Bryan-College Station Eagle from Bryan, Texas (2024)

a of THE BRYAN DAILY CUE Serving the Brazes Valley Since 1876 SERVICE 91 No. 142 MIGs U.S. Bombs Near Hanoi Second Day SAIGON, South Vietnam MP U.S. warplanes straddled Hanoi with bombs for the second straight day Wednesday, the U.S. Command announced, but intense ground fire and a missile-firing MIG shot three of the American raiders out of the skies.

A State Department spokesman in Washington said the department had no evidence to confirm Communist reports that the American planes bombed nonmilitary and inflicted civilian casualties in Hanoi itself. AIR FORCE and Navy fighter-bombers returned to the same two targets they hit Tuesday to rain more explosives on a sprawling truck depot five miles south of Hanoi and a major railroad marshalling yard six miles northeast of the Communist capital. Pilots claimed heavy damage to both installations. During the raids, more than a score of MIG21s and MIG17s were encountered and a MIG21, downed an Air Force F105 Thunderchief 50 miles southwest of Hanoi. The pilot was rescued.

Two Navy jets were brought down by groundfire, the U.S. Command reported, and both pilots were listed as missing. WITH THESE losses, the total of American planes reported lost in the air war against the Communist North reached 446. The Thunderchief was the seventh U.S. plane reported downed by a MIG, while U.S.

fliers have reported shooting down at 26 of the Communist jets and possibly two more. As the tempo of the air war increased, there was a spurt also in ground fighting in South Vietnam. Vietnamese military headquarters reported four widely separated Viet Cong attacks in which defending government units were badly mauled. A headquarters spokesman acknowledged moderate to heavy casualties to the South Vietnamese forces in the four engagements. THE NORTH Vietnamese government claimed that more than 100 people have been kill(See U.S.

BOMBS Page 10) Thieves Heist Santa Claus Santa Claus may not come all this year if area thieves have their way. They got an early start on waylaying the jolly gentleman last night when they stole an eight-foot plywood Santa from the yard of H. P. Murray of 407 Fairview St. in College Station.

Murray told police he was building the decoration himself and did not list a monetary value for the Santa. Bryan-College Station, Tex. Thursday, December 15, 1966 MICROS FOX TEXAS ALLAS, Shoot Down Three American Jack Ruby Has Chance According to Doctor's THe A HOUR 8 And the Mail Mounts Bryan postal employes appear to be inundated with early mailing will make these employes' holiday a boxes and baskets as the annual Christmas rush little merrier. (Eagle Photo by Gene Dennis) reaches its peak. Proper labeling, zip coding, and Jackie Would Relive Grief By RELMAN MORIN AP Special Correspondent NEW YORK (P) Mrs.

John F. Kennedy says she is prepared to relive her grief and shock after the assassination of her husband in order to legally block publication of a book about the tragedy. The outlook for her is horrible, she said. The book, which the Kennedy family had authorized, is "Death of a President," by William Manchester. It describes the assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas, Nov.

22, 1963, and the events Bryanite Satisfactory After Auto Mishap Jack Hudson, 53, of 309 E. Carson injured Wednesday.in a train-truck accident which killed his brother, is listed in satisfactory condition today in Bryan Hospital. He and brother W. C. (Bill) Hudson, 59, of 711 Es- Bill Moyers Resignation Plugs Big 3 WASHINGTON I The resignation of Bill D.

Moyers as White House press secretary will to changes in the ranking White House aides lead, and mark the end of a gradual 100 per cent turnover in top White House staff jobs. MOYERS, leaving Feb. 1 to become publisher of the Long Island newspaper Newsday, regarded at one time as the most powerful and influential of presidential aides. He sometimes was referred to as being "first among equals." With his departure, three other special assistants all getting salaries of $30,000 year seem almost certain to be ranked as the "big three" of the White House staff. They are W.

Marvin Watson, Joseph A. Califano Jr. and Walt W. Rostow. Another high rated special assistant, and the most recent addition to that elite roster, is Robert E.

Kintner, former president of the National Broadcasting Co. IN TIME, Califano or Kintner could emerge as a new "first among, equals." Rostow hardly could be expected to figure in any such competition because he is specialist in foreign affairstoo narrow a base on which to build a position of pre-eminence. Watson is physically closest. to the President. Occupying an adjoining office, he is appointments secretary and resident specialist in political matters.

Califano, a young man who once was troubleshooter Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, often plays the same role for Johnson. He also has a major hand in shaping legislation. ROSTOW, a State Department at graduate, is Johnson's special assistant for national security affairs. He occupies the desk and does the work of McGeorge Bundy, who resigned last February to become president of the Ford Foundation.

In announcing Rostow's appointment, Johnson insisted he was not a replacement for Bundy. Kintner handles many administrative and housekeeping matters for the President, acts as Cabinet secretary and recently became coordinator of (See MOYERS Page 10) ther were riding in van-type truck which was in collision with a Fort Worth and Denver freight train Wednesday in Shiro. W. C. Hudson was dead on arrival at Bryan Hospital.

Funeral services are sched- Gonzalez Pleads Guilty To Murder, Dope Charges Bennie B. Gonzalez, 38, of 308 Alamo was sentenced to two to eight years in prison today for the Aug. 20 shooting death of Leon Alvarado at the Playboy Lounge in downtown Bryan. Gonzalez, appearing before 85th District Judge John M. Barron, pleaded guilty to both the charge of murder with malice forethought and a previous charge of possession of marijuana.

JUDGE BARRON also assessed Gonzalez eight years on the narcotics charge, with the stipulation that the sentences First Bank Trust now paying per annum on ings certificates. -Adv. 5 Cents Planes to Live Report Injections Begin Today By DALLAS (AP) Doctors Jack Ruby started injecting shore up his sagging morale. "We told Ruby he has Jay Sanford, who said the was "less alert this morning. "I told Ruby he has a impression because we feel fighting to live," Sanford By PEGGY SIMPSON treating cancer-stricken drugs today and trying to a "I think that there are things that happened, especially on the plane coming back, that could be embarrassing to both the Kennedys and the Johnsons." He declined to go into details.

Kilduff added that in the emotional intensity of the moment "some of the old 1960 wounds were reopened, rehashed, thought about." This apparently referred to the bitter struggle between Kennedy and Johnson for the Democratic nomination for president that Kennedy won. NEVERTHELESS, Kilduff (See JACKIE Page 10) chance to live," said Dr. killer of Lee Harvey Oswald chance to give him this his attitude is important Post Office Says Mail Moving OK NEW YORK UP A recent test of the U.S. postal service showed a generally efficient performance on first-class mail deliveries throughout the nation. Letters airmailed between two points in different states, including coast to coast, stood better than a 99 per cent chance of reaching their destinations within two days.

Duplicate mailings one Zipcoded and one to the same address without the Zip code arrived simultaneously in every case. THE BULK of the airmail between major east coast cities and major cities of the far west was delivered the day after posting. Airmail from the east coast made it to Juneau, Alaska, in two days. In point of elapsed time between posting and delivery, the poorest performance was by two airmail letters from San Francisco to Miami and from Los Angeles to Bryn Mawr, a Philadelphia suburb. Each took four days.

Los Angeles to Juneau, and Seattle, to Juneau, took three. All the other test airmail was delivered in two days. THE ASSOCIATED Press began the test on Nov. 17. That morning, major bureaus posted more than 500 letters either to other AP bureaus or to suburban addresses of staff members in other er cities.

Coincidentally the postal service, alerted by a massive mail jam in Chicago in October, had begun hiring the first of 150,000 temporary Christmas (See MAIL Page 10) Ruby's morale was described as lower after he read ports that he apparently was losing his battle against widespread cancer whose primary source still has not been pinpointed. 'WE BELIEVE he has chance also," said Dr. Eugene Frenkel, another on the team treating Ruby. "If we didn't, we wouldn't be treating him as vigorously as we are." At a news conference, doctors said Ruby will be jected with a special therapeutic drug known as five-fluorasil for the next five days every other day until changes in his blood and general condition are detected. The doctors have rescribed Ruby's cancer as not treatable by surgery or irradiation treatments, and said that chemotherapy- drugs--was the procedure left.

And Frenkel has said chemotherapy is dom successful in cases such as Ruby's. RUBY ESCAPED the elec(See JACK RUBY Page 10) in the days immediately erward. MRS. KENNEDY calls it "tasteless and distorted." "As horrible as a trial will says, "it now seems clear that my only redress is to ask the courts to enforce my rights." Her attorneys said they are, preparing papers seeking a temporary injunction to stop the book's publication and would file them in two or three days. Summonses already have been served on Harper Row, book publisher, and Cowles Communications, publishers of Look magazine.

The magazine, which reportedly paid Manchester $650,000 for the serial rights to his book, scheduled publication of the first article for Jan. 10. Harper Row plans to bring out the book next THE IMPENDING lawsuit, and a mention of "inaccurate and unfair references to other individual" in a statement by Mrs. Kennedy about Manchester's book, may throw some light on long-standing reports of friction between the Kennedys and President Johnson. It assertedly began on the plane that brought Kennedy's body from Dallas to Washington after the assassination.

A friend of the Kennedy family said Manchester's book depicts Mrs. Kennedy as having been "upset because LBJ kept the plane on the ground too long in Dallas, waiting to be sworn in as president." Another version of this in- SO Deputy Commended Brazos County Deputy Sheriff Pinkney (Pinky) Hall has been commended by the 85th District Grand Jury for his "diligence in investigation of cases presented to the grand jury." Hall is the newest man on Sheriff J. W. Hamilton's staff. The grand jury took the action before adjourning Tuesday.

cident is that Mrs. and Kenneth O'Donnell, special assistant to the assassinated President, boarded the plane and ordered the pilot to take off at once. Johnson reportedly countermanded the order. SOURCES close to the Kennedy family said Manchester's book contains "other things that involve LBJ which are distorted and unfair." Last Nov. 22 the third anniversary of the assassination Malcolm M.

Kilduff, press aide in charge of the presidential changeover at Dallas, said in an interview: BULLETIN BURBANK, Calif. Walt Disney, who built an entertainment empire based on a mouse named Mickey and won a reputation as the movies' most versatile creator, died today. He was 65 ten days ago. His studio in making the announcement declined to give the cause of death but Disney underwent surgery last month for removal of part of his left lung, after lesion was found. The founder of Disneyland and producer of more than 600 films ranging from the animated cartoon "Snow White" to the lavish color musical "Mary Poppins" succumbed at St.

Joseph Hospital. He is survived by his widow, Lillian, and two married daughters, Mrs. Ron Miller and Mrs. Robert Brown. Tiger Spaceman's an's Friend for 11 a.m.

Friday in Central Baptist Church with the Rev. Andrew R. Heskett officiating. Burial will be in Bryan City Cemetery under the direction of Callaway-Jones Funeral Directors. Hudson, operator of the Hudson Fence Company, was a member of the B-CS Eve- ning Lions Club and a board member of the Camp Creek water Association.

Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Ila Mae Hudson; one son, Royce F. Hudson of an; four brothers, Frank Hudson and Jack Hudson of Bryan, A. D. Hudson of Brownwood, and Maurice Hudson of Houston; Three sisters, Mrs.

Reba Merle Smith of Temple, Mrs. Viola Baird of Belton, and Mrs. Doris Ford of Rosenburg; and his mother, Mrs. Annie Hudson of Temple. Pallbearers named include Huel Connor, Bill Brannen, Euell Fincher, Robert Honeycutt, Gus Gustavus, and John Woodward.

Members of the Evening Lions Club will serve as honorary pallbearers. per annum paid on savings at Bryan Building and Loan Association. -Adv. will run concurrently from Sept. 1, 1966.

Four witnesses, including a Justice of the Peace and the assistant county attorney, filed to the witness stand to tell the story of the wild Saurday night fight in the lounge and the events which followed. JULIA VALENCIA, who was in the lounge on Aug. 20, said the fight started when John Alvarado, brother of the dead man, approached the table where Gonzalez was sitting with Paul Gonzalez, (no relation), Noel Moreno, and an unidentified woman. An argument ensued and blows were exchanged. She said Gonzalez went to (See GONZALEZ Page 10) By TEX EASLEY WASHINGTON (P) The nation's, astronauts have a special friend in Congress in Texas' Rep.

Olin (Tiger) Teague of the newly enlarged 6th District. which extends from Houston to Dallas-Fort Worth. The hefty, much decorated World War II veteran is the No. 2 man on the House Science and Astronautics Committee. Authorization for all the big NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration programs are embodied in legislation which must go through that committee.

In the second place, an obvious rapport has developed between him and virtually each of the men who so far have rocketed into space, especially the first few. At 56, Teague is considerably older than the average astronaut but much nearer their age than the chairman of the committee, Rep. George P. Miller, who will be 76 Jan. 15.

Not infrequently one or more of the astronauts comes to Washington, and when they do they almost invariably visit his office. And he has been at Cape Kennedy to see -some of the blast-offs, and on other occasions has met with them at the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston. Most of them miss being his constituents by just a few miles. Because of his interest in the space effort, Teague often places in the Congressional Record the text of addresses scientists make on the subject. And occasionally top government scientists send him dissertations they feel should be ready by the lawmakers.

He has become a recognized authority among his colleagues on space matters. To friends, he confesses that since going on Rep. Olin Teague the committee when it was created eight years ago he has studied more seriously than he ever did at his alma mater, Texas In a post-adjournment issue of the Congressional Record, Teague inserted letter he received from Deputy Director George M. Low of the Houston Spacecraft Center. "Dear Tiger: I have just returned from a.

three- tour of Latin America with Astronauts Neil Armstrong and Richard Gordon," Low wrote. "During the tour I saw at first hand the tremendous impact that our program has made throughout Latin America." He. said the group traveled 15,000 miles through 11 countries and to 14 major cities as official representatives of President Johnson. They met with presidents, cabinet members, lawmakers, governors, mayors, They held 14 news conferences and gave more than 25 lectures. "People in Latin America in all walks of life went out of their way to tell us that their country and, in fact, all of South America is really very friendly toward the United States and that any reports that we might have heard to the contrary come only from (See TIGER Page 10).

Bryan-College Station Eagle from Bryan, Texas (2024)
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