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Show Sunday, November 8, 1970 Racial Strife Hits North Carolina City group of black students had By ERNEST H. ROBL HENDERSON, N. C. (UPI)-Nati- onal gathered at the education office Guard troops were press their demands for the ordered into Henderson Satur- luring cf a Negro head coach and a Negro assistant principal day to enforce a curfew aimed at preventing a at the city high school. recurrence of Friday night's Negro leader Ben Chavis said that police began chasing some siege of sniping and burning. The outburst, which resulted of the youths after the protest, in about 40 arrests, stemmed hitting them with nightsticks. Earlier in the week, the from a dispute over s.hool school board, under pressure desegregation policies. About 300 guardsmen were from the Department of Health, believed involved in the callup, Education and Welfare, bowed to Negro demands that an ordered by Gov. Bob Scott dusk-to-da- Kidnaping Admitted, But Murder Denied Stabbings Sentence Meted Out WORLAND, Wyo. (UPI)-Ju- dge Donald Harkins Saturday sentenced Craig Sims, 19, to 0 years in prison for the brutal stabbing deaths of two Lander teenage girls. "This was a horrible crime. It is too bad these things happen," Harkins said. "Families-o- n both sides suffered agonies. Craig Sims is to be taken by the sheriff to the state penitentiary at Rawlins and kept for a period of 35 to 50 years." Immediately before the senschool tencing, Harkins asked Sims if he had anything to say in his own defense. He quietly replied "No." Sims was found guilty of second degree murder Oct. 30 cf the stabbing deaths of Dee Ann Smith, 15, and Vicky Mather, 16, both his classmates at Lander High School. They were killed when he took them for a car rid; after a football rally. 35-5- all-bla- 100 Saturday morning nearly hostile black youths, apparently bent on rekindling the violence of the night previous, gathered in the smouldering ruins of a burned out tobacco warehouse and began pelting passing cars with bricks and pieces of pipe. Tme trouble was concentrated in a four block section of the Negro district cf Henderson but the curfew was clamped on all of Vance County in fear the violence might spread. At the height of the trouble, police sealed off the crea, electrical power was cut off, and firemen refused to answer calls because of sniper fire. Two persons, both of them whites, were injured, but there were no reports of anyone being hit by gunfire. Arsonists set fire to the tobacco warehouse, and, in the absence of firefighters, the flames soon spread to a grocery and several homes. The fires eventually burned themselves out. Before the violence Friday a xBlackYule' Brings Trouble 25 (UPi)-so- me Murder Suspect Released - PRICE, Utah (UPI) City Judge Thoma3 Platis held Friday morning the state had presented insufficient evidence to bind over Tom Egley, SO, Helper on charges of murder. Egley was charged with the July 30th slaying death of Lor-etJones, 24, Price at her home. Platis ordered Egley's release. He had been in custody since Aug. 2. Non-Vote- Teens Clash With Police For persons taking part in a "black Christmas" demonstration spent more than an hour Friday night rifling through clothing and other displays and dumping items on the floor at a downtown Atlanta department store. Led by organizers of the Tenants United For Fairness (TUFF), The protestors went from counter to counter messing up the displays at the downtown branch of Rich's department store. Store securidetecty officers and tives watched the group but no arrests were made. The action was part of TUFF's planned "black Christmas" protest over the acquittal of two white policemen in the shooting death of a young Negro boy last August. The group has announced a boycott of white downtown merchants as part of the protest The boycott is designed to force the businessmen to support a list of demands by the blacks. Included in the list were an immediate disarmament of police in black areas, a citizen police review board, an Andre Moore scholarship fund in memory of the slain youth and the renaming of Atlanta Staoff-du- ty content for viewing by their children GP R at wm ONE UNDER (Age limit moy vary fj ALL f. fk. 1 ft " y " mm 1f" ' ' J 1 t, EXTRA - - , . ADDED . It SCROOGE MC DUCK 'THE IN COIOR OF MOTORCYCLE BEN-HU- R PICTURESS'A thur Knight of Saturday keview gmm Loving,brawling and bustin'it up ! DeSicas J GENERAL'S X .tneatre 1230 N at 2nd W XV IPS iLJ MC A 374 552b If ever this ntsdftnadtittsd, mad world needed 11 ymad. Jl An Avco Embassy Film GPj R ANO THIS SEAL OP m 1 starring as hit girl k SL manAllanCorrliogerSniilh production IT'S NOW! cpH.nn ,vo.is films receive MOTION THE 1 'SS!iMml0,t" "d 17 ADMITTED n Support Your Local Sheriff PICTURE ft! OPEN 6:30 CODE OF W EMPS TUESDAY! I LIZA RATES OSCAR IN TOP DRAMA" 1Mb ii F - I- "J!wc TODAY AT JUNIE MOON 3:40 "GRIT" i 7:45 A FILM FOR OTTO PBEMINGER FILM THE ENTIRE FAMILY EamincJIi ken Howard robertmoore james coco kay thompson trtdwriiamson - pete seegef "BEST ACTOR" ZZim-- old devil nroe "TRUE GRIT" JOHN WAYNE A AIL THE GOLDOH true wildlife advencure story M HURRY! LAST 3 DAYS ENDS TUESDAY OPEN 6:30 START 7P.M Guvtno. 3 FOLLOW "WHISKERS," an independent and curious young cougar, through two exciting years in a mountain wilderness known as "COUGAR COUNTRY" .. ENDS FRIGD Cilice TOWN ft COUNTRY FOU THEATRE CAC3 YOU FAMILY OlNINO EAT Ann Guarino, DAILY NEWS 5 4:30 6:30 8:30 Son. 2:15 4:30 6:30 8:30 Wlc. Days 7dV LnO PaSSeS CO-HI- T Jfid ADULTS $2.00 UNDER 1275' VXSIl BRADFORD HOUSE 5 JACKLEMr.ICK SPKDYDEKftIS KENNECOTT THEATER IKELSINKMSTORT NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES AN OTTO PREMINGER FILM &urtm tethnicilef' I25S I iv j SHOW AN OTTO PREMINOER I ('I mmmrn wmm TUESDAY 1 m f asCCRyder HURRY! COLOR If RESTRICTED Under 17 requires accompanying Parent or Adull Guardian NO man said. "Maybe more, but we can handle it." Police were called from several surrounding communities. sl r-- k '.5- - DAILY NEWS PLUS i a low story. mmm NATIONAL e3 iti mm ALL AGES ADMITTED Parental Guidance SuggrMt'd HURRY! ENDS TUESDAY Ann f DISNET1 Marcello 1 "There's at least 500 kids down there," a police spokes- II If -- Joseph t. Levme pfesenis dium to Andre Moore Stadium. CHnWCTABTt "MM M " I 5 Sophia 1 AGES ADMITTED Gi'ncfal Audiences ALL k ! Sunflovar Parents and Young People .The objective of the ratings is to inform parents about the suitability of movie ht mm in Vittorio MOVIE RATINGS MAIDEN, Mass. (UPI)-R- iot equipped police clashed with about 500 teen-agedemanding weekend rock concerts and an end to marijuana arrests early were Saturday. Thirty-eigarrested. No injuries were reported in the clash, which began Friday night and lasted well into the early morning hours. Officers said a large crowd gathered shortly before 8 p.m. in Maiden Square, the main shopping area of this Boston suburb. Their ranks soon swelled to several hundred. But Lortie said he did not witness the murder because he had left the house near St. Hubert Airport, where Laporte was ueiu nusiage, tat s uie morning of Oct 17. Paul Rose had left Oct 14, afraid that he might be recognized and picked up by police, Lortie said. ha woridgonemsd... I er, the state's largest newspaper, plans to begin publishing Tuesday, a list of names and addresses on the more than 15,000 Manchester voters who did not vote in Tuesday's election. Publisher William Loeb, in announcing the move Frii y, said he hoped it would spur people to vote in future electionr . ta witness said the Rose brothers obtained machine guns from a Notre Dame street pawnshop Oct 10. The group phoned the Laporte home in suburban St. Lambert and when told the mrdster was outside, then they went to the house and abducted him. Filmed in Russia from the Kremlin to the Ukraine. MANCHESTER, N. H. (UPI) The Manchester Union Lead- first-degr- f The EXTRA I 5 7:30-9:4- WAIT Names rs 12:30-2:45-5:0- recite HpcirpH earimewit ORIVE-I- N S. STATE. PROVOj pp' EXCLUSIVE!! 1st Drive-i- n Run! A ID ANN-MARGRE- iLGAmOXKWQODll MMMI scuniiiTinuc CARY GRANT JACQUELINE BISSET JGEORGE SEGAL A UNIVtRSAL First Run 5:24-8:4- 2 R.P.M. 3:41-6:5- FRIGHTENING ADVENTURE Co-H- it I0F 50 DESPERATE SURVIVORS ! 1 9 10-1- I y . NAIK)NAlGINflAl? 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Bernard Lortie, 19, arrested Friday, was produced as an early witness in the coroner s inquest which opened Saturday into the slaying of Laporte last month. Lcrtie said he and two other suspects still sought under Canada-wid- e broth- warrants ers raw ana Jacques nose decided to kidnap Laporte Oct 10 because the kidnaping of British diplomat James Cross Oct. 5 had not produced the MHWTRirAT. THE HERALD, Provo, ENJOY BETTER LIVING WITH GRANTS CREDIT RIVERSIDE SHOPPING PLAZA "IUCKY" IIAOPOIO |