ustxtxb_obs_1966_12_09_50_00025-00000_000.pdf

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l 011 ! `*” i “‘”” 1’7″ i t 1.. ” I ,,’ I ‘ .,es, i uR177114,:ikliiisits F;44.c.q1.. .:…!. —:V –14.4-1’.1.P….., ,,.1-121. -1.-Croo 1 – % re.s, t ‘ tAAt A.-4,’ IuA i’:?,..,, _i_ STLAND % 7,:l ititai–;a. -t I.1 Is k EA :, ‘ . .4%,..\(fA 461”” r e22L -T.,,,Z. I ‘ . . .;;;4′,C\\A!ri-4. wDCM OMl k 1, ,.. i,`,.. I.,-!!’1”,.. t iieNT461 -. FER../1″fRT -10. 3 ORD iwscwe liair iTaIT ORT.11154iIIRATAV L._ TOTTER C1-1715014TCi17T I I i STRONG’ Ii .01171 1.4..Prif11 -1.simo ,r,… I, -.7.1544..ci j ti t ri m ,….:.’.f :6Ley -\(…t ..e Ift:A ‘TI.0\(.0 :0T1.111’ ir….. 1 i I 1. ‘1 I.T;:ifc -67I groax. nny INK !igLu -L esc7CRioiicii . 1″faiibr i I I ! ! i I rat 41,4 I…OS,se 1.-4,v+ alum tiT i MONTE*, ARRTRI 111,11 -7-eR y laTroir/L17,2 E’TTU.716117.-1″‘D -“T I 1, ;KEYES lwAnciieliiWe “r-e al,-, I 1, . III I 4 ISGNLL E ‘ ‘ WO; .. kr.OR L ” \\ r-VeiTi4 !offal i ,` 1.1.1.!SPTE Rs, ts ___ 17.-LT,EAR ‘MEW \(NUL ..R. I I TONDEi…. 4$%lattl. ..Ii o VALCE j,;,.,.,’ .. I C ,..i \\ l oimif \\\\ ,.. mu, -sec catO I ov / -,41.tenA KILRDRI MEATY RK t pwo r _J TON \\,LbRAeomA ATCAMA. -1\\’` tti* TEXAS empencre\\ UCr The shaded counties depict the counties carried by Waggoner Carr in his campaign against U.S. Sen. John Tower. It was incorrectly stated in the last issue that Tower carried the shaded counties. office. Plans include prosecuting 57 slanthole oil cases and the state’s claim against Louisiana to a Sabine boundary to the middle of that river. Martin intends to set up a separate division to handle water cases and to institute data processing of state sales tax returns, rather than continuing the present practice of spot auditing. V Carr’s office has ruled that an in crease in the motor fuel tax can not be used to finance removal of billboards and junkyards from land adjacent to highways or to screen junkyards from view. Voter Registration 1,00′ Negro voter registration in Texas stood at 61.6% of those eligible this past summer, reports the Southern Regional Council, compared to 53.3% for whites in the state. Numerically, whites outnumbered Negroes, 2,600,000 to 400,000, in registration, it is estimated. V Fort Worth Police have denied the report that they were tipped off about a supposed assassination attempt against Jerry Levias, SMU star player and the first Negro to play football in the Southwest Conference. The report was in a copyrighted story in the Fort Worth StarTelegram, quoting a “reliable source.” Levias was spit on and verbally abused in some conference games this year, it is reported. V Four Texas hospitals are facing loss of federal aid, pending possible hearings, because of alleged failure to comply with the 1964 Civil Rights Acts. The hosBaytown. V Liberals of the Harris County Demo cratic Executive Committee met to map plans for voter registration, and to criticize committee chairman William Blanton, a conservative. Liberals in San Antonio are also planning a registration push. V Gov. Connally has announced the pur chase of some more land, two tracts totalling 1,704 acres adjoining his Wilson County ranch. V A former classmate of the governor’s, J. Pat O’Keefe, has resigned as executive director of the State Democratic Executive Committee to take a similar job with the Texas Fine Arts Commission. Fair’s Tower OK’d V San Antonio voters approved the is suance of $5.5 million of bonds to finance erection of the HemisFair tower. The vote was 25,112 for, 14,290 opposed, in a turnout of just under 20%. A wide variety of San Antonio political and civic leaders and organizations urged passage of the measure. State AFL-CIO leader Hank Brown, in a speech to labor people there, urged passage, saying the issue should not be confused with opposition to the Good Government League, which dominates San Antonio political affairs. Brown was reported as saying that next spring’s city elections will be the appropriate time to challenge the GGL. V Opposing the fair tower bond issue was the Alamo Messenger, a Catholic publication, which pointed out that in 1964 civic leaders had promised that the fair would not cost San Antonians any-thing except “the price of admission” should they choose to attend. The Messenger said, “In view of the enormous social needs in San Antonio, a hierachy of values would militate in favor” of other projects rather than erection of the tower. A few days before the election it was announced that Dallas financier Lamar Hunt had considered underwriting the tower project, which would have made the bond vote unnecessary. But no deal was made. Plans for a private club that had been planned for the tower were dropped in the face of public criticism of such a facility in a municipally-financed undertaking. V HemisFair Commissioner General