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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 6

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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6
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CHICAGO TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 30, 1964 Sec lion I Comfortable Wickets PUERTO RIGO OFFICIAL WEATHE REPO RT II IB FEARS STliEj: End County Sit-in BY THOMAS BUCK NEGROES DEFY ST. AUGUSTINE PROTEST BAN Police and Dogs Halt March of 200 OVER CASINO EEENY, MEENY, MOTHER GOOSE, YOU ARE OUT! New" London," May 29 CP A 1917 edition of the Mother. Goose rhymes in1 the children's section of the New London PuMic library wiU be withdrawn' because it has objectionable references 5 (Picture on back pmge) One of the most comfortable I (N. Y. Timas-ChiciM Trissnt'strvict sit-ins ever, staged came to an end yesterday; in the County building offices Seymour Simon, president of the Cook county board.

The sit-in began shortly be SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, May 29 Gov. Luis Alunoa-. Marin canceled a trip' to New York today and prepared to head off a strike threatened the teamsters' union that vould affect shipping and air traffic to the island. Munoz received assurances1 from other unions here and invJ-the mainland that everything will be done to prevent any at-u tempt to interrupt the normal -A to Negroes. x- Any similar copies of children's books valso wifl be fore noon Thursday after Simon had told a delegation of 50 Negroes, that he desired to study for the next week their proposal for direct distribution of gov withdrawn, said Mrs.

Olive Prentis, acting librarian, ernment surplus food to relief recipients. 'v Most of the delegation left functioning of the Puerto Ttican economy. Munoz, who wasfabout to Simon's office, but the leader of the group, the Rev. Henry Seymour Simon during press Mitchell, pastor of North Star Baptist church, 1414 S. Hamlin toast for 5-SKEB (UPI) OF UUS Ml-IW TUOII: FMCm fM CITIIS COUPmOW MAY 29, 1964 7 P.M.

wowt (expected at im coussss waim tticiibb wind- conference yesterday. and two others, the Rev. Herman Williams, 607 S. Keeler and the Rev. Commonie Sipp, 1355 S.

Peoria remained. Ask to Be Arrested National weather forecast based on maps of U. S. Weather bureau. Daylight time.

They asked Simon to have them arrested and sent to the county jail. Simon said he told them he could not do that be cause they had done- nothing MAY 1964 IP JUNE 1964 SUN MON TUE WED THU Fll SAT SUN MOM TUE WfD TMU Mt SAT 1 2 1 2 3 4 5 day 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 7 ,8 9 10 11 12 13 SP 11 12 13. 14. 15 16 WSDAY i5 16 17 18 19 20 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 22 23 24 25 26 27 2jU 25 26 27 28 29 MRUl 28 29 30 wrong. Instead, Simon invited the when informed today the New London chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is seeking the removal of the books.

No Previous Complaint She said no complaint, has been made to her and that she and her staff were unaware of the rhymes. "Now that I know, I will do something about it," she said. The matter was brought up last night at a chapter meeting. The copy in question has two rhymes which contain the word "nigger." The rhymes are "Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Mo" and "Ten Little Niggers." The latter rhyme is a version of one better known as "Ten Little Indians." The "Eeny, Meeny, etc." rhyme runs: "Eeny," meeny, miny, mo, Catch a nigger by the toe, If he hollers let him go, Eeny, meeny, miny, mo." Asked for the wording of the second rhyme, the librarian said the objectionable pages were removed from the book and destroyed so the text was not available. The book itself is "Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes," arranged by Logan Marshall, and published by the John C.

Winston company, Chi Rev. Mr. Mitchell and his two companions to take over his their comfortable quarters, the 'Rev. Mr. Mitchell and his companions decided to leave.

"They told me that any further sit-in. would serve' no purpose," said Simon. Gets Phone Threats Simon explained that he has been opposed to direct distribution of surplus food on grounds that it would be better to provide such service to relief recipients, thru a food stamp plan now pending in Congress. Simon also disclosed that he has received several threatening anonymous telephone calls and letters in connection with the investigation of conditions at" County hospital. He attributed the calls and letters to a "crackpot." As a precaution, the office of Police: Supt.

O. W. Wilson has assigned around-the-clock police guards to Simon's northwest side home; For a day earlier in the week, Simon also had a city policeman assigned as a body guard. board a plane thismornjng, drove back to the governor's mansion after hear! Frank Chavez, of the teamsters local had announced that he would order a strike beginning Monday. Leaves for Chicago1 Chavez, who left San Juan last night to confer with James R.

Hoffa, the union's president, in Chicago, was protesting the Puerto Rican government's withdrawal of a gambling con- cession from the Ponce de Leon hotel. He contended that the action was a reprisal against the hotel for entering into a labor contract with the teamsters. A government spokesman said the permit was canceled because 25 per cent of the. ho- tel's stock was controled by Zachary A. Strate a New Orleans builder who is on trial with Hoffa in Chicago on charges of misuse of union funds.

i Munoz defended the cancelation of the hotel's casino license on the grounds that only -persons of "proven integrity and honesty" can be connected with a gambling operation." Other government sources said that they suspected that the hotel corporation operating the Ponce de Leon hotel was actually controled by the teamsters. A spokesman for the Weiss- -berg Hotel corporation, which Simon's adjoining conference room, complete with comfortable chairs and a private bath. The invitation was accepted. Simon immediately posted two deputy sheriffs at the door of the conference room. "The deputies are there to keep the Rev.

Mitchell and his companions from being pestered by the press and the television and radio men," he said. Late in the afternoon, Simon's concern proved to be unfounded. After more than 28 hours in St. Augustine, May 29 (LTD Nearly 200 Negroes marched toward downtown St. Augustine tonight in defiance of a city ban on dempnstra-tjons, but helmeted police with dogs turned them back! In Miami tonight, Atty.

Tobias Simon announced' that on Monday, Negroes would ask Jacksonville Federal. Bryan Simpson to enjoin the city of St. Augustine from banning demonstrations. He said they would ask the court to require that police protect the demonstrators, or order federal marshals into the city. Shots Hit King Cottage Earlier today.

in St. Augustine, an unoccupied beachfront cottage rented by Martin Luther King was riddled by bullets from four Shotgun blasts shattered the windows of another integration leader's but both occupants of the car escaped injury. The shootings followed a midnight clash between whites, Negroes, and police which sent two men to a hospital. 4 March Out of Church There was no violence tonight Authorities had slapped a ban on demonstrations, hoping to head off further incidents, but about 170 Negroes marched out of a church tonight toward the downtown section, --r Approximately 35 state, county, and city police met them two. blocks away and formed four lines, one behind the other, across the street In.

the back row were 10 police dogs. When the Negroes reached the front line of police, they dropped to their knees, recited the Lord's prayer, then got up and returned to the church singing freedom songs. While the Negroes were praying, Gary Haynes, UPI photographer, snapped a picture of them. A man in civilian clothes walked up, struck Haynes on the hand with a nightstick, and grabbed bis camera. Asked who he was, the man snapped, "None of your business.

I'm a deputy." He refused to identify himself further. "Reign of Terror" King, who had been in St Augustine organizing racial demonstrations but had left the city before the violence erupted Thursday night, sent a telegram from San Francisco to President Johnson asking that United States marshals be seat to St. Augustine to protect the Negro community. The integration leader charged that St Augustine is undergoing a reign of terror, that all semblance of law and order has broken down. Peoria, clear 70 43 Philadelphia, clear 71 54 Phoenix, clear 91 55 Pittsburgh, cloudy 64 40 Portland, clear 66 42 Portland.

py. cy. 70 48 Quincy, partly cloudy 69 48 Raleigh, cloudy 64 53 .07 Rapid City, rain 54 45 .11 Reno, partly cloudy 70 38 clear 71 53 .22 Rockf ord, clear 66 40 St. Louis, cloudy 68 44 Salt Lake City, cloudy 53 41 .56 San Antonio, rain 93 72 T. San Diego, clear 69 54 San Francisco, clear 59 52 Sault Ste.

Marie, clear 53 37 Seattle, clear 67 48 Shreveport, cloudy 78 60 Spokane, cloudy 73 54 Springfield, 111., p. cy. 72 43 South Bend, clear 64 40 Tampa-St. clear 86 74 Traverse City, py. cdy.

60 31 Tucson, clear 88 57 VandaUa, partly cldy. 68 39 Washington, ptly. cldy. 74 53 Wichita, cloudy 65 56 Temperature extremes within the 48 mainland states: cago and Philadephia. The li Hoffa Defense Raps Refusal of Documents Brownsville, clear 88 72 Buffalo, clear 56 44 Casper, rain ,55 38 .36 Charleston, S.

rain 84 67 1.18 Chartoh, W. clear 68 42 .11 Charlotte, rain 64 57 .03 CHICAGO, clear Midway official 61 46 Grant park 54 49 OUare field 60 41 Cincinnati, clear 68 40 Cleveland, partly cldy. 55 38 Columbus, ptly. cy. 60 39 Denver, rain 62 43 1.18 Des Moines, ptly.

cldy. 68 50 Detroit, partly cloudy 63-41 Dubuque, clear 65 42 Duluth, partly cloudy M. 34 El Paso, clear 88 73 Fairbanks, clear 73 42 Fort rain 81 60 .76 Galveston, cloudy 82 77 Grand Rapids, cloudy 66 36 Green Bay, cloudy 66 34 Helena, cloudy ...53 45 .19 Honolulu, partly cldy. 85 65 Indianapolis, clear 66 42 Jackson, clear M. 59 Jacksonville, ptly.

cdy. 90 72 Juneau, clear ...79 43 Kansas City, cloudy 68 52 Las Vegas, partly cldy. M. 57 Little Rock, cloudy 78 52 Los Angeles, clear 74 54 Louisville, clear 69 44 Madison, clear 67 32 Marquette, clear 55 41 Memphis, partly cldy. 74 SO Miami Beach, cloudy 81 73 .03 Moline, clear 72 45 Midland, clear 87 64 Milwaukee, ptly.

cldy. 57 39 Paul, cloudy 69 41 New Orleans, ptly. cdy. 81 69 New York, partly cldy. 69 49 North Platte, cloudy 59 46 .04 Oklahoma City, rain 62 58 .89 Omaha, cloudy 67 51 Paducab, partly cloudy 68 43 FORECASTS CHICAGO AND VICINITY five 4a forecast thru Wednesday Temperatures will average about It decrees below normal hijh of aad Bormal low of 56; con-ttauet cool; total precipitation less than a tenth of an inch.

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS: Increasing cloudiness and mild today with occasional rain beginning in the afternoon; high, 70 to 75; showers continuing tonight; low, in the lower to mid 50s. Tomorrow: Rain ending and a little cooler. INDIANA: Partly sunny in forenoon today, becoming mostly cloudy in afternoon; cloudy, occasional showers and not so cool tonight; high, 0s north, 66 to 75 south; low, 45 to 55. Tomorrow: Occa- sional showers likely. LOWER MICHIGAN: Mostly sunny and not much change in temperatures today; mostly cloudy and not so cool tonight; high, in 60s; low, in 40s.

Tomorrow: Cloudy, chance of showers extreme south and a few widely scattered showers central and north; little change in temperatures. WISCONSIN: Partly cloudy and continued cool today; cloudy, chance of showers north, scat-' tered showers likely south tonight and tomorrow; high today, mostly In the 60s; low tonight, In the 40s. IOWA: Partly cloudy north, mostly cloudy south today and tonight with occasional showers developing extreme south; high, in 60s. Tomorrow: Partly cloudy and continued unseasonably cool. fl Place of observation -J State of weather S.

May ZS, 7 p. ra. 5 5 Daylight saving a time Albany, clear 45 Albuquerque, cloudy 79 54 brarian confirmed that there was such a rhyme in the book. Called Insulting, Passe The N. A.

A. C. P. terms them "insulting, degrading, offensive, and just plain passe, and not in keeping with the times." It was reported a 10-year-old Negro girl took the book out on loan and came across the rhymes. She showed them to her mother who relayed them Low: 27 at Craig, Colo.

High: 103 at Presidio, Tex. Canadian 7 p. m. BY DAVID HALVORSEN Defense attorneys in the James R. Hoffa fraud trial yesterday charged the government with unfairly withholding relevant documents and placed a defendant on the witness stand in a bid to make their point.

The trial will begin its sixth week Hoffa and seven others are charged with fraudulently obtaining 25 million dollars from the teamster pension is listed as the controling stockholder of the Ponce de-Leon hotel, said that efforts were under way to buy up Strate's interests in the hotel. Police Alerted for Gov. Munoz said he was confident that the courts here and on the mainland would quickly issue injunctions against the union if it ordered a strike on what he said was "patently not a labor issue." He asserted that the island's police would be "ready and waiting" if Chavez carried out his threat to picket airports, docks, and hotels in Puerto to the chapter's president, Lin- wood W. Bland Jr. Bland today commented that he would expect to find books with prejudicial references in the adult section "but for chU- dren to see them is too much.

INDIAN SHUNS BIAS APOLOGY Forced to Leave Cafe in Mississippi Newark, N. May 29 W) The leader of India's Socialist party who was refused service in a Mississippi cafeteria brushed off any effort by the state department to apologize to him today and said: "If anybody needs to apologize, it's President Johnson to the Statue of Liberty and to 3 billion citizens of the world." Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia of Delhi and a white woman companion, Mrs. Ruth Stephan, arrived at Newark airport from Jackson, en route to Mrs. Stephan's home in Greenwich, Conn.

Removed by Police In Jackson, the Indian leader had been refused service at a segregated cafeteria Thursday and was taken away, along with Mrs. Stephan, in a police van when they refused to leave. Lohia, 55, told a press conference today that they were driven around in the van for about 20 minutes and he was somewhat uncertain about what would happen to him. Then police told him he was free. He said he asked why he was not being charged with any offense and "all they told me was Lohia said he understood Rico to prevent any violence.

After more than six years of Judy Garland Getting Well, Doctors Say Calgary, cloudy 56 46 T. Edmonton, partly cldy. 64 36 T. Montreal, partly cldy. 56 39 Ottawa, partly cloudy 56 38 Reglna, cloudy 63 44 Toronto, clear 60 38 Winnipeg, clear 60 31 Vancouver, clear 65 47 Pan American 7 p.

m. -Acapulco, partly cldy. S3 79 Barbados, cloudy 84 77 .02 Balboa, cloudy 88 75 .37 Belize, partly cloudy .90 83 Bermuda, clear 79 73 Havana, cloudy 83 69 Hermosillo, ptly. cldy. 99 66 Kingston, partly cldy.

88 72 Nassau, partly cloudy 82 70 .24 Mexico City, ptly. cldy. 79 54 San Juan, partly cldy. 87 77 .09 Santo Domingo, cloudy 86 72 .01 St. Thomas, cloudy 87 77 Tegucigalpa, cloudy .08 Veracruz, clear 91 73 Foreign I p.

m. Aberdeen, cloudy 63 Dublin, cloudy 55 London, cloudy 70 Paris, cloudy 70 Geneva, partly cloudy 68 Vienna, cloudy 64 Copenhagen, clear 63 TEACHER UNION recruiting efforts, the teamsters have 7,000 members out of an estimated organized working force of 200,000. In Chicago, Hoffa accused VOTES STRIKE HONG KONG, May 29 Reu the Puerto Rican government of using the license issue to ters American Singer Judy "force the teamsters off the .03 1 .06 T- 1.32 Garland today sat up in bed island" because of Gov. Munoz and chatted with friends as she Amarillo, cloudy 59 54 Anchorage, clear ......57 40 AshevUle, cloudy 56 52 Atlanta, rain 62 56 Belleville, ptly. cy.

66 43 Billings, rain 47 45 Birmingham, clear 75 56 Bismarck, cloudy 63 44 Boise, partly cloudy 62 51 Boston, clear 69 47 Last- Day Walkout Set cannot dictate to them. He said Records Called Vital Calvin Kovens, a Florida contractor, took the stand and testified that the records were vital to the interests of his defense. At question were certain financial ledgers of Vaughan B. a Florida real estate investor, who testified for the government 10 days ago about his dealings with Kovens and other defendants. Judge Richard B.

Austin, presiding in federal District court, deferred making a decision 1 until Monday, but ordered the government to keep custody of the documents until, that time. Bellows Hits Unfairness William O. Bittman, special asserted that the records were not relevant to recuperated from a 20-hour coma during which her heart 600 teamsters are employed by nearly stopped. .18 the Ponce de Leon hotel which he denied was controled by the union. Miss Garland, 42, was admit ted to a private Roman Catho lic hospital here last mght in a Mayor of Champaign pouring rain shortly after arriving here from a controver Stockholm, partly cloudy 63 Brussels, clear 72 Rome, rain 68 Athens, clear 72 Madrid, partly cloudy 77 Ankara, cloudy 75 sial tour of Australia.

It was not clear what was Faces in 3 West Suburbs A teachers' strike was called yesterday to begin two hours before summer vacation at six elementary schools in May-wood, Broadview, and Melrose Park. The walkout was set to begin at p. Thursday shortly after students have been dismissed, but two hours before the end of the work day for the faculty. The strike can was issued by Robert KeUy, executive secre Battery Count Blames Strike Violence on No Arrests Order I Continued from first page wrong with the singer because the three physicians attending Moscow, partly cloudy 55 Casablanca, partly cloudy 68 Tokyo, cloudy 61 her refused to comment on her M. Missing.

illness. that the state department had been to reach him to A hospital matron said Miss Garland had suffered a heart involved in picketing incidents. attack, and the singer's hostess, the government's case and were not even brought to the courtroom and were to be returned to the First National Bank of Miami Beach, where they came from. He noted that about a dozen Mrs. Frances Da Silva-Kerk, TORNADO STRIKES MAXWELL, N.M.; 1 KILLED, 20 HURT said her "pulse really arrests had been made in the tary of local 571 of the Ameri last several weeks.

Never in 35 years have I The attorney general-' indi can Federation of Teachers. Kelly said a substantial majority of the 125 members of the stopped." Actor Mark Herron, Miss Garland's traveling companion, said he thought Miss Garland's concert appearance in Mel experienced such unfairness from the government," argued Maxwell, N. May 29 UD cated that steps were being taken to tighten up prosecution. He sent Assistant Atty. Charles Bellows, Kovens' de union's Maywood council 89 approved the strike in balloting bourne, Australia, had a bear A tornado touched down in the business district of Maxwell, in northeastern New Mexico, today, flattening about half the Gen.

Leo Maki to Hillsdale to Gerald K. Weiss (left) and fense counsel. "I'll write to your superiors about it," he Wednesday and Thursday. The walkout is against dis told Bittman. work with Fry.

He said Maki will prosecute cases arising under the state of emergency Atty. Jacques bchufer as serted that Connelly's records ing on her illness. "No one can take that kind of a beating without being hurt," said Herron, who moved into the hospital to be near the singer. Miss Garland was booed by a Melbourne audience when she arrived an hour late for a were needed to show that "Con PUEBU COLORADO Mtyor Emmerson V. Dexter.

accused him of interrupting a conversation," Vlahoplus said. "He Weiss may have pushed him. I can't say one way or the other." Weiss was taken to a Cham trict 89. The union has demanded a pay increase of $350 a year, and the district trustees have offered $100. Negotiations broke down Monday.

Kelly said the union teachers "win not go back in September nelly perjured himself on the proclamation by Gov. George Romney in sending 230 national guardsmen into Hillsdale yes- terday. stand in this very courtroom." "You have this evidence at the doorstep to the courtroom," George Gould, international representative of the-IUE, unless a settlement is reached." concert a little more than a HMnKLL SfKIXSER MEW MEXICO The district has a total faculty he continued, "but if it is sent back to Miami Beach, we will have to subpena them at added apologize tor tne incident. "They're treating me as if I was a foreign dignitary who was badly treated," he. said.

"This has nothing to do with the state department or the Indian embassy. I went to Jackson almost. as an American." Urges White Protests He said he hoped a thousand white persons "will flood areas of Mississippi to protest racial injustice." Lohia was dressed in white robe and slippers, the same type of' native garb he wore when he sought service at Morrison's cafeteria in a Jackson suburb. Asked why he went south, Lohia said, "The south is just as much a part of the United States as the north." He said he found the south "a foul spot," but added that he felt such places exist everywhere, "even in India. In my society, we have color and caste problems." Lohia arrived in the United States about a month ago as a guest of the University of Arizona, where he lectured on history and politics.

He went to Jackson on Wednesday and visited with Dr. A. D. Beittel, white president of predominantly Negro Ton-galoo college Ml. Typhoon Leaves 41 claimed the company provoked violence by trying to maintain expense.

of 193. GIs SAD; LION GETS TOO BIG Prepare for Subpena 100 MILES. production with nonunion workers and importing guards. But he admitted both sides had been aggressive. The defense was prepared to FOR BARRACKS Champaign, 111., May 29 (UPD Gerald K.

Weiss, ,23, today filed a battery charge against Champaign Mayor Emmerson V. Dexter. Dexter allegedly slugged the University of Illinois graduate student at a reception after, the dedication of the Abraham Lincoln memorial here. Weiss is chairman fa National Association for Advancement of Colored People housing committee which' has been picketing the county, board of realtors. I Considered Dropping It Weiss issued a statement saying that he originally had considered dropping-the charge to "avoid causing any personal embarrassment to Dexter.

However, to insure that further acts of violence against persons committed to the civil rights movement, or to anyone, are not condoned by persons in authority, I feel an obligation to state the facts as I know them and file formal charges." Both Weiss and Chris VTabop-his, Gov. Kerner's. press secretary, identified the. mayor as the man who punched Weiss in the jaw. Vlahoplus said he was sitting with Weiss- other civil rights demonstrators-in the reception hall of the Hotel TUden when Dexter walked up to the group.

Vlahoplus said Dexter told him, "This is not a civil rights meeting, you don't have to do this if you don't want to," Weiss then jumped up and told the mayor, "What are you doing here and who the hell do you think you are?" Vlahoplus said. Turned His Back "I looked at the ey. Blaine Ramsey, and when I turned back tiie mayor had popped him Weiss)," Vlahoplus said. "AH I know is that be got hit. If Weiss did anything to the mayor, I didn't see it.

was pretty violent and do that. Mrs. Evelyn B. in the Miami Beach bank, who carried the records to Chicago, was excused town and killing one elderly man. About 20 persons were injured and were taken to hospitals at Raton and Springer- (Picture on back page) May 29 UDA lion won i turn uiner Jijicuk "We don't profess tobthe kind of people who, when they get belted, turn the other cheek," he said.

"The union didn't imDort coons and liuns each about 25 miles away. caUed Vanguard got too big to take an airplane. Defense Atty. George Calla for the barracks so the "lions week ago. Physicians said Miss Garland was on the road to recovery, but indicated would require medical attention for at least five days.

Asked if Miss Garland's ill-, hess was linked to a heart attack or something else Mrs. Silva-Kerk said, "I do not know, but it's not" what you think." She said Miss Garland's "pulse really stopped but doctors pulled her thru." Miss Garland was taken to the hospital in heavy rains after a typhoon struck Hong Kong yesterday. She had complained earlier in the day that Hong Kong's hot, humid weather climate did not agree with her. Herron said "She's terrified by typhoons, The body of Severio Chavez, 85, was found in debris of a building about two hours after of the United States infantry ghan raced to the nearby court clerk's office to get. a subpena the company did.

The -union didn't import professional strike- i breakers the, company did. brigade in West Berlin are sad bunch of soldiers today, and was prepared to chase Mrs the twister All telephone communica Wirebaugh to the airport until The lion, which had been the unit's mascot, was taken back "The company Is so -blinded bv the nrofit motive the are tions into this community of the judge made it unnecessary by ordering the records kept in a few days ago to larger quar some 400 were knocked out as paign hospital to have his jaw examined by a physician and was later released. The Rev, Ramsey led civil rights demonstrations in Cairo, two years Called Self-Defense Dexter said after the incident that he had. approached the group to inform them that the reception was not a civil rights demonstration. He said he met with abuse" and was shoved.

He shoved back in self-defense, he said. In bis office today, Mayor Dexter "I just protected myself and shoved back. It was. all over until someone told him that the mayor shoved him. Then I understand he went to the hospital to see if he had a broken bone and everything else." Dexter said the civil rights demonstrators had delayed a reception planned far the governor.

He said be "just walked over' to where the civil rights advocates were seated with Vlahoplus and said, "Don't you think you've taken i enough time." Dexter said then "two of them jumped up and one guy gave; me a. shove." Chicago. ters in the Hanover zoo, his able only to view their: -rights j-from a dollar 'Onuld said discussinns thus birthplace. rv--: was the water system. Electrical service was restored after about two hours.

Fifteen buildings, including most of the Z7 Cuba Refugees far ha vp rpnterpd arautvf wn. I Pfc. 'Alexander W. Flynt, 21, a former biology student from Lyle, was the saddest Arrive in Nassau Injured in Hong Kong business were demol iority, union shop, and shift bidding procedures. He -said that "we haven't even ffotten of the company's 268 men.

ished. HONG KONG, May 29 (UPD The typhoon which skirted Hong Kong yesterday injured' 41 per into the matter of discussing "He slept in my bed until he was five months old i because he was sick," Flynt said. "We NASSAU, Bahamas, May 29 Reuters Thirty-seven Cuban refugees arrived In Nassau today after sailing 200 miles across the Caribbean in a leaky boat which sank two hours after Rain, Hail Cmmi sons, drove four ships aground, Paris Traffic Jams gave him everything from ground egg shells to pills for Gallucci said tonight that the company would go into federal court in Grand Rapids Monday 'y, to test Gov. Romney's right to and caused' crop damage ashore. After passing Hong Kong, the typhoon, diminishing to a tropical storm, ploughed and yesterday's upset her I Flies to Hong Kong 1 Hollywood, May 29 (UPD Dr.

Lee Siegel, Judy Garland's personal physician, left here today for Hong Kong to treat' the ailing star, i He is expected to arrive in Hong Kong tomorrow. Siegel was accompanied on his flight by Karl Brent, Miss Garland's road 1 pregnant women, but it didn't PARIS, May 29 WA rain and hail storm today turned usually sunny Paris into a mire of traffic jams; flooded gutters, and soaked pedestrians. The into South China. The commu do any good. The veterinarian then told us the cub needed more sunlight before he could they landed.

The refugees left Puerto Padre, in Oriente province, aboard 37-foot yacht May 22, 'picking up women and children from a beach some miles away en route to the declare a public emergency and close the plant. He said an nist Hsin Hua agency said it injunction would be sought but at absorb the calcium so did more good than harm there by relieving drouth conditions water ran' several inches high bought him a sunlamp. From ne was unprepared ai inis. iime on particulars. .1 Bahamas.

in Kwangtung province. in some streets. then on he did fine." 4 -ji.

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