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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 10

Publication:
El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1. Wast Ad Prpf. 5321971 THE EL PKSO TIMES El Paw'i HOME wpapr Tnrday. Jane 2. 1979 Jo N.

C5mnt' Defects. Improper Maintenance Seen Causes Of Rising Train Derailments Correspondent Sees Plot To Destroy iScgro Colleges CASH BURIAL POLICY pvicy to ace 90 No salesmen call or. you. no examination Mc-ney back guarantee Free am, "Tveiope Tear out ad Write BANKERS HEALTH AND LiH INSl'KANCE COMPANY. O.

BOX 11376. Fort Worth. Texas EH 47 RUBBER STAMPS 61S Star.ton miasair 9 olorTW tors, lawvers and activists who have helped improve the black man's plight. In the past. Yette.

said, black colleges ere financially starved in an effort to control them and black educators in charge of Negro schools were placed there to keep down Negroes. But these controls, he said. hae not worked. Sen. Vance Hartke.

D-I-d a sponsor of the pending bill, told rhe Senate of his persona! inspect io- of rav roacSeds. "I have polled spikes out with my finders. I have picked up some of th t.es which are like dr.ftwood. I have observed that bolts are missing on connecting rails. "3 have witnessed first hand a situation where.

could underneath the ra supposedly fastened to a tie and see vojr shoes." by MOTOROLA AT COLORAMA TV 4810 Pershin TT Yl Television Listings HOUSTON, Tex. CAP) A Newsweek Magazine corre- spor.de-;! rces in America are seeic.r.e to destroy black col'eges. Samue! F. Yette. Washington based correspondent for the news magazine, spoke at the commencement exercise for Texas Southern University, a predominantly black school.

Yette told the 40 graduates that the Department of Health, Education and Welfare has set a secret requirement that private black schools must enroll at least 50 per cent white students. He also claimed that HEW wants to require black colleges to hire white administrators. More white students would force out black students who would be unable to gain admission to other colleges. Yette said. And white administrators could eventually gain control of the black schools, he charged.

Yette also criticized what he called the "grand merging schemes" in many states which place black schools under a university system. This, he said, amounts to white control of black institutions. These steps are being taken, Yette charged, because black schools are turning out doc Exerpienced 'peelers' can remove a blemish on a pearl if it isn't too deep. Holes are sometimes drilled at the point of a blemish, thus eliminating it. A small, perfect pearl is much more valuable than a large pearl with a minute blemish.

SUNGLASSES Safety Prescription Glosses coated any color MEDICAL DISPENSING OPTICIANS 1302B N.STANTON Ph. 544-3699 it a El Paso KROD (CBS) (Channel 4i 5:25 MORNING DEVOTIONAL 5:30 SUMMER SEMESTER 6 00 CBS NEWS 6.55 NEWS 7 CAPTAIN KANGAROO 8 0O THE LUCY SHOW 8 30 i HILLBILLIES 9 00 ANDY OF MAYBERR 9:30 LOvE OF LIFE 10:00 WHERE THE HEART IS 10 25 CBS NEWS 1C 30 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW 11 00 FOUR NOON 11 30 AS THE WORLD TURNS 12 00 MANY SPLENDOR ED THING 12 30 GUIDING LIGHT 1:00 SECRET STORM 1:30 EDGE OF NIGHT 2:00 WOMAN WORLD 2. JO THE SAINT 3 30 BOZO BIG TOP CIRCUS 4: 30 FL INTSTONES 5:00 GOWER PYLE 5:30 WALTER CRON KITE 6 00 NEWS 6 30 RED SKELTON SHOW 7 30 GET SMART 8 00 GUN SMOKE 9:00 JUDD FOrt THE DEFENSE 10 91-NEWS 10.45 MOVIE "APRIL IN PARIS- TUESDAY. JUNE 2. 1970 KTSM (NBC) (Channel 9) 7 00 TODAY 7 25 NEWS 7.30 TODAY 8 00 IT TAKES TWO 8 30 CONCENTRATION 9 00 SALE OF THE CENTURY 9:30 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 10:00 JEOPARDY 10 30 WHO, WHAT, WHERE GAME 10 55 NBC NEWS 11 .00 DIALING FOR DOLLARS 11.30 LIFE WITH LINKLETTER 12 00 DAYS OF OUR LIVES 12.30 THE DOCTORS 1 00 ANOTHER WORLl 1:30 BRIGHT PROMISES 2:00 ANOTHER WORLD 2:30 DIVORCE COURT 3:00 MOVIE STOPOVER TOKYO" 5 00 OZZiE HARRIET 5:30 HUNTLEY-BRINKLEY 6 JO NEWS.

SPORTS, WEATHER 6 25 RON A BARRETT 6 30 JULIA 7 00 FIRST TUESDAY 9 00 THE SHINING MOUNTAIN 10:00 NEWS-WEATHER 10: 15 TONIGHT SHOW handful freights. At the same urr.e train miles traveled dechred 5 per cent. Derau rr.erts on defects or improper maintenance of rights-of-way and structures soared 210 per cent, from 577 in 11 to -n 1957, the last year for faich that data was available. HAZARDOUS MATERIALS Railriads estimate hazardous materials now compose 5 per cent of their freight, but the government sayd the figure is closer to 10 per cent. Railroad safety standards are not comprehensively se: or regulated by the federal government.

Instead, they are overseen by the Associatioon cf American Railroads (AAR), the American Railway Engineer. ng Association (AREA), and by each individual line. "Right now, the government has no authority over 95 per cent of the causes of most railroad accidents." says a Senate committee staff member who helped draft legislation requiring the Department of Transportation to set safety standards for the railroads. The bill was passed by the Senate in December and cleared a House committee last week. HEADED FOR PLATEAU The increase in derailments is minimized by the Association of American Railroads.

Says spokesman James A. Schultz: "I think we are headed for a plateau and possibly moving downward in the number of derailments." Schultz also contends that many of the evacuations were unnecessary. The AAR says railroads spent 51.5 billion last year for maintenance of rights-of-way; $2 billion for maintaining equipment and $1.6 billion in capital improvements. "That's not enough money," sayd Schultz. "But this was all we could scrounge up.

We would like to have spent twice as much." In citing the need for legislation to make railroads safer, (For further Information on programs, call the station. The changes in listings which have been furnished the stations.) Kallicriiie Clark Met Rental Tuesilav. June 2, 7:30 P.M. C0R0NAD0 HIGH SCHOOL no admission chorg A-ONE TV APPLIANCES KELP (ABC) (Channel 13) 8 30 JACK LA LANNE K-UOWOER ROOM 9 3D" HAT GIRL 10 00 BEST OF EVERYTHING TO: 30 A WORLD APART 00 ALL MY CHILDREN 1' 30 LET'S MAKE A DEAL CO NEWLYWED GAME 12 30 DATING GAME 1 00 GENERAL HOSPITAL 1:30 ONE LIFE TO LIVE 2 DO DARK SHADOWS 2 30 GIRL TALK 3 00 MOVIE HOT BLOOD" 4:30 ABC NEWS 5:00 MUNSTERS 5:30 HAZEL 6:00 THE MOVIE GAME 6 30 MARCUS WELBY, D. 7:30 MOD SQUAD 8:30 MOVIE 10:00 NEVS, STOCK MARKET REPORT, WEATRER.

SPORTS 10 30 HORIZON SPEEDWAY REPC'RT 10:40 MOViE -'13 DAYS TO DIE" Read Sundial weekly for listing of movies at local theaters and on television. Times is not responsible for to We Undersell The Discounts Service Remember, No One Undersells A-One 3903 TOMPKINS 566-1601 OPEN TIL 6:00 Summer Clauses Repin June 3rd For Information Call Kibbee Death Reported Word has been received here of the death of Milton Kibbee, stage and movie actor who was associated with El Paso community theater in the 1930s. He died Apr.l 17 in Si mi Valley, Calif. Mr. Kibbee.

brother of the late Guy Kibbee, also a famous character actor, was born in Roswell, N.M. Their father, James, worked on El Paso newspapers for 65 years and was editor of a Las Cruces, N.M., newspaper. Milton Kibbee had been in show business for 50 years, doing many shows on Broadway and about 50 movies, prior to his retirement. He then returned to El Paso where he, his wife and their daughter, Lois, were active in local facets of show business. He is survived by his widow and his daughter, Lois, who resides in New York; another daughter, Mrs.

Elizabeth Zonn of Simi Valley; two sons, James, of New Orleans, and Milne Kibbee of Torrance, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Burial was in Oakwood Cemetery in Chatsworth, Calif. The metropolitan area of Cincinnati, Ohio, has a population of about 1,500,000. 11 II I Ill IHJNFRAL HOME MONTANA AVENUE Dial 566-3955 WASHINGTON (A P) Dfc; and improper on Arrtr.can raroads ar maior causes by gw-mmtni atoy iprs for derailments ch have oared 105 per cert in seven years. The derailments scrrse-tirre involving trams hauling dargerou cargoes ircreas-irgHy threaten towns and cites along the track.

with economic disaster and evacuation of er.tre poIat.ons. Records show au'honties have ordered 53 com.T,un:t! evacuated since after derailments of trams carrying hazardous ma'enals. Twenty-five of the cases ere last year. The evacuation-c a i derailments left 12 persons dead, 155 injured and property losses totaling m.I'ions of dollars. "It is obvious that in railroad transportation we are facing a new dimension in accident erposure." Chairman John H.

Reed of the National Transportation Safety Board told a congressional committee last year. SAFETY PICTURE SERIOUS safety picture is serious, particularly light of higher speed, longer and heavier trains, the possibility of a major catastrophe is ever present." An Associated Press study of government records on train accidents disclosed: The number of derailments increased from 2,671 in 1961 to 5.487 in 196S all but a Students Give Support On Cambodia DALLAS, Tex. (AP) Nine representatives of Student Majority for Responsible Expression (SMRE) will present President Nixon petitions supporting his policy in Cambodia during the group's four days in Washington, beginning June 8. Members also will visit congressmen and lobby for defeat of the Cooper-Church amendment cutting off Cambodian support funds. Green said more than 500 petitions have been returned from advertisements carried in Dallas newspapers last Thursday.

The ads urged readers to "support the President" and send to SMRE signed coupons which support the President's decision to eliminate the communist sanctuaries in Cambodia." Green, 13. said telephone calls came from such Texas cities as El Paso. Longview, Port Arthur and Su'phur Springs. One letter, he said. Springs.

One letter, he said, came from Wisconsin. Groups of teen-agers solicited more signatures Saturday in shopping centers in suburban Richardson and Dallas' Oak Cliff section. DI ATCCOncDaj Service AMD IOWEK COMPLETE 3g95 DR. BURG0A COS. 120 1 6th de Sept.

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Pages Available:
1,966,932
Years Available:
1881-2024