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The Town Talk from Alexandria, Louisiana • Page 6

Publication:
The Town Talki
Location:
Alexandria, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I ALEXANDRIA DAILY TOWN TALK. ALEXANDRIA-PINEVILLE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1962 PAGE EIGHT OKAYS CENSUS BILL BROWN This Funny World W.SHINGTON (UPI) The House approved and sent to the Senate Monday a bill to eliminate SOKOLSKY (Continued from Pago I) without explanation. Thus, the fighters, the vendors and purvey-ors, and the entrepreneurs were deprived of their returns on their the requirement that a census taker be sent to every home in the nation during the head count pverv 10 vears. The Census Bu reau, planning use of mailed efforts while the impounded funds questionnaires in 1970, sought tho legislation. are impounded for no reason it i If; Explanations are usually not offered by the Internal Kevenue Service which has become the most arbitrary and intolerable CAN AMERICA KEEP agency of government.

Its rulings are often harmful to the united States, the proof of this being the enormous flight of capital 9 a sS-, 5 O-Z from this country and the large number of Americans who work outside the United States in order to avoid, not so much the payment of income taxes but the i (Continued from Pago i) Moved by this thought, and also by his conversations with Hitler concerning world communism, he decided to give the German dictator the benefit of the doubt. He believed at the time of the signing of the Munich Pact that Hitler meant what he said and that if there was any disturbance of peace in the future it would be the result of a clash between the German and Russian dictators; a clash from which the free world could only profit. U.S. Alont Opposed In those days America alone, instinctively, realized the danger opposed the appeasement of Hitler to the great annoyance of France and England. This reporter remembers a conversation he had with French Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet in the winter of 1939.

Bonnet was angered by our attitude toward the Munich Pact. "What do you want us to do," he asked angrily, "go to war because you don't like Hitler's treatment of his minorities?" A quarter of a century later it is the United States which is trying to reach an accommodation with a dictator as cruel and relentless as Hiler. It is Europe's turn to warn Washington, "You can't do business with Khrushchev any more than we could with Hitler." Washingtons answer to all such warnings is that the world could be wiped out by nuclear bombs if we don't find an accommodation with the communists. You can't compare the pre-nuclear age with 19G2, they insist. rl-fftrffiffttii My biggest trouble is once I get to eating them, I can't stop." (AP Wlrephoto) UNDIPLOMATIC DEPARTURE Evgeni M.

Prokhorov, 38, (left), and Ivan Y. Vyradov, 31, members of the Russian delegation to the United Nations, walk toward plane at New York's Idlewild Airport Monday night on the first leg of their return home. The two were recalled after allegedly being caught redhanded at a diner in Larchmont, N. by the FBI while buying classified documents from a U. S.

Navy Yoeman, Nelson C. Drummond, 33. brutality and inhumanity 01 collection. I was recently told that if a man who suffers from a major illness is ordered by his physician to a different climate, takes his vife along to care for him, he may fi? deduct from his income the cost of his wife's assistance, but if he takes a nurse, he may make such a deduction. Is this sense? Is it socially proper? Is it beneficial to the United States? It has been said that the reason that the fight money was seized was that someone in the government does not like Roy Cohn, its entrepreneur.

Are our laws designed for a beauty THE CUP? Our country has leadership in many fields in science and invention, in business and trade, in cultural and living-standards. But can we hold this lead? Not unless we pay attention to the dilemma of higher education. The cost of leadership has gone up and colleges are in a squeeze. Many face shortages. To give us the leaders our Hurricane Death Case May Set Trend in Damage Suits LAKE CHARLES, La.

(UPI) i clear indication that Bartie's Dozens of potential lawsuits to- claim would not be included in Alabama's Governor Fears Chaos If Integration Forced day awaited the outcome of the any award he might give Bartie. cause of the deep feeling of its precedent-setting Hurricane Audrey trial in federal district court at Lake Charles. Whitney Bartie, a Cameron Ne country needs, they need mod-i ern classrooms, up-to-date sci-i ence facilities and, over anJ gro, was suing the U. S. Weather HOLLYWOOD, Fla.

(AP) -Gov. John Patterson took a look at the tide of integration closing in on Alabama and forecast that another Mississippi would result if schools in his state are forced to admit Negroes. Integration of the University of Mississippi left Alabama and South Carolina as the only South Bureau, claiming its alleged negligence resulted in the death of his versity of Alabama several years back resulted in violence. She later was expelled for making charges against university officials. South Carolina Gov.

Ernest F. Hollings has been less outspoken on the subject although he said the people of his state were "100 per cent in sympathy with the people of Mississippi." Hollings said South Carolina which has no school integration-is watching Mississippi events closely. A Negro, Harvey Gantt, has been ordered admitted to Clemson College by a federal district court and the case is pending before the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Because of the continuing crisis in Mississippi, Patterson said the Alabama Highway Patrol had placed on a five-minute alert.

The action was taken so the patrol wife in Hurricane Audrey. The hurricane churned into Cameron before dawn June 27 1957, taking more than 500 lives "Such a claim," said Judge Hunter of the loss-of-support argument, "is a little far-fetched. The main issue in this case is establishing liability." Bartie was on the witness stand two hours. He testified he thought, due to weather bureau announcements, that the storm would not hit until the afternoon of June 27th. Instead, the storm came about 4 a.m.

The trial opened for a week in April this year, and re-opened Monday. It is expected to end by Friday. Any award in Bartie's favor would probably bring dozens of other suits from Hurricane Audrey survivors. Alvin Bowen, Beaumont, a systems operator for Gulf States people, was determined to keep schools oprating on a segregated basis despite the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court desegregation decree.

Sees No Quick Mixing "I do not see any integration in Alabama in the foreseeable future," he said. Gov. Ross Barnett of Mississippi has drawn some of his strongest backing at the Southern Governor's Conference from Patterson, who has blamed President Kennedy and the Justice Department for bloodshed at Oxford. A suit to force admission of Negroes to Birmingham public schools is pending in federal district court in Alabama. Court-ordered enrollment of a Negro above all, a steady supply of competent teachers and professors.

HELP THE COLLEGE OF YOUR CHOICE NOW1 To find out how the college erisi effects you, wnte to HIGHER EDUCATION, Box 36, New York Times Station, New York 36, N. Y. and flattening the town. ern states continuing to operate public schools and state universities on a segregated basis. Fed Cast Rested Bartie's attorneys rested their eral court suits to force admission of Negroes are pending in both states.

case Monday after calling two witnesses to the stand. Bartie's bureau's storm time of arrival forecasts, company workmen were notified to expect Audrey around 4 a.m. June 27th. Bowen said weather bureau bulletins from a weather bureau "If integration is forced in Ala suit involved claim for loss of sup bama, there would be chaos, Published at a public gervice cooperation with Th AdvertUing Council and the S'ewtpaper Ad-vertising Association, port due to his wife's death. She was employed before she died in the winds and tidal flooding that Audrey brought.

teletype in his office indicated the violence and destruction of the public school system," Patterson told a news conference Monday. Patterson said Alabama, be would be prepared for any even storm would hit about 4 p.m. tuality, he said. girl, Autherine Lucy, at the Uni June 27th. Utilities testified his office Judge Edwin F.

Hunter gave sis UnrrDrnnri I 0 U1 ill ITU REMINGTON AND WESTERN 12 GAUGE III POWERED SHOTGUN SHELLS. COMPARE AT GIBSON'S LOW LOW PRICE I 3.50 GAUGE REMINGTON EXPRESS REMINGTON SHUR SHOT "GIBSON'S Compare at I GIBSON'S 12 Gauge GAUGE WESTERN SUPER WESTERN EXPERT Compare at GIBSON'S ompare at 12 Gauge 3.50 2.39 2.95 2.12 16 Gauge 3.25 2.32 2.75 1 .88 20 Gauge 305 2.22 2.45 1.84 Compare at 3.S0 3.25 3.05- 2.39 2.32 2.22 2.12 1.89 1.84 2.95 2.75 2.45" 16 Gauge 20 Gauge HIGH CORDUROY COLLAR HUNTING PANTS AMERICAN FIELD BRAND IDEAL FOR THE SPORTSMAN FULL-LINED BACK ONE-PIECE FREE ACTION BACK DOUBLE STITCHED RECOIL PAD TOP-LINED SLEEVE IDEAL JACKET FOR THE HUNTER HUNTING CAPS S97 ZIPPER CLOSURE BREAST POCKET COMPARE AT $14.95 Gibson's Low Low Price. fj fS VENTILATED iv UNDERARM GUSSETS AT GIBSON'S VENTED CUFF INSULATED RUBBER KNEE $9)99 ZIPPER DROP GAME BAG TWO SHELL POCKETS WITH SHELL LOOPS SAVE ON ALL YOUR SPORTING GOODS TODAY! AT GIBSON'S! Compare At $4.50 BOOTS.

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Years Available:
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