The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 279, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 25, 1965 Page: 2 of 18
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PAG! TWO —
Rusk -
Sopulpg (Qklo.) Hem Id, Sunday, July 23, 1963
(Continued from page 1)
ment a vigorous partner in the
enterprise of foreign relations."
command and make the depart-
Schlesinger has written a
book," One Thousand Days,”
based on his experience as an
aide fo Kennedy. Life is pub-
lishing installments of the book.
Saturday's disclosure came in
the third installment.
Reaches Climax
Schlesinger said the Chief
Executive's dissatisfaction with
the State Department reached
a climax in the summer of
1951 because of ‘ one muddle
after another ”
He cited the 11! - fated Bay
of Pigs invasion of Communist
Cuba and the failure to develop
a negotiating position for Ber-
lin as the factors which finally
influenced the President to get
rid of Rusk.
‘The Stale Department is a
bow! of jelly," Schlesinger
quoted Kennedy. It's got all
those people over there who
are constantly smiling. I think
we need to smile less and be
tougher.”
Band -
Contest -
(Continued from page 1)
said.
Standings among the top 10
participants in the contest are
as follows:
Duck, Bobby Holder, Darrell
Williams, Jimmie Hayes, Larry
Duckert, Jerry Lockridge, Pat
Thoos. Susan Uubas. Kay Linnet
and Kaye McClure.
The event will end July 31
after a three-month duration
and the winners of the nine
scholarships worth $2,000 total
will be announced early in Au-
gust.
The most famous heavy !ady
In America is the Statue of Lib-
erty. She weighs about 225
tons
HUMES
Qtexall)
(Continued from page 1)
son and Mrs. Floyd Beveridge,
counselors. Mrs. Atkinson al-
so will act as nurse for the
group.
During the week the students
will study concert, marching,
conducting, twirling and drum
majoring procedures. At 1:30
p.m. on Saturday. July 31, the
students at the camp will per-
form an outdoor concert on the
campus. Brite said all parents
and friends are invited to at
tend the event.
There will be some 230 stu-
dents from Henryetta, Pryor,
Pawhuska. Sand Springs, Ok-
mulgee and Sapulpa at the
camp. Directors of boll) junior
and senior bands from these
towns will join Brite and Mrs.
Skinner on the faculty.
Also on the faculty will be
Don Kramer, director of the
Little Rock university band:
David Westgate and Bill Big-
heart from the University of
Oklahoma. Noted twirler Dor-
enda Gill, also of OU. will be
on the staff.
City
Briefs
Minor Lost Told
In Two City Firt*
Only minor damage was re-
ported in two fire alarms an-
swered Friday by Sapulpa fire-
men. The first, at 11:55 a. m
involved a car owned by Fred
Rushing at 1330 E. Lincoln. A
backfire in the carburetor
caused an estimated $25 dam-
age. Firemen were on the call
20 minutes.
A fire was out on arrival at
the James Porter residence at
524 E. Hobson, when firemen
answered the alarm at 8:15
p.m. A skillet on the range was
the cause of the blaze. The de-
partment was on the call for
15 minutes.
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(Continued from page 1)
at the intersection of Lint and
Third streets involved a motor-
cycle being driven by Jimmie
L. Maroutsos. 15. 1125 N. Ninth,
and a pickup being driven by
Fred Gentry Smith, 601 N.
Fourth.
Maroutsos was treated and re
leased by a private physician
for lacerations and abrasions.
Police cited him for driving
without a license.
An accident late Friday morn-
ing involved cars being driven
by Elizabeth J. Blanco, Tulsa,
and Clifford Ray Wood, 417 N.
Fourth, y happened in the 700
block North Mission.
A Saturday afternoon acci-
dent in the 300 block East Lee.
involved a 1965 parked sedan
in the possession of Jo Ella
Thompson. 1044 E. Hobson,
and a sedan being driven by
Delbert Creyton. 205 E. Wells.
(Continued from page 1)
would not only be capricious-
ness of the worst kind, hut
hypocrisy, and would play hav-
oc with the confidence of the
people in their government.”
He also said it was "impos-
sible to predict" when any of
the vital Viet Nam decisions will
be made or announced.
Goldberg With President
But Moyers said they would
not be decided until the Presi-
dent feels satisfied that he has
asked all the questions that
should be asked" and has
' brought to the surface all the
informatoin necessary.”
Also with the President was
the new U S. ambassador to the
United Nations. Arthur J. Gold-
berg Goldberg presumably
would join Johnson and Mc-
Namara in discussion of the
Viet Nam problem as it affects
the world peace organization.
Moyers said Johnson and
Goldberg took a long walk to-1
gether to "talk about a num-
ber of subjects that the ambas-
sador will have to deal with."
Charles Curtis, the one-time |
vice president of the United
States, was a direct descendant •
of Indian chiefs in the Osage
and Kaw tribes.
(Continued from page 1)
Friday for a victory celebra-
tion.
The Air Force Skyraiders
swooped down on the village,
west of the seaport town of
Qui Nhon, and hammered the
guerrillas with bombs, napalm,
and gunfire.
The pilot downed wa* making
his second pass when Commu-
nist groundfire apparently hit
] his plant. A wing began spitting
fuel and smoke and the Skyraid-
i er never pulled out of its dive.
Another pilot on the mission,
l apt. M. C. Elliott, of Glendale,
Arlz, said the buildup was
spotted when pilots notice sev-
eral new buildings had been
constructed in the village by
the Viet Cong.
Retrieve Body
A U. S helicopter retrieved
the downed pilot's body and a
memorial service was held for
him. More thin 800 villagers
attended.
The other guerrillas also were
killed in action Friday
A Right of 857 Canberra feta
carried out a raid 350 miles
northeast of Saigon, killing an
estimated 110 Communists The
Hanes, led by Lf. Col. Daniel
F Farr II of Los Angeles, hit
two Viet Cong camps.
The other 75 guerrillas were
killed in scattered air action
elsewhere.
The raid of the North Viet-
namese explosives plant was
carried out by 18 Air Force
planes.
Blow Up Building
They struck at Lang Chi. 55
miles northwest of Hanoi, with
33 tons of bombs. They blew
up one building and damaged
six others.
Navy planes teamed with sur-
face craft to wipe out a neet
of 22 Viet Cong junks, killing
an estimated 25 guerrillas.
Navy Lt. E. J. Clarke of
Frackville. Pa„ spotted two of
the junks Friday off the coast.
He was aboard a Vietnamese
junk with Chief Boatswain's
Mate Charles Sims of Charles-
ton Heights, S.C.
Thev chased the Viet Cong
vessels onto the beach and
called for help from the near-
by Navy destrover escort U S S
Morris. The Morris, aided bv
air strikes, destroyed the junk
fleet.
BLAST KILLS TWO
JOHANNESBURG. South Af-
rica (UPI)—Two African mine
workers were killed and four
others seriously injured in a
copper mine explosion, it was
reported Saturday.
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Miners -
(Continued from page 1)
then went back into the mine
to make sure no one was left
behind.
Company officials said dense
smoke apparently forced Gar-
rett and Hess into a section
known as "11-right” which is
six miles inside the mine.
Last Communication
The last communication with
them was at 7 a m. EDT when
they were directed to barricade
themselvea in one tunnel and
await rescue teams.
Fire fighters were hampered
in their efforts to fight the
blaze because the power could
not be turned off inside the
structure until 4:3(1 p.m., ac-
cording to one company offi-
cial.
One of the two six-man res-
cue teams in the mine got with-
in 540 feet of the men earlier
Saturday, only to be driven
back by flames and smoke.
While the rescue teams inched
toward the trapped miners, their
children waited at the mine en-
trance.
Hess Family Silent
Garrett had a son and two
daughters, all of pre-school age.
His father. Charles Garrett, Sr.,
complained at one point. "They
Mariner-4 Ends
Transmission Job
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) -
America's Mariner-4 spacecraft
Saturday successfully complet-
ed the most important phase of
its mission to Mars by complet-
ing transmission of its historic
21 photographs of the myster-
ious planet.
The cosmic camera, now 142.5
million miles from earth and
hurling itself into an orbit
around the sun, also gave sci-
entists a "bonus” by transmit-
ting about 10 per cent of an-
other photo before its tape ran
out.
This gave the experts on
earth a total of 21 full pictures
and part of No. 22.
Immediately after finishing
Its transmissions, which re-
I Manner-4 video camera July
14 as the spacecraft passed to
the spacecraft rewound itself
and began a playback.
End of the transmission tape
was reached 3:26 p.m., EDT.
! The pictures were taken by
Mariner-4's video camra July
14 as th spacecraft passed to
within 6,118 miles of Mars. Each
picture required more than
eight hours to transmit lo
earth.
The last few of the 21 com-
plete photogrrphs were not ex-
pected to produce much infor-
mation rgarding the mysteries
of Mars.
won't tell us anything.”
The Hess family remained si-
lent. Jess Hess's father also
had died in a mine accident.
■Die Arkwright mine is in
mountainous terrain just south
of here. Both Garrett and Hess
had worked in area mining op-
erations more than 10 years
Christopher officials said fhe
cause of the fire had not been
determined but it started near
power plant in the mam en-
trance to the mine.
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Livermore, Edward K. The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 279, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 25, 1965, newspaper, July 25, 1965; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1488055/m1/2/: accessed May 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.