The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 39, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 14, 1961 Page: 1 of 12
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BETTER GRADES
Is it necessary to cram for
examinations? For suggestions
on bow to outline a plan for
exams, see the 12th article in a
series on “You Can Get Better
Grades" today on page S.
The Orange Leader
VOL. LVIll—NUMBER 39
Member Associated Press ORANGE, TEXAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1961 12 Page*
5 Cents
LATEST EDITION
BIG GAME
West Orange (wings up to
Dayton for big game which may
decide District 23-AA champion;
Bridge City and Little Cypres*
close season; Tigers labeled
“pretty hdr” in spring training.
See stories page M.
I
-■*3
Need for Jobs Cited
By Speaker Rayburn
a
WASHINGTON' (AP)—The need i ported at the conference that hej As Goldberg, did Monday night
to do something about mounting! has f(*uncl the situation worse than after "a meeting., with Kennedy,
Unemployment' is more urgent! he had’expected. ■ ! Rayburn said the President will
than at any time'since the great' Goldberg reported to Kennedy,j have something to say about the
depression of the ' 1930s, House j other members of the Cabinet and; unemployment-..situation at his
Speaker Sam Rayburn. *D-?•••<..! Democratic congressional leaders, news conference Wednesday night,
said after, a conference with Presi-j at an hour-long While House ses-jThe conference• will be broadcast
pant Kennedy today. sioir which concentrated on the: live on nationwide television and
Rayburn added that Secretary) problem of .joblessness and eco-1 radio.
of Labor Arthur J-. Goldberg if - notqic recovery.
. Newsmen asked Rayburn wheth-
| er he got the impression today
; that the administration regards
i the unemployment problem as
| more urgent than had been an-
, ticipated.
Rayburn replied he didn't want
! to speak for the administration,
■ but that in his opinion the prob-
i leni reflects "the most urgency
j since the great depression" of 30
I years ago.
) The White House session was
Th'e West Orange City Council j guish between minor and major j held as Senate Democratic Leader
last night called an April 1 tnunici j violations for fining*purposes. j Mike Mansfield of Montana
pal election for a mayor and two 1. Upon Police Chief Harry Ven-1 pushed for fast action on the eco-
aldermen during regular bi-month- able’s recommendation, appointed nomic program Kennedy said is
ly session at city hall. I Don Mosier as* a policeman. Ven-
Terms expire for Councilmen! a^e recommended appO'intmfent of
Glenn F. Seale and H. R Myers; others not designated. The po-
und for Mayor Jack Etheridge, who j hcemen receive no pay except 30
was elected’last month for an in- P" ,^nt /J1* tr^flcpfu,^;i w ,
terim term. None of the .three has- 8- Was t0 < (Buddy)
West Orange Sets
* r
City Vote on April 1
aimed at "putting millions of-un-
employed back to work."
Mansfield said he has asked ihe
chairman of the Senate Labor and
Finance committees to get. hear-,
ings going quickly on minimum;
Soviet Union Withdraws
Recognition of U. N. Chief
LONDON (AP) — The Soviet;recognize him as an official of the'be immediately disarmed.”
government today officially with- United Nations. I U.N. troops, the Soviet govern-
drew Its recognition of Dag Ham The statement said all Belgian •ment said- should immediately ar-
marskjold as U.N. general secre- troops and other personnel in the I rest Tsbombe and Mobutu and
tary and demanded that all for- Congo must be disarmed forth- brink them to trial as Lumumba’s
eign troops get ouf of the Congo with and removed from the Con- slayers.
within one month.' . !g0, it. asserted all military units Tass said all foreign troops
The Russians demanded the and gendarmerie taking orders should be withdrawn ‘‘so as to
United Nations censure Belgium from Tshombe and Congolese give the Congolese people the pos-
. in the slaying of Patrice Lumum-
ba. the deposed Congo Premier.
A note distributed by Tass also
demanded the arrest and trial of
President Moise Tshombe of Ka-
tanga Province for Lumumba’s
death.
In an apparent hint of possible
Soviet internvention in the Congo,
today’s statement recalled that
remaining officers of the Lumum-
ba government have asked.for aid
to save the republic.
"The Soviet government consid-
ers the rendering of such aid as
Maj. Gen. Joseph Mobutu "mu:
,st |
(See RUSSIA, Page 7)
World Is Distressed
By Lumumba's Death
LONDON (AP)
PATRICE LUMUMBA (LEFT), MAURICE MPOLO
Both Massacred by African Villagers
voiced.intention of seeking re-elec-!Moore of the Oates Elementary;wages and unemployment com- I / n c/ Pnccpc/
lion but they are anticipated candi-1 that traffic^is bung handled| pfensation bills. nOnifTlOUSiy r 05560
well on Newton Street. Moore had) Congress is on dead center with: ......■.................................
appeared at an earlier meeting oil many Republicans away making
the sacred duty,,of all freedom-!Patrice Lumumba shocked gov-
loving peoples,” it said. ernments around the world today
"The Soviet government de-iand sparked new blasts at U.N.
dares that on its part it is ready, j performance in the Congo from
together With other states friendly j both sides of the Iron Curtain,
to the Republic of Congo, To ren-j Arm - Belgian demonstrations
Jder all possible aid and support flared in London and Rome. The
:t0 Fhe Congolese people and its United States also was the target
dates.
The election will be at city hall
this year as Compared to other
years when elections were held in
the West Orange School. Hie coun-
cil felt that there was too1 much
confusion existing because of so
many schools in the system and
many persons did not know where
the voting place was when an ele-
mentary school was designated.
Mrs. T. W. Rowe Jr. will be the
siding judge at city hall, with
to, Mrs. Edna Rogers, Mrs.
arte Carter and Mrs. Joyce
vey.
AttT. John O, Young re-
I today that the deadline for
____m sen dictates is March 1.
piling may begin today and con-
“nue until midnight of Feb. 2$.
In other action, the council last
night:
1. Designated Mayor Pro T c m
Carrol Bishop as corporation judge
until after the election, when one
will be appointed by the mayor.
2. Was informed by Mayor Eth-
behalf of school student safety.
9. Passed two ordinances in re-
gard to. school traffic. These stip-
ulate that there will be no passing
on Newton Street, from Crocket
to Bonham streets, from 7-8:15
Lincoln Day speeches. But Mans
field said he hopes the Banking!
Committee can send the Senate!
next Week a bill'to aid chronically
distressed- areas.
Kennedy told the National In-
a.m. and from 2-4 p.m. and no;dustria! Conference Board MonT
(See WEST ORANGE, Page 7) j day these three are among the
measures in an economic pro-,
to recovery as
Resolution Proposes To Obtain
Old Post Office for a Library
Review Set
For Property
In Tax Sale
A full page of legal notices car-
paid
ried as paid advertising in today’s
edition of The Leader on sale of j
gram geared
__(See JOBS. Page 7)
■ , . * • •
Court Asks
Surveys On
Road Work
Bond, representatives of the-libra-,
!rv board, met, with the council ami";
-------- _ .... _ - .. . discussed the feasibility of remod-
property to satisfy delinquent tax Orange JCounty Commissioners j eling the present building or erect-
lawful government,’
The statement name at the end
of a riotous day in Moscow in
which foreign students smashed
every window in the Belgian Em-
bassy, broke the doors and tore
Belgian Ambassador Hippolyte
Coils’ car to pieces.
Other demonstrations were re-
ported against Belgium on both
sides of the Irori Curtain.
The Orange city councjlmen last: City Manager Archie Walker was d’ismi«e/Vmm
a night passed a.resolution authoriz, authorized to correspond with the farv-eenera, as an ^ac essorvto
| >ng the city manager to negotiate government agency jn an attempt and 80F„anjzer of the if
- for the old post office building, j to obtain the property free or for )f^e leading statesmen of Tiie Re
now declared as surplus govern-'an amount not more than 40 per nuhiir
h? p"’pr:y- !«r -th' d«c"red sct„ss
i .JheK„reS?l,Htlin prop?scs *hf prop’ ISlte’’. I Nations," the Soviet government’s
,erty be used for a library to con-; jn order to be considered as a {statement said.
!form to the disposition require-jpossible recipient the city must! Tass reported that the Soviet
ments of the Department of Health, j propose the site to be used for! government declared that for its
and WeJfarpu’t through j health, education or welfare pur-{part it will maintain no relations"'
which the si.e may be obtained. poses. ” j with Hammarskjold and will not
Clyde V. McKee Jr. and Jimj-—----1---------
of scattered attacks for support-
ing U.N._ Secretary-General Dag
claims was published- at the re-
quest of the City of Orange..
When asked for comment today
Court has asked the State Highway j ing a new library on the site. Li-
Department to make surveys onjbrarian Flora Richardson was also
two projects in the $8,445,000 road; present.
..... ’ ’ ’ pro-! -
r»?nK> r^F^ssinne^rnesf^Waf!city MBr- Arch.ie Walker said "in [building and improvement pro-!’ The library board represents-
y . HvaiWhie for oart nur--a sessl0n last ni£ht- the City Courwjgram so thfc county may know thoI fives indicated the old post office
chase for^use inWest Orange. The c.I decided that each notice of.sfoe; amount , ‘ ”
mavor advised he did not know,
where talk had started as to thej^cl^ attorn^-
Venus-Bound Space Station
Relaying Information Back
MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet I space ship carried cameras
,llr- „ , . of right of way to be pur-; site to be verv good for a city li-
adrised he id n« knowh’°uld be reviewed by mysfof and j chased. • -• brary. ., _________ , __________
*ue city attorney. /• j -The court yesterday authorized! Present negotiations do not com- Union’s Venus-bound space -sta-iaboard.
In those cases wherp/sale of the [County Engr. J. G. (Gus) Foyle mit the city to a definite building !tir>n znnmt! ah art at , * mi|pc!‘ Tass said the station was 303,-
........ ! program councilmen pointed out, 1^ ,^ay and Soviet S I®00 miles fron? earth Mon-
city’s intention of purchasing
interest in the equipment
: property will create' a hardship to notify the department
A"whs‘ toid that" mail delivery !uFn the infirmp^the aged and; The area' Involved on the Texla; it will only leave the. gate open in; uT ^.'j^J^ridav soari
aw m boingmwde at city hall dur-| chronically ilL-tfve -notices-of sale. Road’is from. Highway. 105 to State tease the people indicate a desirerP|ay‘Pe b«k information as lations of
now is being made
relaying back information as
soaring between the constel-
Cetus (the Whale)- and
mg the mornings {will not be/bursiied, he said. {Highway 62. which the. county is! to do so. The resolution was unan- ’ banned
4 Was designated by Etheridge However in these instances asking the state to include in its imousty passed on a motion bv.L
to bea committee to locate an oil! where Ac is determined that the {farm-to-market program. If it is Councilman Rease Littlefield sec-! thf Soviet news agency, j lations of Beta Arts.’ Alpha Peg-
tank to accommodate bulk storage’property owners are able to pay included, all right of wav would onded by Councilman James ojsaid two playback sessions of dataiawis antj Beta Cetus. .
at citv hall itgAes and made no effort to do so, have to be purchased bv the j Gilliam. ’ j,rom tlie s,a*'°n -had been trig- j “After a few days,” Tass said j elected assistant vice president of
5 Approved installation of ftood>fhe city will proceed with the sale, county from.Highway 62 north of —----'c ~ ---1 "f-re-d bv radio .command from|“the automatic interplanetary sta-lthe County National Bank of Or-
lights at the east corner of city! he-said. IMauriceville. westerly to FM 105 n • t Thiaf Diae earth and that a tog volume or data j tion vvin be out of the so-called lange effective tomorrow, Board
• ball . / • This marks the first time the [north Of Vidor near the William- j D'lnKS I rUCr Liles i about space conditions was re-jSpj,ere of terrestrial gravitation." {Chairman B. L. Morris announced
'Pisces (the Fish) in the center
'the triangle formed by the consi
of
onstel-
The slaying cf Hammarskjold’s Congo policies.
Critics generally ignored the
fact that the Security Council had
barred the U.N. Congo force from
intervening between the Congo’s
warring factions that the Soviet
Union had persistently blocked
any extension of U.N. authority
in the Congo unless it meant Lu-
mumba's return to power.
U.S. President Kennedy ex-
pressed “great shock” at the
news of Lumumba’s death but his
government voiced its continued
approval for United Nations han-
dling of the Congo prohleiji. His
U.N. representative, Adlai E. Ste-
'venson, termed the killing "dis-
tressing” and gave support to
Hammarskjold's call for an in-
inquiry into Lumumba’s death.
The Soviet Union took the lead
in attacking the United Nations
for failing to protect the former
Congo premier. It singled out
Hammarskjold as the man ulti-
mately responsible for “this
bloody, black deed.” Belgium, its
Western allies and the Congo’s
anti-Lumumba leaders were also
targets of Moscow’s wrath.
Belgian authorities expressed
regret, but the man in the Brus-
sels streets shrugged. “It’s a good
thing, he was a bad man,” was
the remark generally overheard.
In the Senate members expressed
concern for the safety of Belgians
still In the Congo's Lumumbist
Kivu and Stanleyville’ provinces.
The official Katanga explana-
tion of Lumumba’s death was dis-
believed almost everywhere. Fear
was expressed in the West that
the killing would touch off full-
scale civil war in the Congo.
Unless the United Nations con-
tained the situation, said Britain’s
George B. Godfrey has been
GEORGE B. GODFREY
Named Bonk Officer
New Official
For County
Bank Named
5 Directed Young to-prepare'city has taken this course of action {son Settlement. The project is; WALPOLE. Mass. (AP)—Death! ccived. 1 'All equipment aboard was func-| today.
-■ •- .........I O.V n.,m. -c CD-R Jia^claimcd ome of’I:he eight men The 1.418-pound "automatic in-!Honing as intended, Tass said.! It followed a regular meeting of
traffic
JIIIVIUU' i uuii^ .* -------- ----- ** i" ** ....... *
tickets which vrflT distin- to justify its delinquent tax claims, j known as SR-6. ,— —
:— --:-----y^-------------------; ..... ..... - - ! r~'T The',105 area is from Interstate sentenced to life imprisonment He. planetaryj-italimi” was; nx-ket-! During the first playback, the!the board of directors of the hank
It)-south to. Orange Street, a sec- for the nation’s biggest rash rob- ed from an orbiting Sputnik Sun- temperature aboard was 68 de- yesterday afternoon Comment on
tion running through municipal bery - the. SI.219.000 looting of day. tie Soviets said. It is de.-:grees fahrenheit. The account!the selection came today from
Vidor. . {Brink’s Armored Money Transfer signed to penetrate the clouds per-[said
On that project, known as SC-3, Service in ~
Orange School Board Studies
Plans for New Construction
P r e 11 m i nary
sketches of projects in a proposed
school expansion and construction
program planned by the Orange
way and constructing storm sew-
ers and gutters.
architectural j with "the board again Tuesday toj The PVt 105 project will cost the
norea money t ransterj signed to penetrate the clouds per- j said a temperature control svs- i h T Edwards exe
,the county is participating with the Henry BaSi’ di^ M.Sys^efs.8Soviet' T «^ndi.fonf tPreSidm ^ C^
j state bv acquiring the right • ojmght in the Norfolk Prison Colony | scientists refused tc comment,{equipment on the station.
today
executive vice
present these figures. {county $50,000 and the state, $205,-
Trustees authorized school busi- 600. The Texla project will cost
ness manager Charles Austin to
fn dependent, 'school "District were {place up for sale three homes to-
presented to the Board of Trustees j cat ed on the new Wallace Elemen-
'last night. tary School site. The .houses are
Representatives of the ’Beaumont j }» be; moved from their present
architectural firm of Pitts. MebaneN««ioo. .rutip„ d'
& Phelps presented the sketches; In other action trustees discues-
and reviewed cost estimates 5
trustees in a special meeting m ,rim \llS DhIse of education wdl
th’e school office building. be given funher at.enUon at thelceive the
School trustees had previously nexj meeting of the board Tues- funds. All
the county $70,000 and the state
$330,000.
Commissioners also designated
three banks as county depositories.
They are the Vidor and Bridge City
State banks and the Orange Na-
tional Bank.
The Vidor and Bridge Citv banks
‘ I f T_ *. ..... ‘ ---‘ ......• ,v.,vwvw IV vvmimvm, CMlil|HIKIH UIl UIC SltUIUfl. .
Hospital of bronchial pneumonia.'however, on speculation, that, the The equipment Is designed to
This is an increase in the bank’s
staff of officers made to give bet-
, “"'ts11™ >y ter service to our customers and
] study cosmic radiation, magnetic t0 handle the rising volume of bus-
Port Board Authorizes Suit
For Damage of Pilings Here
{fields, interplanetary matter and
[registering of collisions with mi-
{crometecriles; Toss continued.
{Chemical sources charged by sol-
tar batteries furnish the power to
radio information" back to earth.
Dr. Alexander Markov, an ex-
! pert in physics and mathematics,
A cairn of some $2,600 against a: the Colombian ship Ciudad de Cali; vvrote in Komsomolskaya Pravda
shipping agent for damages to the and present a claim for damages'that after the first Venus probe,
Orange County port dock was au-
iness,” Edwards explained.
Godfrey has been a resident of
Orange for the past two years and
he had worked as a manager of the
Coastal Insurance Agency. Mr. and
Mrs. Godfrey live at 1 Pacific Cir-
cle and, they have three boys.
He received his grade and high
school education in Baytown. He
will get $100,000 deposits each andj thorized last night by the port dis-
the Orange National Bank will re-1 trict board
---- r....... .....* ’ ir-"' lUttl filial IIIC 1II2SI ¥ Cl\U3 JJIUIK, I------------------ '* —-j
in connection with the Feb. 5 mis- other* rockets would carry auto-:has a bachelor of science degree
Instructed architects to investigate; day
the feasibility of three methods
construction in relation to the
Sa/SEar ' ' After Late Night Meet
These included flexicore deck,
the same type of construction em-
ployed in the West Orange Lorena
Oates School, unit wood deck and
laminated beams and standard
wood frame construction.
After a lengthy discussion on the
merits and cost of each type of
construction, trustees decided the
most feasible and desirable meth-
Lawmakers’Tempers Shorl on Valenline’s Day
[the same witnesses until 10:30
(AP)—Cupid found few] p.m. Monday, then sent the pro-
taygets among Texas legislators posal to a subcommittee for more
By GARTH JONES
AUSTIN
■today,
most teasiDie ana ; Valentine’s Day tempers were
°.d °f ‘ n,,intern.nee touch>r after way-in-the-night corn-
standpoint of cost, maintenance
and insurance, would be flexicore.
Architects were requested to re-
vise the over-all cost estimates on
the entire building prosram utili-
sing flexicore construction.
Architects are expected to meet
WARM
Data From U.S. Weolher Bureou
OUTLOOK — Partly cloudy with warm
days and mild nights through Tomorrow.
Highest temperature toddy and .tomorrow
H to 78. and the low tonight about S9.
Southeast to south winds 10 to 18 m.p.h.
doytlmes, and 4 to 9 m.p.h, at night.
- TIDjSS—-Sahlne: h'gh. ’51 o.rr , 4 11,
1 I mu S OB n m I -
low, 8:08 am
J:» a m., 5:71
’.7 » I '
S.43 pm. Bolivar/
p.m.; low, 10:04 a.m.(
pm.;
high,
10:39 p.m.
SUN— rises 6 56 a m. sets 6 05 pm
YESTERDAY — sTemperatuf«f h grt “76,
low
mittee meetings. There was a hjnt
that the crowded U.S. senatorial
special election campaign may
elbow taxing and .spending issues
out of the spotlight, at least tem-
porarily.
The odds were against any few-
er hurt feelings at the end of to-
day. ' '
Tonight, the biennial extrava-
ganza over a possible return to
legalized horse race betting is on
the program—7:30 (i.m before a
House- committee.
Other hearings today considered
legislation on such enemy-making
subjects as the Game and Fish
Commission budget, money for
the Migrant Labor Council, auto
financial responsibility, water res-
ervoir financing, and revised tax-
es on: air conditioners and phono;
graphs.
study.
Officials of the university es-
timated the increased cost to the
state, counting an expected 10 per
cent enrollment increase, would
be just under $11. million for t962-
1963. Student) tuition, now $600 a
year, would drop to $100 a year
under state control.
slonal special elections, and Rep.
Bill Walker’s measure for special
Sam Houston State Teachers Col-
lege at Huntsville.
Before moving to Orange, he was
associatedwith his father in an in-
surance business at Baytown.
Other active officers of the Coun-
hap. I mafic instruments to tjie planet If-T°m Sul1 Ross State College at A1
, Five df the 65-foot pilings whichlahout its ^tmosnhrp surface snd!pine and a master s degree from
remainder of county) port Director J. T. Arledge was: line the dock were broken and mas-: fjora anc| fauna if they exist *
three banks bid for, directed by the board to contact, sive . whaling timbers damaged j Prof. Ari Sternfeld, Soviet space
designation as county depositories.! C. Flanagan and Sons, agents for when the freighter was reportedlyiscjentist predicted the station
blown into the wharf by a strong| wou|(j rendezvous with Venus at
wind, according to Arledge. about 26 million miles out in space
rhe consulting engineering,t,rmjbetween May 15 and 31.
of Grorge .1. Schaumburg estimat-j u s Naval Observatory ty .National Bank are L. J. Lewis,
ed some $-,bC0 damage was done, jd Venus wouj^ be 49.9 million!president, and Burl D. Hobson, as-
hy the Tipy [miles away on May 20. Isistant cashier.
Jn other business, the board au-
thorized Port Director Arledge to
btWnd the March 20 meeting of the
Gulf Ports Association in Washing-
ton, D-C. He was alsp asked by
elections and runoffs to fill all va-i t>oar<j to further study the pos-
capcies for state and local offices sibilHy of handling carbon black /
Bridges contended the bills should,fh A the countv port,
be-studied further by a subcom- A special meeting of the port
. . . . . . [board has been set for Feb. 27 tb
\ chairman chal-l ^j^cuss the proposed legislation to
bulging this committee. ’ said idd a sixth man to the five-man
Rep. Eli^10 de la Garza of Mis-j ^oard and to increase the terms to
sion. We can get- our counsel! sjx 0nce continuity is .-stab-
Memorial Hospital Annexation
Ordinance Due Final Reading
Final reading of the ordinance) regulating wreckers,
annexing Orange Memorial Hos-i 3. An ordinance regulating water
somewhere else■ tye represent..the ljsh^ tw0 members would be Council.
pital is scheduled for tonight’s reg-
ular session of the Orange City
House calendar for possible ini
mediate action after a tumultuous
night session of the' House Elec-
tions Committee. •*’. ■ , - v
Need of quick .action before the
April 4 special election to name
a replacement for Lyndon John-
son was stressed. Feuding com-
mittee members pointed out one
bill was aimed at ways of chous-
ing a successor to Rep. Jim
Wright of Fort Worth if he Were
elected senator, and a second bill
Endurance honors went .Monday! would affqct selection of a sue-
to proposals that would make the cessor to Atty. Gen. Will Wilson
University of Houston a state-! should he Min
supported school. A Senate com-! Election Committee Chairman
mittee heard the long .line ofvwit- ! Ronald Bridges of Corpus Christ!
nesses in the afternoon and voted) protested the lopsided votes that
10-7 to approve the bill for Senate,.approved Rep Howard' Green’s
No witnesses appeared against:people. We will make the deci-j every two years
the bill. * sions.” ’ j -—— -——f—-y-
Four important proposed .elec- The committee majority also
tion law changes were on the bypassed subcommittee action ior
and sewer taps.
4. A resolution appointing a tax
board of equalization for the City
a bill to extend voting time Ly
two hours in the state's four larg-
est, counties, from 6 a m, to 8.
p.m.
"This, would help m the special
Senate election, let’s vote it out,"
said Rep. W. T. Oliver of Port
Neches,
A fourth approved bill would,
allow voting machine counties to
use paper ballots for runoff elec-
tions if necessary.
Disagreement sounded in /the {
House State Affairs Committee,
over a bill to modify budget mak-
ing powers Of st|ie Texas Commis-1
siop, on Higher Education.
"Tt will completely emasculate
the commission,” argued com-!
> ’e>-.
Qs#m
V
{ The passage of the measure will!of Orange,
annex the 11-acre tract occupied: 5. A resolution authorizing the
! by the hospital. The tract is adia-jtax sasessor-collector to write off
cent to the present Orange City) the I960 taxes assessed against
: limits jtl its juncturd'With U.S. 90. properties acquired ’ by the Or-
Also up for final reading at the atige lndepemlent School District.
1.7:30 p.m. session is the ordinance1 6. A resolution appointing mem-
[vacating; and abandoning alleys in j tiers to the Orange Planning Cont-
ra triangular-shaped 4'4-acre tract mission as provided for in the city
between West Park Avenue and! charter. This action, in effect, wili
I Link Avenue.
I In other business, the council is
scheduled to consider a resolution
I relating to the acquisition of a
i tract of land on the north side of
!.Cooper's Gully. This tract is pres-
! ently a part of the proposed sur-
i plus Navy park property'.
[ The City Council is expected to
Consider:
change the title of the p r e s e n t
planning board to planning com-
mission. ■
7. A resolution adopting the
storm sewer easement previously
obtained from Gulf States, ratify-
ing the ettv manager’s actions ,
«. Establishment of a policy
providing for sufficient notice for
prospecti'-e jurors in Orange Cor-
only _
civil war, but a repetition of the
Spanish civil war where interven-
tion by great powers will all too
inevitably develop into a rehearsal
for something worse.”
The Tunisian governmnt for-
mally expressed indignation at
Lumumba's death and described
his killing as an “odious crime.”
But President Habib Bourguiba
pledged to aid Hammarskjold in
anything he may undertake to
bring about a reconciliation be-
tween the warring Congo leaders.
A Moroccan government spokes-
man branded the killing as "pre-
meditated murder” and said tha
United Nations is guilty of com-
plicity because of its "passiveness
and silence.” ,
President Nasser of the United
S(ee REACTION, Page 7)_
YMCA Picks
Same Officers
Officers of the Orange YMCA
were re-elected yesterday during a
luncheon meeting of the board of
directors in the Petro-Chem Room
of the Jack Tar Orange House.
To serve a second term in their
respective offices are Jimmy Conn,
president; Kenneth R. Murphy,
first vice president; Benny John-
son. second vice president; Mrs.
Matthew J. Jkeeler, secretary;
and Max Stegall, treasurer. ”
Board members re-elected for
three-year terms were the Rev.
W. W. Kennedy, Claude Brook-
shire, the Rev. Ben Gillespie,
Homer Miller, Leland Morrow and
James Morris.
New board members elected for
two-year terms were introduced to
directors. They are Charles Wool-
dridge. Cleatis Williams and Joe
Gilmore. Slade .Brown also was
elected to the board for a three-
year term, but was not present
for the meeting.
Dave Sanford, executive secre-
tary of the Y. asks everyone not
contacted during the recent Y
membership drive who is interest-
ed in becoming a member, to
please call the Y office.
I ORANGE JUICE j
FROM A LAWYER — If you
think women better qualified than
men to pick the best candidates
—look what they marry.
STENOGRAPHEF *
R—Outlook Caa
be deduced from a ' comment
made at the county courthouse by
one just back from vacation. Slid
*-7- 1 l ’An ordinance estabUsKmg clas- pprabon Court jury cases she: “.And the sunsets Over the
•Here's another good 'job'in sificatiohs under,:police And fire 9. Settlement of personal prop- lake! There wasn't an, evening the
.................................... ....... ............ ....... m.ssion’Chairman-At Muttrow of! the leader .Wan! Ads Ed-answer mu7s~nvd servin' regulations I erty taxes due from.j. M. K>fo Cloudk weren’t as oink as one et
debate. A llousa .committee heard' b.ll calling for runoff* in cdngr^-lBr^nwdciL i V»f l wakft't on vacation!- .2. An, ordinance governing andltKyU* Du-ss bhep). tour vouchers!
tV, 9
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 39, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 14, 1961, newspaper, February 14, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth558742/m1/1/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.