The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 127, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 29, 1962 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 28 x 18 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE DAILY NEWS-TELEGRAM Tuesday, May 29, 1962
Tech to Ask
More Funds
the present annual appropria-
tion to the school to $10.6 mil-
lion dollars lor the 1963-64
school year and to $10.8 mil-
lion dollars for 1964-65.
The directors also voted to
apply to the Housing and Home
Finance Agency for a loan on
two new dormitories—one for
men and one for women—ex-
pected to cost between $7 and
714 million dollars.
They also directed that a
study be started to determine
if a law school should be estab-
lished at the college.
The board also approved
plans for new speech and psy-
chology buildings and the new
Killgore Beef Research Center
near Amarillo.
Enrollment at Tech this year
has been 10,212. It is expected
to Increase to 11,000 next fall,
to 12,400 in 1963-64 and to
13,600 by 1964-65.
Red Cross Funds
Taken; Woman
Draws Sentence
Lubbock, May 29 GT — The
board of directors of Texas
Tech College at Lubbock took
steps today to seek additional
funds for operations and build-
ings to meet new demands on
the school during the next few
years.
The board said it would ask
the Texas legislature to increase
hospital parking lot. Both
pleaded guilty.
In Marlar’s statement, he ad-
mitted shooting Bond to death
with a .22 caliber pistol on a
lonely streach of highway near
Fouke. Marlar said he dragged
thp body 35 feet off the high-
way into a wooded area.
mm.
BEING TESTED — Chance Vought’s supersonic Crusader, one of the Navy’s first-line
fighters, is being tested for capabilities to take on the additional role of an attack air-
craft and pack the variety of weapons shown. The plane’s normal complement of four
Sidewinder missiles or eight Zunis mounted on the fuselage pylons can be seen. (NEA
Telephoto).
storewide
xsavings^
Window Washers
Plunge io Death
In New York
PRIDE OF ILLINOIS—White or Yellow Cream
CHOICE LOT-FED BEEF
SIRLOIN
year-old Paul Washington, May 29 OF) —
was arrested The Agriculture Department
lowing day in says U.S. wheat exports dur-
it state. ing the year ending June 30th
—- may reach a record 685 million
bushels.
icfni Shipments for the first nine
JihlCll months, from July 1, 1961
through Mar. 31, 1962, were
M 538 and one-half million bush-
** els. This was 80 per cent of
II ■ the amount exported during
nreai the 12 months ending June 30,
1961.
29 op) _ A The department said that
g executive forward sales are high enougli
increase in to expert this year’s exports to
newspapers he at least four per cent more
a threat to than the 601 million bushels
nformation. exported the previous year,
president of Shipments of wheat was up
Broadcasting sharply to Bravil, Chile, and.
West Germany, The Nether-
le of all of lands, Yugoslavia, Turkey, Al-
geria, Morocco and Tunisia in
ij’-aid jn the nine months ending Mar.
e issues and 31st. In contrast, there were
g the move, major reductions in exports to
he proposed Italy, Poland and India,
lass mailing A larKe amount of wheat
ie House and that is exported is under the
lenate, “can- government’s surplus disposal
isly cut back program where the sales are
racter of the for forej£n currencies and bar-
merica. He . , -
ter and for other means of ex-
communicn- change.
i have no di- The disposal program has
ought not to been useful in past years in
^at ()raining away at least some
s battle. . , T ,
Jblication in of the Iar*e 8UrPlusea that ac
under, sole- cumulated under the price sup-
evised postal port program. These surpluses
iford either jnc]U(je not only wheat, but
! solicitation ' , .. - .
. . . corn and the other feed grains.
303 Can
* New York, May 29 GP— Four
window washers were killed
early today when the moving
platform on Which they were
standing plunged down the
side of the Equitable Building
at Sixth Avenue and 51 Street
|n iqidtown Manhattan.
Three of the men apparent-
ly were killed by the impact.
The fourth died on the way to
Roosevelt Hospital.
Cause of the crash was not
immediately determined.
The building is diagonally
across the street from the Radio
City Music Hall.
The men apparently
working somewhere near the ^e
picnic — pork a
300 Can
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT
6-0z. Jar
were
23rd flpor of the building’s 51st
Street side when something in
the platform mechanism gave
way.
The platform plunged down
its guidewires to the ground.
The men were enclosed on
four sides by a chest-high cage
designed to go up and down the
Sections of the building, which
Js on a corner of Rockefeller
Center.
The cables were intact after
the fall. <
GLADIOLA—ALL PURPOSE
Weaver Bans
Vandervoort’s Pure ICE
Cinch—Assorted
VIENNAS 2 - 39
CAKE MIX
N.B.C. New
CHIPITS
Morton’s Pure Black
Memorial Day will be ob-
served at the Baptist Church in
Weaver Sunday beginning at
10 $• m.
; The program will open with
inudcal numbers by the Tom
Brily Quartet, the Pine For-
est Quartet, a piano duet and
folojsts.
3 TShe Rev. Keith Corley of
Port Worth, a former Weaver
iesilent, will preach the
gieisorial sermon at 11 a. ni.
J Lunch will be spread in the
park at noon. All persons who
fre interested in Weaver cem-
etery are asked to be present
ind bring a basket lunch.
PEPPER
1 H-oz.
Reg. 69c Value-
14 Gallon_____
Two Charged
With Murder
At Texarkana
DONALD DUCK FROZEN
SCOTT or DELSEY
TISSUE
Staton spoke at a New York
meeting of Sigma Delta Chi,
professional journalism fra-
ternity.
Texarkana, Ark., May 29 101
— First degree murder charges
were filed yesterday in Texar-
kana against an Arkansas ex-
convict and his woman com-
panion in the pistol slaying of
a Louisiana highway depart-
ment employe missing since
April 28.
Police said Jerrall Kenneth
Marlar, 32, and Weld* Lee
Derr, 32, both from Hope, Ark.,
signed statements admitting
they shot Thomas O. Bond.
Bond’s body was found in an
overgrown area yesterday south
of Fouke, Ark., near the Louis-
iana state line.
They said Marlar and the
woman gave Bossier City, La.,
officer's preliminary statements
admitting the murder during
questioning en route from New
Mexico Saturday. They gave
full statements after being re-
turned to Bossier parish Sun-
day night.
Marlar led Bossier City of-
ficials deputies from Bossier
Parish and Millar County, Ark.,
authorities to the body.
The ex-convict and the wom-
an were arrested by Roswell,
N. M., police last week and
were arraigned on charges of
stealing a car from a Roswell
Infant Found
Dead at Houston
12-Oz
Can
mb Reported
Love Field
Houston, May 29 i/fi —-A
nine-month-oid boy was found
dead in Houston yesterday aft-
ernoon, after he apparently
rolled off a double bed and be-
came wedged between the mat-
tress and foot board.
Patrick Owen Brown, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Dennie Brown,
died of either strangulation or
suffication, according to a med-
ical examiner’s investigator.
The boy’s neck was caught on
the board and his feet were
dangling off the floor.
Mrs. Brown told officers she
left the infant on the bed for
a-few minutes to go outside to
hang clothes and returned to
find him dead.
* Dgllas, May 29 MB — There
wasj* brief bomb scare at Dal-
lasLove Field last night.
* Tie Dallas police dispatcher,
Mrs, Dorothy JUpck, said a
telephone call WM received
iboyt 9 p. m. ia which a male
voi<* hM:
‘l hpsg some Information
tor you. flora is a home-made
in the waiting area of
Love Punt"
' Jo the caller hung np.
.Nr* Dallas policemen and
F-B-f agents rushed to
P** FWd. No explosives were
JUICY
YELLOW
Awneed Slayer
Tomorrow ... and Each Wednesday . . . You Receive
DOUBLE SET*
On AH Purchases of $2.50 or More!
WEDNESDAY
Except Good Neighbor
Value Day .,.
OF *1.00 OR MORE-
Connally Street
Phone: TUMS14
• ,
'
Xisil
MARKET
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.
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.
Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 127, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 29, 1962, newspaper, May 29, 1962; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth829669/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.