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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 13

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Wednesday, Sept. 1, 1965 Honolulu Star-Bulletin A-ll Racial violence erupts in North, South Congressional Boxscore MAJOR LEGISLATION IN 89TH CONGRESS First Session Dm. GOP Vacanelw 3 140 2 0 Houm Llrw-up imnat Lln-u about voluntary compliance. He said he hoped to get 100 per cent compliance. In Natchez, Mississippi, worried city officials imposed a 10 p.m.

to 5 a.m. curfew as the deadline neared for the city's answer to Negro demands for total desegregation. Authorities also banned the sale of whiskey in the city until further notice. Johnson said 4,463, or 88 cent of more than 5,000 school districts in 17 Southern and border states, are preparing to comply with the civil rights act's desegregation requirements. Johnson said this is an increase of 291 in the last week.

'lne President said in a statement that the government has tried to bring under his pants leg and fired wildly at the white men. The group of Negroes turned and fled down the street into a group of whites that had gathered in the middle of town. Several white men grabbed the Negro with the pistol and began beating him. State troopers and police quickly moved in and seized the Negro, who managed to escape. Police arrested two other Negroes.

Elsewhere on the racial scene, school desegregation continued quietly in the South. In Washington, President other was stabbed. Authorities blamed the incident on the Ku Klux Klan and persons from other towns. The Negroes are demanding that voter registration books be opened immediately in the county. By state law, the books cannot be opened until October 9.

The Chicago trouble began when about 40 demonstrators, mostly Negroes, picketed the home of schools Superintendent Benjamin Willis. He has been the target of protests of those dissatisfied with racial distribution of pupils in Chicago schools. When the demonstrators began to lie dovn in the heavily traveled intersection of Sheridan Road and Bryn Mawr Avenue, police moved in to make arrests. Some of those placed bodily in patrol wagons fought their way out and the officers subdued them with clubs. Seven of the demonstrators were taken to hospitals for examination and three were held for treatment.

A total of 14 were arrested and taken to Plymouth police said one of the Negroes in the group walking toward the center of town pulled the gun from PLYMOUTH, (AP) Racial troubles erupted into violence in both the North and South Tuesday night as two white men were wounded in a fight in Plymouth, North' Carolina, and three Negroes were hospitalized in Chicago. Tensions in Plymouth had been so high that civil rights leaders called off a scheduled demonstration. But seven Negroes walking down Main Street of the eastern North Carolina town were confronted by a group of whites, touching off the shooting in which one white man was injured and the fight in which an illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllliilllillllllilllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllU JabubiUL SPECIALS Jih. lVsxJl OUR FAMOUS WHIPPED CREAM CAKES! GOLDEN LEMON CRUNCH CAKE Fabuiom! CHOCOLATE DREAM OF CREAM u.m.m 1 REGULAR J.50 SPECIAL THIS WEEK OUR FAMOUS APRICOT PIE! DELICIOUS CALIFORNIA APRICOT LATTICE TOP OC MwIkqI Con, Social Soctrhj hgjoiwl Mdkal CUn 99 Appalariiii AsshtaM tigioiiol Dmlopnunt lUm utory-StooJory tdtotlM Hlgbr EJtKotkm 9 9 9 Wgttf Pollirtki Coitrol t) Alt Pollntloi Control OMiibis Hois'wi Ptpirtmtit of Hossii iwintrttio 99 Anti-Poverty Awudwcits 9 foreiga Aid Manpower AimmIimiIs frttldtittial Cenrltrtty Right-lo-Work toptol 'Mb) 909 9 Wn 9 Uiwploywt Compwotioo Volim Bights UglshHw 8opportioniMt Hotiowl Arts Fondotio 9 9 Dmu, Cwtrob Gold Rtswirt 9 9 9 9 9 9 Omimtvnhaqnm Ek)m RWurtlom SPECIAL THIS WEEK REGULAR 1.15 Steel negotiations reach 'hard, tough' talk stage GERMAN CHEESE SQUARES i-i iciousl .20 1 CRUNCHY TOP SPECIAL THIS WEEK FOR "CHEESE CAKE" FANS REGULAR .25 EACH OUR FAMOUS BANANA NUT LOAF! 0ntt, -95 "BACK-TO-SCHOOL" TREATS CHILDREN JUST LOVE OUR BROWNIES 'n CUP CAKES 1.95 1.95 MACADAMIA NUT CLUSTERS 12 OZ. BOX "FINEST ASSORTMENT" CHOCOLATES I 1 2 3 LB.

GIFT BOXES lb. wide strike. The new deadline is September 9. At today's morning session, Labor Secretary Wil-lard Wirtz and Commerce Secretary John T. Connor held separate meetings with each side.

Wirtz and Connor were making frequent reports to Johnson. Johnson asked for a wrap-up report on each bargaining session. He has appealed to both sides for a reasonable settlement that would not damage the nation's economy or impair the war effort in Vietnam. of the White House Monday by President Johnson's directive, have "reached the stage of hard and tough bargaining." The bargaining sessions between union and management teams were taking place in the executive office building across the street from the White House. The negotiators included four industry representatives and six officials of the United Steel Workers Union.

They agreed Monday night to an eight-day postponement of a threatened nation By MERRIMAN SMITH WASHINGTON (UPI) Steel negotiations have reached the "hard and tough bargaining" stage, the White House reported today. White House press secretary Bill D. Moyers told reporters at mid-day that he was unable to say whether the negotiators had made any progress, but he added: "They are having some very straightforward confrontations on pensions and wages." Moyers said the contract talks, moved to the shadow IS? FAMOUS FRUIT JELLIES Re freshing! from .75 All Prices Plus 4 Tax Open Daily 6:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. 7 P.M.

Sunday mm mm A IXMf 1061 Bishop St. Telephone 581-961 or 502-166 5 orld lllllllllilllliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir; III! Hroun of Unbeatable values, once -a-year prices 5 7DT7 fl mi mm mm i m. i mm mis rj mm mwim mrim 7rdlLii Sato pledges ratification of ROK pact Kyodo News Service TOKYO Prime Minister Eisaku Sato today announced his firm determination to win Diet approval for ratification of the Japan-Republic of Korea normalization treaty during the next session in October. Addressing a meeting of local representatives of his Liberal-Democratic Party, Sato said the ratification of the treaty would be sought "with the co. operation and understanding of the people." Today's meeting was held to discuss ways to assure the ratification of the treaty in the face of growing objections by the Socialists and the Communists.

The participants heard a lecture on the latest conditions in the Republic of Korea and the treaty normalizing diplomatic relations between the two countries from critic Yosaku Nakao. It is expected that a declaration will be made at the meeting this afternoon to launch an extensive people's drive for facilitating the ratification of the treaty. The planned drive will include the inauguration of a people's congress for securing the backing of organizations supporting the Tory Party and the holding of a big people's meeting at Hibi-ya Park before the upcoming meeting of the Diet. A series of stumping tours will be made also by executive members of the party at various places, chiefly Tokyo, Osaka, Yamaguchi and Fukuoka beginning September 10. Elder Kennedy in hospital for 'congestion' BOSTON (UPI) Joseph P.

Kennedy, 76, father of the late President John F. Kennedy was reported to have spent a "comfortable" night at New England Baptist Hospital where he is confined for treatment of "congestion" in the throat and chest area. The former Ambassador to Great Britain entered the hospital yesterday to undergo medical tests. A doctor said Kennedy would remain in the hospital for a few days. Dr.

Russell S. Boles a gastro-intestinal specialist, said after examining Kennedy that congestion was not the chief worry. Boles said the patriarch of the closely knit Kennedy clan "hasn't been doing as well as we would like him to." "He hasn't been feeling as well as he should," Boles said. He said Kennedy, who suffered a crippling stroke Compiled from Associated Prass, United Press International and Now York Times Nows Sorvic THE PACIFIC Communist China has warned the United States and Japan that it is "definitely not to be trifled with." The warning was broadcast on the eve of a U.S. -Japan security conference Japan Foreign Minister Etsusa-buro Shiina said there is no sense in having the Ryukyu Islands returned to Japan at the sacrifice of security and peace in Asia Major General James W.

Wilson, commander of the 13th Air Force based in the Philippines, inspected Chinese Nationalist air bases in Formosa. MAINLAND The Beatles are flying back to London after a 19-day U.S. tour capped by farewell performances in San Francisco that almost got out of control as hysterical girls leaped onto the stage to grab the performers Actor-musician Steve Allen says he's considering running for Congress in Los Angeles' 26th District where Democratic Representative James Roosevelt will resign to take a U.N. post The New York Times reported that South Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Cao Ky said his country was "not ready now" to begin peace negotiations. Ky said that South Vietnam would not begin negotiations until there were firm guarantees that North Vietnamese troops would leave his country and that U.S.

troops would stay until Saigon asked them to leave Actor George Raft has been indicted on six charges of income tax evasion. Raft is accused of paying no taxes on $85,000 income from 1958 through 1863 Bobby Fischer, 22-year-old U.S. chess champion, has won his third long-distance match in the Capablanca memorial tournament. The meet is being held in Havana but Fischer is cabling his moves from New York because the State Department refused him a visit to Cuba The last two of three striking deck officers unions vote today on whether to ratify contracts with ship operators. If the contracts are ratified nearly 100 idled freighters will begin sailing from ports from Maine to Texas.

WASHINGTON The Marine Corps is compressing recruit training from 12 to eight weeks. The action follows a pattern used by the Corps in World War II and Korea President Johnson said that early reports on voluntary compliance with school integration provisions of the civil rights act showed "deeply encouraging" results. Unbeatable values, once-a-year prices on sedans! Sky-high values at rock-bottom prices on station wagons! ff in December, 1961, was brought to Boston because "there is no way we can check him at Hyannis Port. Polish consul granted asylum EUROPE U.A.R. President Gamal Abdel Nasser flew to Belgrade from Moscow for a three-day visit with Yugoslav President Tito Search efforts have been ended for victims of the Mattmark avalanche is Switzerland as fog shrouded the alpine valley where they lay under tons of ice.

Eighty-five workmen of the Mattmark hydroelectric project are missing and presumed dead. Five bodies have been recovered A U.S. call for an international conference on monetary reform has Italy's backing The Polish consul in Sweden, Edmund Michalski, has defected and been granted political asylum in Stockholm, the Foreign Ministry reported This claim is late --178 years too late MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) It turns out that Levi Bonney's claim against the government is 178 years too late. Bonney was a carpenter who furnished shoes, clothing and hay to Connecticut soldiers during the Revolutionary War, a debt figured at $500 in those days.

A University of Minnesota student, Francis A. Van Dan, discovered the bill while poking around the Bonney family tree on a research project. He wrote to the U.S. District Attorney's office about it, noting that the debt would be worth a cool $22 million now if 6 percent interest were compounded annually. Assistant U.S.

Attorney Patrick J. Fohy said yesterday the government's general accounting office had rejected the claim because it was far beyond the 6-year statute of limitations. Several persons claiming to be Bonney kin wrote letters after Van Dan's bid to collect the debt. They asked about their share of the money. Van Dan said his research turned up several well-known persons in the Bonney clan, including one Wil-' liam Bonney.

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You'll be getting trie jauntiest version yet of America's compact Economy King. Dozens of sporty options like AMBASSADOR MARLIN Sweden, the Swedish foreign office announced last night American Motors DEDICATED TO EXCELLENCE Swedish officials identified the Pole as Edmund Michal ski and said he walked into Buy Rambler American and buy now, at Rambler once-a-year prices! Stockholm police headquar iers last month to request asylum for himself, his wife and their two daughters. The request was granted a few HONOLULU: MOTOR SUPPLY, LTD. 1391 Kapiolani Blvd. HILO: BIG ISLAND RAMBLER.

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Hardy St. WAIIUKU: M.D.G. SUPPLY, Inc. Automotive Division 1980 Main St. days ago.

Swedish officials said Mi chalski defected for political reasons, but they did not elaborate..

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
1,993,314
Years Available:
1912-2010