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Arizona Daily Star du lieu suivant : Tucson, Arizona • Page 4

Lieu:
Tucson, Arizona
Date de parution:
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4
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a a a a a a a TWO-SECTION A THE ARIZONA DAILY STAR SUNDAY, JULY 24, 1966 Clift Dies In NYC At Age 45 Actor Succumbs From Occlusion (Continued From Page One) shoe salesman and had to work in Denver three months, that doesn't mean I'd move my to Denver. I'm an actor and I go where the work is." Clift once turned down a sub-stantial money offer to play in a film in favor of a $100-a-week salary for his role in a New "York City off-Broadway produc-tion of Chekov's "The Sea Clift was once described as a man living the role most actors would like to play. He was as completely original in his actions, twisting from mood to mood swiftly, Ga acting, Describing he said the "If you limitations can play of you can't play a peasant. If you can play a peasant, can't play Singer-actor Frank Sinatra, who co-starred with Clift in "From Here to Eternity," said from his honeymoon hideaway: "I'm deeply saddened by his passing. He was not only a fine human being and as good friend, he was also one of the finest actors of our time." He was scheduled to begin work this fall in Italy in in a Golden Eye," with Elizabeth Taylor.

In 1961, producer Stanley offered Clift $300,000 to play the major role in at Nuremberg," an account of the war crimes trials following World War II. accepted a smaller role of a Jewish concentration camp Inmate and turned down the offered for work because it would lower his salary his, in later films. Goddard Gets Endorsement From COPE PHOENIX (AP) The Arizona AFL-CIO committee on political education endorsed five Democratic candidates for major offices Saturday during its third biennial convention. "hundred Labor spokesmen said several delegates endorsed Sam Goddard, Rep. George in District Three, John for state treasur.

er, Robert Kennedy for state tax commissioner and Milton Husky for corporation commissioner. William Shafter, president of organization, said endorsements were withheld final reports from some Shafer said endorsement of candidates in 1 and 2, where there is no opposition, will be until after the primary election. John E. Evans, AFL-CIO said the committee withheld endorsement of an attorney general candidate two Democrats, Reid and Charles Duecy, both are acceptable to labor. Evans said the union felt it was not its job to endorse candidates for judgeships or for state superintendent public instruction.

World News Briefly Told Compiled From Wire Services The Johnson administration was reported Saturday night to be seriously considering proposing special legislation to end the 16-day-old airlines strike. Informed sources said that the White House had not made its final decision, but that if it did decide to propose the legislation, it would probably offer a bill calling for compulsory arbitration of the airline dispute. A general antistrike bill would not be sought, according to these sources. The administration, the sources said, began Friday to put matter under serious study because it was apparent that the settlement talks still were deadlocked and likely to remain so. Reactions To Riots Rioting in New York, Cleveland, undermining support for civil rights legislation in Congress, sponsors agree privately.

Although they are reluctant to comment publicly on the matter, influential Senators feel that resentment against the lawlessness that has swept Negro slums has built up resistance to enactment of any measure "at gun as one of them put it. For example, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, is telling friends that the disorders in Brooklyn have been very damaging to efforts to get legislative help of any kind for those penned up in the ghettos. An air of suspense hung over Troy, N.Y., Saturday after two fires set with homemade bombs and the arrest of three young Negro men police said were carrying several such bombs.

Civil rights leaders expressed hope the incident might end racial trouble but fear that it might not. City Manager Robert A. Stierer said the police force would remain beefed up. Ex-Beverage ge Executive Called In Gifts Inquiry PHOENIX (P) Al Lindsey director of the Arizona Retail has been subpoenaed to bring liquor to state legislators. Lindsey was directed to preliminary hearing for former Rep.

Louis Ellsworth of Globe, charged with four counts involving alleged bribery and influence peddling on liquor licenses. The Saturday subpoena, was Superior delivered Judge Laurence Wren, as he heard five state senators called as witnesses for the defense on similar charges against State Sen. Ben Arnold, D-Pinal. Arnold was present Saturday as Wren, behind closed doors, heard legal arguments presented by Arnold's attorney, John Flynn. The co-defendant, John Ornelas of Phoenix, was not present, but was represented by his lawyer, Ed Brash.

Flynn declined to discuss the nature of the motion he presented Saturday, but indicated the case against Arnold would be washed out if it were granted by Wren. Flynn called five members of the Senate Appropriations Committee headed by Arnold. They were Democratic Sens. George Peck of Maricopa County, Glenn Blansett of Navajo, A. R.

Spikes of Cochise, Robert Morrow of Mohave and Sol Ahee of Pima. Each was before the judge about half an hour. They said they were directed by the court not to discuss their testimony. The Arnold hearing was continued to Aug. 5, with a possible earlier date if lawyers for both sides can find openings in their schedules.

Colonel's Widow Dies In Missouri BOONVILLE, MO. (AP) Mrs. Bertha Johnston Hitch, 88, widow of Col. Arthur M. Hitch, once superintendent of Kemper Military School, died at her home Saturday.

Mrs. Hitch, who spent nearly all her life in Booneville, was the daughter of Col. and Mrs. Thomas A. Johnston.

Johnston was superintendent of Kemper for 47 years. Hitch, who became his successor, died in 1956. of Scottsdale, former Licensed Beverage Association, to court records of all gifts of appear Tuesday in Phoenix at the Governor Urges Inducement For New Industries CASA GRANDE (AP) -Gov. 1 Goddard said Saturday that Arizona must provide the kind of government and tax atmosphere in which new industries can grow and prosper. Goddard told a luncheon meeting that the new state finance department will produce "an efficient down-to-earth organized effort which can give you a dollar's worth of value for every tax dollar spent." The Democratic governor, who seeks re-election, said Arizona's foremost requirement is a tax base which will enable the state to grow and develop properly.

This can be dore, he said, by obtaining the water needed, by promoting more tourist dollars and by diversifying industry. July Car Sales Show Increase DETROIT (P. Ford Motor Chrysler Corp. and General Motors Corp. all report car sale increases for the middle 10 days of July compared with the same period in 1965.

American Motors said its sales were down for the period. GM, which supplies more than 50 per cent of the market, said its sales totaled 121,888 passenger cars during the period, compared with 114,436. GM noted there were nine selling days in the 1966 period, compared with eight in last year's. Bats emit and react to supersonic vibrations of 45,000 to 000 cycles per second, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. DON'T MISS THIS TREMENDOUS Open Mon.

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PENNINGTON TUCSON PHOENIX FREE PARK OR RIDE AND SHOP SERVICE Famed Tenor Donald Novis Dies At 60 COSTA MESA, Calif. (P) Singer Donald Novis, internationally known tenor of the 1930s and '40s, died of pneumonia Saturday, friends reported. Novis, 60, had been ill for a month, they said. A regular of the "Fibber McGee and Molly" radio show, Novis also was a star in Billy Rose's show "Jumbo" on Broadway. Among movies he played in were "Monte "One Hour with You," "The Singing Boxer," "The Singing and "The Big Broadcast." He was known for his recordings "Diane" and "Charmaine, and recently was attempting a singing comeback in Disneyland's Golden Horseshoe Saloon.

A native of Hastings, England, he attended Pasadena, High School and Whittier, College, where he was "most likely to succeed" in 1925. He married his first wife, Julietta, a vocalist, in 1931 and was divorced four years later. In 1938 he married actress Dorothy Bradshaw in Phoenix. He leaves his widow, Dorothy, two daughters, two brothers and a sister. Services were planned for Tuesday evening at Ives and Warren Mortuary here.

Shoplifting Charge Filed Two young women were in city jail Saturday night on charges of shoplifting. Scheduled to appear in Justice Court Monday are Patricia Lopez, 20, of 3217 E. Hawthorne, and Edith Ann Berry, 21, of 3419 E. Lind. They are accused of taking two girdles, two brassieres and two pairs of women's pants from Save Department Store, 5545 E.

Broadway. The value of the items was $15.31, store spokesmen said. Canteens Missing Two Reservists' Jeep Discovered Abandoned BARSTOW, Calif. (AP) servists missing since last Sunday serted mountainous area at the spokesmen reported. Spokesmen said the jeep about eight miles northeast of Ft.

Irwin, where 2nd Lt. Arthur E. Rowland, 24, of Monrovia, and Sepc. 4 Jeffrey Cullimore, 24, of Bountiful, Utah, had been attending training camp. The milease is approximately 35 northeast of here.

Officers said the men apparently carried two canteens of water with them, since the canteens were missing on the base. Temperatures in the area were reported above 110 degrees. Officials said the men could not have survived more than two days in the heat without water. They declined to estimate survival chances with the canteens. No food or other supplies were missing from the base.

The jeep was in good condition but out of gas, officers said, and rocks found in the vehicle indicated the men had been to Death Valley. Searchers were unable to find footprints on the rocky ground. A 40-vehicle search was under way in an area covering a 10 to 15-mile radius from where the jeep was found. A base camp was set up four miles from this point. Cullimore's father was reported to be at the camp and aiding in the search.

Waiting at Ft. Irwin was Rowland's young bride of three weeks, Edwina. She said they had been planning a vacation trip following the training camp session. The reservists' unit finished training camp Saturday, and spokesmen said no volunteers had remained behind to aid i in the search. A staff sergeant said the ruggedness of the terrain 'requires familiarity with desert conditions on the part of all searchers.

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$1165 FREE selection of Large chico cool summer 70 E. Pennington are "We Mail Gifts" available. Open Fri. Nites Phoenix Man Is Chairman Of Pardons Board PHOENIX (P) W. W.

Witt of Phoenix was elected chairman Saturday of the new State Board of Pardons and Paroles. The Rev. Walter Hofmann was named acting director of pardons and paroles. He was chairman of the old board and a member of the group for 32 years. Hofmann was retained by the new board at his present annual salary of $9,670.

Donald L. Welker of Safford was named vice chairman. Other new board members are A. Alan Henshaw of Tucson, Peter C. Byrne of Yuma and William P.

Reilly of Phoenix. Full Parity Near, Freeman Predicts COLUMBUS, Neb. (P Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman predicted Saturday night that full parity of income for the adequate sized family farm can be reached by the end of this year. In remarks prepared for a report and review meeting in Columbus, the secretary said remarkable progress has been made since 1960 because the farmer and his government worked together to put the right kind of legislation on the books, "lived up to our respective reresponsibility under that government and kept faith with one another Healthy Increase WASHINGTON (AP) New orders for machine tools exceeded $1 billion during the first six months of this year, a 46 per cent jump from the same 1965 period, the National Machine Tool Builders Assn. reported Saturday.

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The three-year contract between Western Electric Co. and the telephone equipment installers unit of the union expires Thursday. George Vogelsang of Phoenix, president of CWA Local 8490, said strike preparations are well advanced--to the point where members already are painting picket signs. A spokesman for Mountain States' Phoenix office said the company is prepared to "try to maintain service as best we can" in the event of a strike. He said much of the public may be inconvenienced little if any by a strike since most of the telephone company's equipment is automated.

Nematoda, which destroy an estimated 10 per cent of the world's food production, are the world's most destructive plant pests. union telephone employes in strike which could occur jeep used by two Army rewas found Saturday in a deedge of Death Valley, Army was discovered in rocky terrain Frenchman Continues Hot Hike DEATH VALLEY. Calif. (AP) Footsore Frenchman Jean Pierre Marquant reached the halfway mark Saturday on his 100-mile trek across this lowdown blazing hot national monument, officials reported. Earlier, concern for the safety of the 28-year-old adventurer was relieved when he trudged into a checkpoint more than 12 hours late at noon Saturday.

Marquant said rough terrain forced him to reduce his pace and spend the night on the slopes of rugged Wild Rose Mountain. After a brief noon rest, the x-paratrooper continued his trek across the scorched desert where ground temperatures up to 190 degrees have been corded. He said he hoped to camp Saturday night on foot telescope peak. The valley's lowest point- Bad Water -is almost 280 feet below sea level. Ranger John Krisko said the high at the peak Saturday was a relatively frigid 80 degrees in comparison to the valley, where it was 116 in the shade.

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