The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 227, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 6, 1959 Page: 1 of 28
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eXIA KLITOItICAL VICIETY
exCA? I TOL 111ED3 -
East Central didn't quite make it a 93 season Saturday in louisianalloAut VdPfs"apittUntitlifie jobcgtger team has put in this year and the fine school spirit which has surged in the ranks of the collegians
THE ADA EVENI
Tiger Cagers
Bop N'eastern
See Sports Page
NEWS
Cougars Battle
Again on Friday
See Sports Page
56T11 YEAR NO 227
gcato
ADA OKLAHOMA SUNDAY DECEMBER 6 1959
36 Pages
5 CENTS WEEKDAY 10 CENTS SUNDAY
$
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0
N'A
I
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I
Steelmen
Set Meet
Monday
WASHINGTON (AP ) — union
and management negotiators who
held "constructive" talks Satur-
day will meet again Monday in
another effort to settle the steel
strike
Joseph F Finnegan director of
the Federal Mediation and Concil-
Union Service declined to give
any details on Saturday's discus-
sions other than to say he thought
they were constructive
Finnegan had said earlier that
he would offer some settlement
proposals He didn't say what
they might be but added that his
mediators had been suggesting
peace plans to both sides right
along
R Conrad Cooper top industry
negotiator and David J McDon-
ald Steelworkers president said
after Saturday's 212-hour meeting
they had no comment
Cost Is Heavy
Renewal of the 166-day strike is
threatened when a Taft-Hartley
Act injunction expires Jan 26
Boyd Leedom chairman of the
National Labor Relations Board
estimated in a New York speech
Saturday that the strike has cost I
workers 114 billion dollars has
cost industry billion dollars!
and the government $16000000001
—a total of $48A000000
Sen Mike Mansfield W-Mont I
assistant Senate Democratic lead-
er said in an interview that the
mushrooming losses from the
strike make it certain that the
federal government will be in the
red this fiscal year
l'p to Congress
Mansfield said that if the strike
resumes after the 80-day cooling-
off period Congress will have to
find a way to handle it "through
some sort of arbitration or special I
labor courts able to deal with
these problems with full author-
ity" The industry is standing firm on
its offer of a three-year contract
with benefits it values at 30 cents
an hour and the union values at
24 cents The union demands the
terms of its Kaiser Steel Corp
agreement c- ottfig for 22ii cents
hourly gain over 20 months There
also is disagreement on work
rules
Prestrike wages for steelwork-
ers averaged $311 an hour
Commissioners
Rally to Map
Battle Plans
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)--Coun-I
ty commissioners across Okiaho-
ma will rally here next week to
map plans for their battle against l
smgoa lllll
Thursday p r
iuposed by Democrats
Roy Grime s Garvin County
commissioner from Elmore City
commissioner from Elmore City
is president of the state associa-
tion Ile said principal speakers will
be Sens Clem McSpadden Nowa-
ta and George Miskovsky Okla-
homa City both critics of the ad-
ministration and opposed to the
plan to let counties turn their road
programs over to the state High-
way Department
"This will be the most important
convention our association has
ever held" Grimes said "We will
form our plans for opposing what
we believe would mark the begin-
ning of the end of local govern'
ment in Oklahoma
"Rankest abuse of executive
power yet seen in Oklahoma was
the utter disregard of civil rights
demonstra'ed by the governor's
aides in McClain County Yet now
this same crew asks us to give
them more power
"If we do the evidence is clear
we will be repaid with even worse
arrogance and vindictiveness than
we have already seen"
Grimes noted that Edmondson !
calls the road reform bill the
"right to reform" law
"We call it the right to short-
change" he said "because it per-
mits taking one-third of the money
now spent on county roads for use
on major highways"
Grimes said county commission- I
ers also are vigorously opposing!'
the legislative reapportionment pe-
tition because it would give Okla-
home City and Tulsa too much
control
Edmondson's third measure
would create a constitutional High-
way Commission
OKLAHOMA — Generally fair
through Sunday night warmer
north portion Sunday and over
the state Sunday night high
Sunday 50s
Lmm14F
SISTER ACT—The home economics department at Atoka High School is all in the family
nowadays with two sisters making up the faculty Mrs Zelma Brecheen and Mrs Arlene
Arnold have follow7d parallel careers finely came together this year at Atoka Here
they are (Brecheen left Arnold right) about to break and share a cookie 1:Aed by one
of their students (NEWS Staff Photo)
Atoka's Home Ec Department
Works on the "Familv Plan"
The home economics depart
ment of Atoka High School is
operating this year strictly on the
family plan with a faculty com-
prised of two sisters
They are Mrs Zelma Brecheen
and Mrs Alene Arnold daughters
of Mr and Mrs John W Daniel
of Olney
The careers of the two Daniel
girls have run on parallel tracks
from the start with Zelma al-
ways a step or two ahead The
two grew up in Olney and were
graduated from Olney High
School Both went on to Okla-
homa State University or Okla-
homa MAL
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air
Force will retire up to 900 aircraft
under administration pressure to
save money for missiles and other
atomic-space age equipment
The manned airplanes mostly1
combat types will be laid up over
the next 12 months This will
parallel the expected closing of a
dozen or more operating bases
These economy moves come on
top of recent drastic cutbacks and
cancellations in costly but prom-1
ising programs for the develop-
planning"
Paul M Butler Democratic
national chairman said council
members including former Pres
Guatemala Says
Cuba Aided Rebs
WASHINGTON (AP) — Guate-
mala charged Cuba Saturday with
backing a Communist-planned in-
vasion against it Cuba retorted
the charge was absurd and was
maoe wiin an eye to its elleci
on Guatemala's Sunday elections
The charge and retort were
made in a session of the Council
of the Organization of American
States called into an extraordi-
nary Saturday session to hear the
Guatemalan complaint
Since Guatemala asktvl no for
mdl action beyond requesting the
Cuban government take steps to
prevent any revolutionary move-
ment from its shores the 21-nation
OAS council took no position
It adjourned without comment
after hearing both sides
1 But Mrs Brecheen took her de-
gree a BS in home economics
in 1951 Mrs Arnold got hers in
1957
Mrs Brecheen moved on to he-
come assistant home demonstra-
tion agent in Seminole County in
1952 Mrs Arnold took a job as
assistant HD agent in Pottawat-
!omie County in 1957
Each stayed in her post for two
years before moving into teach-
ing There are of course some dif-
ferences Mrs Brecheen is mar-
red to a high school principal
and lives in Olney Mrs Arnold's
Air Force Plans to Retire
900 Planes to Buy Missiles
ment of advanced warplanes such
as the F108 long-range interceptor
and the 1370 long-range supersonic
heavy bomber
The Air Force is bearing the
brunt of economy and streamlin-
ing actions imposed by the admin
istration's determination to hold
the line on defense spending and
keep it running at about the cur-
rent 41 billion dollars a year
level
The Army which in past years
has absorbed heavy cuts in money!
A I
To Prove US's Aims
NEW YORK (AP)—The Demo- ident Harry S Truman had ap-
cratic Advisory Council Saturday proved the proposal unanimously
proposed a new arm of govern- at the opening session of a two-
ment—a National Peace Agency day meeting The council was
1
"This agency will be dramatic r formed after the party's 1956
proof to the world that the United presidential defeat to advise Dem-
States is sincere in its desire for ocrats in Congress on policy
peace and disarmament and arms
limitations agreements" the coun- 1 An array of big names in the
cil said Democratic party including pres-
The function of the agency it 1
idential nomination possibilities
said would be "to explore the attended the session in the Wal-
technical possibilities of inspec- !doll-Astoria Hotel
tion systems develop new arms
I As proposed the National Peace
limitation concepts and become t
a strong factor in disarmament Agency would report directly to
the President in much the same
way as the Atomic Energy Com-
mission "It will work in close collabora-
tion with the Departments of
State and Defense" the announce-
ment said
The roster of Democrats attend-
ing the council session beside
Truman and Butler included six
governors They are Gov Edmund
G Brown of California Leroy Col
lins of Florida Orville L Free-
' man of Minnesota David L Law-
' rence of Pennsylvania G Men-
nen Williams of Michigan and
S L R McNichols of Colorado
Also there were Adlai Steven-
son the party's presidential nom-
inee in the last two campaigns
Sen Stuart Symington of Missouri
Mrs Franklin D Roosevelt for-
mer Gov Averell Harriman of
New York and former Sen Her-
bert H Lehman of New York
The two-day meeting of the
council is part of a three-day
round of Democratic activities1
here that will culminate with a
S100-a-plate party fund - raising
dinner Monday in observance of
Mrs Rooseveit's 75th birthday I
'husband is a veterinarian and
they live in Atoka
Also Mrs Brecheen is ahead
in the juvenile department She
has three children Barbara 6
Zane 4 and Dane 2
Mrs Arnold might understand-
:ably have felt that the race was
over this ear when she came to
Atoka High — that she had final-
ly caught up with her sister
But it turns out that Mrs Ar-
nold has only 64 girls in her home
ec classes while Mrs Brecheen
still out in front has 68
A younger sister just hasn't got
a chance
and men appears to be holding
its own better than usual in cur
rent plans and in the new de
!tense budget that will be submit-
! ted to Congress next month
! The Navy will make a substan
!tial contribution to the economy
!campaign probably by mothball
big additional ships within the
next 12 months and by postpon-
' log at least the start of construe
!don and conversion of ships cost-
ing about half a billion dollars1
Within the Air Force the Air!
Defense Command is taking a
heavy portion of the cuts At least !
eight of the command's 79 de1
tense squadrons will be inactivat-
ed before the end of 1960 This
means the retirement or transfer !
to the National Guard or reserve !
forces of some 600 aircraft most
of them supersonic fighter types
U S Considers Troop Pull Out
Of Most of Its Icelandic Forces
Ike Due
Briefing
By Nehru
WASHINGTON AP )—President
Eisenhower w1t get a firsthand
report from Prime Minister Nehru
this week on the extent of the
threat posed by Red China to In-
dia's nen-Communist neighbors
‘Vhat he learns may have a vital
bearing on the prospects for start-
ing a worldwide disarmament
system during Eisenhower's last
year in office
14)r as Communist China's hos-
tility and aggressiveness toward
the outside iAorki increase there
is increasing concern in official
quarters here over the possibility
of setting up an effective inspec-
tion system to police any kind of
' disarmament accord—even a rel-
atively simple undertaking to re-
(rain from testing nuclear weap-
ons Talk Over Aid
Every major Western plan for
!disarmament as well as the nu-
!clear test ban treaty now under
'negotiation at Geneva provides
for the establishment of inspec-
tion stations manned by interna-
tional teams in Red China as well
!as the Soviet Union
Questions concerned with Red
China's policies and attitudes are
expected to be fully discussed by
lEisenhower and Nehru during the
!Presideut's four-day visit to New
Delhi beginning next Wednesday
These questions even enter into
!calculations about the amount of
'foreign aid including U S help
which India may require in the
next few years to carry out its
economic expansion plans
New aggression by Red Chi-
nese forces in disputed border
areas between the two countries
could force Nehru into an arma-
ment program he has long avoidd
ed The cost of this could cut into
India's economic plan unless the
burden were offset by more out-
side aid
Arms Issue Up
Disarmament issues also are:
expected to come up because both
Eisenhower and Nehru advocate !
bringing the nuclear arms race !
under control as a means of pro-:l
viding a global nuclear war
Secretary of State Christian A
Herter told a news conference
Nov 24 that it is "very much of a ! v
question" whether any kind of a's
disarmament agreement would be
practical without Red China's' u
rars"tm 11— —
participation He declined any
further discussion
But the fact is that of about
180 inspection stations which would
be necessary to police the nu-
(Continued On Pace Two 1
(Continued On Page Two i
(Continued on Page 2t
t
C A MC he Us ambassador in Rome I 1 After dinner when Gronchi left
I
HELP WHERE ITS NEEDED was given by this passerby on Ada's Main Street Satyr
day afternoon The Salvation Army Christmas kettles made their annual appearance
Saturday manned by SA personnel This week volunteers from Ada's civic clubs will take
ovar the job Funds collected will provide Christmas food baskets for some 125 needy
families-Capt Me !vitt Moore says Families wishing to apply for such baskets may do so
beginning Wednesday and continuing through December 16 at the SA Citadel 115 North
Oak between the hours of 9 a m and 4 p m (NEWS Staff Photo)
e Italians Join in Plea
For West to Maintain Guard
ROME (API—President Eisen-
hower and Italy's leaders called
on their allies Saturday night to
beep their defenses up until the
Soviet Union agrees to disarm
with "controls inspection and
safeguards"
With a final Rvo-hour review of
world problems Eisenhower I
wound up two days of talks with !
President Giovanni Gronchi and
Premier Antonio Segni Italy was
the first stop on the American
leader's II-nation good wi tt tour
Eisenhower declared there can
vf
AMMIMMMi
EIMONIMMIIMM
ANIMMEINNIEmormisommona
BIG SIRING: A NEWS photographer this week got this shot of some of the big pipe
which will be used in the big water stem imp i ovement program now underway This
pipe is part of the material that will furnich a big new loop for Ada's east side See
story on page 9) (NEWS Staff Photo by W L Knickmeyer)
)0E:jrt-n
-!!!)
-
The President set forth his United States rush into a quick
views in a joint communique with deal with the Russians
Gronchi and Segni Italians have been worried about
Smiling and chipper Eisenhow
er was host later at a formal talk that the United States might !cut back military aid shipments
dinner for the Italian leaders at I
IN 011 oriivilirino
1tto weakening the Atlantic Pact in
' weakening the Atlantic Pact in
Villa Taverna the residence ofl
Eisenhower accompanied h i m ! ri
outside the embassy residence to E
his car Despite the chill of the
rainy evening Eisenhower went
out without a hat or outer coat Fc
Ile was only otitMe a minute or G
two and was not in the rain
Eisenhower returned to QUirin-
al Palace where he is staying at tsF
rnas shoppers paused Saturday t
The President leaves Italy Sun-
da' shortly before noon after an
audience with Pope John XXIII
!Ile fl)es to Turkey second stop
on his tour
The final communique reported
Eisenhower had agreed with the
Italian officials on these key
points:
I The I:-nation Atlantic Pact
must remain ''the cornerstone of
their foreign policies" An Ameri-
can spokesman said this means
steps should be taken to avoid
anything that might weaken the
10-year-old defense treaty
2 More free countries should
join in a coordinated plan for
stepping up economic assistance!
to underdeveloped lands strug-
gling to lift their living standards
3 Further measures should be
taken quickly to wipe out discrimi-
natory trade restrictions which !
block commerce among free coun-
tries EisenhoeCs three separate:
talks with Italian officials were
conducted in a warm friendly at-
mosphere At a news conference afterward
Undersecretary of State Robert D
Murphy and White House press
secretary James C Ilagerty made
clear Italy did not ask to join the
scheduled Big Four East - West
summit conference
But Hagerty said Eisenhower
promised to look with "a certain
sympathy" on Italy's request to
be included if East-West talks
moved on into the fields of dis
armament and European security l
weakening the Atlantic Pact
even Bid
For Earl's
Governorship
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Christ
ppers paused Saturday to
6000 Men
Now Serve
on Island
' N ' 4 4'' -4 '1 : ' WASHINGTON (AP) — With
L
- - t 7
- drawil of a substantial part of
the American military force now
16 ! stationed in Iceland is under con-
i
tlantic
:1 ' iiif sideration All at iance the highest US and
'Ita
S t A levels informed
!!
f "4' k 4 t4 ' 11 officials revealed Saturday
1'
--it 144 k's li The Defense Department de
) chned to discuss this development
:
014N:
''4'4' in view of President Eisenhower's
absence on his good skill tour in
Europe Africa and Asia But a
11-
reduction in the 8000-man force in
ittoo
ie-
rr""r
IL
k : 'Ai' t(1) 7-':-7 ' '''''''Ll' o the North Atlantic island is under
4
it
I
4 1 -- stood to be one of the matters
:'' that will come before the NATO
tif
defense ministers meeting in Paris
starting Dec 14
US troops first went to Iceland
in the months before the United
''-'
It' States officially entered World
N
War II 18 years ago Monday The
US forces now in Iceland are
Atlantic Treaty Alliance of which
- there under terms of th'e North
-
— Iceland is a member
Man Radar
) - Iceland furnishes no combat
1 C--1"!'” : forces to the alliance but her geo-
graphical position has served as a
t t vital link in East-West hemispher-
ic defenses
IVIost of the Americans in Ice-
land belong to the Army and the
Air Force There is an Army
group and engineers whose main
(unctions is to look after the air
base and supporting facilities cen
tered at Keyflavik
In addition to providing ground
support at the air base Army and
Air Force personnel man radar
and communications installations
in Iceland
ED was given by this passerby on Ada's Main Street Satyr The Navy has a much smaller
on Army Christmas kettles made their annual appearance group ashore but is concerned
rsonnel This week volunteers from Ada's civic clubs will take with communications and the con-
d will provide Christmas food baskets for some 125 needy staiit antisubmarine rurvoillance
e says Families wishing to apply for such baskets may do so of the North Atlantic passages
ontinuing through December 16 at the SA Citadel 115 North Oppose Troops
9 a m and 4 p m (NEWS Staff Photo) Several years ago strong politi
— cal pressures developed in Iceland
J for withdrawal of the US forces
but that situation was quieted
Ins Join in Plea down through diplomatic means'
Early this fall the Defense De
partment removed Brig Gen Gil-
hert L Pritchard commander of
to Maint A ain Guard US troops in Iceland "in re-
sponse to a request by the Ice-
landic government"
he no letup in the Western de Eisenhower pledged to bring up The general's removal followed
i fensive position until M o s c o w at the Western summit meeting in an incident in which two Icelandic
agrees to a trustworthy peace Paris Dec 18 Italy's desire to civil defense officials said they
I Eisenhower also promised the make what Hagerty described as had been forced to lie face down
!Italian government to look favora a maximum contribution to easing on wet ground by an American
bly on Italy's desire to join any world tensions
I East-West summit conference that Authoritative diplomatic inform out trz hile he took time to find
IA
deals with European security as ants said Eisenhower succeeded hether they had authority
to enter a US military base
'd1 as disarmament problems !in easing Italy's concern lest the The current discussion over the
I removal of US forces was under
stood to have no connection with
the early September incident And
there was no official word that
the Icelandic government had
made any formal request for the
departure of American troops
Don't Like Us
However there is no getting
away from the fact that the peo-
ple of Iceland have never become
reconciled to having US troops
stationed in their midst
In recent years the United
States has sought to avoid any
situations that might lead to the
exchange of formal documents
with possibly embarrassing re-
(Continued on Page 2)
K vote in a Louisiana Democratic !
primary for governor with a rec- Student Trio
on
ord of li candidates hoping to suc-
ceed g flamboyant Gov Earl K Really Gets
L
op Earl 64 energetic and "The Bird"
:sharp-tongued as ever after his
tumultous confinement in two OKLAIIONIA CITY (AP —A trio
mental hospitals is prohibited by of university of Oklahoma stu-
state law from succeeding him- dents were jailed Saturday after
self being apprehended about 3 a rn
! This time he's running for lieu- in illegal possession of a Mynah
tenant governor
bird
A runoff Jan 9th is almost cer- Oficers said it wasn't difficult
Win Five major rivals for gover- to find the students because peel-
' nor are expected to take big ' pie out at that time with a Mynah
shares of the vote bird just naturally attract atten
Democrats represent 1095747 of non
Patrolmen Jim B:tiir and R D
he 1108011 registered voters '
Louisiana the Democratic noun- Difim picked up Joe the Mymah l
and the students 'ter a neighbor
nee for state office always has
won
near the pet shop called police
Officers
Louisiana is selecting all state said the burglars entered
officials a Legislature a Demo-
the shop through a hole in a rear
will where construction work was
critic State Central Committee
and hundreds of local offices being done
The students were placed in a
Francis Grevemberg onetime cell and Joe sat on the booking
state police superintendent who desk squawking and whistling at
smashed gambling is the GOP
nominoe For the first time the
drunks
GOP has offered a complete slate
fin top state offices They'll face'
the Democratic nominees in the
April 19 general election
The tempestuous Long is trying f
to keep his family dynasty alive
by backing former Gov James A l
N'oe 68-year-old machine mate of
Little Junior on finding a Santa
the late Huey P Long the gov- Claus outfit in the attic: "Gm the
ernor's brother old man must have killed him and
Four strong anti-Longs are run- hid his clothes up here" tCopr
(Continued On Page Two) I Gen lea Corp) 4
noma Luy anti
control
Edmondson's I
would create a cc
way Commissior
W
OKLAHOMA —
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SISTER ACT The home economics department at Atoka High School is all in the family ing a Nkorldwide disarmament ''-z ' 7 o
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nowadays with two sisters making up the faculty Mrs Zelma Brecheen and Mrs Arlene system during Eisenhmkier's last f ''' - k
Arnold have followd parallel careers finely came together this year at Atoka Here year in office ' tl
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of their students (NEWS Staff Photo) I or as Communist China's hos- ' '
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the outside iAorld increase there '' i : '14
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Atoka's Home Ec Department is increasing concern in official ' ''
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quarters here over the possibility t-e " ' : '"' 1 ' ''
14
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it
Works on the t-amliy Plan It
disarmament accord—even a rel-'
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' (rain from testing nuclear weap-
The home economics depart- i But Mrs Brecheen took her de- husband is a veterinarian and ons Qtlri
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onerating this year strictly on the in 1951 Mrs Arnold got hers in' A icn Vire nraolloan iQ nhanti r
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Little, W. D. The Ada Evening News (Ada, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 227, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 6, 1959, newspaper, December 6, 1959; Ada, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2113594/m1/1/: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.