The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1965 Page: 1 of 31
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Orange Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
>
VOL. LXH—NUMBER 19
ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 1965
36 Pages
15 Cents SUNRISE EDITION
British Conservatives
•. AIR
Sudden Blizzard
Downfall
Sweeps Into Stat
e
Is Hailed
■ i
0
r
BEN BASSETT
APME Sets
Convention
By BOB AXELSON
pain in
Mrs.
Johnson
and
their
this is no cal
iam
President didn’t wear
— He didn’t finish the sen-
a
five balls he attended that night.
Press.
ittle more careful in the future.
news reports for the pre-
W. A. VENISSAT
tween the inauguration and the
you prefer to
Mayor Asks
WS coverage
A t V i nt on
■ - ‘ --- ' I
(See CRISIS, Page 7)
As supervisor in. New Yoi
is 51 cents won’t even be
red," said Ralph Mas:
consi
instruction
an
Is Due Soon
primary in April.
Naval Medical Center in Beth-
The Democratic committee,
ight the
05
for a first-hand view of the for
is-
for the party primary.
1 His throat had been soothed
None Hurt
■rm in office. He was un-
is expected to be hospitalized
talents
a
y well to the treatment.
across Cow Bayou and a new
provided by the state. Right
ing.
A nearby small storage tank
a.m. Sunday.
Turner and Malcolm Vaughan.
Tommy McNamara, resident
from exploding.
peeling off.
sion of what had gone wrong.
housing area on a bluff above
start within 30 days.
a
felt from them.
In Seattle, Arnold Hinckley,
Motorists in Distress
Patin, the latest council
installations.
can-
didate, has been employed for
ter at the Levingston Shipbuild-
cy library in Hue. 400 miles he felt the attack on the USIS
DETROIT (AP) - The auto
ment agencies and highway
revi-
Venissat. is married to the
in the
nings. They have one daughter,
4
that expanded construction of
That's handling
The system, to be known as
more limited access roadways
makes the need for the mobile
more
ment and had radio stations
any amount of rainfall—literally
First Savings9
acute.
(See P.S„ Page T)
equipment.
They said transreceivers are
Under the AMA plan, motor-
xne mio mmsenr out apparent- a r « f
ly was not seriously injured. ASSetS Listed
WEATHER
into the sealed-off area.
HOW MANY - John Bick-
demonstrators
Data from U.S. Weather Bureau
Total assets of the First Sav-
round-the-clock monitoring sta-
The basic transreceiver re-
ace Bickham, was exhibiting
Outlook: Clear to
a -
through tomorrow,
days. cold nights.
gon’s Buddhist headquarters
teer citizen teams, police agen
AMA said that if the HELP
program expand; as rapidly as
it believes it will, it might
tank trucks.
was expected Sunday.
pound tried to take to the
a wide area in the sunny, 20-
h
and transmit messages.
Joe M. Powell, Homer E Ste-
about 20 tear gas grenades at
day alligator.
were using demonstrations as a
(See SAVINGS, Page ?)
‘ ¥ •
<
4"
“9 4
Fire, Explosions Rage
Through Anchorage
Annual Meet
Of SA Board
Premier Scores Violence
U.S. Library Smashed in Viet Nam
> '
Underground
School Is Quiet
See Page 9
W. P. Patin
Seeks Post
President Is Hospitalized
With Bad, Hacking Cough
Ec^ch Opponent
Potential Assassin
See Page 10
New directors and officers for
1965 to serve on the Salvation
The U.S. consul in Hue, Sam-
uel Thompson, reported that
The President’s temperature
stood at 99.8 a little after 8 p.m.
White House press secretary
Atlantic and Gulf
ict president of
High today ...
Low tonight
High tomorrow
men’s Association,
Hie wage offer bh
money issue up to "
By Auto Industry
Plan Disclosed To Aid
Dam Electric Co-Op Inc,
Venissat was executive direc-
Member Associated Press
King Feotures Service
dressed to President Johnson
and calling for an end of Ameri-
can support of the Huong gov-
ernment.
In Saigon, a monk plunged a
three grandchildren, all of Vin-
ton.
The academy said it would
not disclose the names of the
cadets who have resigned.
Zuckert’s announcement cli-
maxed a week of tension at the
north of here, smashed all the
building’s windows and ran-
sacked offices.
There were no reports of in-
juries.
tion at the east London suburb
of Leyton.
Hie other Johnson daughter,
(See LBJ, Page 7)
tion Bureau, whose member-
ship is made up of APME mem-
bers, will meet at the Jack Tar
(See APME, Page 7
. communications system to aid cllities for motorists. They said
Mrs. Patricia McFarlin and motorists in distress. f ‘
......, ______ .. .... HOUSTON (AP.) - A federal)
dent said. His' temperature went mediator said Saturday strik- i .
— — _ — " . ing Gulf Coast longshoremen sey, South
have rejected a shippers’ offer Coast Dis
During its convention it ana-
serve as master of ceremonies
and Capt. Cecil Brown, head of
the Orange Corps., will give an
annual report on activities in
Orange County.
SAIGON, South Viet Nam
(AP)'— Antigovernment dem-
onstrators burned books Satur-
day in a U.S. Information Agen-
sizes the SA’s observance of
its centennial year.
Officers to be installed are:
John Utley, chairman; Bobby
Houseman, vice chairman;
Thomas Wiegand, secretary;
and E. E. McFarland, trea-
surer.
New directors are R. B. John-
son, Neal Miller Jr., Howard
building was caused by a group
separate from the mam body of
Orange County out. of the 1960
road bond fund.
midday.
! About 20 cars and trucks were
stranded along a stretch of high-
way near Perryton once Satur-
day morning, but were freed by
maintenance crews.
I A Boy Scout troop from Ama-
rillo was helped out of Palo
Duro Canyon, near the town of
Haney said Saturday he could
not go beyond that at this time. *
The honor code manual, by
which each cadet is bound two
months after he enters the
academy in June as a fresh-
. man, says: “The cadet honor
code consists basically of four
precepts: 'we will not lie, steal
or cheat, or tolerate among us
anyone who does.’
straight route for the road to
Orangefield. «
Funds for the work will be
A fire and explosions raged for p.m. (7:48 p.m. EST). Firemen
more than three hours in a wa- said at about 5:40 p.m. that it
terfront area Saturday, destroy- appeared to have been con-
ing a 600-foot-long Standard Oil tained to the immediate area of
Co. warehouse and office build- the warehouse-office building.
Because Cabinet ministers by
"ion must' sit in Parlia-
His physicians refused to got the bug, though,
[though his medical histories make any direct connection be-
peal to halt the growing vio-
lence.
Ben Martin, academy football
coach, said regulations forbid
any comment from him at this
time. He said normally about 40
cadets ‘are members of the var-
sity football squad and that
spring practice is scheduled
for April. The 1964 academy
team won four games, lost five
and tied one.
Zuckert emphasized that the
“overwhelming majority” of the
cadets were not involved. Prior
to the resignations the cadet
wing numbered 2,567.
The civilian chief of the Air
Force said he was satisfied
“that the investigation of clear,
evidence of cheating at the Air
Force Academy is being han-
dled fairly and expeditiously
and that every consideration is
being given to the individuals
who are being investigated.”
Eatzemtezeemsstesszstarstrattesd-gm==z
tence, but he obviously meant
that he thinks he should be a
ambulance took him from the
White House I
21 program the other night.
“The flag has 13 stars and 50
- 30 Football Players involved
Cheating Scandal Shakes Air Force Academy
By LOUDON KELLY cadets, but said the probe was
continuing.
Colo. (AP) — More than 100 Air
Force Academy cadets may be,
involved in a classroom cheat-
ing scandal, including about 30
football players, it was officially
announced Saturday.
Secretary of the Air Force
Eugene M. Zuckert issued a
statement in Washington saying
that an investigation indicates
the existence “of a well-organ-
ized group of 10 or 12 cadets
who were stealing examination
papers and offering them for
sale.
“Some of these cadets have
already submitted their resigna,
lions for the good of the serv-
ice.”
Zuckert did. not elaborate in
his reference to the football
squad.
So far, the academy has an-
nounced the resignations of 29
New. York, for-
le AP, will be
Stowe said he had asked the
union to bring their demands
more into line "with something
that can be discussed.” He said
a lot of the union proposal is
“wishful thinking.”
Sunset today ........ 5:46 p.m.
Sunrise tomorrow .... 7:10 a.m.
that manner.
Once water
starts flowing
the news, output of a staff of sevN
oral hundred reporters working
in virtually every country of
the world, Bassett is well in-
IsWednesday j He makes periodic tours of
• AP bureaus around the world
was checking reports that ex-
amination papers had been ille-
gally obtained and used. Col.
nevermentioned it,x Johnson
VINTON (Spl) — The fifth
[candidate to announce for a
was a
ports from Brownsville to Lake
Charles are involved in the
Gulf Coast segment of the dock
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)— The fire broke out at 2:48 strike which began Jan. 10.
“There can be no shading, no
equivocation, no quibbling
among honorable men. There-
fore, a cadet who violates the
cadet honor code indicates his
i inworthiness to be a member of
the Air Force cadet wing.”
The manual goes on to say
that, “Cadets and officers of the
USAF Academy must report
every suspected •breach of the
cadet honor code.”
ness.
In a gesture typical of John-
son, he called four newsmen in
Construction Corp. of Beaumont.
Their joint bid was $390,399.
Proposals were opened here
Friday by the Texas Highway
patrolled potential
trouble spots in the wake of Fri-
POST
SCRIPTS
to the
NEWS
iation I had previously
betweemthe American staffers
and the nationals of the coun-
tries has been intensified. AP
has become a genuinely world-
of dozens of nationalities, and
many races and religions.”
Another speaker scheduled to
appear before the APME Sun-
day at 3 p.m. is John W. Sim-
mons of Orange, general mana-
ger and executive vice president
of the Texas Sabine River Au-
thority.
Simmons will discuss Texas
water problems, then outline to
the editors current plans for
apparent, effort by police or
troops to quell the attack.
Earlier, about 100 Buddhist
mnks and nuns presented a
letter at the U.S. Consulate. ad-
the fuel storage depot were _________ ___
evacuated. Flames reached to dacy subject to the Democratic
within a few hundred feet of the party primary scheduled in
homes and the heat could be April. Other announced counc l
Department.
The project will include
The Orange Leader
over lack of
•WASHINGTON (AP) — Presl-iworking long hours on his mes
dent Johnson is in the hospital sages to Congress — his big
with a bad, hacking cough and a'budget m
Canycn, by jeep Saturday morn-
ing. The jeep pushed three cars . _ t rm
up hills to better traction. i A f Inrck I rr
. Two troops from Amarillo and 410 n I •
to the National which amounted to a 51-cent an
hour pay hike.
David Stowe. Labor Depart-
Gully pump station is not 100
per cent complete and has not
yet been accepted by the city,
it was fully operative. The sta-
tion has a pumping capacity of
245.000 gallons per minute.
Work remaining includes
ground cleanup, paint refur-
bishing and final instrumenta-
tion adjustment on the semi-
automated control system
which regulates the pumps.
The $877,814 f a c 1111 y, lo-
cated on local naval base
property, was the sole reason
why homes weren't flooded in
the vicinity of the gully oft
Cooper Drive and further up.
stream in the Wrenway area.
Ponded water was trapped
extensively in a broad area
bounded by the Southern Pa-
cific tracks between Green and
West Park avenues and extend-
ing into Riverside.
The customary number of
gripes were registered about in-
adequate drainage, which is
true of course, with a few
verbal bombs dropped directly
on the gully pump station. The
fact remains that if the water
can’t reach the gully, it can't
be pumped out.
Perhaps a few memories
should be Jogged on what con-
stituted the criteria for pump-
ing requirements at the station.
In the original comprehensive
drainage study by George J.
Schaumburg, Beaumont consult-
ing engineer, this comment is
made:
"The pumping criteria to be
Incorporated Into this report
is based upon a five-year fre-
quency rain with a three-hour
duration and a 48 per cent
runoff, or the removal of 6.8
inches per hour of water from .
the total watershed.”
A long list of municipal ac-
complishments were cited dur-
ing his years in office. In-
cluded are a new municipal cen-
ter incorporating the city hall,
fire station and police head-
quarters; a broad recreation
project, costing $400,000 which
resulted in a modernistic $150,-
hands, "he said.
Buddhist-led
, Under the AMA plan, motor- available from radio supply
ists in need of aid would make shops with prices depending on
their needs known on CB chan- the number of channels pro-
nel nine where the call would vided and special features of-
be picked up by one of the fered.
FORCE ACADEMY,
candidates are Alphe Vice, 31-
... -caue, muiu aenigy, year-old petrochemical plant
Alaska operaions manager for employe; and Mrs. Jean Le-
- - — - Doux Sammis, believed to be
successor, Michael
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS store for the whole state with
Twin cold fronts smote Texas the mercury down to 10 degrees
Saturday with a surprise bliz- above zero in the Panhandle,
zard that caused crippling,' Drifting snow blocked some
blowing snow in the Panhandle roads in the Panhandle for a
and blowing dust in the South while.
Plains At Perryton, near the Texas-
All through the state, balmy, Oklahoma border, police said
spring-like temperatures started highways south to Canadian and
a retreat. A cold Sunday was in Pampa were blocked by two to
—---—--------.—■—:------— | three feet of snow as late as
a specialist had been summoned
from New-York in the middle of
the night — he had his own ven
an annual meeting at L1111 el "The picture of cfose knit as-
stanraguests will con. sociationI Chad previously seei
vene at 7 p.m. The installation
will be conducted by Brig. H. A.
Anderson of Beaumont, Theme
Director Ed Lovelace wi 11 overcoming them.
Directors of the Texas Elec-
in November 1963. ” j ings Association of Orange were
Paratroopers clashed with reported at $2,311,411 as of Dec.
- 31, 1964, during the second an-
nual meeting of stockholders,
officials announced yesterday. cies, road service Stations and
--------r— ... —------... During the meeting, directors hospital emergency rooms,
day's unrest. A mob of youths and officers were re-elected. Di- i. .. .. ..."
rectors are Donald E. .Cohen- lion pieces of CB equipment are
our, Davis Cooper, H. Wayne in use in this country and that
Cox, Walter R. Ebanka, Homer ,
en . , k The mob in Hue surged into about 800 demonstrators at Sai-
™ thousand persons in the city of the agency building, drenched ( ■
60 Nha Trang, 200 miles northeast about half the library’s books and squads
6 of Saigon. The crowds dispersed with gasoline and set them afire, ''
m by evening but more trouble officials reported.
year, and members sug- traditi
‘ sin which better •"
Although the President had
the best in medical attention —
Firemen used foam to douse split a seam because of the
on— flames around nearby petroIe-'beat, and spewed fuel through-
loned um storage tanks and kept them out the area. Another tank was ________ ________
'-----reported steaming and its paint Vinton City Councilpost in the
:l past-14 days was reported yes-
Many homes in a government terday as W. P. (Spinner) Patin
' "eim “ klue-h—51, of East Street here.
Patin announced' his candi-
tected channels limited to
Y
Axelson
“aEmI •nua DIM, -V, I
, , • wx,- down with colds Friday, and
“It may be a lesson I ought to monies Wednesday, and the had gone to Camp David Md.,
. Ma didn* finieh * — President didn’t wear a topcoat so they could keep the President
^•herforhisspeech or for the from catching their
-. . - • Johnson figures that’s where he
_______... industry disclosed Saturday safety groups ____ ____ -
former Claudia Freyou of Jen- plans for a nationwide mobile emergency communications fa-
A t V Inton He began to feel bad Friday
' — [night, “primarily from the tic-
VINTON (Son Navor W A bling in my throat,” the Presi-
VINTON <bpi>-.xayor w A . ., ... temnerature wen
Then they sacked the top floor inside the headquarters com-
There was widespread specu- of the building, extensively
ition that Communist agents damaging the offices of the Viet
“I believe,” wrote laian Mac-
leod, former Tory Cabinet min-
ister, “in guerrilla raids, in con-
centrated assaults on weak
ministers, in occasional planned
setpiece attacks on the Labor
party in general and the prime
minister in particular.”
All this martial metaphor re-
lated to parliamentary, tactics
, e . _ . and to the fact that Prime Min-
yon left the state park Fri-1 The Associated Press Manag- ister Harold Wilson’s Labor par.
light when the blizzard ing Editors Association will hold ty, whose House of Commons
r. Panhandle, whlle 4 its annual convention at the margin is now shaved to three
, fron. Plainviewadecided Jack Tar Hotel here next Sat- votes, could find itself in deep
nAhtts Aethem iM ncots urday, Sunday and Monday. trouble mustering the necessary
"My resistance was awfully Twa railroad box cars and
low,” he said. He had been1 truck were seen burning.
The tanks belong to Standard l„„ ........ LJu. ..n
and. other oil companies and ham” son of Mr. andMrs.“or-
military bases. The port of An- ace Bickham, was exhibiting a
. _____________________ chorage and the Alaska Rail- U.S. flag at a Cub Scout Pack
lions commission license for the road terminal yards are near-
by.
of the advisory board meeting wideooric. enane
will be a "century, of Service wide service blending.
to God and Man” which empha
HELP for highway emergency
locating plans, calls for use of communications system
citizens band two-way radio acute.
The Democratic committee, esda Md
composed of H. J. Moore, Dr. I or’ the congestion in
W. F. Brooks and E W. Sieg, throat, the President said:
will meet Feb. 2, 1965, and "I notice it‛s a little
name a definite date in April now.”
tions within the 10 to 20 mile quires no Federal Communica-
radius of the equipment. f.y.y S..iu. .. •
Monitors would include volun- operator.
broadcast an appeal for all per-
X vitopoiraxatngegredaORANGE JUICE
neprovement project at Orange-
field in Orange County. .
Apparent low bidders on the fifth
The APME- membership is votes to stay in office.
Don made up of editors of all leading This new tilt to the British
lark Texas daily newspapers which political scene came with the
lerifr’sjuse services of The Associated surprise defeat of Gordon Walk.
I" er Thursday in a special elec-
ment, Gordon Walker had to
may resign as foreign secretary Fri-
Longshoremen are reported
[1 im- asking an 86-cent an hour boost
BANG — Then there was the
A tower of smoke several hun- Blue Bird leader who had an
alligator explode in her oven.
It’couldf’t stand the heat. It's
WINDS: Northerly IK m p.h. tdoy
9n0phBvoM*"*mcon
80 1m pm,, "ows ot 4:45 o.m, ad
PESrERDA_Temperatures: hdgh 73,
awr A.
£ W hasbsn.purshasc.ax Merv"fwasaritnsrgam;
for several years. He is pre-
_ . - . _ . .. misently on the board of directors
engineer at Orange for the THDof Gray Memorial Hospital AS-
said barring unusual circum:socation and is secretry-treas-
stances, construction should urer of the board
Aiming Knockout Blow
Walker’s .
-ive Infiltrated the Buddhist Nam American Association, a
campaign to oust Hueng and private group that sponsors
study programs for Vietnamese'them.
Standard Oil Co. of California, kou -ouo, uuneveu 1 ve
said the blaze started when gas the first woman ever to seek
' trem a broken pump casing political office here.
caught fire. "u “ "
The heavens opened up Fri- Sa
day and the rains fell in what day -
eertainly could be labeled as a struck
“sure nuff frog strangler!” fourth fi
A total of 6.08 inches fell10 stay at ■’ . .. .00-
within a 544- urday night. Ahother 180 scouts
hour period were camping inlean-to’s at
and it ad d s improved sites in Samp Lo
up to liter-Harrington, also in theP
ally thousands The Potter .County sh .
and thousands office reported.drifts, up.t06
of ganons nf (eet around Amarillo homes;
1 w ater Sev from a general 4 inch fall. -v
* era! tubfuls if’ High water from general rains. cedi)
’ vou trerr to at midWeek still had one Cen-gest .
thinker if 1 tral Texas farm road closed in statewide «
immt 01 it in Milam County. Floods subsided*be handled.
on creeks in Central and South | Ben Basset
(See WEATHER, Page 7) eign edior
gon and there was a report
protest march involving several
60 thousand
spread over the life.of the con-
tract. The demand is six cents
higher than that received by
dockoworkers in New York,
which the union says is neces-
sary to qualize dock wages
here and in New Orleans.
Stowe said hvas meeting
separately with thermion and
shippers. N
Some 4,800 dock workers In
day.
Making a preliminary inspec-
___, , — 2 - — tion of his office was Gordon
principal speaker at the annual Walker's
banquet Sunday at noon
Venissatwannouncednxesterday up, so at 2:26 a.m. Saturday
that he Will be a candidate for M’L.nR +,1. Li. # ,
re - election in the Democratic ambulance took him from
Venissat, who has been mayor by an old-fashioned cough sy-
shce 1949. will be seeking his lrup. "Brown's Mixture," and he
An explosion was heard for a didate, has been employed for
distance of .about two miles at the past four years as a pipefit-
the outset of the fire. Other ex- te " " ' cneete She
plosions, believed to be small ing Co. at Orange. He pi
oil cans and drums, were heard ously worked in oil fields in
later. N Ce" V------- ----------
Damage was unofficially esti.
mated at $500,000.
nation's newest service acad-
emy, following start of ’ the
probe last Monday.
1 Individual cadets brushed
aside questions about the inves-
tigation, but a spokesman for
the academy said, “They are
disturbed and embarrassed
about this. They aren't saying
’ much, but I know they want any
cadets that have violated the
honor code to clear out.” '
This is the first time the
finger of scandal has been point-
ed at the 10-year-old school.
The probe is being made by Air.
Force officers flown here from
other bases — "qualified inves-
tigetors," Haney called them.
The academy in its original
announcement Tuesday said it
of the Viet streets but the paratroopers -------
pushed them back, hurling C Haworth. James N. Neff,
cover for attacks on American students. Cost at the damage 000 recreation building plus
...... has not been assessed. twP new swimming pools.
Witnesses said there was no1 Others were.a $500,000 grayity
drainage system and a paving
and blacktopping program.
project were the Austin Bridge opposed in the 1961 election. He anywhere from three to five
Co. of Dallas and the Spindietop entered politics as an alder- days.
' ' man, serving from 1945-48. He
On FM
ng AUSTIN (Spl) - colstruction
may start within 30 days on
the long-awaited FM 105 Im-
"I wouldn’t hesitate right now last, two days,
to put on my britches and go
back to the office iPthere was
something that needed to be
done,” Johnson told reporters
Saturday about his sudden Ik
f . ’ T-
E - ■ • - 4
L —2e.
Dozens of oil tankers on rails stripes,” he said, then, glancing
were moved from the scene, at the flag, he said, “I mean 50
Mobil Oil Co. moved away its stars and . .
the Internatfenal longshore-
then was justice of peace until
he resigned to run for mayor.
A Vinton businessman, he is George E. Reedy told report-
vice president of the Ward 7 ers: “Joe doctors say he is in
- ------- .... ------ _ Recreation Commission and a 'excellent shape - couldn’t be
new, wider bridge on FM 106 director of the Vinton Optimist doing better. He is responding
acrnec /nu Ravna and a new Club He * is now serving as verv well in the treatment ”
president of the Sam Raybum
at noon Saturday for a surprise
bedside news conference. They
found him hoarse but re-
m mI . splendent in fireman’s red paja-
Ko.Wloctior mas trimmed in black, with a
—E-UT white handkerchief peeping
from the breast pocket.
overland in
this country in sheets you’ve got
trouble. As far as it could be
“^determined no homes in the
Orange municipal area flooded.
Although the new Cooper's
______________ rooms. i _ . —g
AMA said that over two mil- necessitate assignment of pro-
Premier Tran Van Huong
That's handling a fall of urged his people “not to be rr-----
inch per hour of 12 inches in dragged into this monkey busi- the streets.'
24. You of course can handle ness” in a desperate radio ap- radio addre
Ged-Vinton area for 30 years,
In response to a question as
to why he was seeking election,
The fire department sum- Patin commented, “I am not
moned all its men and equip- pleased with the way things are
' ......... (See PATIN, Page 7)
N •
...______________ _________ emergency automobile use. The dredfeet high was visible over
most of them can both receive auto industry Is petitioning the a wide area in the sunny, 20- __________________ .0
and transmit messages. FCC to study a proposal for as- degree weather before the early tail blew to pieces. Don’t jump
AMA said'the plan grew out signment of two such clear Alaska nightfall closed over the tn any conclusions, it
of a growing concern by govern- channels to HELP, [scene. day alligator.
his ment mediator, said the 51
.Ua, .oueSalu. cents is a package deal of portance with the gang'si:
“I notice it’s a little better wages and other benefits.
3,000 demonstrators.
“The Viet Cong encourage
people to demonstrate andsikin
iha ctreets," Huong said‘in his
radio address. "They hire hood-
lums to derhonstratt-.-at the U.S.
Embassy among' other places.
“At this solemn hour, the life They threw stones at the police knifesintoshimself.but.apparent-
of । nation 1S in the people s friendly country. The Buddhists have threatened
“They did this with the object to renew the wave of fire sui- At Annual Meet
s of breaking up an international cides. that led to the ouster of
saine Pureat took 10 the streets for the se- friendship. They did this dis- the Ngo Dinh Diem government
Partly, cloudy ond straight day in Hue andSSi- guised as monks leading a • "-----•-----
nonro"' gon and there was a repor of a group of curious persons.”
sue,” a union spokesman sal
Reedy said that barring any-
thing unforeseen; there would
be no frther reports on the
President's eondition until 10
.LONDON (AP) - Conserva-
tives, jubilant at the overthrow
of Foreign Secretary Patrick
Gordon Walker, sought ways
Saturday to. slam a knockout
blow at the rolling Labor gov-
ernment. . N
A mood of eager belligerence
swept over the Conseryative
party, which until recently
looked hesitant and ill at easei
opposition.
said he has had pneumonia six [presidential cold, but three but
-1, hacking cough and budget message goes up to Cap’ tninkighe hmmorantdouthetwhsagfoproriythe Johnsons are feel-
.5^ blarm sa k if thelr
for the big inaugural cere- -— —uk‛ ., "‛tE '
Amounting to 51 tCents
Gulf Longshoremen Reject Offer
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View 27 places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 19, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1965, newspaper, January 24, 1965; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1619282/m1/1/?q=1966+yearbook+north+texas+state+university: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.