Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 72, Ed. 3 Saturday, May 13, 1967 Page: 1 of 4
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r
Low-Flyiag PI—Pretexted
K
I
!
I
the area.
i
Lambert's home, in suburban Chili, is about 1,200
5c IN OKLAHOMA—10c ELSEWHERE
VOL. LXXVHI, NO. 72
1 MILLION JOIN POPE
I
1
2
I
i Tax Slashes Promised
Pontiff
Cheered
When War Needs End
9:)
1
At Fatima
ever
made for a return to peace
0000 0022
%0
This would make the gov-
Fowler gave his address at spending was in prospect for eminent a net borrower of
fiscal 1968, starting next July $10 billion in this calendar
t
4 •
reason for the administra-
me nt sources.
Ft*
profits, this could mean a
6-City Dolese
Pilgrims jam square In front of the Basilica of Fall ma, awaiting arrival of Pope Paul. (AP Wirephoto)
Scrappy MIG* Pounce on Raiderg
Strike Settled
3 U. S. Jets Lost Near Hanoi
except for the Vietnam out- can airmen bombing within
got a very good agreement,
shrine in an open car,
wav-
Three U. S. Air Force planes craft lost were slower Thun- for the 126 strike missions
derchief jets — one lost to
were downed.
Police said about three
Military headquarters said ground fire and the other to
million persons were at the
unknown causes." Five air-
Ship Scrapinyg 'Explained'
were jammed around the
Soviet Presents Note
Evidently the bombs hit a
U. S. Ambassador Lewellyn already protested to the So-
and neither are we — but
to the situation in Vietnam."
U. S. headquarters dis-
choose to take a large por-
The U. S. Embassy said
North Vietnam were contin-
to bring new weapons
spokesman in Washington,
Robert J. McCloskey, said
among
•am
CLOUDY
Is Missing Nazi
3
r-
A
Still Living?
Whafs inside
I
This community of 560 earth line.
dwellers is trying to live up
f
The marine force of about
M
to its space age name. All 400 men was pushing up the
UNh
streets have been given as-
Martin Bormann
Juan Falero Martinez
1
s
Jupiter, Pegasus and Comet, bunkers.
2.
b
2
a
■
MOSCOW (AP) — The So-
viet government handed to
heavy fire from Red guns,
missiles and jets Friday.
Todays
News
Today
ton.
The
J. Willoughby, district repre-
sentative of the equipment
flown Friday were a storage
area four miles from down-
ter Vladimir S. Semenov, ex-
pressed concern about the
forces dug in along the de-
militarized zone frontier of
incidents.
The U. S. government had
sors reported that a $5 bil-
lion escalation in Vietnam
declined to say what the So-
viet note contained. It is
being forwarded to Washing-
sile site 68 miles up the Red
River Valley from Hanoi.
were
which
A 12-day strike by 125 local
union members against the
tion of this substantial fiscal Thompson, who was called
dividend in the future in the in by Deputy Foreign Minis-
j
rine and wounded 24 Friday.
The Red barrages of artil-
lery and mortar fire Includ-
ed 85 and 100mm shells. A
spokesman said that this is
barracks an equal distance
southwest of the capital.
Returning to their bases in
pilots said.
An air force spokesman
said the Communist MIGs
evidently escaped unscathed
from the dogfights.
federal deficit of more than
$18 billion, the professional
economists said, unless
Johnson's proposed income
tax surcharge is enacted.
Johnson forecast an $8.1
shelled U. S. positions just
below the DMZ Friday.
Shelling the army-marine
artillery base at Gio Linh
and the marine camp at Con
Thien, Red mortars and ar-
rations.
He said President Johnson
has set in motion "the most
explicit, detailed and inclu-
U. S. sea maneuvers in an
area off Siberia which the
Russians could regard as
their own sphere.
There may be a certain
Amusements
Bridge
Classified Section
Comics
Religion News
Sports
TV Tidbits
Vital Statistics
Women’s News
men were listed as missing
in action. •
The toll brought to 539 the
U. S. planes lost over North
Vietnam.
EMFIRE CONTENTS COevRICHTBO WW OKLAHOMA PUBLISH INO CO., Kt M SOOAOWSY
16 PAGES—OKLAHOMA CITY, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1967
the Hanoi area was jumped
by Communist MIGs. One of
the lost jets, a Phantom F4C,
was downed by the Reds'
slower MIG17.
The other two U. S. air-
my in a healthy state for an
end to hostilities.
He noted congressional es-
t i m a t e s that if current
ITS TOO MUCH for 2-year-old Jeffrey Halliburton to
consider entering that monstrous door into classroom
life. He went with Mama, Mrs. Jack Halliburton, to en-
rol his older sister in Fillmore Grade School kindergar-
ten Friday. Like it or not, Jeffery will be back when
he's a seasoned man of 5. More candid pictures, Page
2. (Staff Photo by Don Brown)
State: Mostly cloudy
Sunday but clearing in late
afternoon. Thunderstorms
and showers central and
east portions. Highs from
60 to 70 after overnight
lows Saturday from 44 in
northwest to 63 southeast.
(Details, Page »)
MOURLY TEMPHRATURE
said.
He said the contract also
carried an updated Insur-
ance plan on workmen.
"I think the management
is pleased with the terms,"
he said. "They’re not very
' . VN/8 V--0 •' F-9VI
Harassed Homeowner Will Go Fly a Kite
feet from the edge of the airport property and 1,700 feet
from the west edge of the east-west runway. That strip
now is the principal landing site for commercial and pri-
vate planes since the longer northeast-southwest runway
will be closed until September 15 for repairs.
Planes taking off or landing at the airport zip over
Lambert’s house. While he said they were 200 feet high,
Houters estimated they were at a 500-foot level at that
point.
Lambert said Saturday he had 700 feet of string to at-
tach to the kite.
Houters said the kite probably would rise no higher
than 400 feet.
"There’s a chance that turbulence from planes flying
above the kite will send it into a dive,” he said.
Until now, Lambert has not allowed his 9-year-old
son, Mark, to fly a kite from the family’s property be-
cause he felt it would endanger the low-flying planes.
Now that he wants to do so, he said, it was because
"basically I’m trying to find out whether I have free use
of my property.
"Some place in the atmosphere must become public
domain and private property must end. My question is
where does this end?"
When asked whether he would abandon the kite-
flying idea if asked to do so, Lambert said he would if he
were requested officially.
"I don’t want to be arrested,” he said.
Thailand, pilots reported military airport near Fatima
both areas burning fiercely, and rode 25 miles to the
The most sensitive targets Smoke was rising 1,500 feet *
over Hanoi’s outskirts as the ing to crowds along the way.
ROCHESTER, N. Y. (AP) — Francis A. Lambert
doesn‘ like planes flying over his house — at an altitude
of 200 feet he says.
Furthermore, he says, that air space above the house
might belong to him.
So he has come upfwith an idea he hopes might
answer this question: "Is that air space mine?"
, "My son and I Intend td fly a kite into that space this
weekend to find out whether I have free use of my prop-
erty,” he said.
Lambert even notified Edwin C. Houters, manager of
the Rochester Monroe County Airport, of his kite-flying
intention so that Houters could warn pilots to fly clear of
shrine.
Church Bells Peal
2, 5
7
9-15
6
4. 5
8
9
9
7
were some 100 members of
Teamsters Local Union 886
and 25 members of the Oper-
ating Engineers Local 627.
‘More Wages’ OK’d
The Dolese plants were
struck at 6 a.m. May 3 in
Paid Circulation 301,134 A.M.-P.M. Daily Average, April 1967
Oklahoma City Times
23y
5xm
. ■
going at a slow pace.
It was the pontiff’s fourth
trip outside Italy in his four
years of reign.
Bells pealed in every Cath-
olic church in Portugal, a
predominately Roman Cath-
olic nation, as a silvery
Portuguese airliner assigned
to the pope set down at the
military airfield at Monte
Real.
In his sermon he referred
to the Vietnam war only
(See POPE—Page 2)
Friday there was no
policy-makers in the Krem-
lin to show a more hostile
face to U. S. activities in the
Asian sphere, they believe.
Space City Modern
COSMOS, Minn. (AP) -
town Hanoi and an army
from war.
For the council, it was a
switch from Friday’s bad
news.
the guns
form of a lighter tax bur-
den,” Fowler said.
miles of Hanoi met
dence that the naval colli-
sions "reflect any deliberate
Intention to worsen U.
S.-Soviet relations or that
the area.
A few miles further south
in Quang Nam province,
more marines were reported
in a heavy battle Friday and
Saturday with an enemy
force holding a rugged ridge-
tion’s continued desire to
have a tax increase enacted
54132202
A-/r . ’
■ g
.3 A
structed to “follow up” the
• a +-)
■ FATIMA, Portugal (AP)
H — On a hillside venerated as
I the scene of a miracle, Pope
“ Paul VI prayed Saturday for
k an end to war and hunger In
S the world.
A throng estimated by po-
E lice to number a million
R knelt in prayer as the pontiff
celebrated an outdoor mass
on the spot where three
shepherd children said they
. saw the Virgin Mary appear
■ exactly 50 years ago and ap-
■ peal for peace in the world.
In his sermon — the chief
address of his half-day visit
( — Pope Paul appealed for
a Peace, saying the
• world is in danger. He con-
tended also that moral prog-
ress is not keeping pace with
scientific progress.
Crowd Totals 3 Million
"Do not contemplate pro-
jects of destruction and of
death, of revolution and of
suppression, but think rather
of projects of mutual
strengthening and of solid
collaboration," he said.
The pope had left Rome
only hours before. He ar-
rived in a rainstorm at a
E. Thompson Saturday a
note containing its version of
the scrapes between Soviet
Friday night, and a three-
year contract was signed.
Troy Shelton, executive
vice president of Dolese, the
largest of five ready-mix
concrete firms in Oklahoma
City, said the men will re-
turn to work Monday morn-
ing.
Spending Surge Expected
The panel said it concur-
red that a tax boost would be
desirable — not on July 1,
but possible October 1 — for
budgetary and anti-inflation
reasons.
Fowler did not mention
any increase in Vietnam
spending, although many
Washington sources have
predicted another steep up-
turn. Instead, he emphasized
that spending has been held
below increases in revenues,
Is Martin Borman alive in Guatemala?
Juan Falero Martinez has been arrested
by Guatemalan secret police on suspicion
of being Adolf Hitler’s deputy fuehrer,
missing since the end of World War II.
Falero Martinez claims to be a 68-
year-old peasant born in Uruguay. "It’s
crazy to think I’m Martin Bormann," he
said. (AP Wirephoto)
Henry H. Fowler assured the
nation’s t o p industrialists
Saturday that the adminis-
tration will call for major
tax reductions when the war
in Vietnam ends in order to
continue sustained economic
growth.
. :i22:
to be happy with it."
‘Management Pleased’ LA
Terms of the contract in-
cluded equalizing job time
among workers so that some
men would not draw unu-
sually large amounts of
Participating in the strike overtime pay while others
received none, Willoughby
sometimes they're neces-
sary.”
On the terms of the con-
tract, Shelton said that "this
is an internal affair, and we
would prefer not to discuss
it.”
The unions had been seek-,
(See STRIKE—Page 2)
lays, and that government five
and I feel everyone is going policies have left the econo-
with Vietnam — were contin-
ued unchanged, the govern-
ment would run a surplus of
some $15 billion by 1970 and
$44 billion by 1975.
Would Jar Economy
Since such massive sur-
pluses would paralyze the
economy, he said, there
would have to be either a
great increase in federal
spending "or there will be
room for tax reduction
spreading over many years
vlet foreign ministry on the
subjecct.
The two collisions are
viewed by policy makers as
another Isolated cold war in-
cident, possibly the result of
Striking even deeper into airport, along the route to
the North, a Thunderchief Fatima and at Fatima itself,
strike plastered a SAM mis- They said a million of them
Because of a prospective
$2.5 billion dip in corporation this year.
spending and tax policies —
other than those connected practically every strike in
Soviet military anxiety about tillery shells killed one ma-
viet Embassy inWashington. are related in
The U. S. spokesman here
McCloskey said earlier closed that the Communist
that Thompson had been in-
Ea.3
warhead storage area. Crowds cheered and waved
Smoke was billowing 7,000 white handkerchiefs as the
feet in the air after the raid, pope rode by. He waved
back, with his motorcade
sa , Want Ads CX MBI
355 Other cals cE2311
the spring meeting of the
Business Council, attended 1. The report indicated that year, the council's consult-
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP)|sive" planning effort
— Secretary of the Treasury -ad- - - —
srpwagtes'anamendr'workkng happy with these shutdowns.
by the heads of about 100 of the estimate was drawn at anta said, and is a major
the courtfry’s largest corpo- least in part from govern- J------- — —
The council's panel of 25 billion deficit, assuming a
professional economic advl- six percent tax surcharge
----- starting July 1.
ai
Ag
IN PRAYER FOR PEACE
American protests. The em- a020
state department bassy here said Semenov uing ten
called Thompson in before into the area. Two new types
the ambassador could initi- of artillery pieces
evi- ate any contact with the So-
ridgeline Friday when it ran
I names like Mars, into heavy fire from jungled
F
injKuj nr
and of a large scale nature.”
"It is my strong belief that and American destroyers In
we should — and will — the Sea of Japan.
a ■ /
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2.
t?\...
hm
P
raiders winged off, they
said.
conditions.
B. H. Pannell, local Team-
sters president, said Satur-
day only one union-
management meeting was
held during the strike. That
one, held Thursday, lasted
nearly all day and paved the
way for contract settlement
Friday night, Pannell said.
"We got considerably
more wages and better
working conditions all
around," Pannell said.
Both Sides Happy
Both management and un-
ion leaders apparently were
happy with the contract.
“We had a very substan-
tial majority vote,” Robert
1 msesgmemm I
Dolese Co. in six cities ended operators, said. "I feel we
amount of pressure from the first time the Reds have
Moscow's "hawks” upon the used 85 and 100mm shells in
SAIGON (AP) — Ameri-
ar.
0420
1 m.mdhdk
Kama E6
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 72, Ed. 3 Saturday, May 13, 1967, newspaper, May 13, 1967; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1846661/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.