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Ada Evening News

   Ada Evening News, The (Newspaper) - June 27, 1966, Ada, Oklahoma                               In one we have learned to fly through the sky like birds swim through the like fish and plumb the depths of the earth like ancient gods But when will we learn to walk the earth like EVENING NEWS YEAR NO 91 ADA OKLAHOMA MONDAY JUNE 27 1966 10 PAGES 5 CENTS WEEKDAY 10 CENTS SUNDAY Meredith Ends March To Jackson Declares White Supremacy Is Dead JACKSON Miss AP The long and turbulent Mississippi inarch has ended with James H Meredith who started it as a journey against fear ing the governor and every other person is going to pay at- tention to the Negro The system of white Meredith drew the Meredith recuperated from response from the crowd which couldn't hear half of what was said from the flatbed truck his wounds in New York where he is a law student at Columbia University He returned Friday triumphantly leading a column which served as a speaker's platform down U.S 51 from Canton to Meredith said his father now Tougaloo College dead told him most white Meredith walked at the front sons are pretty decent It's macy will reign no true that we got some mean Meredith told a heavily guarded I white folks in Mississippi but behind the imposing State Capitol Building Sunday Some persons most of them Negroes flowed through Jackson streets to jam into a portion Capitol grounds and adjacent areas The final leg of the march from Tougaloo College on the outskirts of Jackson to the tol and the rally were marked by a subdued phere Meredith Air Force veteran led the sion with a number of national civil rights leaders including Dr Martin Luther King Jr these people can be decent There is only one thing that is holding them back And that thing is the system of white The purpose of the march that I started three weeks ago was to point up and to challenge that thing at the base of the tem of white supremacy That thing is fear a fear that grips the Negro in America to his very bones not only in sippi but in every section this country because every inch of the country is controlled by the system of white cy Meredith recalled that he was j shot on the second day of his march but as you can see here end a thing Meredith began the trek June 5 at Memphis Tenn 225 miles north of Jackson He was wounded by a blast of from a shotgun the first day near Hernando Miss after covering 27 miles A white man Aubrey Norvell of Memphis was charged with attempted WASHINGTON AP and is free on a limited survey of popular bond in the case King and other national civil rights figures rushed in to take up the marathon mission ing it intc a Negro voter tration crusade They led the marchers off U.S 51 the route planned by Meredith and meandered through the heavily Negro populated delta area The trek covered 252 miles on the highways many more inside Such Mississippi towns as of Sunday's final procession for a while He had to drop out and ride ahead in an auto because his leg still not healed from the wounds began ing Some of the marchers chanted black power the theme emphasized by the more Friends a white an on a sidewalk yelled back At the Capitol King who heads the Southern Christian Among the whites joining the Leadership Conference said the I final day's procession were It was his bravery his Some whites clustered tic scorn of crippling fear the Capitol impassively i 11 originated this march watching the rally They ed 50 Ku Klux Klansmen ing green pants and shirts with white and white belts We came down here to make sure these niggers don't cause any said a Kii a i i AH u j v j 4 V a white man in the march i for freedom in the state of There were no serious er who declined to give Jus tant civil rights forces rally brings to a majestic close Vice President Walter pating in the crusade our long and turbulent P Reuther and Justice Michael As Sunday's column passed through the state of Mississippi i of the Pennsylvania through a white residential is the greatest Court Uon shouted out to spectators lo friends i to date i He hailed Meredith ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft saying ft dents reported along the If they don't we mile route ft i won't The man group was the Black Knights of the Green Forest American flags fluttered in the hands of many marchers At Tougaloo Willie Ricks a militant leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Com- went down the line of marchers and took American flags from those who would render them The Rev John Morris an Atlanta Ga Episcopalian priest tried to stop Ricks Then one of King's aides took the flags from Ricks handing them back to the marchers Those are our he said loudly It was Ricks who repeatedly called during the trek for a black power crusade and i threatened to kill whites ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft Is New Cry In Civil Rights Movement JACKSON Miss AP A chant echoes still from the civil rights march ing clearly the Negro's with past methods and his growing belief that political became the rallying cry ly after the march had been in for nearly two weeks This was the slogan that more than anything struck responsive chords The eagerness with strength holds the key to his which the Negro masses seized the word disconcerted the more conservative leaders It problem Bla r! Bla deepened the philosophical rift within the civil rights ment Dr Martin Luther King Jr who got into the march against the advice of a key associate found himself fighting for con- trol against a militant faction that talked of power violence and disorders King in the end maintained his dominant role among the leadership but recognized the changing mood of Negroes He defended nonviolence in tion but quit talking about new federal legislation apparently Survey Says Viets Believe War Is Ours limited sur tudes in areas of South Vietnam cates people there tend to re- gard the war as an American war officials report U.S experts who conducted the survey say there also is a tendency to rely chiefly on the Americans to bring back peace and find answers to South nam's economic and other problems There seems to be a swing in popular confidence Grenada the ability of the Saigon itta and Belzoni A ment to handle effectively the I trip by auto to Philadelphia various problems facing South the survey indicated of Vietnamese views was understood to have been small and was taken in connection with a study of trends in the morale of the Communist Viet Cong After interrogating some 200 people mostly Viet Cong tors and prisoners U.S said they detected what seemed to be a growing feeling of hopelessness among some elements of the Viet Cong The analysts reported dence that Viet Cong morale has become fragile They said there were signs that the com- bat effectiveness of some Com- munist units had declined In other weekend ments related to Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield expressed hope in an interview that U Thant may be able to interest Soviet leaders in Vietnam peace talks during his planned trip to Moscow field also said French President Charles de Gaulle's current visit to the Soviet Union might result in a move toward neutralization of Southeast Asia a move he said the United States should welcome of State George W Ball appearing on the NBC gram Meet the denied that the United States has decided to bomb oil storage de- pots near the North Vietnamese of Hanoi and Haiphong But he refused to shut the door on this possibility in the future John A Gronouski U.S to Poland in a right interview in U.S News World Report said his sions with representatives of Red China have not produced great progress toward reducing tensions between the two tries But he added these talks are important because they provide a forum for dis- cussing a whole series of issues that confront both nations in Southeast Asia particularly but also throughout the world of State Dean Rusk said that although North Vietnam probably will reject U Thant's proposals for mutual reduction of military action the Hanoi regime is having second thoughts about the prospects of succeeding in South Vietnam And despite many contacts with Hanoi Rusk said no peace overtures have been made by the North Vietnam ment He gave his views in a prerecorded r a d i broadcast with Rep Frank for a rally unleashed violence and a task force from the march returned to the tral Mississippi town last day for a two-mile walk to the courthouse under heavy police guard There was also violence at Canton where the marchers were dispersed by police tear gas when they tried to set up tents on a school yard which authorities had forbidden them to use no one was interested march touched the masses with The march from all a message of hope and tions stirred many Negroes action Hundreds Hocked to i The Alabama march had a er registration offices they j single purpose to get a f joined in rallies and al voting rights law enacted doggedly down the pavement j While the Mississippi In contrast to the Alabama i stration gave considerable em- march of 1965 the Mississippi phasis to a proposed law now in Dodd Swears Charges False WASHINGTON AP Sen Thomas J Dodd made a sworn denial of misconduct charges day and accused trusted em- rugs were given to the tee Dodd white-haired cut Democrat acknowledged OFFICERS These are the new officials for Fraternal Order of Police elected at their state past weekend in Ada Left to right they are Larry Coulson Tulsa immediate past first vice president J R Palmer the new Bob McAlester photo water conductor George Mitchell Lawton secretary and Bob Sharp Ponca City Statt Navy Bombers Blast Huge Viet Fuel Dump ployes in his office who fed i that several times a year he documents from his files to had used the New York hotel newspaper columnists of i suite of a registered bing me blind Dodd took the stand in his own defense at a climactic session of the Senate Ethics Committee hearings into the misconduct charges Before Dodd testified his at- torney had asked that the com- ranking Republican member Sen Wallace Bennett of Utah be disqualified for ing made a prejudgment be- fore hearing the most vital dence the testimony of Sen Dodd himself The request was tabled The committee also heard Mrs Dodd swear that it was she not Chicago public tions man Julius Klein who bought Persian rugs now in the Dodd Washington home Papers she identified as receipts for the SAIGON South Vietnam U.S Navy bombers turned a large North ese fuel dump into an inferno Twelve hours after the strike south of Hanoi by A6 Intruders from U.S military men said the carrier Constellation the of 68 missions against strategic oil stores were still the Communist North r 1 that threw up billows of black engulfed in flames Navy was a particularly successful smoke visible for 150 miles I pilots said The target blow at North Vietnam's vital away at sea an American i was a fuel storage area 35 miles fuel reserves These stores have spokesman reported today northeast of Vinh and 160 miles been the target of intensified ton Jacob K Javits N Y predicted the Vietnam war will not be a major issue in November unless President Johnson falls on his face trying to get a civilian government in South Vietnam Emphysema Tied To Smoking In Chicago Tests CHICAGO AP sema a lung disease with a death rate increasing faster in the United States than that of any other single disease has been produced experimentally in dogs a medical research team reported today At two smoking sessions ly for more than a year the dogs inhaled cigarette smoke through hollow plastic tubes inserted in their windpipes In a report to the general session of the annual meeting of the American cal Association the researchers The inhalation of smoke di- from cigarettes by dogs causes destruction of lung tissue indistinguishable pathologically from that found in human em- physema The U.S Public Health Blind Leads Blind DETROIT AP Hesitancy at the end of the leash told Jack McAdams 23 something was wrong It turned out the blind was leading the blind McAdams dog Dell was guiding him through downtown Detroit streets on a rainy April day when he sensed on the dog's part A veterinarian discovered that Dell a man Pinscher was as blind as her master and had been leading him on instinct and guts alone g Dell had cataracts a malady common to both humans and dogs The lenses of her eyes were so fogged she barely could distinguish light from darkness Fortunately dogs have a second set of lenses though an E operation to remove the defective set costs And no one 3 could promise McAdams what the results of the operation would be McAdams had trained Dell since she was a puppy He felt he just couldn't let her down A radio E ator McAdams told other hams about his and Dell's plight E The operation money rolled in and there was transportation to take Dell to a clinic Two weeks ago Dr William Magrane of Mishawaka Ind removed Dell's clouded lenses Thursday the stitches E inside her eyelids were removed Dell had trouble shaking off effects of the anesthetic be- cause she is a canine diabetic It was discovered three ice has reported that the death years ago the dog was a diabetic but she takes her insulin rate for emphysema 2 between 1953 and 1963 The Tobacco Institute Inc in commenting on the study said the smoking method used is not at all comparable to human smoking conditions The method was highly artificial and quite obligingly I shout Here Dell time for your and she comes trotting McAdams said My mother gives her the needle We have never had any trouble But after the eye operation she lay there for hours like she was said Robinson McAdams mother and a nurse at Doctors Hospital who made Dell her special patient through the dog's ordeal w Mr Robinson ays Dell is starting to look better Her Therefore the results cannot be coat is coming back and she is beginning to scamper around g so having the house Spain interpreted as having any the house again tion to the possible effects of IE McAdams knows Dell can see again even a veterinarian's assurance He can feel a more confident tug E on the leash E Right after the vet took out her stitches she placed her paw in my hand for a handshake She must be able to see again She put her paw in the right place E ciety human smoking The study was headed by Dr Oscar Aurebach of the Veterans Administration Orange Hospital East and E Cuyler Hammond American Cancer recent air attacks Immediately after letting loose their heavy bombardment pilots of the low-level jets oed they saw huge explosions accompanied by thick black smoke One flier banked ly to avoid a glowing orange fireball at An entire hill an- other pilot said While the air blows were being dealt against the North U.S pilots killed an estimated 70 Communists destroyed 460 buildings and hit 36 river pans in South Vietnam man'said On the ground U.S Marines and Vietnamese troops went after the remnants of a ion of North Vietnamese lars and hard-core guerrillas in tunnels and bunkers northwest of Hue The Leathernecks ed 66 enemy bodies took four North Vietnamese regulars and captured 37 weapons a spokesman reported in Saigon Marine officers at the battle scene estimated the relentless U.S air and artillery fire may have cost the lives of 300 Com- or about half the my force U.S 7th Fleet ships offshore joined in the barrage Down the coast eight U.S Army men were killed when two helicopters collided near Tuy Hoa 230 miles northeast of gon as the bulk of the U.S 1st Cavalry Airmobile Division went into action in Operation Nathan Hale against a tough North Vietnamese battalion Maj Gen John Norton the cavalry commander took over- all command when his forcements joined elements of the Airborne Division Marines and several ese battalions in the expanding drive The new spearhead into the Trang Luong area north of Tuy Hoa took place during a visit Sunday by Gen William C Westmoreland commander of U forces in Vietnam He traveled by light plane and copter in his first battlefield tour since his return from con- in Hawaii Thursday The allied force painstakingly pursued the camouflaged North Vietnamese more men about 600 of in small units making sporadic contact with them So far 395 Communists have been reported killed in the operation teen Communists and 141 ons have been captured a spokesman County Soldiers Graduate From Division OCS Ten Pontotoc County citizen soldiers were among the 233 of- ficer candidates who received their diplomas Sunday from the Oklahoma National Guard Of- ficer Candidate School monies were conducted at homa City Among the graduates Billy E Carper Richard W Davenport Richard P Hackler Byron L Hawkins Richard K Hudson Benny E Johnson Gary G Joiner and Walter P Spears all of Ada and George D and Kennedy W Brown both of Stonewall Kennedy Brown was the ner of the Division's tactics award one of four honors given at the ceremonies Others Calvin E Koonce Minco Erickson Trophy of the National Guard tion and the U S Army ship award John Niles rie American Legion Honor Graduate Watch George E Hayes Noble U S Army award Other graduates from this general Alfred D Payne Jerry M Payne and Terry S Ward Sulphur Lewis D ins Lary E Stringtown and Ronald L Boles William M Haynie Dennis W Huggins Larry F Rudolf and Earl Umsted Jr Speaker for the graduation was Judge Fred A Daugherty Oklahoma City a retired major general and immediate past commander of the Division Ada Women Hurt Today In Mishap Close To Clinic Two Ada women employes of Sugg Clinic suffered minor in- juries this morning when they were struck by a pickup as they were crossing an alley near the clinic Eva Layne 63 North sippi and Lois North Stockton and released 812 were agent for West German inter- ests I'm not a rich the year-old senator said I'm not ashamed of it I wish I was He went on to say he accepted Klein's hospitality and was glad to have to stay Dodd denied he ever delivered any speeches written by Klein and testified a 1964 trip he made to Germany was to conduct an investigation for the Senate In- ternal Security Subcommittee not to help Klein hang onto clients there He testified the only German official he recalled discussing Klein with on his 1964 trip was former Chancellor Konrad nauer and he said it was Adenauer who brought up the subject The senator was bitter in his denunciation of former em ployes who removed thousands of documents from his files and turned over copies to columnists who used them for a series of columns accusing the senator of misconduct He referred specifically to James P Boyd Jr his former administrative assistant and Michael O'Hare his former of- fice of them ified against his earlier in the hearings They were robbing me blind and never had the manhood to come and tell me if they were Dodd said senator said that in Congress it's real significance lies in its triggering response among Negroes in Mississippi Today's Negroes are not con- cerned about legislation They talk about bread on the table money in their pockets and gro officeholders in the towns and counties The march emphasized ening resentment of what is considered by some Negro ers to be inaction by the federal government and particularly President Johnson in menting the major civil rights laws enacted in the past two years The man who started the marathon march James H Meredith said he had set out to p Negroes overcome their fears Perhaps he did to -some extent The march disclosed a new mood of belligerence among Negroes a growing frustration over conditions and widespread rejection of nonviolence during the long trek over miles of sippi highways and streets that many Negroes have indeed lost their fears of als for civil rights activities Negroes fought back when attacked by whites in Miss A Negro man had to be forcibly restrained during a dispute with state highway in Belzoni nd released he had called O'Hare into Both sustained bruises D nW were apparently injured not seriously his office told him someone must be stealing documents from the files and asked him if son Route 4 Ada was driving u he out of the alley next to County a block from women were walking west ward the clinic The pickup struck Mrs Layne on the inside and threw his teeth and he is the witness who sat here the jother day telling his Dodd said i Describing his meeting failure to yield right-of-way toj Dodd said hg iM Adenauer P happened at that Klein had not been con- or indicted for any crime but that he committee had just been making an in- into the activities of for- agents a In Municipal Court Monday five persons pleaded guilty to charges of public and were fined drunkenness 1 Q They Leonard Leon Ryles John j Granville Parker Faye Pickens 514 Samuel D and Johnson Ordered Bound Over For Murder Trial Claude Johnson 23 charged 5 the garbage disposer of murder in connection with E the future says the 5 j the April shooting of Floyd Leon manager of Mills 32 Atoka was bound over the appliance division of District Court after General Electric Co hearing before County David judge Fred Andrews Monday j Progress SAN FRANCISCO AP beams may be said about the laser It won't grind it won't mulch it won't burn It will simply utterly and absolutely disintegrate substance placed in its path He said a laser garbage disposer was possible within 20 years Johnson a former Pontotoc countian is accused of killing an Atoka construction worker near Center sometime during the last week in April 5 Mill's body was found May 1 IE i by a search party of local cers after Johnson had been arrested on another charge in Del Rio Tex the ments confirmed a statement made two months ago by ly national man of the radical Student Non- violent Coordinating Committee Integration is he said This attitude prevailed among Negroes interviewed along the march route Mother Baby Survive Two-Day Mountain Ordeal SEATTLE Wash Her courage and initiative saved our baby's says the husband of a young mother who managed to keep her old baby and herself alive for two days in a plane wreckage on a cold snowy mountain Loren Little Uni- versity of Washington student spoke with pride as he told of the ordeal his wife la 25 underwent to save herself and their daughter Laurie Mrs Little's father and step- mother died -in the crash on the snow-covered side of Mt St Helens Mrs Little suffered a broken back broken ribs a collapsed lung and frostbitten feet Doctors reported she was ing comfortably in a hospital today Her daughter has only a bruised forehead Little said his wife who was rescued Saturday recalled the ordeal clearly It began when Mrs Little and her daughter were picked up in a rented plane by her father Grant Erickson 49 an tive of a radio supply company in Sioux Falls and his wife They planned to fly to walk Calif for the golden ding anniversary of his parents Mr and Mrs Ray Erickson I was supposed to go with Little said At the last minute I changed my mind Flying south toward Portland Ore Thursday the four ran into heavy thinks rocky side of the mountain Erickson the craft on a ledge at the level He and his wife were killed Little describing his in-law as a very cautious pilot noted that the last reports from the plane had its altitude as feet He be- Erickson fought to bring the crippled craft to its crash landing at a much lower tude probably saving the life of my wife and child weather Mrs Little a wingtip struck the   

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