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Miami News-Record from Miami, Oklahoma • 1

Publication:
Miami News-Recordi
Location:
Miami, Oklahoma
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ok Okiancni Miami Daily News-Record 59TH YEAR NO 108 Pur ihed tsty Evening fctpt Saturday) and S-nda MarnnQ by Miami Ntioaprt Ire MIAMI OKLA FRIDAY NOVEMBER 3 1961 1 2 PAGES DAILY 5 SUNDAY 15 CENT PARADE GAME FEATURES I College Reunion In City Saturday Chrysler UAW Avert Strike by Approving Pact Formal Signing Is Held Today US Of Council's Support Thant Unanimous A ClirTIPus pep rally this afternoon was to officially gear the machinery of homecoming activities 1 Northeastern After the rally many students planned to vatch the final practice session of the Norsemen footballers who face a formidable homecoming foe Cameron 'Final Vote of Appoval Later 5 pm Saturday Other students were hard at work in garages and other seclud- cr-Packard Three-year contracts places building floats which previously had been negotiated be seen in the homecoming b-v General Motors Corp Ford parade at 4 pm tomorrow Motor Co and American Motors Several alumni activities are urP- scheduled Saturday UAW President Walter Reu- Registration of alumni will be-'ther said the Chrysler agreement at 9 a in the Carter Student which came only 50 minutes be-bnion and continue during the the company's 60000 represented employes were to At 1 to board of directors strike at midnight in support of the Alumni Association will demands was essentially the meet in the Student Union to nom- same as that reached at GM and mate officers for the ensuing year Ford Officers will be elected by vote of' Reurher and Chrysler Vice membership at the banquet for President John Ieary formal-former students and faculty mem- ly signed the agreement some 12 EARN TOP CAP Holding Certificates of Proficiency they received last cadets from left: James A DeLozier Frank Womack Leroy Estes Floyd and Mike Morelan night are these Miami CAP Crumrine Lewis Pratt Employers Target Of Court Actions? Cadet Awards Here a Record Six in CAP Get Highest Citations DALLAS Tex (AP) Considerably stepped-up ment use of court injunctions to stop alleged unfair labor rtr-nnnlw i i- -v-4-itf Vnr A 1961 record for Civil Air Patrol F' auuugi- way uy squadrons in Oklahoma was set Chairman Frank McCulloch of the National Labor Re-last night when Miami' CAP lations Board DETROIT (AP) Chrysler Corp and the United Auto ers Union reached agreement on a new three-year labor contract Thursday night averting a strike The Chrysler pact brought peace between the UAW" and all tne automakers except Studebak- hours after it was announced The signing was delayed to allow technicians time to complete writ-1 ing language acceptable to both sides The union estimated that the Ford and GM contracts were worth more than 12 cents hourly in take-home pay over each year They immediately added a mini- mum ot live cents to gross pay raising that to an average of $295 hourly 'or the industry's production workers This plus company assumption of the full cost of hospital-medical insurance and other improvements in fringe benefits figured in the LAW estimate the contracts were worth more than 12 cents in take-home pay Chrysler and the UAW announced local-level settlements at ree uetroit area plants alter me national agreement was reached Tbe 1(ft on'y hree Chrysler bargaining units without at-the-plant working agreements Local agreements supplement the national contract Reuther said he anticipated no trouble in settling the remainng three County Treasurer at Columbus Quits After Galena Fraud Claim COLUMBUS Kas (AP) Tiie resignation of Earney Gaede as Cherokee County treasurer was accepted Thursday by the county commissioners They said an audit showed no discrepancies in his office Gaede was arrested a week ago dnu nidiueu wim ciiiirct -tug I -1 -1 tlWI while serving as city cierK at Galena Kas He resigned from thit i-K i mitnth mn Vuwrtmo JW county treasurer Me is tree on bond pending a preliminary hearing Nov 27 Merle Duncan Jr assistant rountv attorney said supple mental charges will be filed pfter an audit ot Galena books is i completed next week He indicated the audit shows defalcations exceeding the $900 The county commissioners ap-pointed Theron Follett 48 Colum-j bus grocer to complete Gaede's two-vear term In an address to the Southwest AWOL soldiers charged with kill-Labor Law Institute McCulloch in- ing Otto Ziegler a Kansas rail-dicated sympathy for recent un-1 road man near Wallace last June ion complaints to Congress of "a 9- lack of even-handed justice" The Three relatives of the defend-NLRB has applied for more than ants James Latham 19 Mau-600 injunctions against unions since nceville Tex and George 1952 but only six against employ-: York Is Jacksonville Fla were bers at 6 Feature speaker at the banquet will be Joe Henbest class of 1929 attorney in Columbus Kan who recently returned from a world tour Alumni Association President Dale Rice has announced that five: former Northeastern instruc-1 tors will be honored at the banquet special recognition of outstand- ing service They are: Mrs Frank Dorscy (Ruby Campbell) of Miami who taught mathematics at the college from 1937 Miss Virginia Lindsey of Chouteau who instructed college classes in government and history from 1933 to 1955 Mrs James Wilson Owen Sr (Etta Bruton) of Skatook She was English instructor at the college from 1934 to 1955 i Miss Fav Vann of Miami who was a language instructor at the college from 1924 to 1960 Steed of Tulsa former ag- riculture and psychology instruc- Ten college organizations are iponsonng candidates for homecoming queen The candidates and sponsoring organizations follow: freshman Tulsa Connie i t-bracht sophomore class Miami Sue Rampey freshman class Broken Arrow Sondra Hacked Business club sophomore Oklaho ma Patti Ba-haw Air Force freshman Derby HOMECOMING on Kan Radioactive Cloud Is Over Southern Canada WASHINGTON (AP) The radioactive cloud from the Soviet Union's big Oct 30 bomb blast is era Canada the Weatner Bureau reported today reau's atmospheric radioactivity research project said the cloud is moving between 60 and TO miles an hour He would not make any prediction today as to whether the debris from the i xplosion would brush the northern United States hi-iin "at It a Son For Meg Thrilled' -gave birth to Her husband Princess a vin to-said she illed and delighted see the after the and was the fath- Earl of Snowdown the society photographer An-rtrong-Jones from the royal materni- in Clarence House he to a member of the "The princess and I lutety thrilled and fifth in line to the was born Viscount fant's weight was not an- ficial announcement said and son are doing well" it Id was horn in the room House that Princess once used as a bedroom at the house home of ti mother until her mar-ay I960 Both she and Kind are 31 cheered outMde Clarence Die Scots Guards bagpipe ews of the birth was re-iickly to Queen Elizabeth nnre Philip t'oogratuli- ivans 58 on" of the five men who attended the rgaret an arm-tie reneited iners in flight and Lord i House Mercury Skids Oyer Oklahoma idded below was lor even ih a hard freeze Weather Bureau of the state to- official overnight The tempera-n today under! 44 Thursday's iami rainfall on I two inches overnight from temperature report-was 21 degrees at' and Gage Other om 28 at Ponca City lore and McAlester i ranged from 56 71 at McAlester and expected to remain Saturday with a lit-1 temperatures Highs expected to range decrees with lows uoMI GET aho braved $209 foul wealh- solicit funds Fund reported 5209 74 today volunteers had XXI The wom-ete their effort ed Will gin day of the an in 1 This Afternoon Picking Successor To Hammarskjold UNITED NATIONS (AP The Security Council to day recommended unanimously that Burma's Thant be ramec acting secretary-general of the world organization in place of the late Dag Hammarskjold The action was taken at a brief closed meeting of the 11-nation council after the big powers had reached agreement ending a six-weeks-old deadlock The General Assembly was scheduled to act quickly on the council's recommendation at an afternoon session Overwhelming approval was expected in a secret ballot Mongi Slim of Tunisia the assembly president will read out the results to the delegates in the big blue and gold assembly hall Thant will await the outcome in a room behind the podium The Belgian Count Jehan de Noue chief of UN protocol will escort Thant to the speakers' platform Members of the assembly's steering committee and presidents of the three high UN councils will be on the platform Slim will administer the oath of office to Thant and then escort him to the secretary-general's seat at the right of the president Thant will make a brief acceptance speech to be followed by a round of congratulatory speeches by delegates expected to take up the entire afternoon ses-! sion Thant will have a free hand to choose his chief assistant The Soviets backed down after trying to specify the number of principal deputies the Burmese ambassador would appoint and the areas from which they would be drawn The L'nited States made See UN on Page 3 Monkey Has Space Radio Beneath Skin CAPE CANAVERAL Fla (AP) rhesus monkey with a radio transmitter and biomedical sensors beneath its skin is scheduled to ride an Atlas missile 600 miles into space next week The 6-pound monkey is the first of several animals slated to be rocketed aloft to determine whether implanted senors can be useful to human astronauts If perfected the system could eliminate uncomfortable and cumbersome wires required for externa' sensors such as those worn by Alan Shepard Jr and Virgil I Grissom on thtir space flights The monkey will be in a special capsule packed in a cylinder tacked to the side of the Atlas The cylinder is intended to eject from the Atlas and follow a bal-1 listic course which will land it in i the Atlantic 6000 miles southeast I of Cape Canaveral During the 35-minute trip the monkey will be subjected to crushing acceleration and deceleration forces radiation 15000-mile-an-hour speed and fiery reentry heat An attempt will be made to recover the cylinder and its passenger A radio transmitter was inserted in the monkey's abdominal wall several weeks ago Wires 1 running beneath the skin link the transmitter with an electrocardio- graph and temperature and res- pjration sensors planted through- 0ut the bodv The sensors feed information to the transmitter The transmitter relays the data to a receiving antenna in the animal support ccuch The antenna sends the signals to ground stations Implanted sensors might increase an astronaut's walking range on the moon With external senors requiring wires a man would be able to travel only a few feet from his spaceship The internal instruments might enable him to roam several miles ers The labor board said is considering which use of the McCulloch areas in injunction "might be extended areas where interlocutory and temporary relief is desirable and the historic problems of the labor injunction might be avoided" "Our desire is not to transfer our problems to the judicial forum" he said "It is our ex- penenced expectation that we can deter violations of the act by in-di eating a readiness to seek in-junctive relief when the incentive to rcist unfair labor practice charges rests on the advantage of time and delay" The NLRB chairman said the ooara is considering a unimi request to move in the courts against "threatened emplover removal of plants after the em-ployes vote for a for this type of threat and action effectively kill freedom of self-or-ganization and collective bargaining beyond hope of resurrection" It was reliably reported that the NLRB is readying injunction pro- ceedings in a case of this sort in-1 volving a Southern plant GIVEAWAY Black and white spaniel-type pup (stray) male Corine Webb 12 northwest Telephone 2-8171 1 I i I Murder Case Is Hearing Windup Relatives of 2 Youths Testify RUSSELL Kan (AP)-Evidence was completed today in the first degree murder trial of two young the only witnesses After their testimony Judge Benedict Cruise ordered a weekend recess Final instructions and arguments will be given Monday Testifying were Mrs Betty Roddy Beaumont Tex Latham's sister Mrs Tom Stewart Orange Tex his aunt and Mrs Horace A York Jacksonville Fla moth-er of York They related incidents of the de- fendants' childhood and events leading to their entry into the service Latham's relatives told of his I parents' divorce when he was two years old and of him living with 1 first his grandmother and then his mother He dropped out of school in the 10th grade entered the service and was injured while I overseas York's mother testified her boy was a slow student in school and diopped out after failing in the 10th grade She said she never had any trouble with him and he was a regular attendant at church as a boy Mrs York said he went absent without leave to return home when she and York's father were both in a hospital Later she said 1 he was admitted to a psychiatric 1 ward at Brooks General Hospital i at San Antonio Tex sensitive cne in Japan but I hope i there will be a degree of under standing of this difficult prob- lem' Rusk told a news confer- ence Kennedy's ment pushed nuclear announce-news of the high- level Japan-U economic conference Rusk is attending here into second place in Japanese newspapers The historical situation Rusk referred to was the explosion of atom bombs over the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II by the United States Those tiny in comparison to the 50-megaton explosions of today snuffed out the lives of hundreds of thousands and maimed thousands Rusk said he does not expect Communist China will get a seat in the United Nations in this session of the General Assembly The prestige and voting position of the Chinese Nationalists had been strengthened by their decision not to veto the admission of Communist Mongolia he added I 1 IM1Mrinc nmnlnirft-ri BlraB learful Worried Islanders Arrive a Sinful World SOUTHAMPTON England (AP) The homesick islanders of Tnsun da Cunha sailed into the 20th century world today to make a new home far away from their deserted volcano-ravaged island in the Atlantic Perplexed and bewildered the 262 refugees arrived on the liner 1 Stirling Castle Some of the women cried Anxiety and concern showed on the faces of the men The youngsters were bubbling with excitement They carried their forlorn possessions tied in cardboard cases or sacks or blankets They saved only a few things when the volcano on Oct 10 drove them from their island home midway between South Africa and South America where they had lived an 18th century existence "I am afeared for us all" said Peter Repetto 59 the island chief speaking in the curiously archaic English of the Tristan people "Now our children must face evil for the first time They will be frightened and bewildered and very homesick" he said "We will never forget the island I think a lot of us will go back if that will be possible I want to go back" The islanders come from a simple place without taxes or red tape no buses or trains to catch no prisons crime television political demonstrations housing shortages subways noise money Peter Repetto the administrator of justice on the island for 30 years said: "My people are good and innocent Pray that they will stay that way I do not want your world to change them" Owens and Cannon Plan CSA Huddle OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) Two state officials will go to Washington Monday for conferences which could clear away obstacles to financing the Markham Ferry Dam on Grand River Gov Howard i Edmondson said todav Ben Owens Miami chairman of the Grand River Dam Authority and Joe Cannon Oklahoma City attorney will confer with officials of the General Services Administration GSA holds $129 million in outstanding Grand River Dam bonds and another million is held by the public Edmondson said He said before the $36 million Markham Ferry Dam can be financed GRDA must have consent of 75 per cent of bondholders to issue additional bonds family dinner program was climaxed with the presentation of Certificates of Proficiency to six Miami cadets Nearly 100 cadet and senior members of the Miami CAP squad-ron and their families attended the dinner in the CAP-Civil Defense building at the airport The highest award possible in the CAP Cadet program is the Certificate of Proficiency The award of six here is the largest number earned by am squadron in the state this year and is an all-time record for the Miami unit which was organized 10 years ago Since 1951 Miami Cadets have received 20 of the top certificates Receiving the awards last night were James A Delozier Frank Womack Leroy Estes Floyd Crumrine Lewis Pratt and Michael Ray (Mike) Morelan To earn a Certificate of Proficiency a cadet must have attended a summer encampment at an Air i orce oase ana passed rigid tests Last night's first annual family dinner was for the purpose of ac- quaimmg parents of cadets with CAP details Lt Col Bill Morelan a charter member of the Miami squadron and commander since 1956 was in charge of the program which included oriel talks and showing of motion pic- tures and film strips of CAP activities Major James commandant of Miami squadron the MHS Grads Return Today Students of Miami high school I saw Marlene Cox crowned fixitball queen today at a 2 pm all-school assembly Miss Cox daughter of Mr and Mrs Fred Cox rural Miami was elected by members of the football squad She also is reigning as I homecoming queen today The coronation ceremony cli- maxed the homecoming assembly also attended by high school alumni Alumni were welcomed by Fred Kelton high school principal who introduced the featured speaker of i the assembly Charles Gibson pastor of the Blendville Christian church in Joplin A bonfire and pep rally scheduled Thursday night was cancelled because of rain but students we're content with a noon jpep rally at school today Activities for the high school homecoming have increased this year due to the re-activation I of the MHS Alumni Association I under the leadership of Bob Garwood president New officers for the association were to be elected during an afternoon meeting See REUNION 00 page 3 Rusk Finds Japs Understandably Sensitive on Nuclear Tests Issue HAKONE Japan (AP) Sec- retary of State Dean Rusk said today he does not believe "the world will be safe if nuclear I superiority moves to those who intend to dominate the world" Rusk recalled that at the recently concluded Soviet Communist party congress in Moscow the prediction was made that the world would be dominated by communism by 1980 "The other nuclear powers" he said "have no intention of dom- inating anyone" but are committed to the charter of the United Nations The American secretary spoke to the press and indirectly to the Japanese people who have been incensed by the Soviet Union's explosion of two superbombs and were further stirred to anxiety by President Kennedy's declaration Thursday that the United States itself may resume nuclear tests in the atmosphere "I fully understand and respect the special historical circumstances which make this subject a TRL'MANS AT WIIITI HOUSE-Former President and Mrs Harry Truman pose with their hosts President and Mrs John Kennedy prior to a dinner given at the White House in honor of the Irumans In the front row left to right are Truman Mrs Kennedy and the President In the back row are Mrs Truman Mrs Margaret Daniel Jr the Trumans' daughter: Clifton Daniel Jr Margaret's husband and (apt Tasewell Shephard the President's Naval aide I.

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About Miami News-Record Archive

Pages Available:
150,656
Years Available:
1923-1969