The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 19, 1961 Page: 1 of 38
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HUMAN DIGNITY
Talk of school district merg-
ers again will become a top
news subject here soon, and
today’s Around Town column on
the editorial page cites the
need for considering the feel-
ings of adversaries, because
they believe intensely in their
positions, be it pro or con.
The Orange Leader
•VOL. LVIil—-NUMBER 43
Member Associated Press
ORANGE, TEXAS, SUNDAY/ FEBRUARY 19, 1961
38 Pages 10 Cents SUNRISE EDITION
INSIDE TODAY
CLASSIFIED............ 23, 24, 25
SPORTS ...... 12. IS, 14, 15
TOWN TALK.......... 17
DEAR ABBY________17
DR MOLNER ... 22
CHURCH DEDICATION _____ 17
FFA FEATURE ...... .... «, 7
POST
SCRIPTS
to the
NEWS
U.S. Restarts Satellite Engine In Orbit! Your County Road Debt
;T:
i
By BOB AXELSON
A battle of Qian's—one gnarled,
and old — the other a vigorous
stripling is being' waged in .haihj
ways, meeting rooms and -hotel h
lobbies thif. gvij.-k in the' State* Cap-
itol at .Austin.
Tho victor in-
ties • legislative
contest can have
eventually a pro-
found effect on
‘the future of Or-
ange ami the en-
ure Sab ne Area.
I'or c-vpr half a
Century, rural
int l ; • j:ts have!
dominated the!
State l.egisla-j
ture. They rep--;
resented the econora c interests ini .,. ,
power—along with the gas *nd f
oil lobby of course.
Since the end of World War TT
Its Military
Significance
Pointed Out
. 'EDITOR'S NOTE—Ttila is Oit'fliV
of a series of factual articles on the
road and bndge deficit of the Orange
County Government ) ' •
AIR
r , How would you feel if you woke
! up some New Year s Day in his
I predicament: ,
! You are going to need every
i nickel of your income to meet cur-
rent expenses for the next six or
seven years . .
| Rut during that time you. are
j supposed to pay off debts amount*
FORCEling to $433,757. .
TUM
Vfti
* ft,. j
/v.£
tr
ft
j YANDFftBERG
■ BASE', Calif. (AP) — Discoverer! Especially If SH8.8B9 of this debt
\ |XXI shot into orbit Saturday, then was due the day you woke up . . .
"ft!—by restarting its engine* on a! And if you already had drawn
■'',ignaf from the ground — showed in advance $34,562 of your income.
• ihow currently passive sky spies for the current year.....
'I
-4
¥1
jean be converted into maneuvera
hie military space craft.
: The Air.Force said this was' the
first time an Agena B. satellite
vehicle had been restarted in or-
bit.
AXELSON
p:
the Texas population has shifted
to .cities and its oiTtiying metro-
politan periphery. In short the
outlook has changed from rural to
urban and suburban. Legislative
action d d not kc.-p ]race.
With this horde of people, sub-
divisions spread outward. Chi -s'
beoarne hard pressed to supply
the customary sendees ordi-
narily associated‘with municipal
life At the same time, there.was
a spillover with h ruses being
concentrated just cut. de city
boundaries. The term—bedroom
communities.
Most Texas cities—particularly
those with the court til - manager
system—are keenly aware of the
advantages of planning. Annexa-
tions of surrounding territory be-
gan apace particularly in the on- .
where cities had home rule char j
tors. In these instances no elec-
tive permission was required from
residents within the. area.
The above paragraph Is at
best a kindly look at annexation.
In subsequent years, city offi-
cials became concerned about
elbow room, blackmail annexa-
tion of industry for tax purposes
and jockeying for dominance.
Orderly annexation in short be-
came outright land grabs
1
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MISS ORANGE PAGEANT FINAL’STS COMPETE FRIDAY NIGHT
Shown (left to right) are .Miss Lockarf, Miss Richardson, Miss Ketchell, Miss Paul, Miss Gryden
■ m*
?■.. fJSr
I* A
—leader Photo bv BNlie June Murphy
And if you had to meet $36,352
in installment payments during he
12 months just ahead?
Orange County’s taxpayers —
for the'most part not realizing it
—were in that predicament when
The Agera engine was ignited' woke up on New Years Day)
nr. the satellite’s first puvs aroundi1 .ft,,,, !_
the earth's poles. I lh,s IS 3 Puhl|c debt of the typeiTeresf.
Mai. Gen. O. j. Ritland. com-1 knowrt to accountants as a deficit i Commissioners
mand.-r of the Air Force Missile
Along ,-with about $3,352 in in-
Court already
It is owed by the Orange County; has announced its intention to bor-
Government’s road and bridge1 row $41),(XX) more mpney next
funds, 'May. If if does, the installment
And it is not just a debt of the I part of the road and bridge de-
road and bridge precincts.. It is licit will be bigger at the end of
owed by the taxpayers of Orange j 1961 than at the beginning.
County. They’re going to have toj .Some of the bills which made up
pay it off from' property taxes to the $96,86!) due last New Year’s
be levied by the county govern-j Day already have been paid. The
ment for- road and bridge pur-(remainder will be paid before the
poses. , . j end of the year.
While it is being paid off, thei But these payments have been
1 Speed up! Tinw down or dart mnnev komR for retirement of the or will be made with money that
off in anoncr direction to dodge'debt wi!l not be available to build would have been available tor
or repair roads and bridges. It huilding or repairing roads and
has been spent. (bridges during this year if these
A n the h:jh-flving.U2 plane shot . Moreover, $291,484 of this debt, bills had not been owed.
d:;v.n by the Soviet Union last IS draw ing interest at rates .aver- TTiat’s why the b.lfe have to be
sprjnR ■ aging 3round 5 per cent a vear. included ir. the road and bridge
' 2. Chance the shape, altitude or! Th'j inu'r,esl als0 is /omg to have fund deficit. If they were not.fthe
w" ----- taxpayers would have an mac-
Divisien, said that Saturday's at-
tempt was only to test the restart
system.
“It is another successful expe-
riment to perfect the system for
satellii • stabilization am! control
in orbit.” the general said.
No attemo4 to recover any part
of the satellite will be made.
A satellite capable of restarting
its eroine in spare cr.Uld:
a ballistic missile sent To destroy pf rfta
it. It would be much harder to hit1 already
Five Lovelies Remaining
In Miss Grange
By BILLIE JUNE MURPHY f Miss Ketchell presented ‘‘A the contestants who have a host:
Five contestants to compete in<Search for Talent” skit in which: of friends in the .Orange County
the final 1261 Miss Orange Pageant j she did a jazz dance, comedy rou-j area. The Jaycees hope that ail off
Such grabs as opposed to fhejwere selected from 15 talented; tine, dramatic'reading and played! these friends will turn out to lend;
necessity for orderly planning and; and attractive entrants in preii mi- j the piano. (personal support for the caadi-!
that of rural dominance are allinaries Friday night in Stark High] Aliss Richardson presented abates cf their choice at the Fri-
intermmgied in pending corrective! School auditorium before a pack-; mlmber which she call-cl ’’From'dav ’show.”
legislative measures. The House, ed audience. i the Classics Came Jazz.” She'gave! Sharon Arnold, Mft Orange of
Municipal and Private Corpora- They arc Dune Ketchell, Ottr-t* classical rendition oh the piano! I960, will place the crown upon tk«
tions Committee late this week. Jotte Richardson, Nora Paul, Ina”3nj performed a modern jazz head of hep successor. The Orange
beard testimony on two annex-si*; Jean Lockart and Rose Ella cisnet* To fht* accompaniment of ’^vinrid* w ill bo .eligible to compote
tion bills. The aim in part-to put; dor. Contestants were judged onthe Tieer sh()w Band directed fey'in the Miss. Texas' Pageant sched-
ule reins on galloping municipal the basis of beauty which • countedjJoe peneke * * ’ j uied later in the year in Beau-
land expansion. ,20 per cent; poise, grace and in- Miss Pau| modeled four season.- mont
Each sets up buffer zones around; tejiigence, 30 per cent; and talent, al fats which she had constructed
(See P.S., Page II)
1 50 per cent.
Strike Goes Into 10th Day
At Crown-Zeilerbach Plant
and displayed; seasonal paintings
with each hat.
Miss Lockarf played ‘‘Grieg's
Piano Concerto in A Minor.” Miss'
Gryder modeled a garment she!
■ had constructed called the "Littlej
'Black Dress.” -She showed how
! accessories could be added to
j change it for any occasion.
These five, girls will compete for
j the Miss Orange crown in the final
A strike went into Its 10th day; said, “To management, this is still; pageant scheduled Friday at
today at the ' ‘ ~ _' ‘ . '
bach plastic film processing plant (been made that some employes jorium under • sponsorship of
n ^ T oool tVw-y 1 uioro nn^anmt KorailCo /NVArt i m P i (")M TIPP .laVFPPS
Judges Friday niebt for the pre-
(See PAGEANT, Page 11)
Thank You . . .
thank You . . .
Thank You. . .
Reader response to our offer
to sell the "You CAN Get Bet-
ter Grades” booklet has been
tremendous The same has been
true with alxiut 350 other news-
papers.
Result: We have temporarily
exhausted our supply, but have
another shipment due in soon.
Pending orders will be filled
when it arrives.
Meantime, the series of 13 ar-
ticles based oh the booklet have
Been run. But we are Still ac-
cepting orders for the booklet
and will continue to do so. They
will be mailed to you as soon
as received.
angle of its orbit on command. |K> be taken nut of money that
W'cr perfected it could over- otherwise would be available to curate picture of how much money
haul other satellites for inspec-'-^j* and repair roads and they owed last Jan. I
i tion pvrn inff*rc<vr)t pnfrnv ICBIVI*? I bridge's. TnC S2HT16 IS CTu6 Oi $34,vo3 Jl
Abl(i to rendezvous in snare a A part of that $291,4S4 — about»tax money collected last year for
'group of such satellites could loini*32-000 ~ Wi» be paid off out of: road and bridge work during 1WI
to form a way station for inter- m -ney collected m 1360 for this; but PnortoDec. to. I960-
olanetarv travel. years ebunty road and bridge (TOMORROW: We’re still
— . . . fund budget ... fighting the Civil War!)
i There has been some specula- ------ -------:—
tion that the recent Soviet Venus
.rocket demonstrated a restart ca-
pability but Soviet announcements
were too meager for accurste
judgment.
Discoverer XXI, the second
launched in 27 hours, roared into
the skv at 2:58 p.m.
The‘launching was delayed sev-
eral hours to make sure that Dis-
coverer XXt fired Friday, was far
out of range. *. WASHINGTON (AP)—The de-1 revised fiscal 1962 bill.
To newsmen 4,000 .feet away.Tense budget, as revised by the; First of these items is addition
Discoverer XXI appeared JittlejKennedy administration for the of 55 jet and propjet transport
different from earlier rockets in.next fiscal year, may approach
the workhorse series. . or exceed the peak spending in
Its-first stage was the custom-the Korean War.
ary medium-range Thor missile, j The estimate for the .year start-
Its 2,i()0--pp,und second stage, aiding next July 1, as submitted to
destined to'go into orbit, was six'Congress by the Eisenhower ad-
New Defense Budget
May Top Korean War
(See SATELLITE, Page II)
By Civil Service Board
Ex-Officer's Bid for Reinstatement Rejected
By BERT BREWER | Vice Chairman
Members of the Orange Civil poinu,d 6ut t.hat
Fred
Anderson
local Crown Zeller- a mystery, although mention, hast8 p.m. in Stark High School aud:- Service Commission Friday n-ght j i;.n;ariiv qu t. rpd s:nce the attention to the vacancy of assist-
the, rejected the request of a former c;. jS(,rviC(, beard could not hire ant chief which now exists in the. president" and’his "budget, makers'; IG. Cobh is the fourth candidate
ministration, was $42.9 billion.
(Speculation is that additions to
(this may range up to $2 billion.
(Such a boost would top the $43.7
:billion military budget in fiscal
1953, peak spending year of the
-Korean War.
! . At the Pentagon, Secetary of
j Defense Robert S. McNamara and
j his aides are working up a new
Trimble mission from Police Chief Ken.KV,!, KeS’uSiTtfilYs
had nerh B. Green, called the ho,,daft”te,ft ™ rhe' “
and turned
planes for troop and cargo airlift.
Respondibg to the President’s
request, the Pentagon—like other
federal departments — is trying to
eliminate spending for items or
organizations that have become
obsolete. ’ ■ 4
Bridge City
Race Draws
New Entry
BRIDGE CITY’ (Spt) - Williard
end of this
over to the
as workers of Local 4-23 Vf the!were unhappy because overtime| Orange Jaycees. (police officer for immediate rein- nV "fT* cnvrne ^it* had "no "oower • police department. M,B(President and his budget; makers,. . t trustee
Oil. Chemical and At*mic Workers had been reduced." . I Pageant Chairman Pearce Bene-'statement as superintendent of ft, act upon* the'request Trimble I Civil service commission mpn, !no, flrm of ™!lM Innsts on the Bridoe" Citv School
Uninn fAFLKilol maintained nick- He p.int^ that in 25 jmars’ke said yesterday. -The pasE,n,|id™,iliM.i»h. |“T,'. ”'pS?M pr.-taift &“ -tafiMto S?Ap
* f Rla,'ons Ndvten Western-Wax-, vmII be televised bv Channel 4 and! Th» .« its regular:under the present civil service job;meeting 'were Chairman W. . E.lmoves,**made ift response to Ken-! election:
et. lines. |of relations between Western-Wax-; will be televised by Channel 4'and The commission, in .... ........
There has been no change since|lde and many unions elsewhere this will give patrons an oppor-lmonthly session, ruled -that it"was;classifications Stephens. Director J. D StanfiHd Tiedv's’request for accelerated"a"c-1 • Cobb,-"^40, a native of Tyler
pickets were posted Feb n at the num of the locals had ever cal.etl am; y to seclive^television show;n0t. withm the pov.: r of the board; And(.r.son-3 u-.,ter a!s0 included.Trimble, and Cliff Eaves. Police tion in delense programs, obvious-1 County, has resided in Orange
CZ’s Western-Waxide Division fa- a «^4 • •. ... i“,' lst,Dem8 proc™cedft , t0 ^instate Charles Andersen, 32- a reqUest to be placed on the re-! Chief Green and Fire Chief Veriis.lv will cost more mdney which County for the past 19 years,
ctlity. During this interim period, ArpI£ea p, i B.v the same token these fmais year-old former patrolman who inMaU,inpnt proper seni-1 Sands were also present. presumably would appear in the! He is married and the father of
plant operations have-continued
Negotiations on a new contract
Were expected to be resumed this
Wednesday at 9:39 am. at the.
Jack Tar Orange House. With the;
dispute now In its second week,
Plant Mgr. Art Aronsen issued a
Statement yesterday clarifying the-
management position.
According to Aronsen, the OCAW
and management began bargain-
of vital importance to each of resigned cfl'enive Jan. 1.
More Now Than When Alive
(See S1RIKE, Page II) alc v, uun impurtanee w eacn orresignea enecuve ,ian. I or;tv m the even: ho was not im-
mediately placed on active duty. {
This request was also refused by
th'e board. .
♦ ’ The present chief of police is
trying !u upgrade the department,
in my .opinion,” Trimble said,
“and you can’t run a department
by having a vdfi* or4 discussion
even' time a. man quits. I’m not
iUj, on urron contract nrooosals Co”«° «» Po*rie.' LomW-s'Wcrth » |nli.,es ha"d back to the Con-Tus degree. These included Con- inclined to take men back once
HI'.1,’ -contact assessed bv on Associated Press statt igolese the. huge territory, some! golese, advisers from Guinea and; they quit,”
Jan. At the conclusion of that] writer who in four years in Africa 900,000 square miles, that had sortie Belgian Communists.
Lumumba's Death Hay Have Lasting Influence
EDITOR S NOTE-The Impact
meeting, it was agreed.to resume
negotiations Feb. 22.
- “This agreement to resume ne-
gotiations was-made between man-
agement negotiators and George
Cowart, .international representa-
tive of the OCAW and his commit-
SSSSSr* ,he nse of ,hc "ery Co-,co,*“ |h«m taken over by King Leopold' An,0ine Gizenga.
Ill in. 1885.
Bv LYNN HEINZERI ING
LONDON (AP)
shadow of
premier, while
Lumumbas first act was an un-1traineef Communist, was Marxist
! Tiie board was unanimous in its,
his deputy den d of both the requests madeioverseas airlines returned to full!were
not -realty a by Abdorson. (boom late Saturday after a Pres-(hours
Strike of Flight Engineers
Returns to Previous Force
NEW YORK (AP) - A Bight] Thousands of persons milled] t- f fh Brids,- rifv ftchool
engineers’ strike against six oL around airports across the nation t " Jl JT t ft‘f. ” .
4 domestic and waitinc for fliuhts that ewmfuailv Dlstrict fQr fourJ5ars.’
four children, three of whom are
attending Bridge City School.
The Cobb family, which resides
at 235 Quincy St., has lived in
j Bridge City about six years. Cobb
(has been employed by Du Pont
for the past 15 years where he is
a maintenance foreman.
He is a member of the Bridge
City Church of Christ and has
served on the board of equaliza-
tion for
the nation's, major domestic and! waiting for flights that eventually
canceled or delayed for
by the strike action
and
In announcing his candidacy.
Cobb said, “I am well acquainted
darken the troubled Congo and all go. Stiff ’ Belgian officials sat
central Africa for many years, (aghast as Lumumba shattered the
i merit.
with the growing pains which this
_ , . .school district has a bad case of
The temporary settlement sp- arld j think the grovvina win con.
P-.M - d near about noon when of- tiljUe for vfarS t0 comv«
...... the UI1!0n order0d| Cobh added. “Serving on the
;esman for the ,3..tOO-. fjciais of the union ’ordered
tee of Crown employes now on, Dead at 35( the. poSta, clerkiaughst ocrasum'"iiaudouhV looked h^s '4^ "‘,v h'att';nv1"1 ,isJ maiti“* him‘ cnl'f. i ITSfe' livu'el-e ripping to return to
strike,” Aronsen said. J turned politician may exert more on in fury. “ . ' ^nenr n The Con ' bi<? tQ bC reh,red' lt was nomt*,d,r‘ “ .....-‘4 ........-.....° ,a- 4 - 4 1
He continued, f nm nmnzed inf]\j£ncg on the future’ of the* But tvDic«ftl of the v’olut'le Lu- ur u 4* k- ■ if
i_*ypical.._Y^Lal*ie,established himself ,n ^an.ey- Hart had quit. 4 bringing the engineers back
^ /
mumba, he raised a toast to R^iu-;vflle, Lumumba's. stronghold. But
douin and 4 the noble Belgian peo- Gizenffa is from Leopoldville
pie at another function a 1 fewprovjnce bis hold on the Con--
(hours later. Innlese of Oriental Province .is
Anicet Kashamura was another
the -method used bv the ^ Of AW Congo than he* ever could have
Tt’s hard to believe that after ono]as an audacious, unpredictable,
meeting and with another meet-dictatorial-minded political lead-
ing arranged bv both parties for er. ’ inours rnier. | .
Feb. 22, the OCAW would disre- j'he Congolese people, free ati .Then, within a few days," Lu-'k^uJ
■gar d - mmmaJ-. coiled!ye _b a r g a in i n g [.j a s t after centuries of tribal fight- (mumba ■/launched the campaign, ft
procedures and instead select nr-‘-(4i"hj-| Hrtf !nu ’imirmniitni nP() !that resulted in panic and the! Anl, . , , . .,
strike method.” jond-rate status, .are- in no of Belgians from, (fa- member .of Lumumbas Cabinet.
In reference to, n question as to-for the kind of military dictator- Congo.— jminis.er ol information, who was
why the strike was ordered, - he j ship Lumumba seemed-to’have, in j From the beginning, jLumurift^^iL^WSciose advisers. He also
—.....................mind. ba’s closest advisers included!^*41
| Left alone to stumble toward-Marxists and left wingers in vari- ,n>Pc- a.though, he (homed- tq
their own solution of their prob- —-----*-------ibe a Socialist Kashamura was not
■_ .. „ items..-the Congolese would soon
... . W I forget the long-legged Lumumba.
.....^.^IrJschooi' ^ard-i, thne "consum[ng.
He has out that t!v>. was the second iime"|haw an^SjiS KU^sT^uest'tor
ffaia rinninporc Kar’lr 4r)- j _ _____
p'liftand that a person must have an
• ;a tfa educational pro-
A letter to the civil service com-(work.
PARTLY CLOUDY
Seccrsd Candidate Enters
West Oraijge Council Race
cial board studied the labor dis-
I agreement.
j .It was Pan American flight en-
| cineers who touched off the strike
Friday night at New York’s Idle-
wild Airport in a dispute over a
reduction of work time for the en-
gineers.
The walkout soon mushroomed
across the, nation as flight engi-
neers for other carriers began to
His hold on the/imagination of the
‘Congolese was always precarious.
He had long since lost contact
with the powerful tribal figures
who sit placidly in the beck-
ground ruling the lives of the vast
majority of the 14 million Congol-
ese..
Blit the Communist bloc is not
I am willing to give of my
time and am sincerely interested
in the. education of our youth,’*
he concluded.
Terms expire in April for Thom-
as E. (F.ddie) Cone and Guy O.
Rascoe. Those filing for places in
this election are Cone, Jess R.
Thames and Lee Alford. Rascoe
has not filed for re-election.
Candidates must file with the
Pinehurst Voters
Will Select Two
Aldermen April 4
report sick or failed to report at board secretary, Mrs. Bess Cox,
by March 1 at 6 p.m.
ORANGE JUICE ]
outlook—”arViyS clowvh,rnnauro<,l,iiit|c4ikely to let the Congolese forget:-’Mermen in
=ajL: second candidate for a-West [a Beaumont pipe’and pressure ves-
Sw*72ltbocor;.rpij,c2'S:i,,,.
(the Communist lanas. terday at the city hall. inumcipaTajHi-they have five children. j Airline 'officials immediately
} Nevertheless, once in office, he officials reported In comments on his ‘candidacy.|termed the stoppage an -illegal;
freely gave time on Leopoldville | He is Lloyd I .a Grone; 32, of (La Crone said yesterday. “One of; walkout — and injunctions.-were,
radio to propaganda handed over!23)7/Hilton St.• The first coimni-' my primary campaign planks is;sought bv several lines to force" ,
ihv Marxists. Kashamura knew;man. candidate who turned in an opposition to any additional tax in--] the engineers back to work, PRACTICAL •— That• the view
little,-about the -’job assigned to!«pf>licaitK-n earlier .was Glenn F. creases by the city ginernmen*; shorriv after the stoppage erun*- of a sixth grade student at Dewey-
him and still less about the rigid| Sandlin. Sandlin s'erved for l'ft at the present time. Sdsne rest* ed again, a federal:court order,ydle school who had an answer
rules, of Communist, propaganda ,.cars as a councilman during the dents of-West Orange mavfte able was issued in Brooklyn barring thej'or hl* teacher wnrte playing a
While freeing the air waves fm- administration -of Mayor Eiwood to afford higher taxes, but Tkiv'wv flight .engineers union from ,en; wxro game fast week. Four words
Pinehurst voters will elect two (Communist propaganda he also] pierce.- 'bw-mairtrUv mnt.ni ■* , ant-inn in strikes or
’ the coming electiori(gave time to the an/fi-Communist ]
i m'-maiority cannot.” ( gaging in strikes or refusing to were given him which w e r,e
W.est Orange voters vviil elect _a, He continued, 4 I feel that the (accept flight assignments. ; .’/spent., weary, 4 fatigue,
....ivor ' and two- counciimen on /equipment we now have to main-' Judge Leo F. RayfiePs order .ana < tireless, wnen^ rne teacner
... .......... , at’April I. I'.-rnts expire for Vaybrftaih our roads — if pit into* con-(forbttde tl ■ engineers to strifc.br- etayxUiim to select the one which
tides—Sabine- high/s 31 am «•» I dependence and his quarrel with according to Mrs. M. L. McGowan, news conferences .that Lumumba,: Jack’ Etheridge and Council men stant use -n we could use avail-, fore- Feb, 28 and called for a hear- had a.-ditf?rent meaning from tna
p.m., low, 11:10 am, saz p.m. Bolivar. n,e United Nations were m?de to i City secretary. The only candidate (finally ordered him to discontinue Ginn I- Sede .and H. R. Mvers able tax money now coming in bring I eb 27 on the injunction pc .tnreeot tiers, ne cnose tireless.
7-ii' a'm“ 1:20 p'm,i low' 1:04 a’m'' folder for Moscow-propaganda and in fh< race thus far is Aldermanlthem;. A frail, smiling man, Kas- r,, : dat si •..•'op- a blacktoppirig program, tit ion filed »S Pan American, / • uhv r*“nl,«14 W"H-
° jilfjii. i: id u.s.‘r»rxn Mm Mor.,vimnihflmnn nhcprvnrc in -• * ' u ^ » 1 L - -J------ - u:a ^ i
installed .
. ___. . | . w., , -• I n,ccn UI an ft.1 UIU.IJI h_i C1V-VL _« , nt: umumu
cooler through Monday. High "today' 75!(Lumumba. His life and death, his, April ). jprograms of moral, rearmament.i-mavor and two counciimen on/equipment we
Northwest to north winds 16-18 m.p.h. be-!attacks Oil the Belgians after in-! rw>oeltin» fnr filiner ic March - Kashamura was so inent af.,A.,,-.ii - - ----- —“
Harmon, Mrs.
"SUti—pses 6:5? am., sets 6:09 p.m. j infiltration. ft, -tL. B.
tides—Sabine: high, T58 a.nv. 1:14., Lumumba was installed as.said.
HiX: :premier W.30, I960, in an im-( Terms expire this y.-ar f.- both in- Bukavu • cntlv to take over
*.04 p.m. ipressive cerempnv’ in Leopoldvdl- Harmon and John Adams Candi- Kivu Province for (he deposed
-vie7er2?A5:52‘ °Tmri ■*", 6 09 £& 7. ‘attended bv Baudouia, long of the dates m,tv file at Mrs.. McGowan’s Lumumba gove/nment. He was
^YESTERDAY “ -Mali 7» lBdgians -pfa klng fad flown 5,000(home,at 2727 N. 35th St. » (See LUMUMBA, Page 11)
mpmHPvw hp v
McGowanThamura astonished observers in. j-S' Inc'rr.b -nt-s nr.- expected It) be ibis couid be done'a litt’l- bit at. A federal judge in Miami grant; don't that mean a car that hasn’t
Leopoldville when he- turned Up candidates far ie ejection to two-;a tune with the funds available.'ed a temporary restraining order; got any(tires on it.
. ......... yea44 turns ‘ / . La Grone has lis t'd in West Or-! to Eastern Air Lines and ordered] OJ SAYS ~ The way to hav»
La (. one is .t!’- s.ft of .A I., ang off and .on for the part 18 the : engineers to return /Several some Of the. best families ask yoa
i • nor cc and years He is active in F- - »ppM "■"* M" ”! to call Again is to be a bill col*
(is 'employed as a fabricator withiOrange Little League program. Jders- were filed-by other amines.jlector.
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 19, 1961, newspaper, February 19, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558793/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.