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San Mateo Times

   San Mateo Times (Newspaper) - November 8, 1965, San Mateo, California                             TUESDAY'S RACE SPORTS FINAL NEW YORK STOCKS Financial Story Col. 8) SAN MATEO TIMES AND DAILY NEWS LEADER A HOME OWNED NEWSPAPER WEATHER Fair tonight and Continued Low 48 de- high 66. Westerly winds 10 to 15 miles per hour in the after- Vol. 65-No. 267 Sections 44 PAGES SAN NOVEMBER 8, 1965 lOc PER COPY PER MONTH Viet Cong In Fierce Battle Search for 2 Escaped Cons Intensified U.S. paratroopers battled strong force of Viet troops in tierce hand fighting today in a Communist jungle hold just 35 miles east of Australian infantrymen ami artillery teamed with I in bitter I In the air American disclosed thai law officers hunted aircraft were for convicts who a siring of In their latest terrorized three women and boy on a ranch before roaring away in a car stuffed with ammunition and O'GRADY Leo in North Viet crewmen were listed as raising lo 103 the ber of Americans presumed dead or captured in the air war Viet College Is Signed Billion Student Aid SAN Tex. President Johnson flew to his old college here today to sign a tion he said will put more students in college next year with eral returning to the campus of Southwest Texas State College where he received his degree in 1930 after a brief fling as a school dropout offered this assessment of the broad now means that a high school senior anywhere in this country One San best-known residents and a native of apply to any college or uni- Leo 86. until in the U.S. and not be The prison breakers lied the California Medical Facility at Vacaville a week ago jn of the disarming two sheriffs smashed They boasted yesterday to their site HO miles cast oi lour victims that they heavily damaging four a treasurer and head cashier of his turned away because his family is Asserting that is no longer a luxury but a -j following a long Johnson said in a speech j prepared for the outdoor would never go The Charles m i s s i 1 c s. launchers and several 49. of San Francisco and South Viet Ralph D. 24. of ers of the U.S. 173rd Airborne were in prison for armed Brigade clashed with a Viet Cong in the Red stronghold known as He haa wen associated witni b the school son 01 jungle free of the Lake the bank for some 62 years although he resigned as an cer two years retained his status as an employe of the Son of Pioneers was the son af the Zone northeast of Mrs. Kiernan 0'- resort lo miles northeast of when they Close Quarters took refuge on a rugged The furious fighting was at Grady according to local history operated one of ed 10 miles long close quarters most of the five miles A jeep taken day that from the disarmed deputies was found Evade Dragnet So and pri helicopters and Viet Cong torce of to out a But the men struck Monday somehow slipped past the area's finest as the Laurel k Stock located across from what Bay Meadows to bomb or strafe the Viet Cong tor fear of A spokesman the trained them trotters on the c The Laurel ing while the L. S paratroopers Creck Fam as a sheriff's at Prior to opera prison with separated two h f n also 1 s i D TUp ronB of DOO to j See Page 2, Column 2) Deputy Now They struck next at the D. Weaver thoroughbred ranch just southwest of the lakej and found it an easy said they didn't to hurt but they those related Mark 15. one of the they left my teeth were n I The equally of Sgt. Forrest were his Delores to tlle rank of lieutenant 43. a dentist and today by of the her Earl B cy 36: and his whitmore said a 16- Marie 70. of the Napa Sheriff jn charge of the new Claussen said that information center to be See Page 2. Column November 15 at 1657 Bay East Palo It will be his the sheriff to serve as liaison between the office and the residents of lhe Residents will be encouraged to come to the See Page 2. Column 2) year 140.000 young men and women will be enrolled in col- lege but for the provisions of this would never have gone past high We will reap the rewards of their wiser citizenship and greater for decades to Federal Scholarships Among other the lation provides for federally scholarships called See Page 2. Column Cuba Slated Soon KEY Fla. operated as such by Leo ciy in the according See Page 2, Column 1) LEASING Designed to Fit Your Transportation Needs CHECK THESE FEATURES No Capital Outlay Low Monthly Rates Option to Purchase No Hidden Cost at Termination Personalized Service Good Business to Know The LEASE INC. Affiliated with Ford 101 CALIFORNIA DR. BURLINGAME 344-1111 SAMPLE LEASES MUSTANG 2 DR. HARDTOP I HARDTOP iso tm MO. WU IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LEASING ALL INDEX Deaths 31 Comics Feature 24-25 Peninsula News 27-28 Sports Section 19-21 Business 22-23 Theaters 17 World of 9-11 Television Figure Dies at Home She Could Have Danced All Night breeding operation dated back to 1871. As a general it was founded at a much earlier and purchased in 1889 States today planned a the O'Grady It was that will ferry some stranded Cuban refugees here from the port of ca. Indications were that it may get under way within 48 j A mounting stream of boats most of them carrying j only the crews which sailed to flowed across the straits of Florida into the U. S. Coast Guard base coming in like said a Coast Guard official who reported a total of 84 boats in since of them since midnight last There were at least 49 gees aboard the They managed to escape from despite the official cutoff See Page 2, Column 4) PRINCESS MARGARET leaves the Bistro restaurant in Beverly Hills just be- fore 3 a.m. today after dining and dancing with Hollywood movie stars at a party given by her schoolgirl Sharman Even at that the sidewalk outside the place was jammed with people trying to get a close-up glimpse of the princess and her Lord Heavy Rain Ends Extended Dry Skys Gearing The extended dry spell in the Bay Area was broken last night by a heavy ing of an inch al the State Division of Forestry station at San Mateo city's rainfall measured of an wood and International Thunder and lightning kled across the but the rainstorm caused little San Mateo County authorities reported Prediction of further rains this morning gave way to one for clearing skies and patches of things were lively enough last night to keep county firemen on the San Mateo fire officials re- ported that arcing wires started a pole fire on the levee a block north of the 1600 block of view Avenue at p.m. The resulting burnout of a trans- former temporarily blacked out a section of the Shoreview A pole fire at Twentieth nue and El Camino Real at was caused by arcing Two service leads to the Jack 227 West Thirty-first arced and burned at p.m. On Bayshore traffic was slowed to 40 miles an hour as rains pounded windshields faster than wipers could clean them off. Two wires were down in lingame with arcing wires re- ported in South San Millbrae and San Fair weather was expected to return to most of California through tomorrow after a low pressure area dumped rain on most of the north state last Rainfall was limited to the area from Monterey and ton northward About an inch and a quarter fell at Mount Shasta and Crescent City had nearly as Princess Maintains Dizzy Pace in L.A. LOS ANGELES at a party attended Margaret and own Lord short on sleep after dancing until the wee Alcoa Won't Retreat On Price Hike By DON CARSON WASHINGTON An official of the Aluminum Com- pany of America said today coa has no intention now to cancel the one-half cent a pound increase it has But L. E. executive vice president of added price increase must be tested in the market He made his comment in re- sponse to questions at a news conference called to discuss plans for disposal of tons of stockpiled num during the coming Hickman said the aluminum ed a Beverly Hills department store today to inspect a display of British The dark haired princess motored from her Beverly Hills hotel to the nearby department and waved to crowds that lined the Several hundred children ered outside El Rodeo tary School to get a view of the She smiled and waved to Some of the youngsters carried signs After the department store the couple headed for the new Museum of Art and then for a luncheon at a movie Dinner Party The glittering in a cream silk evening and Snowdon met Hollywood's movie elite last night at a dinner party at Beverly at the Bistro Hostess was man a close friend of the princess since The royal couple did not leave the night spot until shortly be- fore 3 a.m. Among the motion picture celebrities at the popular industry had agreed to buy French restaurant were 000 tons of the metal the Fred Natalie before the government Dorothy plans to sell that amount from the He said the purchase See Page 2, Column 5) DOROTHY KILGALLEN Dies While Reading Panelist Died As She Read Writer Of Top Column Picture NEW YORK Dorothy per columnist and television died today at her home on Manhattan's east A spokesman for the New York J o u r n al American later said Miss died while reading and was found by a maid when she reported for work at the town house on East 68th Besides winning fame as col- umnist and newspaper Miss 52. had for years as a panelist on the popular television show My Miss made her last appearance on last night's ing of My bers of the staff said she and Returned From Europe She had recency returned from where she had spent some time in Her the of was the only top Broadway column written by a She was married to Richard Tompkins a former actor and later a and Born Dorothy Mae on July 2, 1913, in Miss was the daughter of noted James She moved to New York with her father when he joined the Hearst organization Educated at Eramus Hall High School and the College of New See Page 2, Column 8) IAN MATEO MUTUAL SAVINGS our my Frank Sinatra and Mia Princess Margaret danced with Dr. Richard and with an old and dear comedian Danny Elizabeth Taylor and husband Richard Burton also They arrived with Russell in a 1932 English The 90-odd invited by Miss were entertained by several of their including singer Judy Garland small One departing guest was a swinging Several others said the princess andi her husband were Princess Margaret and her husband arrived in Los Angeles at midafternoon Sunday after a whirlwind three-day tour of San Francisco and the Bay They were greeted at the See Page 2, Column 6) 4.85 1 per annum is com- 7V.V r et a i n e d ye a SAVINGS INSURED to by FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN Insurance Corporation Funds in by the 10th earn from 1st. 70th This Community's Oldest Association MAIN SAN MATEO 417 So. B Street Dl 4-1756 BURLINGAME Plaza 1341 El Gamine OX 7-8497  

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