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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 1

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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THE OLDEST DAILY NEWSPAPER IN THE UNITED STATES-FOUNDED 1771 THE WEATHER V. S. Weather Bureau Forecast Philadelphia and vicinity: Sunny, windy and cold Tuesday. High in the mid 30s. Windi west to northwest 15 to 20 miles an hour.

Fair and continued cold Wednesday. COMPLETE WEATHER DATA ON PAGE 34 CITY EDITION PUBLIC LEDGER AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER FOR ALL THE PEOPLE November Circulation: Daily, Sunday, 990,199 TUESDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 15. 1964 Copyright 1964 by Triangle Publications, Vol. 271.

No. 168 Dailv: Home Delivered 48 Cents Per Week TEN CENTS Itumimr U. BritainjNavy Assisrns Phila. Yard Rights Act Is Upheld By Supreme Court; Sit-In Cases Voided By ANDREW J. GLASS Special to The Inquirer and N.

Y. Herald Tribune pUJ 1V11111U11 111 OllljJ tHUUQ Diplomats Washington Recalls Will Boost Work Force By 2000 By JEROME S. CA11ILL WASHINGTON, Dec. 14. The Supreme Court upheld Monday the mainspring of 4.

K'r 3 Attaches; London Brings Home Aide By WARREN UNNA Special to The Inquirer And Washington Pout the 1964 Civil Rights Act a ban on racial discrimination in public facilities. Acting with rare unanimity, the nine justices rebuffed the first and most sweeping constitutional challenge And ROBERT S. INGERSOLL 1 7 to the historic anti-bias legis Johnson Statement Of The Inquirer Staff The Philadelphia Naval WASHINGTON, Dec. 14. Four Soviet Embassy military lation by clearly affirming the power of Congress to open Southern hotels, motels and restaurants to Negroes.

attaches have been ordered expelled from Washington and London as the United Then, dividing 5 to 4, the court Shipyard, spared a Pentagon economy ax only last month, on Monday received the revitalizing news from Washing a 1 States and Britain, in a co 1 I ton that it was to be assigned construction of three fleet ordinated move, called home four of their own attaches vessels a $165 million pro from Moscow. Robert J. McCloskey, State Department press officer, announced Monday that the So I Acceptance of Law WASHINGTON, Dec. 14 White House made public Monday the following statement by President Johnson on the Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of the new Civil Rights Law's public accommodatigns section: THE Civil Rights Act of 1964 was proposed by two Presidents. It was overwhelmingly adopted by Congress and now the constitutionality of its public accommodations section has been upheld by a unanimous vote of the Supreme Court.

The Nation has spoken with a single voice on the question of equal rights and equal opportunity. I have been heartened by the spirit with which the people of the South have accepted the act even though many were opposed to its passage. There already has been encouraging widespread compliance with the act in the five months it has been law. Now that the Supreme Court also has ruled, I think we all join in the hope and the resolution that this kind of reasonable and responsible acceptance of law will continue and increase. viet military attaches had been ruled that the rights law wiped out trespass charges against sit-in demonstrators arrested before the act became law.

The order meant that some 3000 criminal sit-in prosecutions throughout the South must be dismissed. These include cases not yet tried and those in which convictions were handed down and appealed. 630 COMPLAINTS Since the law went into effect, about 650 complaints have been received by the Justice Department and the new Community Relations Service alleging discrimination in places of public accommodation. Congress, court noted, is given the unwelcome label of persona non grata for activi ties incompatible with their dip lomatic status." gram. Cmdr Vincent C.

Langan, administrative officer at the yard, said once construction was started about six months from new, some 460 employes to be furloughcd in January will be recalled and an additional 2000 employes will be hired. FOUR-YEAR PERIOD Construction of the vessels, anticipated to extend over a "three to four year" period, While McCloskey declined to go into specific charges against the Soviet attaches, he said they would be "made known to the Soviet Government if it asked." CURB EFFECTIVENESS empowered by the Constitution will warrant bolstering yard employes to "10,000 plus," com to regulate commerce "among the several States" and since pared to the present level of 8100, Langan said. The tidings were relayed to Analysis of Court Split and Reactions to Rulings on Page 3 Philadelphia by Rep. Richard S. Schweiker a member of the House Armed Serv ices Committee.

He was noti McCloskey also disclosed that the Western military attaches were being called home from Moscow because the restrictions the Soviets had imposed on their activities have "been tantamount to impairing their total effectiveness." The U. S. and British attaches had been confined to Moscow after being apprehended late in September with 900 photographs and 26 notebooks full of descriptions of a trip across such facilities as motels affect commerce, they may be gov erned under Federal law. Penna. Electors Cast 29 Votes for Johnson, Dine With Scranton Justice Tom C.

Clark, deliver ing the Court's finding in a 20-page opinion, wrote: "We conclude that the action of the Congress in the adoption of this act as applied here AP Wireplioto by cable from Oswiecim Members of the Frankfurt Auschwitz trial court stand on ruins of combined gas chamber and crematorium in Birkcnau concentration camp, Oswie-cim, Poland, during tour of area involved in trial of Nazi SS officers on war crimes charges. Prosecutor Dr. Joachim Kueglcr wears white coat. The Russians raided the at is within the power granted to it by the commerce clause of By SAUL KOHLER Inquirer Harrisburg Bureau fied of thj assignments by Rear Adm. C.

B. Jones, chief of legislative affairs for the Navy. ESTIMATED COSTS Schweiker identified the ships to be built and their estimated costs as follows: An amphibious force flagship (AGO, prototype of a series, estimated cost $75.5 million. An amphibious assault ship (LPH), of the Guam class, estimated cost $60 million. A tank landing ship (LST), estimated cost 130 million.

Schweiker said the new con IIARRISBURG, Dec. 14. Twenty-nine Pennsylvania taches' hotel rooms and accused them of espionage but never bothered to expel them. Instead, the Russians refused to grant the four Western military attaches permits to travel more! the Constitution, as interpreted by this court for 140 years." TV'O TEST CASES The high tribunal gave high priority to two test cases challenging the public accommoda Democrats did Monday what 3.1 million of their fellow voters told them to do last month they cast their ballots U.S. 'Not Ganging Up Nazi Death City for Lyndon B.

Johnson and than 23 miles outside of Mos cow and gave them no invita-l tions law. It heard arguments On de GaullejSeen by Court from both sides last Oct. 5, on the first day of its fall term. struction assigned to Philadel In one case, a co-owner of phia was the biggest slice of Bar Governors OK 'Guidelines' On Press Gag Hubert II. Humphrey for President and Vice President of the United States.

Here, as in 49 other State Capitols and in the District of Columbia, the Electoral College met to ratify the wishes of the voters in an archaic ceremony which goes back to the days before instant communication and rapid transportation. the 216-room Heart of Atlanta tions to last month Nov. 7 Revolution Day military parade. DENIES 'RETALIATION' U. S.

sources said Monday that while the United States never uses the term "retaliation," a coincidence might be Is Assured by Rusk On War Crimes Motel argued that Congress, by new work given to Government shi.r'ards in the Navy's 1965 ship program. depriving him of the right to PARIS, Dec. 14 (UPI). Secretary of State Dean Rusk serve whom he chose, was over-stepping its constitutional By GENE KRAMER NQ RsplTE F0R 4fi4 construed in the fact that the assured President Charles de Gaulle Monday that the United States is not ganging up on France nor attempting to iso- late France from its allies. bounds.

four military attaches being ex OSWIECIM, Poland, Dec. 14j However, the 464 employes (AP). Germans came back; scheduled to receive three- In the other, the owners of 4Rfi DEMOCRATS HFF.T Thn TinerA fu pelled from Washington and month furloughs Jan. 10 will 1 jM Rusk conferred with de Gaulle to Auschwitz this muddy, grey London hold equivalent posts to day to check up on courtroom auacnes nn an hour and a half, 30 min-Jutes longer than planned, on ithe eve of a NATO Council of evidence and assure fair trial movements have been restrict-M ed in Moscow. 4 MinUfpr moptin hvr 21 countrymen accused of WW Ul UUYU ilUl Ul Ui nil' r-t 1 I flu rrv i OHie Barbecue he that their Thus, 486 Democratic electorsj Philadelphia Bar Association on200.scat restaurant in Birming.

gathered in the 44 States andjMonday approved a set of ham lies 11 blocks from the the District of Columbia to constrict the nearest U. S. highway, rarely gave Mr. Johnson and Hum-jflow of information to the publicj caters to interstate travelers, phrey a popular vote plurality, in criminal cases but sent purchases all its foodstuffs And 52 Republican electors another suggested code on thewlthin Alabama and therefore met in the six States carried rights of arrestees back for. Continued on Page 3, Column 1 The three attaches ordered 'sharp Allied disagreements onf," innocent prisoners in Hitler's biggest death camp.

nuclear policy. Ami1 ar rnm alnri a nrl expelled from the Soviet Embassy here are: General-Mayor Vasily V. Zadvinski, the armv nr ii iium muiui nuioic M-ums uiuiic, uua chambcr ruins, the West ruins, German court team began an Continued on Page 2, Column 3 by Sen. Barry Goldwater andlmore discussion. Rep.

William E. Miller, the GOPl Tne passage of the informa- receive no respite. "It's a shame," said Langan, "but that's the way it is. There is work now, but not enough to support these people." Langan said most of the work scheduled for the third and fourth quarters of the fiscal year, ending next July 1, was in the repair and rehabilitation category. Six destroyers are currently being overhauled, and two others are undergoing a more extensive "FRAM" operation, standing for "Fleet Rehabilitation and Modernization." Although the latter operation is an eight to nine month job, one inspection of the Auschwitz- Birkcnau complex where Nazi Typhoon Damage in Special Interest Today Railless (rains, jet-pro-polled and riding on a cushion of air in enclosed tubes, arc suggested as the solution to transporla-tion problems along the Northeast coast of the U.

S. The proposal is dis- cussed in an article on the Feature Page, Vutjc 27 Pompidou and Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville. VARIETY OF ISSUES Rusk and dp Gaulle ranspd nominees lor resident ana vice President. SS guards killed more than four million Jews and other top officers and 12 members of bet at MllllOnS India Shunning A-Bomb Race SUBMITTED TO HOUSE the board that compose the full MANILA, Dec. 14 (UPI).

Typhoon Opal, with winds ur to The results of the balloting Board of Governors means the over a broad series of issues facing the Western Alliance, in-jEYIDENCE CHECKED jcluding the controversial mul- WRh mcasurcs and cam were sent to the chief clerk of "code" will be put to a vole 175 miles an hour, pummeledl NEW DELHI, Dec. 14 (AP). thickly populated crop-rich Lu-India 1S in a position to produce iiiaierai nuc car lorce the Rroup meticuiousiy of the general membership of the U. S. House of Representatives, who will read them to a zon Island on Monday and caus iue aidu auu 'jcon iputcd distances, took pic the association.

an atomic bomb but still is committed not to do so recardless are snarpiy at ooas over iuir. nH rhprkpd locations in 29 joint session of Congress on NOTE SET DEC Rusk said afterward he orcier to establish if witnesses ed millions of dollars worth of damage to the southeastern tip of this major island. The storm killed two persons. Continued on Page 38, Column 5 of what Communist China a spokesman for Prime Lai Bahadur Shastri told Par- 'i This vote will be at a meeting scheduled for 3:30 P. Dec.

29 in the brought de Gaulle "very cordial reaiy coui(j have seen and personal greetings" from identified perpetrators of alroc-iPresident Johnson. The possibil-'ities that occurred a gencra- injured three others, derailed liament on Monday. Jan. 6. At that point, the election of Mr.

Johnson and Sen. Humphrey will be official. Copies of the results also are sent to the General Services Administration to the Federal courts in the districts where the a tram with at least 1000 pas 9 3d Bomb Blast RipsStudyCenter The Board decided that asso ity of their meeting early next year was not brought up, he said. sengers and grounded a British tion ago. Dr.

Hans Grossman, prosecutor from Frankfurt, said the in- ciation's Committee on Criminal freighter. Law should get its recommenda A landslide caused by heavy Rusk described their talk asispection was an official court Shastri said in view of China's recent explosion of a nuclear device government would step up development of atomic energy for peaceful purposes. "We believe we are far ahead of Red China in this he added. BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, tions on the rights of arrested rains dumped by the typhoon balloting was conducted. "a very friendly and frank dis-! proceeding under West German Shopp'mg fJuis Until Christmas 14 (AP).

A terrorist Scene of the Pennsylvania persons. claimed the lives of a farmer Electoral College was the cham- Association Chancellor Thco-! and his daughter in Virac, Ca ber of the House of ReDresenta- rlnrp V'onrhpps said the Roarditanduanes tussiuu me type ui iucL'uug'iaw to Clear up aouDiiui pumis that is extremely helpful the Frankfurt trial. aIllCS I 'BLACK WALL' VIEWED 'ENJOYED TALKS' The 23.membcr West German bomb exploded Monday against the facade of the Center of National Studies, headed by a political colleague of Gen. tives, after which the electors: wished the Committee on Crim-were guests of Gov. William W.

jnal Law to make certain Dis- Stevenson Defends Congo Action "I thoroughly enjoyed the team gazed silently for 20 sec conversation," he said trict Attorney James C. Crum-lish, and Polece Commissioner Howard R. Leary are in full agreement in regard to onds at the "Black Wall ofcciro Aramburu wno Helped Auschwitz," a fragment of brickjoust dictator Juan D. Peron in wall where the SS is said to have 1955 French sources said they ap African "Tirade TVnnnnrpfl Scranton at a $4-a-pIate beef strogonoff luncheon in the Executive Suite. Mostly dlmocrais Scranton noted that "in few nations in this modern world" parently did not go into any detail in discussing problems to both "codes." sliol li Uealu puaoncri.

Other visitors observed a minute of silence. Voorhees said he had assured the Board there had been (dividing the Alliance and creative have no apologies to in2 between the United States and France. The attack on the center, located in nearby Lanus, was the third bombing incident in three days aimed at members of Aramburu's party. could a Governor of one politi- I The first inspections were at! Continued on Page 8, Column 5 one of, the notorious Birkcnau railway By DARIUS S. JHABVALA Special to The Inquirer And N.

Y. Herald Tribune UNITED NATIONS, Dec. 14. nionc iu any aidtc tipJl'tU lily before this council. We arc Continued on Page 4, Column 4 U.

S. officials said Rusk's main purposes was tn'sDiirs. where freight cars of. Nations from its inception, off and on, for seven years," Stevenson began. "But never before have I heard such irrational, irresponsible, insulting and repugnant language in these chambers, and used to contemptuously proud of our part in saving hu ragged prisoners were unloaded man lives, imperiled by civil Continued on Page 5, Column 4'anj Ss doctors decided -on im- U.

S. Ambassador Adlai Ste Killer Weather Hits Europe Again 3n Sljr Sttqmrrr Departments and Features vvar in the Congo," he doclar-1, Continued on Page 2, Column 3 impugn and slander the gallant ed. venson, flushed with anger, Monday characterized chargs Moods Kill 5UU and successful effort to save LONDON, Dec. 14 human lives of many nationali Killer weather struck Europe a sain Monday, touching off In S. Vietnam Lunar Eclipse saigon, Vietnam, Dec.

14 Due on Friday On The Air WFIL-RADIO 56 8:00 A. M. News 11:05 A. M. Jim Gearhart 8:25 P.

Villa-nova vs. Toledo WFIL-TV Channel 6 9:30 A. M. eatures for Women 12:30 P. U.S.A.

Girl" more flooding on land and tragedy at sea. s. omciais in central; NEW YORK, Dec. 14 (AP). by some African states against the United States as "irrational, irresponsible, insulting and repugnant." Stevenson's remarks, made before the Security Council, were considered by many veteran diplomats to be the toughest they ever heard him make.

The U. S. Ambassador de Amusements 18, 19 Auctions 44 Bridge 45 Business and Financial 28 to 31 Classified Ads 38 to 41 Comics 45 Vietnam reported Monday that. An hour-long total eclipse of the Three persons were reported drowned in Britain. Hundreds ties and colors.

"But even such a torrent of abuse of my country is of no consequence, compared to the specter of racial antagonism and conflict raised in this chamber," he went on. "I need no credentials as a spokesman for racial equality and social Death Notices 34 Editorials 26 Obituaries 34, 38 Real Estate 29 Sports 35 to 38 Television and Radio 20 to 23 Women's News 17, 18 Page 27 500 persons drowned and 2000, moon will occur Friday night wore inft hornpipe as (hp rp. and, weather permitting in in- Stevenson then accused some governments, including those "as far away as Peking and Moscow, as near as Burundi and the neighboring Congo (Brazzaville)" of interfering in the internal affairs of the Congo. "Let us understand what is happening," Stevenson said. "What is happening is that outside governments are claiming that they not the government of the Congo shall decide whether that government can be assisted or whether its ene- of troops supported by amphibious vehicles swung into action lr battle floods in the storm- 4:00 P.

Theater, piagued west of England. color) The Finnish towns of Tam- 5:25 T. M. Cartoons "Woodyj misaari and Provoo were flood- justice in this country. The government of this country needs none in the orld." Stevenson spoke at the fourth session of a council meeting Woodpecker" ed by rising rivers.

Little dam dividual localities, will be vis- suit of a new flood two prov- iWe througnout North and South inccs over the weekend. America. Hardest hit was Ninh Thuan, The moon will be almost half-Province, 170 miles northeastU'ay UP lhp sky when jt starts of here, where flood waters re-to darjl I shadow, called the umbra, at portcdly were at a depth of EST The shadow to 12 fect. Crops were reported! wni completely cover the lunar destroyed, with most livestock 'disk from 9:07 to 10:07 P. MJ dead.

land the eclipse will finally end The city of Nha Trang in'at 11:15 P. M. 6:55 M. Sports (color) WFIL-FM 102.1 mc. age we 3 reported.

The German coaster Deutsch-land sank in the lower Elbe called by 21 Afro-Asian nations 'mies shall be assisted to over nounced charges by the African states that the Nov. 24 rescue mission in Stanleyville was motivated by racism and was an aggression on the Congo. He accused some of the critical African nations of interfering in the internal affairs of the Congo by supplying money and arms to the rebel forces of Christopher Gbenya. "I have served in the United Feature Page Best of Broadway Eest of Hollywood, John M. Cummings Marguerite Higgins Walter Lippmann Victor Riesel Red Smith Legal Problems Complete Weather Page 18 Page 18 Page 26 Page 27 Page 27 Page 27 Page 36 Page 27 Page 34 and Yugoslavia to consider al-jthrow it.

legations of U. ag- "This- is intervention in gross gression in the rescue of 1700' violation of the United Nations 11:00 P. M. For Orchestras River after a collision with the Only I Norwegian ship Vera. Four of Television and Rndin J.ixt.inns, the sunken ship seven-man multinational rebel hostages in Charter and of repeated reso- the strifetorn Congo.

He cate lutions of this council concern on Pages 20 and 22. crew were picked up, but one of them, the master, later died. Khanh Hoa Province also was The last total eclipse visible reported hard hit. 'in this country was last June 24. gorically denied the charges.

ing the Congo..

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Pages Available:
3,846,583
Years Available:
1789-2024