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Independent from Long Beach, California • 1

Publication:
Independenti
Location:
Long Beach, California
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FEATURES INDEX Amusement B-8, LAC. Bays rrrr Classified ...04 Market s.J... A-10 VWllIiCtt maiKeis.1M.,.A-io WEATHER 4. 'Cloudy night and earty mornlng tours with Hazy sunshine late moinlng and, afternoon hours. High today 74.

Complete weather Tag A-2. Comics II B-12 Death B-7 Shipping Editorial Spurts 1 1 Jr The Southland9 JLlFinestMorning Newspaper HE S-IIAI No. HE'zi95 irk, .51 PA6ES LONG BEACH I CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE HM, VOL-B NO. 291 HOME EDITION 10 rie laii 0 9 L.B. Unit mwr mm xt by UAW CONFETTI SHOWERS ON IKE IN MANILA More than members of the United Auto Workers "hit the bricks Wednesday morning after negotiations between the union and Douglas Ajrcraft Co.

officials failed to bring an agreement. Workers of. the second shift, which quit 53 minutes ahead of their 12:54 a. m. closing time.

laughed and joked as they walked through the company gates. Meanwhile talks continued at the company's main office at Santa Monica in an effort to bring the strike to a quick halt. All gates at the plant were manned by UAW pickets who challenged anyone entering the plant. An unusually heavy traffic problem developed as worried wives met their-husbands to-determine if the strike 'was a reality. Even if an agreement is reached, the final decision must be ratified by a majority of the UAW members.

Tentative plans call for a mass meeting of union members at Veterans Memorial Stadium. Eisenhower, Garcia Discuss i Modern Arms for Philippines GETTING READY Smear Drive Batiifiring Against Reds Preparations for a strike against the Douglas Aircraft Long Beach plant are made late Monday at headquarters of Local 148, United Auto Workers. From left are Eddies Fletcher Of 3711 Farquhar Los Alamitos, a steward; Walt Huggins of 108 Home a senior trustee, and Joseph LajCrOix469 Truman Boyd members of the uinons executive board. (Staff Photo.) exorbitant demands equal share of the sidered for an traffic. Report Missing Plane By MERRIMAN SMITH.

MANILA (UPI) President Eisenhower and Philippine President Carlos P. Garcia today discussed the possibility of more fnodem American weapons possibly nuclear for this island republic. Presidential Secretary James C. Hagcrty said the two leaders discussed military cooperation between -the two countries at 'a business session this morning at th6 Malacanang Palace. After the talks Eisenhower drove past thousands of cheering Filipinos through the streets of Manila to lay a wreath on the monument of Dr.

Jose Rizal, one of the heroes of the Philippines. Spotted on Mountain THE UNION is seeking an improved medical plan and assurance of a union si p. No increases are being sought at this timer because of. the company's announce ment that it lost 33 million IUCIII uiai It iM lllilliun biggest welcomes of his career, but it was another impressive display of friendship for the American leader on the sdcond day of his danger-tinged Far Eastern tour. Many surged forward and' tried to shake hands.

Hagerty said the two executives did not go into details of possible new weapons, leaving. that for their aides. Hagcrty said the question of possible nuclear weapons to be based in the Philippines was not mentioned fti his presence but that he could not rule out the possibility of some mention of this. He said Eisenhower and Garcia also agreed to resume negotiations for a new civil air agreement between the two countries "shortly. Negotiations on this broke down in Washington 10 days ago after the' Philippines present ed what U.S.

negotiators con' TOKYO (UPI) A vitriolic Communist campaign to smear President Eisenhower and wreck his Far East good will tour appeared to be backfiring today. His tumultuous welcome to the Philippines by two million people in Manila showed signs of being infectious. En thusiastic welcomes were being prepared for him in Formosa, Okinawa, South Korea and even in Tokyo, where internal political strife has sparked Red-led anti-Ike demonstrations. Word of the tremendous reception Eisenhower received in Manila gave impetus to a swell of Japanese sentiment against the riotous leftists who have vowed to "punish'' the President. ANCHORAGE, Alaska CH An airliner with 14 persons 5lU.MMi.iAJ AMJ doIUr, during the pan -of the missing plane was spotted on 9,620 feet-high Mt.

Gilbert. year. Preparations made by Local 1 148 went into effect as the Mrs. Odom was returning from a visit with her ailing mother, Mrs. Ellen Juelson, in Crookston, Minn.

She formerly was a nurse at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, 'Minn. Others aboard were Mrs. Joan Edgman and' Mark Edg-man. Anchorage; R. A.

"There is absolutely no chance anyone could have survived," Darby said. Elmendorf Air Force Base here sent a helicopter to the scene about 60 miles east of Anchorage after the wreckage was sighted from a plane. In Seattle, PNA said the THE TWO. presidents in structcd their respective state departments to decide on time for resumption of the discussions. Eisenhower and Garcia also discussed the Communist threat to Asia including the Philippines.

said Eisenhower gave Garcia and other Philippines officials a thorough briefing on the collapse of the Paris summit talks. The two men also held a general discussion" of the international situation. Former Filipino President Sergio bsmena met for a time with Eisenhower and Garcia and presented an aide memoire to support Filipino claims for pay adjustments the Manila government contends the United States still owes veterans here for wartime service. Osmenas aide mcpioire ac tually was a copy ofdhe ex ecutive order he issued as president during he war, raising the salary of Filipino soldiers to that of U.S. troops.

strike deadline arrived. Head-1 quarters was set up in the union's building at 4120 Long Pacific Northern Airlines, operators of the missing Con Beach Blvd. Picket signs, picket assignments had been a pass over the wreckage and THE CROWDS were not as large as the record-breaking mass of two million persons who jammed the streets Tuesday to give him one of the reported the plane apparently had hit near the top of the site was slightly north of route the missing plane would Lrcd Anderson Portlaml Ore normally fly. Costelloe, Oakland. Army Pvt.

James The plane had taken off Ft. Lewis, and 6:16 a.m. (PST) from CordoyajLojs Brammcr, Puyallup, made Monday afternoon. At 'the same time, it ap- peared that progress toward'P3 en skidded down the an agreement between the In- Pe neary ect Wash. US The pilot said life rafts strewn over the hillside, engines and a part of the tail section bearing the red letter were the only identifiable pieces of wreckage.

PNA said its constellations carry the red letters "PNA on the tail. Harris Darby, photog- teraational Association of Machinists and Convair Division of General Dynamics at San Diego was slowing down. THE IAM ALSO called for a strike effective at 12:01 a.m. today against Lockheed -installations. The main Lockheed plants affected are at five crew members were Capt.

Richard Chamber-lain, pilot, Duane Easterly, co-pilot, and stewardesses Jo Ann Saylor and Naomi Lee Matts, all of Seattle, and flight engineer Larry Stevenson, Renton, Wash. on the last leg of a Scattle-Anchorage flight. The propeller-driven Constellation then disappeared in cloudy, drizzly weather. Among the eight passengers was Mrs. Corrine Odonj.

42, wife of Milton W. Odolh of Anchorage. Odom, wealthy beverage distributor-and banker, also has operations in Seattle and Phoenix and iTucson, Ariz. (Continued Page A-3, Col. 6) Fire Breaks Out on A-Sub the Anchorage flew over the HONOLULU (AP) A flash fire broke out aboard the nuclear submarine Sargo Tuesday as it, was 'being prepared for a royal cruise and firemen fought the blaze from boats in the harbor and from the dock.

The blaze apparently started in the SEN. Lyndon Johnson wins full support of Texas Democrats for presidential nomination. Page A-3. Professor Ousted where there arejrapher for 6,000 IAM workers, and Van Times, also Nuys, where there arc' more wreckage than 1,500 employes. In addition, the IAM aiso is prepared to call a strike at midnight Thursday at Douglas plants at Santa Monica and El Scgundo.

workers at the Douglas plant in Charlotte, N. went on strike at in A Woman, 56, Killed Two-Car Crash CHAMPAIGN, III. (UPI) The University of Illinois board of trustees Tuesday fired an assistant biology professor, Leo F. Koch, 44, for saying pre-maritial sexual? intercourse was all right for grovttHip college students. REPORTED missing by his wife, TV's controversial Tom J)uggan turns tip in a Sunset Blvd.

motel. Page. A-9. PACIFIC NORTHERN, which has not haijd a passenger fatality in' 29. years of extensive operations in Alaska and to Seattle, said Cham -berlain was veteran ptldt who had flown the route for 15 years.

"He was one of our most 1 experienced pilots," the air' line said. The Constellation, an exta section from Seattle, had discharged about 50 fishermen and cannery workers at Cordova, a fishing port oil Princp William Sound. The other passengers had taken advan trge of the extra flight to faster connections $(f Anchorage. 56-year-old woman, crushed beneath i'er own automobile after a two-car collision at Alamitos Ave. and Walnut Tuesday afternoon became the city's 2 1st traffic fatality of the year.

torpedo room of the vessel which" carries atomic warheads. But it takes a considerable amount of heat and dis-turbance to affect a nuclear warhead. They have- been unaffected by plane crashes. A public' information officer at Pearl Harbor said details of the cause of the 'blaze and whether anyone was injured were not available immediately. 1 A rupture in the liquid oxygen line near the after torpedo room was given as a probable cause of the blaze.

The compartment is located behind the nuclear locker room which is scaled off. King Bhumibol of Thailand was tq have cruised on the Sargo today. 1959, 13 persons had been killed in tong Beach traffic accidents. Mrs. Wilhelmina Chabqt, of 2691 Magnolia was dead on arrival at Seaside Hospital at 6 p.m.

She suffered a skull A'. t' Not From Space HIS FORECAST TO RANKERS: rt 'M: Weatherman, after sticking his head out the window to take a dose look at the low cloud; which Treaty Ratified 'WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday unanimously approved the new U. security treaty after just 20 minutes debate. The quick action set the stage for possible Senate ratification before President Eisenhower begins his visit to japan on Sunday. Committee Chairman J.

William Fulbright (D-Ark) told news-' men he hopes for. a Senate vote on Thursday. fracture. Bystanders lifted the automobile off the woman. tong Beach motorcycle officer Frank Hainley, about 100 feet away when the automobiles collided, said the vehicle driven by Arthur Rosario Chabot, 56, husband of the dead womah, feared straight, up in the air and came down on top: of her." Officers cite! 3ames Emmett Peery, '44, of 2350 Granada for faifure to have an operator's: license irk his possession.

Mrs. Chabot was the first traffic fatality iince May 13 when pedestrian Lester Peter-sJh, 23, of 1374 LeWiV was killed by a hit-run vehicle Children in a nearby burse ry also came up with purple faces. The East Los Angeles sheriffs office wag, swamped with complaints from hundreds, of persons. One housewife plained that her refrigerator turned purple. Another said her water was comingtrt-' of faucets purple, resembling wine.

Scientists from the sheriffs crime lab examined the powder and safd -ft was not poisonous. They said it is easily removed. Citizens werq. asked not to become alarmed ahould they take, on purplish characteristics, i com CITY COMMERCE (CNS)-If you see purple people in the eastern section of the county today, don't be alarmed they're not visitors from outer space. 1 In fact, they're just plain ordinary citizens.

It seems, a huge drum containing a greenish, powder-believed to be a sol- uable dye fell from it moving, truck at Washington: Blvd. and 'Eastern Ave. ill1 the City of Commerce. The drum ripped vopen and the powder scattered about the; area: 'v Firemen turned hosea on the powder i on the 'street and their faces turned pui plq. Fire engines also took on apurpie glint Pills Worthless HUSBAND STOLEN wer.

supposed to dissolve and lei; the. sun come through, thou ht about the businessman WiXwn'cticI fo hi frequent lapses into bankruptcy; When' the man died, he lift this-note: "I hereby name the following six banktre to be my pall-' bearers. Since they carried me for ao long during lifetime, it's only faiV they finish Mrs. Dan W. Fielden, 16, of Knoxville, Tenn.

has sued her husband's parents, Mn and Mrs. Carl Fielden, for $1,750,000, claiming they alienated his affections for. her. The young bride, said the 'whisked their son away from her -after their marriage last NEW YORK (AP)A grand JurJr Tuesday, accused manufacturers and promoter! of "Regimen tablets' of falsely advertising them' as a reduce ing drug in newspapers, magazines and television DlstAtty. Ffank S.

Hogap said that "in every instance -purported medical tests proved "Regimen tablets "scien- fi cpmljer and refused to-let him sep. Photo.) On (he comparable ditto of the lob now. 'ft: i. V- i -r. Hi- Aft.1.

'v tifically worthless.1 -h.

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Pages Available:
764,821
Years Available:
1938-1977