The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 116, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1961 Page: 3 of 18
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THURSDAY. MAY 18. W1
. "i vc:vifl*r«'
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
City looks tne Some
HIM, TO
' LEOPOLDVIILE, the
I 3fAP)—They still tend the
S «cents to the Belgian
1 Leopoldville, regularly
pcrtS|HHjSSU
J - Kini
kings
and
King Albert stiU stands on his
feige memorial at the end
Sou:
jlevard Albert. That old
* p rialist Leopold II site
f lis horse in the square
Congo months or a year and then leave.
What is needed at the present are
Belgian or French-speaking tech-
nicians who are pre oared io stay
indefinitely and provide some con-
"s tinuity.
.of; There is. much unemployment,
im- but somehow with ü. N. hell
monu-
in
ex-
< parliament.
The grass around them is bril-
£ Jiuntly green and freshly cut.
£ .flowerbeds are tenderly attend
* eó. You get the feeling m this
improbable city that if
r douíh arrived tomorrow hi
astride everybody gets something to -ea
outside There are more people than usua|
sleeping under the palm trees
Somebody keens the grass
trimmed at the Soviet Embassy,
vacated last September when a
. ÍS^year-old armv colonel, Joseph
r„. a"l.Mobuiu. ordered foreign Cotjimu-
WOulamsts out of the country within
.V..,bc cheered in the streets] . 149-' hours
" 'i:' Cfngp h*8 ¥« f°r The Czechs are not so iortu
| ne^r'y. . , n?w' ,Put, the nrte. The weeds are growin
¿ capital city still look* much-as thickly around their shuttered
i u before the cry pt tofePMHkifernfoafcsv. The twisted frpme of
ai old automobile rusts quietly
Albert
with
is somewhat ,0B the front lawn
its sidewalk
'or New Chief of Operations
É
Boulevard
'T grimly giy
cafes and striped umbrellas. The
~ Belgian supermarkets still oper
■ ate with shrinking stocks
£ goods.
There are no statistics, but
haps 10,000 Belgians have moved
£ back into their villas and flats;
. in Leopoldville; some hoping to
2, tevive their old businesses. There
were about 20,000 here in the days, WASHINGTON* (AP) — Navy
before independence,. mutinous speculation about who will be
troops and the late Premier Pa-¡tapped as the new'chief, of naval
; trice Lumumba persuaded most operations focused today on Vies
of them to leave. jAdm. George W. Anderson Jr.,
The Belgian Embassy lias been dynamic commander of the 6th
empty since that day last August Fleet in the Mediterranean.
; when the Belgian flag was hauled The White House is expected to
• down to the jeers of !i small mob;act soon to nominate * repláce-
i of Congolese. But it is~ expected meat for Adm. Arleigh A. Bu.ke,
that relations soon will be re-iwhose third two-year term as
stored. • ICNO expires Aug. 1.
Not many Belgians have moved j Speculation also centered on
IF Wfll SO WORRIED
ABOUT LOSING TWAX
AtOSE/ NbO GOT By
ANSWERIMG AH AO,
MA30R,M0W COM.E:
vouTxjfn cooNtr
rr Eveizy-DAV? or
ACorWSP«AY3
THIS ISVWA-TICAU-
A LA HOOPLC—AUL\NE
MEED ID COMPLETE "tWE
GAY NINETIES ATWV3S
FROM
AND
KlKÍOÜT
CÜP& AMD TANDEM.
*
By JAMES MARLOW ¡ his aide, other advisers, and the|out foray before^ larger pressure
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice!Central Intelligence Agency, [is applied. If South Viet Nam
President Lyndon B. Johnson is
now doing for President Kennedy
what former Vice President Rich-
ard M. Nixon used to do for Pres-
ident Eisenhower. ,
He's traveling abroad, meeting ¡ai
with the heads of foreign govern-! is
Johnson might have been of
more practical value to Kennedy
if hs had remained in Washington
and helped get ttie adminis-
tration's programs through Gon-
rcss, where he is an expert. He
s an .amateur in foreign deal-
ments. giving them "the" .word] ings.
from Kennedy, and then coming¡ Nevertheless, more'and more
home to report to the Presiden?. |.s¡nCe World War II it has te-
These goodwill mission! may come a kind of stylish habit to
have some psychological benefit; send presidential representatives
in boosting the ego and self-con- overseas, to single* countries on
fidence of people In smaller coun-! special missions, or just abroad
tries by showing the. United generally on so-called goodwill
States is sufficiently concerned trips. vfe.., 7
about, them to send the No. 2 From the very beginning of
over- Johnson's trip the main question
has not been what Johnson might
Sfiy, since he's oftly the Presl
dent's special messenger, but
what Kennedy might say through
has really said any-
made
Asia
Ier
PSER
dlt>
lid do-
put all
and
second in command, and Vice rinr> leader
Adm: John T. Hayward, the Navy
development chief.
Another possibility is Adm. Har
ry D. Felt, peppery- commander
of the 7th Fleet and chief of all
U.S. military and naval opera-
tions in the Pacific. But with
Southeast -Asia, and now Korea,
in crisis, it was thought Felt
would be left where he is.
• Som; Navy sources said the
"smart money" was on Anderson.
54, a tall handsome aviator who.
since the fall of 1959. has directed
the powerful fleet units patrolling
■waters' near the volatile Middle
East. •
Brooklyn born Anderson has
been á career officer—for nearly .
34 years. An Annapolis product,1
he is described as «n athletic
' "Even thoughs We, may hi
disagreed with him," this offi
1 said, "we- couldn't h'lp but
he made his
have
icor
SiJ-
dcci-
tvpe, "about G feet 2 with piercing
blue eyes and iron-gray hair.
Some of Anderson's former as-
sociates said he long has been
marked for big things—they note
he became a . vice admiral at 50.
one of the youngest men to reach
three-star Navy rank.
An officer of another service
who worked under Anderson when
the admiral was a top man on
the joint staff in the Pacific some
, . - , , i vears ago call?dv Anderson "ter-
hack to their old posts in the in-,Adm. James S. Russell, Burkes;"rif Cally knowledgeable" and a
terior. \ | J —1 4,i"" -
Tribal warriors still make life
In many regions precarious.
Albert Kaionji, once the profes-
sional leader of a dissident wim:
of Lumumba's party, has restored
a kingdom in South Kasai to ce-
ment his Báluba tribal support.
A diplomat recently "returned
from Equator Province said it's
"quietly sinking into the búsh."
Mi.ny of its rich plantations hfive
been abandoned.
The Congo badly needs a steady
hand and the United Nations,
w>th a limited budget, is making
what appears to be a devoted- ef-
fort. qjit the Congo also needs
thousands of technician;' and
skilled workers who know this
countrv tod can get it back on
its feet. ~
Dr. Sture Linner, a Swedish
businessman who heads the U. N.
civil administration in the Congo,
i tryingjto set up cram courses
io tcacncongolese how to handle
some of their own affairs. He
hopes to send many of them
abroad to study.
One difficulty wi*hr U. N. tech-
nical assistance experts is that
they sign contracts for nine
man
4 But any practical effect from
either the Johnson or Nixon jour-
neys — with one notable excep-
tion in Nixon's case — la hard
to see, hlm.Vjr ,
The mistreatment heaped on ; If Kennedy has really sal
Nixon In South America shocked thing new, it hasn't been
the United States into painful re;i, public. For instance, it seems
allzation that not all Latin Amer- -wnerally accepted the United
icans loved us and that this States, no matter what happens,
country was going to have to ^oi will riot "send U.S. forces directly
som to k n them on the side of into Laos. :
the United States. ¡ That country, álready more
Nor is It clear why anything than half lost to Communism.
Nixon or Johnson may have had probably will be swallowed up bv
to /say to the head of a foreign | it eventually, even though Laos is
government couldn't have been the key to other- Southeast Asian
said just as well by thef local nations which are either neutral
I American atnb9Ssador who could or tied to the United States,
have delivered a message from But the-next critical area "Is
South Viet Nam, which has re-
goes, then all Southeast
truly in danger.
The other countries "there, so
close to mammoth Red China,
can hardly be expected Jo stand
up agiinst Communist pressure
if the United States declines to
Intervene directly in South Viet
Nam in the event the situation
there, gets critical.
So — the question was: Will
Johnson tell President Ngo Dinh
Diem not to worry, that the Unit-
ed States will jump In Wth army
and air force if they're needed?
A communique was issued aft-
er Johnson's visit. It spoke of
more American economic and
military help but so far It has
a®
not been
promised direct
There were
son. when he
promised ILSi
sent there. Thailand
with the United States in
iErá&r-4-""
But Wednesday
promising more help to
brushed aside
American troops
there.
Johnson wiH teü
he saw and what be thinks
he gets back. ,
But this probably won't add
anything to what Kennedy al-
ready knows from the American
ambassadors in Southeast Asia.
ceived both military and econom-
ic aid from this country. Commu-
naval operations since World War;Kennedy too.
II has been chosen from a fleet or; policy toward every other
foreign commend. . . I country is made here in Washing-
Burke -was destroyer command- t0n — not on the scene .by a j nist guerillas are tormenting the
er of the Atlahtic Fleet when he visitor, even one as important as government there.
was elevated to chief of naval j johnson — on information from: These guerilla pushes appear to
operations in 1955. ' the American ambassador there, i be only preliminaries, a feeling-
Announcing
the opening of
Ace Prescription
Discount Center
Monday, May 15th
2425 Western Ave. — West Orange
PHONE TU 3-3300
¡Smfí
mire the way
sions."
Although Russell and Hayward
hold top posts at Navy headquar-
ters here, this would not neces-!
sarily, give- them any advantage]
over Anderson.
In fact, the postwar record in-
dicates otherwise. Every chief of
1
Mcleans eleciric
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 116, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1961, newspaper, May 18, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143038/m1/3/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.