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Show 4A DESERET NEWS, Monday, Jo.. jury 20, 1969 No Pueblo 1 Court Backs Open Mousing Provision - 'Destruct' The Court limited today "Supreme power of cities to repeal WASIILNGTON (AP) laws. open-housin- g decision the court an ..found Akron, Ohio, had put an 'u n c o n stitutional special on its Negro ; -- burden by requiring bans on to discrimination Lousing Chave the approval of the of the voters in the city. 8-- 1 resi-dril- ls ma-joji- ty 2Justice Hugo L. Black, the o tvT y dissenter, protested strenuously that there was no tions: Agreed to consider Capt. Dale E. Noyds claim that the Air Force acted illegally in confining him while he was in the process of appealing his to conviction military counts. Noyd was confined on charges of refus court-marti- PARIS vanguard Richard M. Nixpn's negotiating team arrived today under orders to get The; expanded Vietnam war negotiations started as quickly .as practicable this week. . "Lawrence E. Walsh, the new t deputy American delegation leader, told newsmen upon 'arrival from Washington he saw elements for optimism In the .'imf talks on how to end the 'conflict starting this week think it would be wrong to all. the difficulties mirymize said. Everyone Walsh ri!jjrtd, 5t$lizes that a good start has ;bcen made but there is more to -- be" But I see accomplished. elements for optimism here in t lI a dues NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison today abruptly withdrew his motion for a delay in the trial of Clay L. Shaw on charges of conspiring to assassinate President John F. Kennedy and announced he will open the trial on schedule Tuesday. Garrisons office made the surprise move a few minutes before Dist. Judge Edward A. Haggerty was to decide whether to delay the trial one more time. The case will go to trial tomorrow morning," Haggerty said. Garrisons office last week filed the motion for the delay on grounds it could net proceed uniil it had secured from the Kennedy autopsy and the pictures and clothes the president was wearing when he was shot to death in Dallas Nov. 22, 1963. Garrisons motion for a continuance followed the refusal of a judge in Washington to release the autopsy evidence. he (UPl)-T- pay union PROCEEDS ON SCHEDULE Feace Talks of president-elec- to TRIAL IN KENNEDY DEATH Arrives For ; refused Del., won $10,617.80 in lost wages and the right to his old job back with Trans World Airlines. Refused to prevent the establishment of a branch of Auburn University at Montgomery, Ala. An agency of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People had contended opening of the branch would help segregated schooling. Stormy Seas Hide Jetliner Wreckage LOS ANGELES (AP) On. Pothoff returned to Denver the bottom of the storm-tosseFriday. -- $alsh said new delegation Pacific today lay the battered! Bonnie J. Cottel, 19, was rewreckage, of a U.S. Jetliner in turning to the University of Col- Chief Henry Cabot Lodge, which 38 persons died. A mile orado after visiting her parents expected to arrive here tonight, "will decide himself whether the away rests the hull of a Euro- in Palos Verdes Estates near in which 11 are Los Angeles. Her -- Conference can open Tuesday as pean jet father, Capt. entombed. J. Russell Cottle, is manager of Vietnam and North by '..proposed "the- - National Liberation Front Aboard the United Air Lines Uniteds flight operations at Los (NLF). the political arm of the Boeing 727 when it crashed Sat- Angeles International Airport 'VIM Cong guerrillas. urday night after take off for from which the plane took off. .'Denver, Colo., and Milwaukee,! In West Bend, Wis., six chil-un- u -- ylloving ahead at uai school dren ranging in age from 2 to 16 t were a theology .stfed after eight months of president a college coed were told their parents, Mr. and biKer public and secret bargain. . . . the parents of six Wisconsin Mrs. Robert K. Shroeder Jr., Ana the four parties involved , youngsters . . . one of United s apparently are dead. F1 RS-There were a. few tears shed One body was recovered from.but overall they took, it very I issues and agreed the waters well," said William J. Albrecht, jet Tor plunge into main an uncle, matters early this week. around the crash site. Searchers also found scraps of the fuse- wonderful lage and mail sacks in the wa- and how shown. ters cut by sharks' fins. NEW MYSTERY ??? He added, We are going to hamand rain seas Heavy ADHESIVE do our best to keep these chil- Pads. ... Sy I Is Yours for ! the Asking how vJJncanny -- -i- lit works secret combof ingr- nnation - - - that old dentures -- Sight ! Nam, Addftsi, 2$c handlin' lo. - 4 omt Omul Aids r. USS Only U Scousdalt An. 85?$?. lor trial int pr cuiiomr. QM kmttrt. Cox and two other expressed admiration for his untiring and struggle in favor of the rights of man. Mrs. Coretta King, widow of the U.S. civil rights leader who was assassinated last April 4, called on the after receiving an Pope award in Verona, Italy, in her husbands memory. and lights scampered search Sunday. operations DULUTH, MINN. (AP) AJ police officer and his wife arei Denver for first time and! If there is a good in this with a lap " beginning H. Dr. said theyre tragedv, Harvey full. Mrs. Clinton Bragg, 29, Pothoff, it is that Dr. Swan up to the last minute of his life! gave birth to a was doing the things he liked1 boy and a best. girl. They were born The two had represented Iliff,fve minutes apart last Thursat a ministry recruitment con- - daY a St. Lukes Hospital. ference at Claremont School of Theology near Los Angeles. Dr. P118 - smoke DIES into, Bunk Johnson bands and accompanied Lewis, who died earlier this month," on a tour to Europe in 1958. a Lithuanian 78, patriot, who held several am- bassadorial posts prior to World War II, died last Thursday at Kaunas, Lithuania. . . . James T. Quirk, 57, publisher of TV Guide magazine and Klimas, longtime executive of Triangle Publications, died Saturday after suffering a heart attack at the Philadelphia port. flash- HEARING AI- D- Q PRICES ARE EXORBITANT! you can still enjoy the fine quality of Standard Optical Eyewear. GLASSES lenses Weigh less than an ounce forever guaranteed against breakage. STAN-LIT- E commiuioni, othor telling cotls not for make far higher pricat bottar flooring. Why pay for them? $al $210 ii our priio for tha finest hearing aids made. Buy From Us . $75 to $150 SAVE lenses STAN-GRA- Y - Go from clear to dark automatically in sunlight in 60 seconds. CHRISTIAN DIOR FRAMES Styled by the master designer to enhance your appearance. 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COME IN TODAY! 1 FLORSHEIM SHOE SHOPS " 180 South Main (Corner of 2nd South I & Main' 354-695- Monday ami Fuduy, n a m. to 9 p n , W wolcofflt American Exprtts, BjnkAmucard. Walker Banko'd, Dintn Club and Master Cha-goedit Opn SEE YOUR NEARBY PARTICIPATING -- Wii ow LINCOLN-MERCUR- Y A Pay-agea- u, Ski rack. Ski-Pa- c - grenades, the tunnel! Viet Cong pop out of another opening. They sent her back in to urge her orders with comrades to surrender. Lip Full Of Babies - GREAT Marines above ground at the same time spotted a female dren together right here. He was a wonderfully human man. said a friend of Dr. Lowell B. Swan, 58, president of Illff School of Theology, Methodist institution of J AZZ traditional jazz funeral and parade were being arranged til New Orleans today for Alcide Slow Drag 80, New Orleans jazz musician and official grand marshal of the Eureka Brass Band. He died Sunday at his French Quarter home.. He won fame as a bass player with the George Lewi and opening. fuel-staine- d pered medal from the Sons of the Desert Shrine Club. Thomas is of Lebanese descent. Marines and, stripped to the waist armed with the pistols, " i ! llllllllllllllllllllllllll!ll!!lll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllll Lance ; Cpl. William Cox of Jackson, Miss., one of the Marine "tunnel rats told UPI correspondent Kate Webb he first saw two Viet Cong peeping at him from a tunnel opening. -- iSLm, People 70?-Re-- d aZ,Sd1,,r HONORED -- I Danny Thomas was honored Sunday night for the great spirit of showing loyalty, courage and benevo fence that is a tradition of the He repeople of Lebanon. ceived the Order of Adonis DANNY Entertainer INNOCENT PLEADS Clifford said that while the minutes after a will M. new administration Cohn, lawyer and fin-- a bring Roy Naval court of inquiry was connew the ideas, foreign policy i n c e r, pleaded innocent vened to look into the loss of the broad thrust of that policy in U.S. District Court to ship to North Korea almost a should remain what it has today charges of bribery, conspirayear ago today. been for two decades: Timeextortion and blackmail in Bucher outlined his naval ser- ly assistance to our friends, cy, with the citys connection miliof the use great vice and told of taking over com- prudent of the Fifth Avenue takeover our are at disposal mand of the ship when it was tary that Coach Lines Inc. a willingness to help othand still being converted in Puget ers defend their freedom and tired LeMAY FOR Sound, Wash. national independence. Air Force Gen. Curtis The skipper, 41, said that lie SAIGON (UPI) Half naked LODGE LEAVES Henry LeMay, George Wallaces 1968. jwn)te a Tetter ;ither to the Kenne45 Marines running mate, is being consid- from caliber Cabot left Lodge carrying jCh;ef 0f jjaval Operations or the ered as a candidate for goverfor to Faris in one hand and, Bureau of Ships in Washington, dy Airport today pistols nor of California next year by become of head American the 23! of some that sort suggesting flashlights in the other killed he American Independent Vietnam at the delegation Viet Cong and capt, red 13G destct sy?tem b installed n We are thinking of W. Party. talks, peace electromcs replacing and the cryptograh Averell more in a battle 30 feet Gen. LeMay, said Keith M. Harriman. ic areas of the ship. Greene of San Francisco, the underground, military spokes men said today. His request was not accepted, POPE SEES MRS. KING -P- new state chairman of the Bucher Paul VI received the party which backed former said, although ope The fighting raged during the widow of the late Dr. Martin Alabama Gov. George Walweekend in the guerrilla tunnel Luther King Jr., today and lace for president. network uncovered by some o' the 3,000 Marines and 2,000 South Vietnamese troops sweepBatan-ga- n ing the Peninsula 320 miles northeast of Saigon. ? ... WASHINGTON (UPI) -Outgoing Defense Secretary Clark M. Clifford says the United States must keep in East Asia, even if troops there is an early end to the SAN DIEGO, CALIF. (UPI) Vietnam War. Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, Clifford issued a final report skipper of the USS Pueblo, testi- to Congress during the weekfied todey that he asked for a end in which he warned to be indestruct system against a return to isolationstalled in the electronics and ism. He also said the United code area of the intelligence States need not fill the miliship and that his request was tary gaps being left by British turned down at the highest level withdrawal from Malaysia, in Washington. and the Persian Singapore Bucher began his testimony Gulf. 15 Nixon Team ; increase and wound up without a job. The mechanic, Vincent P. Brady of Wilmington. ing to train a student pilot for the Vietnam war. Turned aside a challenge to the mobilization of Army reservists for Vietnam duty without a congressional declaration of war. A group of reservists from the Cleveland area, most of them already in Vietnam, had raised the challenge. Refused to review lower court decisions which accorded victory to a mechanic who foundation in the Constitution for this latest pronouncement on civil rights. The court, before quitting early to attend the presidential inauguration of Richard M. Nixon, took these other ac- Keep Troops In Asia DEALER NS air- |