The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 151, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 28, 1961 Page: 3 of 24
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To force Cml Rights Action
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By JACK BELL ¡In the
HONOLULU (AP) — C*lifor-¡W«5e before the
lia'a Democratic Gov. Edmund proposal by 15
G. Brown gave a helping hand ernor for* affirmative state
- - ~fi - to end rae t discrimination.
Republican Gov. Mark O., Hat
Held of Oregon said in a separate
to
ac-
Croe Governors' Conference
a civil rights.
Brown said he intends to vote
• Ageing .Warrior
In Wheel Choir
MANILA (AP)—Gen. Emilio
Aguinaldo, 52 and ailing, proba-
bly will not be able to' attend the
13th anniversary celebration of
Philippine independence July 4
Members of his family said to-
day it is highly unlikely that the
old .guerrilla, who fought Spain
and the United States for Philip-
pine independence at the turn of
Be century, will be permitted to
jftend.
Aguinaldo has been confined to
a wheel chair since a recent
heart attack. He is also partially
bl'nd.
interview that Brown's vote, com-
bined with those of four Repub-
licans, would furnish the margin
to force the resolution out of the
nine-member committee for de-
The civil rights controversy was
one of several expected to engage
■
WINN'S STUDIO
PHOTOGRAPHY
CmhmkM • Portraits
407 V SECOND
Wtddir.qt
TU 34253
Oklahoma House
; .. "•v A •,
Is Seeking Funds
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—The
Oklahoma House face<f the inevita-
ble today of matching appropria-
tions for operation of the state
government with funds now avail-
able.
In a motion adopted unanimous-
ly Tuesday, the House directed
its IS members of the joint con
ference committee on appropria-
tions to work toward fitting the
budget with an estimated $226
million available in the next bi-
ennium. •—r~>
A proposed one cent hike in the
Tax di<
sales tax died Monday and this
| eliminated an estimated $50 mil-
lion which could have been
■ worked into major appropriation!!.
to | the governors in á windup busi-
* ness session of their 53rd annual
conference.
Barring " unexpected develop-
ments, a nominating committee
headed by GOP Gov. John. R
Reed of Maine was ready to rec-
ommend the election of Gov. Wes-
ley Powell of New Hampshire as
new chairman of the conference.
Powell would succeed Democrat,
tic Gov. Stephen L. R. McNichols
jof Colorado under a conference
tradition of rotating the chairman-
ship yearly between'members of
the two major patties.
Some Republican^ complained
Powell was being forced upon
them by Democrats who didn't
want the conference honbr to go
to Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of
New York, President Kennedv's
possible opponent in the 1964
presidential contest. • \
Powell was rebuked by former
Vice President Richard . M. Nixon
during the 1960 presidential cam-
paign for suggesting that Kennedy
was soft on communism. The New
Hampshire governor has made it
clear that he has no intention of
supporting Nixon for the 1964
nomination if the latter seeks it.
Hatfield said a scheduled meet-
ing of the GOP state executives
to discuss the .matter had been
called off "because the Demo-
crats can outvote us and we see
no sense in dividing among our-
selves on the question of -the
chairmanship."
Automation Giving insight
To Some Mysteries of Sea
GALVESTON (AP) — Automa-¡which cculd not have been possk
tiun is giving faster and more ac- ble under manual manipulations,
curate insights to mysteries of "the ( Nature itself proposed the ma-
. . Jir problems against man's auto-
Paradoxically, the sea is not giv-;mation and engineering advances,
ing up its mysteries at any great Although the ocean areas are
rate of speed. vast. Collier describes only three
This is the feeling of the director general situations in which marine
of the Texas A&M College Marine environment is such that produc-
Laboratory here, one of the slate's tivitv Is possible.
I tost aptiye centers endeavoring Almost all fishing either in the
to determine whether the sea is ¡Gulf of Mexico or any other water
exploitable for another fcod source rrea on earth is confined to shal-
sei-ond to land. .-g—srs; i^vcoastfcl waters and estuaries.
He is Albert Collier who directs¡Tnese are the areas where chem-
projects whk% make up basic ce! enrichment and maximum
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21 1961 THE ORANGI
Methodist Church Will Si
" f
I
the tel^
it takéB
parts in the total picture of a pos-
sible expanded food source for
mankind.
Although research at the A&M
laboratory shows promise. Collier,
and several of his colleagues are
mindful of more and more public
interest in marine science as a
reality toward another food fron-
tier soon. x
"Recent 'developments in automa-
tion such as the Thermistor Chain,
and In scores of automatic com-
puters. f re helping studies.
The Thermistor Chain, now
standard etyiipment on the labora-
tory's research vessel, the Hidal-
go. takes temperatures of sea wa-
ter at closely \spaced intervals
dewn to 900 feet. The information
is fed through an IBM "teletype"
—like machine giving ^a permanent
useful record for many ^undamen-
tal studies such as tracing sur-
face currents. \
This is. the kind of research
Austin Shoe Store-Semi Annual
SHOESALE
FANTASTIC SAVINCS ON WOMEN'S SUMMER SHOES
HUNDREDS OF PAIRS- THREE BIG GROUPS- ALL SIZES BUT NOT
IN EVERY STYLE
Group 1 Reduced To
$[87
Group 2 Now
$«Í87
x-
2
Group 3 Now
$387
Regular $2.99 - $399 Value Fabri c Casuals - Leather Sandals.
Regular $3.99 - 5.99 Value FLAT S and Sandals
Regular $5.99 - $8.99 Dress and Casual Shoes. .
$1.87'
$2.87
$3.87
WOMEN'S SLIPPERS
$T.99-$2.99 Value
?147
HANDBAC SALE
Regalar $1.99*2.99
$ 4 00 $ 4 87
NOW J, ■ X P,u« Tax
MEN'S - BOYS' SHOES
R«f. J3.99-J8.99
*287 „ ?587
H OS
LON
69c Value
BUY EARLY FOR
BEST SELECTION
302 N. FIFTH STREET
WHERE A 'SALE' IS A REAL 'SALE'
light intensity are coupled to-pro-
duct sea life suitable for man's
ure.
Next in-productivity arfe the so-
called banks, those areas of:ocean
bottom which cise above the gener-
al level of the surrounding sea
floor. These irregularities provide
increased surface for thé growth of
?mall and large forage organisms
and they create a certain amount
of turbulence in the flow of ocean
wafer ovfef them. When such areas
are shallow enough to receive suf-
ficient sunlight to drive the photo-
sypthetle process, the productivity
is greater than in the surrounding
ateas.
FinaHv, there Is the area In
which the hydrodynamic situation
causes the richer waters from Uio
depths to rise within the range of
sunlight. The classic exampie of
this is the divergence of masses of
water along the equatorial cjlrrenl
sysim> in the Pacific. In the di-
vergence. the deeper waters are
brought to the surface and a pro
ductive tuna fishery Is the result,
the Campeche; Bank offers another
case of fine fishing from<surface
i irregularity.
I. Research at the A&M laboratory
has shown, such promise in the in-
vestigations of basic research to
determine feasibility of productiv-
ity from the S6a that the National
Science Foundation has given a
^30.000 grant, matMjed by the col-
lege, for a $100,000 expansion pro-
gram beginning in Miv
Ml of this laboratory's studies
arc on marine organisms , placed
in controlled environmental \pndi-
tions. The reason these synthetic
conditions are used. Collier said,
is to assure controls which would
not be possible under the varia-
ble condition of the natural set
ting-
The marine organisms are
placed in synthetic sea water, con-
taining the known chemicals of the
sea, in amounts desired. Physical
conditions.of temperatures, light
and food also are controlled ex-
perimentally.
This basic method has already
produced some records of interest
in oceanography. One was Collier's
study «f the oxygen requirement
of the oyster. His work showed the
oyster needed more oxygen while
pumping water than was previous
ly believed.
Texas Man Dies
In Plane Crash
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (Al>)
I—A. Marshall. Tex., man died
Tuesday when his light plane
crashed into a tree - .studded hill-
side 16 miles southeast of hete
and burned.
Tlie State Patrol said Howard!
Brown.was taking the body 'if;
Wayne Frank from Chicago to
Marshall for burial when the
plane crashed.
Mrs. Brown was at the Marshall
airport awaiting her husband's!
arrival .when she heard of his;
death.
DALLAS (AP) — The Methodist
Church I* more likely to concen-
trate on consolidating Its own
merger than to begin merger ne-
gotiations with other protestant
churches in the near future, ac-
cording to the chairman of a
Methodist Commission on .Ecu-
menical Relations.
Bishop Gerald Ensley of Des
Moines, la., said that since Meth-
odists are already part of a large
national and international church
family, they "don't feej quito the
urge to get together with other
denominations that
groups do."
Bishop Ensley also said that
since Methodists know how diffi-
cult it is to run a church organi-
sation Of some 9,000,000, they are
not quite so eager to merge with
other denominations.
The whole question of the Meth-
odist Church's relations to other
some church
church bodies
a day-long
Commission on
sulfation at Southern
University Tuesday.
Four bishops. Including
Ensley and Bishop Will
Martin of Dallas, and II
professors and presidents
ministers participated in the
cussions of the commission
Bishop Ensley described
"mainly an Idea group/
The commission was appointed
liam
NEW
LUCITE
BUMIS MINT CO
r*«K ft; «t «tu tu tur
Coyote Gets
The Sur prise
Of His Life
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — A
manpy coyote showed up at the
home of Mrs. D. C. Hutson and
got the surprise of his ornery
life.
Mrs. Hutson approached tf.e
problem with a scrub brush and
a box of soan flakes
Said Mrs. Hutson: "I Just give
him a bath."
Now Mrs. Hutson, who thought
the animal was a dog, believes
she may be the only living wo-
man ever to bathe a wild Texas
coyote. .v
She said "He didn't act quite
natural."
The coyote, a sandy • haired
youngster, also seemed to abhor
humanity. He raced into the
garage at the sight of Mrs. Hut-
son and her two children—Gary,
11 and Barbara, 7.
As for the faimily dog, Prince,
the woman said: "Boy, thjcy
really didn't jive together."
But the slinky intruder had a
hankering for dog food, which
seemed to keep him around since
last Thursday.
\Then Mrs. Hutson dumped him
into the bathtub again and, she
said,x"lie really showed his wild
streak .then,"
Policélnan G. ,S. Connell was
called to vd«a' with the unwilling
bather: Conhell pronounced him a
wnd coyote. \
The roo has in captivity today
what is believed to be the world's
Cleanest coyote. V
★ \-
City Manager Has
Many Pet Worries
CONCORD. Calif. (AP) — Cats]
around here are leading a dog's
life at the insistence of the area's
bird, fish and tree lovers.
This puts City Mandger F. A
Stewarf in the doghouse, with cat
lovers, that is. >
It started when the bird, fish, ¡
and tree lovers said, there were
too many cats and Contra Costa
County made traps available with !
which to catch them. i
i-Vite.r the cat lovers, who yelled!
"foul." in reference to the fish!
used in the traps as bait. They i
said all cats like fish and that
more household pets were caught,
th<n strays /
All of which putS/^tewart sort;
of up a tree, proleainn the bird*,;
as it were, 'after catchin« fish j
with which tó trap the cats.
Dies Suddenly. <
TROUP. Tex. (AP)-A 77-year-
old man shot Mrs. Jesse Willis ¡
to death Tuesday and Mart Lacy, j
BB. who watched, dropped dead;
if ,1 he^rt attack. No charge was j
filed. Thr deaths of the Negroes!
occurred within minutes of each
other
NOW-FLY
r : '
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Dialing is
plier com-
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Distance
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 151, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 28, 1961, newspaper, June 28, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143073/m1/3/: accessed May 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.