WHITE SALE Nixon Picks Agnew As Running Mate

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

WHITE SALE Nixon Picks Agnew As Running Mate ^ V PAGE THIRTY-TWO W E D N E S D A Y , AU G U ST 7, 1968 p ' ^ Aanriipjatpr EoraIttQ lirraUi Most Manchester Stores Open Tonight Until 9 O *Clock First Church of Christ,'" Scien­ gregants at the Burger Chef, af­ per hour, and that hi* men, About T o w d tist, will conduct its regular Directors Get Petition ter hours, are tuned In on the po­ vdien off -duty, don’t even want Wednesday Evening Testimony lice, radio-'wmve length, and dis­ the Job. VITAII1NS ICktwMk Bible ctaaees will be meeting at 8 at the church, 447 perse wheh they hear a com- Sonife o f the drlve-ln prob­ COMPARE AND SAVE ATBU fi Doiljr Nat Praas Ron conductM tonlgbt nt T;ao «t the N. Main St. On Noise at Drive-ins . plaint. lem*, he said, are because of The Weather CSnirch of Chxlit, Lydall and . fh r The WaMt rv. “Manchester policemen are town’s anti-lolterlag ordinance d lgn orettl sadd, ’ ’T lie nuia- young and inexperienced man­ Vernon Sta., including an adult Jdwvah’s Witnesses will con­ ARTHUR DRUa Aogiwt S, U I9 Fair toriigM. Low between 60 spending entirely too much time and of the state law pertaining ancee ore all over town, and agers. r- atudy on “ How On* Bible Came duct a theocratic ministry and 66. T om orrow m oatly fa ir, at drive-ins, when they should be to unmuffled automobiles and not merely at the Burger Chef. He said that, under the.town’s to U a.” school Friday at 7:80 p.m. and a doing more important police motorcycles. No wonder the community at anti-loltering onknance, piriice warm. High in die 80r. service meeting at 8 :S5 at King­ cannot make arreats 'without 14,685 work,” said Police Chief James “It they are no4 enforceable, large In the country is plagued OaopenUlve Summer J.H. dom Hall. evidence and 'without affidavits Reardon last night. let’s change them so that they wUh riots and chaos. Let’s stop Menchowter .. A City o f Vittage Charm Preirnm win bold a meeting and warrants from the state RANGE Reardon, speaking after the will be enforceable," he recom- H here at the beginning —etop lar Oradeo 7. 8 and 9 tonight, Members of the Daughter* of prosecutor. Under the or­ Board of Directors had accepted niended. it wMle M’a etlH only a epork ' N' VOL. LXXXVn, NO. 288 (TWENTY PAOBS^TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 AdNwtWag m ID PRICE TEN CENTS at 7 at South Kethodiat Church, Isabella are ha'vlng a naUcnal and before K becomes a flame.’’ dinance, he said, alleged loiter­ a petition from ISO nelg)\bor8 of He acknowledged that the Uas lIMn St Sponaored by convention in S t Paul, Mtam., Reardon said that his men ers first must be asked to move the Main St. Burger Chef Res­ Burger Chef management has FUEL OIL Emanuel Lutheran, Concordia Aug. 12 ttuough Aug. 16. Over check all drlve-liw, once or twice on. taurant, decrying nolseu and Lutheran, and South Methodist 80 members from the state are cooperated in moves to correct every hour, and that, when re­ Mayor Nathan Agosttnrili nuisances in the vicinity of the nuisances on Its parking lot, and GASOLINE Churdtea, Qte theme is "CM sIb making the trip.. Lea'ving Fri­ plying to a complaint call, find praised the Manchester pidlce town’s diive-lns, - said, “The in America —Hope Through Ac­ day from the local group of St. conceded that the rolice respond things In order on the parking “ fo r an outstanding Job, consid­ tio n ." Margaret’e O rde are Mrs. Jo­ problems in Manchester arc not immediately to complaint calls. lot*. ering the problems." nearly as rough as they are in BANTLY OIL seph FUkowskl, Miss Stephenie “ But those measures are only He saM that motorcycles are He said that he 'will coll a other areii towns.’’ stop gaps,” he sold, appealing Offlcera and members of the Tunsky, ICss Aims LaGace, legal pieces of eQuipment and meeting of drlve-in operators The spokesman for the peti­ British American Club will meet Mrs. Ann IQdy, and Mr. and to the directors for stronger are properly licensed, in accord­ within the next month, to dls- Nixon Picks Agnew As Running Mate tioners was Rudolph Signorettl measures. at e;tO p.m. tomorrow at the Mrs. WUtred Lemire. ance with *tate statute. cuas and impletnent possible of 14 Bond St. He asked for duUiouae to proceed to Trinity Findlay photo He said he believed, but with­ He said that the drive-ins esn’t sdutlons to the loitering ahd stricter enforcement of the MIAJWT BEACH, Fla. ESpiacopal Church, 120 SIgoumey First Congregational Oiurch of out confirmation, that the con­ afford to hire poUcemen at $6 nuisance problem. Engaged (AP)—RichaPd M. inxioo, 8t, Hartford, to attend the me­ Vernon, Hartford Tpicc. and winner of the RepubUoan morial aervice fOr David AUely, Center Rd., w ill hold its Church The engagement of Miss Deb­ Council and Library tonight at Youths Riot presidential nomination, to­ a m em ber. orah Beth Rubin of Manchester 8 at the church. day picked Gov. &iin> T. ngton LOL will meet to- to Alan N. Munits of Detroit, Agnew of Maryland as his nigh,' at 7:S0 at W.P. Quieh Fu­ The Ladies Auxiliary of Man­ Mich., has been announced by lit M ia m i, rumdng mate. neral Home, 225 Main St, to chester C h a p te r, Disabled her pcu:«nt8, Mr. and Mrs. Da­ Nbeon mode the eanotmoe- pay their reapeots to the late American Veterans, will meet vid B. Rubin of 103 Weaver Rd. ment In a brief news conliiw nee David ClHUnbera, who was a tonight at 7:30 at the VFW 25 Injured at 12:40 p.m. He aaU’acme 100 Mr. Munitz is the son of Mr. member. Hom e. party leadero had been ooaadR- and Mrs. Raymond Munltz of lO A ia, Fla. (AP) —Bands of ed. Mias Patricia Hogan, daugh­ Akron, CRiio. young Negroes set fire to care, The eeleetton c f Agnew, a ooe- Miss Rubin, a 1967 graduate Personal Notices ter of Mr. imd Mrs. James T. atoned white motorlet* end loot­ tlme stgiporter of dor. Naina Hogan of 141 Bolton St., and of Manchester High School, is ed storee in a flve-Uook area of A. Rockefeller cf New Totic, Miss. Jane Wsigner, daughter of attending Eastern Michigan nortbweet ICaml Wedneeday was a major surprise. The In Memoriam Mr. and Mrs. John Wagner of University, Ypsilanti. Her fi­ night In a dtetorhanoe towflied Maryland govenwr delivered In lovkie memory of our Horn, 181 Bolton St., have been nsun- ance attended Akron University off when police maoeed at a ral­ the nominating speech fOr Nix­ If- 5 Martha P t . Hewitt, who passed sway Aus. 7, 1967. ed to the Dean's List for the and is a senior at Elsa Cooper ly aimed at airing proUema fao- on last night. spring term at Albertus Magnus School, Detroit. W HITE SALE N egroes. Nixon opened hie news cooisp Lovms meraoiies never die. As years roll on sod days pass by. C ollege, N ew Haven. They 'wlU Ihe wedding Is planned* for Some 36 peisone were Injured, ones saying die daXberatSoaS In our hearts a memory ts kept. be Juniors at the school in the June 1969. indudlng two Negroee who po­ "have been very thorough on Of one we loved and wal never fop- aet. fa ll. lice eald were shot by unknown what we think Is a tremendously gunmen. Important decision." a Mrs. A. J. Stroker and FYunlly David F. King, son of Mr. Five Day Forecast All About 100 Negroes were ar- He said he wanted a and Mrs. Edward F. King of reeted, moeUy on riiaigee of die- QuaXlled to be preafdant, who In Memsiiam WINDSOR LOCKS (AP)—The In loviK nMtnory of Spec. 4, Ed* orderiy oonduct leading to riot­ could campaign effeofively and 106 Oreenwood Dr., a student U.S. Weather Bureau says , tem­ First Qiality ward L. rouech. who cUed Aur. 7. ing. who would be able to 1966. at the University of Connecticut, peratures In OonnecUcut Thura- is attending Army Reserve Of­ CANNON. TzouUe bixAe out in the pre­ new respoosibllltiea dealing The tears in my eires, 1 can wipe day through Sfbnday are expect­ especially with the problema cf away ficers’ Training Corps summer ed to average below normal. dominantly Negro area about But th« ache in my heart, will ai* camp at Indiantown Gap Mili­ 0:80 pjn., eeveral boura before th ki;Miatlon'e oittee. ways st&y. tary Reservation, Ann'ville, Pa. Daytime highs averaging Luxurious 'Long Wearing RepuMlcan ddegatee 10 mflea Nbfixon said he had been in el- Mother mostly in the 70s and ovemight away acrose Btocayne Bay aa moet contlnuouB seerioo wUh lows ranging from the upper 60s one hour out for sleep and that Card O f Thanks WUUam J. O’Neill Jr., son of Miami Beach nominated Rldi- Mr. and Mrs. William O’Neill to the mid 60s. No marked day- ord XL Mxon aa their preelden- 100 leaden had been consulted, We wtah to thank all of our neich- to-day change. bora. friends and relf..tres for me of 17 Doane St., has been named Percale Sheets Muslin Sheets tlal candidate. in person or by phone. many ads of kindne,« and sym- Precipitation may total one- “I have now made a deef- paUiy shown ua in our recent be­ to the Dean’s lis t for the second IBaml Police lA.
Recommended publications
  • Voting Without Choosing?
    Institute of African Studies Carleton University (Ottawa, Canada) 2019 (7) Voting without Choosing? Ethnic Voting Behaviour and Voting Patterns in Nigeria’s 2015 Presidential Election and Implications for Institutionalisation of Social Conflicts Kialee Nyiayaana1 Abstract: Nigeria’s 2015 Presidential Election was widely seen as competitive, fair and less violent than other elections since the transition to democracy in 1999. This paper does not argue otherwise. Rather, it problematizes ethnic voting behaviour and voting patterns observed in the election and raises questions about their implications for institutionalisation of democracy and social conflicts in Nigeria. It argues that while scholarly examinations portray the presidential election results as ‘victory for democracy’, not least because an incumbent president was defeated for the first time in Nigeria, analysis of the spatial structure of votes cast reveals a predominant pattern of voting along ethnic, religious and geospatial lines. It further contends that this identity-based voting not only translates into a phenomenon of ‘voting without choosing,’ but is also problematic for social cohesion, interethnic harmony and peacebuilding in Nigeria. The relaxation of agitations for resource control in the Niger Delta throughout President Jonathan’s tenure and its revival in post-Jonathan regime is illustrative of the dilemmas and contradictions of ethnic voting and voting without choosing in Nigeria. This observation draws policy attention to addressing structural underpinnings of the relationship between ethnicity, geography and voting behaviour in Nigerian politics so as to consolidate democratic gains and enhance democratic peace in Nigeria. Nigeria’s 2015 Presidential election has been described as a turning point in the country’s political history and democratic evolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Brazil Ahead of the 2018 Elections
    BRIEFING Brazil ahead of the 2018 elections SUMMARY On 7 October 2018, about 147 million Brazilians will go to the polls to choose a new president, new governors and new members of the bicameral National Congress and state legislatures. If, as expected, none of the presidential candidates gains over 50 % of votes, a run-off between the two best-performing presidential candidates is scheduled to take place on 28 October 2018. Brazil's severe and protracted political, economic, social and public-security crisis has created a complex and polarised political climate that makes the election outcome highly unpredictable. Pollsters show that voters have lost faith in a discredited political elite and that only anti- establishment outsiders not embroiled in large-scale corruption scandals and entrenched clientelism would truly match voters' preferences. However, there is a huge gap between voters' strong demand for a radical political renewal based on new faces, and the dramatic shortage of political newcomers among the candidates. Voters' disillusionment with conventional politics and political institutions has fuelled nostalgic preferences and is likely to prompt part of the electorate to shift away from centrist candidates associated with policy continuity to candidates at the opposite sides of the party spectrum. Many less well-off voters would have welcomed a return to office of former left-wing President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2010), who due to a then booming economy, could run social programmes that lifted millions out of extreme poverty and who, barred by Brazil's judiciary from running in 2018, has tried to transfer his high popularity to his much less-known replacement.
    [Show full text]
  • Picking the Vice President
    Picking the Vice President Elaine C. Kamarck Brookings Institution Press Washington, D.C. Contents Introduction 4 1 The Balancing Model 6 The Vice Presidency as an “Arranged Marriage” 2 Breaking the Mold 14 From Arranged Marriages to Love Matches 3 The Partnership Model in Action 20 Al Gore Dick Cheney Joe Biden 4 Conclusion 33 Copyright 36 Introduction Throughout history, the vice president has been a pretty forlorn character, not unlike the fictional vice president Julia Louis-Dreyfus plays in the HBO seriesVEEP . In the first episode, Vice President Selina Meyer keeps asking her secretary whether the president has called. He hasn’t. She then walks into a U.S. senator’s office and asks of her old colleague, “What have I been missing here?” Without looking up from her computer, the senator responds, “Power.” Until recently, vice presidents were not very interesting nor was the relationship between presidents and their vice presidents very consequential—and for good reason. Historically, vice presidents have been understudies, have often been disliked or even despised by the president they served, and have been used by political parties, derided by journalists, and ridiculed by the public. The job of vice president has been so peripheral that VPs themselves have even made fun of the office. That’s because from the beginning of the nineteenth century until the last decade of the twentieth century, most vice presidents were chosen to “balance” the ticket. The balance in question could be geographic—a northern presidential candidate like John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts picked a southerner like Lyndon B.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Maryland's Electoral College Meetings 1789-2016
    A History of Maryland’s Electoral College Meetings 1789-2016 A History of Maryland’s Electoral College Meetings 1789-2016 Published by: Maryland State Board of Elections Linda H. Lamone, Administrator Project Coordinator: Jared DeMarinis, Director Division of Candidacy and Campaign Finance Published: October 2016 Table of Contents Preface 5 The Electoral College – Introduction 7 Meeting of February 4, 1789 19 Meeting of December 5, 1792 22 Meeting of December 7, 1796 24 Meeting of December 3, 1800 27 Meeting of December 5, 1804 30 Meeting of December 7, 1808 31 Meeting of December 2, 1812 33 Meeting of December 4, 1816 35 Meeting of December 6, 1820 36 Meeting of December 1, 1824 39 Meeting of December 3, 1828 41 Meeting of December 5, 1832 43 Meeting of December 7, 1836 46 Meeting of December 2, 1840 49 Meeting of December 4, 1844 52 Meeting of December 6, 1848 53 Meeting of December 1, 1852 55 Meeting of December 3, 1856 57 Meeting of December 5, 1860 60 Meeting of December 7, 1864 62 Meeting of December 2, 1868 65 Meeting of December 4, 1872 66 Meeting of December 6, 1876 68 Meeting of December 1, 1880 70 Meeting of December 3, 1884 71 Page | 2 Meeting of January 14, 1889 74 Meeting of January 9, 1893 75 Meeting of January 11, 1897 77 Meeting of January 14, 1901 79 Meeting of January 9, 1905 80 Meeting of January 11, 1909 83 Meeting of January 13, 1913 85 Meeting of January 8, 1917 87 Meeting of January 10, 1921 88 Meeting of January 12, 1925 90 Meeting of January 2, 1929 91 Meeting of January 4, 1933 93 Meeting of December 14, 1936
    [Show full text]
  • Contingent Election of the President and Vice President by Congress: Perspectives and Contemporary Analysis
    Contingent Election of the President and Vice President by Congress: Perspectives and Contemporary Analysis Updated October 6, 2020 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R40504 Contingent Election of the President and Vice President by Congress Summary The 12th Amendment to the Constitution requires that presidential and vice presidential candidates gain “a majority of the whole number of Electors appointed” in order to win election. With a total of 538 electors representing the 50 states and the District of Columbia, 270 electoral votes is the “magic number,” the arithmetic majority necessary to win the presidency. What would happen if no candidate won a majority of electoral votes? In these circumstances, the 12th Amendment also provides that the House of Representatives would elect the President, and the Senate would elect the Vice President, in a procedure known as “contingent election.” Contingent election has been implemented twice in the nation’s history under the 12th Amendment: first, to elect the President in 1825, and second, the Vice President in 1837. In a contingent election, the House would choose among the three candidates who received the most electoral votes. Each state, regardless of population, casts a single vote for President in a contingent election. Representatives of states with two or more Representatives would therefore need to conduct an internal poll within their state delegation to decide which candidate would receive the state’s single vote. A majority of state votes, 26 or more, is required to elect, and the House must vote “immediately” and “by ballot.” Additional precedents exist from 1825, but they would not be binding on the House in a contemporary election.
    [Show full text]
  • Brazil: Presidential Election 2018
    August 15, 2018 Backgrounder N° 1 BRAZIL: PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 2018 Source: LSE Library In October 2018, Brazilians will go to the polls to elect their president, national legislators, state legislators, and governors. The president and governors compete in a two-round system. If no candidate surpasses the 50 percent threshold on October 7, the second-round runoff will take place on October 28. Since the participation of Lula remains uncertain, there are two polling percentages for each candidate: one for if Lula runs (used here) and one for if he does not. Brazil: Presidential Election 2018 2 Who are the candidates, their party affiliations, their polling results, and their policy inclinations? As in every presidential election, Brazil has several candidates. This time, however, the list of 13 registered candidates beats the record, going all the way back to 1989. August 15 was the last day for withdrawals and alliances. The most popular candidates: 1. Luiz Inácio da Silva, a.k.a. Lula. • Workers' Party (PT), an old, traditional labor party, but the entire left may fold under Lula if he’s allowed to run. • Polling: 31 percent, down from over 40 percent before he was jailed. • Ideology: social democracy, third way clientelist welfare state. • Running mate: Fernando Haddad, former mayor of Sao Paulo. Haddad, polling at 13 percent, will be the PT candidate if Lula is unable to run. • Observations: Lula (72) was president, achieving reelection, from 2003 to 2011. 2. Congressman Jair Bolsonaro • Social Liberal Party (PSL), a small and relatively unknown social-democratic party. He joined it a few months ago to run for president.
    [Show full text]
  • Brazil's Presidential Election
    INSIGHTi Brazil’s Presidential Election name redacted Specialist in Latin American Affairs Updated October 16, 2018 Brazil—the fifth most populous country and ninth-largest economy in the world—held general elections on October 7, 2018. Antiestablishment sentiment carried the day, as Brazilians replaced almost half of their congressional representatives and nearly elected a right-wing populist to the presidency. A presidential runoff election, scheduled for October 28, will have significant implications for the economic and foreign policies of this U.S. “strategic partner.” Domestic Context Over the past several years, Brazil has struggled to emerge from a series of domestic crises. The country fell into a deep recession in 2014, due to a decline in global commodity prices and economic mismanagement under the center-left Workers Party (PT) government of President Dilma Rousseff (2011- 2016). The unemployment rate more than doubled as real gross domestic product contracted by more than 8% from 2015 to 2016. Although economic growth returned in 2017, conditions remain difficult. More than 12% of the population is unemployed, and several million formerly middle-class Brazilians now live in poverty. Budget cuts have exacerbated the situation, limiting the capacity of Brazilian authorities to provide social services and address challenges such as escalating crime and violence. Brazil also is contending with the repercussions of massive corruption scandals. Since 2014, investigators have uncovered arrangements throughout the public sector in which businesses provided bribes and illegal campaign donations to politicians in exchange for contracts or other favorable government treatment. The revelations discredited much of Brazil’s political establishment and contributed to the controversial impeachment and removal from office of President Rousseff in August 2016.
    [Show full text]
  • “Potatoe” Kings Why Vice Presidents Are Doomed from the Start
    “Potatoe” Kings Why Vice Presidents Are Doomed From the Start Tyler Isaman P-O-T-A-T-O. The word was scratched on the old blackboard in crisp white chalk causing a comforting smile stretched across the Vice President’s painfully young face. The clean cut, black suit that hung off Dan Quayle’s shoulders and the red patterned tie that was fastened tightly around his neck gave him an air of importance and intellect. William Figueroa, on the other hand, was an overweight Puerto Rican sixth-grader in a plain blue tee shirt who had to travel over an hour by bus to get to Trenton’s Muñoz Rivera School’s spelling bee. "You're close," Quayle said, "but you left a little something off. The e on the end."1 William looked at his vice president, the man who was second-in-command of the free world, then slowly scratched an “e” on the blackboard. Moments later at a press conference a reporter entreated Quayle to spell “potato” and the media debacle began, forever implanting the misspelled “potatoe” next to Quayle’s name in American history. This, coming only months after millions watched “Danny Boy” get affronted by Senator Lloyd Bentsen at the vice presidential debate, sparked further questions about whether or not Dan Quayle was competent enough to be the next President of the United States if there was an emergency. Quayle’s embarrassment follows a pattern that appears relatively often in vice presidential memoirs. A young, fresh faced man who has just dipped his feet into politics is suddenly up for the position of vice president.
    [Show full text]
  • Kenya Paper for Sudikoff
    COUNTERING DANGEROUS SPEECH TO PREVENT MASS VIOLENCE DURING KENYA’S 2013 ELECTIONS Susan Benesch Founder, Dangerous Speech Project and Faculty Associate, Berkman Center for Internet and Society February 9, 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .......................................................................... 3 THE PRECURSOR: KENYA’S POST ELECTION VIOLENCE OF 2007-8 .... 5 THE ELECTIONS OF 2013: RISK FACTORS AND PEACE PROPAGANDA .. 8 THE EXPERIMENTS .................................................................... 10 UMATI ................................................................................................ 11 NIPE UKWELI ...................................................................................... 14 VIOJA MAHAKAMANI .......................................................................... 16 PEACETXT ......................................................................................... 19 LOOKING BACK ON THE ELECTION FROM NAIROBI: KENYA’S POST ELECTION 2013… PEACE, CALM, CYBERWAR, COMA? ..................... 21 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Susan Benesch and the Dangerous Speech Project are deeply grateful to the United States Institute of Peace, as well as the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Fetzer Institute, for supporting many of the projects described here. 2 INTRODUCTION This report describes a new set of violence prevention methods carried out in Kenya during the national elections of 2013, to counter inflammatory speech and limit its power to inflame audiences, while protecting freedom
    [Show full text]
  • Rockefeller, Nelson - General” of the Ron Nessen Papers at the Gerald R
    The original documents are located in Box 25, folder “Rockefeller, Nelson - General” of the Ron Nessen Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Ron Nessen donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box 25 of the Ron Nessen Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library \' n,_ Es' I t)E;~(i l S (Loc_~ Pec...Le--12_ ~t is not to say that I wish the Congress would keep out of fo~eign affairs and that I want to run everything beyond the water's edge in my own way without legislative inte~ference. Under the Constitution, the Congress has a fundamental responsibility in the shaping of all broad matters of public policy, both foreign and domestic. Nobody knows that better than I do. But while the Congress, together with the President, makes foreign policy, only the Executive can execute it. I seek a coalition of confidence with the new Congress and there is no area in which this is more critical than in the national response to the crisis of ene~gy.
    [Show full text]
  • Cyprus Quiet but Uneasy
    Weather DISTRIBUTION 7 fern, temperature 1t, Partly TODAY CtowJy today and toaizbt Higb & THEDAILY the 70f tt<Uy, low tonight In the 24,150 «s. Tomorrow, warm, humid, chance of late afternoon thunder- Red Bank Area showers. Thursday, fair, cooler. I 7 DIAL 741-0010 See weather, page 2. NORTHERN MONMOUTH'S HOME NEWSPAPER 1>sueii dally VOL. 87. NO 32 ' Mtrad>y through Friday. Second Clasn Postati TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1964 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE ' Paid it Hed Sank uid it Additional Milling OlflcM. Cyprus Quiet But Uneasy NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — A shaky peace re- split, possibly impairing the political strength of result of a delay in transmission of orders to some urned to Cyprus today as Turkey and the Greek Archbishop Makarios, Greek Cypriot president. Right- Turkish air bases. The Greek Cypriots claimed 10 Cypriot government accepted a UN cease-fire. But ists and leftists in the cabinet exchanged anpry persons were wounded when the jets strafed the vil- Cyprus remained jittery as Turkish air force jets con- words over whether to count on Greece or the Soviet lage square. tinued reconnaissance flights. Union for help, informants said. A Turkish government spokesman denied the UN headquarters said Turkish planes flew over Both factions were disappointed by the loss than planes had opened fire. He said they flew over an area south of the village of Alevga, near the scene wholehearted support Uiey received from Greece and Cyprus because the Greek Cypriots broke an unof- of the recent fighting, for 25 minutes this morning the Soviet Union. ficial truce by resuming their attack on Kokkina, but did not open fire.
    [Show full text]
  • Electoral System Design: the New International IDEA Handbook
    Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook Andrew Reynolds Ben Reilly and Andrew Ellis With José Antonio Cheibub Karen Cox Dong Lisheng Jørgen Elklit Michael Gallagher Allen Hicken Carlos Huneeus Eugene Huskey Stina Larserud Vijay Patidar Nigel S. Roberts Richard Vengroff Jeffrey A. Weldon Handbook Series The International IDEA Handbook Series seeks to present comparative analysis, information and insights on a range of democratic institutions and processes. Handbooks are aimed primarily at policy makers, politicians, civil society actors and practitioners in the field. They are also of interest to academia, the democracy assistance community and other bodies. International IDEA publications are independent of specific national or political interests. Views expressed in this publication do not necessarily represent the views of International IDEA, its Board or its Council members. The map presented in this publication does not imply on the part of the Institute any judgement on the legal status of any territory or the endorsement of such boundaries, nor does the placement or size of any country or territory reflect the political view of the Institute. The map is created for this publication in order to add clarity to the text. © International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance 2005 Reprinted 2008 Applications for permission to reproduce or translate all or any part of this publication should be made to: Information Unit International IDEA SE -103 34 Stockholm Sweden International IDEA encourages dissemination of its work and will promptly respond to requests for permission to reproduce or translate its publications. Graphic design by: Magnus Alkmar Cover photos: © Pressens Bild Printed by: Trydells Tryckeri AB, Sweden ISBN: 91-85391-18-2 Foreword The Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that ‘everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country, directly or through freely chosen representatives’.
    [Show full text]