth-
quake grew. Red Cross officials
estimated the dead close to 10,- .
000 and the injured “beyond
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Craig, Colo.
Earlier, a head-on crash killed
six persons in two cars near
Litchfield, Minn., and six other
persons lost their lives when two
cars collided in a driving rain-
storm near Weiner, Ark. Five el-
derly persons were killed in a
crash of their car with two trucks
in Schuyler, Neb. Three young
persons and two truck drivers
were killed in a head-on collision
between a car and a trailer truck
on the West Virginia Turnpike
south of Charleston.
Traffic deaths last Labor Day
weekend totaled 386, only the
third time in the last 12 years that
the toll was below 400. The record
low toll for the holiday in recent
years was 246 in 1946.
The safety council said the traf-
fic toll averages 330 for a 78-hour
late summer non-holiday week-
end. An Associated Press survey
of accident deaths in the 78-hour
non-holiday weekend from 6 p.m.
Friday, Aug. 17 to midnight Mon-
ever, approximately $43 was tak-
en the first time.
The man, who is now in jail,
had a little over $42.00 on his
person when picked up by police,
Chief Schier said.
Also, about 8 p.m. Sunday
night, the Herman Walthers of
Wuthrich Hill Community, Route
3, Taylor, heared a shot out-
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“It is a challenge,” Pastor
Zoch said. “I should also have
to work in a number of churches
in training others to assist with
the work since one person could
not cover all of the ground alone.”
A native of Giddings, Pastor
Zoch served several pastorates
prior to World War II, and on
discharge from service in which
he had served as a chaplain, he
said the toll for the three-day pe- :
riod, the final holiday of the sum-
mer season, could reach 500 if
the highway carnage continues at
its present pace.
The traffic toll reached 392 to-
day and traffic officials said they
look for the rate of fatalities to
increase later as millions of va-
cationing motorists commence the
homeward trek. In addition to
traffic deaths, another 19 died in
boating mishaps, 35 drowned and
62 died in miscellaneous accidents
for an overall total of 508.
Before the start of -the 78-hour
holiday period at 6 p.m. local
time Friday, the Safety Council
had estimated between 410 and
490 lives would be lost in traffic
accidents. But a sharp increase
in the hourly rate of deaths Sun-
day caused the council to raise
its estimate.
The revised estimate of 500 traf-
fic fatalities, if reached, would
surpass the record Labor Day toll
of 461 deaths in 1951. The holiday
period ends at midnight (local
time) tonight.
The third six-victim car crash
of the holiday period occurred
Sunday in a head-on collision of
two cars near Roosevelt, Utah.
Four persons lost their lives Sun-
day night when three cars collided
on a mountain highway near
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 221, Ed. 1 Monday, September 3, 1962, newspaper, September 3, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523892/m1/1/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.