The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 145, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 16, 1966 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO Sopulpo (Ohio.) Harold, Wodnesdoy, February 14, 1944
Civilian Board To Village Chief
Guide NY Police
NEW YORK (UPI) The
controversial concept of a
VIST CONG FOLLOW BLINDLY, even after
being captured. Here e lineup is led under
• barbed wire barricade at Theerit Trw,
Viet Nam. as a U.S. Marins bolds up
the strands with hi* rifle. They were cep-
lured Airing operation "Double Eagle."
Bartender Places
Powers At Scene
MIAMI (UPI) —A bartender
testified today at the Mossier
murder trial that co-defendant
Mel via Lane Powers was in a
lounge at the entrance to the
causeway to Key Biscayne
about aa hour before the stab-
alayinf of Jacques Mossier oo
that residential island.
The witness was the 52nd in
the state's attempt to send tbe
•trapping dark Powers, 29. and
Mrs Candace Mossier, his 45-
year-old aunt and Messiers
widew. to the electric chair.
With this testimony in the
SSrd trial day, the state took
the alleged weapon-wielder
Pavers, near the scene of the
murder shortly before it took
place.
The witness was Badar
Shehan. of Miami, a short
wiry, dark bartender who said
be had worked at the Stuffed
Shirt Lounge for three and i
half years.
Mossier, the M-year-old finan
cial wizard who was Candy s
husband, was slain about 1:45
am. June 30. 1964 Shehan said
that Powers came into the
lounge, which is located just
•cross the street from the
entrance to the causeway that
crosses Biscayne Bay to the
island, between 12 30 and 1
a m. the morning of the 30th
"He ordered a double scotch,
and I served him.” the
bartender said.
"Then what did he do’-’
assistant prosecutor Arthur E
Huttoe asked.
"Drank it and left,” Shehan
■aid.
Earlier in the evening,
between f 30 and T, Shehan
said. Powers came In and
ordered a drink
"He asked me for in empty
Coke bottle and I act it on the
par ”
The state contends the soft
drink bottle eould hive been
used as one of the murder
weapons Mossier was stabbed
3* times and bludgeoned on the
head.
9th Democrat
Enters Race
OKLAHOMA CITY il'PIi -
Shehan pointed out the rangy A ninth Democrat formally en
Powers in court, as the man | tered the governor's race Tues-
"right over there'' at the day with a seven - point pro-
defense counsel table, gram “to make Oklahoma a
The manager of the Stuffed better place to live.” Three oth-
Shirt Lounge Marshall Kline er candidates spoke up on oth
civilian board to review police
performance is headed for ita
ultimate test in New York's
27,000-man police forte, the
nation's largest.
Creation of a review board
here became a certainty
Tuesday when Mayor John V.
Lindsay named Philadelphia
Police Commissioner Howard
R Leary to head Naw York's
police department. Lindsay had
made a campaign promise to
the city's more than 15 million
Negroes and Puerto Ricarw to
establish a civilian-dominated
board to review complaints of
police brutality and other
practices.
L*«ry, who hi Philadelphia
commanded a department
which has had a civilian review
board since 1957, said be could
live with one ia Naw York,
although ha does not personally
favor a board or consider it
necessary
He will replace Vincent L.
Broderick, an outspoken op-
ponent of a review board fn
Broderick's emotional farewell
statement Tuesday, he said the
issue is not simply a review
board, but the question of who
runs the police department—the
mayor or the commissioner
“Is this department run as a
professional police department
or as an offshoot of city hall
with all of its political
implications*’' Broderick
asked.
Some police feared a review
board would hamstring police
operations and open the way to
political meddling In the
department
But Leary said Lindsay
Loses Fight
Against Cong
45, was the last state witness
Tuesday.
Telling about Powers, he
said:
He had a drink He went to
the door, and he came back in
almost unmedistely—came up
te the service bar and told me
the ether bartender had given
him an empty Coca-Cola bottle,
and he'd forgotten it. And
would I give him another
bottle, ana I gave it to him ”
And he left The state
contend* the bottle could have
been the bludgeon Police must
have thought fast about Pow
ers. Because Kline testified on
er issues.
Oklahoma Co. Assessor Hen-
ry Ford, after campaigning
over the state in three Model-T
Fords, issued his formal an-
nouncement.
Ford’s program includes de-
velopment of water and agri-
culture, governmental reform
road improvements, develop-
ment of education and industry,
tourist development, tax equal
istion and no tax increase
and statewide cooperation
among the legislature, gover-
nor and big and small towns.
J. Leland Gourley, Preston
Moore and Howard W Joplin
expressed their opinions on
crow examination that at II ------ ----
IZr "*.? hours courts, per# loyalty and edu
after the first policeman cation,
arrived at the murder apart ! * . ..
P of Powers at the against sin and one for unity,”
lounge.
Kline Identified in court
police pi-lures made of Powers
after his July 3 arrest in
Houston—Powers had long hair
at the time.
The state has coming up soon
witness to say Pewers
returned to the lounge that
night little over an hour before
the murde- and ordered a
double scotch.
VISIT TENTATIVELY SET
BELGRADE (UPI) -The
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr
Arthur Michael Ramsey, has
accepted an invitation to visit
Patriarch German of the___owiizeriana
Serbian Orthodox Church ir t UPI) —Poisonous gas creeping
Belgrade, reliable sources said through a hydro-electric duct
h*re d<*P inside the Swiss Alps
The visit the first between a today killed 17 persons Police
primate of the Church of launched an immediate invest!
England and the leader of the gallon of the mysterious
Gourley Mid. "but put me down
for education.”
Moore said he will be loyal
to the Democratic party and
that all candidates should pub-
licly support the party's nomi-
nee for governor.
Joplin called for penalties
for judges who fail to follow
the constitution. He said it is
immaterial whether judges are
elected or appointed, "because
you can appoint a corrupt judge
as well as elect one ”
Real Life
Story Was
Too Much
TOKYO (UPI) It was Just
like in the movies Fourteen
Japanese tuna fishermen who
landed on a South Pacific
island last October liked the
wine, women and song so much
they stayed until last week.
The saga of the 14 intrepid
seamen was brought to light
today by the Asahi Evening
News.
The Tokyo newspaper report-
ed that the crew and captain of j ----* —- —z
the 39 ton vessel Kuei Maru put Prom'**d hlm complete autono-
m on Kay angel Island of the my *nd freedom of political
string-pulling
Civil rights leaders envi-
sioned a review board here as a
means of stopping alleged
outrages against members of
minority groups by policemen
who believe in night stick
justice. Lindsay's proposed
board doe* not fully meet their
demands
Although they hailed the
appointment of Leary as a fair,
sympathetic commissioner,
they were disappointed that
Lindsay’s board will not be
completely independent of the
police department and will not
have its own investigation
powers. The board the mayor
proposes would be part of the
police department but would
have four civilians added to the
present board of three deputy-
police commissioners.
DA NANG. South Viet Nam
•UPI) —A Vietnamese village
chief who survived for five
years with a Viet Cong price on
his head, was laid out In a
vermlllion coffin today after)
losing his personal battle with |
Communism.
Grieving relatives planned to I
bury Ngo Tuong. 45, in his
native village where he was
shot down by Viet Cong
assassins m a daylight gun
battle on Tuesday.
Tuong was a grass-roots I
warrior against Communism in
the region around Da Nang
For many years he had led
Peoples .Action Teams tPATi in
forays into Communist con-1
trolled villages.
PAT teams follow much]
the same pattern as the Viet
Cong's own armed propaganda
units, ferreting out enemies of
tho regime and propagnzingat
gun point in areas under)
nominal Communist control.
Tuong worked for the last I
five years with a 9300 price on
his head, offered by the Viet
Cong to anyone who would kill |
him.
Two weeks ago he accepted I
nix's roto wilt ha to maintain air sopirfsHty
over distant objective* such as haaaMsaad
AIR-TO-AIR PHOENIX missile ia_______
on tho launcher rail af an A3A Navy |at at ___ _____________________
Hughes Aircraft m Culver, CalM. Leaking N leadings, and te provide prataatiaa lap war-
•var are Maada A. Livesay of Hughe* and ships The sna pictured her# ia a ta#t asaON.
Vic# Aden. Ignatius J. Galantin. The Phaa-
Irvin Blasts Action Taken Against
District Judge Chandler By Council
Palau group in mid-October,
hoping to trade with the island
chieftain for bananas.
The chief, as is customary
ordered up a grass skirt au-gfr
go featuring island maideni. All
14 seamen attended, leaving ao
one behind to mind the boat
During the merrymaking, the
<*>at was washed away by
strong winds and the sailors
were overcome by strong drink
U S authorities later found
the tuna vessel aground off the
island and detained the fisher-
men for unlawful landing
Japanese fishery agency offi-
cials sent another ship to pick
up the stranded crew and thev
arrived back in the port of
Yaizu last Saturday.
Meningitis Fatal
To Army Private
■ '=«srr t
snowcise I senate subcommittee Tuesday against Chandler was "unwar-, be before bim as chairman of
of Da Nang U 8 ludge* could destr°y-
Ti.nno .... -.I.-, , , , | *d by action such as that taken
.. a lve v ^ recently against Federal Dist
17 Persons Killed
By Flow OF Gas
L 0 C A R N O, Switzerland
Serbian Church, has been
tentatively set for April, the
eourcea said
NOTICE
of change In leasee-operator
(Formerly Dub's
Comer Male at Taft
STATION
Station)
BA 4-4229
accident.
Three of the victims—?we gas
specialists of the Locarno fire
brigade and a foreman—were
found with their gas masks tom
from their faces The 14 other
dead were Italian workers
killed by the gas as they
interrupted their nightshirt for
a food break. ■
MANAGED
by Tom Buchanan
Tom invites oil friends ond customers
to coma in ond get re-oequointed
Tom hos long been osocioted with
Phillip* "64" stations — and will be
remembered os o former employee of
the station he rywv monoges
Hospital Notes
Admitted were Priscilla Lugo
Verdis Miller, LeRoy Davis
Sherry Montgold, Vada Ellis,
Cors Singleton. Dr. James Tay-
lor. Ruth Thompson. Lewis Lu-
per and Charoiette Graham.
Dismissed were O B Fouse!,
j Micheal Pierce, Robert Page
Elizabeth Cummings, Burge
Hammond, Ethel Hammond.
Tennie Taylor, W M Taylor
Gary Sparks. Rozetta Stephens.
Clarence Dietz. Haney Mask.
Maude Proctor, Bill Fisher.
Cheryl Hood and Bobbie Rob
ertson.
Soma Friandly Facts—
SERVING YOU FAMOUS
PHILLIFf "44" PRODUCTS
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CASH HfTI NIXT MONDAY NIGHT
WORTH 9S0.0O
Of Sopulpo Shopping Cantor. Got frog
fekota at Dial "44" Station
nominates negro
BAY SPRING, Miss. (UPI)
— Rep Prentiss Walker, R
Miss. has become the first
southern congressman to nomin-
ate s Negro youth for
| appointment to a service
; academy
Walker proposed Marvell
Lang, an "A" average senior at
I Bay Springs vocational school,
for the US. Air Force
1 Academy, It was announced
Tuesday.
The congressman Is a randl-
j date to oppose veteran James
Eastland, D Miss , for |||
Senate seat
FT CRD. Calif. (UPI)
Army Pv;. Robert L. Johnson
20, of Shawnee, Okla., died
Tuesday, apparently of menin
gitis.
Johnson’s death was the first
blamed on meningitis since an
epidemic forced the Army to
phase out basic training at this
sprawling post from October.
1964. to April, 1965.
Johnson was transferred here
Dec 21 from Ft Polk, La., to
undergo advanced training in
communications.
Preliminary laboratory tests
indicated Johnson died of men-
ingococcal meningitis, the seme
strain ‘hit was responsible for
25 deaths La the previous out-
break here.
All other men In his barracks
were given sulfa treatments
and restricted to the area for
medical observation through
the coming weekend.
Freeman Has
1BJ Suggestions
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Agn
culture Secretary Orville L
Freeman returned from South
Viet Nam early today with
list of recommendations for
President Johnson on how to
step up the battle on the war's
civilian front.
Freeman and his party of
officials and agriculture experts
landed at Andrews Air Force
Base outside Washington. The
secretary was to report to
Johnson later today.
Freeman told newsmen that
tremendous stride* had been
made In agriculture in South
Viet Nam. particularly In the
areas of land reform and
developing technique* of using
previously infertile land to
grow crops.
At on* point In his tour, he
said, he saw a pint of J j.j
acre* that had been nothing
but sand dunes two years ago”
but now was bringing Its owner
a net of about 12,000 a year
Nows Conference
Cancellation Adds
To Search Mystery
PALOMARES, Spam (UPI)
— The sudden cancellation of a
joint Spamsh-American news
conference added a new myste-
ry today te the month-long
search for a missing US. H
bomb off the southeastern coast
of Spain.
The news briefing called
Tuesday night presumably to
report on the progress of the
search, was cancelled abruptly
No explanation was given.
U S. military and embassy
official! rtfused to comment en
the progress of the eearch or
about reoorts that new equip-
ment was sent to the search
area Monday for further efforts
te raise the bomb. It Is believed
te lie in about 1.2M feet of
water.
It was reported that two 150-
pound water pumps, capable of
ournplng son gallons of water a
minute, were flown here from
Westover Air Force Base
Mass., possibly to be used to
raise the bomb once it was
located.
Two special underwater craft
probed the bottom of the
Mediterranean Sta thro* miles
nff shore Tuesday and were
expected to continue their ^
search today.
Th# search for tho missing
I l-meg»ton bomb began nearly
a month ago after a B52
bomber and KHm tanker
collided over -he southern coast
of Spain Seven of the H
crewmen abesrd th# two big
’*« were kilted Three other
bombs were recovered on land
Rabbi's Assailant
Dies OF Wound*
Le My. which the Marines have
protected from Communist
■ttsck for the past few months
But his nearby native village of
Ap Quang Nam was a different
story.
Tuong went back to Ap
Quang Nam on Tuesday to
attend a Buddhist anniversary
ceremony.
Two Viet Cong terrorists
stepped out from behind a hut
and fired a machine gun down
the village street, killing Tuong
and two other villagers.
Escapee Capfured
On Bourbon Street
During Mardi Gras
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -
FBI agents, mingling with
carnival merrymakers on the
French Quarter's raucous Bour-
bon Street, today quietly
arrested Charles Lorin Gove, i
prison escapee sought in i
double bank holdup in Ken
tucky.
Gove was to have been put on
the FBI's list of 10 most
wanted criminals today along
with his alleged partner in the
bank robberies, Ralph Dwayne
Owen.
Gova. 40. was te be arraigned
later today before a U.S.
commissioner.
Robert Rightmeyer, epecial
agent in charge of th* FBI in
New Orleans, said Gove was
unarmed and put up no
resistance although he had been
considered dangerous.
He had been using the alias
Leo Nichols while living in New
Orleans.
Owen and Gove had been
sought since last Oct. 31. when
they broke out of a prison
medical facility at Vacaviie.
' alif., while serving terms of
five years to life for armed
robbery.
any circuit council could easily
deridt to remove from the ef-
Judge Stephen S. Chandler of
Oklahoma City.
Ervin, a former justice of the
North Carolina Supreme Court. — —------------ ....
told the Senate subcommittee l*c,,ve occupany of this office
--1 any district judge whose official
action displease* it in any wey,
especially where this council
ran rite some ereentricity of
temperament or personality.”
The subommittee is seeking
a way, short of impeachment
NEW YORK (UPI) —A by Congress, to strip the U S
freighter carrying about 50 court system of unfit jurists
persons turned around in the | Former Chief Judge John
ranted and preciptous.” I th* Judicial Conference Com-
If the order issued by the 10th mi tee on Court Administration.
Circuit Judicial Council, par- Bigg* admitted there was a
tially stripping Chandler of his "no man's land” between im-
powers as a judge, is allowed peachment and effective action
to stand, Ervin said. "Then that can be taken by a judicial
Freighter Turns
After Sea Fire
USE HERALD WANT ADS
North A'lantic and headed for
St John's Newfoundland, today
after fire swept two of her
cargo holds.
The U.S. Coast Guard said
the 441-foot freighter American
Importer reported the fire
under control at 7 25 a m„
nearly three hours after she
radioed for help. The C__
Guard said the vessel was
moving under its own power
and that she required
assistance.
There were no |
reported aboard the 1.000-ton
ship She was believed to have
crew members and three
passenger* aboard, the Coast
Guard said
The vessel, a V S Lines ship,
left New York on Saturday and
was bousd tor Dublin. Ireland
The Coart Guard said the
nature of her cargo was not
known.
MIDWAY MODERNIZED
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
The 20-year-old aircraft carrier
Midway was decommissioned
Tuesday before undergoing
175 million modernization job
The work at the
Francisco Bay naval shipyard
will take two to three years It
will equip the carrier to handle
htavier jet planes.
The Midway was commis
sioned in 1945 and recently
returned to the United States
after 4*4 months of duty
waters off Viet Nam
council with a judge who cannot
carry out his duties.
Joseph Boykin, a Washington
attorney and author of "The
Corrupt Judge." said impeach-
ment was "the sol* mathod
available to remove an unfit
judge, whether he be incompe-
tent, psychopathic, senile, alco-
holic. or e\en corrupt." Ha aaid
there had not been an Impeach-
ment inquiry since 1945. and
----- y.rr, J1IUKP Jonn that j| was improbabi, that no
Higgs Jr., of the 3rd U. S Cir {judge since then had needed to
cuit declined to comment on i be relieved of his duties.
FORD ON ROADI
OKLAHOMA CITY tUPI) -A
county assessor named Henry
Ford has announced as
candidate for governor of
Oklahoma Ford, one of nine
persons seeking the Democratic
nomination.
DETROIT LTPI) -Richard
3 Wishnctsky 23, who shot
Rabbi Morris Adler and then
tried to kill himself during
fynagogue services Saturday
died early today at a hospital
Rabbi Adler, who has not
regained consriousnesf since he
was struck down by two bullets
fired by Wishnetsky. was
reported to havo made “a few
•mall gains ”
Wishnetsky, who shot himself
in the head seconds ofter firing
»< the prominent Detroit
religious and civic leader died
I* 2.4 am EYT He never
regained consciousness.
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Livermore, Edward K. The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 145, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 16, 1966, newspaper, February 16, 1966; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490838/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.