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Petaluma Argus-Courier du lieu suivant : Petaluma, California • Page 2

Lieu:
Petaluma, California
Date de parution:
Page:
2
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

1 fit 3-ARGUS-COUKIl ft. Pttaluma. Co Saturday, Nov. 7. 1970 Charges Over No Jobs Continue Russian Soldier Wounded lobless Americans remained Republican National Chairman Rogers C.B.

Morton retorted that Democrats, in preelection forecasts of a 6 per cent jobless rate, had played "an economics politics of fear." Friday' Labor Department report said the actual total of tration held up the report until after Tuesday's elections, said the official report didn't include some 600,000 "discouraged" unemployed. The White House denied the report was deliberately held up until after the elections. WASHINGTfJN (AP)- Political charges over unemployment continued today alter the government's postelection report that the nation's jobless rate edged up to fi.C per cent of the work force in October. Democratic House Speaker John W. McCormack, who had predicted a rise to 6 per cent and charged the Nixon adminis J' Pa, yV Shooting, Fires Begin Petctluma Argus-Courier roughly the same at 4.3 million, but seasonal factors pushed the rate up one-tenth of 1 percentage point to 5,6 per cent.

It blamed the General Motors strike for the rise in the jobless rate and for a drop of 610,000 in manufacturing employment during the month. It also said total employment rose 660,000, including farm workers and the self-employed, but that the key payroll employment figure was down nearly 500,000 to 70.6 million. In all, said the Bureau of Labor Statistics, it added up to little change in the overall job situation and didn't indicate much about the health of the economy because the strike of some 325,000 auto workers distorted the picture. "The effects of the automobile strike really dominated the employment situation over the month and really obscure underlying economic changes," said Assistant Commissioner Harold Goldstein of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. White House Press Secretary Ronald L.

Ziegler said the unemployment report probably wouldn't have been damaging to Republican candidates even if it had been released before the state highway patrolmen. Blacks have been objecting for a month to the reopening of an elementary school closed under a desegregation plan. Some Negro leaders said the reopening and the assignment of an all-black student body to the school were done to circumvent the desegregation plan approved by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Local education officials said it was done to relieve overcrowding at other schools. Thirty-five persons, whites HENDERSON, N.C.

(AP) -Sporadic shooting and two fires broke out Friday night, police said, after officers used tear gas to disperse a group of Negroes protesting srhool desegregation policies. Police said they did not return the gunfire and no one was injured by it. Sheriff Linwood B. Falkner said officers were unable to determine where the shooting was coming from. A home and a tobacco warehouse were destroyed by the fires.

BERLIN (AP) A Russian soldier guarding a Soviet monument in West Berlin was wounded early today by shots fired at him and a comrade, a British spokesman said. The spokesman said two or three stiots were fired about 1:15 a.m. The soldier, wounded in the arm and left side, was taken by a British military ambulance to East Berlin, the spokesman said. The incident occurred a few hours before Red army units were to parade before the memorial in honor of the 53rd anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. The official East German news agency, in a brief dispatch that called the incident "an un-heard-ofprovocation," said officials did not know who fired the shots.

Officials in the Soviet Embassy in East Berlin lodged a "decisive protest with the British military administration in West Berlin and demanded the necessary measures for the immediate discovery and serious punishment of the criminals," the agency said. II tj 'W Mini- ii A and blacks, were arrested Fri-were in- day, mostly on curfew violation from his charges. The Rev. C. R.

Mitch Two white persons jured-a man pulled 0 a oo- 52 UC no'ith by CO" 1 UAW Strike Progress For Pact DSTRCIT (AP) Although progress apparently has been made on a new national pact, the end of a 54-day-dd United Auto Workers Union strike against General Motors Corp. still seemed today to hang on lo-caWevel pacts. The UAW summoned its 350-member CM Council to a meeting here Wednesday-a traditional sign of progress in contract talks. However, union leaders emphasized In their telegrams to delegates the urgency of the localJevel agreements, and also said no national settlement was "imminent." When any national agreement is reached, the UAW's GM Council must be consulted on whether to recommend approval or rejection to the rank-and-file. More thai) 400,000 GM employes have been idled, as well as thousands of others in related fields, since the strike started at midnight Sept.

14. Top GM and UAW bargainers have been operating under a news blackout since highJevel, intensified talks began eight days ago. Union and management leaders have said there must be a substantial number of the local accords which supplement the national agreement-before a final settlement and resumption of auto production. So far, 75 local pacts have been reached at 162 separate UAW-CM bargaining units in Canada and the United States. However, 21 new pacts remain unsettled at 54 so-called key plants.

There wis speculation in the auto industry that unless a new national three-year pact is reached by Nov. 15, there may be none forthcoming until January, because GM would have to pay $14 million a day in wages for the eight days its plants are closed during its Christmas-New Years holiday. Earl Bramblett, who heads GM's negotiating team, has said that a new contract must be reached by Tuesday if car production is to be resumed in November. Major obstacles to a new contract involve wages, retirement, and cost-of4iving. I car and beaten by young blacks and a bystander hit in the head by a rock at one of the fires, po-lice said.

Neither was hospitalized. Officials declared a state of emergency in Henderson and surrounding Vance County in northeastern North Carolina. They imposed a curfew throughout the night with the help of GO ell, a Negro, was arrested, charged with inciting to riot and released in $15,000 bond. The fires and the shootings were confined to an all-Negro residential area about three blocks by seven blocks at the northwest side of Henderson, a city of about 15,000 populations evenly divided between blacks and whites. "MORE I CANNOT WISH YOU" William "Bill" Sabados sings the ballad "More I Cannot Wish You" to Donna Moss In "Guys and Dolls." Sabados, a little league manager, flyer and plumber in real life, plays the role of "Arvide" grandfather of "Sarah Brown," the leading lady, sung by Donna Moss.

"Guys and Dolls" a musical with more than 30 in the cast will open Friday night at the Petaluma Senior High School Multi-Purpose Room. (Petaluma Adult Education Department photo by Kay Krueger) PRIZE-WINNING NEWSPAPER of the CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION elections. But Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien thought otherwise. Suicide Notes Shown At Trial MIVI-IN ftotfic'Rtduc of 'TfelfesUess Ones1 NOVATO PfTALUMA OPEN 6 30 7627242 SHOW 7 Oi NOW THRU TUESDAY GP At 7 05 ma 10 35 LEE Hob oinms MARVIN And Jeanne Moreau "MONTE WALSH" A Real Western Wilh Jock PoloiCf FRESNO (AP) The prosecution in the trial of Mrs.

Louise Thoresen has wound up its case by introducing suicide notes it said were written by the former speech therapist ac-cust of shooting to death her wealthy husband last June 10. The trial was recessed over the weekend after the introduction of the notes Friday. Asst. Dist. Atty.

Frank Wells said the undated notes were found in the second story bedroom where the bullet-riddled body of William Thoresen III, heir to a Chicago steel fortune, was found nude in bed. The prosecution, which called only nine witnesses, had said it would call 14. Wells said two of the notes were addressed to "Dear Joe," and referred to an affair the mo prosecution nas cnargea Mrs. Thoresen with carrying on. Two other notes were addressed to Mrs.

Thoresen's parents, said Wells, and one was addressed to her husband and spoke of taking pills to "go to sleep." The prosecution has stated it would prove Mrs. Thoresen stood to gain financially from her husband's death through his will and insurance. Defense counsel James Shep-ard, who was scheduled to begin calling witnesses Monday morning, said at the beginning of Friday's session that Mrs. Thoresen's right to any portion of Thoresen's estate is "not determinable by law at this time." He said that if convicted she would not be entitled to any of it. 2nd BIG HIT AT 9:00 Grasshopper etmeiruit SHOWCASE THEATRE SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE SAT.

AND SUN. MORNINGS AT 10 A.M. AND 12 NOON -All SEATS 75c ST'SOUTTA rrrm e7T One man matches his faith against the turbuknt world of feather and Weathe THE UNKNOWN daredevil races, discovering temperatures Bismarck, cloudy Boise, cloudy By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High Low Albany, cloudv 54 39 Boston, cloudy 44 39 Albuquerque, cloudy 69 Atlanta, clear 70 "the greatest adventure going!" Charlotte, cloudy Chicago, cloudy Cincinnati, clear Cleveland, clear Nation's Weather Des Moines, cloudy Butch (The Munsters) Patrick Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fairbanks, clear a a Fort Worto, clear ed wide areas of the nation to- 45 32 Omaha, clear 67 36 57 45 Philadelphia, clear 55 42 51 41 Phoenix, cloudy 85 56 51 46 Pittsburgh, cloudy 52 41 67 44 Ptland, cloudy 50 34 60 41 Ptland, cloudy 61 49 62 42 Rapid City, cloudy 58 36 53 38 Richmond, cloudy 62 41 68 33 St. Louis, clear 70 38 66 35 Salt Lk. City, rain 55 41 55 35 San Diego, cloudy 71 60 27 17 San cloudy 61 57 75 46 Seattle, rain 61 51 53 26 Tampa, clear 69 58 85 73 Washington, cloudy 60 42 58 36 Winnipeg, cloudy 72 44 M-Missing, T-Trace 39 33 Bakersfield 73 53 68 37 Brownsville 79 58 69 Fresno 72 50 62 48 Las Vegas 75 56 66 47 Oakland 62 55 72 58 Red Bluff 59 52 57 38 Reno 56 34 49 30 Sacramento 64 49 71 42 Spokane 52 33 54 45 Thermal 4 62 69 40 ing of light showers in the Indianapolis, clear West and a few flakes of snow NOW THRU TUESDAY Cont.

from 2 P.M. Sun. Only 111 Ul lAifiuia aiiu Michigan. Temperatures were near or Kansas City, clear Los Angeles, clear above normal in most sections, Louisville clear himo- nn in OUloVUie, Clear the SouUieast after several days cC of frosty mornings. Milwaukee, clear The mercury climbed into the New York, cloudy Okla.

City, clear TVesentB the northern two-thirds of the country. The 70s and 80s prevailed in the Southwest and the 70s gerneral along the Gulf Coast. Temperatures before dawn ranged from 13 at Alamosa, to 87 at Coolidge, Ariz. AS PARKWAY. OPEN 6:30 SHOW 7:00 EXCLUSIVE SHOWING Vssr uxro Sjbeciof sateen buy Area Forecasts SIERRA NEVADA Chance of few snow showers above 4000 feet north and 6000 feet south with rain showers below.

Partly cloudy through Sunday with rain or snow Tahoe northward Sunday. MONTEREY BAY AREA Chance of a few showers through Sunday. Local night and morning fog. Little temperature change. Highs through Sunday in the 60s.

SANTA CLARA VALLEY Increasing clouds with chance of rain early Sunday then partly cloudy Sunday afternoon. Little temperature change. Highs through Sunday in the 60s. West to southwest wind 10 to 20 mph. Russ Meyer's Cherrv.

SAM AL GroomFreeman, jr. Miltord "'Harry Music by RALPH CARMICHAEL Executive Producer FRANK R. JACOBSON Written and Directed by JAMES F. COLLIER SH OWCASE THEATRE 1 7 A' Nov. 1 1 thru 1 9:20 Nightly Matinees Sun.

1:30 4:00 Box Office Price $2.00 Ages 1 2 up; $1 .00 Ages 8 to 1 1 One Complete Show at 8 P.M. PETALUMA 763-5660 STATE POPULAR PRICES! NO RESERVED SEATS! COME ANY TIME FOB THE TIME OF YOUR Lift! THIS AD SPONSORED IN THE COMMUNITY INTEREST BY THE FOLLOWING: Shown "Jfcr of 7 P.M. Fl4 ond 9:30 ADULTS $2.00 ET shown 4hL wret. ii NORTIIB AY FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN JIM ROSE CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH CROWN CLEANERS KVALHEIM MACHINE SHOP NED CLARK'S PHILLIPS 66 WESTERN MOTORS GEORGE BUICK P0NTIAC-GMC PLES CREWS HANCOCK HAGSTROM'S MARKET Children 75c Adults logos $2.50 Matinee Sunday 2 P.M. AlSO-JoneFondc in "BARBAREL1A" This Sat.

and Sun. Morning Only gL AWARDS! i 1 9 9 RUSS MEYER'S j.tmiiii mu 3- jpniui miuren monnee "THE PHANTOM TOLL BOOTH" I I 2 Shows Only 10 AM. and 12 Noon II All Seats 75t I I vsliinq Jiim 3oi T)lic Entire Jcunidi! nh (YNTimv rnx prf sents VIXEN. Umbra Streisand waiter matthau.

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415 805
Années disponibles:
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