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Casper Morning Star from Casper, Wyoming • 15

Location:
Casper, Wyoming
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the the Casper Morning Star, Tuesday, August 27, 1963 15 7 4 5 490 20 6 10 8 MATCH 'EM UP Military chiefs testify 0 Hand in the till All roads lead to Disaster on the ferry Where's the money? Underground drama Fiery protest Busy on the border Graduation victory 5 Forecast: co-operation Partial Ban No GainHarrison CHEYENNE (AP)- Americans will be on "possibly fatal" grounds if they "indulge in illusion that peace, with justice and freedom, is a step nearer reality" because of a partial nuclear testban treaty, Rep. William Henry Harrison, warns. Harrison said there is hardly any doubt that the Senate will ratify the treaty but "the occasion should not be one for rejoicing in the streets." Cold war tensions will be eased only if the Communists are willing "to forego their ambitions for world conquest" or the free world is willing to make new concessions and accommodations, Harrison said. "The history of communism is a long trail of broken promises and treaties, of treachery and duplicity," he asserted, "Before we lull ourselves into any notions that the Soviets are guys' 1 and only the Red Chinese are the bad guys, let us remember that Khrushchev less than two months ago in East Berlin vowed that communism would never halt until capitalism is completely eradicated," said Harrison. Hansen Plans To Attend State Fair DOUGLAS (AP) Gov.

Cliff Hansen is scheduled to attend the 51st annual Wyoming State Fair Thursday night and Friday morning. However, the governor is now in Jackson near his grandson who was hurt in a horseback riding accident, and this could change the governor's plans. He is scheduled to go to Lander Friday afternoon for the annual one antelope hunt which will held early Saturday. Train Crash Kills 8 LYON, France (AP) Eight persons were killed and three were critically injured Monday when two suburban passenger trains collided in a tunnel near Lyon. The dead were four men, three women and a nine-year-old girl, all French.

The three critically injured were also French. The nationalities of 13 other persons treated for less serious injuries were not immediately known. Police and rescue officials said the first train, drawn by an electric engine, entered the tunnel near the station of Gorge de Loup on schedule but stopped inside for an unknown reason. The second train, a light diesel crashed into the rear of the first. The engineer of the second train was among the dead.

Ex-President Of Mont. Doctors Dies RAINIER, Ore. (AP)-A former president of the Montana Medical Association died Sunday night in a hospital at Longview, near here. He was Dr. George W.

Setzer, a Rainier physician. Funeral services are pending. Nationalist Gen. To Visit U.S. TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)-Gen.

Liu An-chi, commander in chief of the Chinese Nationalist army, is scheduled for a three-week visit to the United States at the invitation of the U.S. Army, a spokesman announced in Taipei, Kennedy-Gromyko Session Set A Answers To World Newsmap Quiz 1. Nehru says Chinese Reds digging in on truce line. 2. Buddhist priests' suicides Northwest Jets Fly Again ST.

PAUL, Minn. (AP)-Northwest Airlines' new 707-320B jets were flying Monday after having been grounded since June 30 in a dispute of pilots over increased pay for manning them. An NWA spokesman said the firm had reached an interim agreement with the Air Line Pilots Association but it would not be made public pending signing of an over-all contract, now in process of negotiation. As pilots refused to take out the 320Bs on scheduled runs, the company had placed them on a strike status and refused to assign them to other ships. At one time, 32 pilots were off the payroll, 18 of them based in the Twin Cities.

The company has purchased five of the new planes at a total cost of $36 million, including spare parts, and three already have been delivered. Antique Gun Kills Man In Kemmerer KEMMERER -A 27-yearold Kemmerer man died in a Salt Lake City hospital after he was accidentally shot while examining an antique gun, Sheriff Earl Ellsworth said Monday. Roy Wilson was wounded Saturday night when the gun, held by Lee Hogan of Kemmerer, discharged while the men were looking at it in a tavern, Ellsworth said. Wilson was struck in the side by a blast of buckshot from the old shotgun-pistol. He was taken to a Kemmerer hospital and then moved to a Salt Lake City hospital where he died Sunday night.

Ellsworth said the shooting was accidental. Wilson was a bartender at the tavern where the shooting occurred. The 350-mile long San Joaquin River in California is one of the few in the U.S. that flow north. NEWSMAP QUIZ- -What occurred where? Look at the map and match up the numbers with the events listed in the box at the left.

Then turn to the answers on this page and see how well you did. Score yourself 10 points for each correct answer. A score of 20 or less indicates you'd better start reading the papers a bit more. A score of 50-you're fairly hep. A score of 75- you're pretty sharp.

A score of 90 or morecongratulations to a real news hawk! are fire as protest against religious injustice deepen troubles for South by Viet Nam government. 3. U.S. U.S.S.R. agree to joint weather -communications research in space.

4. Finishing touches are put to plans for the civil rights march on Washington Aug. 28. Beer Popular Among Mexicans MEXICO CITY (AP)-Beer is the most popular alcholic beverage in Mexico, reports the newspaper Ultimas Noticias. Mexicans drink about 800 million quarts of beer a year.

By JERRY T. BAULCH WASHINGTON (AP)Kennedy agreed Monday to meet with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko next month to seek ways beyond the imited nuclear test-ban treaty to ease cold war tensions. The planned meeting, without exact time and place, was announced by the Soviet ambassador, Anatoly F. Dobrynin, after he spent an hour with Kennedy and delivered a letter from Soviet Premier Khrushchev expressing "thanks and appreciation" for the U.S. signing of the pact.

Meanwhile, a Senate hearing on ratification of the treaty moved into its third week with an endorsement of the pact by Dr. Herbert F. York, the Pentagon's chief scientist from 1958 to mid-1961. He stressed what he sees as a need for follow-up steps. The agreement to ban all except underground tests, York said, is "a first small step toward finding a solution" to the dilemma "of steadily increasing military power and steadily decreasing national security." "If we make no further steps in this direction then the national security will continue to diminish, though perhaps less rapidly," York said.

"If, however, we are able to build on the partial test ban and develop other areas and find other means of reversing the arms race then the partial nuclear test ban will have been a success," he added. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee, with Armed Services and Atomic Energy Committee members attending, also heard endorsement of the treaty by Arthur H. Dean. He served for ly two years as chief U.S. negotiator at the Geneva disarmament talks before he resigned last year to return to his New York law practice.

Dean said ratification would "be in the best interest of the United PET PROBLEM- This is the family of Bill, 19, was arrested for having a pet Ed Pruitt, a Kansas City contractor who skunk. Pruitt (right), holds Smokey Joe, was arrested after a dispute with wild- a crow. Annette, 6, holds Pablo, a poolife agents. Ed is charged with threaten- die. In center, George, 14, holds kitten, ing officers when they sought to search Muffin.

Mrs. Pruitt is at left, and Bill, Pruitt's home for any wildlife after son 19, stands in Wirephoto. BERNIE WATTS His 4.W RANCH BOYS Are heard on KATI Radio Mon. thru Sat. on the Country and Western Show 6a.m.

to 7 a.m. NOW SEE THEM IN PERSON EVERY WED. AND THURS. NIGHT SAGE CLUB JIM COX AND HIS OUTLAW BAND EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS CASPER-LANDER DELIVERY SERVICE Via SHOSHONI AND RIVERTON DAILY Monday Through Friday 4 Cu. Ft.

100 Ibs. Size Limit DIAL 4-1808 Limit Weight P. O. Box 454 Casper, Wyo. Use STAR Want Ads States" but he cautioned that country must "keep musket oiled and constantly loaded." "My long years of negotiating with the Communists and my study of Communist tactics and strategy tell me," Dean's prepared testimony said, "to watch out when they try to make us feel too good and to beware of what Secretary (of Defense Robert McNamara and ogists call a state of euphoria (feeling of well-being)." Another witness, Dr.

Marshall D. Shulman, professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Medford, said U.S. rejection of the treaty would be interpreted around the world as an indication the United States "is not interested in the stabilization of the arms race." Shulman, an expert on the Soviet Union, said any reservations attached by the Senate, would jeopardize the treaty. Llewellyn Thompson, former U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union, took part in Kennedy's White House session with Dobrynin.

The Soviet ambassador left open the possibiity that Khrushchev might come to the United States next month to attend the United Nations General Assembly session, the event which is bringing Gromyko to U.S. soil. When asked about the prospects of a Khrushchev visit, the ambassador replied: "There is good question. I'm not prepared to give you an answer now. A strong indication that Khrushchev will not come, authoritative sources said, is the fact that his letter to Kennedy did not indicate any such plans, nor was there any hint of a desire by Khrushchev to meet with the U.S.

chief executive. The letter was not made public but sources said it was in general terms, thanking Kennedy for hav. ing sent Secretary of State Dean Rusk to Moscow to sign the treaty and expressing appreciation for the visit of a congressional delegation for the ceremony. While Khrushchev was reported to have agreed that the treaty should be a first step on the path to better East-West relations he did not spell out what further The Showplace of Casper! AMERIC DIAL 23 5-5440 Theatre AIR-CONDITIONED Mat. Open 1-Show 1:30 Now Eve.

Shows Only 7:30 MIRISCH COMPANY JOHN 'THE GREAT ESCAPE" STEVE JAMES RICHARD McQUEEN GARNER ATTENBOROUGH COLOR TEN PANAVISION RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS THEI RIALTO DIAL 23 7-2416 Theatre AIR-CONDITIONED Mat. 1:30 Now Eve. 7:00 9:00 METRO- SOL MAYER PRESENTS A KING BROTHERS PRODUCTION In and WONDRASCOPE steps should follow the test-ban agreement. The letter stressed, however, the informants said, that it will be Gromyko's task to explain Moscow thinking in this respect. It is most likely, informants said, that the Soviet foreign minister will come to Washington either just before or just after he attends the opening of the General Assembly.

Andrew T. Hatcher, acting White House press secretary, declined to say whether Kennedy gave Dobrynin any message for Khrushchev. York was the fourth head or former head of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory at Livermore, to testify. Last week, the present chief, Dr. John S.

Foster joined another director, Dr. Edward Teller in opposing the pact, but Dr. Harold Brown, current Pentagon director of research and engineering, favored it. York, now chancellor of the University of California at San Diego, describes as "misplaced" the expressed fear by Teller and others that the pact will permit the Soviet Union to beat the United States in perfecting a missilekiller system. "If we are concerned about Soviet antiballistic missile program, we should put our first priority on developing ballistic missiles which can surely penetrate their system," York said.

Emphasis on the U.S. antimissile system would not be banned under the treaty, he added, since problems do not lie in atmospheric testing but "in the areas of detection, identification and interception and not in nuclear weapons technology." York said, in reply to questions, he doubts that it is possible to build a defense system that will guard against all missiles. Venezuela Meets British On Border CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)Venezuela's foreign minister, Marcost Falcon Briceno, will go to London next month to discuss the Venezuelan-British Guiana border dispute a spokesman in Caracas reports. Venezuela has challenged the 1899 treaty establishing the border. 5.

Fifty or more persons dead or missing, 185 rescued, as ferryboat sinks in heavy seas off Okinawa. 6. James H. Meredith becomes first Negro to graduate from University of Mississippi. 7.

Authorities continue search for money missing in Britain's multimillion-dollar train robbery. 8. Ex-Venezuelan dictator Perez Jiminez deported from U.S. Faces charges in Venezuela of stealing some $13 million during his year's in office. 9.

Dramatic rescue efforts seek to free three miners entombed near Hazleton, Pa. 10. Pro and con testimoney is given to Senate on approval of nuclear ban treaty. School MoNey' 070 You're welcome to our books, clothes, fees or whatever your family The Associates where rates are reasonable and terms are fair. So when cash can help you, just phone us, or stop by the Associates office nearest you.

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Pages Available:
79,943
Years Available:
1953-1965