Call Now! 1-888-845-2887 Hablamos Español

You have viewed 1 newspapers today. Please Register in order to view more newspapers.

You are currently viewing page 1 of: Yuma Daily Sun

Show More

Other Editions of Yuma Daily Sun

Yuma Daily Sun Monday, December 02, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Monday, December 02, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Tuesday, December 03, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Tuesday, December 03, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Wednesday, December 04, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Wednesday, December 04, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Thursday, December 05, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Thursday, December 05, 1935,
Arizona

Yuma Daily Sun Friday, December 06, 1935,
Arizona

Other Editions from Monday, August 01, 1966

Ames Daily Tribune Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Iowa

Appleton Post Crescent Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Wisconsin

Bedford Gazette Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Pennsylvania

Colorado Springs Gazette Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Colorado

Coshocton Tribune Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Ohio

Edwardsville Intelligencer Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Illinois

Fond Du Lac Commonwealth Reporter Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Wisconsin

Great Bend Daily Tribune Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Kansas

Guthrian Monday, August 01, 1966 ,
Iowa

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1966-08-01 for page-1
Yuma Daily Sun
Yuma Daily Sun

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Yuma Daily Sun

   Yuma Daily Sun, The (Newspaper) - August 1, 1966, Yuma, Arizona                               Rewards For Writers In the USSR By JONES OSBORN Is it a crime to hold an un- popular In a totalitarian society yes Into my office last week came a young Yuma man who has lived the past two years in Paris He worked there for the Paris edition of the New York Herald Tri- bune and er for the New York Times So he is well informed about European events One of the biggest uproars of recent years he said was over the Sinyavsky Daniel Trial Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel both Russian authors They were arrested in tember of 1965 by the KGB Soviet Security Po 1 i c e on charges of disseminating anti- Sovel propaganda For four months the Soviet press did not even report their arrest It was reported in Italy The two men wrote novels about Soviet life in which they pointed out human vices and follies in a witty sarcastic ner But the state controlled viet press took a dim The two have for several years been sending to foreign publishing houses and published abroad their dirty libels of their own country the Party and the Soviet authority From petty Hastiness to high treason this was the course they ran The lampoonists urc raising their hands not only against Soviet society they are spitting venom at all progressive mankind at its ideals and at its sacred struggle for social progress for democracy and for peace The two writers were accused of having furnished material for an imperialist campaign against the USSR The two did not deny they wrote the material in question But one of them I do not regard myself as an enemy I am a Soviet man and my works are not hostile works In this fantastic fied atmosphere anybody who is different may be regarded as an enemy Their defense was not pub- And both of course were found guilty One got seven years at labor the other five years No appeal allowed Thus a Soviet court was used for a purely objective the silencing of unpopular opinions It raised a great storm of test throughout Europe as it should have everywhere in the free world HST Suffers Colitis Attack KANSAS CITY Mo AP A severe attack of colitis an intestinal disturbance has weakened former President Harry S Truman but a re- search hospital says there is no cause for alarm He is progressing satisfactorily Ilr Wallace H Graham man's physician for many years said definitive diagnostic studies and tests are being until the former chief executive is er He was hospitalized day A hospital report said Mrs Truman spent Sunday afternoon with her husband and that man read the Sunday papers before retiring and rested com- THE WEATHER Highest yesterday Lowest 80 Temperature at 11 today Relative at 11 Average high this date 107 Average low this date 80 FORECAST to Tuesday Variable cloudiness otherwise ally fair this through day A litile warmer afternoons High this afternoon 106 low tonight 80 High Tuesday 107 Sunset Sunrise YUMA 219 10 PAGES PER COPY lOe YUMA ARIZONA MONDAY AUGUST I 1966 PHONE ARIZONA 118 LBJ To Take No Strike Stand White Power Scream Rioting Whites 60 Injured In Chicago Flare-Up By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON CHICAGO AP More than angry white persons shouting White as they threw rocks and bottles drove 350 civil rights from an neighborhood Sixty persons including three policemen and a nun were injured by rocks and tles Scores of persons mostly white youths were arrested It was the most serious direct clash of Negroes and whites in Chicago in several years police said Burn Cars Earlier this summer riots wracked Puerto Rican and gro areas Gangs of white youths burned 30 of the marchers cars and pushed two into a lagoon The autos had been left in a park in the normally tranquil class neighborhood of new bungalows and homes on Chicago's west Side The demonstrators white and Negro priests and nuns men and women and children moved from the area at a fast walk without returning the lence as 260 policemen ed to keep the whites away They were protesting under the banner of Dr Martin Luther King Jr against alleged dis- crimination in housing Dr King chairman of the Southern Christian Leadership ence organized the march last week King was not in Chicago Sunday It was of King's direct action program to make Chicago an open city in housing The demonstrators met in a Negro church after the march and said they would go back to the area They did not say when Speck Says Innocent CHICAGO AP Richard Speck 24 pleaded innocent day to indictments charging he murdered eight young nursing students The pock-marked drifter stood in a crowded Circuit Court room of Chief Judge Alexander J poli by four policemen Napoli approved ment of Gerald Getty chief counsel of the public office as Speck's attorney Tells Pope Rhythm Method Not Good RIOT cars which police said were owned by demonstrating civil rights workers turn a street on Chicago's southwest side into a flaming spectacle Gangs of white youths burned the vehicles while the owners were marching through the neighborhood protesting alleged discrimination in housing AP The Things He Missed CINCINNATI Ohio Everything is ready in the home of Army Cpl Tim McFadden for his return after 13 months in Viet Nam Included is a big sign on his parents house a decorated Christmas tree with presents and a pile of genuine snowballs that survived the recent heat wave in the family freezer Mr and Mrs Robert den of suburban Norwood said Tim wrote thorn last winter ex- pressing hope that maybe we'll have a snowball fight when I get home American Motors To Omit Payments DETROIT of American Motors today for tho fourth consecutive ter to omit payment of a dend as earnings nose dived over those of a year ago not earnings for the third quarter of its fiscal year were on net sales of A year ago the earnings were or 37 rents a on net sales of Police Capt Ray Dehn Dies Yuman 22 Years Police Capt Raymond G Dehn died this morning at his home 548 7th Avenue He was 56 Capt Dehn in charge of the Police Department when Chief Robert Mabery was not on duty became a patrolman here in 1946 He worked in that cap- until 1954 when he became a sergeant In 1961 he passed a competitive examination for captain and was appointed cap- Nov 1 1961 He had worked with the Border trol from 1944 to 1946 Capt Dehn was a member of the Yuma Masonic Lodge No 17 the Yuma Commandery No 10 and a member of the First Methodist Church He was a past high priest of the Masonic Cochan Chapter No 10 Dehn was born June 1 1910 at Youngstown Ohio He came to the Yuma area 22 years He had lived at 1301 Street until recently Death camp at home this morning about Funeral arc at Johnson Mortuary Survivors arc his widow Eva Airport Access Road Is On Supervisor Agenda A scheduled Board of Super- 8th Street between Palm and NEW YORK leading Roman Catholic psychiatrist who had sought evidence to port the rhythm method of birth control today reported findings directly to the it is a poor method I must conclude that the use of rhythm is productive of rious psychological said Dr John R Cavanagh a in the Theology School of the Catholic University of ica On Commission Dr Cavanagh who is a ber of the birth control study commission named by Pope Paul VI his findings from a survey in the August sue of Marriage magazine Based on replies to a from ful users of the rhythm method Dr Cavanagh con- cludes that its use deprives a woman of the conjugal act ing time of her greatest de- sire and thus causes vere frustration in many ples Marital Discord Furthermore he said dis- agreement over its use anc quarrels over its failures cause marital discord and such disharmony with its attending symptoms may cause psychic damage to the offspring The survey was originated last fall by Dr Cavanagh The rhythm method requires abstinence from sexual inter- course during a woman's fertile period The Church so far has disapproved ive means The commission re- ported to Pope Paul in June with its contents and reaction from him still forthcoming visors meeting was postponed today bacause of a lack of rum at the County Courthouse Only Board Chairman Clark showed up at board meeting room The other two members Jim Fuquay and Bob Nissen were out of town Clerk Linder said Fuquay was taking a brief vacation in the mountains and Nissen was attending his son's wedding at Refugio Tex Chairman Yarwood said a meeting had been called for 10 tomorrow When the other two supervisors are expected to have returned 3 Hearings Three hearings are scheduled during the meet One ing will at 10 on the subject of designating an in- gress egress read as a county read at the Valley Park vision adjacent to and south of Dora Avenues The second hearing at 11 will on a new road to Yuma International Airport Boat Is Missing FALMOUTH England An excursion boat with 25 sengers aboard was reported Planned is the moving of today off the Cornish he old access road lo align with Avenue Chairman Report Soviet Economy Slows i WASHINGTON API -A congressional report says Soviet economic growth has declined sharply and the gap between th Soviet and U.S Gross Product has not narrowed since 1938 1 As a result the to a subcommittee of the House Economic continues the Soviet Union no j longer of calcium up industrially with the United States by 1970 Frank Mia In London LONDON API and his bride Mia arrived in London Sunday Tho couple flew by cial jol from iho United Slates lo where Sinatra's private piano was waiting In fly them south They al Northolt field on outskirts of London and went by car to nn ment in tho city's Grosvenor Square across Highway SO A traffic nal helps at Avenue The third af 2 p.m will be an application for a water franchise by Wellton Co which plans In and maim a in a water system at Wellton and vicinity Grenade Kills Sgt ADEN API -A British army sergeant died Sunday of wounds received when terrorists threw nl a bus Saturday coast The motor cruiser Darlwin left Fowey Sunday for but failed to Coast Guard lifeboats and helicopters went out to search A southwesterly gale was blowing in the search area Cause of Buddhist Riots Comes Back WASHINGTON AP South Vietnamese Lt Gen Nguyen Chanh Thi whose ouster touched off a Buddhist revolt against the regime of Premier Nguyen Cno Ky four months ago arrived here early today on what he call a private visit Fatal Fall Ends Trip With LSD BERKELEY Calif LSD trip with three ended with a fatal three-story fall for a Berkeley youth Sun day Friends of Vernon L Cox 2 occasional University of Califor nia student and son of a retiree Air Force officer told police h jumped from a window som four hours after taking the ha drug LSD for th first time Kenneth D Tavalin 19 one o the witnesses to Cox's behavio under the influence of the drug said Vernon was in touch wit reality one minute and the minute he lost control We re- strained him several times from leaving the apartment They said Cox in he was going to take a ip lo When they prevented him from the apartment foi last time they told Cox ran a anc jumped out the window Police said no arrests were made Airman Electrocuted PHOENIX AP Lee 26 an airman at Luke Air Force Base was ed when the blades of an electric grass trimmer cut through an extension code Police said Shelton was ing on damp ground when the accident occurred in his yard Saturday Morse Solution Endorsed WASHINGTON AP ary of Labor W Willard Wirtz old the Senate Labor ee today the Johnson ration is taking no stand for against a settlement to the nes strike If Congress does decide to ct on any of the various ng proposals for ending the ay walkout Wirtz said he pre- ers the solution proposed by en Wayne Morse Morse's plan would impose a back to work period uring which efforts would con- nue at attaining a negotiated Wirtz said he ored this approach over to empower the ent to declare a national ency to he followed by issuance f back to work orders for three periods Congress stepped back into le forefront of efforts to end ic strike after the airline overwhelmingly d a White House engineered Thp union vote was unday and Wirtz said there las not been sufficient time for in administration decision on course to take next Wirtz appeared before the Senate committee not long after anion and management men had testified at an informal session of the House Labor Com- Union President P L Roy Siemiller told the House com- he believes the only way strikers will agree to a new contract is if it provides wage and fringe benefit boosts rather in than in stages William J Curtin chairman of the industry negotiating team urged Congress to act on lation to end the strike Earlier today the president of the machinists fold that the only way to get the striking mechanics to agree to new contract is to make wage and fringe benefits effective im- mediately rather than in stages Texas Sniper Kills Five BULLETIN AUSTIN Tex Chief Boh Miles said at p.m CST today we got ending the sniper siege from the of Texas tower Radio froni the pus said police were leading a struggling man away in tody after he finally ered CAPT DEHN of the home n son Timothy of the home two daughters Diane Freeman of Santa Maria Calif and Pat Head of nix his father Leo of town Ohio and a liam of Cleveland Ohio Tht Sun Comics FIESTA four young women are in competition for the title of Sept Fiesta queen The winner will be determined by who has tho most tickets sold in her name They were introduced Saturday evening at the Club 22nd Street and Colorado Left to right are Norma De LaVern 17 4th Street Rosalinda Coronado 18 3740 5th Street Mary Lou Garay 17 599 Magnolia Avenue and Henrietta Hurtado 17 8th Place Sun Staff Photo AUSTIN Tex sniper at least five persons ay with shots from a i powered rifle from the floor of the University of Texas towe r Ben Tobias administrator of the Hospital said five victims brought there were dead--and there might be six dead He said a total of 20 persons i shot by the sniper had been brought to the hospital Different sounds came from the building like a pistol and rifle and then we heard the big said Mrs Susan shaw a university employe who was walking near the tower when the shooting occurred Everybody was running Minuting someone has been shot I'm scared she said University police said half an after the first The man is still up there ing We don't know how many have been shot Mrs Gandhi Refuses To Lift Bombs Ban NEW DELHI India AP Members nf Parliament pressed Prime Minister Indira Gandhi today to relax India's ban on atomic weapons because of that Pakistan j will SIM off an A-bomb in 1968 with Red China's help Mrs Gandhi con- cern and distress over the re- ports Even if na explodes a in East Pakistan it will he China's bomb not Pakistan's and I do not think Pakistan can so ly the know-how to ex- its own bomb   

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!