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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 1

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Los Angeles, California
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nn 0 SATURDAY JQDmJDuDD MM cS hl 7 (i7 1 PI 1 mm LnJU LARGEST IN THE WEST, 861,350 DAILY, 1,212,983 SUNDAY Copyright' 1967 Los Angeles Times 60 PAGES SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 24, 1967 PARTS PART ONE U. O) DAILY Police Clash I With Crowd Outside Hotel BY PAUL HOUSTON Timet Staff Writer President Johnson dined with admiring Democrats at fund-raising festivities here Friday night out of sight of; a clash between l.dUO club-swinging police and 10,000 antiwar demon strators outside the 'Century Plaza Hotel where he spoke. 1 Police made a. total of 45 arrests during- an earlier incident andv-'ia they cleared the huge from the hotel entrance with a massive show of force. More than two dozen persons were to have been bloodied; byv riot sticks as police made a sweep of the area within an! hour after the President's said they themselves were stoned, spat upon and had their badges torn off.

May Have Seen March The major confrontation occurred shortly after Mr. Johnson and his daughter, Lynda Byrd, jetted tb International Airport from the East and took a helicopter to, the hotjel. It was possible they observed fr6m the air the 10,000 chanting, sign-carrying demonstrators marching up the Avenue of the Stars from Cheviot Hills Playground nearby. At 11:55 four hours and "13 minutes after arriving in Los Angeles, the presidential party left by Jet for the Johnson ranch in Shortly after the presidential party entered the hotel from the 'reap Jm-der heavy guard, the demonstrators began piling up in front of the hoteU In 30 minutes concerned police shouting through bullhorns declared the crowd to be an unlawful assent and ordered it to dispersed In another half hour, around 9 p.m., 1,000 helmeted police began moving on the crowd in lines two-deep, jabbing and beating some ufl- Please Turn to Page 15, Col. 1 1 p-rtA'TAn CJ'n-rt tilts I lvJ'F" mwsXt 4 ft Wi i il 4 "F1 r- i i i I r'-, 4 7 i FOUR Johnson, Soviet Premier to Talk Further Sunday BY STUART H.

LOOBY. Times Staff Writer GLASSBORO, N.J. In a great public outpouring of goodwill toward each other, President Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin met for five hours and 13 minutes Friday, and liked it so much they decided to, come back for more. The.

two leaders were smiling, expansive and obviously buoyant as they emerged from the rust-colored, stone house of the president of Glassboro State College here to address a crowd which had been waiting in a grove of huge elm trees. "This meeting today was a very good and very useful meeting, "the President said as the premier, his good spirits softening his characteristic doleful expression, stood at his side. The President continued: "We are inviting ourselves to return here again at 1:30 on Sunday afternoon (10:30 a.m. PDT). We will continue our discussions here then." Crowd Gathers on Streets While the two men talked alone for two hours, lunched with their advisers or two hours and then returned to another hour of private talks, a crowd of 5,000 gathered on the streets around the college.

When Kosygin started to drive away after the meeting he spotted the crowd, ordered his car stopped and got out to greet them. The premier waved. The crowd cheered. The premier held his hands clasped in front of his face in the style of a victorious prizefighter. The crowd cheered more and some chanted "Peace, Peace." Then, with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F.

Dobrynin translating, the premier spoke to the people: "I send you a greeting from the Soviet people and would like to assure you that our Soviet people want only one thing and that is to live in peace with you and to want war Some Throw Flowers The crowd cheered mightily and some threw flowers up the embankment on which he was standing. One of the onlookers, John Russack, extended his hand toward the premier, saying, "Tovarish (comrade) Kosygin." Kosygin turned and shook Russack's hand. Then Kosygin waved again and, his face glowing with a smile, he said: "There are many beautiful and wonderful things to be done." Once again the great roaring response from the crowd and once again the premier waved prizefighter style. Then he was led to his car by security agents and he was gone. The mood was infectious.

When Mr. Johnson emerged from the house about 15 minutes later, he, too, went to the embankment and received the greatest public ovation any crowd has given him since the Flease Turn to Page 12, Col. 3 THE WEATHER Light smog today. U.S. Weather Bureau forecast: Low clouds in the morning, becoming mostly sunny this afternoon.

Mostly sunny after mid-morning Sunday. High today near 80. High Friday, 78; low, 60. VOL. LXXXVI War start march toward Century Plaza Hotel where President Johnson' spoke.

Times photo by. Ray Graham on 1 Count, Cleared of Other harshest form of punishment, short of expulsion the Senate can impose. Throughout the nine days of debate on the censure resolution, it had become increasingly evident that many senators regarded the, double-billing count as relatively inconsequential. Several senators "also contended that, the ethics committee, "officially known as the Select Committee on Standards and Conduct, had failed to prove that Dodd had wilfully committed double- billing. Dodd himself put the blame for it on what iilift 1 f' DEMONSTRATORS MASS Antiwar 1 Young GOP Hears Johnson Policies Scored by Reagan BY RICHARD BERGHOLZ Timet Political Writer OMAHA The Johnson Administration has "lost touch with reality," Gov.

Reagan suggested Friday, and Republicans can win next year if they present "clear and positions" on political issues. The Californian was keynote speaker at a banquet which marked the close of the biennial convention of the Young Republican National Federation. His appearance as well as his speech took the Young Republicans by storm. Repeatedly he was given standing ovations. For five minutes the crowd of 1,500 shouted, "We want Reagan" when he arrived, and- so great was the de-m a for autographs and handshakes after his speech that he was hustled out of the cavernous auditorium for his own protection.

Speech Ranges Far and Wide Before he spoke, a tightly "organized band of conservatives, led by Jack McDonald of Nashville, captured leadership posts in the national YR movement. Reagan, clearly the sentimental favorite of many YRs for President next year, despite his disclaimer of candidacy, ranged far and wide in his prepared speech. He said Republican triumphs in last year's elections showed that the public was deeply dissatisfied with the Democrats and "it is our destiny to offer a banner for the people of all parties to follow." "Choose the colors weii," Reagan told the YRs, "for they are not in the mood to follow the sickly pastels of expedience, the cynical shades of those who buy the people's votes Please Turn to Page 2, Col. 4 protesters fill Motor Ave. as they -7 Dodd Censured BY JOHN H.

AVERILL Timet Staff Writer WASHINGTON The Senate censured Sen; Thomas J. Dodd Friday for financial misconduct that "tends to bring the Senate into dishonor and disrepute." By a vote of 92 to the Senate upheld the findings of its ethics committee that -Dodd had diverted to his personal use at least $116,083 of the $450,273 raised for him from testimonial affairs and campaign contributions between 1961 and 1965. For this, the Senate decreed that Dodd "deserves the censure of tne Senate, and he is so censured for his conduct, which is contrary to accepted morals (and) derogates from the public trust expected of a However, the Senate then exonerated Dodd of a second censure charge that he had double-billed the Senate and private organizations for the same air travel. By a vote of 51 to 45, the Senate eliminated the double-billing count from the. ethics committee's tion of censure.

Legally, a censure resolution carries no penalties of any kind and Dodd will lose none of his privileges or rights as a senator. But, practically, censure is regarded as the FEATURE INDEX ASTROLOGY. Page 5, Part 3. CHURCH NEWS. Pages 6-8, Part 3.

CLASSIFIED. Pages 1-20, Part 4. COMICS. Page 11, Part 2. CROSSWORD.

Page 19, Part 4. DAY IX SACRAMENTO Page 12, Part 2. FINANCIAL. Pages 7-10, Part LETTER'S TO THE' EDITOR. Page 4, Part 3.

MOTION PICTURES. Pages 16-19, Part 1. SOCIETY. Page 1, Part 3. SOUTHLAND.

Page 5, Part 3. SPORTS. Pages 1-6, Part 2. TV-RADIO. Pages 2-3, Part 3.

VITALS, WEATHER. Page 5, Part 3. he called the incompetence of a former But there never seemed any doubt that the Senate was convinced. of Dodd's guilt on the major charge of political fund diversion.) And this was borne but by the dramatic roll coll on that count. For the first few minutes, there was an unbroken response of clerk James Johnson called alphabetical It wasn't until 47 senators had responded in the Please Turn to Page 4, Col.

3 ip -3 Him i SUMMIT HANDCLASP President Johnson ond Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin shake hands before tneir meeting lege President at home ot wassDoro, IN.J., Mate LOI- Thomas Robinson and wife, ifl Wirephot 4-.

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