Oses Geneva Talk Hn Attending Are Aaked to Contact Tickets for the Spring Dance Be- Word Has Been Received That .1 ■' Mfw

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Oses Geneva Talk Hn Attending Are Aaked to Contact Tickets for the Spring Dance Be- Word Has Been Received That .1 ■' Mfw ».1 . 'i FRIDAY* MAY 28, ' i i . V A m n r m m HaufbPHtpr IttM tht^ ® praiii ■ ■ 'V. A fenigt Doily Net PrcM Ron Th# W#othcr } : Foreeaei ol 0. •. Weather Members of the local rirpt Mr. and Mra. Arthur H. tiling Per tAoWett ibsjM " ' ■ Church of Christ. Sdentlat; are, plan a .trip to Great Britain diir- ktoy n , 1948 . .Pair, not oo.eoel tooighL Lew About Town reminded of the lecture Monday at Ing the ixtter part of the aummer. Illing, who la , superintendent ol 48-8#. 8—day elewdy, nlld, eee#^ 8:15 p.m, ^ Elbert R. Slaughter aionol showere Into tn dny. n g h KltiK David IjoAgt, lOOF, will of Dallas. Tex., at the Unipn Con­ schools, will visit relativea while 12,715 meet tonight at 7:30 In Odd Fel- gregational Church, Elm and there. -* MeiolMr •( the Audit 7#-7A . Iowa Hall K aocial time will fol­ ■ Union Sta... Rockville. Hls-isubjecl 1.1 , I Bofeo# of OtrcnlattoB MancheBter^A City of Village Charm low tile meetlni;;. The iheetlnj; wilt be “Mah-a Birthright of PTee- The Cristoforo Colombo Society acheduled for May 30 will be omit­ I dom.” will meet Sunday afternoon at 2 ted. ! o'clock at the Italian American MANCHESTER, CONN, SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1958 tUlneeUled AdvorttOng e# Page 10) PRICE FIVE CENTS Miss Rita A. Cxjtebf 17 Canrt^r- Club. This will be the laat meet, Headquarters VOL. LXXVJI, NO. 200 (TWELVE PAGES) * The Buckley Child Study Group burv St. and Albert R,. TkM of ing of the season. The next meet­ will hold ita laat 'meetinft the Washington St. will, be Ubited In ing will be held In September. aeaaon in the form of a potluck in marriage tomorrow g t' 10 a.m. in ''highland fling" the achool cafeteria Tueaday at 1 St. Brldget'a ChW k. The taking of pictures of mem­ If Ii with a gr#9f dial of plaasura p.m. Dr. a ; E, Diakain, chainnan The Ariieri<*h I^egion band will bers of the 8th District Fire De­ Beirut Plea of the .United World Pederallata, practice tonight at 8 o’clock at the partment acheduled for Sunda.v has that HalaVfeagini iti 30th yaar af will apeak on “Practice in Being post hoisrt. been postponed until a later date. Global Nelijhbora.” All interbated 9.95 _>*'-^ypur Jantien haadquartari. May Nfever OSes Geneva Talk Hn attending are aaked to contact Tickets for the spring dance be- Word has been received that .1 ■' Mfw. Edward Higgina. 204 Green-‘ liig held tomorrow night at 9 David E. Murphy, son of Mr. and OJHERS to $19.95 w o o d ^ . o'clock at the Knights of Columbus Mrs. Thomas Murphy of 82 Jordt - ■f'■ ■ - Home may be obtained at the door. St., has been promoted to person- Reach UN A "reci^ h o p ” for mwbbesd'and To See Junta nelmsn second class, U.S. Navy. Invited guaatjf'^ the John Mather The Buckley School PTA fair Murphy la stationed at Port Ly- By WILUAM N. OATIS Chapter, Order oj DeMolay. will will be held tomorrow at the aute, Africa, and has been In the ilave i fling and buy two! A pur# PhPil, M#y 24 (TP)—Premlerflng ao now by aigning the commlt- United Nation*, N. Y., May be held 7;30 to '10^30 p-m. Satur­ school, rain or shine, from 10 .a.m: Navy for nearly thlee years. teo’a incorporation papers. 24 (/F)—Lebanon apread new day at the Maaonlc Temple. to 2 p.m. Movies, pony rides and Scbtcii value—for rarely is so much Pierre Pflhnlin sent a mem galan eald the committee's Job Ban charges of -subversion against ofN- booths at which various articles The Baptist Women’s Mission ber cd! p#rli«ment to Algeria waa making sure Uie people's will ..Will be for sale will be featured. Society will serve a family style “know h&w'” packed into one suit at today to talk with the in- Is not thwarted by "establtsfied the United Arab Republic to­ supper tomorrow afternoon begin­ such A price. Jantzen designing, sliape ■urgent junta there. powers.” day, but some diplomats pre­ LEAKY FAUCETS? Manchester Assembly. Order of ning at 5 o’clock. Tickets will be Jean-Lout* VIgier, an aid* of In sn attempt to win mors Al­ dicted they miight never reach We wlll repack all faucets in a the Rainbow for Girls, islll hold a avsilsbie at the door. Mrs. Ray* making, plus fine glnghtm cotton that'" Oen. Oiartee D* Oaull* during gerian support, the committee soft-pedaled the military and colo­ the U.N. Security Council. llllgle borne In one senice call rehearaal at 2 o’clock Sunday af mond Ruddell. president of the has been ^ Con trolled to dry quickly World War n who later brok* with Lebanon's Foreign Minister UAW Seen Urges East for temoon in the Masonic Temple. Af society. Is general rhslrman. the OaulUat party In parllamanL nl«nial, demands for a more vigorous and practically wrinkle-free.. It's it sjpUnst Nationalist rebels. Charles kfsUk told newsmen in ^ W ILL R. G UY ter a short business meeting at tiew to Alglere on ^HparaPBal JWOf»ghi Beirut yesterday President Nas-I 7:30 Monday night a semi-public! straight out of Life Magazine and unofficial miaalon. But the trip had But Salan’s hesdqtlarters empha- M l 3.0677 sited th* 8H-year rebellion ser's USA was moving men and Retreating Join West installation of new officers will be comes in rich r^y(?llow miniature obvious polHicai ImpUcatlons, arms Into Lebanon "at this very held. All members are requested WASHING MACHINE Th* re-establUbment, of normal against French rule waa still go­ to wear white. 1 Clooney tartan., eontacte with Uw miliUry-clvUlan ing on by reporting that 97 rebels minute.” R*pa irs>S«rvicc group that *et up a near revolution have been killed in recent clashes Malik charged that armed bands In 3 Weeks All ,\ppllnnces, Refrigerators ary govemtaent In Algiers yester­ With French troop*. infiltrating from Syria threaten In Demands Soroptimist International of | the independence of Lebanon by Manchester will meet at the Red Wringer .Rolls—All Sices day ha# been the primary aim of While ti^ n g to build the strong­ By JOHN mOHTOWER PfUmlln. est poatlble government front In Joining opposition parties Inside Detroit. May 24 (A*)—The Cross office at the Center Monday 1 P O H E R tO N ’S Paris, PflimUn -rsfiued to bar the the country In a 2-week guerrilla Washington, May 24 (JP)— DONT ^-Twar*" at 6:15 p.m. and proceed to North ' goes bonhie and VIgier Is making his trip on th* United Auto,Workers Union, AtlU plenty of wear left In 180 Center St.—5II 9-4537 advic* of Plerr* Oulllaln ds Bsnou- possibitUy Of concilistlon with the war to overthrow the pro-western Preffident Eisenhower pro­ ahoea wdm brought here for Coventry for a supper and pro- ^ AlElers insurgents. He viewed government. warned by president Walter gram at Caprilands, Mrs. Adelma ville. a strong GaulUst supporter Reuther that it Would be “in­ posed to Premier Khrushchev expert - repairing. Simmons’ home. ' 1 and French publisher, who. mad* a developments there as "demonstra­ Malik added, however, that Leb­ today that the United States WORR DONE WHII-E previous trip to Algiers through tions of -.fratemtsation” between anon would ' withdraw her com­ sane to strike now,” stood Bwitterisnd. Th* results of his -trip French and Algerians that could plaints In the U-N. Snd also in the and Russia name scientific ex- rO tJ WAIT j Cadet Thomas J. Flaherty ,Ir..! Makr j'our leisure hours smart and carefree witl^ ready today to ease its con­ bav* never become public. lead to * new Algeria under Arab League "any time external tract demands on the automo­ )erts to meet at Gepeva with- I son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J .' WhKshoiin Bros. “Highlaiid Fling" sun separates. VIgier Wilt be the first deputy to Frciicb rule. ■>,' pressure and lnter\'ention in lAh-;; n three weeks to di^uss ways Flaherty Sr.. 84 Alton St., has go on such a mission although a But be. added, *‘It would not be anon ends.* , . tive Bijr Three. SAM YU LYES I been promoted to the rank of ca- hMdful of extrema rightwingers admlsalbte for a fraction of a ns-' Reuther yesterdiy told a Joint of policing a nuclear test “SHOE REPAIRING PHINTING ond Lebanon's U.N. Delegate - Karim Council representing 450,000 work­ suspension. < OP THE BETTER RIND" I det second lieutenant In the Air The Jamaica shorts of cri.ip poplin in authentic have already gone to Algeria to tion to Impose Its wiU on the entire Ark (Hi) acknowledged here laat ' Force ROTC detachment at the Join the InsurgenU. nation.” - ers at Ford, General Motora and Bleenhowar said that for tha 23 OAR STREET red-vellow miniature Clooney tarian. 6.98. night t)iat a Security Council meet­ Chrysler that the union has run weatern aide experts might b* University of Notre Dame. He la VIgier took off on a regular com- Pfllmlln's proposals are aimed ing had not yet been called to con­ Same Side at Watkina a sophomore In tlie college of en­ nECORATING mercUl flights after PfUmlln and . at countering Oe Gsulle’s own un- into a aolid wall (k opposiUon In contributed by Britain and Franca sider hU complaint filed Thurs­ efforts to work out new .pacts. and poaslbly other countries, aa gineering.
Recommended publications
  • The BG News April 14, 1981
    Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 4-14-1981 The BG News April 14, 1981 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News April 14, 1981" (1981). BG News (Student Newspaper). 3856. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/3856 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. Tuesday. -\ Home or work, Opening day Falcons on the women want marks right track respect Indian summer Page 2 Page 5 Page 8 Vary cloudy. High April 14, 1981 50-55 F, low upper 20s F. 90 percent chine* of The B G News precipitation. Bowling Green State University SGA candidates run unopposed as election nears by Kyla Silvan "I didn't think that gave the students much of Margie Potapchuk is running unopposed for tailed checking the candidates' grade point SHE SATO she does not like the idea of write- News ataff raportar a choice." one of the two Founders openings, and averages to ensure that they are carrying the in candidates. Johnson said he is pleased his position is op- Firelands has not submitted a candidate. required 2.0 GPA and a random survey of the "I am a little bit fearful of that," she said, Student Government Association candidates posed.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 MLB Ump Media Guide
    the 2020 Umpire media gUide Major League Baseball and its 30 Clubs remember longtime umpires Chuck Meriwether (left) and Eric Cooper (right), who both passed away last October. During his 23-year career, Meriwether umpired over 2,500 regular season games in addition to 49 Postseason games, including eight World Series contests, and two All-Star Games. Cooper worked over 2,800 regular season games during his 24-year career and was on the feld for 70 Postseason games, including seven Fall Classic games, and one Midsummer Classic. The 2020 Major League Baseball Umpire Guide was published by the MLB Communications Department. EditEd by: Michael Teevan and Donald Muller, MLB Communications. Editorial assistance provided by: Paul Koehler. Special thanks to the MLB Umpiring Department; the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum; and the late David Vincent of Retrosheet.org. Photo Credits: Getty Images Sport, MLB Photos via Getty Images Sport, and the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Copyright © 2020, the offiCe of the Commissioner of BaseBall 1 taBle of Contents MLB Executive Biographies ...................................................................................................... 3 Pronunciation Guide for Major League Umpires .................................................................. 8 MLB Umpire Observers ..........................................................................................................12 Umps Care Charities .................................................................................................................14
    [Show full text]
  • Baseball News Clippings
    ! BASEBALL I I I NEWS CLIPPINGS I I I I I I I I I I I I I BASE-BALL I FIRST SAME PLAYED IN ELYSIAN FIELDS. I HDBOKEN, N. JT JUNE ^9f }R4$.* I DERIVED FROM GREEKS. I Baseball had its antecedents In a,ball throw- Ing game In ancient Greece where a statue was ereoted to Aristonious for his proficiency in the game. The English , I were the first to invent a ball game in which runs were scored and the winner decided by the larger number of runs. Cricket might have been the national sport in the United States if Gen, Abner Doubleday had not Invented the game of I baseball. In spite of the above statement it is*said that I Cartwright was the Johnny Appleseed of baseball, During the Winter of 1845-1846 he drew up the first known set of rules, as we know baseball today. On June 19, 1846, at I Hoboken, he staged (and played in) a game between the Knicker- bockers and the New Y-ork team. It was the first. nine-inning game. It was the first game with organized sides of nine men each. It was the first game to have a box score. It was the I first time that baseball was played on a square with 90-feet between bases. Cartwright did all those things. I In 1842 the Knickerbocker Baseball Club was the first of its kind to organize in New Xbrk, For three years, the Knickerbockers played among themselves, but by 1845 they I had developed a club team and were ready to meet all comers.
    [Show full text]
  • All-Out Efforts Speed Storm Recovery
    The Daily Register VOL. 99 NO.32 SHREWSBURY, N. J. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1976 15 CENTS All-out efforts speed storm recovery By BOB Bit AM LEY from Raritan Bay to Bamegat and inland to include Mon- mouth and Ocean Counties and a portion of Middlesei County All-night efforts by work crews in Monmouth County's Mr. Sbemtt said 4,Mt of the remaining failures were In shore areas made possible a return to near normal conditions the coastal areas from the Maiawans to Point Pleasant. yesterday after Hurricane Belle's leu-than-stellar perform- "We'll have them all in again by some time tomorrow," ance Monday night. he added "It's these (alien flees Wo have had 11 tree tnmm By yesterday afternoon, road department crewi had lag contract crews out removing the trees that (ell across chain-sawed away most of the thousands ol trees and heavy our wires. We have to clear the trees before we can repair the branches laid low by the storm's blasts, their roots under- Haas," he explained. mined by heavy rains that softened the earth. Wire repair crews from outside areas have been called in Flooding which tell short of pre-storm estimates by com- to give reskfants and N^ni—• electricity in the rimes! pot fortable margins hid subsided except for a few determinedly stole time damp spots, and all area roads were reported open to normal "Thirty-five crews came in from Pennsylvania and mon traffic, even at the state Marine Police station In Monmouth from North Jersey They didn't get hit very hard up there," Beach, where four feet of water drowned Ocean Ave.
    [Show full text]
  • BUSINESS Marxism Fight Why Not Hire Your Teens Yourself?
    • 2 0 - MANCHESTER HERALD. Mon., June 7. 1982_ Reagan vows BUSINESS Marxism fight Why not hire your teens yourself? .. page 5 discrimination laws, from asking for birth certificates, this report can be stretched). If you’re among the hundreds of thousands of parents baptismal papers, similar documents. Children can 4) On taxes, the regulations are fairly lax. With the whose teen-agers are now getting out of school, looking prove age by presenting age certificates or working possible exception of federal income tax withholding, Mostly sunny for jobs and NOT finding any available, and if you papers, available from the schools they attend. the law applies as usual. You do not withhold federal in­ happen to own your business, how about hiring your Y o u r 3) There are advantages to hiring a 16-year-old as op­ come taxes if the minor fills out and files a W-4 Form on Wednesday child or chUdren yourself? You'll achieve twin goals: M o n ey 's posed to hiring a 14-year-old (unless this is your own stating that he/she had no income tax liability for last giving your children employment plus spending money child and then the age is a subsidiary issue). The 16- year (1981) and if the child expects to incur no tax — See page 2 and gaining major tax advantages. W o rth year-old can work in or about manufacturing plants and liability for the year 1982. But know the rules on hiring children — and that can -work in all occupations not open to under-16-year- What yo achieve by hiring your own child is now violations of our wage-hour law can be expensive, no Sylvia Porter olds (unless the occupation itself is listed as “hazar­ clear.
    [Show full text]
  • The BG News October 24, 2006
    Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 10-24-2006 The BG News October 24, 2006 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The BG News October 24, 2006" (2006). BG News (Student Newspaper). 7663. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/7663 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. ESTABLISHED 1920 A daily independent student press serving THE BG NEWS the campus and surrounding community Tuesday October 24.2006 HUMANS VS. ZOMBIES Volume 101. Issue 45 WWWBGNEWS.COM c ampus Selecting the right pumpkin crime is critical Size and smoothness of a pumpkin are keys decreases for a good carving | Page 3 By Magan Yodzia Reporter Sewing back in According to the University's style; still annual campus security fashionable report, crime on campus has decreased slightly since 2004. Sewing to make The report includes campus outfits is useful for crime statistics, crime preven- tion tips and a section about the everyone, not just University's policies and proce- grandmas | Page i dures concerning sexual crimes. lim Wiegand, the University chief of police, said better tech- 9/11 victims' nology and police visibility helped lower the crime rate. remains found Sgt. lohn Shumaker, also of five years later the University police, said the amount of vehicle accessories Rushed recovery — such as radios and CD players left bones behind — stolen from campus parking in underground lots has decreased since cameras passages | Page 8 wire installed in some lots three years ago.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2017 MLB Umpire Media Guide
    THE 2017 MLB UMPIRE MEDIA GUIDE Veteran umpire Joe West is expected to work his 5,000th career game during the 2017 season. He will become the third umpire in history to do so, joining Bill Klem and Bruce Froemming. The 2017 Major League Baseball Umpire Guide was published by the MLB Communications Department. Chief Communications Officer: Patrick Courtney; Vice President: Michael Teevan. Edited by: Michael Teevan and Donald Muller, MLB Communications. Editorial assistance provided by: Paul Koehler. Special thanks to the MLB Umpiring Department; MLB Design Services; the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum; and David Vincent of Retrosheet.org. Photo Credits: Getty Images Sport and MLB Photos via Getty Images Sport. Copyright © 2017, The Office of the Commissioner of Baseball 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS MLB Executive Biographies ................................................................................................................................. 3 MLB Umpire Observers ...................................................................................................................................... 12 Umpire Initiatives .............................................................................................................................................. 14 Umpires in the National Baseball Hall of Fame .................................................................................................. 16 Retired Uniform Numbers ................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Umpire Stories
    So, You Want to Be an Umpire? David Vincent Modern umpires like to be invisible on the field and consider it a good day when no one remembers them after a game. There have been days, though, that are memorable ones. Here are some of those days. *** In 1882, National League Umpire Dick Higham, a former player, was expelled from the game for colluding with gamblers. He had been the first umpire to wear a mask on the field. Higham umpired his last game on June 22, 1882 in Buffalo. *** On June 19, 1896, the Chicago Colts (now Cubs) were in Cleveland to play the Spiders. The latter team was well known around the league for acting in a rowdy manner. In the seventh inning, Umpire Tom Lynch fined and ejected Cleveland Captain Patsy Tebeau, who refused to leave. Tebeau instead rushed at Lynch to assault the umpire but the two were separated by other players. Lynch refused to work the rest of that game and left the field. After a long delay, the game resumed with Chicago player Con Daily calling the pitches and Cleveland player Cy Young making the calls on the bases. Tebeau remained in the game and Chicago’s Cap Anson protested the game because Tebeau remained in the contest even though he had been ejected. Chicago won the game, 8-3, so the protest was not lodged. After the game, Lynch told a reporter: “I suppose I should not have permitted my indignation to get the better of me, but after all there are things that pass human endurance, and one of them surely is to be called vile names.” Lynch refused to work in Cleveland after that and did not until 1898.
    [Show full text]
  • War Protest Biggest in Nation's History
    Cahill Regards Women Key to GOP Victory SEE STORY BELOW Sunny and mild today. THE DAILY FINAL Cloudy, ,-flulder tonight. Cloudy, rain possible tomor- Red Bonk, Freehold row. Long Branch EDITION (See Details, Page 2). I 7 Monmouth County's Home Newspaper for 92 Years VOL. 93, NO. 78 RED BANK, N.J., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1969 34 PAGES TEN CENTS A LISTEN-IN — A crowd that at times numbered as high as 2,500 gathered in front of the Monmouth College FUNERAL MARCH — War Moratorium Day demonstrators lead march with a coffin containing the names of the Student Union to hear student and faculty speakers talk on the Vietnam War as part of the college's "M-DAY" American dead in the Vietnam War. About 2,000 students followed in a peaceful line as the coffin was carried activities, Later students and faculty met in smaller groups to discuss the Vietnam War, across Monmouth College campus to be buried. (Register Staff Photos) War Protest Biggest in Nation's History By ASSOCIATED PRESS Vietnam Moratorium Day dis- ed by a mass demonstration respond, there will be a sec- ington Monument and New London, Paris, Home, Brus- the open here at home, then ter a dispute on whether th& With parades, rallies, can- played the American flag and of any kind." ond moratorium." York City had three rallies of sels, Vienna, Tokyo, Dublin, our chance to achieve an hon- flag should be flown at full dlelight processions and drove with headlights on. Majority Backing Leaders of the protest said more than 10,000.
    [Show full text]
  • Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers
    Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 6-26-1973 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1973). Winona Daily News. 1309. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/1309 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. y Cloudy and cooler tonight and N^/ednesday ' ^ Ofi' 'hts '6wnj^^^ ! Deah Ho|>ecl^-foip ;^.=l|ii^ioM^,: - ^^^f^i'fe ' ¦ ;¦7WASHINGTON , ; (AP) " " - fenses. .;¦' ;.V"I wailed 'until April 15 . to begin hot seem surprised: at that.- ' 7 , "Vv . And I participated in it." months.- .7: Ousted White House . Counsel telling federal prosecutors ., his When the cover-up persisted , He said he acted on instruc- Dean said today his motive m ' felling the : truth ag ,71 1 : ¦ ih John W,Heart III testified to- "I' .. V accusations that Nixpn paftici-. Dean said , he went to federal tions 7 from Ualderriam, ' fqrnier unfoldipg the. story to the Wa- day that he had hoped until kno-w it," he insisted as com- patcd in covering up the wire- i prosecutors on April 12, arid be- White House aide John D, Ehr- tergate , committee was not to mid-April that: President Nixon mittee members aiid ; lawyers tnpping affair ^ | gap 7 telling them broadly of lichman arid other officials. V try to obtain 7 irrinnurity .from would come forward to.
    [Show full text]
  • Rail Service Ive Strike
    >^0*3 A m «« Dally N«t n«§s Rof r o r /llw Weak linded The Weather fxarKmn Clear, cooler tonight, low 56- 60; {>artly sunny and warm . 14,945 tom orrow , high 80-8S. Manche»ter~“ A CUy o f VUlage Charm: * VOL. LXXXVI, m 243 (TWENTY PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTEI^ CON*., MONDAY, JULY 17, 1967 (OIsMlfled Advertising on'Page 17) PRICE SEVEN CENTS Newark Quiet, Violence Spreads Extra IForiy ASI1X;E17, Pa. (A P)—illxe railroad strike gave resi­ Rail Service dents of this man eart- i Policeman Killed em Pennsylvania eommunlty something else to worry about today besides the loss of transportation. Abhley’s only fire and am­ In Jersey Rioting bulance etrens noimany are ive Strike powered by the compresaors at the Oratial Railroad of NEWARK, NJ. (AP)— • New Jersey yard. "^ith most businesses shut When the railroad Strike voluntarily, Newark police began Shortly after mid­ and National Guardsmen night, AShley’e elrena were Don’t Kid, started a careful buMing silenced. by building search today PoOce arranged that sirens Says Boyd; in the rioit-tom but now r.:;m . in neaihy Newtown and peaceful Negro slums for I f e ’’ Preston could call Ashley inaipers who h ^ fired an - firemen to duty. It’s Chaos’ iport occasiomd wiM shot during WASHINGTON (AP)— lasts th e night. The nation’s biggest rail ianu, .m is d t y o ( 400,000, New Jer­ sey’s largest, started efforts to RibicoiPf Asks strike in 20 years virtually 3am- reUim to normalcy, with major wiped out commuter serv­ H c- attentloB to hauling away piles ice, cut ties between farm rellis of rotting gaxiiage and debris.
    [Show full text]
  • Student Views Run from Far Left to Far Right
    VOL. IV. No. THE24 ______________________________ Serving the NotreOBSERVER. Dame and Saint M ary’s College Community Friday, OCTOBER 17.196! Hesburgh expresses approval of Moratorium; Student views run from far left to far right The President The Students By John Dicola and Tim Treanor I’m inclined to go along with By Steve Hoffm an understand themselves. something the people believe Given a day to reflect upon A junior Theology major, in.” Ryan quoted St. Paul in University President Father Asked for his opinion o f the Wednesday’s moratorium, four maintaining that the participants Theodore Hesburgh, C.S.C., yes­ possible effect of the Morator­ articulate campus leaders from in the moratorium were setting terday expressed approval o f .Oc­ ium on President Nixon, Hes­ contrasting political camps themselves free for freedom’s tober fifteenth’s moratorium; burgh stated “ I don’t see how reacted strongly to its impact upon the Notre Dame sake. both as it was conducted at the president could possibly ig­ com m unity. “ The feelings o f those people Notre Dame and as it was con­ nore such a demonstration for Ed Roickle, off-campus transcend all social or political ducted across the nation. peace made by so many people." Senator and one o f the power,” he stated. Father Hesburgh, who never­ The president had previously moratorium organizers, said he Ryan related that he bore the theless characterized the peace said that he would be “ un­ Father Hesburgh, C S C. first cross memorializing Notre efforts of President Nixon “ sin­ moved” by demonstrations on felt that the moratorium was very much a success, and Dame men killed in Vietnam.
    [Show full text]