Show More

Other Editions of Billings Gazette

Billings Gazette Saturday, January 06, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Saturday, January 13, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Saturday, January 27, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Wednesday, January 31, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Wednesday, February 07, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Tuesday, January 09, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Friday, January 12, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Tuesday, January 16, 1906,
Montana

Billings Gazette Friday, January 26, 1906,
Montana

Other Editions from Thursday, May 27, 1965

Ames Daily Tribune Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Iowa

Appleton Post Crescent Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Wisconsin

Coshocton Tribune Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Ohio

Edwardsville Intelligencer Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Illinois

Great Bend Daily Tribune Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Kansas

Indiana Evening Gazette Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Pennsylvania

Joplin Globe Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Missouri

Kossuth County Advance Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Iowa

Lime Springs Herald Thursday, May 27, 1965 ,
Iowa

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1965-05-27 for page-1
Billings Gazette
Billings Gazette

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Billings Gazette

   Billings Gazette (Newspaper) - May 27, 1965, Billings, Montana                                Marks Riling to party cloudy rising Thursday through Friday High Thursday near 65 tow Thursday near 40 High Friday 70 Final 27 DIXIE BITTERNESS ECHOES M Senate Stamps on Vote Rights ALL senators smile in approval after the Senate voted overwhelming approval of President Johnson's voting rights Wednesday Looking over a sheet after their bipartisan victory are left to right Sen Thomas H minority whip Philip A Hart Edward M Kennedy Mike Mansfield majority leader Everett M Dirksen minority leader and Jacob Javits By WALTER K WASHINGTON AP Amid echoes of a bitter Southern sault the Senate Wednesday passed President Johnson's gro voting rights and sent it to the House After a debate son's measure won Senate passage on a call vote H has taken us 100 years to catch up with this said Republican Leader Everett M Dirksen of Illinois who helped write the and chart its course through the Senate Not since Reconstruction has the Senate permitted this Union to be so perverted and subjected to such a diabolical said Sen Allen J Ellender D- La Never In Doubt The outcome was never in doubt senators considering and morc than enough to pass it for the measure sponsored it in April 12 by its first place iary Committee The major hurdle was cleared Tuesday when the Senate voted to slop talking about the which would suspend state acy tests and authorize federal registration of voters in wide areas of the South Ellender said the Johnson First to First to Leave Approve violates the Magna Carla the of Rights the Declaration of Independence and Hie Con- Dirksen called the cal and enforceable This may of this he said Actually there were Senate votes on the All three were terms The step was approval of revised committee measure 1 came on a voice vole Then came passage of Despite repeated overhauls in he Senate Dirksen said With each man limited lo one of talk Deep South foes of voting rights legislation rose one after another to charges of tyranny coercion and Sens Holland D- Kla said the measure would touch violence and Senate compromise And Son Strom Thurmond said it was how The formality of a vote for passage is nearly at lie said The ihas witnessed au almost i-j i display of political yet be an epochal day m the life A similar has been minor changes still should be made He said they can be House work out a final version of voting rights lion mended by the House Judiciary Advocates of the measure uus OT i re measure in a last-minute amend Mouse leaders have been marking time on the seeking to make sure its Incw voting rights guarantees go swiftly into effect Continued on Page 9 Col 6 600 U.S Marines Bid Adios to Dominican SANTO DOMINGO Dominican Republic hundred U.S first to land in the embattled Republic were the first to leave Wednesday They represent the first trimming of U.S military strength in proportion to the arrival of Latin American troops here Units of the 3rd Battalion 6th Marine Regiment boarded helicopters at a polo field in the international zone the Marines set up amid the civil White Looks Forward to Space Walk CAPE KENNEDY Fla API Astronaut Edward White said Wednesday it is just great the decision was made that he try to step outside the orbiting Gemini 4 spacecraft next week He said he was well trained tor the space excursion He ed that the feat would not be as important as the goal of the flight to find out how well men and equipment withstand prolonged exposure to the space environment White and astronaut James McDivitt both Air Force jors are to blast off June 3 on an intended four-day mission The National Aeronautics and Space Administration an- Tuesday that during the second orbit White would They were flown to the no difficulties he would float about 25 feet into space on a lifeline He is lo be outside the craft about 10 minutes as he flies more than 100 miles above the southern United States He will take pictures and nake observations will control the capsule and carrier Boxer lying offshore A U.S military spokesman said the Marines would not depart for the United States until the Boxer and ing naval units are fully and eco- loaded for departure The first Marines landed in the Dominican Republic at 6 p.m April 28 four days after the outbreak of the rebellion that toppled the government of Donald Reid Cabral Others Follow Other Marines soon poured ashore and were joined by para- troopers of the Airborne Division building American military strength here lo about men President Johnson announced that the American landings were necessary to protect the lives of Americans and others many of whom wanted to be evacuated He said also the landings prevented a nist takeover of the rebellion Provide Bulk The United States will ue to provide the bulk of the men and material in the newly created Force under whose command and the remaining U.S troops have been placed The was by the Organization of American States the first such force lo be organized in western Hemisphere history Big Pullout By LEWIS GULICK WASHINGTON AP Sec of State Dean Rusk de- clared Wednesday that the Communist threat in the ican Republic has been very substantially reduced He fore- saw a pullout soon of large numbers of American troops Rusk reported too the ting of a second Soviet type an- missile site near noi He said equipment has been installed at one of the sites and held open the possibility that other such sites are being built in the area of the North Vietnamese tal Saying that this involves a deepening Soviet commitment in Viet Nam Rusk warned of the gravity of the i most of his remarks at a news conference his first in two months to what he termed a of the Dominican crisis which began four weeks He said the events which led to the landing of U.S troops in Santo Domingo should spur the Organization of American States to consider setting up some standby forces on a continuing basis those supporting Hanoi which includes Red China should not feel that they can drive us out of our commitments there in Southeast tie added Stock Taking The secretary of state devoted ago though not completely the secretary said He said he would be willing to call the leftist extremists Violence Not Answer The reduced threat from the Reds he explained has come about because it is now clear to everyone that a solution here is not going lo be found by lence and military means but uu a oasis on prompt to rush to trouble the processes of a democratic society The U.S foreign affairs chief did not specifics in voicing hope for a substantial tion before too long in the Queen Takes Look At Berlin Wall SENNELAGER Germany UPI Queen Elizabeth Wednesday inspected British and Canadian armed forces in Germany on the eve of her spots A number of the hemisphere foreign ministers are meeting here Thursday on the Domican situation and Rusk indicated the United States would push the standby forces idea at that on Along with saving American lives the prevention of self-proclaimed state was cited jy President Johnson as a main in his dispatch of U.S Marines and paratroopers to Domingo Conspirators Johnson said on May 2 that the Dominican rebellion had been seized by a band of Com- munist conspirators LIFETIME ro and Pvt Frank Briglia are all smiles now The way is clear for their wedding Saturday The paratrooper was sent to the Dominican Republic with the Airborne sion a short time the couple's wedding invitations were in the mail Jacqueline's letter to dent Johnson got the soldier home at Conn in time for his date at the RED ACTIVITY PROBE first wall his drifting space The Marines ner The astronaut will float at about miles per hour in space over United Stales and climb back into the spaceship over the Atlantic replaced by 600 Brazilian Hon duran Nicaraguan and Costa Rican troops the first in American contingents to ar- rive here The Brazilian troops at full strength will number inn Ocean island of Antigua aDout men White's walk The departure of the Marines the historic walk made March I followed a night of renewed 18 by Russian cosmonaut Alexei Leonov while orbiting the earth in his spaceship 24 INJURED to West look at Berlin and her the Communist proximately U.S force in the Caribbean land About 600 relieved by troops of the new inter-American force prepared to leave Wednesday Rusk said some of the U.S contingent might stay on for some lime as part of the y FRANK L SPENCER American force CHICAGO UPI Federal marshals carried 12 screaming squirming demonstrators from a hearing of the House Com- Demonstrators Upstage HUAC r vi me A burdened taxpayer on Un-American ties Wednesday when tried the trouble with our foreign relations is that they're living The announced trip to the di- vided city Wednesday brought Communist charges that German politicians are using i the royal visit to Berlin for purposes They warned it could have but dieted no Communist ment of the queen during her five-hour visit to West Berlin The Queen is to return to Hannover Thursday night and clashes between U.S troops and then leave Hamburg for home rebels holed up in downtown I Friday to end her historic Santo Domingo iday visit to Germany beyond our means workings Rusk on Wednesday said that there had been a AKI DAI IT If I AM ty that extremist elements WyMAr Kill I I IV I AN would attempt were ing to capitalize on the anarchy j and disorder of the revolt in an effort to a position ofi power that would destroy the democracy of the Dominican Republic I think that threat has been very substantially reduced ties Wednesday when they tried lo shout down testimony about Communist party aims and The protesters were hauled bodily out of the room ed and bundled off to the eral lockup when they bobbed up singly or by twos or threes snouting such slogans at HUAC is unconstitutional and HUAC must go Communist activities in the Chicago area had been dis- by demonstrators teen persons were arrested Tuesday most of them when they threw themselves under police paddy wagons to protest arrest of one demonstrator Questions Election Sudden End to Jungle Life Traffic Stopper By DORIS LOS ANGELES AP 1953 Rosalind Wiener a pled coed surprised almost everyone by defeating seven men for a Los of Mayor Samuel W Yorty and found time to marry yer Eugene L Wyman now She is the It was the second consecutive V Jill A bookstore manager took the Fifth Amendment 43 times charged thai the committee was constituted and at least one member's 1 election to Congress The ness Lou Diskin manager of the Modern Rook store said the unidentified congressman was Mrs Wyman blamed her de- elected from a state in which feat in the election have on a combination of Yorty ai E Q severe observers pre- Willis er of three children campaign and took the charge as refer lui a Tuesday the voters turned ring perhaps lo and i ICily Council electing political The I'm going to I have never tne youngest known Edmund out my files leave a list tied these charges police declined to identify a attorney by a 3 to 1 margin of capital improvements for my Willis said that in his her father Al M ne youngster and then maybe ana district 57 per cent of the car a pharmacist had warned grew up in City Hall a bonfire with the rest i non-white persons of voting age her It's a jungle she's a little disillusioned President Kennedy offered registered Ho said that of But Roz won three successive m she told mc on njs inaugural registered 73 per cent Police at headquarters were four-year terms as the interviewer It's hard for she says and not vote in the last laughing about the report councilwoman I women to stay up there and dcnt Johnson has been awfully officer made by She became a power in politics but she doesn't want to 1 make this statement for agreed lo put on a local politics helped bring I've had 12 years Aside go lo or Sacra the record to indicate of officer reported This Brooklyn Dodgers to Los from my family it's been my to although Gov Edmund G the baselessness of your better than a Jog call Angeles became a tough life Brown is a close political ally Willis said woman sunbathing in a topless Wednesday but they admitted they sent an officer oat to help traffic Tornadoes Batter Midwest ONCE BEAUTIFUL ALWAYS By United Press International Tornadoes and violent storms lashed sections of nine Midwestern and Plains stales Wednesday injuring at least 24 heavy persons and wreaking property damage An electric lineman was killed in Indiana as he repaired damage inflicted by the does which struck on Palm day and claimed more than 250 lives The The destructive winds un- roofed a parochial school at 111 and hit a tist home for the aged al ton Mo No injuries were re- ported at either place Parents rushed to Our Lady of Hope School inv to see if the 350 pupils were safe parking lot and blasted windows in the main terminal Three persons were by flying glass violent onslaught of ther hit parts of Oklahoma Kansas Missouri Illinois Iowa Indiana Wisconsin Michigan lineman Linder J Vicker 34 Weslfield 111 fell 30 feet from tha top of a utility pole when wind blew a high tension wire against the pole and Ohio Tornado Hits Winds that sounded like tornado stabbed at a O'Hare International court m Wis port the world's busiest It ripped roofs from two hangars and a barracks hurled a plane into a cargo liner aged 90 cars on the airport Seven persons were injured and six trailers were destroyed or damaged Seven Persons A tornado injured seven sons at Addison UL and a mother and two children were hurt when a twister upended j their house trailer in Plainfield HI A tornado or high winds pled house trailers at Blue Springs Mo injuring four sons Another storni ripped dalia Mo smashing the wall of a furniture store and flipping a light plane at an airport Office workers and tourists Vehicle I 13 Timekeeper Calls Clay a Bum Page 25 Science to Control of WASHINGTON AP Kohn made his comments at possibly inhibit aging There's no theoretical on research progress Dr K Marott Sinex a Boston said Dr Robert R Kohn and trends in aging sponsored University biochemist why we should the National Institutes that collagen changes might be able to keep people as they Health be one of factors in aging jare at age 20 to 30 for another 40 Defining aging as a that the secret of the Classified biological process process of aging 27.301 Assuming society would sometime around will be tapped Ann Landers Editorial Markets Obituaries he added Kohn suggested it's primarily But even if it is he snid e at Michigan Capitol when a tornado sighted nearby The Lansing reported Continued cu Page 9 Col 4 Kohn a Western Reserve Uni- due to progressive changes will always be a pathologist collagen chemical occurring ty force If we put as much effort into in the connective tissue outside There will always be wear this as we do in getting to the the body's cells what he moon we might do it Kohn said studies of a muscle said No one is immortal I But another scientist said that disease in animals think our bodies are even with such prolonged the possibility of using human lung for Bridge 28 Astrological 5 general wear and tear would chemical called beta could not breath 34 Vitals S exact its toll ito slow down collagen changes ed air forever Weather Roundup Map Women's Features 22   

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!