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Yuma Daily Sun Monday, December 02, 1935,
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Guthrian Monday, December 07, 1964 ,
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Yuma Daily Sun
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Yuma Daily Sun

   Yuma Daily Sun, The (Newspaper) - December 7, 1964, Yuma, Arizona                               Bombing Of Cong's Lines Seen By MALCOLM W BROWNE SAIGON South Viet Nam AP U.S Ambassador Max well D Taylor and South Premier Tran Van Huong today opened planning talks expected to lead to ing of Viet Cong supply linos in Laos Taylor returned to Saigon Sunday from Washington amid increasing speculation that the war against the Communists would be broadened It was be- that President Johnson had ruled out attacks against North Viet Nam hut the Red supply routes through southern Laos were considered likely gets Officials said no ments were expected from the planning sions I think as time goes on the results of the decisions will be- come one official said New Measures Taylor on his return said new measures by both the United States and the South ese would he discussed He re- fused to say what they were As an outcome of my Taylor said the President has instructed me to consult ly with the government of Pre- mier Trim Van Huong as to the measures to be taken to im- prove the situation here in all its aspects the ambassador said Johnson had reaffirmed the basic U.S policy of providing all possible useful assistance to the South Viet Nam people and the Huong government in their struggle to defeat the externally supported insurgency and aggression being conducted against them Thousands of police were strung out along Taylor's route from the airport into town There had been rumors that Buddhists tion against the Huong ment None materialized The South Vietnamese forces scored a major victory against the Viet Cong in a fierce hour battle Saturday on the Ca Mau Peninsula at the southern tip of South Viet Nam The said 115 Communists were killed in the encounter at Tan Lac village about 150 miles southwest of Saigon 86 South Vietnamese officials said their side suffered 86 alties but the battle was re- as a psychological boost for the government's war effort which had been sagging badly Six U.S airmen were ed in the attack as U.S ters raked the Communist talion with rockets and light bombers dropped bombs Communist fire aged 14 helicopters Find Skeleton Near Skeleton of a small man was found in the desert about yesterday about a mile west of and a half of a mile north of U.S Highway 80 No indication of foul play was evident Deputy Sheriff John Phipps said the body had lain there probably two years or longer and that the location was behind the new Hyder School An in- is under way to identify the person C W Carmichael found the skeleton while going to a dump in a Officers said the skull was found a hundred feet from the main part of the skeleton The bones were scattered somewhat and investigating officers found all bones except a leg bone and bones of both hands The skeleton was determined structurally to have been of a man having a waist of about 28 inches determined from a belt The man was apparently wearing two shirts The inner shirt carried the name John embroidered above the right pocket Shoes found at the scene were black and white tennis shoes Officers said a suitcase ing no identification was found also at the scene Part of- a wallet containing a Japanese dollar was found 232 12 PAGES YUMA ARIZONA MONDAY DECEMBER THE WEATHER Highest yesterday 91 Lowest Temperature at 11 today 59 Relative humidity at 11 Average high this date 72 Average low this data 44 FORECAST to Tuesday Variable cloudiness today Tuesday Northerly winds 10 to 2 mph Diminishing tonight Cooler tonight High 70 Low 42 Sunset PER COPY lOc PHONE SU ARIZONA NO 24 Russia Asks Top Arms Talks Nuclear Arms Accord Sought by LBJ Wilson Is Hoping To Revise MLF WASHINGTON AP dent Johnson and British Prime Minister Harold Wilson today opened a two-day conference on the nuclear weapons crisis in the Atlantic alliance They reportedly hope to de- some new formula which other Allied support in spite of would win West German and French opposition Wilson went into the White House meeting shortly before noon He and the President scheduled another conference in afternoon and two more working sessions Tuesday in addition to a White House ner tonight Here Sunday The head of Britain's new bor government arrived Sunday night bringing a reassurance to Allied countries that the dent and he did not intend to finalize any agreements Ke predicted however steps toward strengthening the North Atlantic Treaty Organization which has been badly split by the question of how to organize nuclear weapons particularly by controversy over the force project MLF is a proposed surface fleet manned by inter- national crews and armed with Polaris nuclear missiles Wilson with special British nuclear problems to solve hopes to emerge in some find of middleman role by de- with the President the rough outlines of a Britain's nuclear force into a NATO system the U.S MLF plan so that it will be more ble to other European Allies as well as West Germany Both U.S and British diplomats were reported hopeful of an under- standing between Wilson and Johnson which would then he discussed with West German and other European leaders Official setting of the bond issue for Arizona Western College was done by the Yuma County Board of Supervisors this morning The date will be Tuesday Jan as previously proved by the AWC Governing Board Presenting the proposal to the Supervisors this ins were Dr Elmer Nix AWC business official and Jack Bado of the firm of Refsnes Ely Beck and Co Phoenix fiscal agents for the college Real property taxpayers will be asked to approve the new bonds for college expansion that will help construct a new Drary science technological business and physical education facilities plus some remodeling A federal grant of over 000 will put the new tion over the mark The supervisors set 10 polling places These Yuma Legend City Heeds AP ers in Legend City amusement park must come up with In a week or face the possibility of going out of business The amusement center be- tween Phoenix and Tempo has been closed since early ber with poor attendance blamed for the move Now the million park is faced with over million in debts and not enough money to have its financial statements printed Court Refuses Race Review WASHINGTON The Supreme Court refused today to Justice Department forts to compel desegregation of public schools near military in- in Alabama and The department appealed to the high tribunal after the U.S Circuit Court in New Orleans threw out suits contending war powers could be used to prevent school boards from racially children of members of the armed forces and of civilian employes of the military Burglars Break Glass At Edwards Jewelry City Police Chief Robert L Mabery reported three ies this morning One burglary Involved ward's Jewelry 298 Main where a display window pane was ken and seven watches were stolen Value of the watches was estimated At Roost 175 Main and euh valued at were stolen A suitcase containing personal items valued at about was stolen from it Ml 5th Avenue AWC Bond Vote Set for Jan Mississippi Awaits Look At Evidence PHILADELPHIA Miss AP The case of the three slain civil rights workers Is heading toward climax day when the government un- veils evidence at a preliminary hearing Mississippi authorities await a ook at the FBI evidence They must decide if they will press murder state offense some of the 21 men arrested last Friday The first thing I'm going to said Dist Arty W H Johnson Jr is review the dence very very carefully and hen make the decision on whether the state will take tion Johnson said the FBI has en assurances it will turn over its evidence to the state The FBI has charged 19 men with violating the civil rights of the slain workers Two other men were charged with being accessories These are all al charges The preliminary hearing could be a delicate legal crossroad It is scheduled in nearby Meridian before U.S Commissioner Esther Carter High Kofa High Gila Vista Jr High Crane School erton School Wellton School Mohawk Valley School Parker Elementary School Salome School and Quartzsite School Voting will be from 6 to 7 p.m For School Approval of a revised con- tract for the Somerton School construction work was given this morning by the ors The board okayed the con- tract for to construct a new classroom building and a new The contract is with the Peter Costello Con- struction Co of Phoenix inal low bid of the firm was which was too high for the bond issue by the voters Various items were deleted to bring the contract down The tion company was setting out its stakes this morning to be- gin work At the request of County En- gineer Gene Brazeel the board approved the establishment of six county roads on section lines in the Gila Valley area ty Engineer Gene Brazeel said that the rights of way were needed to be established so that the county could petition for interchanges on proposed Interstate 8 Brazeel also said that an an- is due in January of the Interstate 8 route through Turn to Page 4 Col 6 please Lettuce Market Gains Strength The price for lettuce over the weekend remained firm and demand exceeded supply for best Total weekend shipments were 49 rail and 94 truck Crates of were ing for to mostly An occasional was ed The Market News Service predicted that today's ments would be 41 rail and 35 truck equivalents with the market price remaining firm The season shipments to date are 304 rail and 377 truck According to Market News Service the market is strong Judge Warns Charges To Affect Future BITTERSWEET Young Sylvester 3 breaks Into tears while being graphed with a life-sized doll given him as a Christmas gift by the Bantu Child Welfare Society Durban South Africa Overjoyed with the toy the child was overwhelmed by the AP work in the South The insurgents represented BIG COLD JOB James Bracy of Bangor Me faces a sized mountain of snow after the latest series of storms dumped one to three feet of snow yesterday in parts of the northeast Weather Bureau here reports eight to 10 inches on the ground in Vermont and New Hampshire and two to five inches on the ground in New York AP Ice Knocks Power out To SCHENECTADY AP Cold and hardship continued today for thousands of families in an eastern tion of New York Power crews sought to restore heat and light for nearly customers The sun glistened this ing on a winter wonderland created by trees and power lines Temperatures ranged down to 10 below zero in the wake of one of the state's worst storms The bitter cold added the threat of frozen water pipes for stricken residents most ol whom were in an area bounded generally by Albany on the south Glens Falls on the north and on the west Three deaths were attributed to the weekend onslaught of snow sleet and freezing rain Many schools closed Friday remained closed today Others served as emergency centers from their fire houses places also were opened for emergency use and cooking facilities were vided By CLAUDE V BURGETT BERKELEY Calif AP Hundreds of University of fornia sit-in demonstrators were warned by a judge today the charges against them may seriously affect you in the ture Saying that Berkeley Judge Rupert Crittenden agreed with defense attorneys to continue the mass arraignment of 768 ar- rested students until next day to allow for defense tion The demonstrators are op- posed to campus rules ing such activities as collecting funds on campus for civil rights by about 60 San Francisco Bay area lawyers were arrested in the breakup of a chaotic sit-in at Sproul Hall the Berkeley campus administration building last Thursday Holding court in the Berkeley Community Theater Municipal Judge Crittenden warned the rebels the charges against them can have serious consequences for you and the ultimate decision they make will be important for the rest of your life As court adjourned sity officials prepared to reveal a plan they hope will restore peace on the student campus At the same time hundreds of students picketed the en- trances to the giant Berkeley campus in an attempt to force a shutdown of the institution Navy Fighter In Atlantic NORFOLK Va AP The Coast Guard continued a search today for a Navy jet fighter in- plane with two men aboard that was presumed to have gone down in the Atlantic The Phantom I jet was believed to have crashed about 35 miles off Virginia Beach on a routine training flight Saturday The crewmen were identified as Lt Robert L Carter 25 the pilot a native of Antioch Calif and Lt James L McDonald 27 radio interceptor officer of Grantsville CHRISTMAS SEALS WITS for those driven homes Churches and other public Gromyko Blasts West Before UNITED NATIONS Soviet Union today its full support to efforts to reduce world sions but struck out at Western on Viet Nam the Con- o and a multilateral nuclear orce The Soviet views were set by Foreign Minister An- drei A Gromyko in a major policy speech before the ion General Assembly He posed a world summit ence on disarmament and sub- mitted a detailed memorandum on disarmament Western sources said the memorandum contained little new U.S Chief Delegate Adlai E Stevenson issued a statement calling Gromyko's speech harsh cold war talk He said he hoped it was more ganda than policy Unchanged Evidently the world tives of the Soviet Union re- main Stevenson Even self-defense and aid to countries to protect their security and independence is wrong and illegal if it inter- feres with the Soviet sive ambition to communize the world The proposed multilateral clear force Gromyko said is incompatible with the tion of Germany and is the main obstacle in the way of halting the further tion of nuclear weapons Western diplomats said the Soviet proposals were largely the same as those previously made by them in arms talks The Soviet delegate specifi- cally endorsed Red proposal for a meeting of the heads of state of all countries to consider a ban on all nuclear weapons He also backed the recommendation of the nona- nations at Cairo for a world disarmament conference He The Soviet government Is prepared to participate in er discussions in any forum and at any level including the highest one of the problem of general and complete ment of banning and ing nuclear weapons and of measures for the curtailment of the arms drive Bullet Kills UA Senior TUCSON DeLong 21 a University of Arizona ior from Montclair Calif was killed Sunday night when a tol in the hands of his roommate accidentally discharged Detective Sgt Ernest Lehman said Keffer 24 was ing the weapon when it went off DeLong was killed outright when the bullet entered his right side Lehman said Keffer told him he was holding the hammer of the gun back when he reached for an oil rag His thumb slipped and the gun went off To Rule on Effect Of Televising Trials WASHINGTON AP The Supreme Court decided today to rule on whether live sion coverage of the trial of Billie Sol Estes on a charge of swindling violated his rights under the U.S Constitution Estes the Texan whose bubble burst with heavy losses by lending nies appealed to the high tri- bunal from his conviction by a state court jury in Tyler Tex sentenced to eight years imprisonment The Supreme Court in an- nouncing it had granted Estes a hearing said it would be re- to the com- plaint against requiring him to submit to live television of his trial The announcement said the hearing will be limited to this Whether the action of the trial court over persistent aid continued objections of the de- fendant due process of law and equal protection of tht Uwi under the Amendment to the U S Constitution The court agreed to submit to live sion of his trial and in refusing to adopt in this all-out publicity case as a rule of trial Canon 35 of the Canons of Judicial Ethics of the ican Bar Association and in- stead adopting and following over defendant's ob- Canon 28 of the Canons of Judicial Ethics Canon 35 deals with er publicizing of court ings The canon The taking of photographs in the Turn to Page 4 Col 8 please 7 Women   

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