Box 19, Folder 2, Document 69

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Box 19, Folder 2, Document 69

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Pirates Lose





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om L.A.

See Sports

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THE WEATHER

10 to 20 m.p.h. See Page 34.





Bay Area: Fair except for > ¢ > ¢ > ¢ >
overcast extending inland

night and early morning. San SC

High Wednesday, 62 to 74;

low, 48 to 55. Westerly wind THE VOIC E OF THE Ww rE ST







102nd Year No. 250 4 CCCCAAA

WEDNESDAY, , SEPTEMBER 7, 1966 4. 10 CENTS << GArfield 1-1111



DEPOT ACR fuer Oe i a ee |

Bg Ceaner 7 igh eee

r C | | ae A ‘ 4
Marin Cops | Atlanta Riot | Spears ong | ssassination

Quiz Marine |
In Killings

A young Marine who!
was a friend of Everett)
and Margaret Zimmer-,
man and an odd-job work- |
er on their Marin county |
a was questioned yes- |

about the couple’s’
cal er a week ago. :

He was identified as.
16-year-old Robert D. Sid-
beck, who was on leave
after boot camp training
and visiting his family’s)
San Anselmo home at the |
time of the killing.

Police said he left the day
the bodies were found and re-

‘or duty two days lat-
ne ee Marine base in, «







Trip Back con
qoSchot Werwoerd Slain

|
| By Maitland Zane ©

pr. Harold Spears, San hi S N Af ®
| ancisco’ S$ retiring sy. © t 4
_perintendent of sclin| Nn u rica |
swept local problems un-| !

aes ie ie’ re in|

4 more than 3000 nite Fanatic White Man
Knifes Prime Minister.

At Parliament Session

school teachers,

some 100,000 San
Francisco public school

children, plus parochial
ae School students, 20)
hack to school today, with |
some Private school stu-|
dents beginning the fall,
term tomorrow.

| Bll schools bave a shawl



Reuters





Capetown, South Africa



ae

=~

SS SS aa










nos
last Sunday and have since



been questioning the youth

- on the base.
Meanwhile, Mountanos and

conferred with District Attor-
ney Bruce Bales for three
hours. yesterday afternoon on
new ‘evidence’? about the
crime.

The sheriff said a decision
in the case will be made af-
ter State criminal laboratory

I Undersheriff Sidney Stinson
| ;

_ experts finish inspecting the

_ risked jail and scorn to pro-

ear used by the murderer to
leave the scene.

Sidbeck’s 9-year-old sister,
Elsie Kay, was a house guest
of the Zimmermans the night
the murderer entered, the se-
cluded ranch house and
bludgeoned the sleeping cou-
ple to death in bed.

The Sidbeck and Zimmer-

See Page 17, Col. 2



Mrs. Sange r, | Atlant

Birth Control
Pioneer, Dies

United Press

Tueson, Ariz.
Margaret Sanger, who

mote the birth control move-
ment throughout the world.
died yesterday of hardening
of the arteries. She was 83,

Death came to the mother
of planned parenthood at the
Valley House Convalescent
Center. A family spokesman
said she had been ill for the
past five years.

Twice married and a moth-
er of three herself, Mrs.
Sanger traveled the globe
campaigning for birth con-
trol. She made nine trips to
Japan, three to India and

bottl



_ many to England.

HER MOTHER |

“To take a subject like |
eontraception and make it|
understood: to separate it!
from an abortion and have |
the masses of people agree to!
if is quite an accomplish- |
ment,”’ Mrs. Sanger said in a)
1963 interview.
Fired still by her cause |

See Page 17, Col. 1





|

*

Jy

UPI Telephete

_ Atlanta police fired tear gas into a Negro home from which bottles were thrown
——then a policeman dashed in to rescue the children inside.

|

Mayor



them.

Negro Mob Knocks
Off Cartop

Lgeiye,

SH 708 ies res 0 PF
ALLEYT Se ST” CST New Cpe

Rioting Negroes fought police with bricks and

es yesterday and toppled the city’s mayor from
a car top onto the street when he attempted to calm

Police brought the violence under control by
tossing tear gas canisters and repeatedly firing pis-

tols and riot’-guns above |

| the heads of the rioters.

_A sniper opened fire from
a building in the riot-torn
district shortly after dark,
hut police rushed in before
anyone was hit. Seven sus-
pects were taken into cus-
tody. ,

Twelve persons, including
four policemen, were in-
jured.

Arrests mounted fo 53 in
the area.

A policeman was cut on the
face and had a possible jaw
fracture, and a police detec-
tive and at least séven others
persons were treated for tear
gas effects.

DAMAGE

Windows were smashed in
two patrol cars parked on a
Street. Negroes bombarded a
white motorist’s car with
rocks. Another police ear
was turned on its side, with



all its windows shattered.

Governor Carl EB, Senderé|
ordered state troopers into

See Page 8, Col. 1 ‘|



Psychiatrist
Menninger
Is Dead

Associated Press

Topeka, Kansas

Dr. William C, Menninger,
president of the Menninger
Foundation psychiatric clinic
and an internationally known
psychiatrist, died last night
of cancer.

The 66-year-old physician
had been confined to bed for
most of the summer. The
malignant tumor was detect-
ed in his chest last December
during exploratory surgery
at the Mayo Clinie in Roches-
ter, Minn,

“Dr. Will,” as he was
known wherever psychia-

See Page 17, Col. 6



US. Action
Against Big
Drug Firm

Clase
Times-Post Service
Washington
The Government has
started criminal proceed:
ings against the Upjohn

' Co., a giant pharmaceuti-

cal manufacturer, which
are based in part on a
failure to publish a warn:
ing to physicians con-
cerning the safety of a
prescription drug if used
by pregnant women.

The drug — Upjohn’s
biggest seller—is Orinase,
an oral antidiabetes
agent.

Marketed in 1957, it, is said
by the company to have been
used by more than 750,000

atients. It has been reported

at in tests on animals,
massive doses of the drug
can kill or deform the fetus.

The charges involve the en-
try about Orinase that
Upjohn supplied for publica-
tion in the 1965 edition of
Physician's Desk Reference,
the single most important
source of prescription infor-
mation for more than 200,000
physicians.



' See Page 8, Col. 1

The maximum penalty the

ee ey a)

)sion Day.-a legal holiday cel-

ebrating California's admis-'
| sion to the union,

) JOKES

Spears. 64, who retires
‘next June 30, did not men-
tion, in his Teachers’ Insti-
jtute speech at Masonic Audi-
torium such festering dis-
‘putes as de-facto racial
Segregation or the choice of
| his suceessor.

Instead, he cracked a joke
or two about his own small-
town Indiana schooldays and
then launched into a long de-
scription of his recent world
tour,

Here were a few of Spears’
points;

The United States is a sort
of benevolent colonial power,
he said, and this is how it
should be. “We tend other
nations’ crops and double as
scarecrows to scare off those
who would come in and plun-
de~ these fields.”

“Every child has the right
to be treated as an individu-
al. You protect that right.
But this right is not protected
in India, The Hindu can kill a
Moslem but not a cow or a
rat which éats up their limit-
ed store of grain.”

“India is an exceedingly

exciting and puzzling coun-
iry.”

TAJ MAHAL

Two great problems struck
him during his tour of South
East Asia, the. ‘‘wretched-
ness and abject poverty” and
the “threat of Chinese power
undermining the integrity of
developing nations.

Spears talked about the
Ta} Mahal — “Its beauty is
blemished by its price, the
gaP between the ruler and

HENDRIK VERWOERD-
His policy—apartheid

ewer nf eek ke Ser we me

by a white man.

The 64-year-old Prime Mini

a parliamentary miessenger walked up to him and



Los Angeles
The top o

ernor.
They also urged that



Governor
Cultivates
Farm Vote

By Earl C,. Behrens
Political Editar —

Bakersfield

Governor Edmund G.
Brown tramped through
the hostile farmlands of
the San Joaquin Valley
yesterday, packing a pro-
gram designed to win
him the agricultural vote.

“The fact that I have
not been able to get
across to the farmers of
the State has disturbed
me more than anything
else,’ the shirt-sleeved



See Page 17, Col. 3

j/-———__.

One Town's

Somes Bar, Siskiyou County
The 30 children in this log-
ging hamlet couldn't start
classes on schedule yester-
day: ;
Not a single applicant has



See Page 7, Col. 4

School

Crisis-- No Teacher

From Gur Correspondent

sought a teaching post in the
community’s two-room
school,

“The children just aren't
going to school, and there’s

See Page 17. Col, §

ce

,
eis) adel

‘te it

| Reagan Issues His
Tax Reform Plan

poly se ae en

f the Republican state ticket, Ronald)
Reagan and Robert Finch, issued a campaign state-
ment yesterday outlining their plans to change prop-
erty taxes if elected governor and lieutenant goy-

the State Board of Equal-
(ization be expanded from
four members to six, with
the additional members

‘|to come from Southern

California.

Reagan, the GOP guberna-
torial candidate, and Finch,
his running mate, released
the seven-point statement.

The seven proposals:

® “Abolish personal prop-
erty tax on household fur-
nishings.

-e “Eliminate double taxa-
tion on subsidiary dividends
of corporations.

e “Bstablish a system of
credits permitting a partial
write-off. of inventory tax
payments against State fran-
chise taxes and eliminating
inventory taxes as rapidly as
possible.

© “Assessment of State and
Federal land holdings in Cal-
ifornia with an in lieu pay-
ment returned to the coun-
ties.

e ‘Conform State income
tax laws to those of the Fed-
eral Government and support
the ballot measure this year
to accomplish this end.

e‘“Create a State Tax
Court to hear the tax appeals
from the rulings of the State
Board of Equalization and
State Franchise Tax Board.

e “Add two members to
the State Board of Equaliza-
tion, so that a truly repre-
sentative statewide board is
achieved.”



Amsociated Press



a eile ae

Tay PR

1 Wht ae

inister died soon after

.

~\plunged a knife four
times into his neck and ~
| chest. ey

The assassifation took

Place in full view of mem-
_|bers of Parliament as the
| bells rang for the start of the
' session.

As blood spurted onto the
carpet, members fell on the
assailant and pinned him,
struggling, to the floor. He
ve then taken into custody...»

ASSASSIN ;

The assassin was Dimitri
Stafendas, a 45-year-old —
South African of Greek and -
Portuguese origin. He report-
edly had complained to co-
workers that the government
was doing too much for
non-whites and not enough
for poor whites.

Verwoerd slumped at his
desk with his head down.
Four medical members of
parliament rushed to help
him and one, Dr. C. V, Van ©
Der Merwe, gave him
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
in an attempt to revive him.

Stretcher bearers pushed
through the crowd of legisla-
tors and officials and carried

See Page 12, Col, 1



The Index

Berge ows 65 a 40
CER, an dhe, Ces eet 40
Comice 1h. Ns 56
Crossword ..... 39, 56
Datebook... .....-. Al
Deaths! ioi..5 0.0 35
Editorials ........ 38
Entertainment .. 41-43
Finance ........ 51-55
Feed. ieeklie 10, T1F
Jumble .......... 24
Movies ........ 42,43
Obituaries .. .35, 40, 45.
Shipping |:),, >... - 35 |
Sports ......... 45-51
A VRaase Aol wets 40
Vital Statistics .... 34
Want Ads ......-: 26
Weather... 34

Women's World. 18-23 r



i ar
i







|

PAGE 8 FHE A

Rioting Atlanta
Negroes Fell Mayor

From Page 1

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, Wed., Sept. 7, 1966



the city on request of the
mayor, but they were held in
reserve. Police began pulling
out of the area about 9 p.m.

The riot started in midaft-
ernoon after police shot and
seriously wounded a Negro
whom they suspected of car
theft.

shooting more than 400
Negroes, including several
members of the Student

Non-Violent Coordinating

Committee, were rushing

through the streets shouting,

“Black power—police brutal-

ify.

When Mayor Ivan Allen Jr.
rushed to the scene and
climbed upon a police car to
talk to the rioters, they
surged toward him and
rocked the car again and
again until the mayor tum-
bled to the street, shaken but
uninjured.

PLEAS

The 55-year-old mayor
scrambled to his feet and
then raced about the riot
area, which is only two
blocks from the city’s new
$18 million Atlanta Stadium.

“Go home, he pleaded
“please go home.”

“Don’t go — stay here and
protest police brutality,”
said members of SNCC who
walked behind the mayor.

The police said Stokely
Carmichael, SNCC’s 25-
year-old chairman, came to
the scene on tree-lined Capi-
tol avenue soon after the 1:30
p.m. shooting and told
Negroes that ‘‘we’re going to
be back at 4 p.m. and tear

~, this place up.”

Two other SNCC members,
Willie (Bill) Ware and Bob
Walton, were taken into cus-
tody by Atlanta police while
touring the area in a
sound truck, urging Negroes
to gather to protest the shoot-
ing.



UPI Telephoto
Mother cradled child, one of four rescued by police-

man from tear-gassed home



Drug Firm:
U.S. Files Action

From Page |!

ACCUSATIONS
“They were bringing dif-
ferent people into the area,”

|complete information was re-
| quired.
firm faces if convicted is a) Last September, FDA said

Within three hours of the |





SIM fine. a Len manila vwafuesn ¢n- allaw ¢hell allo.

sergeant D. J. Perry, a Ne |

Ge wt

o fp =
fa +
AO

Plutonium
Sale Goes
To Congress

| Washington

To promote American - Eu-
ropean cooperation in the
peaceful development of
atomic energy, the Adminis-
tration has asked for
congressional approval of a
record sale of plutonium to
the European Atomic Energy
Community.

Under the proposed trans-
action, the United States
would sell the six-nation
community, known as Eura-
tom, 1000 kilograms of pluton-
ium, or about $43 million
| worth.
| A PAUSE
| Plutonium once used exclu-
\sively in atomic weapons
would be used by the Eura-
tom members, particularly
|France and West Germany,
'to develop an advanced
atomic power reactor. This
reactor, known as the breed-
,er, produces more fissionable
| fuelthanitconsumes.

The size of the transaction
said Davis. a Negro. “And launched by SNCC, Atlanta |and the potential use of it for
they started. rocking the cal. has heard few of the “‘police|the manufacture of atomic
And I got the hell out |brutality” complaints that|weapons, gave the Adminis-
caiet Both Davis and WsB pave heightened police-Negro | tration considerable pause.
radio newsman Andy Still &S-' tension in many of the Na- |}

caped without injury. | tion’s cities. | DIBEEEEIVCES

Yesterday violence caught) The city has been widely| Euratom, which purchased
the mayor, one of the f€W| Praised as a model for the |500 kilograms of plutonium in
Southern officials who b@S|South in its peaceful accept-| 1964, originally requested the
advocated civil rights legisl@- | Ance of school desegregation, | additional plutonium last
tion, by surprise. . and its two daily newspa-|spring to meet its breeder

Except for tension in T@| Pers — the Constitution and |reactor research needs over
cent weeks between the p®| the Journal—are among the | the next five years.
lice and advocates, of th®|™ost liberal in the region in! The Administration de-
“black power’ philosophy | Tacial matters. |layed in approving the sale,
ee Pe See ee PEE es





AP Wirephoto

Moments before he was knocked off car, Mayor
Ivan Allen tried to disperse mob

Syria Foils {
| Coup Plot by
Vila, New Hebrides (ey

President de Gaulle touch-| Beirut, Lebanon
ed oe eee in this | The left-wing Syrian re
sun-drenched capital of the| jm i
New Hebrides, the world’s aoe : i eee
anly territorial condominium. |. Peres Gh ape zur

Flying 300 miles north|™ Baath party toregain
from New Caledonia, he paid control and sweep the nation
a relaxed five-hour visit to|with a “wave of terrorism,
the colonial territory ruled | violence. murder and destruc-
jointly by France and Brit-| tion.” Radio Damascus said
ain. A condominium is: aj.) a
jointly administered protec- | ¥¢Sterday.
torate. | A government statement

His brief stop here was the | said supporters of the Baath
second he has made in Pa-|party international com-

cific in the course of a world ‘
tour. He returned to New mand, toppled by strongman

| Caledonia late in the day.|S@ah Jedid six months ago,
| Today he will fly to French |Joined with “imperialists and
Polynesia, where he will in- \reactionary forces” in the at-
spect France’s new Pacific|tempt to overthrow the Da-
nuclear test installations and | mascus regime.
witness an experimental nu-| ‘
clear explosion. | The broadcast, monitored
New York Times here, named former Premier
Salah Bitar, former Party
| Secretary Michel Aflak and
largely because of inter-|/Dr. Mounif Razzaz, interna-
agency differences over what |tional command secretary-
safeguards should be re-)general, as leaders of the
quired to assure that the | abortive coup.
material, sufficient to make| jt said the plotters were ar-
more than 100 atomic weap- | rested and had confessed and
ons, would not be diverted to | youlg be tried without merey
ester at eoeoe , |by a special national tribu-
he agreement finally| 31 But there was no confir-

reached was that, as in the . 4
zi - mation that the major lead-
case of past transfers -of fis- ers were actually in jail.

sionable materials to Eura-

tom, the controls against mil-| The plotters also master-
itary diversion should be ex-|™inded Bitar’s recent escape
|ercised by the Euratom|from a Damascus jail, the
agency. | government broadcast said.

New York Times United Press



| De Gaulle |
| Visits the |





How'd

Wel



like
Cv Wate
The information was quiét-
ly filed on August 22 in Fed-
eral Court in Grand Rapids,
Mich. The case is being han-
dled by United States Attor-
ney Harold Beaton, who, said
yesterday that the date for
arraignment has not been
set.

In Kalamazoo, Mich., a
spokesman for Upjohn said
he had no comment on the
plea that will be entered by
the firm. He said Orinase
sales last year came to about |
17 percent of the firm’s total
sales of $243 million.
Upjohn’s 1965 net after-tax
income was $37 million. :
The criminal information
charges that Orimase, which
has the generic name tolbu-
tamide, was mislabeled be-
cause the entry in the 1965
Physician’s Desk reference}
— the same entry as that
used in some prior years
—‘‘was not, as required by
regulations, substantially the
same as the labeling author-)
ized” by the Food and Drug}
Administration.

The charge is based on





entry to appear in the 1966
PDR without inelusion of cer-
tain information that had
been omitted. Upjohn com-
plied and added the following
information:

“The safety and the useful-
ness of Orinase during preg-
nancy have not been es-
tablished at this time, either
from the standpoint of the
mother or the fetus.’”’ In ani-
mal studies, the entry said,
tolbutamide in massive doses
has been shown to kill or de-
form the fetus.

“Tt is not known whether
or not this finding is applica-

\ble to human subjects,”

Upjohn said. “Clinical stud-
ies thus far are quite limited
and experimental. Therefore,
the use of Orinase is not rec-
ommended for the manage-
ment of diabetes when com-
plicated by pregnancy.”

Air Strike
Cost City
$250,000

FDA’s long-standing rule that) Last month’s 24-day airline
entries in PDR—which are|strike cost an estimated
prepared, edited, approved $250,000 in lost income at San
and paid for by drug manu-|Francisco International Air-
facturers—are legally label-|port, George F. Hansen, air-
mg. Under the 1962 amend-iport general manager, said
ments to the drug law thelyesterday.
>gency also requires drug ads) Hansen told the Public
to contain a true statement! YtiJities Commission’ that the
in brief summary of the FDA-\July traffic passenger vol-
approved brochure enclosed yme was $20,973, down near-
in each package of a drugjy 5 percent from the July,
product. 1965, figure of 852,515.
UPJOHN June’s pre-strike traffic
The Upjohn spokesman'volume of 1,061,279 was the
said that in a difference of/first month in the airport’s
opinion with FDA the firm history to top a million.
considered the PDR entry to} Hanson estimated that,
be paid advertising, and that'without the strike, July traf-
under that interpretation less fic would have been 1,130,000,



Chances Fading for
Grand Canyon Dams

Washington mistie picture of the $1.7,

The Colorado river Project | billion measure’s chances. _|
bill with its controversial; If the measure is indeed |
Grand Canyon dams ap-|buried, it would be a major |
pears headed for the legisla- | victory for the Sierra Club
tive graveyard this year. 'and other nature-lovers who
_. Arizona Congressmen Mor- have attacked, in particular,
-vis K, Udall, a Demoerat,|the two proposed Colorado
‘and Jon J. Rhodes, a Republi-| river dams above and below
‘ean, are expected to issue a|Grand Canyon National Park.
-joint statement on the subject; They claim the dams would
‘today. Their statement was |damage the canyon’s natural
sunderstood to paint a pessi- | beauty. Times-Post Service

men, “and they were saying
that the man had been shot
while handcuffed and that he
Was murdered by white po-
lice.”’

The police denied the aceu-
sations. The wounded man,
Harold Louis Prather, was
reported by a spokesman at
Grady Memorial Hospital in
“poor condition.”

“This is an explosive area,
and they (the police) come
down here and shoot a Negro
— good God Almighty.” said
Cleveland Sellers, SNCC’s
project and program direc-
tor. “People here are just
reacting to police brutality.”

Other SNCC officials on
capitol avenue during the
rioting were Ruby Doris Rob-
inson, executive secretary of
the Committee, and Ivanhoe
Donaldson, head of the or-
ganization’s New York office..

In the beginning, the mis-
sile-throwing was sporadic.
But after the police used tear
gas to rout a group of bottle
thowers Negroes hurled vol-
ley after volley of bricks and
bottles. At one point, the po-
lice threw tear gas into a
home, which they said had
been the center of some bot-
tle-throwing, and a mother,
her five small children and
their grandmother were
forced into the street.

The family was taken to
Grady Memorial hospital in
an ambulance.

Heavy police details’
rushed into a Negro section)
about one mile from the trou-
ble spot last night after a ra-



dio newsman’s car was over-'

turned by Negroes near a|
church. Reporter Mike Davis |
of the Atlanta Constitution |
said one of the Negroes
pulled a pistol and fired.

“T heard glass breaking,” |

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