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Lake Charles American-Press from Lake Charles, Louisiana • Page 9

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Lake Charles, Louisiana
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9
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M-LOD6ES SOCIETY NOTICES Called FiAW at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jnly 18th, 1980 at WMHako, Examinations degrees, Officers and mem- berg m-fed to attend. Victors welcome. G. E.

JENSEN, W.M.. A. IAUGKUN Sec. Stated communication of Wcstlafcc Lodge No. FfcAM, Tuesday, July 19, at 7:30 p.m.

for regular or- of easiness. Entered Apprentice decree will be conferred. Officers and members nrgcd to attend. Visiting brethern welcome. HAROLD It.

YOUNG, W.M. C. t). ADAMS, Sec. Mrs.

Hazleton Of Sulphur Rites Wednesday SULPHUR fSpl.) Funeral services for Mrs. Fannie Piersall Hazleton. 54, of S24 West Parish road, will be held at 9 a.m. Wednesday at St. Arme's Catholic church in Mamou with burial in the clrurch cemetery- A Rosary will be held here tonight at 7:30 at the Burke-Hammer funeral home and services will be held at 9 a.m.

Tuesday at Burke- Hammer in Sulphur. Mrs. Hazleton died at 1:15 p.m. Sunday at a Sulphur hospital. She was a native of Mamou and had lived In Sulphur for 17 years.

She was a member of Our Lady of Prompt Succor Catholic church in Sulphur. Survivors include her husband, Percy Hazleton of Sulphur; one son, Pvt. Percy Hazleton Jr. of Fort Bragg, N. one brother, Gilbert Piersall of Mamou and one sister, Mrs.

Emily neaux of Vflle Platte. Mamou services are under the direction of Ardoln funeral home. Man Files Suit For Injuries in Parking Lot Fall A Calcasieu parish resident has filed a $10,000 damage suit with the clerk of court here claiming he was injured in a a 11 on the parking lot a local grocery store. The suit was filed by Edwin E. Flaherty and names defendant as George Ttteriot's of Lake Charles.

Flaherty said that on July 18, 1959, he was walking on the parking lot of a Theriot store on First avenue and stepped into a hole, causing him to fall. Tlie man said the fall injured his shoulder and back. State Police Investigate 17 Mishaps Over Weekend State police today reported they made 17 arrests as a result of 15 accidents, over the past week- mostly on Sunday. And Lake Charles city police reported one driver charged with hit-and-run and one person slight- persons, not all were charged In connection with accidents. But they did charge five drivers with reckless driving, one with drunken driving and a seventh with aggravated obstruction of a highway in connection with accidents.

Guferma Still Fights Against Agent Charges WASHINGTON (AP) Financier Alexander L. Guterma i lJ he Cily Crash ke his fight 'today against over the week end. Although troopers arrested 17 Cuban Pilot flees to U.S. With Airliner KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) A Cubans Air Lines plane, carrying 52 passengers bound to Miami, was landed here Sunday night orders of a pilot who said "I had to flee Cuba because Comiminists have taken over my The pilot is Jose Perez Menendez, 41. Authorities were told he pulled a pistol soon after the plane left Havana and forced the first officer, Guido Colli, 35, to head to this Caribbean Island.

Cuban Consul Herfborto Clews declared Perez Mencndez had paid $50,000 in Miami to divert the plane. He declared be ha proof. He said the incident was promoted fay "an international ring led by a foreign capitalist whose only aim is to spread malicious propaganda against the Cuban government." Here Perez Menendez said Communists were in command of his company and Prime Minister Fidel Castro's government. "Castro and all his top men are Communists," the pilot declared. "Thousands are rotting in jail many foreigners In Cuba, in the guise of technicians, are in reality Communists from Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia and I China." 1 "Castro wants to rule all the Caribbean and Latin America, I was Joseph E.

Falk 45, of 2110 Fourth street. Troopers said his car hit the rear of one ahead stopped at corner of Broad street and Sixth avenue for a traffic light Sunday afternoon. Larry J. Cclestine, 20, of Rt. 1, Box 1071, was charged with aggravated obstruction of a highway and driving without a license in connection with a three car crash early Sunday morning.

Troopers said Celestine topped his car at the intersection of Goodman road and Opelousas street, blocking the road while he talked to another man in a parked car. Both cars were htt by a third driven by Norris Broussard of 317! charges of acting illegally as an agent of Rafael L. Trirjiflo and the Dominican Republic. Guterma, 44, a mystery man of international finance, asked the U.S. District Court to allow him to reinstate his plea of innocent.

The indictment against him charged he and an associate obtained $750,000 from the West Indies republic with'the trader standing tbe Mutual Broadcasting System, of which tney were then top officials, would disseminate pro- Dominican propaganda in tbe guise of news. May 18, Guterma withdrew his pita of innocent and substi- Ctrerry street. Injured in that crash, according to state police, were Jimmy Fontenot of Lake Charles; Clifton and George Celestine of Iowa; and Senegal Dupree of Woodlawn. injuries were apparently minor. Charged with reckless driving by state police were Harry Frink, 39, who listed his address as the jtnted one of nolo contendere.

This (pica, while not admitting guilt, allows the defendant to be sentenced as though he had pleaded guflty. Sentence, which could be as much as five years in prison and $10,000 fine, was deferred. If today's request is granted, the nolo contendere plea will be set aside and Guterma again will boat "Frosty Morning" in Cameron; Leanier Lavergne, 21, of 617 First avenue; Salvatore Piccione, of 120 Concord street. Abbeville; Gerald Broussard, 18, of 1229 Mayo street; and Bernice Nettle, 42, of Gaspard trailer park, Crowley. be eligible for "trial.

Guterma is serving a four-year and 11-month sentence in a federal prison in Atlanta, Ga. That sentence was imposed in New York on charges of violating regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission. A New York court also fined him $160,000 on that chargee. Guterma was brought from At- Troopers said Frink ran a red light at TJ.S. Highway 171 and Opelousas street and collided with a car driven by Ruth L.

Savaee of Ianta for today's hearing. Lafayette. Lavergne, going about 60 or 70 Fugitive miles per hour in the 300 block of Booker street, lost control of his car and hit three other parked vehicles there about midnight Friday night, according to state po- TlnM lice. To Live Up to His Reputation A Lake Charles police charac- Two Teenagers Put on Probation In Burglary Try against Piccione were ln warn all those must be alerted t( threat," he said. countries they the Communist Navy to Test New Mountain Rescue Device i filed after an accident Sunday afternoon at the State Highway 14- State Highway 397 intersection.

105 tlie rear of a car driven by Kevin P. Gayle, of Rt. 3, Box 405; who was attempting a left turn. which knocked SOUTH WEYMOUTH, Mass. Navy Neptune twin-en- Two teenagers, one from bomber will take off in about Qnincy and one from Starks, were placed on probation in Calcasieu ri'slrict court today when they pleaded guilty to attempted burglary charges.

Robert E. Vanwinklc, 17, of De- Quincy. and Kyle D. Rainwater, 17, of Rt. 1, Box 14E, Starks, wer given two-year suspended penitentiary sentences and placed on probation by Judge Mark.

C. Pickrel. DeQuincy Policemen Brooks Arrant and Arnold Young reported they were called Saturday night to the Brantley grocery in DeQuincy where two figures had been seen behind the building. The officers reported that when they arrived at the building, the two boys fled and were stopped only when the officers fired pistol shots into Ute air. Police said the pair had taken a screen off the store's rear window and had attempted to pry the window open.

Bar-Restaurant Is Burglarized a week for Point Barrow, Alaska a lonely ice island in the test a new invention for rescuing men from mountain sides or flating ice packs. The device, called an "air retriever," consists of a shaped fork extension on the front of the plane, a helium-filled balloon, and a length of nylon rope. It is the invention of a Connecticut man, Robert Fulton, and is designed to make possible aerial retrieval of both men and equipment from areas otherwise inaccessible because of terrain or location. The procedure is for the party on the ground to release the balloon. When the balloon has reached about 300 feet witii Us light, strong nylon cord attached, the plane will then catch a device on the upper end of the line on the fork extending forward from the middle of the plane.

Then the man, or the material, attached to the line will be snatched aloft. It was explained today that there is so much elasticity in the 300 feet of line The burglary of a Ryan street men who have been picked bar and restaurant was investigat- up in several preliminary "live" ed early today by Lake Charles'tests reported no discomfort. city police. i Mike Hogan, city police chief of detectives, said the break in occurred at the Office Cafe and Bar, 3306 Kirkman street, sieu district court, apparently did not live up to his name. The man, James Williams, 27, of 306 Enterprise boulevard, better known to police as "Little Fast Blade," (to differentiate him Bert Parks Hails New Theater Career By LILL1AM GLOVER Associated Press Drama Writer NEW YORK (AP) "It's a whole new world, boy," says Bert Parks of his leap from television to Broadway.

"I believe this will change my whole Parks, whose tireless grin and surging voice have long been network features, is the new star of "The Music Man," one of the Rialto's most solid hits. "Fortunately, it's ideal for my debut," says the ebnlldent entertainer whose only previous Stage experience was two weeks of summer stock four years ago. "I feel I've got something to Rail Unions Will Oppose Merger Plans MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, Railroad brotherhoods said today they will oppose merger of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific railroads if the proposal goes to Interstate Commerce Commission hearings. Richard Bichsel, Northern Pacific chairman for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, said the merger proposal would be opposed on the basis it would adversely affect seniority of NP engineers. Bichesel said employment of engineers on the GN and NP had decreased to a total of about 1,500 during recent years, the decrease being due principally to dicseliza- tion.

C. L. Birdsell, Northern Pacific chairman for the Brotherhood of Fireman and Enginemen, said Iris union is studying demands for protection of seniority if the merger materializes. He said protection of displaced workers would be a jfrom Albert Hunter, "Big Fast vehicle 75 car ran into a over, troopers said. Broussard was charged in connection with a crash Sunday afternoon on Highway street where the iBlack," another police char- the'acter) was fined a total of $35 been approved by directors of the issue.

The merger which has Piccione when he pleaded guilty to charges railroads, still needs stockholder turned' of driving without a license and'approval and approval by several federal agencies. simple escape. State police troopers said they, stopped Williams on Opelousas; crate nearly 25,000 miles of line systems involved now op- trormorc street late Saturday, and finding ihe had no drivers license, him to get into the patrol car. SundHafternoon Wt A trooper related how later he heard a noise in the bushes beside Opelousas street and UPhUr Who was at the investisated and The cafe manager found the break in shortly after 4 a.m. today when he went to the place to open for business, llogan said entry was made through a rear window and exit possibly through a rear door that could be unlocked from the inside.

Stolen was cash from coin -op- dav crated machines and a quantity of assorted liquor. 7,000 Americans Are Evacuated From Congo WASHINGTON (AP) About half of all Americans in The 1,000 men, women anc' been evacuated thus far, State Department officials estimated privately lo- lus'estigating were Detectives Rrooks Koonce. Hamilton and Walter Pope Appoints New Prefect VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope John XXIII today formally named Gregory Peter Cardinal Agagia- nian prefect of the Vatican's Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. Cardinal Agagianian succeeds Pletro Cardinal Fumasoni Biondi, who died ago after heading the congregation for 27 years. The congregation directs the Roman Catholic Church mission activities throughout the world.

Cardinal Agagianian, who will be 65 on Sept, 18, was born in what is now Soviet Georgia. He is considejBd one of the Church's foremost experts ou the Soviet Union and They said an official estimate will be issued after the department appraises a large number ov evacuation operation reports which came in during the weekend. Huge Balloon Radios Back Cosmic Ray Data BEMIDJl, Minn. huge balloon soared 25 miles above the earth Sunday, probed the stratO' sphere for information on cosmic rays, and then radioed the data to scientists on the ground. Air Force teams here today were evaluating the information, which will help them understand the hazards to be faced by any men sent into space.

Most of it was telemetered vhile the balloon drifted over Minnesota, North Dakota, anc! Montana at altitudes up to 133.000 India Aiding Congo NEW DELHI. India (AP) A government spokesman said Saturday India will send 1,000 tons of svheat to The Congo at the" re quest of the- United Nations. just set down to rest under a little old bush." found Williams Iving in the weeds ff High besid the street, tempting a left turn off U.S. High-: way 90 east of Sulphur, troopers' Although he pleaded guilty to taid ithe charges. Williams told Judge Mark C.

Pickrel: City police charged both drivers with traffic offenses after an accident at Enterprise boulevard and Prien Lake road Sunday afternoon, Henry Wayne Lemmons, 21, of Headquarters Squadron 68th Bomb Wing, Chennault Air Force base was charged with hit-run driving and the other driver, Donald Lovttt, 21, (no address listed) was charged with driving without a license and failure to yeild right- of-way. Patrolman T. D. Abbott reported Lovett pulled onto Prien Lake road into the path of Lemmons. Police reported Althea Penn of 1506 West State street, Jennings, was treated at St.

Patrick's hospital for bruises after an accident about 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Ryan and McNeese streets. She was a passenger in car driven by Joseph E. Penn, 51, of the same address, police said. Penn was charged with driving without a license in his posession, and the ofter driver, James A.

Beard, 25, of 418 North First avenue, was ticketed with improper passing. Patrolman L. D. Graves reported Beard, passing on the right side, collided with the Penn vehicle, which was attempting a right turn. and have about 65,000 employes in 17 states and Manitoba and British Columbia in Canada.

White Man With Neqro Sitters Is Roughed Up offer other than what I've been known for. and there's no better place to prove it than Broadway, the last refuge of creative theater. "But I'm not abandoning television, and I'm hot kicking it hi the teeth. I've seen too many other guys get out and deride. Television can great too, and it nurtured me." The big thing, adds 42-year-otd Parks, is that the theater provides a fine way to stop being typecast as a Jolly master of ceremonies.

As far as TV colleagues are concerned, he says, "I've already taken on an entirely new dimension." Never again, he says, will he do a daily air a diige." His Broadway contract extends until June, 1981. The square-jawed, ruddy Parks has yearned to try legitimate theater for a long time. But for more than 25 years demands for his talents kept him hoofing, punning and announcing through such varied fare as "Break the Bank," "Stop the Music," and "Double or Nothing." Parks first became interested in "The Music Man" when composer Meredith Willson, a longtime broadcasting associate, urged him to audition for the original cast. He did one song for the backers, but didn't follow up because of a crowded calendar. The notion of portraying the breezy, bouncing travelling man who went about long-ago Iowa setting up boys' band slingered on, however.

Parks decided to have a go at it when he heard a successor was needed for Eddie Albert, who had followed Robert Preston in the role. Battle Hymn: a new clement injects fresh theatrical excitement into a revival of "John Brown's Body" by a collegiate group which in September sets off on a national tour after off-Broadway triumph. The production, directed by Curtis Canfield, dean of the Yale School of Drama, adds music to the dramatization that Charles Laughton staged on Broadway several season back. The score by Fcnno Heath, dl rector of the Yale Glee Club, infuses a vibrant excitement into the Civil War saga. The chorus is young but versatile, and so are the three dramatic players who handle some 30 characterizations.

After winding up here Sept. 11, the company goes to Boston's Colonial later moves on to the Civic Theater in Chicago. AP) I white man from Atlanta. who "I wasn't trying to escape. I was accompanying a group of A Negroes trying to stage sit-in Carl Greenleaf Dies at Residence Carl R.

Grccn.eaf, 63, a printer at the Port Printing company for many years, died at 9 a.m. today at his home at 614 North First avenue. The body is at the Burke Hammer funeral home where arrangements will be announced later. A native of Lake Charles, Mr. Greenleaf was a journeyman prin- er most of his life.

He was a member of Lake Charles Tyco- graphical Union No. 568. Mr. Greenleaf was a Mason. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Alee Greenleaf of Lf.ke Charles; and a sister, Mrs. T. A. Womack of Lake Charles. Wilkins Doesn't Object to Demo Choice for Veep NEW YORK (AP)-Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Assn.

for (he Advancement of Colored People, indicated last night that he doesn't object to Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson as the Democrats' vice presidential nominee. He added that while the idea of a Texan as vice president 'takes a bit of getting used to." Johnson can get things done. "Mr.

Johnson is from Texas and a good majority leader," said Wilkins on a local television pro- grain, "although no special friend of civil rights, except generally speaking. And I think personally it fair to say that Sen. Johnson himself doesn't have any personal prejudices." "He may not do as much as I would wish," Wilkins observed, "but he'll gel something done, just as he got through a civil rights bill. Whei it came out it was just that big, but he got it through." Court Rules Stampede Deaths'Act of God' NIIGATA, Japan (AP)-A court has ruled that tire death of 124 worshippers in the 1958 stampede at lyahiko Shinto shrine was an act of Four Shinto priests were acquitted Friday of accidental homicide charges. Government prosecutors accused the priests of negligence and had demanded they be fined $140 each.

DOW JONES demonstrations at three variety stores today. Police identified the man as Charles Helms, 24, and took him into protective custody. Ho told officers he had not actively participated in thc demonstration. Witnesses said Helms was with a group of 50 to 100 Negroes who stopped "to get something to eat" while coming from the delayed trial of eight Negroes charged after a weekend demonstration at the public library. The demonstrators stopped first at the F.

W. Woolworth store, but the management refused to open the doors. Then they proceeded to Green's variety store and tried unsuccessfully to sit at a lunch counter. The scuffle took place outside the group's third stop, the W. T.

Grant variety store. Witnesses said a group of white men exchanged words with Helms and during a brief scuffle he lost his glasses. Management closed the Grant lunch counter when the- Negroes sought service. Little Suoport Seen for Draft Of Rockefeller Early Start Due on Homes For Elderly WASHINGTON (AP) Housing Administrator Norman P. Mason today ordered a fast start on the new federal program of direct loans for housing for the aged, signed into law by President Ei senhower last week.

Mason announced establishment of a new division in his Housing and Home Finance Agency and named the man to head G. Minto, former director of the San Francisco office of the Federal Housing Administration, Minto told newsmen there is "a terrific need" for decent housing for the aged and promised an energetic effort to get projects under construction in the next six months. Congress, in approving the di reel loan program, provided a 20- million-dollar appropriation for a test of the plan and directed Ma son to have a report ready for submission to the new Congress in January. The HHFA will head 98 per cent of the cost of rental projects designed specifically for the elderly. The loans will be made only to private, nonprofit sponsoring church or (ratemal groups, but also new i civic bodies organized for the purpose.

I Elaborate or extravagant proj- CH1CAGO Republi-'octs are barred, but some are can national chairman said today! expected to cost two or three mil- that 'outside of New York, dollars each. haven seen "erj much strength' for drafting Rockefeller," Fourth Industrials (MO.NUAV) The chairman. Sen. Thruston on a.a», Morton of Kentucky, commented Five-Day Term final week of preparation Us national convention which 1 -W I JULY 18, I960, Lake Otarfes African frfii Teenager Gets Two-Year Term For Car Theft One of two teenagers who told police they went on a car-stealing spree after seeing the movie "Ten Commandents" today faces a two- year penitentiary sentence. Pleading guilty in Caleasieu district court to theft of a $300 pickup truck belonging to a Holmwood man, was John Cook, 17, of Archibald, La.

His companion in the case. Perry Lee King, also 17, of Winnsboro. received a three-year suspended prison sentence and was placed on probation by the court in a session last They were accused of stealing the pickup near Iowa, July 2. They were arrested by Vermilion parish authorities after they had abandoned it near Pecan Island. After their arrest, the pair told officers their spree started July 1 when they went to Tallulah, in northeast Louisiana, to look for work.

Apparently finding none, they went to see the movie "Ten Commandments," and after leaving, stole a car which they drove to Georgetown, where it ran out of gas. Near there, officers quoted them as saying, they took another car which they drove until taking the pickup in Calcasieu. In another case, Judge Mark C. Pickrel sentenced Phillip Wendell Poole, 29, of Starks, to serve nine months in jail when Poole pleaded guilty to a charge of theft of $50. Poole was accused of taking the money from the billfold of a drinking companion July 10 on a road near Starks, then leaving the man, Jack Beard of Deweyville, Texas, alongside the road.

Clyde Wayne Jones, 38, of 502 Ann.street, pleaded guilty to theft of $25 and also received a nine- month jail sentence. Lake Charles city police reported Jones, then a route salesman for the Royal Crown bottling company at 118 West Mill street, failed to turn in receipts from his route sales last Monday. A Sulphur barmaid, about 28, received a six-month suspended jail sentence when she pleaded guilty to a charge of cruelty to juveniles her two children, one aged two years and the other seven months. Juvenile authorities and sheriff's deputies reported she left the children with a Sulphur Negro woman May 27 and when she didn't return for them by noon next day, the Negro family called authorities. Deputies reported they found the woman asleep on the bar of a U.

S. Highway 90 lounge east of Sulphur. Kennedy's Summer Home Is Problem HYANNIS PORT, Mass. You'll see it printed In two wtrrdS Port and in one Hyannisport. Town fathers of BatnstaWe second pronounced as in comfortable) of which Hyannts atid Hyannis Port are a part, say ficiat records list as Hyannis Port (two words).

The U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Geodetic Survey use both styles. Highway directional signs spell it both ways. Many Massachusetts and news media spell it as one word.

In that regard John Rogers, managing editor of the Cape Cod Stnard-Tlmes, published in nis, says: "Our style is one word, However, an old time resident there says he has a written agreement from the Coast Guard and the Geodetic Survey to spell it 'Hyannis If he can produce that agreement we'll change our style from one word to two." Hyannis Port is in the news cause Sen. John F. Kennedy, the Democratic presidential nominee, summers here. Tanker and Tug Collide Near New Orleans NEW ORLEANS (AP) The Norwegian tanker Stolt Avance and the tug Ellen collided at Norco, a few miles up the Mississippi River, today and injured three tugboat crewmen. Tire collision set loose two empty gasoline barges which were intercepted by a Coast Guard patrol boat.

A tug was sent to pick up the barges and take them to nearby A a 1 e. One barge caught fire briefly. The Ellen, owned by Industrial Marine Service of Memphis, was en route to Avondale for repairs at the time of the collision. Damage was limited to the left rear of the tug. W.

G. Rudolph, a crewman on the tug, said the collision knocked a liQie "as big as a man" in the tanker, which was headed upstream. Russia Claims U. S. Carrier If Off Congo LONDON radio claimed today a U.S.

aircraft carrier is anchored In the mouth of the Congo Kiver and sending planes into the interior of the Congo. The broadcast said an American tanker is moored near the carrier and claimed the United States is trying to assist Belgian forces. 59 Killed in Japan TOKYO (AP) Plfty-nine per sons were killed over the weekend in Japan, either by drowning or by falling while mountain climbing, police reported today. Four others were reported missing and 10 injured. Waitress Finds Husband, Three Children Shot BALTIMORE (AP)-A waitress came home from work today and found her three young children and her husband all shot in the head.

Her two sons, aged 9 and 11, died later. Police would not say promptly who might have done the shooting because 'right now the peopla Involved are either dead or unconscious." But Lt. Fred Gladstone said that the father and husband, 40- year-old John Cooley had been despondent over being unemployed and the couple had been having "domestic troubles." He also said a .32 caliber German automatic was at Cooley's feet. Cooley was slumped in a chair on an enclosed porch nd is in critical condition. So is his 5-year-old daughter, Elizabeth.

The dead boys were 9- year-old Franklin and 11-year-old John. The 32-year-old mother. Eli7i- beth, first saw her daughter in her bed in a pool of blood upja returning to her five-room bungalow from work at a restaurant. She next saw her husband. Mrs.

Cooley ran screaming from the house and yelled to a neighbor "see what he did to my baby." The neighbor, Mrs. Anthony Fazio, entered the house and going to the attic found tha two wounded boys in their beds. Cooley, a television engineer, had been laid off seven months flgo. 'Blockbusting' By Realtors in New York Hit NEW YORK real estate operators" in the metropolitan area have been accused of creating race prejudice to create a panic in home selling. The practice Is called "blockbusting." Atty.

Gen. Louis J. LefkowiU and Secretary of State Caroline K. Simon said in a statement that a fringe group of unethical real estate operators are telling homeowners in long-established white neighborhoods that Negroes or Puerto Ricans are buying homes in the same blocks. Some homeowners panic and sell their property below the current market price, said the officials.

The houses can then be resold at a big profit. Lefkowitz said the brokers often bring Negroes and Puerto Ricans to see propery on sale, but seldom sell to them. Lefkowitz said his office drawing up a code of ethics for real estate brokers. Those who continue in "blockbusting" will subject to suspension or revocation of their licenses, he said, Boeing Aircraft BranlH Cities Service Morton spc'e at news conference. He had been asked for his Van T.

Cienard, 20, of Dayton, Texas, was given a five-day jail sentence and fined $50 in Calca- ews Sunday's statement by sieu district court this morning Eastern Gov. Nelson Rockefeller if when he pleaded guilty to reckless Kord New York that lie would accept Diving. "rfjamilna Aratt" 37U General Dynamics Geucis! Gas No General Motors W. R. Grace GuU Oil PVt Gulf States 37Vi Lockheed Montgomery Ward 41H OJin Malhk'son J.

C. Penney a "genuine draft" as GOP pres- identiaj candidate Troopers charged Cleuard after an accident June 30 on Highway Every current sign points to the sout of Lake Charles. They re- nomination of Vice President ported Cienard, traveling at a Richard M. Nixon by acclamation, "high rate of speed," ignored VMin. 3 i Pepsi Rockefeller refused to the nomination of Nixou.

Polaroid KCA Scars-ItoeUuck Socony Mobil 37-H Souiheru Pacific SW. of ludUns 36H Std 41 Texas Co 72'li Texas Union Oil-Bid Ask 24H United United U. S. StMl 80 Woolwgrth warning signs, lost control of his second vehicle, skidded 70 paces, Jumped 9, ditch, tore down a fence and hit Morton declined to comment oa ibis refusal. The chairman saidj he had no details about it except brief accounts he had read.

Denmark, smallest of the Scan- dauavian countries has a population of about 4,500,000. a utilities pole. Fare increase Asked WASHINGTON (AP) Fifteen eastern railroads today asked government approval of Interstate fare increases ranging from 2.29 to 5 per cent effective Sept. 1. CORRECTION WEINGARTEN'S Velveeta CHEESE 2 IB, LOAF and not 59c inadvertently ytittrday..

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About Lake Charles American-Press Archive

Pages Available:
92,202
Years Available:
1954-1967