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                    <text>1954
'lbt fbtning J&amp;ullttfn
11165
•
f...~;::· _
'
S STAa L t&amp;HKD 1847
Wllllam L. Mctcan, Ptt.ldent and Pnbll.sher, 1695,1931
'PUBLISHED EVE NING AN D SUNDAY BY BlJLLETIN COMPA NY
3 0 TH AND M A RKET STR E ETS, PHILADELPH IA, PA, 19 101
ROBERT McLEAN, C hairman of the Board
R OBERT t. TAYLOR, Pmidcnt and Publisher
'WILLIAM B, DICKIN ON, Managing Editor -
i
22
DONALD McLEAN, Editor, Edito rial Pare
DO AtD W. THORNBUR GH, Vice President - ALB ERT SPENDLOVE, Vice Prcsidcnt•Busincss Mana1er
RAYMOND D. McGEE, S«rerary and T rea1urcr - Wl LLIAM I. McLEAN, Ill, A S1i1tant Truturer
JOSEPH G. ELLIOTT, As,istant Bulinc11 Manaeu - RICHARD W, CARPENTER, Adverti1in1 Director
LOUIS T RUPIN, Circulation Dlrec,or - JAMES P. GRANT, Production Manager
J!ARRY VRDANG, Promotion Manager - REGINALD E, BEAUCHAMP, Assistant to the PrcaidcnC
B
T H URSDAY,
SEPTEMBER
1 5,
1966
Planning to Plan
The $26,000 federal grant made available to help the Delaware Valley Regional '.Planning Commission "define" its job
is a necessary first step. But it hard ly "refutes" aH of the recent criticism of the
Commission by the Governors' Interstate
Advisory Committee, as Commission Secr etary Lawrence G. Williams hastily insisted it did.
Even when matched on a on_e-thifd
basis by state and local governments r~p\
resented on the commission, the federal
grant will pay only for a very modest professional and clerical staff- big enough,
perhaps, to draft some preliminary outlines of the Commission's enormous tasks
but certainly not equipped t o begin any
real nuts-and-bolts work.
More or less theoretical notions of
what the Commission should undertake
will be no substitute for a beginning on
concrete regional planning of land use
and resource development. If such planning is to have the necessary backing, if
it is to have an impact on the actual operations of government in the Delaware
Valley area, the fuller involvement of the
governors and other ranking officials of
the region, as proposed by the Advisory
Committee, will indeed be necessary.
Planning Commissions, local and
regional, have a long history of ivory tower labors that too often result in plans
that have little orno chance of implementation because the responsible officials of
government are not involved. All the
good intentions and professional com- ·
petence in the world cannot make a politically sterile or impotent organization
an effective force. The Commission will
truly come to life when this is recognized.
.
-
Some Lessons From the tPros'
.
.
Professional politicians can learn sev- ,ate halt to all bombings or a cease-fire by
eral things from the results of Tuesday's South Viet Nam and its allies.
The other lesson, and this one is to
primary election balloting.
be learned from the results in Minnesota,
One, made obvious in the returns is the danger of "over packaging." a pofrom New Jersey's Democratic Party pri- litical product with bright-young-man
mary, ii; that the war in Viet Nam is in- wrappings.
deed an issue in congressional votingMinnesota's Dem:ocratic-Farmer-Lawhenever anyone sets out t o make it an_
bor Party leaders decided more than a
iss'Ue.
year ago that Governor Karl F. Rolvaag,
A slate of Democratic Party "peace 53, should be placed on the political scrap
candidates" was defeated down t he line heap. Rolvaag, these leaders reasoned,
by party regulars who supported Presi· lacked polit ical "oomph" and had to be
dent Johnson's conduct of the war ·as replaced by someone younger, more atwell as · his continuing efforts to bring tractive. Thus, the D'emocratic-Farmerabout a negotiated peace. The Viet Nam Labor endorsement went to Lt. Gov. A
dissidents, who sought a U. S. Senate as M. (Sandy) _Keith, 37, who is in the .Rob
well as sev.eral U. S. House nomi nations,· ert F. Kenneqy image-including hair
fared badly- very badly- in the vot ing. styling.
,
The lesson here, and one supported by
The party leaders figured everythir.
previous primary contests, is that while -except voter reaction. A tremendou
the American voter may not be a Viet sympathy vote was generated for RolNam "hawk," neither is he attracted by vaag and carried him to renomination. It
pleas for tl}e unilateral withdrawal of left the party leaders alone with their
U. S. tro~op~s~,_!;b~.e,i.~loQ8~,i,-e,A,,,1,l,Q,l;i~U.:..,~~2El~::,..- - - -- - --...:.._
I·
New Battle of Atlanta
Atlanta, Ga. , is a part of the old South
well worth the consideration of northerners. It has close to a half-million populatiQ,n. It is the hub of transportation in t~at
quadrant of the country, as it was more
than a century ago. It is also a town which
seems really to believe that the Civil War
was a long while ago, and that what has
gone with the wind never blows back.
Atlanta, therefore, integrated its
schools with much less strain than elsewhere in the Old Confederacy. This year
there was violence as school resumed,
because there are impassioned but sense·
less people in every city, and of every
race. Atlanta's mayor, risking his neck
quite literally, went through the streets of
a Negro district reminding his fellow-At·
lantans of their duty to uphold the law.
An out-of-state Negro whom some would
describe as a demagogue was arrested
fo r-violation of a local law. But so was a
white man accused of wanton shooting of
an Atlan ta Negro.
Both arrests make sen,se; the point being to uphold the law' without partiality.
This Atlanta seems to be attempting to
do, much better than some of its back·
ward sister towns such as Grenada, Miss., c
where naked white power seems to have s
the support of policemen who ought to be
ashamed to wear a badge; where the crippling of children for the "sin" o( being
black appears to be the accepted code.
Atlanta is the place to look, for Atlanta is one of the most successful cities
in the South. Its culture and industry, and
its ·unusually articulate press have made
it a leader. What Atlanta does in civil
r ights will be copied, though perhaps
grudgingly. On the record so far, the vigorous city in the red hills deserves the
mantle of leadership._
~
Kickoff might be a bad word for such figure was $7.85 per person, while the fe
things as the United Fund, since the last Philadelphia average was $4.90.
thing that happens is that anybody gets
Since then we have done better. But t
kicked. Everybody gets helped; contribu- what Mr. Seltzer had to say goes a long d

 ..: .&amp;~-a. l .h:1:

 ~1.i1d o n


W.J:lV
to
p y_n l_!lin u r. b u
D. l.-.- -
1
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              <text>   
  

PULITZ

ROBERT L. TAYLOR,

1

e)—Ur Evening Bulletin

HVAT 1aa7
‘William: L. MeLean, President and Publisher, 1895-1931
PUBLISHED EVENING AND SUNDAY BY BULLETIN COMPANY.
30TH AND MARKET STREETS, PHILADELPHIA, PA, 19101

ROBERT McLEAN, Chairman of the Board

WILLIAM B, DICKINSON, Managing Editor = DONALD MecLEAN, Editor, Editorial Page
——$—$—$_ ee

DONALD W. THORNBURGH, Vice President — ALBERT SPENDLOV, E, Vice President-Business Manager
RAYMOND D, McGEE, Secretary and Treasurer — WILLIAM L, McLEAN, LI, Assistant Treasurer
JOSEPH G ELLIOTT, Assistant Business Manager — RICHARD W. CARPENTER, Advertising Director
LOUIS TRUPIN, Circulation Director — JAMES P, GRANT, Production Manager
BARRY URDANG, Promotion Manager — REGINALD E. BEAUCHAMP, Assistant tothe President

President and Publisher

 

Zp -B

THURSDAY,

i) Sig a gd Sg

15, 1966

 

Planning to Plan

‘The $26,000 federal grant made avail-
able to help the Delaware Valley Region-
al Planning Commission “define” its job
is a necessary first step. But it hardly ‘“‘re-
futes” all of the recent criticism of the
Commission by the Governors’ Interstate
Advisory Committee, as Commission Sec-
retary Lawrence G. Williams hastily in-
sisted it did,

Even when matched on a one-third
basis by state and local governments rep-
resented on the commission, the federal
grant will pay only for a very modest pro-
fessional and clerical staff—big enough,
pethaps, to draft some preliminary out-
lines of the Commission’s enormous tasks
but certainly not equipped to begin any
real nuts-and-bolts work.

More or less theoretical notions of
what the Commission should undertake
will be no substitute for a beginning on

concrete regional planning of land use
and resource development. If such plan-
ning is to have the necessary backing, if
it is to have an impact on the actual oper-
ations of government in the Delaware
Valley area, the fuller involvement of the
governors and other ranking officials of
the region, as proposed by the Advisory
Committee, will indeed be necessary.

Planning Commissions, local and
regional, have a long history of ivory tow-
er labors that too often result in plans
that have little orno chance of implemen-
tation because the responsible officials of
government are not involved. All the
good intentions and professional com-
petence in the world cannot make a po-
litically sterile or impotent organization
an effective force. The Commission will
truly come to life when this is recog-
nized,

 

‘ Some Lessons From the ‘Pros’

Professional politicians can learn sev-
eral things from the results of Tuesday’s
primary election balloting.

One, made obvious in the returns
from New Jersey’s Democratic Party pri-
mary, is that the war in Viet Nam is in-
deed an issue in congressional voting—
whenever anyone sets out to make it an
issue.

A slate of Democratic Party “peace
candidates” was defeated down the line
by party regulars who supported Presi-
dent Johnson’s conduct of the war-as
well as his continuing efforts to bring
about a negotiated peace. The Viet Nam
dissidents, who sought a U. S. Senate as
well as several U. S. House nominations,
fared badly—very badly—in the voting.

The lesson here, and one supported by
previous primary contests, is that while
the American voter may not be a Viet
Nam “hawk,” neither is he attracted by
pleas for the ee yitharawal of
U. S. troops, by demands mame

New Battle

Atlanta, Ga., is a part of the old South
well worth the consideration of northern-
ers. It has close to a half-million popula-
tion. It is the hub of transportation in that
quadrant of the country, as it was more
than a century ago. It is also a town which
seems really to believe that the Civil War
was a long while ago, and that what has
gone with the wind never blows back.

Atlanta, therefore, integrated its
schools with much less strain than else-
where in the Old Confederacy. This year
there was violence as school resumed,
because there are impassioned but sense-
less people in every city, and of every
race. Atlanta’s mayor, risking his neck
quite literally, went through the streets of
a Negro district reminding his fellow-At-
lantans of their duty to uphold the law.
An out-of-state Negro whom some would
describe as a demagogue was arrested

‘Kickoff might be a bad word for such:
things as the United Fund, since the last
thing that happens is that anybody gets
kicked. Everybody gets helped; contribu-

—-aifnalier inelidad

 

 

 

Twice Blessed

ate halt to all bombings or a cease-fire by
South Viet Nam and its allies.

The other lesson, and this one is to
be learned from the results in Minnesota,
is the danger of “over packaging” a po-
litical product with bright-young-man
wrappings.

Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-La-
bor Party leaders decided more than a
year ago that Governor Karl F. Rolvaag,
53, should be placed on the political scrap
heap. Rolvaag, these leaders reasoned,
lacked political “toomph’’ and had to be
replaced by someone younger, more at-
tractive. Thus, the Democratic-Farmer-
Labor endorsement went to Lt. Gov. A
M. (Sandy) Keith, 37, who is in the Rob
ert F. Kennedy image—including hair
styling.

The party leaders figured everythir
—except voter reaction. A tremendou
sympathy vote was generated for Rol-
vaag and carried him to renomination. It
left the party leaders alone with their
rappings,

  

   

of Atlanta

 

for- violation of a local law. But so was a YU
white man accused of wanton shooting of ,;
an Atlanta Negro. tHe
Both arrests make sense; the point be-
ing to uphold the law without partiality.
This Atlanta seems to be attempting to
do, much better than some of its back-
ward sister towns such as Grenada, Miss.,
where naked white power seems to have
the support of policemen who ought to be
ashamed to wear a badge; where the crip-
pling of children for the “sin” of being
black appears to be the accepted code.
Atlanta is the place to look, for At-
lanta is one of the most successful cities
in the South. Its culture and industry, and
its unusually articulate press have made
it a. leader. What Atlanta does in civil
rights will be copied, though perhaps
grudgingly. On the record so far, the vi-
gorous city in the red hills deserves the
mantle of leadership,

    
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    

 

figure was $7.85 per person, while the
Philadelphia average was $4.90.

Since then we have done better. But
what Mr. Seltzer had to say goes a long ¢

wav ton eynisin turk Ola---1-
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                    <text>-=
2
£LEE&amp;
7Z;_~th--~
~~
~~
~~
I
PARKHOTEL SCHOEN EGG
CH - 3818
GrindeJwald
/
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              <text>a LUFTPOST

PAR AVION VIA AEREA

Sa

         
 

  

(0 y/ we

PARKHOTEL SCHOENEGG
CH -3818 Grindelwald

 
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                    <text>Todesopfer
im Rassenkrawall
ATLANTA, 11. September (AP). Noch
bis in den Sonntagmorgen war die farbige Bevolkerung von Atlanta im amerikanischen Sildstaat Georgia in Aufruhr, nacbdem ein Negerjunge am
Samstagabend, wahrsdleinlich von Wei.Ben, erschossen und ein zweiter verletzt
worden war. Ein Polizeibeamter wurde
durch einen SchuJ3 in den Kopf ~etroffen, sein Zustand wurde nach einer Behandlung im Krankenhaus als zufriedenatellend bezeichnet. Nach den Beobacbtungen eines Anwohner$ wurden die
Schilsse auf die Negerjungen aus einem
vorbelfahrenden Wagen abgegeben, in
dem ein weiBer Mann und eine we!Be
Frau saBen. Eines ihrer Opfer, der 16jahrlge Hubert Vorner, war bel der Einlleferunl in ein Krankenhaua beretts
tot. Dem zweiten angeschossenen Jungen, dem 16jlihrigen Milton Wright,
ging es den Umstiinden entsprechend
gut. '
Wle aus Chikago gemeldet wfrd, 1st
der
amerikanische
Nazl-Anfilhrer
Rockwell am Wochenende in Chikago
festgenomrnen worden, ehe etwa hundert seiner Anhllnger mit Hakenkreuzfahnen durch ein Negerviertel von Chlkago marschierten, wobel es zu Krawallen kam. Die meisten von rund 1500
Farbigen, die den Zug der Wei.Ben durch
ihr Wohnviertel beobachteten, blieben
unbetelligt. Elnlge Male schleuderten sle
jedoch Steine und warfen Behlllter mit
Sllure auf die Nazis. Zwel Pollzisten
und sieben Fatbige wurden dabei verl~tzt.
Die Mltg)ieder des amerlkanlsdlen
Senats haben, wle aus Wasalngton gemeldet wlrd, durch Abwesenheit eine
Debatte des neuen jlmerikanischen
Bilrgerrecbtsgesetzes verhfndert, dessen
Paragraphen jede Dlskriminierung von
Farbigen beim Kauf von Hllusern oder
Mleten von Wohnungen untersagt. Die
ffir elne Debatte erforderlidle Anzahl
von 51 Senatoren ersdlien weder am
Donnerstag noch am Freitag Im Plenarsaal, so da.B die Debatte auf Montag vertagt wurde. Politische Kreise in Washington rechnen jedoch nicht damit, daB
sle an diesem Montag stattfinden kann.
Kleine Meldungen
Dean Rusk, der amerikanisdle AuJ3enmini91:er, hat am Wochenende das Walter-Reed-Krankenhaus, in das er am
vergangenen Dienstag mit einer Grippe-Erkrankung eingeliefert warden war,
wieder verlassen. Rusk will an diesem
Montag seine Arbeit wiederaufnehmen.
Eine Delegation des Bundestages unter der Leitung des CDU-Abgeordneten
Martin 1st in Pakistan eingetroffen, von
wo aus die Abgeordneten zu einer vierwochigen Reise durdl Asien, auch nach
Afghanistan und Indien, starten. (dpa)
EID Berlln-Treffen veranstaltet die
SPD vom 20. bis 23. Oktober; auf elner
Kundgebung werden im Spartpalast
Brandt, Erler und Wehner sprechen.
(F.A.Z.)
Montas, 1Z. September 1966 / Nr. 111
l'BANKl'UBTBB ALLGBMBUJB ZBITUNG
Sel&amp;e'
~ohe Wahlbeteiligung in Siidvietnam
Wilson lehnt a&amp;ikanisdte Forderungen ab
FORTSETZUNG UNSERES BERICHTES VON SEITE 1
,Weder Gewaltanwenduiig noch Mehrheitsregierung in Rhodesien
I
An seinem sechsunddreil3igsten Geburtstag am Freitag wuide ~ offensichtlich, da.B er das .Anit des Prlisidenten anstrebt. Dariiber ldnaus lie.B er a1s
Wahlsdllager zwei angesehene franzosische Geschiiftsleute in Saigon verhaften. Die Begrundung fur dieae Festnahme ist wen.lg ilberzeugend. Es beiBt
die beiden FraQZOsen blitten Millionen
Piaster an den Vietcong gezahlt. Da das
fast alle Geschliftsleute und auch manche Funktionlire in Saigon tun sollen,
biitte die Tatiacbe an sich kaum ausgereicht, Verhaftungen in der franzosisdlen Kolonie vomehmen zu milasen.
Von offlzieller $eite wurde jedoch behauptet, die Franzosen hiitten beabsichtigt, mit ihrer finanzfellen Unterstiltzung an c,ien Vietcong die Wahlen negativ zu ~influssen. Inzwisc:Jien sollen
drei weitere angesehene :franzosische
Bilr,er in Saigon verbaftet worden sein.
Politische Beobachter wollen wissen,
daB insgesamt vierzehn Franzosen auf
der Liate stehen, die festsenommen
werden sollen. Es wird befiirdltet, da.B
eine Art Franzosenpogrom vorbereitet wird. Unterrichtete 1'reiae sind sich
nicht im klaren, ob damit der latente
Fremdenha.B in Vietnam po,litisch geschilrt werden 1011 oder ob die Verhaftungen als Antwort der Regierung in
Saigon auf die Politik des Generals de
Gaulle in Sildostasien gedeutet werden
sollte. Von amerikanisdler Seite wird
zu dieser EntwicklUDI nocb gescbwiegen.
Die Tage der Wahlvorbereitung haben nach dem Will4'!1 der amerikani-
sdlen politischen Stellen ganz im Zeichen der sildvietnamesischen Regierung
stehen sollen. Jede fremde EinmischUDI
in innervietnamesische Angelegenheiten
wurde vennieden. Die amerikanischen
Truppen, deren Verlustquoten mittlerweile auf filnftausend Tote gestiegen
ist, haben zum Wahlwochenende eindeutig militarische Auftrage auBerhalb
der Stlldte und Dorfer erhalten.
General Westmoreland hatte Sildvletnam demonstrativ vetlassen und begab
sich auf eine Besuchsreise nach Korea.
Die Vereinlgten Staaten wollen die
Sildvletnamesen ennutigen, nacb Bildung der vertassunggebenden Versammlung biimen sechs Monaten eine
Konstitution auszuarbeiten, die eine
demokratische Regierungsform ermoglicht. Sie hoffen, auf die Dauer die offensldltliche politische Apathie der
Vletnamesen Uberwinden zu k6nnen.
Dazu bediirfe es nach Auffassung
amerikanischer Kreise des politischen
Geschicks der Regierung und zuslitzlidle
amerikanische Truppen. Man setzt darauf, daB letzten Endes die politische
Neugierde, das Interesse der Menschen
des Sildens, sich zu zeigen, dabei sein
zu. wollen, ilber alle Unann~keiten siegen wird. Die Wahlwnzi.ige mit
ihren offentlidlen Drachentanzen, die
Anteilnahme der Bevolkerung, wenn es
um eine offentliche politische Schau
ging und die Wahlbeteiligung am Sonntag haben Politiker zu optirnistiscben
Deutungen der nacbsten Zukunft kommen lassen.
Keio flan fur Truppenriickzug
Pzg. MOSKAU. Der sowjetismen
Presse kann man entnehmen, da.B
Parteidlef Bresdlnew dllS Politbilromitglied der Vietnamesis&lt;len Partei der
Werktiltigen, Le Tsdlan Ngu, in Gegenwart des Chefldeologen isuslow und des
filr soziallstisdle Lander zustiindlgen
Sekretllrs des Zentralkbmitees Andropow empflng. Er hatte bier vor Tagen,
wie es ausdrilcklfch hleB, auf der Durchreise nadl anderen osteurop!lisdlen
Uindem Halt gemacbt, wobel seine
Eigenschaft a1s stellvertretender Minlsterprisident und Leiter der Regierungswlrtsdlaftsdelegatlon hervorgehoben wurde. Wle verlaut,et, setzte er inzwischen die Reise nadi Budapest und
Prag fort, um dort uber einen Ausbau
der Hllfeleistung ffir Vietnam zu verhandeln.
Wie Agenturen aus:Moakau melden, hat
Nordvietnam am Samstag , abermalll die
Aufforderung des amerikanischen Prllsidenten Johnson abgelebnt, einen Zeitplan filr den Abzug der nordvietnamesischen Truppen aus Sildvietnam vorz\i!egen. Die Absage war in einer Erklllrung des pordvietnamesischen AuJ3enminist'eriums enthalten und bekrlftigte
die Bedingungen, deren Erfullung Hanoi
schon friiher als Voraussetzung fur
Friedensgesprliche genannt hatte. Johnson hatte angeboteg, die Vereinigten
Staaten wollten einen Zeitplan zur
Rilckfilhrung ihrer Streitkrafte aus
Sildvietnam unterbreiten, sobald Nordvietnam eine gleiche Verpflichtung eingehe.
Flupeas verloren
SAIGON, 11. September (AP). Die
amerikanischen Streitkriifte waren am
Wahlwochenende in Vietnam nur in der
Luft in groBerem Umfang in der Offensive. In der Morgendammerung kurz
nadl Ablauf einer vierstilndigen nachmltterniichtlichen Ausgangssperre filr
die sildvietnamesische Bevolkerung er6ffnete eine amerikanische Infanteriepatrouille etwa 40 Kilometer nordwestlidl von Saigon das Feuer auf einen
Ihnen verdlichtig erscheinenden Odlsenkarren. Bei Anbruch des Tages fand
man die vier Insassen, unbewaffnete
Zivillsten, darunter zwei Kinder, tot.
Bel einem Angriff auf eine nordvietnamesische Feuerstellung wurde am
spiiten Samstagabend zum ersten Mal
ein amerikanisches Flugzeug ilber ·der
entmilltarisierten Z.One abgeschossen.
Wie aus Kambodscha gemeldet wird,
hat die Regierung bekanntgegeben, daB
zwei Hubschrauber mit amerikanisdlen
Kennzeidlen am Mittwoch das Dorf
Sramar BD1egrlffen batten.
ho. LONDON, 11. September. Die
CommoltIWe8lth-Konferenz trltt an diesem MO\trtag mit der Antwort Wilsons
auf die afrikanisdlen Rhodesien-Forderungen it1 ihr kritismes Stadium. Nam
Andeutungen von unterrichteter •britisdler Seib:i wird Premierminlster Wilson nicbt mir die Gewaltanwendung ablehnen, s01Ddem auch die Forderung,
da.B Rhodesien seine legale UnabhAngigkeit ·our unter einer afrikanischen
Mehrheitsregierung erbalten so11.
Die Ablehnung der vdn Sambia und
anderen Commonwealth-Staaten geforderten Gewaltanwendung ist keine
Oberraschung. Wilson k6nnte sie in seiner Antwort an die Konferenz nicht zusagen, seD:&gt;st wenn er wollte, da er slch
verpflldltet hat, vor einer so einsdlneidenden A.nderung der britlschen Rhodesien-Politlk das Parlament aus den'
Ferlen zurilckzurufen.
Nidlt elmnal Sambia hat LI&gt;ndon vor
die ausschlieBliche Wahl gestellt: Gewaltanwendung oder Austritt Sambias
aus dem Commonwealth. PrAsldent
Kaunda hat die Gewal~nwenctuna als
das ra1'3dleste und simerste Mittel emp..
fohlen, um Smith auf die Knie zu zwingen. Falls die britische Regierung aber
ein anderes, gleicb sidleres und wenigsterrs Ahnlidl rasches Mlttel anzubieten
hat, so ist Sambia zum vorlAufigen Verzicht auf Gewallanwendung zu bewegen.
Sein Spredler auf der Commonwealth•
Konferenz, A u J 3 e ~ Kapwepwe,
ist aber nlcbt bereft, sich mit einem geschlckt formullerten, aber hoblen Rezept
abzufinden und zu intelligent, um einen
solchen Versuch nicbt zu durchschauen.
Wilson scheint die Forderung nacb in•
tensiveren Sanktionen unter Vorbehalten zu akzeptleren, aber nicbt die nacb
Unabbllngigkeit nur unter einer atrlkanischen
Mehrheiisregierung.
Diese
zweite Forderung wird von 17 unter den
22 Delegationen auf der Konferenz gebilligt. Er kanu und wird in seiner Antwort darauf binweisen, daS das Ziel
einer afrikan1scben Mehrheltsregierung
von der Labour-Regierung uneingeschrllnkt anerkannt w1rd, was audl mr
die konservative und die llberale Opposition gilt.
Es 1st elne der tundamentalen Beiiingungen der britiscben Reglerung in lhrer
Auseinandersetzung mit ~odesien, da.B
1jede neue Verfassung die unaufhebbare
Garantie der ungehinderten Entwlcklung, der afrikanisdlen Mehrheitsregierung erhalten muB. Aber zu keiner Zeit
hat Wilson oder einer seiner konservatlven Vorganger die Gewahrung der Unabhangigkeit von der vorherigen Bildung einer afrikanisdlen Regierung abhiingig gemadlt. Wie lange die Konferenzdebatte ilber die Antwort Wilsons
dauern wird, ist vollig offen.
•
Das Staatsbegrabnis Verwoerds
Rechtfertigung der Apartheid in der Tr,.uerrede '/. Antellnahme der Wel8en
PRETORIA, 11. September (AP). Unter der - Anteilnahme vor allem der
weiBen Bevolkeruni Siidafrikas 1st der
sildafrikattische Ministerpriisident Verwoerd, der am Dienstag das Opfer eines
Attentats geworden war, am Samstag
in einem Staatsbegrabnis in Pretoria
feierlldl zu Grabe getragen worden.
Etwa eine Viertelrnillion Menschen erwiesen ihm die letzte Ehre. Der gro.Be
Platz vor dem Halbrund der Regierungsgebliude war filr die Trauerfeier
in elne Kirdle unter freiem Himmel
verwandelt worden. Der schwarz und
purpur verkleidete Katafalk. darauf der
Sarg, mit der sildafrikanisdlen Flagge
bedeckt, stand unterhalb einer Kanzel,
voa der aus dei- Moderator der 'niederlAndisch-reformierten Kirche der KapProvinz, Gericlte, die Trauerpredigt
hielt. Sie wurde zu einem Bekenntnis
zu der Rassenpalitlk Verwoerds.
,,Wir haben den 'Menschen verloren,
aber seine Botsdlaft ist uns geblieben",
sagte Gericke. Die bleibende Botsdlaft
des Ermordeten sah der Geistliche in
der tlberzeugung, daB Gott in seiner
Weisheit die Rassen unterschiedlich gesmaffen babe, damit sich jede nach
ihren eigenen Anlagen innerhalb der
Mihajlov in Z,,dar
aus der Haft entlassen
F.A.Z. BELGRAD, 11. September. Der
jugoslawlscbe Dozent Mihajlo Mihajlov
1st am Wodlenende aus dem Geflngnis
der ~astadt Zadar entlaasen worden.
,,.Meine Mission lat beendet, gleichgQltlg,
ob lcb verurteilt werde oder nicbt", 88lte
lWhajlov. ,.Die Sache hat 1es1egt.• lllihajlov wlrd slc:h in Freiheit verteidiaen
k6nnen. Die Anklage gepn lhn taut.et
auf Verbreitun, fa1ac:her ,Informationen
und VerMfenfflc:hung verbotener ArtikeL Als er Anfang August ein Treffen
mit l'reunden vorbereltete, bei dem eine
opposltlonelle Zei"tsc:hrlft gegrilndet
werden sollte, war er verhaftet worden.
Man n1mmt an, daB es in den nlcbaten
zwei Wocheli zum Prozef3 kommen wird.
Mlhajlov tellte mit, da.B er ge,en die
Anklage kelne Elnwendungen erheben
werde. ,,Ea llbt nlcbts, w.o,ecen lcb Einsprucb erbeben Jdhmte•, saste lWhajlov.
,,Wenn 1~ verurtellt werde, wOrdeu die
Beh6rden zuceben, daB sie den Sozlallsmus mit einem Elllparteiensyatem iden•
~eren.• Mihajlov berlcbtete au8erdem, da8 seine geplante Zeitsc:hrlft demnlichst erscbeinen werde. Eine Druckerel
f(lr sie sei sdlon gefunden. ,,Alles ist
vorbereitet. Die Leute arbeiten daran,
und die erste Nummer wird demnllchst
herauskommen." Er selbst werde an der
ersten Nummer nicht mitarbeiten.
Die Zonen-Visa fiir Auslander
jn. LEIPZIG, 11. September. Filr auslandiscbe Touristen, die nam Mltteldeutschland fahren wollen, gelten ab
sofort erleidlterte EinreisebestimmUngen. In Zukunft soil das Einreisevisum
ohne weitere Formalitllten an den
Grenzubergangen zu erhalten sein. Es
mwrsen ledJglich ein 8llltller RetNpaD
vorgelegt und die vo.rherfge Buchung
einer Vollpension oder der Erwerb entspremender Gutscheine durch ein
Reisebiiro nachgewiesen werden. Eine
solche Buclwng kann audl direkt an
den Grenzilbergiingen vorgenommen
werden. Fiir Burger der Bunde&amp;republik gelten diese Erleichterungen
jedoch nidlt. Entgegen den ilblichen Gepftogenheiten sinm bei der Leipziger
Messe jetzt bei auslindisdlen Besucbern
schon bei einem eintlgigen Besucb
Zonen-Visa in die Passe eingestempelt
worden, obwohl normalerweise ein
Messeausweis genilgt hatte.
Grenzen ihrer eigenen kulturellen Tradition entwickeln konne.
In der ersten Reihe der Trauerversammlung saB der rhodesische Ministerprasichmt Smith in Begleitung eipes
Leibwiichters nicht in seiner Eigenschaft
als Regierungschef, sondern als personllcher Freund Verwoerds, wie die diplomatische Vertretung Rhodesiens betonte.
Getrennt von den iibrigen Trauergasten,
aber in unmittelbarer Nahe der Hinterbliebenen und der Kabinettsrnitglieder,
hatte eine kleine Gruppe von afrikanischen Hlluptlingen und Vertretem der
indischen Bev6lkerungsgruppe und der
Nordkoreas Vorschlag
Mischlinge Platz gefunden. Der wlchtigzuriickgewiesen
ste Hiluptl\ng war Kaiser Mantanzima,
Ministerprasident der Transkal, des
WASHINGTON, 11. September
ersten Bantustaates in Sildafrika.
Die Vereinigten Staaten haben den VorTausende saumten die Stra.Ben, als der schlag Nordkoreas zurElnberufung einer
Konferenz filr die LIS'Barg auf einer Geschiltzlafette von 38 internationalen
berittenen Polizisten, elf Panzerfahr- sung der Korea-Frage zurilckgewiesen.
zeugen und vierhundert Soldaten durch AnlaBlich des 18. Jahrestags der Grllndie Stra.Ben Pretorias zum alten Stadt- . dung der Volksrepublik Nordkorea hatte
friedhof geleitet wurde. An der Trauer- sich dernordkoreanische stellvertretende
feier am Grabe nahmen nur die Fami- Ministerprasident Kwang Kyup Kim dalienangehorigen, Staatsprasident Swart fiir ausgesprochen, alle Staaten, die am
und seine Frau, die Mitglieder des Kabi- Korea-Krieg beteiligt waren, zu einer
netts und enge Freunde der FamilieVer- Konferenz einzuladen, auf der die Problepr. des geteilten Landes erortert werwoerd teil
den sollten. Das amerikanische A,u.Benministerium erklkte 2t1 diesern Vot•
schlag, es bestiinderi Im Rahmen der
Verelnten Nationen PlAne filr die Wiedervereinigung des Lan'aes. Eine De1,le
Kdnferenz sel deshalb unn6tig.
.
en Herrlnmenschen
CUPn.
�Brandt, Erler urid Weliiier -sprechen.
(F.A.Z.)
.Johannes Dl""C'APaun, der PJ:isidant
der "Volkskammer", hat in Leiptig auf
einem Empfang fur eine guinesische
"Parlaments-Delegation"
die
sich
"sUindig welter vertiefenden Beziehungen zwischen der DDR und der Republik Guinea" gewilrdigt.
(F.A.Z.)
Todor Sdllwkpff, der bulgarische Ministerprtisident µnd Erste Sekretir der
Konµnunistischen Partei Bulgariens,
wird auf Einladung der franzosischen
Regierung am 10. Oktober zu einem
sechstiigigen offiziellen Besuch in
Frankreich eintreffen. (dpa)
In Berlin 1st der ,.Acbte Deutsche
Technikertag" der Deutschen Angestelltengewerkschaft eroffnet worden. 120
stirnmberechtlgte Deleglerte aus allen
Bundesliindern i:iehmen daran tell.
Die Devlaenhilfe-Verhandlunren zwischen der Bundesrepublik und Gro13britannien wero'en am Montag in Milnchen
fortgesetzt. (d~)
Der 'l&gt;eutldie Entwlcklunpcllenst in
Bad Godesberl bat einen jungen Berliner Techniker als 5000sten Bewerber
fiir eine Aufgabe in einem Entwicklungslantl registriert. (AP)
Blnem 11111ariadum Blaepaar und einem
25jiihrigen Arbeiter ist am Freita1 im
Burgenland die Flucht nacb Osterreicb
gelungen. (AP)
Paldatan and Malaysia haben fhre
diplomatischen Beziehungen wiederaufgeoommen. Diese Obereinkunft ist durch
die Vermittlung des Schahs von Persien
zustande gekommen. (UPI)
Zwischen ,,Schwarzer Machtu und we;J3en Herrenmenschen
Atlanta s-qmt auf den Weg der Vemunft zuriickzukehren / Sabina Lietzmann berimtet
~
Vor fiinf .'Jahren hat Priisident Kennedy der Stadt Atlanta Dank und Anerkennung fur die Wurde und Gesetzestreue ihrer Burger ausgesprochen,
die allen Gemeinden des SUdens zum
Vorbild dienen konnten. Hatte doch die
rassenbewul3tei bureerstolze Kapitale
des tiefen Sild'ens den Eintritt von Negerkindem auf bisher rein we113e hohere
Schulen trotz ingstlllier Erwartungen
schmerzlos und ohne Jwischenfall vollzogen, well Stadtv
ltung, Presse und
eine Vielzahl komm
ler Gruppen von
den Pfadfindern bis
r Handelskam-·
mer in idealetn Zu
enwirken die
Bev6lkerung Uber Mi te hin darauf
vorbereitet batten,
in das Unvermeidliche mit Einsi
zu f(lgen.
Es gab in Atlan
damals keinen
Skandal wie in and n Stldten. Auch
in den Jahren seith hat Atlanta sich
den Ruf einer liber n Stadt, ei,nsichtig regiert und zum nstruktiven Zusarnmenwirken 'W
--und farblier
Burger stets bereit,
rt. Atlanta
hat eine einfluBJ;eidle Zeltung unter
Leitung des Im gamen Lande bekannten und •chteten Redakteurs und
Leitartiklers MacGill, es hat
~ I U t 1e
Neief'Gmversitlten
in seiner Umgel&gt;UDI, und ea 1st seit
zwei Jahrzehnten Sitz einer regionalen
Organisation, in der Farbi1e und WeiBe
an der Verbesseranc des Negerschick·
sals arbeiten.
Seit den filnfziger Jahren 1st Atlanta
auch Hauptquartier von Martin Luther
Kings Organisation, der Southem
Christian Leadership Conference. Seit
1960 schliel31ich beherbergt es die Zen- '
trale noch eines weiteren Farblgenverbandes: des "Student non-violent Committes" (Gewaltloses Studenten-Komitee), das sich unter seinem neuen Fuhrer
Stokely C&amp;rmichael ,in diesem Sommer
zum Bannertrii1er der neuen Losung
.,Black Power" (Schwarze Macht) macht
und EinfluB ff1r die Schwarzen entwickelt hat.
Der ZusammenstoB zwischen llberalen und militanten Kriiften hat Atlanta
in der vergangenen Woche seine erste
Krise seit Iangem beschert. Ihre Bewiiltlgung ist fur Stadtverwaltung und Bevolkerung ein Test wie dama1s, 1961,
die vom Obersten Gericht befohlene Zulassunl von Negerkindem auf die hoheren Schulen. Der Zwischenfall entwickelte sich aus der Verfolgung eines
schwarzen mutmaBlichen Autodiebes
durdl einen Pollzisten, wobel der flilchtige Neger von dem Polizisten angeschossen wurde. Es follte ein StraBenaufruhr in dein sch,warzen Viertel.
Stokely C&amp;rmichael und andere Mitllieder seines ,.Kolhltees" erschlenen
mit Lautsprecl}erwagen auf der Szene
und wie,elten die BevcSlkerung zum
Angriff 1e1en die Polizei auf. Es entwickelte 1lch eine jener StraBenschlachten, die es diesen Sommer in vielen
amerikaniscben Stiidten gegeben hat,
mit Flaschen und Zie.gelsteinen als Wurf- Aufdruck ,,lch bin ein guter Nachbar"
geschossen. ~ Bilrrrme_y;ter Ivan Al- verteilen und an Haustilren kleie~ ein liberafer un allseits geacnteter' ben, damit ihre friedllchen Absichten
'Mann, fuhr in das Aufruhrgebiet, bekundend. An einer Stelle wurde bewollte vom Dach eines Polizeiwagens reits von Negern ein Werbetislh mit
aus die Bev6lkerung zur Ruhe mahnen
Literatur des Studentenkomitees verund wurde vom Auto in die Menge ge- brannt.
schleudert.
Weniger auf~iillig gehen andere
Mit Trlinengas trleb die Polizei Gruppen, darunter Geistliche, von
· schlie6lich die Massen auseinander, doch Haus zu Haus und arbeiten an einer
das Ereignis, das die einen eine rilde
Stra.Benschlacht, die anderen ,,Atlantas Bestandsaufnahme der farbigen Bescbwarze Revolte" nennen, wirkt nach: volkerung. Bilrgermeister Allen hat
Die Stadtverwaltung hat Carmichael alle arbeitslosen Neger aufgerufen,
der Anzettelung von Unruhen ange- sich im Rathaus um Stellen zu bewerklagt und ihn verhaften lassen. Man ben, die reichllch zur Verfilgung stilnden. Eine andere Farbigengruppe, ad
prilft, ob man, ihn nicht nach einem alten Gesetz des Staates der Verbreitung hoc gebildet, arbeitet mi~ der Behorde
aufrilhrerischer Schriften beschuldigen zusammen an der Beseitigung der iirg.
kann, ein Vergehen, das eine H6chst- sten Ubel in den Slums.
strafe von zwanzig Jahren Zuchth,aus
Aber auch die GemllBigten unter den
nach sich ziehen konnte.
I
Schwarzen haben beteits einen miliDie schwarze Bev6lkerung von At- tanten, sozusagen rechtsradlkalen Flillanta ist Uber das Ereignis fast mehr gel erhalten, der sicb, durch den Scbodt
betroffen als die weiBe. Carmichael der StraBensdllacht bescbll!unigt, aus
und sein Studentenkornltee, das nicht rund hundert schwarzen Sdlillem und
nur in der Theorie, sondern neuerdings .Studenten gebildet hat und erklllrt, es
auch in der Praxis die Gewaltlosigkeil sei nun an der Zeit, daB eine verantaus seinem Pro,ramm gestrlchen hat woi:tliche schwarze Jugend lich gegen
(Im Titel wird sie allerdinp nodl gtt- die These von der schwarzen Macht
filhrt), st6Bt bel dem wesentlldlttn ebebso Geh6r verschaffe wie 8egen
Tell der farbigen Burger von Atlanta weil3e Theorien von Herrenrassen. In
auf wenig Gegenllebe, ja auf heftfle der Gegnerschaft gegen schwarze ExAblehnung. In den letzten Tagen ha- trenµsten sind farbige und weil3e Burben sicb mehrere schwarze Nachbar- ger von Atlanta gemeinsam bemuht,
schaftsorganisationen gebildet, die in der Stadt und ihren Ruf a1s liberalste
den Negervierteln Schilder- mit dem Kapitale des Sudens zu erhalten.
Vereinten Nationen Pline ·
e
dervereinigung des Lan'aes. Eine
Kdn!erenz sei deshatb unnotig.
et1e1,1e
.
Prader bei Malinowski
F.A.Z. MOSKAU, 11. September. I&gt;er
6sterreichische
Verteidigungsminister
Prader ist zu einem einwpchigen Besuch
in Moskau ein,getroffen. Prader folgt
einer Einladung des sowjetischen Verteidigungsministers Malinowski, der ilm
auch auf dem FllJibafen Scheremetj~o
begrill3te. Der so.wjetische Verteia'igungsminister hatte vor einem Jahr
Wien besucht.
l'raaktar&amp;er Alllemelae ZeHaq
Fraakfa11er ZeHUDI
Verlag Frankfurter Allqemeine Zeltuni
GmbH. Verantwortlicb filr Polltlk: Dr.
Bruno Decbamps, Nacbrtcbten: Walter
Nowak, Dr. Hermann Ruellus, Deutscbland
und die Welt: Bernd Naumann, Feullleton:
Dr. Robert Held, Sport: Karlhelnz Vo1eJ.
Wlrtscbaft: Dr. Max Kruk, Dr. Ham Hoeper, Lokales: Rudolf Reinhardt, Chef vom
Dienst: Hugo V. Seib, Anzei.Jen: Kurt
Grothe, alle In Frankfµrt. Anzeigenpreisliste Ni. 24 vom 1. Januar 11188. - Monatsbezupprets 8,80 DM durcb TrAaer oder
durcb die Poat etnschl Zustell• und Yer-
-.OdgebClbren; 1m Strel1band 9,- DIUin-
land), 15,- DM (Aualand) elmdll Po11o.
W6chenUicb secbs Auapben. .... Drudt:
Frankfurter Soeletats-Drudterel GmbB. -
Gericbtsstand Fr,pkfwt
L 14. -
J'flr
UD•
verlangt elniesandte Manuskrlpte w1rd
kelae Gewlhr gelelstet. Aile Nac:bricbten
werden aacb bestem Wlssen, aber oboe
Gewlhr ver6ffentlidl\ - Ansduiften filr
Verlag und Redaktlon: 8 l"i'ankturt l, Postfacb MG, und Bellerbofstra8e 2-4. Postsdleckkonto: Frankfurt Nr. 913 Ill. Telearamme: EFAZET Frankfurt. Fermchrelber Of 1223. Tel Frankfurt (08 11) 2 88 11.
�</text>
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Seite 4

FRANEFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG

Montag, 12. September 1966 / Nr. 211

 

Todesopfer
im Rassenkrawall

ATLANTA, 11. September (AP). Noch
bis in den Sonntagmorgen war die far-
bige Bevélkerung von Atlanta im ame-
rikanischen Siidstaat Georgia in Auf-
ruhr, nachdem ein Negerjunge am
Samstaga wahrscheinlich von Wei-
Ben, erschossen und ein zweiter verletzt
worden war. Ein Polizeibeamter, wurde
durch einen Schu8 in den Kopf ‘getrof-
fen, sein Zustand wurde nach einer Be-
handlung im Krankenhaus als zufrie-
denstellend | ‘bezeichnet. Nath den Beob-
achtungen eines Anwo) wurden die
Schiisse auf die Negerj n als einem
vorbeifahrenden Wagen abgegeben, in
dem ein weiSer Mann und eine weife
Frau saBen. Eines ihrer Opfer, der 16-
jahrige pert Vorner, war bei der Ein-
lieferung in ein Krankenhaus bereits
tot, Dem zweiten angeschossenen Jun-
gen, dem 16jahrigen Milton Wright,
oe es den Umstiinden entsprechend
gu

Wie aus Chikago gemeldet wird, ist
der  amerikanische Nazi-Anfiithrer
Rockwell am Wochenende in Chikago
festgenommen: worden, ehe etwa hun-
dert seiner Anhainger mit Hakenkreuz-
fahnen durch ein Negerviertel von Chi-
kago marschierten, wobei es zu Krawal-
len kam. Die meisten von rund 1500
Farbigen, die den Zug der Weifien durch
ihr Wohnviertel beobachteten, blieben
unbeteiligt. Einige Male schleuderten sie
jedoch Steine und warfen Behalter mit
Shure auf die Nazis. Zwei Polizisten
una sieben Farbige wurden dabei ver-

etzt.

Die Mitglieder des amerikanischen
Senats haben, wie aus Washington ge-
meldet wird, durch Abwesenheit eine
Debatte, des neuen _ amerikanischen
Biirgerrech ndert, dessen
Paragraphen jede Discriminierng von
Farbigen beim Kauf von Hausern oder
Mieten von Wohnungen untersagt. Die
fiir eine Debatte erforderliche Anzahl
von 51 Senatoren erschien weder am
Donnerstag noch am Freitag im Plenar-
saal, so da@ die Debatte auf Montag ver-
tagt wurde. Politische Kreise in Wa-
shington rechnen jedoch nicht damit, dai
sie an diesem Montag stattfinden kann.

Kleine Meldungen

Dean Rusk, der amerikanische AuBen~
minister, hat am Wochenende das Wal-
ter-Reed-Krankenhaus, in das er am
yergangenen Dienstag mit einer Grip-
pe-Erkrankung eingeliefert worden war,
wieder verlassen. Rusk will an diesem
Montag seine Arbeit wiederaufnehmen.

Eine Delegation des Bundestages un-
ter der Leitung des CDU-Abgeordneten
Martin ist in Pakistan eingetroffen, yon
wo aus die Abgeordneten zu einer vier-
wochigen Reise durch Asien, auch nach
Afghanistan und Indien, starten. (dpa)

Ein Berlin-Treffen veranstaltet die
SPD vom 20, bis 23. Oktober; auf einer
Kundgebung werden im Sportpalast
Brandt, Erler und Wehner ares ,

GAZ:

Johannes ee der Prisident
a = hatin Leinzig-auf

alice

 

Hohe Wahlbeteiligung in Siidvietnam

FORTSETZUNG UNSERES BERICHTES VON SHITE?

An seinem sechsunddreifigsten Ge-
burtstag am Freitag wurde dann offen-
sichtlich, da8 er das Amt des Prasiden-
ten anstrebt. Dariiber hinaus lieB er als
Wahischlager zwei angesehene franzi-
sische Geschaftsleute in Saigon verhaf-
ten. Die eae fiir diese Fest-
nahme ist wenig ve ond. Bs heiBt

op pelle Say oT one
‘jaster an fetoohg es Da
fast alle Geschatftsleute ved auch man-

gereicht, Verhaftungen in der franzdsi-
schen Kolonie vornehmen zu miissen.
Von offizieller Seite wurde jedoch be-
hauptet, die Franzosen hatten beabsich-
tigt, mit ihrer finanziellen Unterstiit-
zung an den Vietcong die Wahlen. nega-
tiv zu béeinflussen, wischen. sollen
Sieh, ‘weitere angesehene franzisische

er in-Saigon verhaftet worden sein.

itische Beobachter wollen wissen,
dai insgesamt oa Franzosen auf
der Liste stehen, die festgenommen
werden sollen, Es wird befiirchtet, daB
eine Art Franzosenpogrom vorberei-
tet wird. Unterrichtete Kreise sind sich
nicht im Idaren, ob damit der latente
FremdenhaB in Vietnam politisch ge-
schiirt werden soll oder ob die Verhaf-
tungen als Antwort der Regierung in
Saigon auf die Politik des Generals de
Gaulle in Siidostasien gedeutet werden
sollte. Yon amerikanischer Seite wird
zu dieser Entwicklung noch. geschwie-

gen.
Die Tage der Wahlvorbereitung ha-
ben nach dem Willen der amerikani-

 

 

sehen politischen Stellen ganz im Zei-
chen der siidvietnamesischen Regierung
stehen sollen. Jede fremde Einmischung
in innervietnamesische Angelegenheiten
wurde vermieden. Die : en
Truppen, deren Verlustquoten mittler-
weile auf fiinitausend Tote gestiegen
ist, haben zum Wahlwochenende ein-
deutig militirische Auftriige auGerhalb
der Stiidte und Dérfer erhalten.

‘General Westmoreland hatte Siidviet-
nam demonstrativ verlassen und begab
sich auf eine Besuchsreise nach Korea.
Die Vereinigten Staaten wollen die
Siidvietnamesen ermutigen, nach Bil-
dung der verfassunggebenden Ver-
sammlung binnen sechs Monaten eine
Konstitution auszuarbeiten, die eine
demokratische Regierungsform ermog-
licht, Sie hoffen, auf die Dauer die of-
fensichtliche politische Apathie der

Vietnamesen fiberwinded kénnen.

Dazu bediirfe es nach Auffassung
amerikanischer Kreise des politischen
Geschicks der Regierung und zusitzliche
amerikanische Truppen. Man setzt dar-
auf, da letzten es die politische
Neugierde, das Interesse der Menschen
des Siidens, sich zu zeigen, dabei sein
zw wollen, tiber alle Unannehmlichkei-
ten siegen wird. Die Wahlumztige mit
ihren 6ffentlichen Drachentiinzen, die
Se cane ee der Bevélkerung, wenn es

eine éffentliche politische Schau
eee und die Wahibeteiligung am Sonn-
tag haben Politiker zu optimistischen
Deutungen der ndchsten Zukunft kom-
men lassen.

Kein Plan fiir Truppenriickzug

Pzg. MOSKAU. Der sowjetischen
Presse kann man entnehmen, daf
Parteichef Breschnew das Politbtiromit-
glied der Vie Partei der
Werktatigen, Le Tschan Ngu, in Gegen-
wart des Chefideologen Suslow und des
fiir sozialistische Lander zustandigen
Sekretirs des Zentralkomitees Andro-
pow empfing. Er hatte hier vor Tagen,
wie es ausdriicklich hie®, auf der Durch-
reise nach anderen osteuropiischen
Landern Halt gemacht, wobei seine
Eigenschaft als stellvertretender Mini-
sterprisident und Leiter der Regie-

schaftsdelegation hervorgeho-
ben wurde. Wie verlautet, setzte er in-
zwischen die Reise nach Budapest und
Prag fort, um dort tiber einen Ausbau
der Hilfeleistung ftir Vietnam zu ver-
handein,
Wie Agenturen aus Moskau melden, hat
Nordvietnam am Samstag abe die
Aufforderung des amerikanischen Pra-
sidenten Johnson abgelehnt, einen Zeit-
plan fiir den Abzug der nordvietname-
sischen Truppen aus Siidvietnam. vor-
zuflegen. Die Absage war in einer Erkla-
rung des nordvietnamesischen AuBen-
ministeriums enthalten und bekraftigte
die Bedingungen, deren Erfiillung Hanoi
schon friiher als Voraussetzung fir
Friedensgespraéche genannt hatte. John-
son hatte angeboten, die Vereinigten

    
 
 

 
   
   
 
 
   

 

 
   

 
  

 

Staaten wollten einen Zeitplan zur
Riickfiihrung ihrer Streitkrifte aus
Stidvietnam unterbreiten, sobald Nord-
pies eine gleiche Verpflichtung ein-
# J

Flugzeug verloren

SAIGON, 11. September (AP). Die
amerikanischen Streitkrifte waren am
Wahlwochenende in Vietnam nur in der
Luft in gréBerem Umfang in der Offen-
sive. In der Morgendimmerung kurz
nach Ablauf einer vierstiindigen nach-
mitternachtlichen Ausgangssperre fiir
die stidviemamesische Bevdlkerung er-
éffnete cine amerikanische Infanterie-
patrouille etwa 40 Kilometer nordwest-
lich von Saigon das Feuer auf einen
ihnen verdachtig erscheinenden Ochsen-
karren. Bei Anbruch des Tages fand
man die vier Insassen, unbewaffnete
Zivilisten, darunter zwei Kinder, tot.
Bei einem Angriff auf eine nordviet-
namesische Feuerstellung wurde am
spiten Samstagabend zum ersten Mal
ein amerikanisches Flugzeug tiber ‘der
entmilitarisierten Zone abgeschossen.

Wie aus Kambodscha gemeldet wird,
hat die Regierung bekanntgegeben, da
zwei Hubschrauber mit amerikanischen
Kennzeichen am Mittwoch das Dorf
Sramar angegriffen hatten.

Macht“

 

Wilson lehnt afrikanische Forderungen ab

-Weder Gewaltanwendung noch Mehrheitsregierung in Rhodesien

hé. LONDON, 11. September. Die
Commomwealth-Konferenz tritt an die-
sem Momtag mit der Antwort Wilsons
auf die afrikanischen Rhodesien-Forde-
rungen im ihr kritisches Stadium. Nach
Andeutungen von unterrichteter :briti-
scher Seite wird Premierminister Wil-
son nicht nur die Gewaltanwendung ab-
lehnen, somdern auch die Forderung,
daS Rhodesien seine legale Unabhan-
gigkeit nur unter einer afrikanischen

erung erhalten soll.

Die Abjiehnung der von Sambia und

anderen Commonwealth-Staaten fe-
forderten. Gewaltanwendung ist keine
Uberraschung. Wilson kénnte sie in sei-
ner Antwort an die Konferenz nicht zu-

sagen, selbst wenn er wollte, da er sich |
verpflichtet hat, vor einer so einschnei-/

denden Anderung der britischen Rho-

desien-Politik das Parlament aus den’

Ferien zuriickzurufen.

Nicht eimmal Sambia hat London vor
die ausschlieBliche Wahl gestellt: Ge-
waltanwendung oder Austritt Sambias
aus dem Commonwealth. Prasident
Kaunda hat die Gewal dung als
das rascheste und sicherste Mittel emp~
fohlen, um Smith auf die Knie zu zwin-
gen. Falls die britische Regierung aber
din anderes, gleich sicheres und wenig-
stens ahnlich rasches Mittel anzubieten
hat, so ist Sambia zum vorliaufigen Ver-
zicht auf Gewalianwendung zu bewegen.

 

Sein Sprecher auf der Commonwealth-

Konferenz, A _ Kapwepwe,
ist aber nicht. bereit, sich sich mit einem pe-
schickt fo aber hohien Rezept

abzufinden und zu patetigsss cm evens

solchen Versuch nicht zu

Wilson scheint die Forderung Serie. in-
-tensiveren Sanktionen unter Vorbehal-
‘ten zu akzeptieren, aber nicht die nach
Unabhangigkeit nur unter einer afrika-
nischen Mehrheitsregierung. Diese
zweite Forderung wird von 17 unter den
22 Delegationen auf der Konferenz ge-
billigt. Er kann und wird in Son icc Ant-
wort darauf hinweisen, daB das ‘Ziel
einer afrikanischen Stu SETe ene
von der Labour-Regierung unei
schrankt anerkannt wird, was auch
die konservative und die liberale Oppo-
sition gilt.

Es ist eine der fundamentalen Bedin-
gungen der britischen Regierung in ihrer
Rhodesien, dai

_Auseinandersetzung mit
‘jede neue Verfassung die unaufhebbare

Garantie der ungehinderten Entwick-
lung der a: en Mehrheitsregie-
rung erhalten mu&amp;. Aber zu keiner Zeit
hat Wilson oder einer seiner konservati-
ven Vorgénger die Gewihrung der Un-
abhangigkeit von der vorherigen Bil-
dung einer afrikanischen Regierung ab-
hangig gemacht. Wie lange die Konfe-
renzdebatte iiber die Antwort Wilsons
dauern wird, ist vollig offen.

Das Staatsbegrabnis Verwoerds
Rechtfertigung der Apartheid in der Trauerrede / Anteilnahme der WeiBen

PRETORIA, 11. September (AP). Un-
ter der Anteilnahme vor allem der
weiBen Bevélkerung Siidafrikas ist der

stidafrikanische Ministerprasident Ver~
woerd, der am Dienstag das Opfer eines
Attentats geworden war, am Samstag
in éinem Staatsbegraébnis in Pretoria
feierlich zu Grabe getragen worden.
Etwa eine Viertelmillion Menschen er-
wiesen ihm die letzte Ehre. Der grofe
Platz vor dem Halbrund der Regie-
rungsgebiiude war fiir die Trauerfeier
in eine Kirche unter freiem Himmel

‘yerwandelt worden. Der schwarz und

purpur verkleidete Katafalk, darauf der
Sarg, mit der siidafrikanischen Flagege
bedeckt, stand unterhalb einer Kanzel,
yon der aus der Moderator der nieder-
liindisch-reformierten Kirche der Kap-
Provinz, Gericke, die Trauerpredigt
hielt, Sie wurde zu einem Bekenntnis
zu der Rassenpolitik Verwoerds.

»Wir haber. den Menschen verloren,
aber seine Botschaft ist uns geblieben*,
sagte Gericke. Die bleibende Botschaft
des Ermordeten sah der Geistliche in
der Uberzeugung, daB Gott in seiner
Weisheit die Rassen unterschiedlich ge-
schaffen habe, damit sich jede nach

ihren eigenen Anlagen innerhalb der

und weiben Herrenmenschen

 

Grenzen ihrer eigenen kulturellen Tra-
dition entwickeln kénne.

In der ersten Reihe der Trauer-
versammilung saf der rhodesische Mini-
sterprisident Smith in Begleitung eines
Leibwachters nicht in seiner Eigenschaft
als Regierungschef, sondern als persén-
licher Freund Verwoerds, wie die diplo-
matische Vertretung Rhodesiens betonte,
Getrennt von den tibrigen Trauergisten,
aber in unmittelbarer Nahe der Hinter-
bliebenen und der Kabinettsmitglieder,
hatte eine kleine Gruppe von afrikani-
‘$schen Hduptlingen und Vertretern der
indischen Bevélkerungsgruppe und der
Mischlinge Platz gefunden. Der wichtig-
ste Haéuptling war Kaiser Mantanzima,
Ministerprasident der Transkai, des
ersten Bantustaates in Siidafrika.

. Tausénde sAumten die StraBen, als der
Sarg auf einer Geschtitzlafette von 38
berittenen Polizisten, elf Panzerfahr-
Zeugen und vierhundert Soldaten durch
die StraBen Pretorias zum alten Stadt-
friedhof geleitet wurde. An der Trauer-
feier am Grabe nahmen nur die Fami-
lienangehérigen, Staatsprasident Swart
und seine Frau, die Mitglieder des Kabi-
netts und enge Freunde der Familie Ver-
woerd teil.

 
  
   
 

 

dervereinigung
‘Konferenz sei deshalb unn6tig.

eerrenl uatite thar derernatin sparen.
‘Men cimmieee debe fn den nachsten
zwei Wochen zum Proze8 kommen wird.

Mello elite alt ab er gegen

 

jlov berichtete aufer-
dem, daft seine geplante ‘Zeitschrift dem-
nichst erscheinen werde. Eine Druckerei
fiir sie sei schon gefunden. Cee ist
vorbereitet, Die Leute arbeiten daran,
und die erste Nummer wird. demnfichst
herauskommen.“ Er selbst werde an der
ersten Nummer nicht mitarbeiten,

Die Zonen-Visa fiir Auslinder

jn, LEIPZIG, 11, September. Fiir aus.
Kindische Touristen, die nach Mittel-
deutschland fahren wollen, gelten ab
sofort erleichterte Einreisebestimmun-
gen. In Zukunft soll das Einreisevisum)
ohné weitere Formalititen an den
Grenziibergingen zu erhalten sein, Es
miissen lediglich ein giiltiger ReisepaS
vorgelegt und die vorherige Buchung
einer Vollpension oder der Erwerb ent-
sprechender Gutscheine durch ein
Reisebiiro nachgewiesen werden. Eine
solche Buchung kann auch direkt an
den Grenziibergingen vorgenommen
werden. Fiir Birger der Bundes-
republik gelten diese Erleichterungen
jedoch nicht. Entgegen den ublichen Ge-
pflogenheiten sinm bei der
Messe jetzt bei auslaindischen Besuchern
schon bei einem eintagigen Besuch
Zonen-Visa in die Pisse eingestempelt
worden, obwohl normalerweise ein
Messeausweis geniigt hatte.

Nordkoreas Vorschlag
zuriickgewiesen
WASHINGTON, 11. September (UPD.
Die Vereinigten Staaten haben den Vor-
schlag Nordkoreas zur Einberufung einer
internationalen Konferenz fiir die Lé-
sung der Korea-Frage zuriickgewiesen.
AnléBlich des 18. Jahrestags der Griin-

‘dung der Volksrepublik Nordkorea hatte

sich dernordkoreanische stellvertretende
Ministerpraisident Kwang Kyup Kim da-
fiir ausgesprochen, alle Staaten, die am
Korea-Krieg beteiligt waren, zu einer
Konferenz einzuladen, auf der die Pro-
pais des geteilten Landes erértert wer-
sollten, Das amerikanische Aufen-
Sinistevinn erklirte zu diesem Vor-
schlag, es besttinden im Rahmen der
Eben Nationen Plane fiir die Wie-
des Landes. Eine neue
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L al-c MacDougall
Mrs. Ro eCrtlubeDrive, N. E.
4 14 1
.
~~
.
~
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              <text>Mrs. Robert Leak MacDougall
4141 Club Drive, N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia

LQean Jw,

Vie to To coy
Foi Si 4
‘ se
Q02 AbhokL sn

Pn pened tes
ep
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                    <text>~L
'4 66 A8"2
.
NS143.215.248.55s ~Am NL PO Gf\EENVILL£ "ISS 14
P,AYOR IWAN AUEN JR
ATLA
nU:SS YO!J., IYAH NiO LCUtS£ F'OR YQOFI SJATESKANS.-fI~ ~ F'ORTIT·AJE
A.ICJ THANK QOO THAT ll!ROUQH YCU ATLANTA'S !NOOl'!INfASLE SPIR!T
LIVES ON. "AV 01..f\ AOl'URATIOH FC-R YOl,l AF'FOAO SOME C~fCRT ANC.
STR.9t'lTHEN YOUR PURPOSE IN Tl-1£S£ HCURS Or TRAVAIL
DMOTHY Al'f.) ~ILLY KI~,BRE.Ll..
5°'" .. "'---
.l .
1270
(1•51)
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                    <text>tov cock.Us or to hurl anarchistic
JOHN S. KNIGHT, Publisher
Ky's generals can change any part of
JAMES L. KNIGHT, President
LEE HILLS, Associate Publisher
ALVAH H. CHAPMAN, Jr., Gentr•I M.n•oa•r
DON SHOEMAKER, Editor
JOHN McMULLAN, EHcutive Editor
GEORGE: BEEBE, Senior M•n•9ln9 °Edltor
.JOHN D. PENNEKAMP, Asiociate Editor
LARRY JINKS, M.n19ln9 Editor
ARTHUR J.• GUCKER, luslne11 M.a•,a•r
Published Dally 11 I Herald Pl111, Miami, Florida 33101
2-K
Sunday, September I I, 1966
Time For A Moral Upturn
It's Only Natural
A Sag In LBJ's Popularity?
By HOWARD K. SMITH
THERE ARE a great
many things the President
might do about his sagging
stock on the opinion pons.
Probably the single most
useful rcccur3e would be to
shrug it off with a little philosophy.
Measured by the standard
of most of his predecessors, .
he is not doing nearly as
poorly as the polls or the
Washington press corps suggest. But corrosive criticism
and bouts with popular disillusion are almost non-constitutional requisites for the
job. And past examples suggest the present time is about
right for pop11lar favor to
reach for bottom.
It was within months of
FDR's 1936 landslide victory
that his stock began to sink,
beginning with his ill-fated
court reform and ending
with the ensuing and disastrous off-year election of
1938. It was about two years
after Harry Truman's stun. ning upset triumph of 1948
that his poll rating attained
what is still the record low .
for Presidents - - 26 per
cent. In 1962, John Kennedy's popularity enabled his
party to confound the tradition that the in-party always
loses in off-year elections
and win a net gain of seats
in Congress ; yet a year later
his influence was so low that
his legislative program had
completely jammed on Capitol Hill.


 * *


THE TROUBLE is, we
still personalize our complaints, and what better person to blame than the one
whose actions fill a third of
the average front page each
day and whose face appears
on television more often that
W a It er Cronkite's? Also,
when people give a man a
spectacular triumph they
also unconsciously hang expectations on him that no
human can fulfill. So, comes
the pendulum swing from
charisma to disenchantment.
In this situation even the
most trivial features of a
against a brick wall. You
had to get that bus started
again, and you had to get it
through that brick wall but how?" There are not
many preced.ents for the
skill with which Johnson got
it started and through the '
wall.
The troubles in our cities
cannot be shrugged off. They
demand prompt and vigorous
remedy. Still, in a real sense
they are the noises of progress. It is true that desperate people don't make revolutions; it is rather people who


 *


WITH voting-booth per- have had a whiff of success
President are picked at. Not s p e c t i v e, which swallows a'nd felt the first flow of demlong ago I read a list of scath- near-up wrinkles in long- ocratic power into their spiring comments about the trend contours, Mr. John- its.
P r e s i d e n t on everything son's record cannot but apThe economy's main troufrom his absence of style and pear inordinately impressive. ble is the threat of "overhis cornball mannerisms to His immediate predecessor's heating." How much more
his vulgar jokes and lack of slogan was, get the country welcome a problem that ls
dignity in public. At the end moving. But when Kennedy than the way the motor went
it was revealed that not died all had stalled. John- cold in three recessions in
Johnson but Abraham Lin- son's job was, in Pierre Sal- the eight Eisenhower years.
coln had been the butt of inger's words, "about like Then we shuddered at Allen
these comments by his con- taking over the driver's seat Dulles's announcement that
of a bus that had run up our economic growth rate
temporaries.
was but a fraction of Russia's. Now, our growth rate
~ ~ ~ " ' - ~ , 0 1 ° ! &amp; ' 1 ' ' , ; ~ ~ " ' ~ ~ ' i &amp; , ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ has simply traded places
~
~ with Russia's.
Among the comforts of a
philosophical attitude is the
observed fact that people
often tend to say one thing
when airing views that won't
affect national actions, and
to behave differently in that
periodic moment of truth in
the voting booth. As a friend
of mine who hated Truman
said when I asked why he
did not mark his ballot for
Dewey, "Hell, I was on 1 y
talking then; now I'm voting."





~
Potomac Fever
~
~0
George Wallace says
0, LBJ can't buy Alabama





,








~
~
~
I
~
~
fii~
I
~
~
~~
~
for $30 million in federal
aid. That's the kind of
talk that's going to bring
on price controls.


 *






Orbiter is still circlin,g
the moon, looking for
Apollo landing sites. Nobody's been there yet, and
already it's hard to find a
parkmg spot.


 * Tarzan




Television's
has
a dislocated shoulder, a
~ broken rib, and two lion
§%
~ bites. That's awful - in
i that costume every little
w


~ band-aid shows.


it
~




o/·:






~;
~%
?1
~·
&amp;ft,


 * *


No wonder LBJ wants
everybody to start saving
water. He figures Congress has been pumping
16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)
too much of it into his
Great Society bills.


 * *


The prisoners' art sale
at Leavenworth was only
partly successful. Some
artists wanted to sen engra\[ings, but Secret Service took away their
plates.


 * *


Cambodians went all
out to make De Gaulle
feel at home. They staged
a pageant showing how it
was 2,000 years ago, when
god-kings ruled the land.


 * *


A British worker won
$974,000, tax free, on a
51-cent football pool ticket. No ruling yet whether
he can claim the 51 cents
as a business expense.
JACK WILSON
16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)143.215.248.55
~
~
~
~;;;
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
~
!
~
fii
~
~
~
I
~
1ij
~
fii
~
~
1fi
~
fii
~
~
~
~


 * *


THE PRESIDENT'S weakness is said to be foreign af 0
fairs. Yet the intervention in
the Dominican Republic, so
fiercely assailed at the time
(by this reporter among others,) turned out pretty well.
In a year of our really resisting in Viet Nam, the
m o o d of all Asia has
ch a n g ed. The assumption
that China would inevitably
come to dominate the continent has been de-fused, and
a kind of spiritual rebellion
against Peking's influence is
spreading. In fact, so disastrous has been the year for
China that we have a new
fear that she may resort to
irrational actions to try to
rescue her prestige.
The President has to face
the fact that vigorous Presidents don't get an even
break. Since he insists on
rem.ammg in that condition,
it is going to be tough, at
least until election time.
The Constitution of the United
States was documented and ratified
in 1789. It was conceived and dedicated in liberty by men of integrity who
felt that every person should 1be guaranteed the right to the pursuit of
happiness, liberty and the freedom
from fear.
With those beautiful sounding
words ringing in our ears, many of
us stupidly plunk ourselves down in
an easy chailt, prop up our feet as we
w11tch television and turn the reins
of our beloved democracy over to the
gangsters, the pornographic deale,r s
and the Uqoor lords. We feel we do
not need to trouble our pretty, soft
heads about the erosion of our country's morals, nor worry about the
swift increase in violenee and crime
or the sloshing of our people in alcoholic lbeverages.
We anesthetize our brains by telling ourselves that we are merely
enjoying the fruits of our forefathers' labors and thait everyone has the
right to do as he pleases. But I am
of the opinion that we shall awaken
suddenly to find we have sold our
birthrights to the unprincipled and
the underworld characters who are
fast siphoning off our nationirl integrity and strength.
The mor~lity of America has declined to a point of alarm. We may
disapprove and be disturbed by the
downward trends of our nation, but
when are we .going to be sufficiently
alarmed to rise up and demand our
rights as citizens who would like to
be able to step outside our doors in
safety, or enjoy a peaceful walk in
the park wiithout · being accosted by
some crazy, trigger-happy drunk or
one who has been "turned-on" by
LSD?
'What is it going to take in the
way of a national calamity to awaken us from our lethargy to the dangers which are threaitening our peace
and security? How long can a loving
God be patien,t with such an ungrateful, slothful and rebeHious people?
How long can He spare our country
from utter destruction and annihila-
Sign Your Name
Letter, to the Editor
must bear the writer', name
and address. The use of ini·
tials or pen-names a, signa•
t11res will eliminau: a letter
from consideration for pub•
lication. All letters are aubject to condenaation by ,he
editor,.
tion or keep us from being taken
captive by an enemy nation?
To those "who care enough": We
will get up from our easy chairs and
declare war on all of the menaces
that are threatening our very existence as a free nation and put some
teeth in our laws and demand our
lax and soft-hearted judges to express their convictions via stiff punishments for those who are robbing
us of our guaranteed American
rights.
MAURINE CLEMENTS
What Is Troubling
Glum Schoolboys?
On the editorial page of this
morning's Herald there i.s a photograph of some 50-odd young schQOl
children. Forty-five of these are
clear enough to reveal facial expressions. Of •t hat 45 only six are smiling. And these six are girls.
There must be some message or
lesson in this phenomenon, but I do
not know what it is.
MRS. E. LOCKARD ROW
•
Bob Kennedy
Rates Applause
I read with great astonishment
The Herald's editorial that Sen. Robert Kennedy should apologize to Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles.
Mayor Yorty did nothing to remedy the problems of the Negro community in the Watts section. When
Kennedy asked him about the conditions in Watts, Yorty replied that
Kennedy should stick to his job as
senator.
This country wonders why there
', unrest and resentment in the big
cities. It seems to me that these
apathetic mayors like Yorty, who
care nothing about the plight of people in ghettos, are the ones to blame.
Sen. Kennedy, who speaks up
against a person like Yorty, should
be applauded, not asked to apologize.
HARVEY LEVIN
Defends England
As Our True Ally
Isn't it about time you put an
answer in this column to the everlasting slurs on England? We haven't
any quarrel with England. I say that
she and Australia are the only true
allies we have in the entire world
regardless of our differences in Suez
and Viet Nam.
The mention of LBJ waging war
against ' the British to capture the
Irish-American vote as one writer to
your column suggested is asinine; he
might lose the English-American
vote.
We never hear of them, yet as I
read our early American history it
appeared to me that the majority of
our early settlers and American patriots were English or of English
forefathers. They quickly and truly
became what we are so boastful of,
100 per cent American, without a
prefix, and by now their descendants
must truly be legion, ·and still without a prefix.
LIONEL D. LUSARDI
Stuart
•
Florida Milk
Twice As High
Your story on the recent increase
in the price of milk indicates that
further increases may be expected.
You naturally deal with conditions in
Florida, and explain in some detail
why ,t he increases arc necessary.
· The price of milk is of real concern to .most peop!C'. Even before the
recent milk price increa.,es, consumers in Florida were paying substantially more than in the North. Right
now, for example , the retail price of
milk in Indiana runs from 61 to 69
cents per gallon. In Miami we are
paying this much for a half gallon.
Certainly production costs in Indiana, where heated barns are required for the winter months, are as
great as in Florida.
No one has even tried to explain
why the differential.
M. E. RATTS
The Bible
Tells Us
THE HEAVENS declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth his handiwork.
Day unto day uttereth speech,
and night unto night showeth knowledge.
,
There is no speech nor langua11:e
where their voice is not heard.
PSALM 19
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              <text> 

The Miami Herald

JAMES L, KNIGHT, President
ALVAH H, CHAPMAN, Jr, General Manager
GEORGE BEEBE, Senior Managing Editor
LARRY JINKS, Managing Editor ARTHUR J, GUCKER, Business Manager

JOHN S. KNIGHT, Publisher

LEE HILLS, Associate Publisher
DON SHOEMAKER, Editor
JOHN D. PENNEKAMP, Associate Editor

JOHN MeMULLAN, Executive Edifer

Published Daily at | Herald Plara, Miami, Florida 3310] = =

  
  
 
  
 

 

 

2-K

 

Sunday, September | 1, 1966

 

 

 

Its Only Natural

 

A Sag In LBJ 5 Popularity?

By HOWARD K. SMITH

THERE ARE a= great
many things the President
might do about his sagging
stock on the opinion polls.
Probably the single most
useful receurse would be to
eshfug it off with a little: phi-
losophy.

Measured by the standard

of most of his predecessors, ,

he is not doing nearly as
poorly as the polls or the
Washington press corps sug-
gest. But corrosive criticism
and bouts with popular dis-
illusion: are. almost non-con-
stitutional requisites for the
job, And past examples sug-
gest the present time is about
right for. popular favor to
reach for bottoni.

It was within months of
FDR's 1936 landslide victory
that his stock began to sink,
beginning with his ill-fated
court reform and ending
with the ensuing and disas-
trous off-year election of
1938. It was about two years
after Harry Truman's stun-
‘ning upset triumph of 1948
that his poll rating attained

what is still the record low. -

for Presidents — 26 per
cent. In 1962, John Kenne-
dy's popularity enabled his
party to confound the tradi-
tion that the in-party always.
loses. in off-year elections
and win a-net gain of seats
in Congress; yet a vear later
his influence was so low that
his legislative program had
completely jammed on Capi-
tol Hill.

%.¥ rk

THE TROUBLE is, we

still personalize our com- 7

plaints, and what better per-
son to blame than the one
whose actions fill a third of
the average front page each
day and whose face appears
on television more often that
Walter Cronkite's? Also,
when people give a man a
spectacular triumph they
also unconsciously hang ex-
pectations on him that no
human can fulfill, So, comes
the pendulum swing from
charisma to disenchantment,
In this situation even the

  

    

most trivial features of a ;

 

President are picked at. Not
jong ago I read a list of scath-
ing comments about the
President on everything
from his absence of style and
his: cornba]| mannerisms to
his vulgar jokes and lack of
dignity in public. At the end
it was revealed that not
Johnson but Abraham Lin-
coln had been the butt of
these comments by his con-
temporaries.

WON NNNAMA AA Si www

George Wallace says
LBJ can't buy Alabama
for $30 million in. federal
aid. That's. the kind of
talk that’s going to bring
on price controls.

~~ *&amp; *
Orbiter is still circling
the moon, looking for

Soke SSS

Apollo Janding sites. No-
body's been there yet, and
already it's hard to find a
parking spot.

Se ee

Television's Tarzan has
a dislocated shoulder, a
broken rib, and two lion
bites. That's awful — in
that costume every little
band-aid shows,

* Kk *

No wonder LBJ wants
everybody to’ start saving
water. He figures Con-
gress has been pumping

 
  

‘near-up wrinkles in

Potomac Fever

Among the comforts of a
philosophical attitude is the
observed fact that people

‘often tend to say one thing

when airing views that won't
affect national actions, and
to behave differently in that
periodic moment of truth in
the voting booth. As:a friend
of mine who hated Truman
said when I asked why he
did not mank his ballot for
Dewey, “Hell, IT was only
talking then; now I'm: vot-
ing.”

x *« *

WITH voting-booth per-
spective, which swallows
long-
trend contours, Mr. John-
son’s record cannot but ap-
pear inordinately impressive.
His immediate predecessor's
slogan was, get the country
moving. But when Kennedy
died all had stalled. John-
son’s job was, in Pierre Sal-
inger’s words, “about like

ing over the driver's seat
of a bus that had run up

too much of it into his
Great Society bills,
tk vk ok

The prisoners’ art sale

at Leavenworth was only

partly ‘successful. Some

artists wanted to sell en-

gravings, but Secret Ser-

 

vice took away their
plates.

7 kK) ok
Cambodians went all

out to make De Gaulle
feel at home. They staged
a pageant showing how ii
was 2,000 years ago, when
god-kings ruled the land.
* &amp; ke
A British worker won
$974,000, tax free, on a
5i-cent football pool tick+
et. No ruling yet whether
he can claim the 51 cents
as &amp; business expense.
JACK WILSON

   
 
   
     
 

 
 

      
    
    
    
     
       
 
     
      
 
     

      
    
      
     
    
   

against a brick wall. You
had to get that bus ey
again, and you had to get it —
through that brick »
but how?” There al 5a
many precedents for the
skill with which Johnson got
it started and through the
wall.

The troubles in: ae foe
cannot be SauEeSG off. They
demand prompt and yiOEDO
remedy. Still, in a real sense
they are the noises of prog-
ress. It is true that desper-
ate people don’t make revolu-
tions; it is rather people who |
have had a whiff of success
and felt the first flow of dem-
Ev power into their spir-

The s main otrou-
ble is the threat ‘of “over-
heating.” How much more

_—

 

 
 

welcome a problem that is
than the way the motor went

 
    

the dee Eisenhower ye

Dulles's ann that
our economic growth rate
was but a fraction of Rus-
sia’s. Now, our growth rate —
has
with Russia's.

* OF Tk
THE PRESIDENT’S weak-
ness is said to be foreign af=

 

 

the Dominican ‘Republic, 50:
fiercely assailed at the time
(by this reporter among oth-
ers,) turned out pretty well.
In a year of our really re-
sisting in Viet Nam, the
mood of all Asia has
changed, The assumption
that China would inevitably
come to dominate the co!
nent has been — and
a kind of spiritual ic
against Peking’s “influence is
spreading, In fact, so disas-
trous has been the year for
‘China that we have a new
fear that she may resort to
irrational actions to try to
rescue her prestige. ,
The President has to face
the fact that vigorous Presi-
dents don’t get an even
break, Since he insists on
remaining in that condition,
it js going to be tough, at
least until election tin time.

 

 

 

 

  

ntion in

  

  

- The Constitution of the United
States was documented and ratified
in-1789. It was conceived and dedicat-
ed in liberty by men of integrity who
felt that every person should be guar-
anteed the right to the pursuit of
happiness, liberty and the freedom
! = fear. "7
With those beautiful sounding
words ringing in our ears, many of
us stupidly plunk ourselves down in
i ‘ig, prop up our feet as we

watch television and turn the teins
of ae beloved democracy over to the

nographic dealers
and the i liquor 5
pee de ab ‘to trouble our pretty, soft

 

 
  
 
   
  
 

out a erosion of our coun-

 
 
  

_ing vate that we are merely

wg the fruits of our forefath-
s and: that: jeveryone has the

opinion that we shall awaken
enly to find we have sold our

“Pirthrignts to the unprincipled and

they underworld characters who are
siphoning off: our national integ-
ay, and strength. —
The morality of America has de-

Then we shuddered at Allen ee ems

 

‘ove and be disturbed by the
amore trends of our nation, but
c are we zoing to be sufficiently
alarmed to rise up and demand our

 

simply traded places — rights as citizens who would like to

be able to step outside our doors in
safety, or enjoy a peaceful walk in
the park without’ being accosted by
‘some crazy, trigger-happy drunk or
‘one who has been ‘turned-on” by
LSD?

What is it going to take in the

 

way of a national calamity to awak-'
en us

 

s from our lethargy to the dan-
gers a ohieh are threatening our peace
and security? How long can a loving
God be patient with such an ungrate-
ful, slothful and rebellious people?
How long can He spare our country
from utter destruction and annihila-

  

 

Sign Your Name

Letters to the Editor
‘must bear the writer’s name
and address. The use of ini-
fials or pen-names as signa-
tures eliminate a letter
from consideration for pub-
lication. All letters He sub-
ject to condensation by the
editors,

 

 

 

Time For A Moral Upturn

tion or keep us from being taken
captive by an enemy nation?

To those “who care enough”: We
will get up from our easy chairs and
declare war on all of the menaces
that are threatening our very exis-
tetice as a free nation and put some
teeth in our laws and demand our
lax and soft-hearted judges to ex-

‘press their convictions via stiff pun-

ishments for those who are robbing
us of our guaranteed American
rights,

MAURINE CLEMENTS

 

 

What Is Troubling
Glum Schoolboys?

On the editorial page of this
morning’s Herald there is a photo-
graph of some 50-odd young school
children. Forty-five of these are
clear enough to reveal facial expres-
sions, Of that 45 only six are smil-
ing. And these six are girls.

There must be some message or
lesson in. this phenomenon, but I do
not know what it is.

MRS. E. LOCKARD ROW

Bob Kennedy
Rates Applause

IT read with great astonishment
The Herald's editorial that Sen. Rob-

ert Kennedy should apologize to May-

or Sam Yorty of Los Angeles,

Mayor Yorty did nothing to rem-
edy the problems of the Negro com-

munity in the Watts section. When
Kennedy asked him about the condi-
tions in Watts, Yorty replied that
Kennedy should stick to his job as
senator.
This country wonders why there
*s unrest and resentment in the big
cities, It seems to me that these
apathetic mayors like Yorty, who
eare nothing about the plight of peo-
ple in ghettos, are the ones to blame.
Sen. Kennedy, who speaks up
against a person like Yorty, should
be applauded, not asked to apologize.
HARVEY LEVIN

  

 
 
  
 
 
   
  
      
   
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
   
  
   
 
  
 
 
  
   
   
 
   
       
     
     
 
  
  
   
     
   
 
   
   
      
        

Defends England
As Our True Ally

Isn't it about time you put an
answer in this column to the everlast-
ing slurs on England? We haven't
any quarrel with England. I say that
she and Australia are the only true
allies we have in the entire world
regardless of our differences in Suez
and Viet Nam.

The mention of LBJ waging war
against ‘the British to ¢apture the
Irish-American vote as one writer to
your column suggested is asinine; he
might lose the Inglish-American
vote. G

We never hear of them, yet as T
read our early American history it
appeared to me thal the majority of.
our early settlers and American pa-
triots were English or of English
forefathers. They quickly and truly
became what we are so boastful of,
100 per cent American, without a
prefix, and by now their descendants
must truly be legion, and still with-
outa prefix,

LIONEL D. LUSARDI
Stuart

Florida Milk
Twice As High

Your story on the recent increase
in the price of milk indicates that.
further increases may be expected,
You naturally deal with conditions in
Florida, and explain in some detail
why ithe inereases are necessary.

The price of milk is of rea] con-
cern to most people. Even before the
recent milk price increases, consum-
ers in Florida were paying substan-
tially more than in the North, Right
now, for example, the retail price of
milk in Indiana runs from 61 to 69
cents per gallon. In Miami we are
paying this much for a half gallon,
Certainly production costs in Indi-
ana, where heated barns are fe-
quired for the winter months, are as
great as in Florida.

No one has even tried to explain
why the differential.

M, E. RATTS

ie Bible
ells Us

THE HEAVENS declare the glo-
ry of God; and the firmament show-
eth his handiwork.

Day unto day uttereth speech,
and night unto night showeth knowl-
edge.

There is no speech nor language
where their voice is not heard.

PSALM 19

 

 

        
 
      
    
       
        
        
 
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                    <text>~!J!IJ!Jl]!!!li!!!l!!lii~
16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)~liit~~"16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)~r,r,K~~I
~
j
~
143.215.248.55 ~ ~ ~ ~
~
~~'*'143.215.248.55 16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)
!16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)143.215.248.55 16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)
iii
.
i&lt;i
Co-Ordinated But Far From Non-Viol~nt
.
--143.215.248.55
16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)143.215.248.55 16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)
~
!Atlanta Riots Unmask Agents Of Anarchy I
~
~
the new constitution unless twothirds of the constituent assembly
objects. This means the junta could
control the assembly with a third of
the votes plus one, or 40 votes.
Carmichael &amp; Co.:
THE RECENT riots in Atlanta
offer convincing evidence that most,
if not all, of the racial violence in our
large cities has been organized and
led by a small
minority bent
upon the des t r u c t i o n of
our society.
My authority
for this statement is Ralph
McGill, publisher of The A:tlanta Constitution,
and long a moving and militant force for
Knight
e q u a 1 treatment of the Negro citizen as provided by law and the Constitution of the
United States.
McGill places responsibility for
the Atlanta disturbances squarely
upon the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (Snick) and its
leader, Stokely Carmichael. Snick,
according to McGill, has no more
than 300 members. These have been
the agents of anarchy in Watts, New
York, Chicago, Cleveland and other
major cities.
Snick's beginnings were auspicious. Its early student leaders
were motivated by high dedication to
the civil rights cause. Now the John
• Lewises and other responsibles are
out. Control of Snick is held by the
• extreme radicals, of which Carmichael is the dominant figure.
As McGill says, Snick is no longer
• a civil rights organization but an
• anarchistic group which is openly
and officially committed to the destruction of existing institutions.
Though small in membership,
Snick appeals to all haters of the
• white man. Its slogans of defiance
intrigue the very young as was
shown in Atlanta where the mob was
largely composed of youngsters in
the 12-.to-18 age range.
There appears to be no question
but that Snick's funds are supplied
from abroad. One of its lawyers is a
registered Castro agent. Its agitators
shout Havana slogans to the effect
So despite efforts of the Viet
Cong to disrupt the election by act,
of violence against those who participate, the outcome is assured. It will
be acclaimed in Washington and Saigon as a triumph for representative
government.


 * *


Check The Facts
that we must live through violence.
"Black Power" is but the rallying
cry.
IT IS, of course, a first tentative
step in that direction. But lest we
attach too much significance to the
election returns, J:hese facts should
be kept in mind.


 * *


A Stand-Up Mayor
1. The balloting is not a test be-
FORTUNATELY for Atlanta, it
has a mayor who confronted the mob
with rare courage. Though physically
manhandled and taunted! with shouts
of "white devil," Mayor Ivan Allen
Jr. remained upon the scene until the
crowd had been dispersed.
Mayor Allen gave short shrift to
charges of police brutality. "I saw
plenty of brutality," he said, "but it
was all directed against police officers." At his press conference, Mayor
Allen stated that "If Stokely Carmichael is looking for a battleground,
he has created one, and he will be
met in whatever situation he
chooses."
Atlanta's Negro community leaders were quick to decry the rioting
and violence. The Atlanta Summit
Leadership Conference, a Negro organization, denounced both Snick and
Carmichael, while calling for constructive ,measures designed to alleviate problems which directly concern
the Negro.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Executive Director Roy Wilkins of the
NAACP and Whitney Young, who
heads the Urban League, have all
repudiated Stokely Carmichael and
his tactics.






 *


The Truth Is Out
THE CITY of Atlanta has long
enjoyed an enviable reputation for
t ween
the Viet Cong and the nonCommunist nationalists, for the Viet
Cong have been excluded, as far as
possible, from the candidate and voter lists.
2. Charles Mohr, correspondent
for The New York Times, reports
that in two weeks of campaigning,
the candidates have not discussed
the war, how to win it or how to negotiate its end.
Mar bing Through Georgia
racial amity. Ironically, it was Atlan·
ta's splendid image that the destroyers sought to tarnish.
And yet, unwittingly, Stokely
Carmichael and his followers performed a useful service not only for
Atlanta but for the entire nation.
For here was stripped away the
myth that Negroes are always inclt•
ed to riot over poor living conditlou,
lack of employment and denial o1
civil rights.
Mr. Carmichael has now revealed
himself for \Yhat he is_ a schemtn,
fomenter of disorder, a mad dog
who attacks all whites indiscrimtn•
ately, a revolutionist who seeks to
burn and destroy, a terrorist who
defies law and spits upon our flag.


 * *


Good Start Made
THE RIGHT to peaceable assembly is guaranteed by tile Bill of
1U1hts, as i1 the freedom to demonltr~ e and to seek redTess of griev-
ances.
'rogether and in a spirit of constructive cooperation, the Negro and
white communities must find solutions and answers to the ·problems
which beaet our cities. For they are
. · both numerous and difficult.
~ major start has been made in
many areas. Where failures have
occurred, the Negro is usually as
mum at i.ult u his white brother.
Suspicions, diltrust and fear of associatlon have worked agl\inst the Nearoea' btllt Interests.
BUt the effort must go ahead if
we are to enjoy the fruits of a com~tlble aociety in which there is mutualtty ol purpose and respect for all.


 * *


Senatorial Views
TlQS NATION will not, hOwever,
permit the ttestroyers of society the C~ichaels and his ranting radicals ~to tear down what we have
built,
burn and destroy, to defy
law a
order with rocks and Molotov c tails or to hurl anarchistic
idogans and imprecations at our public officials.
The Ribicoffs and the Kennedys
who continue to deplore "our tragic
conditions" from comfortable seats
in the U.S. Senate should visit riot
areas and seek to quiet the mob, as
did Mayor Allen.
If nothing else, the experience
might leave them better informed
and not quite so sure that all social
ills can be cured by dispensing a few
hundred more millions from Washington.
.-
1
JI~ .. 143.215.248.55 16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)
II Plus Ca Change .• - I~
~
~
16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)16:23, 29 December 2017 (EST)~~-J
TODA Y'S election in South Viet
Nam is largely an exercise in
propaganda.
Its purpose is to elect a 117 -member assembly charged with writing a
new national constitution. ,When that
is done, a legislature is to be elected
next year.
The election has been neatly
rigged by the ruling junta. Premier
Ky's generals can change any part of
3. While there are _no prohibitions
against debating government war
policy, the candidates are wary of
standing Jaws that could punish
those who "hamper" the war effort.
In Saigon's election district 3,
some 200 persons heard speakers
from 11 slates of candidates. "Not
one," according lo correspondent
Mohr, "mentioned the war-, inflation,
the American impact on Saigon or
how soon the ruling junta should
step down."
The wariness ' of issues was rationalized by one candidate who said:
"We must have a constitution as a
legal base for our government. With
a legal base, we can solve all problems."
So when you read the optimistic
post election pronouncements to the
effect that democracy is thriving in
South Viet Nam , leave a little room
in your mind for some wholesome
skepticism.
The old French saying - the
more things change, the more they
remain the same - has specific application to Viet Nam.
JOHN S. KNIGHT
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              <text>Atlanta Riots

Carmichael &amp; Co.:

THE RECENT riots in Atlanta
offer convincing evidence that most,
if not all, of the racial violence in our
large cities has been organized and
: ea, led by a small

minority bent
pon the de-
truction of
ur society.

My authority

or this state-

ment is Ralph

MeGill, publish-

© er of The Atlan-

) ta Constitution,

| and long a mov-

fing and mili-

a tant force for

Knight equal treat-

ment of the Negro citizen as provid-

ed by law and the Constitution of the
United States.

McGill places responsibility for
the Atlanta disturbances squarely
upon the Student Non-Violent Coordi-
nating Committee (Snick) and its
leader, Stokely Carmichael. Snick,
according to McGill, has no more
than 300 members. These have been
the agents of anarchy in Watts, New
York, Chicago, Cleveland and other
major cities,

Snick’s beginnings were aus-
picious. Its early student leaders
were motivated by high dedication to
. the civil rights cause. Now the John
' Lewises and other responsibles are
' out. Control of Snick is held by the
| extreme radicals, of which Carmi-
| chael is the dominant figure.

As McGill says, Snick is no longer
| a civil rights organization but an
' anarchistic group which is openly
. and officially committed to the de-
| struction of existing institutions.

Though small in membership,
. Snick appeals to all haters of the
' white man. Its: slogans of defiance
| intrigue the very young as was
_ shown in Atlanta where the mob was
largely composed of youngsters in
» the 12-to-18 age range.

There appears to be no question
but that Snick’s funds are supplied
from abroad. One of its lawyers is.a
registered Castro agent. Its agitators
shout Havana slogans to the effect

that we must live through violence.
“Black Power" is but the rallying
cry.

* * *

A Stand-Up Mayor

FORTUNATELY for Atlanta, it
has a mayor whe confronted the mob

with rare courage. Though physically

manhandled and taunted with shouts
of “white devil,” Mayor Ivan Allen
Jr. remained upon the scene until the
crowd had been dispersed.

Mayor Allen gave short shrift to
charges of police brutality. “I saw
plenty of brutality,” he said, “but it
was all directed against police offi-
cers.” At his press conference, Mayor
Allen stated that “If Stokely Carmi-
chael is looking for a battleground,
he has created one, and he will be
met in whatever situation he
chooses.”

Atlanta’s Negro community lead-
ers were quick to decry the rioting
and violence. The Atlanta Summit
Leadership Conference, a Negro orga~
nization, denounced both Snick and
Carmichael, while calling for con-
structive measures designed to allevi-
ate problems which directly concern
the Negro.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Execu-
tive Director Roy Wilkins of the
NAACP and Whitney Young, who
heads the Urban League, have all

‘ repudiated Stokely Carmichael and

his tacties.
kt ke *

The Truth Is Out

THE CITY of Atlanta has long
enjoyed an enviable reputation for

ents Of Anarchy

 

racial amity. Ironically, it was Atlan-
ta’s splendid image that the de:
ers sought to tarnish,

And yet, unwittingly, Stokely
Carmichael and his followers per:

formed. ai useful sary ea| Wee Barna :

Atlanta but for the er

For here was stripped away
myth that Negroes are always nt
ed to riot over poor living cond
lack of employment. and d
civil rights.

Mr. Carmichael has now revealed
himself for what he is — a schemin;
fomenter of disorder, a mad dog
who attacks all whites. _indise rimin-

burn and destroy, a terror
defies law and spits upon our alg,

kt ok
Good Start Made

THE RIGHT to peaceable assem-
bly is guaranteed by the Bill of

 

 

caetict and in a spirit of con-

tion, the ‘Negro and

e Negro is usually as
It as his white brother.
trust and fear of as

Ns ge egetillnees

ity of Sea ee epee for all.

‘slogans and imprecations at our pub-

lie officials.
The Ribicoffs and the Kennedys

who continue to deplore “our tragic

conditions” from comfortable seats
in the U.S. Senate should visit riot

areas and seek to quiet the mob, as

did Mayor Allen.
If nothing else, the experience

‘might leave them better informed
and not quite so sure that all social

ills can be cured by dispensing a few
hundred more millions from Wash-

ae r
SS ‘

TODAY'S election in South Viet
Nam is largely an exercise in
propaganda. —

Tis purpose is to elect a 117-mem-
ber assembly charged with writing a
new nationa} constitution. When that
is done, a legislature is to be elected
next year.

The election has been neatly
rigged by the ruling junta, Premier

_K Ky's generals ean change any part of

the new constitution unless two-
thirds of the constituent assembly
objects. This means the junta could
control the assembly with a third of
the votes plus one. or 40 votes.

So despite efforts of the Viet
Cong to disrupt the election by acts
of violence against those who partici-
pate, the outcome is assured. It will
be acclaimed in Washington and Sai-
gon as a triumph for representative
government,

* * *

Check The Facts

IT IS, of course, a first tentative
step in that direction. But lest we
attach too much significance to the
election returns, {hese facts should
be kept in mind. :

1. The balloting is not a test be-
tween the Viet Cong and the non-
Communist nationalists, for the Viet
Cong have been excluded, as far as
possible, from the candidate and vot-
er lists.

2, Charles Mohr, correspondent
for The New York Times, reports
that in two weeks of campaigning,
the candidates have not discussed
the war, how to win it or how to ne-
gotiate its end.

3, While there are no prohibitions
against debating government war
policy, the candidates are wary of
standing laws that could punish
those who “hamper” the war effort.

In Saigon's election district 3,
some 200 persons heard speakers
from 11, slates of candidates. “Not
one,” according to correspondent
Mohr, “mentioned the war, inflation,
the American impact on Saigon or
how soon the ruling junta should
step down,”

The wariness of issues was ration-
alized by one candidate who said:
“We must have a constitution as a
legal base for our government. With
a legal base, we can solve all prob-
lems.”

So when you read the optimistic
post election pronouncements to the
effect that democracy is thriving in
South Viet Nam, leave a little room
in your mind for some wholesome
skepticism.

The old French saying — the
more things change, the more they
remain the same — has specific appli-
vation to Viet Nam,

JOHN S. KNIGHT

 
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                    <text>Ma yor Al le
Mimi ju~t m~ lle ti me t h e a tt !:l c- e
Miami He liw. l ti Pub l i ~h~ r
J Slok • ~
a;
very kee
cJ
. a ek Ni ~ltt '~ c:;u
clip of
ay oolum11 •
reporter a!!! well a~ !!!UCO 9 !!1·ful
publi!!! e r . T i ~ co l um.
a l s o i s publi !!! e ~ 1 •
Bil] H
t he
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              <text>Sep t mk Lh, 1966
Mayor Al len
Mimi just mailed me the attached clip of
Miami Hevmwald Publi,her “ack Night's Sunday columm .
Jack &amp;s @ very keen reporter as well as suce ssful
publisher , Thi, column also is published in the
other Knight papers .
Bill H
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                    <text>THAiP E
THARPE &amp; BROOKS
SROOl:S
I N CO RPORATE D
MORTGAG E B A N K E RS
ROBERT T H AR P E
728 WEST PEACH T REE S T .. N . W .
CHA IRM AN OF THE BOARD
873- 12 11 - ATLANTA, GA. 30308
September 7, 1966
Dear I v an:
You ar e a Great Mayor and a Great
Leader!
His Honor the Mayor
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
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as THARPE &amp; BROOKS

BROOKS INCORPORATED
MORTGAGE BANKERS

ROBERT THARPE 728 WEST PEACHTREE ST..N.W.
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD 873-1211- ATLANTA, GA. 30308

September 7, 1966

Dear Ivan:

You are a Great Mayor and a Great
Leader!

Sincerely,

 

His Honor the Mayor
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
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                    <text>CHARLES P. PHILLIPS,
270 PEACHTREE STREET,
C.L.U.
N. W.
ATLANTA 3, GA.
September 7, 1966
The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor of Atlanta
Georgia
Sir:
Just a note to compliment you on your
courage, tact and understanding in the
handling of Atlanta's unfortunate incident yesterday. Without your leadership,
this situation possibly could have been
even worse.
It is gratifying indeed to a private
citizen like myself to see a man of your
caJ.iber i n the Mayor's Office.
V~
OJ.lrS,
R~ager
Metropolitan Life
Campany
,.
�</text>
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              <text>CHARLES P. PHILLIPS, C.LU.
270 PEACHTREE STREET,N.W.
ATLANTA 3,GaA.

September 7, 1966

The Honorable Ivan Allen
Mayor of Atlanta
Georgia

Sir:

Just a note to compliment you on your
courage, tact and understanding in the
handling of Atlanta's unfortunate inci-
dent yesterday. Without your leadership,
this situation possibly could have been
even worse.

It is gratifying indeed to a private
citizen like myself to see a man of your
caliber in the Mayor's Office.

Ve yours,

 
   

Regional Manager
Metropolitan Life
Company
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              <text>plea z ——— J pons
ee yaruele, att x” W
a. ZL ve See ened ty,
tanga hac git fee
Pies hs, 21d Ripper yetl gethe
‘ , 7

| a ee i

Zt

Vacanan |

 
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                    <text>Se p t/7 / 66/
De ar S ir.
The city o f Atlanta Ga. has a MAN for MA YOR.
In t he s e tro u b l e d d a ys,that is go od to know.
S incere ly.
�---
- -.
I206 Peachtree St.N.~.
At lan t a . Ga. 30309.
.-~
. "'··.......__ . " -
l
I
'
Mayor Al len. City Hall.Atla nta. Ga.
�•
---:---;,,,
r
"
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              <text>Sept /7 /66/
Dear Sir.

The city of Atlanta Ga, has a MAN for MAYOR.

In these troubled days,that is good to know,

Sincerely.

fie DRE

 
1206 Peachtree St,N,u. . as &amp;

 

ST Py A as
Atlanta, Ga, 30309, mo Ze haat
oe” wor

Mayor Allen, City Hall.Atlanta, Ga,
 
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                    <text>"ABCC~ MA IL FO
I
1
BETTER BUSI NESS S
�--


.a;


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