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Tucson Daily Citizen from Tucson, Arizona • Page 47

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 48 A I I I MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 20, I960 Gcter was with i i I J3 in IOM CINCINNATI, Minutes later police halted his i Geter, 18. is not worried ton much mother. Lucille. and charpfd tbout criticism st home for cct- her i driving 35 rr.ws an hour ting a speeding ticket. in thr samp More More More Home Glamour with FOLDING DOORS the space wi swinging Chooit from Bamboo, Mahogany, a or Wood.

A I INSTALLED! Samples on Display in Our 3 New REBUILD REPAIR RECONDITION YOUR OLD BUNDS TO LOOK LIKE NEW! NOW Our Ntw Addrttf 151S. CAMPBELL South of Broadway MA 2-8874 --Citinn Photo A BIT OF DESERT Briggs, manager of the 22nd street branch of the Bank of Douglas, poses beside an original picture being displayed at the bank. The picture, composed of stones, was made by fourth grade students of the Hudlow School. Their teacher was Mrs. Ouida Carithers.

Rockefeller Says Hell Stump Nation ROCHESTER, N.Y.--UPl-Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller said today he would conduct a nation-wide tour in behalf of the Republican Party candidates in the November election. The Republican governor did not immediately set a date for the lour. He told a news conference he would campaign "not only for the national candidates" but for sena- i torial and congressional candidates.

Rockefeller said he had not been invited to make the campaign tour by the GOP National Committee but said he would "assume they would take it for granted. "I plan to tour the country and I plan not only to campaign for the national candidates, but for the senatorial and congressional candidates and to give them every possible support that I can in their campaigns," he said. Advertisement Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch--Relieves Pain Ynrk, Y. For fixst. time science has found a new healinc substance with the aston- i i a i i i i stop itchinp, and relieve pain i surccry.

In case after case, gently i i a i a a i (nhr.inVaEc) took place. Mnst amaiinjjof a were thoroueh that iuffereTS madt astcnlahinc statements like "Piles have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing utance of a world-Jamons research institute. This substance is now available in tiippotilOTy or oi-ntmvnt form under the name Preparation A i i a jruarantee. u.s. r.uoir.

Hitchhiking Leghorn Only Ruffled By Ride McALESTER, Okla. UPf -Kenneth Williams discovered he had hitchhiker when he arrived here after a drive from Irving, Texas, 200 miles away. Stuck between the exhaust pipe and shock absorber was a plump Leghorn chicken. Service station attendants managed to free the traveling fowl who appeared only ruffled from the Tide. Ike Homers With Young Ballplayers By GENE KRAMER SEOUL, Korea (Pi "How's i your 'wing?" the kind-faced, 6J- year-old grandfather asked the tow-headed youngster in his fresh- ly pressed uniform.

"Can you get the ball to sec- ond? "Are you leadoff man?" i The questioner was the grand-; father of David Eisenhower, the Gettysburg, Little Leaguer who decided he'd rather play baseball with his team than visit Russia with grandpa. Meeting the American commu- nity in Seoul in the garden of the I U.S. embassy, President Eisen- hower was mobbed by uniformed members of the Pirates, the Cardinals, the Dodgers and the Larks --Little League baseball teams of American boys whose parents work in Korea. Eisenhower, three minutes behind his schedule after the baseball small talk, explained to the American community: "I have got a grandson who is a very good second baseman and in hitting. Now he doesn't field very well.

So the reason-I delayed down there was to ask these fellows how they were doing; in fielding and in hitting." The Little 1 Leaguers of Seoul didn't look too much like the hustling ballplayers they normally are. Their had scrubbed them and pressed their uniforms. They literally glowed. And they were glowing more after shaking hands wifli and talking to the President of the United States 5,000 miles from home. "I liked him.

He was real nice," said freckle-faced, 11-year- old Johnny Hughes, son of W. V. Hughes, a U.S. aid official from. St.

Louis, Mo. 1 "He asked me if I had a wing good enough to get me ball to second whes I told him I was a catcher," said Rusty Hoagland of Fairfax, Va. His father, Richard Hoagland, is also an aid official. "He asked if I was leadoff batter. I said sometimes," reported little Stuart Michael Bradford, 9-year-old son of Air Force Col.

J. V. Bradford of Marshall, Tex. "My son Neal won't wash his hands for weeks now that he has shaken hands with the President," said Mrs. Phyllis Coyle, wife of Lt.

Col. Ray F. Coyle of Oakland, Calif. iPauling Asks To Testify Publicly In Nuclear Inquiry Advertisement ITCH ING Torture Stopped like Magic Hm'l bleued relief from torturti of nginil itch, rtcitl itch, chifing, nih tcumm with uniting new icicntific formuli called LANACANE. Thii faiMctiiw, Htin- medicittd creme kills tiirmful bicierii erms white ic toothts jiw, irriotid ind nflimed ikin tissue.

Slops icriichinic--H tpcedi helling. Don't taller another minute. Get LANACANE todijr it ill druj sioref. Senate internal security subcommittee postponed a hearing on nuclear test propaganda today when Dr. Linus Pauling requested his testimony be taken in open session.

The hearing was rescheduled for 8 a.m. tomorrow. Pauling said he will testify in a closed session if the subcommittee insists, but he will feel free afterward to state publicly what went on af the meeting. The California scientist, a leading advocate of banning nuclear weapons tests, appeared in answer to a subpoena which he said ordered him to testify about any Communist activities in opposing the tests. The subcommittee met behind closed doors after the postpone: ment, presumably to consider whether tomorrow's hearing will be open or closed.

Pauling, a leader in the post- World War II opposition against nuclear testing, charged the inquiry is an attempt by those who oppose suspension of the tests to silejice scientists who don't agree with them. He told a news conference yesterday the hearings 'also are an attempt to "suppress Bill of Rights" and stifle information on nuclear tests to the public. Subcommittee counsel J. G. Sourwine declined; to confirm or deny the subpoena was issued for Pauling's appearance at a closed- door hearing scheduled today.

Pauling said he was served Saturday after addressing the annual convention of the Women's International League for Peace and Friendship here. Sens. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn) and X)lin D. Johnston (D-SC) said yesterday they were not aware of the subpoena, which Pauling said was signed by subcommittee Chairman James 0.

CD- Miss). Rep. James Roosevelt (D-Calif), in a statement issued by the women's group, assailed the "unthink- i ing action" of the subcommittee for ordering, rather than request- ing, Pauling to testify. He said Communists would use the action as propaganda "to prove that I freedom of thought does not exist in the United States." Pauling told the women he op- i posed the tests because of the "danger of nuclear war." He said I U.S. dependence on nuclear weap- ons stockpiles was a "sign of re- I liance on the which he termed "a bad thing." i The chemist received the Nobel i Prize in 1954 for his work on i chemical bonds.

The Russian academy of sciences called him a' Vpseudo scientist" for this study, but Pauling, who has sworn he is not a Communist, later was made a. member of the Soviet Academy. The Pasadena, native, who teaches at California, Institute of Technology, said the subpoena ordered him to testify on "Communist participation, or support of, a propaganda campaign against nuclear testing." He commented: "I don't know anything about Communist activity, but I'll be glad to educate the members of the subcommittee on this very important matter of nuclear war." He received a similar subpoena three years ago'when the mittee investigated whether Communist groups were behind a petition he had signed calling for a halt to hydrogen bomb tests. At that time, he asked to appear ahead of schedule because of planned European trip and' the subpoena was withdrawn. Rites Set For Former Pastor Funeral services will be conducted tomorrow for the former pastor of the Eastside Church of God, William F.

Brannon, 49, of 6094 E. 21st who died. Saturday at the Pima County Hospital. The service will be held at the Southside Church of God at 6 p.m. with the Rev.

R. Johnson officiating. Brannon, a native of Florida, came to Tucson in 1957. Following the service the body will be sent by Reilly's Funeral Home to De Funiak Springs, for burial. Brannon is survived by his wife, Erion, three sons, Franklin and Daris C.

and William H. of Denver; and five daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Blevins, Martha Lois and Esther E. Brannon, all of Tucson, and Mrs. Mavis B.

Stargell, in Germany. Surviving brothers' are Alfred, of Panama City, Osker, Ft. Benning, Aubrey, Be Funiak Springs, and sisters, Mrs. Cecil Tnarp, Panama City, Mrs, Olde Bearden, Ponce de Leon, Mrs. Dave Beardon, Leonore City, N.C., Mrs.

Aris-Moms, Ft. Walton, Mrs. Lois Brandei), Jacksonville, znd Mrs. Nettie- Graves, Port St. Joe, Fla.

Sinatra Gives Pal Lift HOLLYWOOD-UPI-Frank Sinatra sent his buddy Dean Martin, recuperating from a hernia operation in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, a set of barbells. TOOTH ST TO8ACCO COFFEE is by dentish Jo remove stains from teeth. Stain-free look bright, feel wonderful. distinction at moderate cost? architect, Ttrry Atkii see the BANES company for Butler Buildings in Tuscon and the Southwest 1149 Frttwiy MAin 2-2149 it's unique SOUTHERN ARIZONA BANK i 2 2 I l.C..

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About Tucson Daily Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
391,799
Years Available:
1941-1977