The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, February 10, 1956 Page: 1 of 8
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.
A
SB
9909 xog'O *
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Solori Admits Getting Insurance Shares
* , * ’ * | 4T*^> ^ l . • ■*“v ■ - , ,%KVVI**A'* . ‘ . ' ' ' ^
Niarchos To Regain Possession 1
Of Seized Tankers in Port Here
Court at Beaumont.
Currently registered under the
flag of Panama, the five ships u.-, . ...
were ordered to A merican_ waters J.“U*~ till
from overseas destinations by the
government. Three of the tankers
are tied up at the Orange port af-
ter being brought in by German
skippers and skeleton crews. Ships
here include the Owyhee. Yamhill
and Umatilla 'fwo others are tied
Bv BOB AXELSON -
Five rust-pitted T-2 tankers
tied up at Orange and Beaumont
ports and owned bv Stavros S.
Niarchos, fabulous Greek shipping
magnate, will be renovated and
transferred to Liberian registery,
it was announced today.
This is part of an involved set-
tlement by the 46-year-old Greek
citizen and world’s biggest inde-r_ . , .
pendent shipowner with the U.S.2 UP at the BeaUmont port
Department of Justice Concur-1 D Ft Dorn, public relations of-
’ rence it), this settlement is expect- 1 fil ial for Transoceanic Marine,
ed to come today frqjn Judge La- Inc., of New York City! .sard these
mar Cecil of the Federal District five tankers will be towed to East
Coast yards to be put into shape
.and then plated in operation
As part of the settlement of the
two-vrir dispute, the Niarchos
group will build a sister ship of
the world s largest tanker, a 45.-
500-1 on‘vessel, and two additional
52 HOO-tonners
AM thiee'of the n*>w ships will
(L the Anicnean flag. Contracts,
fm ttic «■ \esseh have been awayef-
ed to 'he Bethlehem Steel Cfrfp.,
shipbuilding division The giant
•iiipertanker will be b d i 1 t at
The Orange Leader
■ ■ . ^ . ' ' ' '• _ ^
LIU _ Member Auoooled Press OtANGe7tEXAS~ fViDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1956 ~ 8 Poges : NUMIEIU6!
ORANGE, TEXAS’ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1956^
Senator Calls
Offer of Cash
’Breathtaking'
Union Drive To Double Membership Proposed
30 Million
Enrollment
Is Expected
WASHINGTON i AI ’ i. - ben
Fi*ancis Case (R-SI)l testified t«-
dav he re',ard”d a Nebra-'.a he -
vers 42.'•>00 e.!!i'nai°n rontiibu-
tmn as inin'vmi1 an '"'bnmnerl ,
mterest*' hi* vote on the >;, o Quincy Mass . and the other two 1
a! gas lull So he rejected
Ca*e 'aid
Just learning of the 25 S'luO
bills drooped on a Irjend’s desk bv
John M. Neff. J evi’igton Neb .
attnrnev and sometime* oi! loo-
'ovist, "‘sort- nf took mv breath
av ay," Case ir.tg a Senate in\e?ti-
gaHne com mi* Wo
Arid he quoted an office assist-
ant Av exclaiming. "Mv Lord' ’
w hen he tpld her about if.
But Ca«eN repeated as he l ad
:<t Sparrows Point, Md
The progi am. ds based on the
agreement byet wren companies
controlled bv Niarchos and the De-
partment of Justice, which will
enable the 'hipping magnate to
expand some more Under the re-
vised agreement, 13 ships, the
status of which was once in dis-
pute. are restored to the Niarchos
gropp. It will transfer to Liberian
registry ui consideration of new
tanker construction and two.will
told the Senate itself, that he does be retained under American flag.
not-aHege any attempt.....was made The transfer from Panamanian to
Says Stock
Was Given
For 'Help'
HOUSTON (AP)—Tha Houston
Chronicle said today state Sen
George Parkhouse of Da Hat had
informed if, he was given 500
shares of stock in a Dallas insur-
ance company which he “helped.
The senator was vice chairman
of (he Senate Insurance Commit-
tee when he accepted the stocks-
He said the stock was given 1o.
him "about tjje spring of 1953"
when he became a director of the
company, the Robert E Lee Life1
Insurance CO.
“I sold the stock after I resigned
from the board in late ISSf.” Park-
house said, "and got Sfl* a share.
•' <
MIAMI BF.ACH. Fla CAP'—A
coast-to-coast organizing blue-
print, aimed at doubling the AFL-
CIO’s 15 milliop membership in or $7,000 for it.”
a few sears, todav was proposed The stock was given to him by
to the merged union organization s the ^company president, Frank Lee,
. I
Executive Council
John W. Livingston. A FI.-CIO
organizing director, mapped the
nationwide, member-getting n'a’n
and drafter' a multi-million-dollar
financing fund
Livingston, former vice presi-
dent of the big United Ado
Workers, said in advance of '.he
council session that "wherever
there is a need for organizing is
where we will be "
The plan was orepared on a
state-by-state, area-by-area and
industry-bv-industry basis from a
survey made bv 22 AFL-CIO re-
gional directors.
.Details were kepi secret, but
Livingston alreadv has indicated
and Ben Kohen.-chairman, Park-
hou?e said.
The senator, who is in the ari-
vcitising business, said "1 helped
them (Lee and Kohen) on account
of friendship and they wanted to
sho e me they appreciated it."
"Lee and I had been friends ter
a number of years and I spent
considerable time on the com-
pany,'* he said.
The senator said there was
nothing* wrong about his connec-
tion with the company, and tluit
he had never talked about insur-
ance legislation with the officers.
"I can represent anyone I want
to when I am out of the Senate
(o bribe him __
Case wasfhe" first” wffness at'
the opening of a Senate tenuity
1 into the incident which (axe
brought last week into the Sen-
ate's debate on a bill to lift fed-
eral price controls from natural
gas producers Case had told the
Senate he was first < inclined to
vote for the bill, but* would vote
against it because of the *2,500
proffered as a campaign contri-
bution......’ . ......„.....
To the four-member rommlftee.
Case said he did not know how
Liberian registry involves seven
T-~2 tanker? anfttmrrt.ibci t v ship*.
The new U S flagship and thosei
which have resumed operations!
SyUI be owned by the Domestic;
V'dhp, m which a trust for the
American - born minor son of
Niarchos holds at least. 75 per cent
of the stock.
'>
These arrangt’Hicrds itturn to
the American utaikwl one of the
world s loading sh’pbiiilding cus-
tomer?:. NhhxUvo-' (n*t new. .ships
will be the World Peace and World
CONTRACT SIGNED, SEALED—Business agents and negotia-
terday afternoon signed 75 copies of a two-year contract with the
Levingston Shipbuilding Co. Management signers were President
Ed T. Malloy and Personnel Director Cecil Beeson AFL-CIO
craft local signers included OMTC President H. B. Whitehead;
OMTC Sec E. H. Eikenhorst: Dist. Business Mgr. Homer Pierce,
Business Mgr. Leonard Musgrove, and Committeeman Charles
Morvent Jr.
—T eider Photo fcy Boll Axetson
Operating Engineers Local No. 450; Business Mgr.
Buck Hearn,
2007; Business Mgr. D. K. Dorman. Committeemen E L Fields
and Luther Tillman, Patnteis Local No. 328; Business Mgr. White-
head, Committeeman W. T. Hughes. Laborers Local No. 853: and
Business Mgr. John A. Yeatts and Committeemen Bon Hudnall,
Irvin C. Kach and Harry L. Huff, Boilermakers Local No. 587.
that primary organizing targets chamber, he said. "But when yeu
will be "white collar ’ woi kerj, in- enter the Senate door you are sup-
cluding federal, state and citv 4>osed to forget your other cfflR-
government workers as well as I nections. That’s the way I try to
■sttcC* operate mv bufinesr."
have been
the *2.500 might strike others but ! Liberty ordered in 1049 In *9$V
to him it was evidence -there ’he World Glory was ordered
might be extraordinary profits"
for someone in the ga* bill
Case was still testifying vs hen ,
eommittee Chairman George (D- j
Ga) ordered a luncheon recess
Case said the investigation or-
dered by the Senate after he pub-
licly denounced the offer, is "not
an Investigation of a bribe, bf-
c«u*» no such allegation has been
made."
The question, he <*td, as he
understands it, is wnethW the
proffered campaign contribution
involved an effort "to influence
my decision" in the voting on the
natural gas bill
Juvenile Gang
Is Broken
In Calcasieu
per
tanker fleet
aboard
The slim, short citizen of Gieere
has a private merchant ficct big-
(See I ANKfRS, ^Pacr 2'
Algiers Faces
Fresh Rioting
ALGIERS. (APt - Robert 1 a-
(oste arrived todav to become
"There was nothing proposed to Premier Guv Mollet's resident
me in this matter." Case said minister m 'violence-totn Algeria
There w as nothing prom.scd ” Fi e>h i .<>ting as thicatoned both
He said Neff
there were ’ no
From 1951 until now. however. , <»'{* rHiPr »-c ,c„m v ,„
r« ..L'^rr m „s,-.Nbr-
to in per cent of the enter l S whf) ron a-------•• ....
Piacpd ,iu„.ai>-
sang" and wn e
allegedly involved in 35 thefts
and burglaries have, been rounded
up by the Calcasieu Parish Sher-
iffs Department. Sheriff Henry
A. (Ham) Reid said today.
P*eid said the burglaries occur-
red during the last three months
of 1955 and that the youths, be-
tween 13 and 16 year* of age. are
m custody of their pat ents. Their
cases have been transferred to
Calcasieu Parish juvenile author-
ities.
Report From
Cirtleville
Circleville
Feb. 9. 1956
Dear Editor:
The real reason the Russian
government objects to propa-
ganda and weather balloons
flying over Russia is that It
doesn't want the Russian people
to know which way the wind is
blowing.
Tours faithfully,
II B Eox
Annexation Talk Marks Meeting
On Little Cypress School Needs
Carter Delays'
Pushing Claim
Countv Com-
segments of the chemical, textile, Parkhouse, said he appeared be-
buiiding. wood, paper and shoe foie ’he state Insurance Commis-
industries sion for the company “about three
The AFL-CIO goal was outlined °r four times" on minor items,
in a resolution adopted at the org- One of these appearances was
anization’s founding conversion in before he joined the board, he
New York^two months ago. It said.
said the objective was to sign up Lee refused to say how many
at least as many as the AF’L-CIO s shares of s*ock Parkhouse re-
present membership "in the years _ ___ _
immediately ahead’’ SOLON. Page -t
- Only one out of three wage ancH
salary workers in the nation is
presently a union member.
By MARY .ALICE LAKEY facilities for our girls and boys". Former CIO unions alreadv have
LI PILE C\‘PP>ESS (Spl)—Lit- John Wilkinson Jr. who heads pledged four million dollars in
tie Cypress may as well be pre- the Citizens Advisory Committee organizing funds and the general-
pared to be in the Citv of Orange promoting an ; educational pro- Iv richer former AFL unions were
within the next four or five years \ gram for school expansion, said expected to swell the kitty by at
and should not be afraid to forge j a lot of questions had been asked
ahead In anything that will ini- | him as to what the district is go-
prove its school, a gathering was I ing to do and advised a questibn-
told by C. H (Hobson) Meri-! and-answer session
wether last night at the school, i understand." he said, "that
Said Meriwether; "You’ve got to j there is a proposal for a *500,000 ; C — k 1 * I _ J
: build schools for the children. The! bond election." I OTITlS lYlQIlCG
citv is coming this wav simply ! Heard advised that the district, ... *
because it can t grot* any othet ; had considered a *750.000 bond is- Tax departments of the City of ton ,-n$nr#ne* accountant and
wav ... we’ve got the pretties trees , sue but settled for the lesser Orange and Orange School Dts- consultant who said hi* concltiaten
and the highest ground, and peo-‘ amount. trict todav are placing in the mail* afte,r ...idvins the defunct Waco
To a question a* to how the dis- inventory toms for all urdivid- conc<,rn three times in 1954 was
trict's valuation could finance re- us s and businesses rendenn?
tirement of the bonds. Supt. E A personal property.
- Jhint announcement of the
Eh/a-
fSee I NION DRIVE. Page 2)
Tax Inventory
Probers Learn
Of Manipulating
AUSTIN CAP i—Some of A ft
.Shoemake’s manioulationi of the
the collapse of U. S. Trust and
and '■Guaranty Co. amounted to
robbing Peter to pay Paul," *
witness told Senate investigators
today,,. —
He w as Charlie ToaHe of H«u«-
•nvl
pie are talking to me about land
himself has s.iid her and n France as nationalists ,wo hm ,'wnrkrd to(,r.hVr q,>f|
*trmg* attached a,;d co.ou.al- Planned new; demon- ,fv<>ral ,n,l;)nrpe a hnv >
to the offer, and added that 'all strations.
As Moslems flocked to their
mosques to obsriie their Sabbath.
French settlers defied an official
ban and ordered a huge raliv
liter i
-quire It was aimed at discourag-
ing both French government
VIDOR fSpI) _ , ...... . . ,
Reid said 'hr ■'oungster* oner- missioner Harold Carter, of Pie- i *cr Juture housing additions
a'ed as a gang but pulled various nnct 4 said today he will not ' Meriwether, a real estate agent
mbs in different group* of three pursue anv legal action against made his comments during a meet- Bates reminded that a cement
o six boys. In some case*, on tv water and sewer contractor? lgyVv ing called for discussion of school, plant under construct inn would moling was made bv Airs
ing lines in Vidor until after their problems. Farlier. the board of probably hr valued
*900.OOP.
several instances, a single bov was work is done and then onlv "if | the Little Cypress Independent and that two ml well* and a pipe- ""avvinme
no agreeable settlement is reach- ! School District had discussed their , line would bt tng additional reve- ■ 1<‘l ,c (0ipct°r-
beth Hustmyre, citv tax collector,
and Mrs. Winnie C Grice, school
(See CASH OFFER. Tate 2l
Councilmen To Get
Modernized Table
the offender.
gallon launched and spearheaded ktmagrs of *26,855 against the J Beaumont.
bv Depute Warren A Cormier as- contractors who are installing : The discussion meeting follow-
the day in the main c;ty misfed bv'Depiihes .1«*e DiGiovanm ,h° ,lnP5 ln ;hr Oiange County
and Leroy Authemen' Wa'Pr Control and Improvement
year The projected!
< See ANNEXATION. I’age 2l
Work is expected to hr complet-
ed bv Monday on a sen.i-etrcular
council table in the chamber at
ell *e?stons in the past.
peace efforts and Arab nationalist
. „„ , , , District Nn, 1.
more than 2P local firms were Wednesday
tbe 15-months-old i?-v ’^e youngsters in burgiaties. qffqrru Carter about
aspirations in .... ... ............ ..... ,, , , , , . , ......... .........
insurrections. hefts and shoplifting, and thefts damages which Carter claims
The aemi-rurved table replaces ^^'^'^0100X^011^but' foes ra?h t0 doiendiapers arid a ’trfet The'commissioner saTd^to-
*''’**"u “* u j winch truck. day; “That definitely vv'll not be
Youngsters rifled a drug store, enough to compensate the conn-
ed the board and PTA .meetings
and was held in ’he cafeteria.
Board Chairman J. A. Heard open-
ed discussion with, ‘’The board
*8,700 for has gone as far as possible. Now.
it's up to you ail to help us get
nig.-d. contractors
a court-type bench at which com
missioners formerly sal. The woily
is being done bv Haskell M Mon-
toe, local. cabinetmaker, and the
of Mollet—inflamed French w ar ’
veterans, students and loral may-
Ofs-
r- it
-formed an unofficial "Com-
a boat, a camp, a service station Lv for damages.
of Public Safety" and vot
and any , number of parked cars. Carter's claim will be consider.
The winch truck was stolen from hv ,hr «aUr lioard upon
Special Auto
Plates Ready
Anybody who ha* reserved li-
Texos Snowfall
Expected To End
Bv ASSOCIATED PRESS
A rapid!v moving belt of light
snow switched across Texas from
west to Cast today signaling a
probable end >0 almost tw o weeks
of snow and raih .for most of the
state. N . .
Snow fell in the South Plains
and Panha'ndlo last night men
sped through West Texas into
cense tags up to or including the £P?t Texas
number 2 000 should call imme- r, 8 a.m. todav skies were clear
office of Orange vvest of Abilene and Wichita
‘•County Tax Assessor * Collector' pm I*. Sunshine was expected to1
more
1« S400 Whrn con -
pleted, the curved rounctl table <,fi 10 noi(1 » uve-nour protest narked" wisition"a* "the'"corner termination of the contrketors
will provide storage space and RI,lkc nnfi march on the center of Pvicn pakP road and Rvgn work. About 10 per cent of the
seating for the five rmnnussioti- of the divided capita! street " rontnactors’ fees are withheld by
ers, citv manager .-and attorney. While Lncoste was fl'tng here. „ ‘ . the water board pending settle- (Lately at the
Involved was extending a raised the French government Interior'1.7 '• *' ,? n]"1!'r 'footer apdmenl 0( eiaims.
platform, nptwng out the old bwieh—MtersTt-y banned two schefriried Is”• c,*,rp,,e hghters, gasoline, j{
and building the tiew table id piv- ’ Atjrrmtr pi of <-TT demonstrations •‘ackets, magazines and news- damages and it is considered in- _ . . .... . ,_______, . ,
wood. The changes should enable in Pans, one bv French war vet- whiskey, pa pet tacks gas satisfactory, he may file legal ae- j:ru'le,h/>«« 1" i-opn panhandle South' Plains'area
spectators to hear more clearlv era us at the Arc de Triomphe to- c***‘ ‘’IfctriC motors and wheel- tion within 30 days after such dlc!lnK hat 16 000 tn ,,'°00 tw Panhandle-South. Plains a.ea
and eliminate the necessity 'for. i.iorrow and another by leftist • t,,e.*nd wheel wore* among .settlement, he reminded today.
huriHlrs which h*is marked ('oim- croups at the Place de la Repub-* l.cms rccovei^ner- Upon termination of the instal-
costing *5 94 supplied bv the |muc Suniday ,ff* ^Paj’mcnt. All property re- lation of water and sewer lines.
____»_ ..... ........... .’ ___J ________ _________ covered ha.<f been returned to the engineers of Koch & Fowler of
; owners, the department said Dallas will examine the com-
It is the first time in the history
of the two taxing units that me
forms are to he returned bv the
taxpayers without direct contacts
being made bv the tax offices
The inventory returns are being
mailed to property owners be-
cause additional territory has
been annexed bv the city and that
makes contact bv a tax appraiser
impossible. It has been the custom
in prior years for an appraiser to
contact each owner personally
The tax units urged that the
returns be executed according tn
the instructions which accompany
them and returned before April i.
City May File Lien
On B&W for $309.06
City officials todav were eon?rd-
that in many cases Shoemake was
simnlv '-faking money opt. of one
pocket and putting it in another"
Leslie sairi Shoemake handled
the fiscal affair* of all seven com-
panies "as one" and considered
the setup that included five in-
surance companies as a single
operation.1 ,
Leslie was the first witness as
the Senate committee resumed its
probe into the insurance situation,
especially the factors that led to
fiscal affair* of his.U. S. Trust
Guaranty, a combined bankinjk-
nsutance firm Shoemake, its
president, attempted suicide and
is in the Veterans Hospital at
McKinney with a bullet wound
through the head.
Sen. William Fly of Victoria said
the committee among other things
would hear from the Insurance
Commission tn reply to the charg-
es of lraud and corruption voiced
earlier' by Renne Allred Jr., dis-
charged attnrnev for the insur-
ance receiver-liquidator.
The mmmttfek also ha* railed
. ]
Dismissal of Attorney Engaged
For Divorce Suit Is Requested
,is a!,0l<l a Frprt Foire and pick up the tags.- nc|t more 'or" the accumulated crin8 ’be po*.*ib:hrie* of Ming a up Charles l^eslte Jr of Houston.
Force announced (.this in pre-1 snow that has bound parts of the labor hen against the B&W Con- a consulting actuary who did
lor struction Co. following the non- some auditing for U. S. Trust and
for all.tvpes of vehicles would be more than a week. payment of nine sower tops made Guaranty Co, of Waco,
issued this vear. Light—snow fell today in Fort in February. --------
The 1956 plates eo on sale next Worth> Wichita Falls, Mineral No definite action ha* . been FERRT SINKS: THREE DIE
Wednesday and the office is look- 'Veils. Sherman and northward taken to date Involved are nine 1AIPE.I Fotrneta (APi —Three
ing foV the pUeup to begin about ’brtmgh Ardmore. Okla. to the taps at the cu ternary *35 charge, pm sons died and la were bgUeved
Wesl Orange Raises
$1,226.52 in MOD
Dieted job and present their | Feb. 25.
findings to the board.
In a stormy session of the
board. Carter and engineers
Wednesday night, contractors in.
Great Lakes region." At most; less nine joints of 4-inch pipe; test in. the capxizmg of a ferry
points temperatures were barely signal changes from yellow *0 red. in rough sea? off northwest For-
‘ mosa yesterday.
An Orange physician went into I 1954, is still pending with separ- West Orange contributions to ferred tnat stiaets were not in
128th District Court today seek- ate maintenance granted to the ’be March of Dimes totaled $1.- j ;°° Kood^a condition at the I Cense 'receipt
ing the right to dismiss an attor- wife while the case is pending. 226.52. accoi-dihg to Grady Gal- i ginninu of the installation work. I
ney who bad been employed to Frank Hustmyre represented j ben. who made the report today,
handle a divorce rasm for hint Dunn in court, saying Dunn had | Gallien said the community was
Dr. F,. C. Pretz seeks to remove tint asked to, withdraw from the especially proud of Ithe Mothers
Poyntz Dunn trom the case attei case . 1 March on Polio total, which
Sexton told Judge llomcr E. dwarfed last years figure. Moth-
Foice said that effective vvith freezing or a degree or «o above, company, for a total of *309 06
the new registration all trailers • .......................7 —————— — - — -----
which exceed a gross weight of
4,000 pounds will have to ha\e a
serial number shown on the !t-
Called Subterfuge for Refusin g Class Attendance
Coed Charges Officials Could Have Stopped Riots
presenting to the court a check ........_
showing Dunn had been paid stepheitsoii that^ aiyvonc "haV the j ers r»i«ed $227.51 after The march
right tfl dismiss an attorney in j was P°stP0,!cd twice because of
any litigation when he is dis- ; bad weather.
*200.
The doctor now wants to em-
ploy BID Sexton to handle the pleased with the services
action against his wife, Mis.
Astrid B Pretz.
Lhr divo!iP ‘*CJ3, but. when informed Sexton had a
Credit Union Treasurer Charqed ('unfl‘c'ting case in another court.
With Embezzlement of 5145,000 ^",otlo-n ,0'" 10 a m’ next
last night arrested the treasurer ! !l . si?lcl 110 ubmony
of a credit union for subway cm- Ea‘\rne!)' btjd been made during
ployes and charged him with em-I ^ctembel ‘ 'lanuarv ancl February,
bezzling *145,000 during a 13- Milton Reagan was the first at-
year period. ! terncy in the case. He, too, was
The man, Cyril Marshall. 54 dismissed, Sexton'told the court
worked as a subway car inspector , a‘tcr 'be doctor paid him $200.
for the past 31 years. He earned i Sexton said Dunn had been
$4,500 yearly plus *1,000 a year! paid the same amount. He showed
as treasurer of the credit union, 1 the judge checks to back pp^his
a posh he assumed in 1938. j contention,
-j! There appears to be'some con-
U/aoEL/.. litention over the amounts of the
| I OuOy S ^earner | fees involved. Bunn could not be
f>*U Fr»m I S Wratbrr Burriu i reached.
West Orange School contribu- 1 ties
*287.7
Carter bases part of hi* claim ! Bbrftrailers without serial num-1
• bers owners will have to obtain » !
(See CARTER. Page 2) | form from Force’s office and have , .... . ... , ,
p > j... M • ~ a serial number assigned and die-' BIRMINGHAM. Ala. f^P) — A | day* from aitcnamg classes a’.ei su*t nh inciting students to
rresidenr Nominates Kyle Elam stamped on the trailer before the Negro coed, returning to tedeialS noting uov.d* had stoned her paiaoe and demonstrate and make
For Port Arthur Postmastership ! vehicle can be registered. court in a bid to gain readmit-1 and school officials. speeches" against her because of
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- Serial numbers have been allot- ’ante lo the University of Ala- The trustees declared Hist she her tace
dent Eisenhower nominated post- ! ted to the office by the state gov - bama. charged School officials hu* excluded as a measure of Tuscaloosa police said none ar#
| masters today for 392 commuhi- ’ emment. could have halted campus tiot- -afe’y. M;*s I.'.tcv charged in her stuoon’.s a' the university.
Force cautioned vehicle owner? ins
Judge (Stephenson first set next; j’?”s amounted to *287.75. the j Among the Texas nominations, to-watch the Leader (or change* The action was one of two tiled
Monday lor hearing the motion! fteinbo supper raised $190-1 an subject to Senate confirma- 1registration rules
3°' ,yar'ous coffees brought in j tion: Richard Cowan. Fort Worth; ’hem that will be published be(oie
$L6.i7 and coffees by the Home | Kyle Elam, Port Arthur ’he official opening date.
Demonstration Club raised $25.90.
Gallien pointed out these are
onlv major organizational contri-
butions.
I.«c»l for»c»»( Clearing »nd colder to-
with htghtit temperaturei »7 to M de-
ste«. Northerly wind* 10 to 10 inllre an
hour.
5
apan _(APi—LiUl# |
hope was held tadlvroFww’ork-
romorrow’r i.de,: Sabine-h.,I, a. ! » I ^ b'V * Sn°WQaV?lfunch,Cn
a rn. and a n p m.: low at ms a m. and ! Re^ue teams rescued 9 of the 39
• it p.m. Bolivar—Mob at 3:W »m. and men who were trapped white f
;» '*m! *and working on a ptever project They
mi at « p m. | recovered the bodies of five others.
Russians Toil Harder, Produce More
For Same Pay, 1955 Report Shows
petition bin! was excluded
solely becat ?e she i? a Negro, in
affecting yesterday in the long legal bat- defiance of an order issued by
lie of Autherine Lucy to attend Gioont? last July. It was on'tin*
classes at the university. Hearings order that Miss Lucy was adnut-
on both petitions are scheduled ted to the school.
Feb. 29, before U.S. Dist. Judge She called the board's action
Hobart Grooms. a cunning strategem” and said
, Mis* Lucy petitioned Grooms to adequate police protection i?
compel university * authorities to available.
readmit her to classes, and in a Miss Luty is asking $1,000 dam-
AHhur D. Shores, attorney ter
Mus Lucy, said Miss Lucy will
not re’uni to the university until
alter the Feb. 2D bearing "unless
the trustees ‘ rescind their sus-
pension oefoit that date."
The university news bureau an-
nounced la?’ ntght there would be
no immediate comment from
school officials in connection with
halls. ' sign her a dormitory room and J ORANGE JUICE ]
Miss Lucy charged that mem- allow her to eat in. university din- mr | \TLST In cast yfy
bers of the Board of Trustees and ing halls. <cd the crack by Red Skelton
Dean of Admission William F. In the petition seeking readmit- on <j«y jas. nlght, you might be iil-
Adams “intentionally permitted tance to classes, she » seeking terested in knowing that the latest
. . . acts of unidentified persons $2,000 damages She also asks sha<je for men ? suits*is "Mon«*n
in order to assimilate an air of; that Dr O: C. Carmicbacl, uni- Kiecn — .slightly darker thifl
riot and disorder and rebellion versify president, Adams and 10 Kelly." « l
on the campus.” - i trustees ,be lieM m con tempt aud-v, flfEM ’I’M fhan|ft*ii twp
. How'd you guess I sold
our aquarium with a Leader
Want Ad?"
harder, produced more—and got | tion by 1960 to make economic
almost exactly the same pay th^y warfare on the West.
received in 1954 ,, . .. ,
Workers in the West call this the14 ”er?,l* Sn'
speedud lure, as outjjned by official bo-
This was the first fruit, of the jviet sUtlsUcs:
economic policy party boss Nikita j The average industrial worker
Khrushchev and Premier Bulganin ! produced 8 per cent more in 1954.
laid down when they took over | average construction worker
from Georgi Malenkov: “heavy in-: P*r c*nt better,
duatry ikst," guns and buHdozerti . Whrie the totaL wage and xaiary
.11
4" 1
4 --I
lead of butler, — > bdi of. the U.S.S.R.
Soviet labor's prospects for 1956 j per cent, the number
aren’t vepy pleasant ether. Prices j went up about the same—more
for Russia’s most vital food—po-; than 2 per cent. Thus the average
tatoes — are virtually certain to wage or salary, in money or in
more than double during the year, goods, remained in 1955 about the
Still more belt-tightening appear* same as m 1934.
—--ftBrtEi-gdtiana ihe.,,
>e about 8 petiUon, werw..a ."s.ubmtUAfe Toi 7w Tint- petnu’ hu lb U" attig and .311- W
courses at the university.” In her petition, she said her The two part-time school officers
The 26-year-old Birmingham i sunocmion was to »m>e»sr i
secretary is the first Negro en- j sons having no connection with decorated with gold buttons, sard#*
rolled at the 125-year-old state ; the university . , color xkirts. white shirt, black tie
univeisrty. She was baited Mon-I She accused four person* in the and oversea* cap, Wf
.
I
• ■ ,r
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, February 10, 1956, newspaper, February 10, 1956; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth560463/m1/1/?rotate=0: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.