The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961 Page: 9 of 43
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On Historic C onierences
Hundreds
By Release of Official Papers
WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet
dictator Joseph Stalin's animosity
ir.ward British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill brought a
doarge at the Tahran conference
that the Briton wanted a soft
pcace for Nazi Germany.
And at the same meeting, Pres-,
¡dent Franklin D. Roosevelt sug-
gested that in oostwar France no
French officeholder over 40 years
of age should be allowed to re-
turn to authority.
These point* were among hun-
dreds brought out in official pi-
pers which the State Department
released Saturday on the Tehran
and Cairo Big Three conferences
which much to shape tKe post-
war world.
Stalin clashed repeatedly with
Churchill at Tehran, according to
Postal Rate
ChangeMade
Extensive revisions have been
made in the postage rates on in-
ternational mail to become ef-
fective July 1. Orange Postmas-
ter Howard Turner announced yes-
terday.
Letter nail to Canada and Mex-
ico will remain 4 cents per ounce
but to other countries the rates
will be U cents for the first ounce
and 7 cents for each additional
ounce.
Post cards to Canada and Mexi-
co are 3 cents single and 6 cents
reply-paid; other countries post
card rates are 7 cents single; and
14 cents reply-paid.
Air letter sheets are 11 cents
each to all countries. Airmail post
cards, single, will be II cents each
to all countries except Canada
and Mexico where it will be only
S cents.
¡tetter mall, per haff ounce, will
be 15 cents to Argentina, FrapceT
Germany, Ireland. Greeje^snd
England. The rates are^Tcents in
Australia. Republic, ™ China and
Continental China; Japan, Korea.
Philippines, ifd Saudi Arabia.
Air .jefvice for other articles
includes prints, samples,
nail packets and etc. the rates
are 40 cents for the first 2 ounces
in Argentina, France. England.
Greece. Germany and Ireland. For
each additional 2. ouncéa or frac-
tion, there is a 20 cent charge.
Further Information on rates to
foreign countries is available at
the local post office.
Draft Board Calls
Youth From Area
The local draft board haa issued
an induction call Wednesday for
cne boy In Orange County and two
youths for a physical.
They will report st 6 a.m. to
leave on the 6:20 a.m. bus for
Houston.
Going for induction will-be Pres-
ton Burton Middleton of Vidor.
Roy Lee Woodard of Orange,
and Raymond Hornby Bailey, a
transfer from Dallas, will go for
physicals. An Orange boy, Eddie
Joe Wooden, received a transfer, to
California for a physical.
The next call will be issued on
July 19 in which five area men
will ba inducted.
Onngeitc Taking
Guard Training
Charles S. Meyers of Orange is
participating in the Texas National
Guards "Take Six" program,
through the 3«th Texas Infantry
'Division headquarters.
He is taking basic at Ft. Ord,
Calif. -Following active duty he
will drill with the Orange Guard,
Comapnv C, 1st Battle Group,
143d Infntry.
the minutes prepared by Charles
E. Bohlen who served as Roose-
velt's aide at the Nov. ¡27-Dec. 2
meeting in 1943. Bohlen now is
the State Department's top advis-
er on Soviet affairs.
Roosevelt and Stalin have been
dead for many years and
Churchill is in retirement. Most
of the information in the State De-
partment papers has been made
public before in various ways, in-
cluding Churchill's memoirs.
Stalin was not satisfied with
measures proposed by the British
and American leaders for the
postwar c o n t r o 1 of Germany.
He Requested drastic measures
which, he said, would prevent
Germany from rising again -and
plunging the world Into another i
war. ; .
The Soviet proposed the "physi-
cal liquidation" of at least 50,000
and perhaps 100,000 of the Ger-
man commanding staff. Churchill.
Bohlen noted, protested he could
not agree to what he termed the
cold-biooded execution of soldiers
who had fought for their country.
•Churchill apparently was the
most lenient among the three. He
proposed a division into three
parts, while Roosevelt suggested
a five-zone division;
For Stalin .this was not enough.
He said that an even greater
number of separate states woi
please him < better. He/'ve-
hemently dismissed any-^sugges-
tion that German reconstruction
was needed.
The Stalin-Chtirchill friction was
marked on-ihe French issue, too,
with ^Roosevelt somewhere be-
the two.
Many years of honest labor
would be necessary for the
French to become decent citizens
again, Roosevelt felt.
Stalin expressed nothing but
contempt for the French.
Churchill came to France's de-
fense. He said France was a de-
feated country and had suffered
the horrors of occupati
McLewis Minutes |
Oates Principal
To Attend Meet
At Georgetown
Mrs.-Vera Bean, principal of,
Oates Elementary School, has I
been invited to attend a seminar;
for key educator*, interested in the
relationship of religion and educa-;
tion.
The seminar .will be at South-'
western University in Georgetown
July 7-10. It is sponsored by the'
university, the Department of Re-¡
ligion „ and a Public Education and;
Texas Council of'Churches under,
a grant from the Danforth Foun-
dation. !
Dr. Carfyle Marney, pastor of
the Myers Park Baptist Church,,
in Charlotte, N. C.. will be the;
principal spiaker.Jfe iaa well;
known Texas educator and author i
of several booka. ' 1
Lectures, panels and small;
group discussions will constitute
the seminar. Persons attending
are by invitation only. A generous,
grant'by the Danforth Foundation
provides scholarships, room and;
meals for all of the participants.
Invitations are extended by a
committee headed by Dr. L. D.
Haskew, who Is dean of the School
ol Education and vice president of
the University of Texas.
City Water Usage
For May Listed
Orange muncipal water meters
registered 105.MO.OOO gallons of,
water pumped during May, ac-!
cording to the monthly report com-
piled toy Ruby Broom, water de-i
Mr*. Hareld Williams, TU XMJ
to their home alter spending three
weeks in Alice with i son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Kirkpatrcik.
Arthur Lee Durio, son. of Mr.
and Mrs. Maxie Durio, Airport
Road, has returned home after
serving in the Army.
Peggy Murphy, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. W. E. Murphy, Marsha
Christian, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J. F. Christian, and Marti-a
Walters, daughter of .Mr. and Mrs.
Brit Walters, attended a 4-H Club
training camp held last Week at
the old National Guard arihory in
Orange.
was
I ■ May
21, compared to a pumping low of
2,66#,000 gallons on May 4.
Mains total some 95 miles. 773
feet following addition of 377 feet
of new lines In May. Broom saidjl
pew mains were laid on Link Ave-
nue between 14th and 15th streets ]
during the month.
Pumps and allied equipment'
used 151,540 kilowatts of electricity I
for an average of 1.43 kilowatt j
hour per each million gallor
Water pumped in May. Tnere wereü
24 water samples sent to Port;
Arthur and tested at the health
unit. Results showed there were!
00 coliiorm organisms present.' j
teie tpytt HM-
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961, newspaper, June 18, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143064/m1/9/: accessed April 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.