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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 19

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i i ALL EDITIONS Captive Release Hits Sua The Arizona Republic Pae 21 Friday, July 4, 1958 By DON DEDERA Castro Holding Out For Further Talks Good Morning! LOU JAFFE is getting his 'Coffee Break" in Flagstaff these days. He says he is reminded of a gal who was less fortunate. HAVANA, Cuba (AP) A diplomatic snag was re ported yesterday to be blocking the release of 45 kidnaped North Americans still held by Cuban guerrillas in the hills of eastern Cuba. Informants hinted Rebel Leader Fidel Castro was hedging on orders to his men to free the captives. "Johnny Sexhauer was with the Chamber of Commerce here," writes Lou.

"One day a man called and asked, 'Do you have a Sexhauer And the switchboard operator complained: "Heck, we don't even have a coffee break." if txiA Dedera for a jungle rendezvous to pick up more captives. Usually informed sources here said Fidel Castro would not permit a helicopter flight into rebel territory yesterday. They said a snag had developed in the U.S. consular negotiations with the rebels and that Castro had decided now to hold out for further negotiations. There was no report on what the snag was or what Castro wants to talk about.

These reports could not be confirmed at the U.S. embassy here. Wollam conferred there with U.S. Ambassador Earl E. T.

Smith. One of the five released prisoners, Howard A. Roach of Watertown, N.Y., said Raul Castro was preparing a personal apology and explanation for the kidnapings. The orders were broadcast Wednesday night by Castro's headquarters in the mountains of Oriente Province. The broadcast said because of poor communications the rebel leader had known nothing of the kidnaping of 47 Americans and 3 Canadians by guerrilla bands headed by his brother Raul.

But it added: "If that is the case their liberty is hereby ordered." Four Americans and one Canadian were flown out of the rebel country in a U.S. Navy helicopter Wednesday after U.S. Consul Park Wollam spent several days talking with the rebels. A helicopter was readied to take off from the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo yesterday.

But Associated Press Correspondent Bob Clark reported from there that none had left For nine years, Buford Dobbins, commander of the American Legion post, has worked so hard at the show he never had a chance to see it. This year he will. At 8 p.m. at Austin Field, Dobbins is going to sit out front and watch $1,000 worth of fireworks explode. "HOW TO Catch an Angler," is the title of an article in the current Fisherman magazine.

The story is written for fish, and there are four brief rules for successful manning. 1. Never actually bite the lure. 2. Let the sun flash off your sides by rolling in the depths.

3. Follow lures right up to the fisherman's toes. This causes some anglers to faint. 4. If this fails, jump out of the water and throw water on the fisherman.

He will become tangled in the line and he is yours. Be careful. Don't let the fisherman fall on top of you. Try not to bore your comrades with man stories. SYLVESTRE Herrera, Arizona's Medal of Honor soldier, rose to speak before a Phoenix civic club.

A naturally shy man, Herrera stammered and then stopped in embarrassment. A club member rose. "Relax, friend," he said. "We know you didn't win your medal by talking." Herrera then delivered his speech flawlessly. -1: 'I THE SLEEPY town of Taylor was to hear a terrifying blast this morning at 4 a.m.

"Before the hills come back down to earth," writes Shirl Tenney, "you will hear the wailing of a fife and booming of a drum. "Judge Renz L. Jennings plays the drum now, taking the place of his father, and his grandfather before him. It is the same drum that set the pace for the longest infantry march in historythat of the Mormon Battalion. "This year Taylor is honoring its heroes of World War I.

One can get an idea of the depth and intensity of the two world wars. In the first war, Taylor was somewhat bigger than it is today. "Taylor contributed 15 sons to World War I. And, with a population of 281 in World War II, Taylor sent more than 100." ANOTHER TOWN with a Fourth of July celebration is Chandler. TVpprl Rv Two Americans and a Canadian, kidnaped by i ecu uy iicucia rebds in Cub3( are shown at the Nayal Base at Guantanamo, Cuba, where they were flown by helicopter.

From left are Edward Cannon, of Cornwall, Ontario, Henry Salmonson, of Portland, and William H. Koster, Akron, Ohio. (AP Wirephoto) 3MIE WIEKO), Voice Of Broadway By dorothy KILGALLEN --f TOP SOURCES say U.S. Attorney Paul Williams is set to resign within the next two weeks. They believe he's giving up the job as a prelude to moving into a more important office.

I It will rate as big news when Brigitte Bardot trains her sights on a bachelor. She's currently crazy about her leading man, a Vallone, described by friends as "very happily married." The moon may be used as a reflector for inter Kilgallen The very British cast of "Look Back in Anger" has succumbed to a strictly American virus. They now watch the Yankees' night baseball games in their dressing rooms. Harlem society is giving the state department headaches; there are so many requests from those who want to ai Ghana Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah when he comes to the United States in July. A strip-teaser who is shedding her husband would like to shed her income tax problems, too.

She's trying to pay off as rapidly as possible, but she owes an impressive sum. Newest taste treat for the dangerous livers among the double-dry martini set: you pour it over Pernod-flavored ice cubes. THE MOST sophisticated Broadway-ites are doing triple takes outside Lindy's when the Main Stem's newest character makes his appearance. He's Mitch Sandler, a New Jersey disc jockey, whose face is half clean-shaven, half bearded. (The left side has whiskers running all the way from the side-burn area to under his chin.) U.S.

Chess Wizard Bobby Fischer, 15, is expected to make headlines out of Russia in the Van Cliburn fashion. He's a promising "sleeper" entry in the forthcoming international chess tournament there. Chuck Reeves, producer of the Dick Clark show, has given up all the other girls to concentrate on pretty Joan Van Pelt. Maxine Golden, chief hostess at Arthur Maisel's new $750,000 eating place in Paramus, used to be Debbie Reynolds's stand-in in Hollywood. Get ready for a new gadget called Car-B-Cue.

It's a grill that can be connected to the cigaret lighter on your auto's dashboard. (Slow down to 80, Daddy, and fix me a hamburger with relish.) continental telephone calls within a few years. The dearth of Elvis Presley pictures in the fan magazines, particularly the absence of the "at home" type shot, is no accident, and no indication that his popularity with the teenagers is fading. It's just that Colonel Parker's asking price for intimate studies of Elvis is far out of reach of most of the film publications' budgets, and the colonel won't let a single negative out of his hands without what he considers a fitting payment. TIN PAN Alley is talking about a new song Perry Como has recorded, "Beats There a Heart So True." Some of the experts think it's the prettiest thing he's done since "Prisoner Of Love." Willie Mays was all set to ask for 100 Big Ones for next season, but now chums aren't so sure he will.

They'll soon be shooting Westerns in New York, which is about as fur east as you can git. The first hoss opera goes (A reminder to the self-employed) By Dr. GEORGE CRANE before the cameras in Augustin the Bronx, yet. The Worry Clinic CASE Y-352: Clarence B. Randall, chairman of the board of Inland Steel, offers some excellent advice to all young folks looking for a job.

Randall wrote an inci es sir! If you are your own boss and paymaster, you of all people should have the protection of a VNB savings account. With no employer to automatically arrange those "payroll deductions," you have to plan ahead to meet insurance and income taxes as they fall due. What's more, you have to build your own retirement and profit-sharing plans and see them through! That's why so many business owners (and doctors, lawyers, farmers) have several Valley Bank savings accounts. In addition to building independence and security, a healthy VNB savings account is also one of the world's best credit references. Your account is cordially invited by your neighborhood Valley Bank.

sive essay for the Harvard Alumni Bulletin in which he outlined the qualities he looks for in young men he selects for his great firm. "Finally," he concludes, "I always wanted to know what talent the applicant had for self-expression. "IT CANNOT be reDeat- Crane WORK This is not to be construed as a blanket indictment of radio and TV, for they are great educational agencies. But when people quit doing their own independent reading, they tend to become sheeplike. Listeners are likely to be followers.

Readers are more inclined to be leaders and independent thinkers. So America needs a revival of reading. Therefore, help your child learn to regard books as fascinating treasure troves of ideas. Equip your home with a good dictionary, plus an encyclopedia. And read to your children when they are too young to do it for themselves.

This very act of reading aloud, can spell the difference between your child's being a good student in later years versus flunking out of high school. FOR A CHILD must first develop a liking for reading before he ever will become a fluent reader. You devoted mothers and grandmothers should thus condition your youngsters to like books. And to help make them swifter, more accurate readers, send for my booklet, "How to Tutor Your Child at Home," enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents. Readers become leaders.

Listeners are usually followers. So bend the twig ed too often that the capacity to speak and write the English language is indis-pensible today for advancement in business. "Each individual in the industrial hierarchy must be able to communicate ideas if management is to function." Your English teachers in school have often told you much the same thing, but you apparently disbelieve them. So I am citing Randall as one of our greatest American industrial leaders, to add more emphasis. Learn to read.

For reading is the motor in the entire educational machine. Americans are becoming too dependent on listening. They let TV and radio artists tell them what to eat and what to wear and even when to laugh. They are becoming sheep. FRIENDLY OFFICES it i i ocretiT INSURANCE coirtnifUR accordingly.

Address Worry Clinic, The Arizona Republic 1 w.www...

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