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F¥. W EAT HER Fair and much cooler to- { night with lows in upper 308 and . 40s, Thursday, partly | cloudy and cool with chance of showers, Vol. LXXXIV, No,. 209 _._ MOTHER TURNED AWAY At TUsKEGHE | B ee 19 0 pe me e A mother who identified herself as Mis, P. M. Wadsworth, left center, accompanies a group of «children to Tuskegee High School in Tuskegee, Ala, A line of state troopers sturoundGed the build- ing and turned them away, Alabama Gov, George Wallace closed the school to prevent integra- tion. Brief Disorders Break Out | FINAL EDITION RX 23131 _ 30 Packs -- 2 Sections ___ GL‘meLLfiN Y‘,WET):NESDAY EVENINE re Killed in Swiss Jet A x After Two Negro Brothers Enter Birmingham School By DON McKEE BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept 4 Ui--Two Negro brothers entered school with white children today and brief disorders broke out at the elementary school where they registered. . Dwight and Floyd Armstrong, accompanied by four Negro men, entered the Graymont grammar school through a side door. They enrolled and 10 minutes later left by the same door. They became pupils in the fifth and sixth grades - the‘ first Negroes in Alabama to en-, ter an elementary school with white children.\ Demonstrations by about 100 white persons who had gathered early on the sidewalks about the school followed. Police brought in riot squads armed with carbines and rifles, The - white segregationists yelled \let's get those Niggers out of there\ and \Nigger lov» ers,\ They chanted, \two four, six, eight, we don't want to in- tegrate.\ Using & megaphone, Police Capt. George Wall offered to let L@pL. ILL __ Rain, Thunderstorms Hit Broad Areas of Eastern Part of U.S. CHICAGO, Sept. 4 (P - Rain and thunderstorms hit broad; Confederate flags and protested greas in the eastern third of the: nation today after severe storms struck sections of Pennsylvania and Kansas. Tornadic winds hammered out- lying sections of St. Mary's, Pa., vesterday, causing property dam- age estimated by Mayor Regis Weinveril at several million dol- lars. Wind up to $0 mpk. lashed areas near Colby, in westem Kansas but property daniage was not heavy. A funnel cloud sight, ed near Levant, Kan.. did not touch ground. Today's wet belt extended from the lower Great Lakes region and the eastern Ohio Valley eastward s through the Northern and Middle Atlantic states, Nearly three inch- es of rain doused Philadelphia in a six-hour period during the night. Cooler weather spread in- to the rain belt. Skies were mostly clear in the Gulf states and in the western third of the nation. Light showers and cloudy skies were reported in the Northern and Central Plains. Temperatures were generally in 'the 70s in the southern half of the nation. In the northern half, readings were in the 50s in the Great Lakes region and in \the 605 in other sections. Farly morning temperatures ranged from 88 in Needles, Calif.,; to 43 in Marquette, Mich. Farm Bureau Opposes Two-Price Plan on Marketing of Milk qne of the group advance and! talk things over. The crowd. shouted back: \We're going to stay here until they close the! schools.\ p At one point, about 25 of the demonstrators broke through po-; lice lines They ran up on the school grounds, clapping their hands and shouting, \get those Niggers out.\ | At least three white men and. one white man were arrested! Police broke up crowds of Negroi spectators on a comer facing the) demonstrators. One young white. man hurled a rock but it wen! astray. He was arrested promptly.; After about 25 minutes of yell-, ing and placard waving, the white group led by officials of] the National States Rights partyi filed back in cars in a nearby pirking lot and departed. Gov. George C. Wallace, who yesterday -| sent hundreds of slate troopers, Wildlife Rangers and other special officers in to | the city, maintained silence at j the - Executive Mansion | in | Montgomery. The state forces | did mot show up at any of the ° three schools affected by 2: Federal court desegregation or der. 'The scene was more peaceful West End and Ramsey High! Schools. A total of 93 schools: opened today with enrollment ex- pected to exceed last year's record 72000. The morning dragged on' without Negroes appearing as, scheduled at the West End and Ramsay schools. | Protest Barricade Shortly after peace returned} to Graymont. a group of about; 50 hard score state righters ap»: peared at Ramsay. They waved. a police barricade. Some wore Gestapo-type uniforms. . Earl Morgan, Wallace's execu- tive secretary, and other admin- istration leaders were in Birm- ingham on orders from the gov- emor \to observe and keep him' fully informed.\ f In the Gulf coast city of Mobile, two young Negroes ac- companied by two city police» men fegistered for the 12th grade at the board of education office. There were no incidents, No other pupils were present, The Birmingham pickets car- ried signs reading \close mixed schools\ and. asking white parents \for your child's sake, please close the schools.\\ But scores of white childrer entered three of the city's 93 public schools ordered deséegre- gated 'by a Federal court. Ab Montgotmnery, Wallace con- tinued to decline comment after désegregation had been accom- plished. The state troopers sent to Birmingham did not show up at the schools. They were stilll in the city in mid-motning. About 60 city and county po- ficemen tere on duty at Gray- mont. . The Negroes went into the school shorfly after white pupils began enrolling. At the time, Wallace's press secretary said the chief tive was in his mansion in Mont- gomery, 100 miles away. |- The Negroes entered the build- ing at 8:05 a.m. (CST) to climax pending showdown between Wal- lace and both Federal and local SYRACUSE, Sept. 4 inter fel estory of the New York PAM), to emerently decided to' as- Buresu were on record today 25%meqg to that r t, but there opposing a proposed two-pricefgfaf no immggiieti’ sélatemgxlé marketing plan aimed at dis-'pom him. State troopers un- couraging. surplus production of accountably did not appear at milk. . William E. Bensley, president White women picketed on the af the farmer's organization, SAld sidewalk in front of the school the program was not in the besté‘as the Negro pupils made their long-range interest of New York historic walk through a doorway dairy farmers. 'The bureatt's spoke out against th meeting here yesterday, Bensley public sthool desegregation below said. He said he had sent telegrams the first break came in 1956 and to U.S. Sens. Jacob K. Javits again last June when the Feder- and Kenneth B. Keating, New,al government faced down Wal- York Republicans, urging themitace &t the University of Ala- to oppose the measure. 280 col from eom board of directors puilding about 100 yards away. plan at a aithorities, who had asked him 'the school. 'on the east side of the red brick Their enrollment was the first college level in Alabama, where what had appesred to be an im-} HIGH S\ s # President Is Expected to M Name Neutral Members of 'Rail Arbitration Panel from the ranks of experts in the transportation field, The third member, announce today or tomorrow his chairman | of source said, probably would come from the general public, BY JOHN KOENIG JR. WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 M -- President Kennedy is expected to selection of three neutral mem- bers to serve on an arbitration panel in the railroad work rules dispute. Under legislation enacted hur- 29, he has until Saturday to name three neutral arbitrators to the - seven-member | panel which will rule on two prime issues in the dispute. But a high government source probably will announce his selec- tions before Friday, That's the day on which Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz meets at the issues other issues, \It would be presumptuous to hold the meeting Friday |© Racial At a Glance BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | i them, BIRMINGHAM, Ala, - Gov George - Wallace, ready for a showdown with the Federal - government, - moves | hundreds of state troopers into Birmingham | where three schools are ordered to desegre- gate foday,. « was TUSKEGEE, Ala, - Local officials mise possibility of court action to open Tuskegee public school after Wallace blocks enrollment of Negroes for a second day. HUNTSVILLE, | Ala.-School | board accopts Wallace's order not to begin integrated classes, 'but two Negroes are scheduled to register today at a white high school in Mobile. CHARLESTON, S,C.-Eleven Negroes integrate four high schools, Ab one a false bomb report forces evacuation ofstu- dents. Four parochial schools admit 15 Negroes SURRY COUNTY, Vs. - Private segregated school starts classes after white teachers ;i balk at teaching in schools ordered desegregated. BOWLING GREEN, Ry. - About 175 Negroes enter white schools under | Federal court order. Twelve other Kentucky school districts admit Negroes. CAMBRIDGE, Md.-Unarm- ed National Guardsmen stand by as 20 Negroes enroll at four white schools. A high school near Hurleck, Md, expands integration from two Negroes admitted last year to mine. SAN ANTONIO, Tex.-Fac- ulties of five schools are in- tegrated in a move approved meeting. ENGLEWOOD, NJ. - Negro parents | claim - school officials are trying to delay execution of an dntegration plan, say they will try to enroll, their children fodav in three pre- dominantly white schools. NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark, - A white mother tries unsuccessfully to enroll her 6- year ald son in. a Negro school. She says she probably will try again and school officials agree to accept the child, contempt of court citations. to night in a row. cipal - court 60 days or $200. °- are arrested | after are being erected. Search Is Ended for Missing Navy Plane ended & search for a U.S. Japan with four men aboard. from 'the Carrier Coral Sea. Aboard were: Tt, Onidr. Jervy Jones, perial Beach: fand Aviation nician Third AMB [Morgan of Dubuque, Iowa, apparently | by the school board at a secret ! Sp. LOUIS - Court of Ap- peals orders Innmediate release of five CORE leaders held on HIGH POINT, N.C. - Police armesh 47 Negroes when they gain service at a white drive-in restaurant for third | PLAQUEMINE, La. - Muni- convicts - Jammes Farmer, mational director of CORE, on charges of disorder- ly conduct in a facial demon- stration and sentences him to CHICAGO - Two Negroes chaining | themselves to a police car at & site where mobile classrooms radar tracking plane missing . R since Monday off the Const MacNeice, 55, She ALB tracer disappeared Playwright, Expires during a routine night operation, \ _ | LONDON, Sept. 4 (MP - Louis MacNeice, 55, poet, playwright! of Im-land radio producer, died Tuesday] heen ter a brief Hliness, MacNeice,| ShOub perigl Beach, Calif; Lt. ose father was a - Belfast E. Taylor, the pilot, also of Im»/wh Class Harry CGlenWorld War II won him inter- board,\ the source said. indicated today the President |fure.. int j combination of road and yard work would-have to be carried on at the same time, i without having learned who [5110111d the two parties fail to: will serve on the arbitration (come to agreement. ' | SEPTEMBER 4, 1963 }.. Explod who would serve as the panel, the Under the emergency bill en- acted last week, hearings in arbitration of the case must be- gin within 30 days, The board would have 60 more days to make a decision and would make it public in another 60 o A H Crificism of on' r Meanwhile, flames dangerously n negotiations other issues such as wage struc-! interdivisional runs and' Regardless of whether agree- - L Labor Department with rail and ' ment is reached on the issues to: | 'lunion representatives to discuss be negotiated, the award of the, t j c procedures for arbitration of the arbitration panel is to go into ef-| of locomotive firemen'sifect within 180 days of Aug. 28,! jobs and train crew makeup and ithe day the bill was signed. The! for resumption of negotiation of Award would be effective for two years, but as the situation now stands there is nothing to pre-] Deaf Ear Turned {ent & strike on the other issues; Pleas for Reforms Arbitration _ panel i By Vietnamese on By MALCOLM W. BROWNE members! SAIGON, Sept. 4 UD - The gov- Meanwhile a list of possible representing the carriers will beggfigzmafi South Viet Nam has, lagainst Communist guerrillas. - Prick Exam CENTS :xplodes in Air After Takeoff from Zurich; Craft Bound for Rome DUERRENAESCH, Switzerland, Sept. 4 (AP) - A Swiss twin-jJet airli exploded in the air today shortly after faking off from Zurich 211121 Jifazslllgtllnglt‘ ear Duerrenaesch, killing all the 80 persons aboard. ~ Shredded wreckage dotted the countrysi t , : ka C yside Afor | glght mxles of the final flight through an early morn- ing mist. The tremendous impact of the crash scat- tered parts of the French- buflt Caravelle and human | remains over a square mile. P x0 o® | i The plane had been bound for Duerrenaesch, said th . | » e Dlem POIICIeS Geneva and Rome. It narrowly glowing fire moving it 52h? missed Duerreniesch, situated speed through the mis - between two small lakes about pamed by agloud roariggafiggrd. 30 miles west of Zurich ands Duerrenaesch villagers sig slasheq a huge crater in the! they heard an explosion, looked. earth just west of the village. ; up and saw the blazing plane The Evorst air disaster in coming down over their houses. ‘vaisg history, the crash took ’ Some said the big craft graz- the lives of 74 passengers and - ed the roof of two farms build- six crew members, If was the ings before smashing into the first major air tragedy in earth and disintegrati st | iting. Switzerland since World War E Flaming particlesg plmd into IL, farm houses. Swissair authorities amnounc-| Mrs, Emil Luescher, wife of a ed one American, a Mr. Glauner, baker, told newsmen she and hex was among the eight foreigners family \first thought the cork arbitrators to be added to four J. E. Wolfe, their chief negotia- Kennedy's dg‘fgaseagmfigggfigeggimgofigggsgggemfi did my, haveifectoy, mersss the read had ox- f r or home town. already selected - two by the tor. and Guy W. Knight, a: 1 fine .I , yo 6 » rally public support for President railroads and two by the unions Pennslyvania Railroad vice presi-.m ; ; j |-- apparently was under study by dent. Ngo Dinh Diem and win tie, iLabor Department officials and; The unions will be represented; While a government spokesman {ploded.\ Best Swiss Nationals | \The whole house shook.\ she Al the 66 other passengersggiéghe window panes went to and the crew were Swiss nation-\ A house closer to the cater White House staff members. The by H. E. Gilbert, president of the:iyesterday welcomed Kemnedy's|@ls. Among then were 44 Der-lwas blackened, its front wail responsibility of naming owever, is the President's. Speculate on Choice iBroLherhoocl of Locomotive Fire- pledge of continued US. aid in {mer and Enginemen, and R. anti-Communist war, he said i McDonald, vice president of the the President's criticism of Diem's | Indications are that two of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train- domestic f neutral arbitrators will be namedimen. policles was .' Pro-Castro Stu Caracas Seen Involved in éAlr Force Quarters Raid By PAUL FINCH | University today looking for pro- Castro students believed to have been involved in a bloody, daring con Air Foteé: hneadqiiatters in downtown Caracas. Four terrorists, apparently bent on stealing the paratroop guards' submachine guns, shot up the headquarters yesterday, killing a guard and wounding a passerby. One {wounded. - Police traced the terrorists' i gelaway car, driven by a wom- ! an, to the uinlversity campus. { They seized two students and - a cache of arms in a dormitory for foreign students. Officials said the raid was stag- ed by members of the Armed Forees for National Liberation (FALN), a Communist organiza- ition trying to topple President Romulo Betancourt before the presidential election in Novem- ber. Betancourt says Prime Min- ister Fidel Castro of Cuba spon- sors the terrorists. - Others May Be Involved interior Minister Manuel Man- 150 Forced to Flee Hotel Schenectady 'When Fire Erupts SCHENECTADY, Sept. 4 (P - Fire erupted in a section of the seven-story - Hotel Schenectady {before dawn | today and forced about £0 persons to fiee because of smoke, No one was injured. Police held for questioning a man who fold them he had set the fire, Firemen said the fire started lon the fourth floor of an un- Itilla said other foreign students, information.\ U.S. officials in Washin dents in relations, wrong\ and \basedon inadequate privately voiced disappointment over the negative reaction to Kennedy's plea for reforms. The Saigon stand was consid- ered a blow to a solution of deteriorating U.S. - Vietnamese The American President ap- pealed to the Vietnamese govern- ment Monday to rally public sup-) likon, Making up & quate (lithe s j Humlikon's population, they were mmtggé?s§?£ m°$lfinmm§ flyillilg to Geneva on a trp was alone with theigr' 18- 512316 zed by a farming coopera- {fart-01d] daughter, Dors who . ro mThe Qisasterbstmck at 1:20 a.m. fast,e ales recently and washec- ur minutes before, officials re-| A small ported they had lost contact with 30 workersmax 1&2?! fgfégtrgé fig the Caravelle. morming shift, remained undam- Farmers in the village of The plane hit 200 yards wil, eight mils northest of it, One of 16 Worst Air Disasters BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The crash of the Swissair when United Air Lines DCI and sons from a single village, Hum- ripped and the roof blown off by 'quite | gion. CARACAS, Venezuela, Sept, 4 May be involved in the almost \iP-Police swarmed over Central 4A!Y acts of violence, terrorist - was reporlzedjili1 © He ordered a complete search of the university, Because it enjoys traditional rights of an- port by changes in policy \And jet airliner neat Zurich|a Trans World Airlines plane tonomy,, the, university .has he- foesme (@ sinctu@ary dor Com- | munists. a (guggscficéugegg £353 fig: 'Diem has denied Buddhist charg- rorists from retreating - to itsges of religious discrimination, j & safety. Police obtained noted that \Kennedy Air - Frgnce {was \Bu erhaps in personnel.\ 1 ; m P ire pippargntly Mad in min dif‘gd“? muggy 80 was one of thel collided over Arizona, Diem's brother-adviser. Ngo Dmmwwffifi alr mine disasters in. hiy| 5. June 22,1962 -113 killed as Nhu. Washington believes Nau|®C\ BC UC Tio) joy vomien; Air lance boeing 107 aished A N _ . Dow 16, 1060 - a #1 \% \ l - ae copic ents Atonlebt on . the : ground, when a) 6 March 14, 1962: A1 Vited. law was imposed in South United Air Lines DC# jet and a WIC. DCV chartered. from Nam: A Roman Catholic, Trans World Airlines Super Con- by Caledonian Almazy® stellation collided over Staten {Of Prestwick Scotland, crashed Island, N.Y. [at Yeounde, Cameroon, Th lein vemment| oro _ R 1 7. March 16, 107, includ- e Vietnamese government| 2, June 3, mfi‘gmgmvgzmdfiflll’g 93 U.S. military personnel, \* killed when Flying Tiger Super- to enter th ds began: . h e grounds ANG DC) 'said the United States should not crashed at Orly Field, in:Constellation disappeared between through search of every build- & ! Students from the university 'participated in the theft last; 'January of impressionist paint- mgs from a French government:; collection on exhibit here. The: FALN said the theft was to dra-. 'matize its demands for Betan-, court's ouster. FALN Is Blamed 'n other acts blamed on the real estate office of about $4,000 yesterday and terrorists set fire zucla. Police at Barcelona, 150 miles high school student and accused him of leading a band that dy- namited | three 6 oil pipelines in the past' two weeks. FALN gunmen robbed a Caracas, 4 'Richard I. Phillips denied theifafl‘lel’ of European to a cultural center in Maracaibo,'government - backed Vietnamese fp H | the oil center in western Vene- newspaper, The Times of Viethconomlc plan' D|8$ in New York - th | [ ork -- the worst southeast of Caracas, arrested al Américan-owned form e iet-| * i 1 nediformal request from South Viet Schuman faid out the plan for} withdraw its support of Viet'worst single plane disaster on: , Nam ang that is henrtening O, lcora. \\ 0\ \South vies nas \ * Ut to Nam gamnaggé’gggoa’gfiog‘e; %. June 18, 1953 - 129. alll 8. June 3, 1963-10 killed in a c tsem'cemen. kuleii bin crash - chartered - Northwest v Air Force C124 Globemaster nest Orient Airli D Washington reacted sharply (.. _. d € rlines DCT whic fell to a story published in Saigon | Tokyo in worst military aviation into the sea off Juneat, Aleta. . that the U.S. Central Intelli- | * | 9. Aug. 14. 1958-99 killed in | 4. June 30. 1956 - 128 tilled crash of a KLM. Royal Dutch gence Agency had plotied to bns A - overthrow the Diem govern- t “22111315; in the Atlantic Ocem off ment with the help of dissidents in South Viet Nam. Reba” SChumafl, 111 10, Nov. 27, 1962-07 killed in State Department Press Officer {crash of Brazilian Varig Boein: P ent SS C {707 near Lima, Peru, € € | 11. March 1, 1962-05 killed in {crash of American Airhnes Astro- Jet after takeoff from Idlewild charges which appeared in a: e Nam. He Hken , ifigtion tiéfigr'ed the story to a! METZ, France. Sept. 4 \PM.-BRo- involving a single U.S. commer- The State Departmen ( bert Schuman, often called the,cial airliner, 'acknowledged that the U.S. Em.'father of European unity, died: 12 July T. 1962-94 pons |bassy in Saigon had rejected a today after a long iiness, He wasglélélitl £1? £5322 yje§n ugliner‘crasha i » a. Inamese authorities for custody of, 13. Dec. 20, 1952-87 stvice- three Buddhist monks who took|the European ctrl and steel POO: men killed in crash of an Air fellow-tréveling Movement of the; Quang, top organizer Revolutionary Democratic Union, largest pany, rejected a coalition offer full,\ an embsssy official ey by the two extremist groups. ed. unity to defeat Raul Leoni, pres-|was a Vietnamese secret idential court's Democratic Action party. 'became & monk. Meanwhile, the outlawed Ven-[refuge in the embassy Sunday. ezulean Communist party and its! The three include Thich Tri peo c I of the Bud- a eft - suffered - a'dhist anti-government movement., be R l ; A political setback. The Republican! The embassy turned away a The same countries later mm'sgfi’rdesrganfign is; filling“ into Venezuela's| fourth monk who appealedforigirggzag°§£32mwgi£§n§gei and overnmen itd luz y. \We're J ; M E ent - opposition|asylum yesterday, \We're just m0;Pro moters of European Barred from running their own, The situation was complicated; slate, they had sought to con- further by reliable reports that vince the party of the need for one of the refugees, Le Mau Chi. a production and marketing 90\. Fore (124 ash iganlzation linking France, West) q, gap: aiomgggg Lakgévxgmed Germany. Italy, Belgium, Hol-: {land ang Luxembourg. (when chartered DCS owned by 15. Sept. 19, 19i0- 80 killed unity, in U.S. military chartered DCSB 'nope the Commun Market willleffter teleoff from Guam; March 'develop into a Europe welded to-Ql2. 1950-81 killed in crash of gother politically as well as eco- British plane near Cardiff, Wales, nomécalléré1h pj | xara -_- _- The \Schuman Plan\ was un- & velcd in 1950. when its author Man Murders Wife plain- # police candida - F ' 1 . : didate of - Betan: {agent for nine years before foreign minister of Prante.! 4 fter She Requests fer ane Kequest | Schuman became seriously ill;\ occupied wing and ¢ limbed through a partition into the fifth floor. Damage was confined to two rooms. The cause was not determined. 'No Cause Given for 'Camp Drum Explosion | CAMP DRUM, Sept, 4 (M - An 'Army board of inquiry was un- 'able to determine the cause of an explosion last month that wreck- ed four trucks and a trailer at this morthérn New York training camp. R The report on the Aug. 11 ex- plosion was submitted yesterday to Col. John. J. Carusone, Camp Drum post commander. 'The vehicles, which contained mortar and anti-tank rounds, were parked in an ammuniton dump in & remote section of the camp when the explosion occur» red. No injuries were reported. The trucks and the ammunition trailer were assigned to the 50th Armored Division of the New | Ensigg Roderickibishop. joined the British Broad- R. Mcinnis, of Fau Claire, Wis.. casting Corporition in 1941. Radio Electronics Tech-|dramas written during and after tou. Jersey National Guard,; which waslof Racial Equality, LOKYO, Sept. 4 (P - Navyjundergoing two weeks of summer of Racial atithorities said today they Sax'eftl‘aining; avy Five Negro Parents and Civil Rights Official Are Held for Sit-In at School official for loitering as they sat- homes. in at a predominantly white éle-, Civil mentary school here. in at the Lindner Place Davidson Avenue School, to at the predominantly which the demonstrators want Woodfield Road School. the arrests. 'ance at the Woodfield \L hope you will live to be School ashamed of this day,\ said Lin- contained vermne Police Chief Walter S.-present. Waring. Some parents, Lynch, president Island Chapter of ed to leave the school auditorium, back - home after and ignored a deadline given crowds and protective them two hours in advance Of there, the arrests, i Dr. Teen-agers. the opening day of school, jeered-sivil rights group, as police f White and Negro adults who engaged in sidewalk debates! puskegee, the civil rights controversy t Appeared surprised at the arrest$. \in Tuskegee is defying a s The Davison Lloyd Delaney, % Ala., siying: schools in this area which wets ing a state commissioner Inational recognition, N. ing an end to racial imbalances|balante in. the schools.\ I rights demonstrators sat- Principal Ray Blank of the and staged a picket line-boyeott R efute Fin o Ch arge more Negroes assigned, told them! 'The 500 pickets and the boy-! the board of education directed cott cut drastically into attend-] where the largest class \exaggerated\ the charge by U.S, 11 youngsters, andiRep. Paul A. Fino, R-N.Y.. that coln Lynch to Blank and Mal- many had only oné, two or threeillegal gambling is a $3 billion both white and) In % r of the LOE Negro, also kept their children the Congressional Feecord. yester- the CongresSiaway from the predoniinantly led the group white Davison Avenue and Lind- of parents who. repeatedly refus-iner Place Schools, or took them' , t ; Ile | seeing than half the total amount of Eryant shot her twice mors, Sar« released early OM psychologist and leader 05 bye, erated.\ \ compared the: : , na deciang led the group &2WAY-school racial problems of ishlS‘Fglgfgig. Gsifggfgddegmin £155,211?) | had.tong Island area with those of“my of knowing just how much f , | \It is ironic that a $011O‘Jl‘bm’fr‘ilgmfxclbling in Massachufebts and I 'Avenue governor and a §0h00lignyone else does.\ tion was one of three elementary board in New York State is defy-| f targets of demonstrations seek-jcation seeking to end racial im- only from a cursory glance at Hast month and received the School Clothes Funds Ifinal - rites of the Catholic {Church. He was suffering from &) | sypacUSB, S stroke and respiratory HOUDIE | | inorities say? 49212 gig—mi? - Death came at Schumen's . ler has admitted killine: his wife France. with blasts from a shotgun after | A native of Luxembourg, Schu- Ezekietfiiselli-l hler 11181211829 to buy (man was schooled as & lawyer chil school clothes for their {and entered public life shortly dren. . after World War I. His goal soon|_ George Bryant, father of two, MALVERNE, Sept. 4 {P - Po-resulting from the neighborhood. m s hich; was charged last night with first- lice arrested five Negro patentsgsqhool concept-the msignmemrfi‘écfisufffifiem MNW (W ' and & Long Island civil rightsiof children to schools near their passion in a lonely, secluded life. virtually his sole degree murder in the death of his wile, Beatrice, 45. . Asst. Dist Atty, J. Richard Sardino said Bryant had told him be killed his wife \arnd he was glad he did it.\ A Sardino fave this sccunt of the shooting yesterday at the Biyant's home in Syracuse; Mrs. Bryant asked her hisband for money to buy new school clothes for the Pearlines, 10, and Floriae, 9. He refused and the wile threat- ened to divorcee him. - Bryant went upstairs, grabbed & shotgun and shot her, SarGing said. - The woman _ staggered through the house an fil down the stairs leading to the ceHlar, School Massachusetts Aides Negro 'On Hlegal Gambling k BOSTON. Sept. 4 (P -- Massa- Road chusetts officials have labelled as business in the Bay State. | - In a statenient Anto day Fino said more than $1.4 pillion made ih off track betting in the Bay State represents less poi}; legal gambling in the stite. ; , Massachusetts Senate Presi- Negro dent John E. Powers said the ¢ figures were \extremtly exag- dine said. - The children and a Bryant nitce. Grace, 18, were in the liv» ing room when the wounded Mrs. the house, SEVEN CHILDREN DROWN SEOUL, Sept. 4 ®y - Seven (children drowned when a Lerfy I boat taking thei to schoolaczross | Fimo said his figures on [the Kum River sank 90 Tesiles of edu- chuselts gambling were gleaned south of Seoul yesterday. |_ The boat was cairying 1) child- ren and three adults. money is being made hy ilegal} egrega« don't know how he (Fino) or |betting here, Bryant came through. They led