The Winkler County News (Kermit, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 48, Ed. 2 Sunday, April 17, 1966 Page: 9 of 12
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Analyist Says State Water
Conservation Is Essential
USE THE CLASSIFIED ADS
By TOM SEPPY
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sar-
gent Shriver today blamed
“ professional demonstrators”
for a hooting, shouting demon*
stration that drowned out part
of his speech and forced an
abrupt end to a convention of
antipoverty workers.
“It was quite obvious that 25
or 30 people there organized
themselves to create a disturb-
ance and make trouble,” the
director of the administration’s
antipoverty measure said in an
interview.
A large group of dissidents, who
said they were spokesmen for
the nation’s poor, heckled Shriv-
er as he evaluated the antipov-
erty program for some 500
members of the independent,
privately financed Citizens’ Cru-
sade Against Poverty.
Rejecting attempts by leaders
of the conference to restore or-
der, they took control of the
meeting. A number paraded to
the speakers’ platform and de-
nounced Shriver, his office of
Economic Opportunity and even
some of the older members of
the audience.
“You people are old and gray
and you better step aside. Us
youngsters are going to take
over,” said Allen Moore. He
said he represented Youth In
Action of the Bedford-Stuyves*
ant section of Brooklyn, N Y.
As Shriver was escorted out of
the room, Barbara Taylor of
Washington’s Southeast House
yelled at him: “It's just a big
publicity deal. He isn’t helping
the poor. He’s just getting his
picture in the paper.”
Civil Rights leader Bayard
Rustin, an officer of the cit-
izens’ organization, was among
those who tried unsuccessfully
to control the situation. So did
Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, stat-
ed clerk of the United Presby-
terian Church and general sec-
etary-elect of the World Council
of Churches, who is a vice
chairman of the Crusade.
Blake finally adjourned the
meeting two hours after Shriver's
speech, when it became apparent
parliamentary procedure could
not be restored and several mem-
bers of the citizens group, in-
cluding the industrial union de-
partment of the AFL-C10, threat-
ened to quit the organization in
protest.
Rustin was the first official to
say the outbursts against Shriv-
er were planned.
“This was not a spontaneous
demonstration,” he told a news
conference. “Some of the people
shouting about the poor partici-
pating were not poor but have a
vested interest. And some mem-
bers came into the meeting with
a sheet that was printed several
hours before.”
But Blake said; “Some of us
have been saying for a long
time the poverty program is in
a crucial stage. What happened
today merely underlines it.
“There is a tremendous
amount of frustration among
the people. It is not a frustration
against Shriver or the OEO. or
anyone else or any organization
trying to help them,
“It is a frustration against the
slowness of an affluent society
to spread its prosperity among1
all the people.’;’
Shriver said later: ffI don't
think it was the feeling of close
to 10 per cent of those attending
the meeting, in fact, one woman
from the Watts section of Los
Angeles asked me for my auto-
graph as I left the room.”
In his speech, Shriver was
listing accomplishments of the
antipoverty program when the
heckling started.
“Negroes are now on the
boards of community action
programs, working with white
people,” he said.
“Where?” came a chorus
from the audience.
“We’ve established a princi-
ple that poor people should have
a say,” he continued.
“But what’s been done about
getting them any answers?”
some one shouted.
One-third of those attaiding
the convention came .from pov-
erty pockets in New York’s Har-
lem, Chicago’s West Side,
Watts, Appalachia and the Mis-
sissippi Delta. For two days,
delegates heard denouncements
by those from poor areas of the
antipoverty program, politi-
cians, “power structures” and
white “do-gooders.”
Queen Unconcerned
By 40 th Anniversary
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By EDDY GILMORE
LONDON (AP) — Next
Thursday Queen Elizabeth n
reaches the age of 40 — an anni-
versary on which most women
com© to terms with their face
and figure.
There are indications that the
second Elizabeth Regina has
already come to term with hers.
She diets and tints her hair, but
ignores faint wrinkles creeping
into one of the world’s best
known faces.
She will be so busy on her 40th
birthday that there should be
little time for intimate reflec-
tion.
By coincidence the new Par-
liament, its House of Commons
chosen in the March 31 elec-
tions, convenes Thursday — and
by law the queen opens Parlia-
ment.
She will breakfast with her
husband, Prince Philip, put on
one of her fanciest dresses, slip
into some priceless jewelry, get
under a diamond.studded tiara,
enter a lavishly decorated car-
riage and be towed by a team of
high-stepping horses to the
Houses of Parliament.
Londoners will see the queen
smiling and waving from her
coach, the mounted bodyguard
with its gleaming swords and
breastplates and plumed hel-
mets, the outriders in all their
gold and crimson .finery, while
trumpets blare.
From Hyde Park, less than a
quarter of a mile from her
palace residence, a troop of the
Royal Horse Artillery will sere-
nade her with an explosive 41-
gun salute.
After the queen opens Parlia-
ment — with all the ceremonial
trappings at which the British
excel — she will return to the
palace for a birthday lunch.
There likely will be toasts in the
queen’s favorite light, white
wine. 5
In early afternoon the queen
will leave London to keep one of
the happiest dates on her yearly
calendar — the Badminton
horse trials.
The queen will also open a
new research center at the Wild
Fowl Trust’s establishment at
Slimbridge, Gloucestershire.
Thus there should not be a
great deal of time for the queen
to contemplate what it means to
be 40.
In terms of the queen what
does it mean?
Her diet has paid off in an
almost girlish figur e with a nar-
row waist, slim hips and prettily
tapered legs.
Some fashion writers criticize
aer clothes, others complain
that her stride is not regal. Her
defenders say this is nit-picking
— that she dresses exceedingly
well, especially for a person
who lives in the white light of
publicity, and dresses to please
people of all ages as well as her
husband and family.
She looks best in ball gowns
and sport clothes, and not so
good in short evening gowns.
Her small face looks strained
at times and even tired. She is
still shy and during some emo-
tional moments — particularly
at royal weddings — her pretty
face can look stern and even
angry. Those who know her well
blame this on nerves. They say
she has a delightful sense of
humor — in strictly private
company.
She is an exceedingly hard
worker and one who works for
long hours, for there is no trade
union for queens.
She spends most weekends 20
miles from London at Windsor
Castle, her summers at Balmor-
al Castle in Scotland. The rest
of the time she is generally at
Buckingham Palace, where her
day begins with breakfast with
Prince Philip. Together they
spend more than hour with the
youngest of their four children.
Prince Charles, 17, is at
school in Australia. Princess
Anne, 15, attends a boarding
school in nearby County Kent.
Those at home are Prince An-
drew, 6, and Prince Edward, 2
last month.
After the hour with the chil-
dren, the queen retires to her
study and begins her work day
by reading the newspapers. Aft-
er this she and her secretary, .
Sir Philip Adeane, discuss the
order of the day.
At 11:15 she begins her daily
audience with ambassadors,
prelates and visiting royalty.
Then come the government
boxes — big oblong leather-con-
vered boxes crammed with offi-
cial documents. The queen
spends much time with these,
making her one of the world’s
best informed women on foreign
and diplomatic matters.
Her daily lunches are three-
course affairs in the palace’s
gold room on gold*1", dishes and
with golden knives, forks and
spoons.
Into this crowded life she
finds time to shop for birthday
and Christmas presents for
members of her family and
friends.
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Winkler County News, Kermit, Texas
Sunday, April 17,1966 Page Nine
SAD CITIZENS — Unlike most humans who do
not like snow and cold weather, three polar bears sadly
watch the white stuff melt away at the Cincinnati Zoo
Family Dog Mangles Girl
SAN ANTONIO (AP)-A Ger-
man shepherd dog attacked and
mauled a little girl at her home
Thursday night.
The victim was Tammy Man-
gold, 3, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs, Bobby Mangold.
Her parents said their daugh-
ter and other children were
playing in the Mangold yard.
Mangold said his daughter re-
ceived 16 puncture wounds and
her left ear was almost tom off.
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Parsons, J. Arthur. The Winkler County News (Kermit, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 48, Ed. 2 Sunday, April 17, 1966, newspaper, April 17, 1966; Kermit, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth910331/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Winkler County Library.