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The Evening Sun du lieu suivant : Baltimore, Maryland • 2

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The Evening Suni
Lieu:
Baltimore, Maryland
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2
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

TAGE A 2 THE EVENING SUN, BALTIMORE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, IMS GOP Asks New NEWS BRIEFS Tj 1 1 If 1 if ml Ttf v. Negroes hold a civil rights rally In baekgiound. Over 600 Mississippi guardsmen poured into Natchez to keep the peace. NATCHEZ STRKKT PATROI-Mississippi National (iiiardsmen with fixed bayonets patrol streets of Natchez as several hundred Racial Talks Gain; March Called OH NatchezNormal Under Patrol Of Troops Natchez, Sept. 3 While and Negro citizens of this Mississippi River bluff city went about their business as usual today as National Guardsmen patrolled the streets.

The day seemed like any other in the business district, with most parking spaces filled by store clerks and shopping housewives. The guardsmen came to Natchez yesterday, following mounting racial tensions touched off when a Negro leader was hurt in the booby-trap bombing of his car. "Very Quiet Night" Police reported "a very quiet night" last night. Twelve persons were arrested for violating a 10 P.M. to 5 A.M.

curfew. One of them carried "a dangerous weapon, a bicycle chain' police said. Guardsmen rode the deserted streets in jeeps throughout the night, their bayonets flickering under street lights. The city has been on edge since a dynamite bomb last Friday ex Plymouth, N.C., Sept. 3 (j-An announced civil rights march failed to materialize today in Plymouth amid reports that a hi- racial committee was making; good progress.

Negro leaders -had announced they would march today in defiance of a local ordinance prohibiting demonstrations without a permit. However, at the announced time, the demonstrators did not appear. Meanwhile, D. S. Coltrane, Gov.

Dan More's racial troublcshooter. i im mi racial council iacKie pruuicins so well." Negro Policeman He said the council had recom mended employment of a Negro police officer, would look into opening voter registration hooks if possible, investigate full Integra- tion ot the Washington county hospital, seek additional employment of Negroes and investigate allegations of police brutality. One segment of the Negro lea dership in Plymouth met with the biracial council last night. The chairman of the council said, "A great deal of progress" as made. Ships' Pursers To Begin Pact Talks Wed.

New York, Sept. 3 Shipping companies looked today to nego tiations with the pursers union as freighters that had been immobilized by a 78-day strike headed out to sea. There was little fear that the pursers, wnose contract expires September 15, would walk out and cause a repetition of the strike which ended Wednesday after Wednesday after idling 100 ships in East and Gulf Coast ports. Burt E. Lanphcr, secretary- treasurer of the AFL-CIO Staff Officers Association, which represents the pursers, said negotiations would begin Wednesday with he American Merchant Marine Institute.

"We have seven days and seven nights to work out the problems and I think that's long enough for us to reach an agreement," he said. Members of the American Radio Association and the Internationa Organization of Masters, Mates and Pilots, both AFL-CIO, wore aboard, the ships heading back to their jobs today. The tun AFL-CIO unions have ratified a settlement announced last weekend by President Johnson. $5,600 Bequest To Aid Cats Congleton, Cheshire, England, Sept. 3 (Reuters' A $3,600 fund has been set up here to look after the interests of cats.

The fund is a bequest from the Slate, Local Rights Laws Washington, Sept. 3 A panel of Republican leaders has called for enactment of new state and local civil rights laws. And Ray C. Bliss, GOP chairman, has asked a team of Negro Republicans to draw up plans aimed at enlisting Negroes in the party, Those steps added up today to a GOP bid to win in 196B some of the Negro votes which went over whelmingly against Barry Gold water, GOP presidential nominee in his race last year with Pres ident Johnson. The Republican Coordinating Committee, in a policy paper made public yesterday, issued this call for civil rights action: "At the state and local levels of government, we urge enactment of laws designed to protect consti tutional guarantees and a vigor ous implementation of such laws.

"Private Action" "We also urge private action at the local level, to insure equal op portunity for all in the fields of housing, employment and public accommodations, the committee declaration added. Declaring that Republicans have alwavs been devoted to the cause of human rights, the' party council added: "We are entering a new phase of the struggle for equality of opportunity and responsibility. In this phase major emphasis must placed on state, local and pri vate action. "We believe that it i the duty of governments to take actions which will ease, not intensify, the problems of race their statement said. It was drawn up at a closed session in Washington Monday.

Gold-water, who voted in the Senate against the 1964 civil rights act on grounds it was unconstitutional, was present during part of the meeting. Rule Bill Gets Needed Name Continued From Page A 1 nature brought the number on the petition to a majority of the House. It also served to freeze the list so that any waverers who might want to change their minds could no longer remove their names. The petition, aimed at giving the capitol city home rule for the first time since 1874, was completed shortly after the House met at noon. The Senate-passed bill can now reach the House floor September 27.

But even before it can get there, the house will be presented with a competng bill that would give most of the capital back to the State of Maryland. The fight over "home rule'1 for the District of Columbia took this dramatic turn yesterday as Pres ident Johnson and Democratic leaders pulled out the stops in trying to line up House members to sign the discharge petition. 217 On Petition They got 25 to sign, 6 of them from Johnson's home State of Texas. At day's end 217 names were on the petition, one short of the required majority of the House. Unless another House member signs, the bill stays where it is in the House District Committee.

But leaders of the home rule drive said they were confident the needed signature would be added todav. In a eountermove, committee chairman McMillan (D.t S.C.) called a meeting and reported out 14 to 3 a bill to cede most of the capital back to Maryland. If the State doesn't want the err rn nnnn nm ii'ni mm no1 i i ill held among Washington residents as a first stop toward self-government. Senate Passed Rill This bill would come before the House September 13. The Johnson-backed bill to giv Washington an elected mayor and city council could not he voted on before September 27 and provided the petition has 218 signatures.

The Senate already has passed a home rule bill. Plane Anti-Collision Lights Really Bright Tacoma, Sept. 'jT Hundreds of people in the Ta coma area have a message for the Grimes Manufacturing Company, of I'rbana. Ohio: Those anti-collision lights you manufacture for airplanes are brilliant, all right. Last nicht, a demonstration plane equipped with eiht of the lights flew oer the area for 35 minutes.

Switchboards at the Tierce County Courthouse, the Tacoma News Tribune, McChord Air Force Base and elsewhere were jammed with unidentified flvirg object reports. McChord ent a helicopter to investigate before the control tower at Seattle-Tacoma Airport. 1 ites Picket Integrated Ala. High School Bessemer, Sept. 3 While segregationists picketed the Bessemer High School today and vowed that protest demonstrations would be conducted "as long as there are Negroes in that school.

Robert grand dragon of the Alabama. Ku Klux Klan aid the Klan plans to extend the pickets movement to schools throughout the State. "We're going to protest until we're beard in Washington' Creel declared. "That's the only way we know we can get an audience with the Great White Father, L.B.J." Creel is the highest Klan official in the State. The Bessemer school system was integrated peacefully this week.

Nine Negroes enrolled in Bessemer high, four in Bessemer junior high. Two Negro girls enrolled at nearby Hueytown High School. Creel said most of the fifteen pickets were parents of school-age children. Representatives of the-National Slates Rights party also were in the picket line. 19 Negro Pupils Register At Selma Selma, Sept 3 Nineteen Negro pupils registered without incident today at three white schools in Selma, the birthplace of the 1965 civil rights struggle.

They are to start classes on Tues-day. City police kept watch at each of the four schools where Negroes were told in advance they would be admitted. Integration was peaceful. There were no signs of trouble. One school, Byrd, reported that none of the five Negroes expected to register had arrived at 9.15 A.M., 45 minutes after the school doors opened.

But the parents of one Negro pupil notified J. A. Pickard, school superintendent, that the pupil would be in later. Elementary Schools All of the desegregated schools are elementary facilities. No Negroes were enrolled at the all-white Parrish High School, and no attempt was made to get in despite earlier rumors of a possible Negro on the school.

The county schools will open under a new freedom of. choice, which will permit Negroes to apply for transfers to white schools, at that time. All desegregation in the city schools was in the first four grades. G.S.A. Rejects Silos Bids Washington.

Sept. 3 The General Services Administration announced today it is rejecting, as being too low, all bids received July 21 for surplus missile silos in a number of states. The agency Jiad received 188 bids for 89 of the silos; the highest offer was $26,110. The silos cost the Government around $12,000,000 to $25,000,000 each. GSA said the disposal plans are now being reviewed.

There were indications it might be decided some could be put to various public uses. Located near air force bases, the silos became surplus because of advances in the missile field They once housed the Atlas Atlas and Titan I missiles for national defense. They are concrete-lined, air con ditioned, and some are 160 feet deep. Most of the bids received ranged between $2,500 and $7,500 each for the silos Fire Destroys Wood Near Lisbon Lisbon. Sept.

3 More than 247.000 acres of woodland were de stroyed when fire broke out a few miles north of Lisbon yesterday. Seven months of drought have made most of the Portuguese countryside tinder-dry, and fires have been reported across the country. Housewife Gets Revenge For Parking St. Petersburg, Sept. 3 (if Twenty students at St.

Petersburg Junior College who tangled with a housewife over parking in her front yard found two tires flat on each of their cars this week. Mrs. Alma Slonim and her 10-year-old son, Mark. let the air out on the parked cars "as a lat resort" after repeated warnings, she said. "I wanted to teach them a lesson." she said.

"I wanted them to get hot and dirty." The students had to roll the tires to the nearest fillinc station and stand in line in 90-degree heat. Her lawn was clear yesterday. "Mom sort of enjoyed it," said Mark. National 13 Persons Injured As Bus Hits Truck Moriarty, N.M., Sept, 3 Thirteen persons were injured slightly yesterday when a Con-tenenta! Trailways chartered bus carrying farm workers from Texas California hit the rear of a truck carrying explosives on U.S. fcfi east of here.

The explosives did not go off. Four bus passengers wore hospitalized at Albuquerque, but uere expected to be released today. Eight other persons, including bus driver Bobby Lively, 35, of Amarillo, Texas, were treated at the hospital and released. The truck driver, Edward Camp, 35, Oklahoma City, was uninjured. N.y.S.

Eases laws On Contraceptives Albany, N.Y., Sept. 3 tf-The sale of birth-control devices to persons over 16 years of age is now legal in New York Stale. The 19fi5 session of the Legislature repealed a widely ignored prohibition against the sale of contraceptives unless, under a physician's prescription, they were for the "cure or prevention of disease. CHANGED STORY Mrs. Mariann K.

Colby, 40, Shaker Heights, Ohio, pleaded innocent to first degree murder of John Cremer Young, 8, stating she accidentally shot the boy whose body was found in wooded area 10 miles from her home. She previously stated the August 24 shooting was done accidentally in her home by her son, Dane, 9. Tough Policy Curbs Garbage Dumpers Reno, Sept. 3 Mv-Washoe county's get-tough policy on garbage dumpers is working. Sheriff C.

W. Young said illegal dumping has almost disappeared. The county recently adopted a $100 minimum fine for dumping in unauthorized areas. A special plain clothes deputy was hired to be on the lookout for illicit trash dumping. 'Gemini 5' Radio Call Is A Bit Confusing Mobile, Sept.

3 5 Calling WLO" was the call received by a startled ship-to-shore operator at Mobile Marine Radio WLO. It was Gemini 5, but this one was a snapper boat out of Bayou la Batre, and just happened to have the same name as the spacecraft which landed Sunday. Third $1 Million Gift New York, Sept. 3 Columbia University has announced an anonymous gift of $1,000,000 for the gymnasium building fund. The donation-the third $1,000,000 gift for the fund increased the fund's total of pledges and gifts to more than $5,000,000.

I THE WEATHER LOCAL FORECASTS Local Forecasts BALTIMORE AND VICINITY Fair tonight with thf lows 56 to 65 Tomorrow partly cloudy and little warmer. Outlook for Sunday cloudv and mild with thf chance of rain. 'Winds east 6 to 12 rmifs an hour todav, light and variable to-right and southeast 10 miie an hour tomorow. MARYLAND Fair tonight with low 48 to 54 in mountain regions Tomorrow partlv cloudy a tittle warmer. Outlook for Sundav ip cloudv and mild with the change of rain.

Winds outhea.t 7 to 12 miles an hour today and tonight and aoutheaM to south to 15 mile? an hour tomorrow. Precipitation Tfr 24 hr ended A tnrfnT Total rjrifi! this month 21 in Actum c.ctenrT tm mrn-h Arrum def.rnf Jan 1 7 4 Temperature Bulletin ywerday and th lcwMt hi! irorntn. 45 S' f2 Grtn S5 I Nw York 43 I OTTat-ft f2 53 F-vQ'jrh 5 If IS i rv 72 Boon 77 Buffalo Chicaio 76 Cincmr.tti "3 5s Drought Drives Wildlife To Cai Settled Areas Foreign Curfew Invoked In Hindu Rioting Bombay, Sept. 3 Farts of Poona City were under curfew to day after the second day of Hindu-Moslem religious rioting. A police commissioner said the curfew was necessary because of looting, arson and violence.

He gave no details of damage or casualties. Reports from Poona said hundreds of Hindus seeking revenge for temple desecrations moved into a blind alley where Moslem families had locked themselves in the houses and tried to burn the occupants. The Moslems were rescued after the mayor of Poona and a political leader intervened. Fischer Gets Draw In Chess Tourney Havana, Sept. 3 (Reuters) Yugoslavian Grand Master Bruno Parama held America's Bobby Fischer to a draw in 34 moves in the seventh round of the interna tional Capablanca Chess Tournament here last night.

Yugoslavia's Borislav Ivkov, who defeated Belgium's Alberik Okelly last night, led the general standing with 5'2 points one point clear of Fischer. The Amer-I ican, however, had one adjourned! game with Britain's Robert Wade in hand. U.S. Sends Iran Aid In Cholera Outbreak Washington, Sept. 3 Iran has had the help of the United States in heading off a possible cholera outbreak by airlifting vaccines and other assistance.

The Agency for International Development says the contribution at a cost of $46,229 included vaccines, air transport and loaned services of Naples-based United States Navy health ad- visor to train Iranians in using injectors. CARE Getting Items For Its Asian Work Washington, Sept. 3 Federal excess property which originally cost $2,000,000 is to be used to support work in Vietnam, Malay sia and the Philippines by the Cooperative for American Relief Everywhere. The United States Agency for International Development says the goods include vehicles, agricultural machinery, water purification and sewage treatment ap paratus, iood preparation and serving equipment, clothing and plumbing, heating and sanitation materials. Noted Violin Going To Slav Academy Camden, Maine, Sept.

3 One of the world's most renowned violins, the 3735 Guarnarius Bel Gesu, will be presented to the City of Zagreb. Yugoslavia, under the will of the late violinist Zlatko Balokovic. His widow, Mrs. Joyce Balokovic, savs she will take the violin to the Yugoslavian Academy of Arts and Sciences, Balokovic lived here for 35 years and died last March in Venice while en route to his native Yugoslavia. Search Resumed For Slide Victims Saas Fee, Switzerland, Sept.

3 i Rescuers resumed the search today for the victims of the Allalin glacier ice fall, halted by a driv ing rainstorm and fog last night. At least 80 construction workers, most of them Italians, were believed still under the mass of ice which fell on the Mattmark power station Monday. Ten bodies, including one woman, have been recovered. Today A Year Ago ih lorn ,3 Temperatures Yesterday Cltr Offlre HirhfO. Tftn.

72. lb. Airoorl 80 lowest. 57: mn fQ HshM of record 98 in 1353. Lcfst of record.

50 1S92. Relative Humidity Data Dry Rulb WM Puib HumMin Temp. Tpt.d. tpfr ffnt 8 t'1? f2 8AM or ii PO i7 SI Barometer At Sea Levp I PM BAN! 10 IS 3 22 fOf IT Pollen Count 1 The Almanac Sin r' Vjn morrow Moon "ST H'th r.r.f tor, H.th tn-rorr? 1 a 7 SAM 12 A 4 f4 1 1 3 00 A 9 a to v.r't tmorrw Todav i Hourly Record 9 8AM 67 MM 66 10 A 6.S 11 A 63 12 ryn 62 IP 62 2 ..61 3 PM 112 VMniiht 1AM 2 A 3AM 4AM SAM 6AM 1 a i 77 10 I Los Angeles, Sept. 3 itf-Franklthey make a disconcerting galle-Brccn, his cocker spaniel and a ry.

100 -pound mountain lion ex- In Corona del Mar, Lee Heater, changed stares at a distance of Retrying to frighten deer from his fect. poach trees, rigged colored rWidrH it was, Christmas lights on his back ploded beneath the hood of George Metcalfe's parked car when he turned on the ignition. Metcalfe, president of the Adams county chapter of the N.A.A.C.P., was reported in fair condition. The blast knocked him from his car and broke his arm. leg and injured his face.

King To Arrive Charles Evers, State field director of the N.A.A.C.P., who has been on the scene since the bomb ing, said Dr. Martin Luther King or one of his top aides would come to the area. Evers called for a civil rights drive to "shake them up a but did not say what form of action was planned. Mayor John Nosser and the Board of Aldermen turned down a dozen Negro demands that called for the city to denounce the Ku Klux Klan and desegregate public facilities. Polish Aide Asks Political Asylum Vienna, Sept.

3 A Polish refugee who said he was attached to the staff of Polish Deputy Pre mior Eugeniusz Szyr asked for political asylum yesterday, police reported. He was Andreji Smolinski, 34. He said he had been working in the economic office of the Council of Ministers headed by Szyr. He was on a return trip from Italy with his wife, and crossed over into Austria in his own car $23,200 will of printer Hubert Hill I 7 1 hnv'Q hnmovvnnrs are a local cat lover remain "faithful who wanted to his mu friends." In the published will, it was explained that interest from the fund About 100 law enforcement officers, including about 50 State troopers, remain on duty. Racia I tensions in Plymouth have erupted twice into violence in the last eight days.

18 Arrested Eighteen persons have been arrested in Plymouth, including eleven last night at a roadblock at the intersection of U.S. 64 and North Carolina 32, the main road into Plymouth. Among the eleven arrested were two constables from other eastern i North Carolina counties. Capt. S.

II. Mitchell, of the highway patrol, 'said they had no authority to be in the area and had not contacted local authorities. Mitchell identi- Tied them as Raymond Carney Shirley, ot Route 2t waisionourg. in Greene county, and Hilton Du-may Anderson, of Chocowinity, in Beaufort county. The trooper said Shirley was carrying a .22 revolver and a blackjack and Anderson had a .38 pistol.

Weapons confiscated by troopers included rifles, shotguns and knives. tence in an unseasonai display which drew puzzled looks from neighbors. And the deer? "They seemed to like he lights," he found. The best marksman from the Montrose sheriff's substation searched unsuccessfully in a helicopter in hopes of shooting a mountain lion which has devoured countless domestic cats in the Flintridgc section. And, above Hollywood's Laurel Canyon, a homeowner lost patience and bought a trap when raccoons playfully pulled all the plugs on his outdoor lighting and rearranged the garden furniture.

They avoided the trap and countered by trying to drown his dog in the fish pond. A fire in the hills last year burned away the natural i i i Flying High 11 time to di something: "I called my wife," he said. "When she came out of the house the lion loped away." What to say to a mountain lion jdavs and nights in southern Cali fornia's tloscst-to-nature suburbs. Driven Into Foothills foothill residential areas, Lions aren't the only problems: An eagle took a ay a Hollywood woman's chihuahua dog. Her query to the Slate Fish and Same Department; "Is lac coming bark for the children?" would be used to pay for special) Drought conditions and, in newspaper advertisements every! some areas, the aridity after scv-year, advising cat lovers, when ere brush fires in the mountains-going on vacation, that all cats fare driving animals down into should be sent to pet homes where they might "reunite, sing and respond with longevity." Russian To Visit Finland Moscow, Sept.

3 tf Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Rodion Maiinovsky will visit Helsinki next week, Tass news agency said to- nav. i ne announcement said Man novskv was invited bv Finland's Defense Ministrv. A pack of coyotes has mnvcdlground cover and hordes of small into Pasadena's Annandale Coun- animals moved into foothill sub-try Club golf course, watching the, urbs, followed by the predators activities there from as close as! who live on them, when the fect. Farly morning golfers saylmer dry season set in. V.

A 'IT- 1 i Jim tm ir rj ti pift TuTTi if Better Than 74 Ch 76 '''I't'ri 77 13 fj.from which the demonstration plane took off, cleared up (tie mvsterv. Astronaut L. Cordon fwppr gets radv to plant a kiss wife Tnidv a he arrivpd at Kllingtnn AFB. TeoS. greeting his family for the first time sinre he and Charles Conrad Irft Cape Kenned oq (heir historic eight-day Gemini space 0ioht.

Astronaut Charles Conrad removes lipstick after being kissed hy lady members of a welcoming party st Ellington AFB nrar Houston. His sons, left to right. Andy, fi; Tommy. 8, and Chris, check operation. A family friend, Julia Talmadge, looks on.

54 Pitnmnnd -5 SO I Lo-ii 7S 53 1 Md 77 fan Aniomo 76 laniDa fii 77' I.

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À propos de la collection The Evening Sun

Pages disponibles:
1 092 033
Années disponibles:
1910-1992