White Segregationist Held in Evers^ Deaths Rifle Sight Was Clue

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

White Segregationist Held in Evers^ Deaths Rifle Sight Was Clue Avcraga Dally Nat Praw Ron For «lM Week Smled Hia Waathar June tt, laas Fore Beat at U. a. Weethor BaNaa Clear with aeaeonable ^ tempera* 13,804 turea tonight. Low in the 40a. lua* Member of the Audit ny and continued warm Tueadagr. Buremi at Olreulatloa High near M. Mancheiter— A City of Village Charm yoL. Lxxxn, no. 22s (SIXTEEN PAGES) MANCHESTER. CONN., MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1963 (Oaealfled Adverttaluf on Pafe 14) PRICK SEVEN CENTS Angry Blind Man JFK, Adenauer Ponder Stabs Blind Friend White Segregationist Koundup PHILADEB-iPHIA (A P )—A blind man stood against a wail, clutching a pen knife. He listened. Ihe "tap, tap, Firmer Western Ties, tap,” of a cane on pavement Clashes, Boat Spill grew louder. Held in Evers^ Deaths Suddenly, police said ,he Take Lives of Six leaped out and stabbed the passing man in the neck and By ASSOCIATED PRESS right arm. Multinational N-Navy Deteotdve Pat Cannon said Six persons died in acci­ the stabbing occurred after Rifle Sight Was Clue dents in Connecticut during two blind friends got into a BONN (AP) — Presidentt”*.?.™*"*' The two men talked^t> Despite overcast skies thousands the weekend— five on the dispute over cigarette money in a tavern. Kennedy and Chancellor Konr with only Interpreters present. of men, women and children were highways and one in a boat­ In a separate miSiUng, other ,\rthur Hinson, 45, was held JACKSON Miss. (A P )— rad Adenauer today discuBsed out again to see Kennedy drive ing mishap. Three of the traf­ U.S. and German officials went the four miles from the American fic victims were pedestrians. in J500 ball on charges of as­ Byron de La Beckwith, whit* problems involved in trying Into problems of Berlin, condi­ embassy community at Bad God- sault and battery. His frie.id, man, was held in Jackson jail lo create a multi-nation nu­ tions in Communist East Germany esberg to Adenauer's office. The dead included; Louis Pratner, 37, was In fair condition at a ho.sipital. tofiay charged with the mur­ clear navy and to strengthen and, the proposal for forming a )Cennedy was reported anxious A B7-year-oId Ellington woman as multinational nuclear force. she stepped out of her car. der of Negro integration lead­ the Atlantic partnership be­ to get agreement from Adenauer Salinger said that the multlna-, and other key allied leaders to A Waterbury man as he walked er Medgar W. Evers. tween the United States and tlonal force project was talked out I open detailed negotiations soon on along Rt. 6A Saturday night. The still unaccounted for in the kill­ Western Europe. i in greater detail by the ministers I the NATO nuclear surface fleet, car that hit him didn't stop. Kennedy Goofs ing of "the 37-year-old Evers were They met alone for two hours. than by the government chiefs.' the President would like to get a A 61-year-oid Norwich man sis he “ othens unknown,’’ charged along Spokesmen for the two men also While he would not make any of | treaty ready for submission to the rowed a boat on his private pond. with Beckwith in a separate fe<£ announced that they had talked the details public. It was under-1 U.S. Senate by next January. In East Lyme, police said a On U.S. Past eral complaint made public after the FBI arrested Beckwith Satur­ over forthcoming East-West ne^o- stood that the U.S. and German | The United States and West young mother turned to scold her tiatl<M in Moscow on a nuclear leaders were seeking Allied ac­ children in the back seat Saturday day night. Germany agree on. the need for I BONN, Germany (AP) — Presi­ Beckwith, a 42-year-old former test ban treaty. Their conference tion on setting up the force. afternoon and lost control of her dent Kennedy dunked in Ameri­ such a force. The problem facing car. It crossed the centerline of tobacco salesman and more re­ also covered trade relations be­ Salinger denied that Kennedy \ Kennedy and Adenau,r is now to can history Sunday. tween the United States and the Rt. 161 and rammed another car. cently a chemical fertilizer selee was having any more back pain I obtain the agreement of other al­ The man who can reel off fig­ agent, from Greenwood, Miss., European Common Maricet. George Allen, 66, of (13 Wlldrose ures in billions about budgets and than usual. The President suffers lies, particularly Britain and It­ Ave.) Waterford, was killed. talked with his attorneys, law Kennedy, who received a loud with chronic back trouble. aly. Neither the President nor the bombs undoubtedly raised cries partners Hardy Lott and Stonny and enthuslaatlc welcome Sunday The young mother, Mrs. Nancy of indignation' in sun-bathed St. Kennedy’s back seemed to be i chancellor wants an exclusively Pintavalle, 30, of IBIB S. Whitney Sanders of Greenwood, Sunday at tile start of his European tour troubling him as he knelt at | • Augustine, Fla., when he told a I and was returned to his cell after went to Adenauer's office In late Ave., Hartford, and her children crowd in (Cologne: Mass Sunday. (Continued on Page Seven) escaped serious in.lury. Mrs. Pinta­ about 30 minutes. He is being held valle was charged with negligent “ As a citizen of Boston, which without bond. homicide. te.kes pride in hel:*.- the olde.st Jackson chief of detectives M A In Windham Saturday night, Al­ city in the United Stotes—” Pierce said police questiOMd vin Miller, 29, of Scott Hill, Leb­ 'The oldest city In the United Beckwith, but did not elaborate. anon, lost control of his dump States is St. Augustine, founded One of 15,000 telescopic sl^ts truck on a curve on Rt. 32. The I in 1565. Boston was founded in and a fingerprint on It led the truck crossed the center line and ' 1630. FBI to Beckwith at Greenwood. hit a tractor trailer. Miller was Then, at dinner Sunday night, They found five of the Imported killed. the President goofed again when . Japanese six-power Golden Hawk In Stamford Sunday night. Mrs. he stirred the p-hos's of the bat­ I sights went to Mississippi, all to * Emma Peterson, 60, of Oak Grove tle of the Little Big Horn. I Grenada gun dealer. One was traced to Beckwith, a (Continued on Page Seven) (Continued on Page Four) gun collector, whom the FBI ques- I tioned Friday night without get- * ting any answers. I Saturday night at a meeting or- Lawmakers Opposed I ranged by Greenwood attorney ; Beckwith, FBI agents arrested Yerger Moorehead, a relative of Beckwith under provisions of the 1957 Civil Rights Act. "Beckwith and others unknown Can JFK Stop conspired to injure, oppress and intimidate Medgar Evers In the free exercise and enjoyment of rights and privileges secured to him by the Constitution,” the FBI . .... said. Business Bias? Evers was state field secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored By JAMES MARLOW '$> local authorities—must treat all I People. Assoelated Press News Analyst citizens equally. Byron de la Beckwith, accused slayer of Negro leader Capt. Ralph Hargrove, chief of WASHINGTON (AP) — Should 3. Tl)e commerce clause. This the Jackson police IdentlficatKm Medgar Evers. (AP Photofax.) bureau, fingerprinted Beckwith the federal government be able .emxwwers the federal govern­ ment—and the Supreme Court has Sunday and said his prints to tell privately owned businesses long upheld this—to regulate in­ matched one on the scope at­ which cater to the public that terstate commerce or prevent In­ tached to a .30 caliber rifle that terference with It. fired the fatal shot. they can’t discriminate against 120,000 in Detroit It was Hargrove who first dis­ Negroes? Keimedy asked Congress to in­ voke both these constitutional pro­ covered the latent print—one In­ President Kennedy says yes. He visions in passing the kind of law visible to the eye but brought out President Kennedy and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer stand at attention asked (Congress to pass a law by chemicals. during the playing of U.S. and German national anthems, (AP Photofax.) he wants. which says yes, too. This part of The 14th Amendment says only Stage Race Parade his civil rights program, imfolded that states must treat all citizens (Continued on Page Eight) last week, will bring one of the equally and cannot discriminate. ft toughest fights in Congress. The Supreme Ctourt ruled in 1883 Southern Democrats, are against that the amendment does not out­ DETROIT (AP) — Demonstrat-<>bitter outburst, 34 persons died Miller Rates Foreign Policy It. But some Republican leaders law discrimination by private ors, estimated to number 120,(XK) and about 700 were injured before —like Sens. Everett M .' Dirksen businesses, like hotels, or thea­ moving In a seemingly endless federal troops quelled the riot. of Illinois and Barry Goldwater ters. This year the court, under column, swept through downtown laiere was only one incident Bulletins of Arizona—balk at it, too. the same amendment, said states Detroit Sunday In a peaceful, al­ Sunday. A white man, Joseph E. Culled from AP Wire* Key Campaign Issue for ’64 Kennedy did not ask that every or' local communities cannot com­ most festive, protest against ra­ Laliberte„ 39, of suburban Berk­ last business, no matter how pel private businesses to discrim­ cial discrimination. ley, was arrested for obstnicting small, be compelled to stop dis­ inate. , . The Rev. Mprtin Luther King a police officer. He had stepped Jr., a Southern Integration leader, ATLANTIC CITY LEAD* criminating.
Recommended publications
  • Tezi Yöneteu
    İSTAltBUL ÜNİVERSİTESİ EDEBİYAT FAKÜTITESİ LİSA.liS TEZİ TEZİN KONUSU : STRABOlPUll XIV. KİTABilillA GEÇEli BÖLGE, KENT, TANRI, TAURIÇA VE ŞAHIS İSİMLERİ ÜZERİIIDE KISA AÇIKLAL'IALI TARAiliA. ÇALiı;MASI • TEZİ YÖNETEU : PROF. DR. ADUAN PEKmAN İSTANBUl/HAZİRAN 1982 NERİrı!AN ARSLAN 18809 İÇİNDEKİLER 1. ÖNSÖZ 2. BİDLİYOGRAFYA 3· STRABON'UN KİŞİLİGİ VE ESERLERİ 4. STRABOIPUN XIV. KİTABIIillA GEÇEN BÖLGE, KEUT, TANRI, TAHRIÇA VE ŞAHIS İSİMLERİ ÜZERİNDE KISA AÇIKLAMALI TABALlA ÇALişmASI ÖN SÖ Z Eskiçağın ünlü coğTafyacısı Strabon r un 17 lü taplık "Geographika" adlı bir eseri vardır. Strabon ayrıca tarih alanında da büyülc çalışmalar yapmış ve 47 cil·tlik bir tarih yazmıştır. Ancak bu eseri günümüze kadar ulaşa~amıştır. Strabon Coğrafya eserinde Eskiçağdwci Anadolu'nun sadece coğrafyası halekında değil tarihi haldtında da b~lgiler vermektedir. Eserinin çeşitli yerlerinde kendisinden ve atalarından bahsetmek­ tedir: Strabon hakkındaki bildiklerimizde eserinde bize naklettiği bilgi­ lerden ibaret·tir. A-taları Pontos kralları yanında önemli görevler almış olan kimselerdir. özellikle anne tarafından soylu bir aileye mensup olan Strabon m.ö. 64-63 yıllarında Pontos bölgesinde Aınaseia (Amasya) şehrinde doğmuştur. Varlıklı bir aileye mensup olduğu için iyi bir ÖbTenim yapabil­ miş ve istediği kadar seyahat edebilmiştir. Öğrenimini genç yaşta Karia'da (Tralles) yanında Nysa şehrinde Aristodemos'un yru1ında yapmıştır. H.ö. 44 yıllarında Roma'ya gitmiş ve orada da öğrenimine devam etmiştir. Onun hocaları arasında Stoic filozof tarihçi, büyük bilgin Poseidonios da vardır. Strabon'un kendisi de Stoic felsefenin ilkelerine bağlı bir filazoftur. Eserlerinde Roma Siyasetine ve siyasetçilerine bir hayranlılc gÇ;izlenılenmelctedir. Afrilca'nın ve Anadolu­ nun büyük bir kısmını dolaşan s·trabon hayatının son 26-27 yılını Amasia 1da geçirmiş tir.
    [Show full text]
  • A Rp N Tii for S
    Weatherr ^ * Finalnal * T-p^lirCloudyi d y ■— Editiontion T h e Bla&it Th# filssic Vallcy Newspaper!r Dedicated to Serring and I’romoUngromntlng thetl Growth of Ninene Irrigated Idaho Counties ________________ T^Vl.VnVLV FALL:FALLS, IDAI{0, FKIDAV,^SK SKPTEJ PT EMBER 21. 1962 _ _____________. TT E E fN T cCENTS — y -------------- — Cease-Fi-F ire j g R usk Appippeals ffoi o r S K y ^Senate e n toa WT i p ^O i u t ' A r p nitin t i i a H B j i t FF 01 o reig n A id Slas]lash BUENOS A I R E S .^ s erenUnn, n tln a . S*StpL 21 (iP)—I ^ e s t . iVAS!n\<;ro.v, 21 (uri)—.Sem‘i«r-Sca-eiiiry c[ SUUc Dt'uii RiiNkNk l<i<l;iyl<i<l;iv appcfllednp jJit Jose Mnria Guido. «xliaufllcdexlioudled frbm a four-diiy lhc- »ciijilc-jii)pry}iiualimiaiCtJmillllk‘U:L(iL;Svj !tnl-l-.l-bHlioK:dol«r IK crL sis, collapsed today alal( Government house. Inr fori'ij,'!! aiil cut tlmt he ik‘iu>iinci.'dced as •'f''fal.te and ci'stly ccdiioniy.”iioniy.” Ru.skRi ac- 11 irts nol known whetherier Guido Ihad suffered heart K di . kiiu\vloii);(‘iluwloiij:cil al'U'i' a two-hoiir .'scs.«ionn wilhw ilh (ho(h cunimitlee that therelicre was "i‘‘not too | ich uf golting ull tho futul.siiid.s rc.su>re.sutred. But ho told re|iorter» he Inmbleor simply ____ L-|iorterH he hoped ( - r M to Kol »n ■'.•<iili.'<titiitiar' re.-'- ‘ BUENOS AIRES,, Sept.t.
    [Show full text]
  • My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014
    My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014 A complete record of my full-season Replays of the 1908, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1975, and 1978 Major League seasons as well as the 1923 Negro National League season. This encyclopedia includes the following sections: • A list of no-hitters • A season-by season recap in the format of the Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia- Baseball • Top ten single season performances in batting and pitching categories • Career top ten performances in batting and pitching categories • Complete career records for all batters • Complete career records for all pitchers Table of Contents Page 3 Introduction 4 No-hitter List 5 Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia Baseball style season recaps 91 Single season record batting and pitching top tens 93 Career batting and pitching top tens 95 Batter Register 277 Pitcher Register Introduction My baseball board gaming history is a fairly typical one. I lusted after the various sports games advertised in the magazines until my mom finally relented and bought Strat-O-Matic Football for me in 1972. I got SOM’s baseball game a year later and I was hooked. I would get the new card set each year and attempt to play the in-progress season by moving the traded players around and turning ‘nameless player cards” into that year’s key rookies. I switched to APBA in the late ‘70’s because they started releasing some complete old season sets and the idea of playing with those really caught my fancy. Between then and the mid-nineties, I collected a lot of card sets.
    [Show full text]
  • Connecticut Daily Campus a Sewing Storrs Since 1896
    1 9 Connecticut Daily Campus a Sewing Storrs Since 1896 TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1962 v VOL. CXVI, No- 111 STORRS. CONNECTICUT Six Resident Advisors South Hall To Engage By HARRIET SHAPIRO , Under the coordinator and her met by the girls who will hold South Hall, the women's resi- assistant will be six senier worn- these positions. They must have dence hall to open in the fall,! men filling the position of senior senior status in the University will engage in a new system of resident advisors. These women upon the approaching fall se- student government. With this are to work wth the coordinator mester and their residence in system, women undergraduate and girls. Each of the six will South Hall and a minimum students will be actively par- be responsible for one floor—ap- academic of 25 q.p.r. ticipating as members of the Uni- proximately 50 girls. The girls Will be expected to versity residence hall staff. Unties work 15 hours a week and should The dorm will employ a staff The women will have various intend to spend most weekends of eight persons. A resident co- duties in conjunction with their at the University. As a member ordinator will be in charge. This problems on the floor to the co- of the staff, the girls will not ordinator and to close the resi- coordinator will not be a stu- 1 he eligible for a student counsel- dent but a full time member of donee hall at night. They also ing position or government office the University Staff.
    [Show full text]
  • 1964 Topps Baseball Checklist
    1964 Topps Baseball Checklist 1 Dick Ellswo1963 NL ERA Leaders Bob Friend Sandy Koufax 2 Camilo Pasc1963 AL ERA Leaders Gary Peters Juan Pizarro 3 Sandy Kouf1963 NL Pitching Leaders Jim Maloney Juan Marichal Warren Spahn 4 Jim Bouton1963 AL Pitching Leaders Whitey Ford Camilo Pascual 5 Don Drysda1963 NL Strikeout Leaders Sandy Koufax Jim Maloney 6 Jim Bunnin 1963 AL Strikeout Leaders Camilo Pascual Dick Stigman 7 Hank Aaron1963 NL Batting Leaders Roberto Clemente Tommy Davis Dick Groat 8 Al Kaline 1963 AL Batting Leaders Rich Rollins Carl Yastrzemski 9 Hank Aaron1963 NL Home Run Leaders Orlando Cepeda Willie Mays Willie McCovey 10 Bob Allison1963 AL Home Run Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 11 Hank Aaron1963 NL RBI Leaders Ken Boyer Bill White 12 Al Kaline 1963 AL RBI Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 13 Hoyt Wilhelm 14 Dick Nen Dodgers Rookies Nick Willhite 15 Zoilo Versalles Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 16 John Boozer 17 Willie Kirkland 18 Billy O'Dell 19 Don Wert 20 Bob Friend 21 Yogi Berra 22 Jerry Adair 23 Chris Zachary 24 Carl Sawatski 25 Bill Monbouquette 26 Gino Cimoli 27 New York Mets Team Card 28 Claude Osteen 29 Lou Brock 30 Ron Perranoski 31 Dave Nicholson 32 Dean Chance 33 Sammy EllisReds Rookies Mel Queen 34 Jim Perry 35 Eddie Mathews 36 Hal Reniff 37 Smoky Burgess 38 Jimmy Wynn 39 Hank Aguirre 40 Dick Groat 41 Willie McCoFriendly Foes Leon Wagner 42 Moe Drabowsky 43 Roy Sievers 44 Duke Carmel 45 Milt Pappas 46 Ed Brinkman 47 Jesus Alou Giants Rookies Ron Herbel 48 Bob Perry 49 Bill Henry 50 Mickey
    [Show full text]
  • Dec 11 Cover.Qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 1 Allall Starstar Cardscards Volumevolume 2828 Issueissue #5#5
    ASC080120_001_Dec 11 cover.qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 1 AllAll StarStar CardsCards VolumeVolume 2828 IssueIssue #5#5 We are BUYING! See Page 92 for details Don’t Miss “Cyber­Monday” Nov. 30th!!! It’s Our Biggest Sale of theYear! (See page 7) ASC080120_001_Dec 11 cover.qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 2 15074 Antioch Road To Order Call (800) 932-3667 Page 2 Overland Park, KS 66221 Mickey Mantle Sandy Koufax Sandy Koufax Willie Mays 1965 Topps “Clutch Home Run” #134 1955 Topps RC #123 Centered! 1955 Topps RC #123 Hot Card! 1960 Topps #200 PSA “Mint 9” $599.95 PSA “NM/MT 8” $14,999.95 PSA “NM 7” $4,999.95 PSA “NM/MT 8” Tough! $1,250.00 Lou Gehrig Mike Trout Mickey Mantle Mickey Mantle Ban Johnson Mickey Mantle 1933 DeLong #7 2009 Bowman Chrome 1952 Bowman #101 1968 Topps #280 1904 Fan Craze 1953 Bowman #59 PSA 1 $2,499.95 Rare! Auto. BGS 9 $12,500.00 PSA “Good 2” $1,999.95 PSA 8 $1,499.95 PSA 8 $899.95 PSA “VG/EX 4” $1,799.95 Johnny Bench Willie Mays Tom Brady Roger Maris Michael Jordan Willie Mays 1978 Topps #700 1962 Topps #300 2000 Skybox Impact RC 1958 Topps RC #47 ‘97-98 Ultra Star Power 1966 Topps #1 PSA 10 Low Pop! $999.95 PSA “NM 7” $999.95 Autographed $1,399.95 SGC “NM 7” $699.95 PSA 10 Tough! $599.95 PSA “NM 7” $850.00 Mike Trout Hank Aaron Hank Aaron DeShaun Watson Willie Mays Gary Carter 2011 Bowman RC #101 1954 Topps RC #128 1964 Topps #300 2017 Panini Prizm RC 1952 Bowman #218 1981 Topps #660 PSA 10 - Call PSA “VG/EX 4” $3,999.95 PSA “NM/MT 8” $875.00 PSA 10 $599.95 PSA 3MK $399.95 PSA 10 $325.00 Tough! ASC080120_001_Dec 11 cover.qxd
    [Show full text]
  • Landscape and History in the Lykos Valley
    Landscape and History in the Lykos Valley Landscape and History in the Lykos Valley: Laodikeia and Hierapolis in Phrygia Edited by Celal Şimşek and Francesco D’Andria Landscape and History in the Lykos Valley: Laodikeia and Hierapolis in Phrygia Edited by Celal Şimşek and Francesco D’Andria This book first published 2017 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2017 by Celal Şimşek, Francesco D’Andria and contributors All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-4438-9859-7 ISBN (13): 978-1-4438-9859-1 CONTENTS Preface ....................................................................................................... vii Urban Planning of Laodikeia on the Lykos in the Light of New Evidence ...................................................................................................... 1 Celal Ş ı ̇ mşek Prehistory of the Lykos Valley .................................................................. 53 Ali Ozan – Fulya Dedeoğlu – Erim Konakçı The Lykos Valley during the Second Millennium BC .............................. 79 Erim Konakçı Tabernae in Tripolis ...............................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Cedrus.Akdeniz.Edu.Tr CEDRUS Cedrus V (2017) 57-77 the Journal of MCRI DOI: 10.13113/CEDRUS/201704
    cedrus.akdeniz.edu.tr CEDRUS Cedrus V (2017) 57-77 The Journal of MCRI DOI: 10.13113/CEDRUS/201704 ANCIENT CNIDUS AND ITS VICINITY (700-400 BC) ANTİKÇAĞ’DA KNIDOS VE ÇEVRESİ (MÖ 700-400) ∗ ∗∗ MUZAFFER DEMİR ALİCAN DOĞAN Abstract: Scholars still debate the issue of the location of Öz: Knidos’un lokalizasyonu konusunu hala tartışıl- Cnidus. On contrary to the views of some scholars, it ap- maktadır. Bazı bilim adamlarının görüşlerinin aksine pears that Cnidus was not relocated from Burgaz to Tekir Knidos’un Burgaz’dan Tekir’e taşınmadığı, aslında kolo- and that actually it lied just across the promontory of nizasyon döneminden itibaren Knidos Kherrone- Triopium on the mainland at the tip of Cnidian Cherro- sos’unun ucunda anakara üzerindeki Triopion Bur- nesus from the colonial period onwards. It had surren- nu’nun hemen karşısında uzandığı görülmektedir. Kni- dered to the Persian general Harpagus in 546 BC. It does dos, MÖ 546’da Pers generali Harpagos’un eline geç- not seem to have involved in Ionian revolt, even though mişti. Karia kentlerinin çoğunun Ionia Ayaklanması’na most of the Carian cities supported it. After the establish- destek vermesine rağmen Knidos isyana katılmamış gibi ment of the Delian League in 478 BC, its military leaders, görünmektedir. Hatta isyan süreci ve sonrasında Persleri Pausanias and Cimon, sailed to the coasts of Caria and desteklemiş bile olabilirler. Pers tehdidine karşı MÖ 478 Lycia to control over the cities there and then get their yılında Attika Delos Birliği kurulduktan sonra Pausanias financial support, including Cnidus. Having extended ve Kimon gibi birliğin bazı askeri liderleri, kentleri her political hegemony over the seas, Athens secured the hâkimiyet altına almak için Karia ve Lykia kıyılarına overall control of the League by 454 BC.
    [Show full text]
  • Oxford Scholarship Online
    The Urban System of Roman Asia Minor and Wider Urban Connectivity University Press Scholarship Online Oxford Scholarship Online Settlement, Urbanization, and Population Alan Bowman and Andrew Wilson Print publication date: 2011 Print ISBN-13: 9780199602353 Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2012 DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199602353.001.0001 The Urban System of Roman Asia Minor and Wider Urban Connectivity J. W. Hanson DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199602353.003.0009 Abstract and Keywords This chapter examines the urban system of Roman Asia. The distribution of urban sites indicates that a large proportion of Roman Asia was surveyed and controlled by urban centres, fairly evenly distributed across relief, but not across space, becoming sparser in the central plateau and east. The dense clustering of cities seems to reduce the span of control of individual cities within the region considerably, resulting in an average intercity distance of 24.5 km. Supporting this is a far denser network of agricultural sites. This arrangement seems to tally reasonably precisely with central place theory, since sites seem to have functioned as nodes of control (military and political) and as centres of administration and justice, as well as service centres. Keywords: Roman Asia, urbanization, urban sites, central place theory Introduction Page 1 of 40 PRINTED FROM OXFORD SCHOLARSHIP ONLINE (www.oxfordscholarship.com). (c) Copyright Oxford University Press, 2015. All Rights Reserved. Under the terms of the licence agreement, an individual user may print out a PDF of a single chapter of a monograph in OSO for personal use (for details see http://www.oxfordscholarship.com/page/privacy-policy).
    [Show full text]
  • GOP Hears Barry. Remains Unpledged by WILLIAM HENDERSON to the Hotel for the Meeting with Alt the People
    Wtather DISTRIBUTION EEDBANK TODAY row. HigD today ana , U to SS on the coast, M fadaad. 35,000 Confrolltd' Tonight, fair, low «S. Iluinday, HOHDAY THMUOH ftUUT-ttT. Wt fair, clear, lett humid. See weath- 1 DIAL 741-0010 er, page 2. REGISTER Iuu»d tuij, Mondty through mujr. Second Cl«n Pown PAGE ONE VOL. 87, NO. 2 Paid U RM 8uk aad *t Mdmmi.1 MUllng Offices. RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1964 7c PER COPir Goldwater's Visit in State a Hectic One GOP Hears Barry. Remains Unpledged By WILLIAM HENDERSON to the hotel for the meeting with alt the people. We'll make it Goldwater spent an hour with him put on the disappearing act TRENTON—It was a standoff. the delegates. all-right." the delegates and his feelings to avoid the pickets. New Jersey delegates backing Pickets from the NAACP were Goldwater tried to break away weren't spared by them in their This reporter folbwed Gold- Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater parading in front of the hotel but more questions were fired direct questions. water. He got Into an unmarked and those supporting Pennsyl- with signs reading: "Don't Tarry at him. They insisted he explain his police car, fooling almost every- vania William W. Soranton agreed Barry" and "Go Home Barry." He said: "I'll pin my cam- stand, thoroughly, on civil rights, one who gathered around the auto on one thing last night—to go to A 'crowd started to gather and paign on three issues—loss of atomic bomb warfare, medical in which he had arrived.
    [Show full text]
  • The Carian Villages Daniel T
    Cuneiform Digital Library Bulletin 2018:2 <http://cdli.ucla.edu/pubs/cdlb/2018/cdlb2018_002.html> © Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative ISSN 1540-8760 Version: 15 August 2018 The Carian Villages Daniel T. Potts ISAW, New York University §1. Introduction ed watercourses depends on the recognition and accurate §1.1. The study of human settlement and, more broad- assessment of chronologically sensitive surface artifacts, ly, historical demography in Babylonia has followed two found in association with sites and relict canals or natu- very different paths, one historical and the other archae- ral watercourses, the most prevalent of which are sherds ological. The earliest historical forays in this direction of pottery. With respect to the 1st millennium BC, when were based upon a meticulous culling of toponyms and the cuneiform documentation offers a potentially rich hydronyms from the records of one or more time periods. field for establishing correlations between historical and Examples that spring to mind are Adolph Neubauer’s archaeological evidence, the situation is less than ideal. As groundbreaking study of the Babylonian landscape in late Robert McC. Adams noted in 1981, both during his own Antiquity according to the Talmud (Neubauer 1868); fieldwork and years later, during subsequent data analysis, Friedrich Delitzsch’s survey of Assyrian and Babylonian ‘The Neo-Babylonian, Achaemenian, and Seleucid pe- geography according to the cuneiform sources (Delitzsch riods are very poorly defined in terms of archaeological 1881); and Maximilian Streck’s study of Babylonia ac- criteria that can assist in accurately dating surface collec- cording to the Arab geographers (Streck 1900). Later tions’ (Adams 1981: 176).
    [Show full text]
  • The History and Antiquities of the Doric Race, Vol. 1 of 2 by Karl Otfried Müller
    The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History and Antiquities of the Doric Race, Vol. 1 of 2 by Karl Otfried Müller This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license Title: The History and Antiquities of the Doric Race, Vol. 1 of 2 Author: Karl Otfried Müller Release Date: September 17, 2010 [Ebook 33743] Language: English ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF THE DORIC RACE, VOL. 1 OF 2*** The History and Antiquities Of The Doric Race by Karl Otfried Müller Professor in the University of Göttingen Translated From the German by Henry Tufnell, Esq. And George Cornewall Lewis, Esq., A.M. Student of Christ Church. Second Edition, Revised. Vol. I London: John Murray, Albemarle Street. 1839. Contents Extract From The Translators' Preface To The First Edition.2 Advertisement To The Second Edition. .5 Introduction. .6 Book I. History Of The Doric Race, From The Earliest Times To The End Of The Peloponnesian War. 22 Chapter I. 22 Chapter II. 39 Chapter III. 50 Chapter IV. 70 Chapter V. 83 Chapter VI. 105 Chapter VII. 132 Chapter VIII. 163 Chapter IX. 181 Book II. Religion And Mythology Of The Dorians. 202 Chapter I. 202 Chapter II. 216 Chapter III. 244 Chapter IV. 261 Chapter V. 270 Chapter VI. 278 Chapter VII. 292 Chapter VIII. 302 Chapter IX.
    [Show full text]