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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, August 24, 1963, Image 3

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4LLFM4NDE LEFT IN THE BALKAN SHUFFLE
On a two-week vacation in Yugoslavia, Soviet right, join hands with a group of folk dancers
Premier Khrushchev and President Tito, second in Cetinje yesterday.—AP Wirephoto.
Obey U. N. Cease-Fire,
Israel, Syria Urged
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y„
Aug. 24 (AP). —U. Thant,
United Nations secretary gen
eral, has called on Israel and
Syria to “exert every possible
precaution" to live up to a
cease-fire agreement arranged
by U. N. observers in Palestine.
Mr. Thant issued the appeal
yesterday while the U. N. Se
curity Council awaited an on
the-spot report for guidance in
evaluating the aggression
charges Israel and Syria have
lodged against each other.
Israel and Syria will resume
their debate here Tuesday,
after council members study
the report from Norwegian Lt.
Oen. Odd Bull, chief of the
U. N. truce supervision organi
zation in Palestine.
Both Sides Accept Truce
Mr. Thant told the 11-nation
council that both nations had
agreed to hold their fire and
let U. N. observers conduct “a
simultaneous investigation of
the defensive areas on both
sides” of the border.
The defensive zone, 7‘/i miles
wide, straddles the 70-mile
Israeli-Syrian border and in
cludes the demilitarized zone
north of the Sea of Galilee
Polaris Secrecy Ends,
1,700-Mile Shots Told
. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.,
Aug. 24 (AP). The Defense
department has lifted its 29-
pionth-old shroud of secrecy on
submarine launchings of the
Polaris missile, and the Navy
is pleased.
• The curtain was raised yes
terday when defense officials
Announced the results of two
missiles fired by the submarine
Alexander Hamilton.
- Both hurled warheads to a
target 1,700 miles down range.
• The news blackout was im
posed in March, 1961, when
submarine-launched Polaris
rockets were having numerous
4
; Trial Set for 2
: In CORE Sit-In
\' Two District CORE members
pleaded not guilty yesterday to i
a charge of unlawful entry
stemming from a sit-in at Ben
jamin Franklin University.
• Jack Goodwin. 34, of 223
Pennsylvania avenue B.E. and
Marcellus Goff, 33, of 1322 Mis
souri aveune N.W. were arrested
after they staged a sit-in at the
university at 1100 Sixteenth
street N.W. on Thursday night.
• They are on 1300 bond.
J General Sessions Court Judge
Catherine Kelly continued the
case until September 25 when
a jury trial is scheduled.
% LOST
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. Reward. WO. 8-1534_
Wrist WATCH. Tady'a, diamond. Aug
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Watch, lady'a. Movado. Initial. 8.
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‘ gold NO. 7-8195.|
! FOUND
COMFREMMED AIR TANK, found in
, 800 blk. Taylor at. n.w. TU. 2-3850.
after 8 weekdari.
6 itf£ k fc-& k - &a k S!-..W oia
yrhere armed clashes occurred
this week.
Israeli Brig. Abraham Jaffe
took foreign correspondents on
an aerial tour of the disputed
area yesterday. He told them
Syria is keeping heavy guns
in its defensive zone “far be
yond what Is permitted under
the armistice agreement and
right under the noses of U. N.
observers.”
Mine Blows Up Truck
i As the correspondents flew
over the area near Almagor,
Israel, they saw a heavily
loaded truck being blown up
by an anti-vehicle mine. Gen.
Jaffe said he assumed the
mine was planted by Syrians.
In the opening debate at the
special council session. Michael
S. Comay, Israeli chief delegate,
accused Syria of aggression
against Israel “for the express
purpose of tormenting tension”
to relieve “internal troubles
and inter-Arab strife.”
Syrian chief delegate Salah
el Dine Tarazi denied Israel’s
complaints and accused Israel
of “resorting to pressure and
blackmail for the purpose of
bringing about its aggressive
and expansionist designs.
problems. Four submarines had
logged 10 successes and eight
failures.
The Defense Department said
merely that military missiles
launched “away from public
view” would not be reported.
But most of the shots were
conducted only 30 miles off
Cape Canaveral, and the mis
siles were clearly visible to
shore observers. News agencies
reported all of them.
Os the 41 Polaris missiles
launched from submarines dur
ing the information balckout,
33 were successful. The Navy
was frustrated because it could
not report officially on a pro
gram that was progressing well.
Combined insistence by the
Navy and reporters resulted in
removal of tl\e ban.
With the lifting of the re
striction, the Navy reported
that 45 of 61 Polaris launch
ing the information blackout,
been successful. Most of the
failures occurred early in the
test program and 26 of the last
29 flights were successful.
Present Navy planning calls
for 41 Polaris submarines by
1967.
Falsity Laid
To 'Gadget 1 Club
By the AMOcUted Preu
The Federal Trade Com
mission today ordered Gadget
of-the-Month Club, Inc., to
stop making what the FTC de
scribed as false claims about
the services the, firm performs
for prospective Inventors.
The commission said the
North Hollywood, Calif., com
pany offered to evaluate inven
tions and assist inventors in
obtaining patents in return for
a registration fee of $5 and a
membership payment of |2O a
year.
“Many of its members were
led to believe that they could
achieve riches from their in
ventions if only they would
trust to GMC,” the commis
sion said. “Many of these people l
expended substantial amounts
of money only to incur disap
pointment and disillusionment
as a reward.”
i
Man's Tiny Gland
CHICAGO. The human
pituitary gland, situated at the
base of the brain, weighs only
a little more than an aspirin
tablet.
Cloud Seeds
Fail to Soften
Hurricane
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Aug.
24 (AP). —Scientists report see
ing no immediate effect of their
cloud-seeding aimed at soften
ing the blow of hurricane Beu
lah.
Nine hurricane hunter planes
flew into the storm last night
and dropped silver iodide crys
tals around the center cloud,
Robert Simpson, director of
Operation Storm Fury, said.
The seeding was part of a re
search project conducted joint
ly by the Navy and the Weather
Bureau.
The Weather Bureau in
Miami said last night Beulah
was increasing in intensity
slowly but steadily, but it likely
would not effect the United
States mainland.
The Weather Bureau said the
storm, packing winds estimated
at 100 miles an hour, was ex
pected to move into the Atlantic
well east of the Bahamas.
Its center was estimated last
night 540 miles northeast of
San Juan and 700 miles south
southeast of Bermuda. The
storm was moving north-north
west at about 10 miles an hour.
The bureau advised small
craft at Bermuda against
venturing too far from port.
It said hurricane-force winds
extended 50 miles in all direc
tions from the center and gale
force winds extended 225 miles
to the north and west and 115
miles to the southwest.
Inquest Holds
Young Driver in
Friend's Death
A District corners jury yes
terday held an 18-year-old
driver for action by the grand
jury in connection with a fatal
accident last Sunday.
The jury found Samuel B
Moore of the 1800 block of D
street N.E., responsible for the
accident in which George
Dyson, 20, of 1908 E street
N.W., was killed. Police said
Mr. Dyson was in the rear seat
of a car Moore was driving
north on Sixth street when the
car struck a tree at N street
about 1:15 am. Mr. Dyson was
taken to District General Hos
pital, where he died five hours
later.
In another case, the cor
ners jury found John Howard,
53, of the 5800 block of Foote
street N.E., responsible for an
accident in which Jaunice D.
Wade, 5, of 5406 Grant street
N.E., was killed last Saturday.
According to police, the child
was crossing Grant street when
she was struck by a car driven
by Mr. Howard. She was pro
nounced dead on arrival at Dis
trict General Hospital.
The jury ordered Mr. Howard
held under the Negligent
Homicide Act for the Criminal
Division of the Court of Gen
eral Sessions.
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Friend of Ford
Is Guest at Villa
Os Italian Tycoon
BRESCIA, Italy, Aug. 24
<AP).—Maria Christina Vettore
Austin, 36-year-old Italian who
has been linked romantically
with Henry Ford n, is spend
ing a week end at Padenghe
sul Garda.
She is a guest at the
Padenghe villa of the Italian
Industrialist, Armando Masieri.
on Lake Garda in Northern
Italy. Another guest there is
industrialist Battista Mene
ghini, estranged husband of
Maria Callas, opera soprano.
Mrs. Austin and Mr. Ford
reportedly have been planning
to meet in the Mediterranean
area this summer. Mr. Ford
anchored his yacht at several
Italian Tyrrehenian sea coast
resorts this month before cruis
ing to the French Riviera.
Patterson Will Gives
$1 Million to Charity
MINEOLA, N. Y., Aug. 24
(AP).—Alicia Patterson, the
late publisher and editor of
Long Island's largest circula
tion newspaper, Newsday, left
$1 million to a charitable fund '
established in her name in 1960.
The grant was contained in
Miss Patterson’s will filed for
probate yesterday in Nassau
County surrogate’s court.
Miss Patterson was the wife
of Harry Guggenheim.
The balance of Miss Patter
son's estate. Including 49 per
cent ownership of Newsday
stock, was left in trust for the
four children of Miss Patter
son’s sister, Mrs. Josephine Pat
terson Albright.
Fifth Circuit Court
Denies It's Slanted
HOUSTON, Tex., Aug. 24
(AP).—ln a carefully worded
statement, the United States
sth Circuit Court of Appeals
has denied its members had
been assigned to hear cases in
such away as to accomplish a
desired result.
A brief written denial was
released by the secretary of the
chief justice. Elbert P. Tuttle
of Atlanta, Ga.
The statement came at the
close of a two-day meeting
yesterday of eight of the nine
justices comprising the court.
Judge Ben F. Cameron of
Meridian. Miss., who charged
publicly last month that the
members of three-judge panels
named to hear desegregation
cases had been selected in a
way to influence the outcome
of the cases, was absent.
He said the panels were not
named according to traditional
procedure, which calls for the
chief justice to appoint the
United States district judge
from the jurisdiction where
the case originated, an appel
late judge from that State plus
Urban League and Allies
Split on New York Protest
NEW YORK. Aug. 24 (AP).
—The National Urban League,
a moderate wing of the civil
rights movement, has split with
its contemporaries by refusing
to indorse a planned demon
stration at City Hall next
Tuesday.
The Joint Committee for
Equal Employment Opportu
nity, a six-group civil rights
council, called for the demon
stration to “further protest
the refusal of the mayor
(Robert F. Wagner) and the
governor (Nelson A. Rocke
feller) to enforce antidiscrimi
nation laws.”
The Urban League, a joint
committee member, issued a
statement last night through
its president, Frederick W.
Richmond, saying it is “strong
ly against further demonstra
tions at this time."
Mr. Richmond, who also is a
member of the City Commis
sion on Human Rights, said he
deplored Thursady’s melee at
City Hall when three patrol
men were injured trying to
break up a demonstration.
The demonstrators were
among a group staging a 44-
day sit-in at City Hall to
emphasize demands for more
jobs for Negroes and Puerto
Ricans in the building trades.
Mayor Ousts Sitters
Following the outbreak,
Mayor Wagner ousted the sit
ters.
Gov. Rockefeller, meanwhile,
has been subpoenaed to testify
at a trial on seven demonstra
tors arrested August 1 for
blocking the entrance to his
Manhattan offices. A three
judge panel was informed of
this yesterday by the attorney
for the seven as the trial
opened in Criminal Court.
The defense is trying to prove
that Gov. Rockefeller gave the
demonstrators permission to sit
in at his offices, and that there
was no unlawful intrusion, as
'police allege. The Governor’s
office had no comment.
Anglicans Denounce
Discrimination as Sin
TORONTO, Aug. 24 (AP).—
Churchmen representing 44
million Anglicans around the
world have wound up an 11-
day meeting with a resolution
condemning racial discrimina
tion as sin.
The Anglican Congress ended
last night with another debate
on the language of the resolu
tion, which African delegates
criticized as too mild.
The final version of Congress
opinion called for the church
to support the defense of civil
rights and expressed shame
that “barriers of race should
still persist in the life of the
church."
!
Archbishop Applauded
Attempts to get a series of
other resolutions tacked on
failed, however, after the Arch
bishop of Canterbury, Dr.
Michael Ramsey, strode to the
microphone and said the Con
gress was not supposed to pass
resolutions. Opposition of an
unidentified speaker was
smothered in a burst of ap
plause for the primate.
Dr. Ramsey later declined an
Invitation to define what the
one of the other appellate
judges.
The statement said:
“The problems alleged to
exist in this court have been
considered by the court. The
court believes that in no given
case has there been a conscious
assignment for the purpose of
accomplishing a desired re
sult. Action has been taken
to avoid any appearance of in
consistency in the assignment
of judges or the arrangement
of the docket.
Judges who attended the
meeting besides Justice Tuttle
were Joseph C. Hutcheson jr.
of Houston, Richard T. Rives
of Montgomery, Ala., Warren
L. Jones of Jacksonville, Fla.,
John R. Brown of Houston,
John Minor Wisdom of New
Orleans, Walter P. Gewin of
Tuscaloosa, Ala., and Griffin
B. Bell of Atlanta.
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Alexander Aldrich, chairman
of the Governor's special cabi
net committee on civil rights,
testified at the trial that he
had given the demonstrators
permission to occupy a back
room, which they have been
using for several weeks.
He added that Gov. Rocke-i
feller “never gave any specific]
order, but gave me discretion
in any matters concerning
civil rights.”
Ringleaders Gets Jail Term
In Criminal Court yesterday,
a bearded Negro said to have
been the ringleader of the City
Hall outbreak Thursday was
sentenced to 30 days in jail.
Nicasio Martinez, 25. received
the jail term for violating terms
of a previously suspended sen
tence. He had been given 30
days for blocking a corridor
outside Mayor Wagner’s office
on July 31, but the sentence
was suspended on condition
that he abstain from similar
activity.
Assistant District Attorney
Richard Kuh told the court
yesterday, “this defendant
flouts the law and considers
himself above the law.”
A detective testified that
Mr. Martinez exhorted the City
Hall demonstrators with the
cry, “ blood must flow yet.”
SERGEANTS FILE
TRANSFER PLEA
COLUMBUS. Miss., Aug. 24
(AP).—Two Negro Air Force
sergeants have asked the school
board here to transfer their
children to white schools.
The requests from Sergt.
Thomas W. Daniels and Sergt.
I Bobbie Bagley—both stationed
at Columbus Air Force Base—
: reached the city school board
yesterday, a day after it had
, voted to close an elementary
school largely used by children
i of white personnel at the base.
Officials at the Air Force
Base said they would not com-
1,000 delegates had ac
complished at their open ses
sions each morning and in 37
closed study groups in the
afternoons.
"The answer to that will be
seen only after the members
of the Congress have gone
home and spread their in
fluence,” he said.
The issue that Congress
leaders have been debating al
most daily since it was intro
duced last Saturday is a pro
gram drafted by leading
bishops for "mutual respon
sibility and Interdependence”
in the 70-natlon Anglican conj‘
munlon.
Program Has Global Basis
Bishop Stephen Bayne, the
former Seattle (Wash.) prelate
who has been Anglicanism’s
executive officer since 1960 and
a power on and behind the
scene at the Congress, pre
dicted the manifesto could turn
out to be either *a lead baloon”
or a supreme reforming In
strument in the church.
The program calls for the
18 member churches In the
communion to arrange prior
ities for both giving and re
ceiving help on a global basis,
rather than looking after local
needs first and donating the
leftovers to work elsewhere. Its
immediate aim Is to boost the
communion’s budget for mis
sion work during the next five
years by 815 million to 865 mil
lion.
Other possible changes might
Involve attacks by Congress
speakers on the old time re
ligion and against the tradi
tions, organization and even
some basic dogma of the
Anglican Church.
Mexicans Seize
$160,000 Marijuana
MONTERREY, Mexico, Aug.
24 i AP> —Troops and police
raided a ranch 25 miles south
of Monterrey last night, seizing
40 tons of marijuana worth
two million pesos (8160,000).
Seventeen members of the
Reina family, owners of the
ranch, headed by Jose Reina,
64. were arrested at the
premises and brought to Mon
terrey for investigation.
ment until they studied the
problem and decided on “a
course of action.”
John Henry, president of the
city school board, and J. E.
Goolsby, the school superin
tendent, declined comment.
Sergt. Daniels asked for the
transfer because “the schools
my children are now assigned
to are segregated below stand
ards in the curriculum offered
and are not nationally ac
credited or accredited by the
Southern Association (of col
leges and schools.)”
The board voted to close the
Brandon School, which has had
an enrollment of about 1,000
children mostly from the
neighboring Air Force 6ase.
A spokesman for the board
said the action was taken be
cause of uncertainty over
Federal funds. He said the
school board has been notified
in the past by this time of year
abdut the allocation made by
the government under the “im
pacted areas” plan. No word has
been received this year.
GREGORY ENDS
12 DAYS IN JAIL
CHICAGO, Aug. 24 (AP).—
Dick Gregory, who spent 12
days in jail because he refused
to sign his name to a recogni
zance bond on a disorderly con
duct charge August 12, was
released yesterday by Municipal
Court Judge Ben Schwartz.
The 30-year-old Negro come
dian and several other men
were arrested on the South Side
where Negroes and whites were
picketing the site of mobile
classrooms. Judge Schwartz set I
October 10 for a hearing of the
charge.
After his release Mr. Gregory
told newsmen that operations
in the House of Correction (city
jail) where he was held, were
corrupt. He also said that
"Mayor (Richard J.) Daley was
lying when he said that there
was no discrimination in Chi
cago.”
33 ARRESTED
j IN LEXINGTON
LEXINGTON, Ky., Aug. 24
(AP).—The racial situation in
Lexington grew very tense last
night when police broke up a
march on the downtown area
by the Congress of Racial
Equality and arrested 33 dem
onstrators.
Trouble was averted as about
15 police officers and most of
the demonstrators obviously
; controlled their tempers.
The only injury was to an
unidentified police officer
whose arm was scratched badly
by a demonstrator.
The group was protesting
alleged discrimination in the
hiring practices of downtown
Lexington merchants.
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M .Jm

THE EVENING STAR
Washington, D. C.
Saturday, August 24, 1963
Reds Tied In
With Negroes,
Senator Says*
By Um AuocUted Preu
Senator Thurmond, Demo
crat of South Carolina, says
he continues to find “evidence
of tie-in between communism
and Negro demonstrations.'*
In a Senate speech yesterday.
Senator Thurmond said "I :am
certain that many persons in
volved in these demonstrations
are sincerely seeking to serve
some end other than advancing
the cause of communism.
‘T am convinced, however,”
he continued, “that there are
also some who are sincerely
carrying out the orders and
aims of the Communist Party.
U. S. A. So I renew here today
my request that this entire
matter be looked into with
out further delay by Congress.”
Accuses Carl Braden
He also inserted in the Con
gressional Record what he said
was sworn testimony of Carl
Braden's Communist Party
membership, taken in Jefferson
Circuit Court, criminal branch,
Louisville. Ky., December 11,
1954.
He said Mr. Braden and his
wife appeared recently in
Negro demonstrations in Dan
ville, Va.
Senator Thurmond said “ex
cept for action of the Supreme
Court, Carl Braden would to
day be in jail where he belongs
instead of oeing field secretary
for the Southern Conference
Educational Fund, associated
with Rev. Martin Luther King,
and causing racial strife and
agitation throughout the
South.”
Mr. Braden, 47, was con
victed of contempt of Congress
for refusing to answer ques
tions at a hearing of the House
Un-American Activities Com
mittee in 1958.
Brands Rustin a Red
Senator Thurmond repeated
an earlier charge that Bayard
Rustin, deputy director of next
Wednesday's march on Wash
ington. was once a member of
the Young Communist League.
The Senator said A. Philip
Randolph, march chairman,
and other leaders of the march,
insist Mr. Rustin will be in
Washington next week.
Mr. Rustin has said his be
liefs are “incompatible with
• communism.” After an earlier
charge by Senator Thurmond,
Mr. Rustin conceded member
ship in the Young Communist
League more than 20 years ago
i as a student at City College of
New York but quit in 1941.
A-3

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