THE WEATHER NORTHEAST MISSISSIPPI Clear to partly cloudy Wednesday. howers Thursday. High Wedne:,. day 82-86, low Wednesday night 60-64. High Thursday 84·88. Varia• ble winds 4-12 miles per hour.
Telephone Vlnewood
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HargettWill ReenterU.
U.S. Will Beef Jet Strength In Europe
Of Chicago Announces He'll Complete Work On His Doctorate
Eight Squadrons On Maneuvers Will Stay; Most Of Guard Units Will Go
BY WILLIAM MILES Journal Staff Writer
BOONEV'ILLE - Former Northeast Mississippi Junior College President Earl Hargett said Wednesday he is planning to re-enter the University of Chicago to complete work on his Ph.D. In a statement issued yesterday, the educator pointed out that the resignation tendered by him to the college's board of trustees several days ago was in reality asking for a vote of confidence. The resignation was given during a regular session of the board on Sept. 12 but was not approved until a recessed meeting on Saturday, Sept. 16. He said that his resignation was given in view a chargethat made by an ousted staffof member Hargett had failed to live up to his agreement to secure a doctorate. The president had planned to get
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Eight sent over Sept. 2 for the exercises The squadrons have a total of. American jet squadrons now in Checkmate 1 and 2. 411 jet fighters, most of them Europe for maneuvers and rota- The Air Force said the squad- capable of carrying nuclear as tion training will be kept here on rons average about 25 planes well as conventional weapons. An each. additional four squadrons reporttemporary duty, the Air Force an- There was no official indication, ing for duty at the same time nounced Wednesday. other than the word "temporary," are equipped with reconnaisThe reassignment came as Pen- as to how long the squadrons sance versions of the planes. tagon sources indicated that near- would remain in Europe. About 5,000 fighter planes are ly 500 more jet planes and thou- The possibility of even more now under NATO command on sands of additional troops may be planes and troops being sent to the European cont inent. sent to Europe by year's end if Europe were raised in guarded So far 40'000 additional troops the Berlin Crisis continues to l response to re~rts ~hat all or have been ordered to Europe But seethe most of the 18 Air Natmnal Guard . . . . · · squadrons reporting for a c t i v e the Army 1s ra1smg its ground Two of the squadrons ordered duty next Monday will be sent forces from 870,000 to 1,(J?8,000 to remain in Europe are on ro- overseas for any Berlin show- I· men and many of them will be tation training. The others were down. sent abroad if needed.
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CHILDREN'S DAY PARADE -
The smarc-:,;i:epp1ng Indianettes and band of Itawamba Junior College
and Agricultural High School at Fulton are shown going through their paces during the gigantic Children' s Day parade in Tupelo Wednesday in connection wit~ the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dair y _Show. Thousands of persons jammed the downtown area to view the hour-long parade of bands and school children. --Staff Photo by Graham
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Tupelo, Mississippi, Thursday Morning, September 28, 1961
;~~~a:e~e~ Mr. Hargevt pointed out in his resignation that he had failed to get his doctorate but thought that the work at Northeast had been more important and deserved more of his time. During the Tuesday. meeting, 1Lloyd Wolfe, former business manager and director of technical and vocational education, who Mr. Hargett fired, asked the trustees "gentlemen, what about Hargett who has !ailed l? live_ up to the a~eement 1n gettmg his doctorate?_ 1 When_Wohlfe left thet mdeetmg,_Hargett said presen e a out resignathe eboard pointing that tion to he had been more interested in the development of Northeast than in Nceiving one of two doctorates which he lacks written work completing, "I had hoped to get a vote of confidence or at least a discussion of degrees 50 that. I would have more freedom in which to work for the school," th~ administrator stated. (Continued On Page 21)
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NEW YORK (UPI) -Secretary down by Soviet Premier Nikita of State Dean Rusk was reported Khrushchev. The Soviet premier Wednesday to be pressing Soviet seeks to have the discussion limForeign Minister Andrei Gromyko ited to his proposed peace treaty · to explain Russia's offer of "guar- with Communist East Germany antees" for free access to Berlin which would abolish the Allied ocry en ompany I The Mississippi • Alabama Fair were summoned to the fairgrounds A pair of Lowndes County young- Pontotoc, Union and Lowndes coun- in any East German peace treaty. cupational status in Berlin and Make Refrigerated and Dairy Show ill: TUpelo_ goes in- both _ti~es. _Neither person required sters walked off with top honors ties. Rusk and Gromyko met for make the Western sector a ded. to its third day this morning after hospitalization. Wednesday in judging of bhe Jun- Dora May Bryant of Tippah three hours and 55 minutes fenseless "free city." Truck Bo 1es being literally overwhelmed during ior Dairy Show of the Mississippi County won the trophy for best an- Wed~esd":Y. in the~ second lengthy Gro~yko was understood to WREN - Officials of the fifth have given _no grounds Wednesday district of Monroe County Wednesthe "best yet" Children's Day Wed- Two persons won the prize money -Alabama Fair and Dairy Show in imal bred by exhibitor while Lane Berlm _crisis ses~10~. . nesday. in the poultry show of the Missis- which 352 animals were entered. Berry of Monroe County was run- Rus~:a has sa1 it 15 ready to 0!1 the Soviet demands. u..s .. 0~ 1- day completed plans for promoting Hundreds of Northeast Mississip- sippi • Alabama Fair and Dairy The Tupelo show is believed to be ner-up. Chester Crum of Tippah ~feRr dgua:an tedesB olinf.freed acc~~s ~ials wereT~ot un.~~h P:;~~,s!~~ passage of a $140,000 BAWI bond pi and West Alabama school child- Show Wednesday. the largest in the state. aunty won the showmanship awar~ e -e":circ1e er un er e ~we":'er... .ey sai ,, e 1 . w issue Oct. 3 to finance expansion of ren and a host of marching bands Mrs. Frank Wright of TUpelo Barbara McKay showed her ag- winning over Martha Simmons or te;~s ~ pgposed pea~~ treat~ ft~l -;:1 1 : 1~!tre!rat t:do~tc:~: Dryden Manufacturing Company 1 participated in the annual Child - showed the first, second, fourth and ed cow to grand championship laur- Pontotoc. w urce assa,·d thel_rmwanays. 0 e· oofrmtehe woourd rbye facilities at Wre:n. · Stree t f'fth r1 th · I50 s points 5Rusk stressed n · · d~stry ren •s Day parade.d own M am I pens an d .h a.,. e best male els w hil e R og~r W'lli ' ams pla ce d h's i Winners by classes in the junior principal in Rusk was said . to be heartened Th e expan d ~d ~n . will be .opWednesday mormng. a~d female broilers. W. E . Berry- gra~d champion. . show included: junior calf, blue rib- Wednesday's meeting. by the fact that Gromyko ~as erated by M1ss1ss1pp1 Industries, The line of march, as usual, was hill of Nettleton won third place. Tippah County walked off with bon winners were: Jimmie Patey The ·sources said the talks, conferring in sober, businesslike Inc., and looal leaders have been packed by thousands of spectato:s Mrs. Wright's prize money total- the coveted trophy as top countylTerry D. Evets, Alcorn county; which are des~gned to discover and _appa.i:entlr sincere ma:mer assured th~t the company has adeenjoying the snappy parade m ed $210 and Mr. Berryhill received herd. Blue ribbon winners in coun- James Luther Ketchum, Benton 1whether there 1s any c o_m mo n 3;11d mdulgi~g m none of the bitter quate credit and ca~ital necessary ideal 80 . degree weather, Yo?Dg- $40. lty herd competition included Lee, County ; Wilie Frank Calder, cal- gro:in? for full-scale Eas~-We~t ne- tirades wh1~h so freq1;1ently _have to operat_e the_new _md~sry. . houn County; Charlotte Ann Ellis, gobations on the explos:ve issue, marked Soviet • American d1Scus- Paul. Sisk, fifth district sup.erv13 ters in the parade were admitted free to the fairgrounds. TESTIMONY COMPLETED Clay County; Jim Johnson, Jr., ~a":'e not. reached a pomt where s1ons. sor, said p_assage of the bond issue Virtually everyone along the Robert D. Albritton, Lee County; 1t 1s possible to forecast the out- Rusk and Gromyko appeared w:ould not ~ncrease taxes. :he pr!nroute were agreed that this hour R b rt w·i MK Jr Elaine come. very cheerful at the end of c1pal and interest on the mdustr1al M~;a ~o~~e ~c;~~ie~· Roger _Gromyko. at Wed~esd~y's ses- Wednesday's ses~ion. G_romyko bonds would be paid in ful~ by Drylong parade was the best in the history of the annual venture. V'll'- Y, Lo d C ty'. L rry s10n, was understood m. his turn. to came out ~n the si ewalk m front den. As a result, no tax levy will • ' i.. ms, wn es oun • a. have sought further information of the Soviet headquarters to es- be required he said. Thursday the highlight of the !air Kent Moalntgol!{l~ry, ~a\ Bi;;, D;v1cl: as to how President Kennedy and c~rt Rusk to bis _car. The two o~fi- The expan'ded industry will offer 0 son. Ger d GI ,am_, _on C . un the other western powers propose c1als stopped briefly to talk with employment to 100 men with an anwill be JUdgmg of the State Open / Y; BobbyHughChnst1an,MornsE. to "broaden" the basis of negotia- reporters. l 11 · of $300000 · · s m1'th , Leamon H . J a~kson, Mar: tions. Th d • . t' nua payro m excess , • Jersey Show begmnmg at 9 a.m. . . . e Satur ay mor,mng mee ~g Dryden manufactures refrigerat1SS ISSI under supervision of the State JACKSON, Miss., Sept. 27 (L'PI) the panel would not offer a ruling garet E. Keele, Prentiss County, Kennedy has sa'd the U 'ted will be held at Rusks quarters m ed truck bodies and h'<ls been hiahly 1 Breeders cattle Club. - Trial of a lawsuit aimed at de- immediately. But he referred Timothy Hurt , Rebecca Ann ~op. . . m the Waldorf Towers wh~re he a~d successful ·nmarketing its prod~cts eCO f eO S Olson Shows will have its ever- segregating tr ave 1 facilities Young to a federal court decision per, Luther H. Hopper, Chester ~tates and its alli~s will not neg?· G~o!"yko _held their first Berlin on a nati~nwide basis Recently J:ACKSON, Miss., Sept. ?!1 (UPI) popular midway running full blast,, throughout Mississippi ended we~- in which similar signs on buses in Crum, Jr., James T_. Brown, Jr.: tiate on the restricted terms laid cns1s session last Thursday. sales have been expand~d into Can~ Employment in Mississippi featuring more than so shows and nesday after three days of testi- Montgomery, Ala. were ordered Char~es E. Bryant, Tipp~h County, TOUGHER IN ada. 1962 continued to rise in August and rides. mony. down. ~orris Rye, ~arroll Garrison, JackMore than 1 000 fifth district clreached. a record high for that T~e grandstand attraction "! i 11 _An attorney for J a c k s on City "You can make up yo u r own ie Ho~e, Umon CoW:tyb J G tizens were reported to be qualified month, 1t was reported today. . ag_am be the ~orl?'s Champion - L~nes, one of the defe:ndants, said mind as to what the law is," Rives ~emor calf, blue rib _ons'I'ho~a~ to vote in the election. An aggresThe St~te. Em~loyment Secun- ship Rodeo, begmrung at 7:30_p.m. his_ company may remove segre- added. Dnver, Alcorn County, . Bobb sive "Get Out To Vote" campaign ty Comm1ss10n said 46,000 workers The rodeo, presented by Kmney gat1on signs posted under state law . . . Brown, .Itawamba County' . Y being promoted in all six precincts were employed in August, an in• Bros. Rodeo Enterprises features before a decision is rendered. Young replied Ill view of that the I G. <?Jmstop?er, Charles Trawickk in the district by the local induscrease of 3,200 over the previous a host of daring cowboys and scores Three federal judges will hear company might remove the signs Curtis TraW1c~, L~e County; Fran trial community. final arguments by attorneys immediately. The signs direct col- Berry, Jr., R itchie Lane ~~rry, The BAWI Jaw requires that a. month. It was also about 9,000 of wild broncs and steers. 1 1 a?ove the same month of the pre- The exhibit halls and livestock Thursday, after which the attor- ored passeng:rs to seat from the Monroe County; Sherry ': ll am~ . . . majority of qualified electors must vious year. barns are open free both day and neys will have 20 days to file final rear and whites from the front. !obhy May, Ponto_toc County, Char WASHINGTON (UPI}-Leaders Berlin cns1s or some other emer- vote and two • thirds of that numManufacturing employment also night. briefs. The judges will hand down Dividers also are used to separ- les Bryant, ~ddie Owen, .J~r of the 87th Congre~s agreed gency forces ~be Presi~ent to call ber must vote in favor of the bond set a new re.cord for the month their decision after that. ate white and colored sections. Brown, Jr., Tippah ~ounty, B Y Wednesday that President Ken- them back mto session before issue. as 1,500 workers were ad~ed to f:be Fair President - Manager J .M. J. Will y O un g, attorney for Young pointed out that Jackson Joe Moss,. J. ~- Elhott, s.herrell ne?y's. progra_m faces far tough~r then. . Local leaders are hopeful that payrolls, the commission said. Savery said Tuesday's opening per- Jackson City Lines, told the panel City Lines was the only transpor- Unfress., !1shommgo County, Ge • gom~, m election~~ear 1~2 than 1_n The lawmakers warmed up for the bond issue will be approved so The total l~,400 was 2,000 above formance of the fair was up to ex- that any injunction against segre- tation company in the 1 aw suit orge_ Wilham Self, Troy Robertso~ the hon~~moo~ session of his th . 1962 b ttl b . . that employment could be provided last year's figure. pectations and Wednesday's Child- gation signs on the company's bus- which did not operate under the .onme Yates, Tomm~ Clayton, R':1 new admirustr.ation. err . ~ es Y engagmg m to people in the area. Dryden, when The commission said most man- ren's Day response was "a pleasant es should be issued today. He said Interstate Commerce Commission. Ann Papasan, Moms Rye, 1.."'nion Congress adJourned ~or the year a sort of civil war as dawn broke expanded will be tbe largest lndusufacturing industries reported in- surprise." it had been brought out in the trial "We feel all alone here," be said. Count:v, . . at 6 : 21 . a .m. EDT, with. the Sen- over the capital Wednesday. try in siz~ in the district. The plant creases in August with apparel "We were delighted that so ma- that drivers are under instruction Jackson City Lines is franchised Jumor ~earlmg, blue ribbons, - ate rag~ng at H~e tactics 0:1 the At 4 : 20 a.Ii:·• ED'.f, THE House is to be located at the intersection showing the largest boost. Lum- ny schools participated in the par- to halt any bus at any time a Ne- by the city of Jackson, also a de- Carroll Mills, Alco;11 County; Rob~ fmal bill-and with. Republicans P.assed the fmal bill of the ses- of U S. Highways 45 and 278. ber, furniture and textiles also in- ade," Mr. Savery said. "Youngsters gro takes a front seat. fendant in the lawsuit, but is a ert Lee Clark'. Ch1ckasa,~ County, ~d Dem_ocrats 3;1:gumg ..ov~r th~ s10n-a _$1:125,333,341 supplemental · -------creased their employment. flowed through the gates here for Young said since that had been branch of National City Lines, Clyde S. Christopher, _Ji~ John- accomp_hshment? or failures appropri~tions mea~ure and Two industries - food and paper a solid hour. We were happy to publicized he feared a "complete which also owns the bus company son, Jr. , Lee Cou.nty; Ritchie Lane of the first session. . then adJourned. Thi~ mea?t the IX00 0 Un - reported a decline for the have them." breakdown" in the bus runs. in Montgomery. Berrv, Larrv. ~mgh. Monroe Coun Expect Future Fireworks . Senate. was faced wit~ acting o.n month, the commission said. As the day progressed Wednesday Judge Richard T. Rives of the Attorneys for the city and state ty; Gerald Gilham, Pontotoc Co:1n· But members of both parties the. bill on a take-it-or-leave-it 1d basisD It said that employment has been so did the temperature at ground- Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals said vigorously protested Young's re- ty; Danny Lowery, Judy L . _Sim- ~gree~ that these siuatbblrh H A r on the rise s\nce F~bruary. ~nd level at the fairgrounds.- At lea~t ~uest fo~ an immediate injunction, mons, Debor~h Counce, Prentis~ . w~r~m~~r~~P~~e ex°Iodee n~: Deno:~:~ce~he o~~~se ca~~fon as Q I Orn IQ that only two ~dustries - mi~ing two persons connected with the !air Extended Forecast if ther~ IS to~~ one. ct~uni~:a;;d a~og~~ J.r.Ro;~"fe year when Kennedy psends the outrageous, g Senate Democratic LOS ANGELES (UPI}-Ricbard and transpo~ation - have failed were overcome _by by the heat. For Mississippi Earlie:, off1c1als of Gre.yhound ~a~s Union 'tfoun ty, election-minded legislators a se- leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., de- M. Nixon, forced into private life ty. ries of controversial proposals clared he never gain would enter with his defeat by President Kento show an mcrease. Oxygen • equipped ambulances and Trailways bus comparues tes.' . JACKSON, Miss., Sept. 'l:l (UPI) tified their companies had no seg- Semor yearling, Bobby Glrl~Y, Bhe!11- Among other things he will· be into any adJ'ournment agreements nedy last November announced . d ay wea th er outi ook for M'is- regat·10n po1·icy e1'th er as t o opera- ton Ho is ' P 1. · pushing for approval ' of medical with the House until the last piece Wednesday night he ,will run for F 1ve. County· . · Marshall . 1 care for the elderly under Social of legislation had been cleared. governor of California next year. hp Hollis, Chickasaw County; Bi: sissippi t!Irough Monday: Temper- tion of bus~s _or waiting rooms. atures will average 2 to 3 degrees Three 0Iilc1als of the Alabama ly League, Ralph Loague, Itawam Security, higher postal rates and Senate GOP Leader Everett M. He said he would not be a canbelow normal. Normal high 74 to Highway Patrol testified that "free- ba County; Robert M. Moore, Lee tax revision. All are so contra- Dirksen, Ill., was so angry that didate for president in 1964. 86.. Normal lo:,,; :>4 to 60. C<><:>ler do~ riders" brought . v!ol~nc~ to County; Barbar~ Jean Ta Y 1 0 r, versial that congressional leaders he said it was time to find out The 48-year old former vice durmg the ~egmnmg of th~ period, then: _state and that M1ss1ss1pp1 au- Lowndes Coun~, ~rank Berry, Jr., postponed s~owdowns t_his year. whether the other chamber could president strode back into the po. warmer Fnday and turnmg cool- thonties who arrested them for Monroe County, Linda otts, Randy He also will re-submit the aid- "affront" the Senate. Finally Jitical arena as an active candier over the weekend. Precipitation breaching the peace were so noti- , Collums, Alden _Jaggers, Jr., Pon- to-education program that was members cooled and the Senate date in the Statler Hilton Hotel totoc County; Jimmy ~ e~le, Tom· blocked by the House and seek adjourned at 6:16 a .m. EDT. His move to seek the governor: will total 1-2 inch or less in show- Iied. ers. Mississippi officials contend that 1;1Y Counce, Bobby Christian, Pren- new tariff-cutting powers from a Kennedy could look back on a ship did not come as a surprise Some ~ighs and lows around the violence in A~abama justified ar- tiss County; i:3everly Morgan, Jer- Con~ress in which protectionist ~irst. yea1: session which his leg- since most political observers had state durmg the past 24 hours: Jack rests of the nders when they ar- ry Morgan, .T1ppa_h County; Danny s~nt1m~nt runs stro~ger than any 1~lative heutena~ts called pr?duc- speculated that he would choose time since the 1920 s. . t1ve and which Republicans to run son 90, 65; Greenwood 87, 61; Me- rived here in order to prevent sim- Burcham, Tishommgo County. . The House and Senate will re- ter~ed expensive and short on Nixon in a statement dri ing ridian 90, 64; Biloxi 87, 70; Colum- ilar disturbances. 1 Two -yea_r -old class, Geradlme bus 88'. 57· Constance Baker Motley , attor(Continued On Page 21) convene next Jan. 10 unless the quabty. . ' . reI erence to mcum. PP . ' Tupelo 88, 58 · w1'th irony m ~n?ffic1al Tupelo temperature at ney for the ~ational Association for bent Democratic Gov. Edmund G. (Continued On Page 21) Brown, said the people of Califormidnight was 65 degree. '!lia "need a new leader." He described Brown as an "amiable but bumbling man who cannot clean up the mess for which he is partly responsible." He said that Brown, alter being elected governor, within six months started to run for the NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 'l:l distance between the Marshall presidency of the United States. (UPI) - The 27th annual Southern Space Flight Center at Huntsville, Then Nixon stated flaUy: Governors' Conference today en- Ala., to the Air Force Missile Test "I shall not be a candidate for dorsed the 150-year-old dream of Center at Cape Canaveral, Fla., president of the United States in Andrew Jackson to build a 45-mile by more than 1,000 miles. 1964; I will run for governor of canal between the Tennessee and The Saturn booster rocket the California in 1962." T~mb~gbee R;ivers to provide a 253- free world's large~t, had .t~ be This answered the big question mile mdustnal waterway. transported by specially. bullt rivon whether Nixon would try to The overall cost was estimated er barge from Huntsville up the use the governor's office as a at $281 million but there was a Tennessee to the Ohio River into springboard for the presidential new twist to the long · discussed the Mississippi River to the' Gulf nomination in 1964. He lost out project: Col. G. M. Dorland, chair- of Mexico and around the Florida last year in a close contest with mau of the Tennessee • Tombigbee Straits to Cape Canaveral. President Kennedy, and said upon Waterway Development Authority, Dorland said the project would his return to California he did not suggested that the huge cut could cause an industrial boom in the plan to run for governor. SPELLBOUND These two youngsters appear be made with a series of explos- South. But he was urged to run for the ions of "small, clean, nuclear devi- The conference a 1 s o endorsed spellbound by the sights during Wednesday's Chiloffice by many t,op Repub ans. ces." Florida G<>v. Farris Bryant's prodren's Day parade in Tupelo in connection with the l Asked by a reporter about any Alabama Gov . John Patterson posal that the proposed Cross-FlorMississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show. No qualification on running for presi• TOP SHOWMEN Chester Crump of Tippah County edged Martha Simmons said the project would provide a ida Barge Canal be supported by dent in 1964, he replied "I made a doubt the lads are also counting the years when they of Pontotoc for first place in showmansh-ip and the top trophy presented during slack water route from the Mid- southern governors. This canal was categorical statement that I win themselves will be in school and eligible to join west and Great Lakes regions to begun during the Roosevelt adthe State Dairy Show of the fair Wednesday. Martha has been runner-up in shownot be a candidate for pre.,id~ . the line o! march. ··Photo b1 Sallis .the Guli oI Mexico and sborwA the mm~tration bu~ since languishe~ 196'... manship for the past two years. ••Staff Ph~fo
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