Box 19, Folder 1, Document 58

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Title

Box 19, Folder 1, Document 58

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~ ‘but not Mcintyre.

~ on Martinez.

- coricern in Palo Alto, had a po-

_ very small and nice mannered.”

‘seph P. Kelly Thursday after-

Intyre with “willfully and un-

MeIntyre’s attorney, James
Boccardo, claimed Thursday

. Suspended

_ the death was the result of an

accident when Mcintyre fell

Martinez was jailed Aug. 28
after he was arrested by Sunny-
vale Officer Tim Martell and
California Highway Patrolman
Max Smith. The Sunnyvale
man, a Colorado native em-
ployed by a carpet cleaning

lice record involving mostly
drunk arrests, but fellow em-
ployes described him as “very
pleasant and easy to work
with.”

One employe added, “He was

McIntyre is married and the
father of one child. He had
served in the sherifi’s depart-
‘ment for one year and a
month with “a clean record.”

He was arrested Thursday
morning following a six-hour
session of the grand jury, which
lasted until 2:30 a.m. Thursday.
The jury heard 14 witnesses,



BERNABEL MARTINEZ
. . » His last arrest

was public officer,
deputy sheriff.”

McIntyre was arraigned be-
fore Superior Court Judge Jo-

noon and then freed on bail. He
will appear for plea at 1:30 p.m.

Boceardo, who recently de-
fended California Highway Pa-
trolman William Brennan, ed :
charged with but. acquited of the grand soey melded:
the Salinas murder of Roland
Strange in a hotel parking lot,! (Concluded on Page 2, Col. 1)

ed.

The two officers who picked
up Martinez said he was ar-
rested after he ran his car
off the road in a non-injury
accident, Martinez was hooked
as a public drunk.

McIntyre was one of six depu-
ties on duty in the main jail in
San Jose for the graveyard shift
on Aug. 28. He was assigned to
the drunk tank.

A witness before the Grand
Jury said McIntyre “kneed”
Martinez.

Boccardo, however, said Mc-
Intyre did not even remember
the incident.

“He was merely trying to get
a drunk prisoner to cooperate
and go into the tank...,” the
attorney said. “It was entirely
accidental.”

Sheriff Charles Prelsnik, who
suspended the deputy last week
because of the incident, and the
district attorney’s office refused
comment because of recent Su-

to wit, a preme Court decisions. They

would shed no light on the inci-
dent.
The list of witnesses before

Prelsnik, Medical Examiner-



sept. 23.

The grand jury, in a carefully
drawn indictment which elimi-
nated the possibility of a first
degree murder trial involving
the death penalty, charged Mc-

VOWS RIGHTS AID

Reasons



lawfully and with malice afore-
thought” murdering Martinez.
The true bill indictment also
said the deputy assaulted
Martinez “with force likely to
produce great bodily injury”
... Without lawful necessity un-
der color of authority, and at.a
time when the said defendant

Where Did
They Go?

With a new Miss America
to be crowned, Sun-

ATLANTA—Mayor Ivan Allen
Jr. said Thursday, although
members of the Student Nonvi-
olent Coordinating Committee
provoked Tuesday’s riot here,
living conditions in the Negro
area where the violence oc-
curred could have been ex-
ploited by other agitators.

After returning from a tour of
the riot area, the mayor also



ay’s This Week magazine |strongly endorsed the 1966 civil
answers an oft-heard question [rights bill” rep.
—what happened to this Miss Fg PRA LET ES
Americas of yesteryear? d he indicated he opposes

Meanwhile, one timely Pa- | the amendment which ex-
rade feature introduces you | empts all privately owned

one-to-four-family units—about
60 per cent of the nation’s
housing—from the

je. housing

to F. Lee Bailey, master of
courtroom dramatics and Dr.
Sam Sheppard’s new defense

attorney. In another, Lloyd | section. ye Ce A=
Shearer interviews actor Gert | <#2y.’ Hie Player
Frobe, whose brief member- | ‘‘The intent of this type of leg-

islation is always warped by the
opposition,” Allen said. “They
say it is to deny man the right
fo sell his house to whomever
he wants. Actually, it asserts
the right of amy man to buy a

ship in the Nazi party may ar-
rest his meteoric career.
Both Parade and This Week
are always part of your Sun-
day San Jose Mercury-News.
Dial 292-5252, ask for Circu-



lation and home delivery. piece of property that is availa.
i Seetler COMRALLD
- LA fCPL

{ Cipee Jere fe COPY

for Riot,

Dixie Mayor Says

From Los Angeles Times, UPI

ble for sale. It is ., eliminate
segregation.” fy
He reiterated ‘his charge

SNCC members, _ including
chairman Stokely Carmichael,

(Concluded on Page 2, Col. 2)

Call Admits
Fund Theft

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) —
Sacramento painting contractor
Norman Call Thursday admitted
having stolen union funds but
denied that he conspired to mur-
der union official Dow Wilson to
hide the theft.

Appearing on the witness
stand for the first time in his
murder trial, Call explained the
method by which he and the
administrator of a Painter's
Union welfare fund used forged



aeiion’’ to shift ‘the economy
infa “ower gear.” rh
Johnson proposed:

























1, 15966 to Jan..1, 1968 of the ?
per cent ¢redit on taxes f
business spending on new m
chinery and equipment. The su:
pension, he said, should appl
to all investing industries on a
orders placed during the 1
month period.

© Suspension of the aecelerat-
ed depreciation on all buildings

(Other story Page 33)

period beginning Sept. 1.

construction was 27 per cent
higher during the past 12 months
than during the previous year,
Johnson told Congress, and has
ly” to an inflation of building
costs. ) tt

© That the Federal Re.
serve Board and major com.
merical banks “cooperate

gress” to lower interest rates
and to
burden of tight money.”

© That. Treasury Secretary
Henry Fowler survey all federaj
agencies authorized to sell secur.
ities “to eliminate from the:
market as much of the federaj
demand as possible.” 5
® A $3 billion reduction jn
federal non-defense spending for
the current 1967 fiscal year|
which ends next June 30. Ajj
agencies have been asked to
“defer, stretch out and other.
wise reduce” spending, he saiq |

oO

message to Congress was the
proposed 16-month suspension
of two tax incentives a
ness investment in new plant
and equipment spending
which now is getting much of

for the present inflationary
squeeze. ‘-

Although the President did not
ask for higher taxes on cop.
porate profits, the effect woulg
be to hit businessmen in the
pocketbook. si

Johnson proposed suspension

business investment spending,
effective Sept. 1 until Jan.

regardless of delivery, and ty
all industries without exception.

He asked a similar rollback,
of authority for businessmen

off for the lifelong deprecia~



claims to withdraw approxi-



mately $6,000 from the fund.

Mio Lclren fpse & Ieee» CF7RS ty
Me, abled: jel, fire PoE Ka LG

(Concluded on Page 2% ol. y

6 eh ei

TV Bla

® The suspension from Sept|”

and structures started or trans-|

(Commercial and industrial|t,

been contributing “‘unnecessarj_|,

with the President and the Cop_} «

“ease the inequitable]

Foremost in the special |

the blame among oe) t

of the 7 per cent tax credit pee ots toward the 7:25
ppt uy towar ein: a.m.








1968. It would apply to all or.|o®
ders taken between those dates, |t

to accelerate their tax writ. |
, pefore,

[fected E2 fel

st



about farmers’ problems.

[PRL ASA LCAND. 7 GEARS SPEER] EA PAL TM REL ASD) SRY NYSE CE CL

. —AP Wirephoto.



Falls Flat

_ NEW YORK (AP) — A blast
boas television by comedian
erry Lewis plopped into the

‘|sea of video Thursday with the

eee

act of a falling pebble on an
asphalt pit.
‘The general reaction among

-|television top folk who admitted
having any was, “Ah, you know

always clowning
Hollywood’s prince of the
pratfall lowered the boom on
ne cathode medium at a news
onference Wednesday in Bos-
on. He said he was all through

‘\with television as it stands—

It's dull, it’s canned, it’s taste-

_ The outburst came as a sur-
prise to show biz peers in view
of Jerry’s Olympian calm
when his brand-new yacht
‘sank under him recently at
Monterey, Calif.

_ “I think something must have
peen bugging him,” said Ed
$ullivan, of the Ed Sullivan
ow.

the! A’ television subexecutive in

ew York suggested that Lewis

| was still aching from an experi-

ence a few years ago when his
own televised show was the sub-
ject of a mercy killing in mid-
season.
He comes out with an anti-
qv tirade like this about once a
year,” the man said.
_Upper-echelon people at NBC,
BC and CBS loftily ignored the
eaming comic.

In Hollywood, comedian Phil
silvers, television’s Sgt. Bilko,
irugged it off.

| “We all have mornings like
t,” he said.







Early Morn
Gemini Shot

‘CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)—All
Teported ticking along

blastoff today of Gemini II
of 4 Precision mission that
as America’s best re-
earsal yet for manned trips to
é Moon, p

Astronauts Charles _(Pete)
contad and Richard F. Gordon,
Jd Navy buddies, will be out
io Ping home a batch of space
fire'S, including flying nearly
twiC® as high as man ever has







VIET BOMBSHELL



— 5

‘The governor spent most of ~

the press conference on welfare,

briefly answered a few ques-



SAIGON (UPI) — Prime Min-
ister Nguyen Cao Ky said
Thursday he would accept a
draft to run as president of
South Viet ‘Nam.

Ky’s bombshell announce-
ment caught the American
diplomatic mission here by
surprise and was expected to
have widespread repercus-
sions throughout the country.

It came as national police to-
day uncovered a plot by terror
squads to booby trap anti-gov-
ernment. election posters and
kill anyone trying to tear them
down. :

The plot was the latest inci-
dent in the stepped-up Commu-
nist campaign to keep people
away from the polls in Sunday’s
national election for a consti-
tuent assembly.

Reports of other terror activi-
ties filtered into Saigon from
widely scattered sections of the
country. Terrorists assassinated
a village chief, machinegunned
to death the wife and three chil-
dren of a_ security official,
bombed civilians and soldiers
and shot children in an attack
on a hamlet.

At least four terrorist blasts
injured a dozen persons
Thursday, and mineographed
death threats were distributed
through the mails to virtually

.| all candidates warning them

to withdraw before it is too
late.

Ky made his announcement at
a party marking his 36th birth-
day. At the same time he indi-
cated he has changed his mind
about the need for dissolving
the constitutional assembly once
it has done its job of writing a
constitution and holding another
election next year for a legisla-
tive assembly.

He said the constitutional as-



Today’s Chuckle

Small boy's prayer:
Give us this day our day
in bed,

tere ¥ fle JES



Ky Eyes Draft

For President

sembly could change itself into
a national Jegislature if it so de-
sired. He said if he ran for}

quest of the assembly, adding
that if asked, he would accept.

Quake Hits

Asian Area

PASADENA (UPI) — A major
earthquake was recorded Thurs-
day about 7,200 miles west or
northwest of here.

It showed a magnitude of 6.8
on the Richter scale and would
have been potentially destruc-
tive in a populated area, ac-
cording to Dr. Charles Richter
of California Institute of Tech-
nelogy.

The famed seismologist said
instruments began recording the
temblor at 2:29 p.m.

In Rockville, Md., the National
Harthquake Information Center
said it located a quake in the
Halmahera Island region north

president it would be at the re-|

tions about the Rumford Act —
and then abruptly ended the
meeting when reporters sought

to question him on other sub-
jects.

Brown said his “‘learn-and- ~

Iwork”? program would be fi-

nanced by $34 million from the
federal government and $26 mil-
lion from the state. He conced-
ed under questioning that the
state’s. share of the retaining
might require new taxes.
However, $5 million that coun-
ties now invest in retraining
programs would be paid by the
state, Brown said.

Holcomb, frequently called
upon by the governor to an-
swer questions about the re-
training plan, said the 20,000
employable welfare recipients
have dependent families total-
ing between $0,000 and 100,009
persons.

The state has a total welfare
caseload of about 1 million per-
sons. But Holcomb said that all
but 240,000 of these are blind,
aged or disabled persons who
are not employable.

Under the Brown-Holeomb
plan a welfare recipient would
be identified as employable,
then trained for an available
job. The governor said use of
computers to find out what jobs.
are available would insure that
recipients would be trained for
available work.

“This combined attack means
that from the day a welfare re-
cipient is found employable, the
end of his dependence is in
sight,’ Brown said.

California’s booming economy



of Indonesia.

(Concluded on Page 2, Col. 1)



What's Inside

Your Mercury

Dr. Sheppard returns to courtroom .... Page 8

k ok
Texas sniper had ‘year to live’... .... Page 9
kt & *
New radioactive capsule lost........ Page Ii
* * *



Ann Landers is. </s0.3. 31
VAStPOIOR © eo arcs aie scenvare 71
SrIHGGM WA KPANE occ iu. 72
aoNassifted occ. canis 41-55
Columnists ...4..... 30; 34
orritee "se ae tnt een 71
eVGssWOId| |... isowae wea: 7
Earl Wilson's Broadway ... 60
Bettas petal tag 30
Fittantiatieecce geltuans 32-35
/ Api ec

De Gaulle aide linked to Ben Barka .. . Page 18
On Other Pages

Freeman’s Here ‘Tis .,... at
Manners’ Hollywood ..... 6!
CISA FIG bee: ook aio ey oh!
San Jose Today ...,.,.. 14
ayaS) Meade od os ee 65-69
Television, Radio .....5: - 70
Theaters, Fine Arts: .;+ 50-63
Wieathian ss bsi¢-tactoeae ~ . +4
Weimers’ “Lee Sidé” .... 30
Women's Section «»--. 57-59
a, Oe &
Jhiie EE Hy

< i PPE Ae a,

ah
22°

Friday, Sept. 9, 1966 Say Inse Mercury

3k

Governor Promises

Welfare Roll Slash

(Continued from Page 1)

makes it possible to find jobs
for welfare recipients where no
jobs existed before, said the
governor. Despite the boom, he
said, “there is a hard core of
inadequately educated, un-
framed men and women who
cling to the ragged edge of em-
ployment.”

Brown said he has hopes that
this program and others could
be financed by the Heller plan,
a proposal dating from the Ken-
nedy Administration that would
refund to states a portion of the
taxes collected from them by
thé-federal government.

Brown conceded that a
‘New revenue program’”’
would be needed by the state
if: the Heller plan failed to
gain federal approval. Under
questioning he said this meant
new taxes.

Ip discussing the Rumford
fair housing act, the governor
sail he expected to appoint a
commission to study the con-
troyersial law within three
weeks. He indicated he had
been having difficulty in finding
a chairman,

Asked whether the commis-
sion would include any “Reagan
Republicans,” Brown replied:

“J’m sure there will be some
ont, but you know they’re hard
to fitid.”

The governor said he opposed
as a “‘delusion” the proposal by
Los Angeles Assessor Phil Wat-
son far a mandatory ceiling on
taxes.

“Ceilings on taxes never have
worked—they never will work,”
Brown said.

The governor was asked about
a recent. statement by former
Southern California Democratic

S.C. County
Sheriff Aide
Accused
CORRE EE SE EMS Ae
Det, Sgt. Ray Pantiga, Sunny-

Vale Officer Martell, Highway
poe i he



















Cyons, jail doctor Paut 3
and two trustees and two te
hicians.

MeJntyre was willing to testi-
fy but was not called, according
to Boceardo.

Martinez had come to this
4rea from his native Colorado
about two veare avo, He bad



hopes









aon|te House

also make a, statement on Supt

of Public Instruction Max Raf-
ferty’s policy questions tojsaid.

chairman Carmen Warschaw in-;Brown and Reagan about edu-
dicating that she might not sup-|cation.
port Brown’s bid for a third
term. He said he would answer|either subject and ended the
this soon in a statement and/press conference when reporters

But he declined to go into

.|tried to go into the subject.
“T think we’ve had it,’’ Brown



(Continued from Page 1)

were directly responsible for
touching off a rock and bottle
attack on Atlanta police.

At the same time he said the
city “‘must assume the responsi-
bility of housing, education and
employment opportunities for
many of these disadvantaged
people. and in Atlanta we have
accepted this as our r ibil-
ity.”

Some officials here disclosed
Thursday they considered, but
rejected, the idea of bringing
charges of insurrection—a
crime punishable by death in
Georgia—against Carmichael,
one of the most militant Negro
leaders.

Carmichael and two of his
aides, William Ware and Bobby
Vance Walton, have been charg-
ed with inciting to riot, a misde-
meanor, A hearing is set today
for Carmichael.

Julian Bond, the Negro rep-
resentative-elect the Georgia
House refused to seat because
of his statements against U.S.
policy in Viet Nam, resigned

y from SNCC_/@x¢< a



Vind, “Whe tes 7SNCC com:

munications director, said he
was quitting the controversial
organization for ‘personal rea-
sons,”

The 26-year-old Bond said he
to become active in the





NA Ey) o 7 lef bday
holds membership.
In Washington, Rep. Wayne

aliad dere, federal crack

acctised of “inciting fete

Atlanta and Cleveland, *
“Carmichael and his anar-

chist group belong behind

hars and the quicker we get
him. there the hatter off ¢hic .






BLASTS CARMICHAEL

Mayor of Atlanta
Admits Riot Cause

country is going to be,” Hays
said.

A round of applause went up
from the 50 members present
following Hays’ brief talk.

Atlanta Mayor Allen, who di-
rected police in restoring order
to the Summerhill district
where Tuesday's riot occurred,
met with city department heads
Thursday to determine whether
any serious services need to be
expanded into the area.

He said most Negro residents
of Atlanta are well housed, “but
there are still some isolated
areas of substandard housing
“laaye wn tion.” (ier

ced ee ‘atlanta

Summit Conference, a coali-
tion of Negro civil rights lead-

ers, for publicly deploring the
violence and working to head
off further trouble. “We are
involved in the same civil
rights cause they are in,’

Allen said, “although the
trouble the other day had noth-
ing to do with civil rights.”

Negroes. began. sailing mis-
siles at mee "Tuesday after
SNCC members exhorted them
in a demonstration to protest
the “murder” of a Negro auto
theft suspect who was shot, but
not critically wounded, while
fleeing a white policeman. Allen
termed the shooting “justified
In the line of duty.”
Carmichael







to the

eling resiaents Ne W
|sponsible for the rioting.
“The racist mayor and white

Hays (D-Ohio) took the floor in|racist papers said we started a
of Representatives|riot and ran,” Carmichael said.

“We did not start it and we will
not run away.””



Does It
Again |

By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON
AP Fashion Editor

NEW YORK (AP)—The de-
signer who gained world fame
two years ago by lopping the
tops off women’s swim suits
eliminated the suit Thursday.

He replaces it with a handful
of black plastic pasties strate-
gically arranged, presumably
by means of adhesive back.
ing.

“Tt’s perfectly decent,”
Rudi Gernreich assured his
gasping audience. “You will
notice the navel has been coy.
ered.” alice Se

His swimwear fashion show
for Harmon Knitwear began
with this eye opener. The suit
of geometrically 8 h aped
patches in shiny vinyl is pack-
aged in a plastic bag 50 sma}]
it can be conveniently carrieg
in achange purse-

There followed diaper-cut
bikinis that elicited Winks,
blinks but never @ 00d, and,
for the incurably old-fashioned
Sirl, strapless one-piecers.

With these ihe tanned lasses
Pasted so-called body warm-
ers—vinyl dots the size of
poker chips, clover shapes or
twinkly stars—onto their
cheeks and the many bare
portions of their torsoes.

There were tops on those
want to call those tiny ribbon
strips that covered the cleay-
age but left plenty of side-arm
exposure.

"EBikinis will be briefe;
and briefer, certainly for sup-

room crowd that, though they

as they could go. Exposed hip
sides that reduced pants to
petitie loincloths was still an-
other method he used for di.
minishing bikinis farther.

“There has been some re,
sistance to the side exposure
‘on bra tops,” said the desig.
ner.

“T's funny, but Ry
slash the cleavage all the wan
to the navel and nobody op,
jects, But some people simply
ean’t accept bare bosoms
from the side view.”





DAs)

SACRAMENTO

Edmund G, Brown Thursday,

rededicating “ |

cating “themselves to the
future betterment of the state.”







had already gone about as far | .

called on Californians to ob-|)
serve Admission muvee ae *



SPOTS SWIM BEFORE HER THIGHS

ning,” Gernreich told a show. —










(UPI}—Gay





.. . After the one piece, the 21 piece

—AP Wirephoto

GOVERNOR RACE



Thursday night chose Franklin
D. Roosevelt Jr. as its guberna-
torial candidate.

In Rochester, meanwhile, the
Republican Party chose Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller as its
standard-bearer. In November’s
election, then Rockefeller in his
bid for a third term will oppose
the son of the late President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Frank D. O’Connor, who was
named the Democratic candi-
date Wednesday night.

In still another state con-
vention, at Saratoga Springs,
the Conservative Party
Wednesday nominated college
professor Paul L. Adams as
its candidate for governor.



Neither of Thursday night’s
political choices came as a sur-

N.Y. Liberals
Pick FDR Jr.

NEW YORK (UPI)—The Lib-|date, but this year ibis pursuing
eral Party of New York State|an independent course.

When Roosevelt, a Democrate,
let it be known Wednesday that
he would accept Liberal nomi-
nation, it was considered all but
certain that he would be the
candidate.

Thursday night the Liberal
conyention didn’t let him
down, He was chosen by a
vote of 209 to 33.

Roosevelt had been rebuffed
by the Democrats, who chose

his father as their gubernatorial
‘|candidate in what turned out to
be the stepping stone to 12
years in the White House.

Political observers believed

the man who would be most
hurt by Roosevelt’s decision to
run as a liberal candidate is his
fellow Democrat, O’Connor,

These observers believe that



prise but confirmed that the
Empire State will have at least
a four-corner race for the gov-
ernor’s mansion,

The Liberal Party usually en-
dorses the Democratic candi-

the political drawing power of
his family name might draw
as many as 600,000 votes the
great majority of which would
have probably fallen to 0’Con-
nor. :



Boy Suffocates

WINDSOR (UPI)—The body
of a 9 - year - old boy was
found Thursday inside a refrig-
erator. The child, Juan J. Medi-
na Jr., apparently had crawled
in, the doors closed behind him
and he suffocated. The refrig-
erator was lying on its back in
a shop on a prune ranch where
his parents live and work.



Safety For Savings Since 1885.

GIVES YOU MORE

Various polls had indicated
that O’Connor would have a
considerable lead over Rocke-
feller, but with Roosevelt now
in the race things may change
decisively.

Even before he decided to run
as a Liberal Party candidate in-
dependently from the Demo-
crats, Roosevelt, the third son
of FDR, had not endeared him-
self to the Democratic leaders.











2;

Friday, Sept. 9, 1966 Sai Jose Merrury

3%

Governor Promises

Welfare Roll Slash

(Continued from Page 1)
makes it possible to find jobs

for welfare recipients where no

jobs existed before, said the
governor. Despite the boom, he

said, “there is a hard core of

inadequately educated, un-
trained men and women who
cling to the ragged edge of em-
ployment.”

Brown said he has hopes that.
this program and others could
be financed by the Heller plan,
a proposal dating from the Ken-
nedy Administration that would
refund to states a portion of the
taxes collected from them by
thé-federal government.

Brown conceded that a
“few revenue program’
would be needed by the state
if: the Heller plan failed to
gain federal approval. Under
questioning he said this meant
new taxes.

Im discussing the Rumford
fair housing act, the governor
said he expected to appoint a
commission to study the con-
troyersial law within three)
weeks. He indicated he had
been having difficulty in finding
a chairman.

Asked whether the commis-
sich would include any “Reagan
Republicans, ’ Brown replied:

'm sure there will be some
on Jt, but you know they’re hard
to find.”

The governor said he opposed
as a “delusion” the proposal by
Los Angeles Assessor Phil Wat-
son for a mandatory ceiling on
taxes.

“Ceilings on taxes never have
worked—they never will work,”
Brown said.

The governor was asked about
a recent statement by former
Southern California Democratic

S.C, County //
eo Cy 1
Sheriff Aide
Accused
(Continued from Page 1)
Coroner Dr. John E Hatiser,
Det. Sgt, Ray Pantiga, Sunny-
vale Officer Martell, Highway
Patrolman Smith, Dep. Sheriff
Dave Gifford, jail nurse Lou
Lyons, jail doctor Paul Jackson
and two trustees and two tech-
nicians.
Mcintyre was willing 1o testi-
fy but was not called, according
to Boecardo.

Martinez had come ta this
area from his native Colorado





dicating that she might not sup-

chairman Carmen Warschaw in-)Brown and Reagan about fede

cation.

port Brown’s bid for a third) But he declined to go into
term. He said he would answerjeither subject and ended the
this soon in a statement and|press conference when reporters
also make a, statement on Supt.
of Public Instruction Max Raf-
ferty’s policy questions tojsaid.

tried to go into the subject.
“T think we've had it,’ Brown



(Continued from Page 1)

were directly responsible for
touching off a rock and bottle
attack on Atlanta police.

At the same time he said the
city ‘‘must assume the

bility of housing, education and
employment opportunities for
many of these disadvantaged
people, and in Atlanta we have
accepted this as our r
ity.”

Some officials here disclosed
Thursday they considered, but
rejected, the idea of bringing
charges of insurrection—a
crime punishable by death in
Georgia—against Carmichael,
one of the most militant Negro
leaders.

Carmichael and two of his
aides, William Ware and Bobby
Vance Walton, have been charg-
ed with inciting to riot, a misde-
meanor. A hearing is ‘set today
for Carmichael.

Julian Bond, the Negro rep-
resentative-elect the Georgia
House refused to seat because
of his statements against U.S.
Thos in Viet ae Jae?

hist der Bee ace “SNCC_com-
(Bind, director, said he
was quitting the controversial
organization for “personal rea-
sons.’

The 26-year-old Bond said he
hopes to become active in the

ay



holds Rea yell 5

Hays (D-Ohio) took the floor in’
the House of Representatives
and called for a federal crack-
down on Carmichael, whom he
accused of “inciting riots” in
Atlanta and Cleveland,

“Carmichael and his anar-
chist group belong behind
bars and the quicker we get



about two years ago. He had

him there the better off this

National asociation fer the Ad-)sun

In Washington, Rep. Wayne)

BLASTS CARMICHAEL

Mayor of Atlanta
Admits Riot Cause

country is going to be.” Hays
said.

A round of applause went up
from the 50 members present
following Hays’ brief talk.

Atlanta Mayor Allen, who di-
rected police in restoring order
to the Summerhill district
where Tuesday’s riot occurred,
met with city department heads
Thursday to determine whether
any serious services need to be
expanded into the area.

He said most Negro residents
of Atlanta are well housed. ‘but
there fe still some isolated
areas 0} ate housing

d of hil tion.”
Mien {a tama

Summit ek a coali-
tion of Negro civil rights lead-
ers, for publicly deploring the
violence and working to head
off further trouble. “We are
involved in the same civil
rights cause they are in,”
Allen said, “although the
trouble the other day had noth-
ing to do with civil rights.”

Negroes began sailing mis-
siles at police Tuesday after
SNCC members exhorted them
in a demonstration to protest
the “murder” of a Negro auto
theft suspect who was shot, but
not critically wounded, while
fleeing a white policeman. Allen
termed the shooting *Sustified
in the line of duty.”
cariciads returied slo

to the

ng
sponsible for the ising,
“The racist mayor and white
racist papers said we started a
riot and ran,” Carmichael said,
“We did not start it and we will
not run away.”



... Rudi
Does It

Again

By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON
AP Fashion Editor
NEW YORK (AP)—The de-
signer who gained world fame
two years ago by lopping the
tops off women’s swim suits
eliminated the suit Thursday.

He replaces it with a handful
of black plastic pasties strate-
gically arranged, presumably
by means of adhesive back-
ing.

“Tt’s perfectly decent,’
Rudi Gernreich assured his
gasping audience. “You will
notice the navel has been coy-
ered,”

His swimwear fashion show
for Harmon Knitwear began
with this eye opener. The suit
of geometrically shaped
patches in shiny vinyl is pack-
aged in a plastic bag so small
it can be conveniently carried
in a change purse.

There followed diaper-cut
bikinis that elicited winks,
blinks but never a nod, and,
for the incurably old-fashioned
girl, strapless one-piecers.

With these the tanned lasses
pasted so-called body warm-
ers—vinyl dots the size of
poker chips, clover shapes or
twinkly stars—onto their
cheeks and the many bare
portions of their torsoes.

There were tops on those
bikinis, if that is what you
want fo call those tiny ribbon
strips that covered the cleay-
age but left plenty of side-arm
exposure.

“Bikinis will be briefer
and briefer, certainly for sun-
ning,” Gernreich told a show-
room crowd that, though they
had already gone about as far
as they could go. Exposed hip
sides that reduced pants to
petitie loincloths was still an-
other method he used for di-
minishing bikinis farther.

“There has heen some re-
sistance to the side exposure
‘on bra tops,” said the desig-

ner.

“T's funny, but ¢
‘slash the cleavage nae wit
to the navel and nobody ob-
jects. But some. Seas mply
can’t aece pi ac dee
from the side view rer







SACR AMENTO (UPI aie
Edmund. G. Brown ursday
called on Cali s to







serve Admission oo us =o ae
rededieating “ be: elves to
fulure betterment ©










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