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Daily News from New York, New York • 21

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

to ft ragaaar 33- A Ti MEOfc THE FOOD I'VE rJM THIS IS SANDY! I Pfri A EL. --SPKEAP BEFORE rSE I PAlRT TP THAT BfQ CAT QOES yfe, I EISlaK fcSfk FOR UNCLE WENDELL WE mMa ffir BEGlKrflHQ HIS APPROACH" TO GO FOR. HIM JWK A P7 I MUST PRETENP HOT TO HOTICE HIM A 1 A. fi wOR. EXUPE THE SCENT OF FEAR" VI 7-7al fflf.

A IK THE NEXT FEW SECONDS HE fa wSMk! S' LBr i a Saigon's Paratroops Nits -IShcKS Mousing Plight Drive on a Key City toll around Kampong Rau in two (Continued from page 2) By HUGH WYATT Staff Correspondent of The News Detroit, July 4 Housing discrimination remains a formidable barrier to black Americans in this society, Nathaniel R. Jones, chief general counsel of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said, days of sharp fighting to 191 Communist dead, compared to 23 South Vietnamese killed and 93 wounded. Action also continued to swirl around Phuoc Binh, 77 miles northeast of Saigon, where allied It is an "effective impediment" for black people who follow job opportunities and want educational and housing facilities that other Americans enjoy, he said. One That Didn't Get Away to 13 warplanes tore into an enemy po sition and killed 100. Skirmishes in the area wounded three government soldiers.

Scene Near An Loc Coi.imunist troops again harassed government forces man ning highway 13 just south of An Loc, 60 miles north of baigon. U. S. planes helped drive off the Reds, who -suffered 59 dead, ac Hue and mounted a pair of ground attacks which were repulsed with 39 of the enemy killed. Allied casualties in the actions were seven dead and 17 wounded.

B-52s bombers pounded the Communists in the two uppermost provinces with 28 raids, a batch of them centered in the jungled Ashau Valley, southwest of Hue which could serve as a springboard for an enemy attack on the city. Bombers Are Busy Other B-52s struck four times North Vietnam, with one raid 62 miles above the demilitarized zone, the deepest Stratofort missions since the bombers lashed taigets around Haiphong April 16. The B-52s also mounted a single strike inside the zone and pulled off 31 other raids inside South Vietnam, including seven in Kontum Province and three in Tay Minh, which borders Saigon. Sources said Kontum and the Tay Ninh area are potential trouble spots, in addition to Hue. New fighting broke out in neighboring Cambodia, where South Vietnamese troops backed by planes and artillery piled up 123 enemy dead near the town of Kampong Rau.

Allied losses were 18 killed and 56 wounded. The latest fighting brought the casualty cording to the Saigon command Six South Vietnamese were killed and 22 wounded. American jets pounded a fuel storage area in North Vietnam's panhandle, triggering a chain of explosions and fires. Air Phantom pilots striking the depot 40 miles south of Vmh reported destroying a 5,000 gallon petro Jones, speaking at the 63d annual convention of the NAACP in Cobo Hall, said that "even more important, however, housing discrimination is a visible reminder of the second-class status to which many wish to consign black Americans, and remains the most discernible manifestation of apartheid that this society has devised." "Powerful Legal Weaponry" He said that it is for these reasons that the NAACP has trained its "powerful legal weaponry" on housing discrimination and restrictive land-use policies. Jones told delegates attending the five-day parley, which ends Friday, that one of the principal cases brought by the NAACP has to do with the land-use policies of the town of Oyster Bay, L.I.

"The town of Oyster Bay is wedded to practices and policies that have the effect of excluding black people and (white) middle-income people from that community," he said- "The outcome of this case, which is presently pending in Brooklyn Federal Court, will have signifcance on land-use policies all across the country." Attacks Rrookhaven Selection In another case, Brookhaven et al v. Kunzig et al, Jones said the NAACP joined with the National Commission Against Discrimina leum storage tank and setting off 15 secondary blasts and three fires. fw-: i I 'V The raid was part of more than 270 across-the-border strikes yes terday which also destroyed or damaged three bridges, 37 pieces of rail rolling stock, 31 trucks, six storage areas, four fuel pipe lines and two pumping stations. Anybody for Chess? Nyet There was another indication that Spassky's moves were being plotted in Moscow. After an at tion in Housing to challenge successfully the General Servides Administration for selecting Brook- haven in Suffolk County, L.I., as (Continued from page 3) what loked like an official document in Russian.

It created the impression that he was acting on Moscow's orders. 1 A dispatch by Tass, said had demanded that the nternational Chess Federation fake some punishing measures against Fischer but did not specify what measures should be taken. "During the days of dispute and had temper that preceded Fischer's arrival, Spassky had been the picture of courtesy and understanding. When approached by reporters, he had no bad words fpr Fischer, a man he respects ajs a chess player. All he would say was, that "I came to play." tempt to come to terms with Fischer's people at a private meeting this afternoon, Spassky and his second, Yefim Geller, drove to the Soviet Embassy, presumably for consultations.

Asked what Fischer's opinion of the new dispute was Euwe told reporters, "Mr. Fischer is asleep and is not aware of this." He was in a new two-story villa on the edge of town, sound asleep in the back bedroom. Fred Cramer, a U.S. Chess Federation official, said, "I didn't want to upset Bobby's metabolism by waking him up." the site of a huge Internal Revenue Service facility in violation of federal policy. As thousands of other youngsters headed for the great outdoors for the Fourth of July, this city boy is alone with his thoughts' and a fishing rod in Hartford, Conn.

Under that policy, he continued, the GSA was obligated to survey housing to be certain that an adequate amount of it was avail- able to serve the needs of federal 25 Meld, 9 Cops Hurt employes. "The study it made was a sham OBITUARY In a Harlem Rampage By THOMAS RAFTERY An attempt by two policemen to question two youths and fraud," he declared. "Our assertions were upheld by the -courts, which blocked the transfer and sale of certain federal land until it can be determined wheth er it might be needed to build housing for employes of the fed seen running on a central Harlem street led to a disturb eral internal revenue facility." More significant, though, is ance early yesterday. The suspects battled the cops, allied for help and attracted bands af youths, who then went on a rampage, smashing windows and looting stores on Lenox Ave. from 110th to 116th Sts.

the impact of the decision, which is that the federal government The disturbance, police said, ABE STARK Funeral services for former Brooklyn Borough President Abe Stark, 77, will be held at 10:15 a.m. today at the Riverside chapel, 1 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn. Stark, who started work at the age of 6 as a newsboy, and became the owner of a clothing store, died Sunday of a stroke in the Palm View Manor Nursing Home in Palm Beach, Fla. Twenty-seven years a politician, he served two terms as president of the City Council before he was elected to the borough presidency in 1961. He retired from politics in 1970 after his wife, Lilyan, died and his health broke out at 12:30 a.m.

and when order was restored five hours GEORGE SCHUSTER SpVmfcville, N. July 4 (AP) -4-GeorgW Schuster, 99, who drove a Thomas Flyer around the world to win the famous New York-td-Paris automobile race of 1908, died of a heart attack today in a nursing home in this western New? York village. iSik cars left Times Square on Lincoln's in 1908, drove west -via Albany, Syracuse and Buffalo and then on to San Francisco. After jnore than 13,000 miles and 169. days of hardship in North America, Japan, Siberia Schuster drove the Buffalo-built Flyer into Paris to defeat a German and an Italian carj the only others to finish.

Hi feat was credited with winning- -world prestige for the ypung American automobile industry. later, 25 persons were under arrest and nine cops had suffered minor injuries. According to the authorities. two members of a citywide anti-crime unit spotted the two youths running along Fifth Ave. near where the cops caught up with them.

The youths' shouts brought out large crowds and a barrage of missiles from rooftops was aimed at the cops. Within minutes, more than 200 policemen arrived. They included cops from three surrounding station houses, members of the Tactical Patrol Force, and both Transit and Housing Authority police. tl Roving bands of youths broke at least 14 store windows in the area and some looting was reported, police said, before these "has an obligation" to consider the low and moderate income housing availability of an area into which it plans to build a federal facility, he said. "Furthermore," Jones went on, "the court has implicitly warned that courts can block a move by the government when it fails to take steps to assure that people will be able to find housing at or near the relocated facility." Meanwhile, the NAACP unanimously adopted an emergency resolution condemning President Nixon for his antibusing views and declaring he had aroused passions of hat aid among M- J- 116th St.

The cops halted the pair," but when they started to get out of their unmarked car one of the youths kicked the door shut while the other struggled 6 Firemen Injured Coventry, R.I., July 4 (AP) Six firemen suffered minor burns and smoke inhalation today bat with one of the policemen. Police said the two suspects tling a fire that destroyed a fire that destroyed the Linwood. lace broke awa; iwajtaBdan to i festjao- I he restored automobile is in yrrouns entispersed lor its rribers-rtt'd Barren's-Museum twork milU i Kant at.

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Years Available:
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