Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 25, 1961 Page: 3 of 22
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Our World Todau
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Attack on French
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form the security council original positions does not
that this cannot continue.
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While Bourguiba spoke,
UN Secretary-General Dag geria and others to the air-
Hammarskjold
conferred craft carrier Arromanches
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rived in the Tunisian capital those bases. This could have
Monday at Bourguiba’s in-
vitation, was studying Tu- fellow member of the Arab
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most difficult tasks of his with the United States.
Political tension showed
do we anger Europeans when
ck
doubted that the UN official There were reports of
new
zerte city into the naval would produce a solution
Nazi Ends Masterful
The Tunisians announced
to pre-battle positions, his al air line, Tunis Air, would
Fanfani to See Nikita
Court Performance
At Marseille the French
protocol
A CURTIS MAGAZINE/JULY 29.1961
Tunis with 173 passengers.
mitted contact” between Tu-
did anything without their
more
orders,
than 500 and French line
SUPER SAU Of
Katanga Gets UN Unit
BEADS!
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BOLD!
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BEAUTIFUL!
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East Berliners Evicted
' the performance.
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Israeli Attorney General thing and add in the next
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10-day breath “But, of course, this
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Editor Dies at 61
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WASHINGTON (UPI) -
man.
“That is one more thing
League. The French share
one small Moroccan base
mann took off on a lightning
tangent. He never answered
nisia’s case against France
in one of the thorniest and
own soldiers clung to bar-
ricaded points at Bizerte in
similar disregard for the
UN order.
Referring to a hitch over
seem
point.
TUNIS (P—Tunisian Presi-
dent Habib Bourguiba ac-
cused France Tuesday of
violating the security coun-
cil’s Bizerte cease-fire or-
are prepared for new hostili-
ties,” the president declared.
"We have decided to in-
Browm’s Jewelry, 1st n.
Capitol Hill, Penn Square
we only want to make friends?
Don’t miss this week’s Post.
DOES IT PAY TO WRITE THE
PRESIDENT? Each week Ken-
nedy receives about 20,000
letters. Many of them are
outspoken opinions on major
issues. How much of his mail
mitted Tuesday that U.
S. foreign aid to South
Korea had been mis-man-
aged, but he warned the
United States any cut-
backs would harm both
countries.
CUBANS SHOWER Soviet spaceman Maj. Yuri Gagarin
(left) with applause as he and Premier Fidel Castro ar-
rive at Presidential Palace in Havana to attend a party
given by President Osvaldo Dorticos. Raul Roa, Cuban
foreign minister, is behind Castro and Gagarin. (UPI
Telephoto)
sengers had canceled their
passage.
der by refusing to withdraw This situation cannot last
to their pre-battle positions indefinitely."
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July 1 all set new records
tat the date.
deau since 1927, died Mon-
day.
IN e
and by extending their hold
on Tunisian territory.
Bourguiba warned at a
news conference that fight-
ing may break out again.
He said he had told nations
that had offered volunteers
to help Tunisia that he need-
ed trained guerrilla fighters,
planes based in Tunisia or
other countries, arms and
mobile antiaircraft batteries.
Prepared to Resist
Bourguiba did not accuse
the French of renewing the
attack. But he said if they
did not withdraw from Bi-
‘A
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Red Protest Ignored
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Defense Department officials
continued preparations Tuesday to launch a “sky-spy"
satellite despite Soviet protests it would be “an act of ag-
gression,” if it flew over Russia.
But officials said a magazine report (Missiles and
Rockets) that the same satellite would be launched this
week was wrong. They did not dispute the magazine’s
■ claim that Samos could take aerial photographs of the
Soviet Union for as long as a year and detect missiles
being readied for launching.
The officials said the launching was a month or two
away.
ROME (UPI)—Ambassador Adlai Stevenson ar-
ranged to confer Tuesday with Premier Amintore Fan-
fani, who is preparing to take a trip to Russia.
Fanfani announced Monday night, after three
weeks of apparent indecision and consultation with
Italy’s NATO allies, that he had accepted an invitation
s from Premier Khrushchev.
He and Foreign Minister Antonio Segnl will leave
August 2 and spend three days in Russia.
Fanfani is expected to do his best to dispel any
possible Russian impression that Italy is a “weak link”
in the NATO lineup.
NP
nisian authorities in Bizerte The ship can carry
Hausner snapped and the French commander,
w
/
PONCA
MILITARY ACADEMY
Ponca City, Okla.
Grades 6fh thru High School
Write lor Catalog or Visit
G
The agriculture department OP—Juel Mosley, 61, manag-
said Monday stocks of com, ing editor of the Southeast
wheat and sorghum grain on Missourian at Cape Girar-
WHY DO EUROPEANS THINK
WE’RE HICKS? Millions of
Americans will visit Europe
this year. They’ll beef about
plumbing, ask for hamburgers
at Maxim’s—and worse. Why
back more than once.
Eichmann sometimes
pleaded that Hausner was
BERLIN (UPI)—The East German Communists dis-
closed Tuesday they have started evicting from their
homes East Berliners who work in West Berlin.
The East Berlin newspaper Neue Zeit said two so-
called “border crossers" already had been evicted for
refusing to quit their West Berlin jobs and four others
kept their homes only by agreeing to work In East Ber-
lin.
The paper made It clear all of the 53,000 East Ber-
lin residents who work In the West will face the same
dilemma.
The action is a violation of the city’s four-power
agreement under which free movement within the en-
tire city is guaranteed.
Eichmann’s performance in
his witness stand—his bullet-
proof glass box—won him
any friends. Whether it in-
fluenced the three Israeli
judges will be shown by the
verdict they hand down in a
few weeks.
In many ways it was
masterly performance.
97-
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Strike Call Ignored
SALISBURY, Southern Rhodesia (UPI)—Armored
cars and heavily-armed troops escorted thousands of
Africans streaming to work Tuesday in defiance of a
strike call.
Govenment sources said the strike, now in its sec-
ond day, appeared to be a failure.
Prime Minister Sir Edgar Whitehead warned in a
pre-dawn broadcast his government would put down any
attempts to intimidate Africans.
Whitehead also hinted legal action against the Na-
tional Democratic Party leaders if it can be proved they
were behind attempts to enforce the strike which
erupted into violence Monday night.
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BAGHDAD, Iraq (P— Iraqi forces were reported Tues-
day to have seized a British armored car and captured
the three British soldiers inside Iraqi territory near the
Kuwait border.
It was the first capture reported by either side since
Iraqi Premier Karim Abdel Kassem claimed Kuwait as
Iraqi territory and Britain sent troops to the oil-rich
little sheikdom to guard its independence.
The car was said to have been roaming in the
desert inside Iraqi territory when a boy saw it. The
boy apparently led the Britons to Safwan police station
and they were brought to Baghdad for investigation.
The Britons were quoted as saying they lost their
way because the border was unmarked.
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A-
Nigerian Chief Visits
WASHINGTON (UEI)-Nigerian Prime Minister Sir
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, head of Africa's most popu-
lous nation, was to arrive Tuesday to “discuss any is-
sue under the sun” with President Kennedy.
The issue of technical assistance to Nigeria looms
largest.
Vice President Johnson, Secretary of State Dean
Rusk, commonwealth ambassadors and other diplomats
are expected at the airport for Sir Abubakar’s arrival
from New York for the second stop on his third visit
to the United States.
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45
many pas-
career.
A number of Tunisians
SEOUL, Korea (UPI)— The former lieutenant
Premier Song Yo-chan ad- general told newsmen, “In
. 7
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from which they came.”
Bourguiba suggested that
nations friendly to Tunisia
where France has military
bases should act against
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apologize. But a few min-
a ! utes later he would repeat
near the breaking when Hausner had him in a
corner, was to admit every-
require any negotiations. It
should not be difficult to
return to the base, send
paratroopers back to Al-
It is doubtful whether
F8/
Ite.
-2,
ficials doubted the prov-
ince was seriously seeking
Communist aid as an-
nounced Monday by pro-
vincial Interior Minister
Godefrold Munongo.
There was widespread
belief Munongo was taking
advantage of the illness of
Moise Tshombe, Katanga’s
president, and perhaps
making a power play of
his own.
that would satisfy Tunisia,
which wants total uncondi-
tional French withdrawal
from the Bizerte base.
Borguiba Complains
While Bourguiba com-
plained that the French
troops refused to withdraw
524
tr '
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LEOPOLDVILLE, The
Congo (UPI)—The United
Nations ordered a com-
pany of tough Indian Gurk-
ha troops into Elisabeth-
ville Tuesday in reaction
to announcement Katanga
province was seeking help
from the Communist bloc.
The action was consid-
ered more of a token show
of force than any real mil-
itary maneuver. Many of-
"‘2
-
21
base enclave, “fighting is
bound to start again."
“We have decided to re-
sist until the end and we
request, the court absented
him from a Monday morn-
ing session after he com-
plained he was unable to
sleep.
Answers Glib
But never again did Eich-
mann appear worried.
He ended his testimony
Monday still slippery, eva-
sive and quick with a glib
answer even after Hausner
denounced him repeatedly as
a liar and all three judges
made it clear they found
much of his testimony hard
,s1 /$v
which proves the bad faith
of the French,” he said.
"... The return to the
Iraqis Catch
British Trio
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cross-examination shook him was always on orders of my president said
driving him to admit any- —
thing, whether true or not.
Slips Out of Corner
“All we want is for you to
tell the truth,” Judge Lan-
dau would reply, and Eich-
mann was out of the corner
again.
At every opportunity, Eich-
mann delivered a little hom-
ily to the court with raised
eyebrows and a look of deep
sincerity, protesting he nev-
er could tell a lie, that he
only wanted the world to
know the truth.
He got away with it sev-
eral times, but later Judge
Landau, his patience worn
thin, cut him short.
Tricks Repeated
Eichmann's manner on the
stand lent strong support to
his claim that he was the
super-bureaucrat. His voice
rasping and clipped, his lan-
guage shot through and
through with officialese jar-
Monday that only the nation- dossrKennedynseediwdne$
few signs of subsiding.
temporarily. At Eichmann’s jsuperiors.”
“Yes, we know you never
way its dashing look thrills you. From bucket seat* inte-
rior to Landau roof lines. 6 in the way it becomes part
of your personality. Part of that secret haven where you
with Tunisian officials in an
effort to keep the crisis
from mushrooming into even
bigger proportions.
Hammarskjold, who ar-
be permitted to fly between
Tunis and Paris. But Air
France headquarters in
Paris said all its flights to
and from Tunisia are op-
Gideon Hausner's
pr T
emd
3
arrests Tuesday among
members of the French
community.
Despite the crisis, air and
sea travel services between
France and Tunisia con-
tinued.
sTe0"-l,""2
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053
store your dreams. Fut meet
the Skylark soon. It's a
limited edition car.
order to maintain this
country as a strong and
anti-Communist nation,
the United States and oth-
er free countries should
provide more aid than
ever before.”
By Joseph W. Grigg
JERUSALEM, Israel
(UPI)—A d o 1 f Eichmann
Tuesday completed a per-
formance that must go down
as one of the most amazing
ever put on in a courtroom.
It was a carefully pre-
pared defense of one of the
most monstrous crimes a
man ever has been charged
with. Parts of it were
meticulously rehearsed in
advance. Other parts were
strictly ad lib.
Question Remains
As defense and prosecu-
tion rested their cases at the
end of 15 weeks of trial,
thousands of documents and
millions of words, the court
was left with a key question.
Was Eichmann really the
ruthless Nazi master killer
who sent 6 million Jews to
extermination, as the Israeli
prosecution claimed?
Read "Dear Mr. President."
ALSO: VIC POWER: “THE
MEANEST MAN IN BASEBALL*
mE SATURDAY EVENINO
POST
0
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to believe.
Eichmann was meticu-
lously polite — almost hum-
ble — towards his three
judges.
He never failed to address
Hausner — the adversary
who was out for his neck —
site, the erating normally.
Never once did Eichmann Another Eichmann tactic,
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Tunisia Threatens
Vice Adm. Maurice Am- officials said
amana
SKYIOIK
Exciting new proof ... when beller dulemobiles ore buill / Buick will build them.
3ke
obeyed orders and never de- Switches Subject
cided a thing on his own, as But when an embarrass-
Eichmann depicted himself? ing question hit him, Eich-
Influence Doubted
F
. A
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Tuesday, July 25, 1961 3
• . ___ *
Or was he just a small- as “Mr. Attorney General”
time bureaucrat, a little cog (Herr Staatanwalt) and
in the vast Nazi murder ma- once or twice as “Mr. Haus-
chine, the man who only ner."
questions have not per- liner Ville D’Oran sailed for
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gon and mixed with strange
a tough one directly if he colloquialisms .Eichmann al-
could. Either he replied on ways fell back on docu-
another subject or launched , ments.
into a long, rambling speech iwe don’t want to know
until Judge Moishe Landau what’s in the documents but
stopped him in exasperation v hat you remember,” Haus-
Eichmann would bow and ner would warn.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 141, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 25, 1961, newspaper, July 25, 1961; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2005109/m1/3/?q=1966+yearbook+north+texas+state+university: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.