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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 5

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

T- T- wm i i 1 ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE Wednesday, Sept. 8. 1965 5A AROUND THE 5I Mv House Okays Base Funds, Upholds Veto New York Times News Service WASHINGTON The Mrs. Johnson Links Ugly Cities, Riots New York Times Newt Servict JACKSON, Wyo. Mrs.

Lyndon B. Johnson said last night she believed ugly neighborhoods had contributed to crime and rioting. i House passed a revised $1.7 billion military construction Mme. Chiang Hopes to Talk to LBJ NEW YORK ID Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek said yesterday she hopes to have "conversations" with the President and Mrs.

Johnson and indicated that she had a message for the bill yesterday after trouncing efforts to override a presi-! In the next decade, she areas on 1 per cent of the the nation's cities willjtion's land, she added, much dential veto. more must be done. have to take their "longest strides in his- The earlier bill, curbing She suggested burying pow- powers of the executive tory" toward er and telephone lines and beautification. I crushing junked automobiles branch in closing military The cities will if or salvage, curbing stream President. Mme.

Chiang discussed her plans at a news conference before leaving for Washington yesterday. The wife of the Chinese Nationalist chief of state said the Johnsons visited her and the generalissimo when in Formosa "and I should like to see them now, when I am in their country." There pollution and preserving trees bases, was vetoed by President Johnson Aug. 21. recognize in this not only human In ru In no mood to renew its when developing city subdivisions. Mrs.

Johnson urged Congress not to adjourn without passing the administration's values, she said, but also "a primary economic asset, a way fight with the White House, the House turned down a Re pending bill on highway beau publican-led effort to override the veto. The vote was 318 to 19. The revised bill, hammered out by the House Armed Services Committee, then sailed tification. LBJ Votes Lady Bird to get. payrolls.

Johnson The city that is beautiful brings a high return on the dollar. The ugly city is the one which will decline and die." The first lady spoke to a joint banquet of the American Forestry Association and through on a vote of 347 to 0. On Change in Texas Senate JOHNSON CITY, Tex. UPI President Johnson voted yesterday in a special election to the National Council of State Garden Clubs at Jackson Lake Lodge under the soaring peaks of the Teton Range just west of the Continental Divide. 'Not Enough' "It is not enough simply to stake out a few splendid areas like the Tetons and say 'here is a place for said Mrs.

Johnson. "Beauty cannot be set aside for vacations or increase the size of the Texas Senate from 31 to 39 The Senate is expected to accept the compromise. The brief House debate found Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, cast in a new role of supporting the administration position.

As chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, he had led the earlier fight to curb Pentagon powers. Opposing efforts to override the veto, Rivers urged the House to drop its fight with the President in the interests of national security. The earlier bill would have barred the Pentagon from closing any military base for 120 days after reporting details of the plan to the Senate and House Armed Services committees. The compromise worked out in committee would require the Pentagon to give Congress just a 30-day notice. This meets with the White House approval.

While unwilling to push nas Deen no announcement irom tne wmie Mme. House on such a meeting. Chiang Canada's Labor Day Deaths Hit 112 TORONTO UP) Accidental deaths in Canada during the three-day Labor Day weekend climbed to 112, the second highest Labor Day total and the fourth straight year in which Labor Day fatalities have exceeded 100. A Canadian press survey from 6 p.m. to midnight Monday, showed 71 persons died in traffic accidents and there were 13 drownings, 7 fire deaths and 21 deaths in miscellaneous mishaps.

U.S. Chess Champion Moves Up NEW YORK (LTD U.S. chess champion Bobby Fischer moved yesterday into a three-way tie for first place with Borislav Ivkov of Yugoslavia and Vasily Smyslov of Russia in Havana's Capablanca Memorial Tournament. Fischer moved to the front rank by defeating Gilberto Garcia of Cuba. Fischer, 22, will play Ivkov today.

Fischer's moves will be cabled from here to Cuba because the U.S. State Department forbad Fischer to visit the Communist-controlled island. Red China-Algeria Talks Sst ALGIERS (LTD Chinese Communist Foreign Minister Chen Yi arrived yesterday for talks with Algerian Premier Houari Boumedienne and Foreign Minister Abdelazis Boute-flika, reportedly on the Indian-Pakistani clash. They are. also expected to discuss the Afro-Asian summit meeting to be held here Nov.

5. West Germany Short of Workers New York Times News Service BONN Unemployment in West Germany has reached a record low of 85.000 workers. Government figures released yesterday show that only 0.4 per cent of the West German working force were not holding jobs in August. Of the 85,000 men and women listed as unemployed, many are either physically incapable of working or in the process of transferring from one job to another. This means that, in this nation of more than 57 million people, unemployment is practically non-existent.

The acute shortage of labor is a serious problem for industry. The government estimates that there are now over 730,000 unfilled jobs in the country which already has more than 1.2 million foreign "guest workers." The President did not indicate how he voted on the proposed constitutional amendment, generally favored by rural communities such as his home town of Johnson City. Johnson cast his ballot at the office of the Pedernales Electric Cooperative Inc. Asked how he intended to vote, the President merely said, "I'm going to vote." He greeted office personnel at the electric co-op and walked in a spacious room to cast his ballot. He then flew by helicopter to Austin and special occasions.

It cannot be the occasional privilege of those who come long distances to visit nature. It cannot be reserved for 'nice neighborhoods' only. "I am quite sure that ugliness, the gray, dreary unchanging world of crowded, deprived neighborhoods has contributed to riots, to mental ill health, to crime." This was an allusion to recent riots in Negro ghettos of boarded the presidential plane to return Washing iLos Angeles, Chicago and ton. elsewhere. Playgrounds Mrs.

Johnson said the riots pointed up the need for "imaginative" park playgrounds "such as the one Mrs. Vincent Astor created in crowded Harlem." Because 75 per cent of the population now lives in urban for overriding the President's veto, Rivers took a few parting shots at the White House. "Is there anyone here who is so naive as to believe the real problem of today is the erosion of power of the executive by the Congress?" he asked. "We all know the contrary is true." LABOR BOOM FORECAST BELGRADE The world's pool of labor manpower will reach 1.5 billion in 1975, compared with 1.1 billion in 1960, according to papers presented at the World Population Conference here. fat House Okays Yet Aide Hike WASHINGTON (LTD The House voted yesterday to increase compensation of service-disabled veterans by between 5 and 20 per cent.

The biggest increases would go to the most severely handicapped. The increases would average 10 per cent, boosting current compensation costs by about $178 million yearly. They were described as cost-of-living increases. The House approved the bill, 347 to 0, and forwarded it to the Senate for expected early passage. A veteran of wartime service rated as 100 per cent dis liatchabelli's GOLDEN AUTUMN Brilliant, tender, fall's own fragrance that combines the mellow warmth of September with top notes of October frost a fragrance classic: COLOGNE 2.50 and 3.50 COLOGNE Spray Mist 3.00 2.00 IF A 31 2.00 Jil 2.50 irXHlml COLOGNE S.

Traveler DUSTING POWDER CREME SACHET BATH OIL abled from service-connected causes now gets $250 per month. Under yesterday's bill, his monthly check would be $300. Compensation for a COSMETICS, STREET FLOOR, MIDTOWN; selections at NORTHGATE and GENEVA i 0 I 10 per cent disability rating COAT PLUS DRESS EQUALS TOTAL LOOK would go from $20 to $21 per month. Allowances for dependent children of service -disabled veterans also would rise. Existing income limitations on dependent parents also would be raised, with compensation increases resulting in some cases.

The Administration recommended a smaller increase in compensation allowances, totalling $102 million yearly. IIOlPGfiEGJi) Capital's superb interpretation of th total look jhe look to be in this Fall created in a magnificent fabria of imported Italian wool In a rich paisley print. Beautiful shaped seaming distinguishes the elegantly tailored coat and the stark simplicity of th little-sleeved dress. Neutral tones of grey or brown. Misses' sizes.

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75 Camp Rood at Exit 57 NYS Thruwoy i.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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