Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 38, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 28, 1962 Page: 2 of 32
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National Affairs
1
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OK Predicted
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A
For UN Bonds
(Continued From Page 1)
'44
4
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2 y
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ministration plan by draw-
cancellation
Argentina Floods Hit
nationalization
The parliament elected El
Koudsi president for a five- (Continued From Page 1)
Sioux City
exchanges, he said,
was a
Damascus
The radio also announced
the resignation of Premier the
cabinet of moderate right-
here which controls
com-
wingers and independents.
announced he was willing to
step down in favor of a gov- ported to have taken
Sunday
Aires, Argentines shopped
MAM WITH..
0
/
House Gets Poll Tax Bill
0
given orders for the
execu-
tion of “plan 3” — the over-
throw of Frondizi
am. The navy, the same
ditch.
Posts Filled
#
#
By Mothers
DOWNTOWN
Dairy Aid Plan Killed
ONLY!
ton, Tulsa, treasurer; Mrs
Alyne Greene, Lawton, chap-
Stillwater, historian;
office while giving the mili- general, and Mrs. Mary Hig-
tary a veto over his decrees, gins. El Reno, banner guard
N
I
/
released tary official confirmed that
I A
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1
a tray of .22 cartridges Tues-
he had powder bums on the
Trust Issue Thrown
"I knew they were shells,
March 15, the day after Mrs.
Bartholomew's death.
Into State Contest
38
C
YD.
SO-ahead loans
town
also is due $5,000 under the
con-
A
—V
1
f
/ SIr
if you have a good job
you have credit for
Richard B. Russell
his approach would have
Firemen from five towns
in this area controlled the
stitute proposed by Sen.
Richard B Russell (D-Ga.)
might even help the ad-
race for the Democratic
nomination in that district.
E. Melvin Porter is assure
the Republican nomination
in the district as the only
one to file on that ticket.
By United Press
International
anything to do with Mrs.
Bartholomew's slaying be-
cause the car they were
c
Y
ernment’s
popular
measures.
Fire Loss Set
At $200,000
FURNITURE CLEANING. Free esti-
mates. Call HOST. JA 4-3585
0
d
t
Save on quality furniture.
BARNETT’S— 5950 NW 39th
ternative sponsored by Re-
publicans.
But Russell, chairman of
the Senate Armed Services
Committee, said he thought
strong support."
h"~A
i re-
gov-
of
kept under her pillow for pro-
tection.
level of $3 40 per hundred-
weight for the remainder
of 1962. This is milk used
in making butter, cheese
and other dairy foods.
Six southern Democrats
joined five Republicans in
voting down the proposal.
The plan had been reject-
ed earlier by the House
Agriculture Committee but
supporters had hoped the
Senate group would revive
it.
i
$
1
1
k
Oklahoma City's Atoka
water trust has become an
issue in the county’s Fourth
Legislative District race.
B. Michael Sullivan, Dem-
ocrat running against Rep.
Bryce Baggett, said he
pledged to his campaign or-
ganization that if elected he
will seek a law requiring
voter approval of such
trusts.
21:08
503
ALWAYS FI RST QUALITY’
Administration leaders were concerned about the
fate of the bond plan—particularly when it gets to the
house. UN Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson conferred
Tuesday with Humphrey and other Democratic senators
about the bond plan’s prospects.
1
3
TWO GOOD REASONS WHY
YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE DOWNTOWN!
CREASE RESISTANT COMBED COTTON
GINGHAM CHECKS
Rates as low as notes con bel
Installment loon department, ground floor,
8 till 5 daily, till 6 Friday
d
d
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I
from 18th Street to 41st
Street between the Illinois j
Central and Great Northern
Railroad tracks.
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WASHINGTON (UPI)—Senate Democratic whip Hu-
bert H. Humphrey Wednesday predicted defeat of a
MO
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c
WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Senate, breaking an 11-
day tieup, has approved a proposed constitutional amend-
ment to outlaw the poll tax as a voting requirement
in federal elections
By a 77 to 16 vote—15 more than the two-thirds
majority needed — the Senate adopted the proposal
Tuesday night and sent it to the House where its fate
depended largely on the rules committee.
With the po|l tax issue out of the way, the civil
rights fight in the Senate switched to a hearing on bills
to ban the literacy test as a voting qualification.
" Sen. John J. Sparkman (D-Ala.), who fought the anti-
poll tax measure, was the leadoff witness before a
subcommittee headed by Sen. Sam J. Ervin jr. (D-N.
C).
t
t
i
J
c
i
1
Wednesday after witnesses
said he was not the man.
The man was arrested in
Skiatook Tuesday and
brought here to be viewed
in lineups.
Meanwhile, another lead
apparently went up in
smoke. Kay County Sheriff
Forrest Walker said he
Although the plan was not
to be presented formally un-
til later Wednesday, a mili-
re-
con-
g,
Morning
Evening
Sunday
Gold Flow “Serious?
j 1 •
- a'
—‘62
4 ak 1
The shot came from a 22- left leg and upper chest,
driving was stolen in Dallas caliber derringer which she *'
Ozarka it neture’s purest water,
low in mineral solids, free of chlo-
rine and algoe, it lets the fun, rich
favor of your coffee come through
Try Oxarke ... you’ll nefice th
wonderful diflerence to Mm at
your coffee. Delivered to your
home or office in sonitary bofilet
Order some today.
%
Mrs.
SINGING TO DELEGATES at the Worn an’s Society of Christian Service of the
Oklahoma Conference of the Methodist Ch urch Wednesday morning was this choir
composed of Oklahoma City Methodist mi misters’ wives. More than 1,060 women
from 620 churches are attending the meet ing at St. Luke’s Methodist Church. Del-
egates will hear several speakers Wedn esday and wind up the annual meeting
Thursday.
Bang Bugs
Boys Game
KANSAS CITY (-George
Burns, 15, makes an indoor
sport of killing bugs with a
hammer at home in the base-
ment.
A scurrying bug ran onto
southern leader's move to
sink the UN bond issue
plan and curb future UN
military action.
The Minnesota Democrat
made the statement as the
Senate called up adminis-
tration - backed legislation
to authorize U. S. purchase
of up to $100 million of the
$200 million UN bond is-
sue.
Humphrey said the sub-
Farm Plan Fight Rages
WASHINGTON (—Battle lines are beginning to
tighten in and out of Congress over the Kennedy admin-
istration’s new farm plan under which farmers would
have to accept tighter controls or lose much of their
price supports and payments.
Congressmen from farming areas report they are
getting more mail from farmers expressing pro and con
views. They said undoubtedly some of the letter writing
reflects efforts of farm organizations to get grass roots
backing for their positions on the legislation.
Meanwhile, Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Free-
man hoped big business might jump in on the side of
the administration plan. After spending much time since
the program was unveiled in January speaking to farm-
ers, the secretary turned Tuesday to businessmen.
He told a meeting of the Sales Executive Club of
New York that failure to end farm surpluses and stabilize
farm prices and Income would hurt not only agriculture
aad small business but big business as well.
I Fabulous selection! Unheard of price! Hurry in and choose
I yards and yards of laces for your Spring and Summer
Ensewing Cottons and nylons in inch to 4 inch widths!
• DOWNTOWN CToSToSn""^
g
Military ft. -es were
/
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A
nap slaying was
Martinez was reported
ready with a compromise,
that would keep Frondizi in
no service would accept any
proposal to share the gov-
ernment responsibility with
Frondizi.
Woman's Gun
Disturbs Sleep
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Mrs. Ruth Waldron, 19, was
zone surrounding the
1 ,l
(
cialist measures instituted
by the U. A R. regime.
Since the early days of the
Dawalibi and his
-Yr. VM
Hl “
/
•4
The engineer was
trol of the city hall and oth-
er public buildings at Ola-
varria in Buenos Aires prov-
ince.
In downtown Buenos
But hours after the report-
ed zero hour a d i p l o m a t
close to Frondizi said nego-
tiations were still going on to
effect a compromise.
The smiling president was
reported maneuvering calm-
ly to stay in office in the
face of the worst of the doz-
ens of crisis in his 4-y e a r
rule.
He dispatched his new de-
fense minister. Rodolfo Mar-
tinez, and a delegate of his
intransigent Radical Party,
to talk privately with the
military leaders.
Reports from garrison cit-
ies in the interior said all
' Your Coffee
Better!
we
Esther Bagott, Oklahoma
City, sergeant at arms; Mrs.
Ruth Harris, Norman, color
nela
f-
-l, 'I
ue
thro. -n
Profits Huge
5 v I
In Gambling
r
ernment of “national unity."
Presumably he meant one
including more liberal or
left-wing elements.
The coup came as Syria
and Israel were preparing
to go before the UN secur-
ity council Wednesday to
exchange complaints about
a series of clashes between
them along the Sea of Gali-
lee in the past two weeks.
It was not known imme-
diately whether the council
would go ahead with its
hearing.
The broadcast statement
said that since the Septem-
ber revolution “imperialism
and its supporters — ene-
mies of Arabism and unity
— began hatching plots . . .
They infiltrated the ranks
of the legislative and execu-
tive bodies . . . Those ele-
ments succeeded in paralyz-
ing laws which had brought
gains to peasants and work-
ers and started issuing or-
ders and throwing peasants
out of their houses and re-
taking their land and re-
storing it to themselves and
their likes. ...
“Those elements brought to
County jail prisoners » » «
worked shoulder-to shoulder drive TO GUTHRIE. Save up to % [
beside national guard troop- famous brands. LENTZ FURNITURE
WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Kennedy told Con-
gress Wednesday that the flow of gold and dollars out
of the United States is continuing and confronts the na-
tion with a serious problem.
To stem the outflow, he said, "we must harness the
energies of all our people—in labor and management
as well as government—to the vital task of keeping our
industry competitive and expanding our exports."
Kennedy said he will appoint an export co-ordinator
whose only job will be to "oversee and expedite all
our varied efforts to penetrate foreign markets more
deeply.”
The president’s press secretary, Pierre Salinger,
said the appointment would be made in two or three
days. The co-ordinator will have “top-level" status in
the commerce department.
WASHINGTON (UPI) —
The Senate Agriculture
Committee Wednes-
day killed President Ken-
nedy's plan to head off a
scheduled April 1 drop in
federal support prices for
dairy products.
The committee rejected
11 to 5 a resolution which
would have ordered sup-
ports for manufacturing
milk held at the current
a" -
am
Shidler Gets Grant
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Shidler, Okla., has been
granted a $125,000 loan by
the Community .Facilities
TULSA (UPD—Mrs. Ma-
mie Simmons, Tulsa, was!
re-elected state president of
the American Gold Star
Mothers, Inc., Tuesday.
Other officers elected as i
the annual convention closed i
were Mrs. Fannie Dinger. I
Tulsa, first vice president;
Mrs. Minnie Morris, Oklaho-
ma City, second vice presi-
dent; Mrs. Mary Henderson.
Only 38c per yard for fine, smooth, crease-
resistant combed cotton! Only 38c for
your choice of small, medium, or large size
checks in yarn-dyed fashion colors from
pink to black . . . even sensational new
lime and turquoise! Only 38c for fabric
that machine washes, needs little or no
ironing! Only 38c —- this won’t last long
at Penney's special Downtown price!
Hurry in for yards and yards and yards to-'
day! Buy enough for dresses, children’s .
clothes, play clothes, even cafe curtains
and home trimmings!
yuupuxmunammmam----,
’ Repeat of a sellout
LACE TRIMMING
+Me. 3-Mo. 1-Mo.
*488 #9 *82
!’g 55
army officers had been
ported split over Ihe ।
laws against use of tele-
phones to transmit betting
information, and consider-
ation of legislation to “pro-
hibit the dissemination of
horse race results and re-
lated information from
race tracks for one hour
before each race begins
and for one hour after the
completion of each race."
It said the latter propos-
al “would have a most
salutary effect" because
bookmakers need their in-
formation quickly.
The subcommittee said
there now is no federal
law forbidding the inter-
state shipment of crooked
gambling equipment, such
as marked cards and load-
ed dice. It urged Congress
to close this loophole,
pointing to testimony that
the traffic in such para-
phernalia is big and un-
checked.
The subcommittee in its
unanimous report reiterat-
ed its announced intention
to probe more deeply lat-
er in the year into other
sports fixing scandals.
McClellan has refused to
Syria
(Continued From Page 1)
ed Nations charter.”
Damascus radio said the
army command would hold
both legislative and execu-
tive power until a transition-
al government is formed. It
said the government once
more was headed by the
same junta that carried out
the September 28 revolt.
The junta originally was
formed of six colonels, but
one of them. Col. Haydar
Kuzbari, was dismissed from
his command last Decem-
ber. It was believed he
leaned too far to the right to
suit the other junta mem-
bers, and he also was be-
lieved to have interfered in
the December election cam-
paign.
Split Reported
The 172-man parliament
elected December 1 was
dominated by right-wingers
generally opposed to the so-
ing votes from a loan al- civilian government that
took over from the junta,
ers in the battle against the
Sioux City flood.
adopted in the armed forces
"they have not found ex-
pression outside the bar- j
racks.”
The military occupation
of such places as telephone
doubted that two suspects awakened Tuesday by a gun- daynight. George’shammer
held in Buffalo, N. Y., had ehe --d ‘—J -h- -- --
. munications within the city
Dawalibi last weekend had and to the provinces.
21 N. WESTERN (1 5-8474
Jota B. White la the ot federal water pollution
• Democrat in the 3way trol program.
4
y
LEAGUE CITY, Texas UB give any details, but is
— Flames set off by an ex- known to be checking some
plosion caused an estimated reputed attempts to fix col-
__ $200,000 damage to the lege football and basket-
Two other persons, both !League City High School be- ball games._______________
were ordered to flee of them children, werefore dawn.
Me
#L
.MAILSUBSCRIPTION NTES
(Oklahoma, Arkansas, Colorado Kan.
oniMissouri, New Mexico and "texas
Sullivan urged others in
Ihe race to take a stand on Administration. The
the trust issue.
♦2 Wed., March 21, 1962 OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
4" • . 111 ---------------------------------------
"V,0
A.
was quiet at those places.
Shortly after midnight,
Frondizi again refused the tary, and Mrs. Fayme Pres-
demand of the military
chiefs that he resign, and
said his decision was "final lain; Mrs. Mable Grimstaff,
and irreversible."
government departments
their supporters and heaped
on them rewards as if the
country were a farm of their
own.
fF
PKi
Norman, recording secre-
he said, “but I just didn't
think."
year term on December 14.
A 55 - year - old moderate
rightist, he had been a for-
mer premier, foreign minis-
ter. speaker of the house, I
and Syrian minister to Wash-
ington for a year in 1944.
£ { »
shot and found the middle exploded one cartridge. None
finger ot her left hand of the fragments hit him but
streaming blood. ' ‘
off with a $100 fine - im-
posed for registering at a
motel under a false name
— and two accomplices
fled the state without be-
ing identified. Bruce testi-
fied he spurned the offer.
The attempted briber
was fined in Michigan un-
der the name of David
Budin. The subcommittee,
however, said his real
name is Frank Larry Ros-
enthal, and called him a
notorious Miami gambler
and “fixer.”
Calling for wiretapping
powers for the police,
now forbidden by federal
law, the subcommittee
said:
"The telephone is the
one instrument which is
absolutely necessary to
gamblers and racketeers
. . . It is inconceivable
that they should be permit-
ted to use this instrument
with impunity."
The report also called
for tightening* of existing
wDamas us, radio . said "precaution to avoid the Families in Sioux Qty.
Wednesday he had resigned possibility of attacks against Iowa, 1
for health reasons ” communication centers ” their dwellings and hun- swept away by flood waters
Troops directed traffic in dreds of other midwest- and drowned.
erners were homeless The northwest Iowa City blaze after a two-hour battle
16-man central telephone exchange Wednesday in the face of a of Sioux City was all but League City is 35 miles
seven - state flood onslaught helpless to withstand the southeast of Houston.
Flood crests in Iowa pounding of the Floyd Riv-
topped records which had er. The river rose two feet oEofdtng.anq"ungey
stood for 71 years. At least in two hours and City Man- elEvenine sungas5 ■■
600 persons had been driven ager Connie Bodine, after a "88 Nonar’agy DeiaRKha -
from eastern Nebraska helicopter tour of the flood- ’ home oe^vsxy11’
homes by ice-gorge rivers lands. announced the c i t y Morning. E‘‘ -*•-*«*>
The snow-runoff from one of would not be able to meet Eoening t
the most bitter winters on its quota of 500.000 sand- Evrnin 2n
record powered more floods bags and many levees would - 1
an won* , - r in parts of Idaho, South Da- not be completed in time to
an went about their work kota,. Illinois, Wisconsin and meet Thursday's flood crest.
Militarv ingomt ■ Indiana. As the Floyd spilled into
Gen Raul informants d Near Luton, Iowa, close parts of Sioux City, the
Gen, w the army by embattled Sioux City, city’s flood emergency com- sts «•=
chief, * reported to have eight cars of a Milwaukee mittee issued a mandatory pbher stat2-2ej7n ctnie; ,08
road freight train hit a evacuation order for per Gryue hfdhermetady forished
washed out section of track sons living in a 23-block area hora cm, 0”.°“'*** Pid *' °ol
at 7:30 and tumbled into a flooded
Police Free
New Suspect
PAWHUSKA m - A 25-
year-old tree - trimmer
picked up because he resem-
bled a man wanted in a kid-
sources said, planned to killed
move earlier. ------
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 73, No. 38, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 28, 1962, newspaper, March 28, 1962; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2005729/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.