Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1967-08-02

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1967-08-02

Mon Dieu! Le Grande Charles Flayed· O'M'AWA t.fI - Prime Minister Lester B. French Canadians believe they Jack H­ said oC De Gaulle's Itatement, "II thai ill si vely brutal" and noted that De Gaulle Pearson served notice on French President berty, equality and fraternity - the rally­ not intervention by a foreign slate In the was silent on future reiatioDl betweea the southwest Charles de Gaulle again 1'ue$day that the ing cry oC the French Revolution. domestic alfairs of another, nothing is." French and canadian governments. caUSed by . .C .USIOl). Ca.nadian government rejects his cam· De Gaulle, after spending four daYl in AmOng the wrathful editorialists, the St. TIle Montleal Star saw a It.reoIt.beniDg IClty !~ paign on behalf o( Frencb Canadi8DI. French'speaking Quebec Province, cut Catharines (Outl Standard suggested: "U of traditional bonds between France and PearlOll issued a two-sentence statement short his visit without coming to Ottawa we bave tears to spare we might shed one Quebec, and said "we are frankly &1ad It ill and Canadian newspaper editors poured out because Pearson said his remarks in sup­ or two for the people of France who have ha ppening." their wrath on De Gaulle following the port of Quebec separatists were \lD8coopt­ to put up with this insufIerable old man The Star added: "Gen. de Gaulle crack· French leader's new pledge Monday to able. on a full·Ume basis." ed the abelI of loDeliness which lWTounda help French Canadi8DI attain the libera­ De GauUe had shouted, "Long live free The Lethbridge (Alta.) Herald expressed Quebec on this continenl. For once, the tion he says they want. Quebec! " - the cry of the separatists - belief that "Canadian unity has gained, not few millions of French-Canadlana in this "The government of Canada has noted in a speech at Montreal. lost, from De Gaulle's visit and his inter­ area of English-speaking Americana and Need the statement by the president of the Canadian sources said Pearaoa decided, ference." Canadians heard gJowing worda in the French Republic regarding his recent visit alter consultin, with Cabinet ministers, to The London (Onl.) Free Press said De Frencb language. Confederation may ap­ itur. to Canada," said the statement issued by make only a brief comment on De GauUe'1 Gaulle', "shoclting demonstration of bad peal to the head but the General appealed Pearson'. office. statement of Monday in the bope that the judgment must make his coUeagues at to the beart. And if confederation Is to re drive "It has already made Its posillon clear furor stirred up by the Frencb president borne wonder just how wise he is in making work, it must appeal to the heart also." the lOcal on the unacceptability of any outside In­ would simmer down_ But Pearson was re­ pter Cor other decilioal." PolilicaUy, the separatiats in Quebec terference in Canadian affalrs and baa POrted unhappy and annoyed at De Gaul· have made little headway. Altbough the Iy Clem. nothing to add to present circumstances." Ie's ren.ewed expression of support for Publisher Claude Ryan of Montreal'. Le De GauUe affair could affect future elec­ French.canadian separ,lltiats. CHARLES DE GAULLE De Gaulle said Monday that hi. trip to Devoir. a Frencb·language newspaper, tions, there Is no sign that the aeparatistJ LESTER PEARSON Iter fOUr Pleclt .. AIII"ln~ canada Iall week had convinced him that A source close to the prime minister called Pearson's rebuff last week "Exces- represent a strong force. Rejecta Campaign ~re. lied. fire Fri. ~I wears prl wears Lawyer Suggests Racial Violence y wears boy sitt , Riot Antidote: oil Iowan Hits Washington; Jail Ringleaders Servin&!, the University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City Milwaukee Calm CHICAGO IA'I - A Washington, D.C., Eatabliabed in 1868 10 cent. a co,", A.uoclated Prell Luted Wire and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa 52240-Wednesday, August 2, 1967 By The Altocl"" Prell lawyer suggested a way Tuesday to deal The tide or national Negro violence with riots - seize and confine the ring­ swept within a mile oC lhe White House leaders until things cool off. Tuesday as aangs of youths roamed sec· Frederick Bernays Wiener, in an article Uona of Washington setUng fires and ill the American Bar Association Journal, Senate Asked smashine windows. No shooling was re­ (e sar of cited legal opinions to support .uch action. POrted. College lie also said there is a "large body of law" The lporadie Washington dlsturbance the Com. available, but unused, for .uch stratei)'. To Study Riots Allies launch Sweep highllabted a dwlndlina series of incidents Wiener harked back to the labor-man­ from coast to coast. The racial scene gen­ agement disorders whicb occurred for 60 WASHINGTON til - The Senate wu SAIGON t.fI - The Jar,eat alUed ....u1t namese soldiers had been killed and 50 Haiphong area, which had been protected erally WlS the quietest it has been in 10 years or so until enactment of the National urged Tuesday to order a special study of Corce ever a sembled in the Mekong delta wounded. recently by bad weather. days. Labor Relations Act in the early 1930s. One racial rioting and put this inquiry under is hunting Viet Cong in the mud and muck Troops of the U.S. 9th and 25th infantry Tn the polltlcal field, the Saigon govern· Th Washington flareup was described solution for such disorden, be lidded. ,... lhe command of Sen. John L. McClellan southwest of Saigon. Contact .lackened divisions, a U.S. Navy ta k Corce and ment announced it had invited 36 nations by police as minor, with little looting. ed legal muster. (D-Ark.!, wbo directed the rackets inves­ Tuesday aIter heavy weekend lighting let Soutb Vietnamese infantrymen, rangers with which It had diplomatic relations to Two thirds of the capital', 750,000 residents "That," he explained, "W81 for the mili· lIgallona of a decade ago. off by Red efforts to cut a vital blahway. and marines were Involved in the drive, send observers to see that the national are Negroes. Nearby military installallons reportedly tary, operating under a proclamation of McCleUan, head of the permanent inves· Perhaps 10,000 or more U.S. and South which centered west of My Tho, one of the elections are free and honell. The South martial law, to selze the ringleaders and ligations subcommittee since 1954, would largest cities in th rich rice-produclng Vietnamese are choosing a president, vice were alerted in case the disturbance Vietnamese servicemen are engaged In the grew. Police were deployed with dogs in 10 confine them, nnt by way of punisb­ be authorized to make a two-month, $150,- sweep, called Coronado n, which waa area 45 miles southwest of Saigon. president and 6O-member Senate Sept. 3 ment but simply to prevent them from 000 study oC the disorders under a resolu­ M.rket Route Cut and a l22-member House oC Representa­ aome areas, after a fire in unoccupied ate In 2 launched in secrecy last FrIday. In liftine transmitting their ardor to their foUowers. lion adopted by the Senate Rules Commit­ The heavily traveled hiibway Hnklng tives Oct. 22. rooms above a furniture atore aet ofI the , IJr COil­ th security wraps, the U.S. Command .ald violence. ·3982 Cor. "This proved an effective depressant, tee. 200 Viet Cong had been killed. My Tho and other delta cities with SaIgon U.N_ Secretary·General U Thant bad $0' and in two instances around the turn of the Declaring the job "should be started to­ bad been cut by Communist mines eiiht rejected last Thursday a request that the Guardsmen remained on standby alert century this means of controlling mob vio­ day or tomorrow," Sen. B. Everett Jordan Field commanders had different ut.I­ Urnes in 10 days, reducing the flow of United Nations send observers. in Milwaukee, where violence abated to lence was held lawful on habeas corpus." (D-N.C.), chairman of the Rules Commlt­ mates of enemy dead, one sayinl they to­ rice and other products to market and thUI occasional gunahola and fires. An armor­ One such detention, he wrote, had been tee, said the Senate "is determined to find taled 150, another 350. pulling economic pressure on the capital. ed car borrowed from Brink's, Inc., was upheld by the Supreme Court of Idaho and the causes and recommend a remedy for The U.S. Command aald 16 Americana Action Tuesday in the allied response used as a mobile fortress to flush out a the other by the Supreme Court of Colo­ this situation." were killed and 59 wounded. Unofficial re­ was officially described as "light to moder­ suapected sniper - who turned out to be a Arab-Israeli War white man. rado. Jordan', committee recommended a.­ ports from the field aaid 28 South VleL- ate and scattered." It was the only major Wiener quoted a onetime Chief Justice signing the inquiry to McClellan's invesll­ ground activity reported by the allied Rlollng Sunday night and early Mon­ of the United States, Roger Taney, as lay­ gators alter rejecting, a8 too time-consum­ command . day claimed two lives In the Wisconsin log omcers engaged in a state's military ing, a proposal by Sen. Edward W. Brooke * * * U.S. Marine elements based just below Seen As Harvest city. service "mighllawfully arrest anyone who, CR-Mass.> that a speclal Senate-Douse the demilitarized zone between North and Three fires were set and Negroes pelt­ from the information before them, they had committee be sel up. CBS Says LBJ South Vietnam again exchanged sporadic ed firemen with bottle as racial trouble reasonable !;'rounds to believe was engaged McClellan'S group would be instructed to morlar and artillery rire with Communi t struck Erie, Pa., for the firth time in io insurrection ." file a preliminary report by Oct, 2 and a gunners.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    4 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us