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Newspaper Strike
Appears
To Start
NEW YORK (AP) Repub
lican Mayor John V. Lindsay
failed yesterday in a last-minute
effort to win a stay in the
merger of three Manhattan
dailies, and thus head off a
strike against the newspapers.
As a result, at least a par
tial newspaper blackout Mon
day appeared inevitble. A
publishers' spokesman, Matt
Meyer, said the chances of
publishing as scheduled Mon
day amount to "none whatso
ever." Lindsay summoned publish
ers and union leaders to city
hall after key negotiation broke
down once again with the AFL
CIO International Typographi
cal Union. Chief issue was
above-t h e-contract severance
pay for 400 printers facing loss
of their jobs in the merger.
Meyer, president of the new
World Journal Tribune, Inc.,
said Lindsay proposed that
peace talks continue, and that
there be a delay in the merg
er of the afternoon Journal
American and the World-Telegram
and Sun and the morn
ing Herald Tribune.
"We've made up our minds
to publish a new paper or no
paper on Monday," Meyer
told newsmen in reporting re
jection of the mayor's propos
al. Even if there was a quick
end to the union-management
deadlock, it was explained,
Monday publication appeared
impossible, because certain
mechanical preliminaries are
necessary before the new dai
lies could hit the street.
Final editions of the Hearst
Journal - American and the
Scripps-Houlard World - Tele
gram are scheduled to go to
press tomorrow. They were to
be replaced Monday by the
new afternoon World Journal.
The Sunday Herald Tribune
and the Sunday Journal-American
were to be put to bed
for the last time this weekend,
to be replaced May 1 by the
Sunday World Journal Trib-
i i tin t hi n. v trui trill
work. Septic Tank
installation
CALL
;Mack ' B. Thompaon
STZ7-37UZ , BURLINGTON
1
HURT
BOOK
BARGAIN
SALE!
Hundreds of copies of
excellent books in less
than excellent condition.
Fancy art books, better
children's titles, books
on painting, boating and
dogs, beautiful cookbooks,
music books and more
each with a nick in the
cover or a bent cover or
such, and each book
Reduced to
half-price!
Original prices from
$4.95 to $25.00 . . .
The pickings will be
better early in the week,
but there's plenty to go
around.
Come, bargain
hunting this
week at the
Intimate!
and in the Old Book
Corner
South Carolina
irginia Books
!
Rare and choice items
to tempt our neighbors.
The Intimate
Bookshop
113 East Franklin Street
Chfrpel Hill
Open Erfcnings until 10
Certain
Monday
une.
The Herald Tribune, retain
ing its name, was to become
on Monday the morning edi:
tion of the merged corporation.
Still unresolved was wheth
er others among the major
New York dailies would close
down in vent of strikes against
the merging newspapers. The
morning Times and the Daily
News have done so in the past,
on the premise that a strike
against one is a strike against
all the papers which belong to
the publishers association of
New York City. So have two
other members of the associ
ation, the Long Island Star
Journal and the Long Island
Press.
The afternoon New York
Post withdrew from the pub
lishers association during the
big 1962-63 newspaper black
out, and presumably will con
tinue to publish in any new
strike.
The merger is expected to
cost some 2,000 jobs from
among 5,700 persons employed
on the three dailies. One after
noon and one Sunday paper are
being eliminated.
Bertram A. Powers' ITU Lo
cal 6 demanded that printers
who lose their jobs receive
more than the three weeks
severance pay to which their
contract entitles them. Nine
other unions also are seeking
new contracts and one of them,
the AFL-CIO Newspaper Guild
of New York, scheduled a
strike for 4 p.m. Sunday.
Daylight Time
Starts Sunday
m
111 Many States
By The Associated Press
A big majority of the Amer
ican people have to remember
to set their clocks ahead an
hour Sunday morning.
But despite a new federal
law aimed at nudging recal
citrant states toward time con
formity, nearly a score of
states will ignore this annual
spring ceremony.
. And in many others, daylight
time-will go into effect in
only parts of a state in
some cases only a single town
or county.
The new law provides that
this year a state can do as it
pleases with one exception. If
any state or smaller govern
mental unit elects to use day
light time at all, it must ob
serve the same dates as in the
federal law April 24 to Oct.
30.
In a number of states this
means six months of daylight
time instead of the three, four
or five they previously obser
ved.
This year antidaylight time
states can observe standard
time with or without state leg
islative action.
But next year, any state
which wishes to stay on stand
ard time must pass a state law
specifically prohibiting daylight
time.
Starting daylight time state
wide at 2 a.m. Sunday will
be all of the populous North
east New England, New
York, New Jersey, Pennslyvan
ia and the whole Pacific
Coast California, Oregon and
Washington.
Others observing statewide
"fast" time will be Colorado,
Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Ne
vada, West Virginia and Wis
consin. States which will be almost
entirely on daylight time in
clude Minnesota, Maryland and
Virginia.
Ohio, Missouri, Michigan,
Kentucky and Indiana will be
about half and half.
Huntsville, Ala., Los Alamos
County, N. M., Butte, Mont.,
ANNOUNCING
THE OBJECTIVIST
THE JOURNAL OF THE PHILOSOPHY OF OBJECTIVISM
EDITED BY AYN RAND AND
NATHANIEL BRANDEN
A monthly journal that deals with the theoretical
aspects of Objectivism, with its application to mod
ern problems, and with the evaluation of today's
cultural trends.
THE OBrtCTIVIST is the development and the new
form of THE OBJECTIVIST NEWSLETTER, whose grow
ing circulation has permitted us to enlarge it and
adopt a magazine format.
THE OBJECTIVIST features articles by Ayn Rand,
Nathaniel Branden and other contributors, on ethics,
political economy, psychology, literature as well as
reviews of recommended books, and reports on
Objectivist activities.
THE OBJECTIVIST, INC. 120 E. 34 St. New York City 10016
Please enter my subscription to THE OBJECTIVIST for one year.
$5 in U.S., its possessions, Canada and Mexico, $6 in other countries. 29
Remittance enclosed
Please bill me please print Name aTove
lf you enclose payment
thereby eliminating billing
costs, your subscription will
be extended for one extra
issue.
ADDRESS
CITY
ABC Recommends Uniform
Enforcement Of Liquor Law
By REESE HART
Associated Press Writer
Raleigh - The North Caro
lina Alcoholic Beverage Con
trol Board recommended rri
day that all law enforcement
officers in the state's legally
wet counties abide by a judge s
ruling permitting "Brown-bagging"
and prviate liquor clubs.
Chairman Clawsan Williams
Jr. told the board this should
be done pending an appeal to
the State Supreme Court on
the legality of North Carolina s
liquor law.
He said that although the
board has no authority over
the city and county law en
forcement officers, "I think it
would be in order tokcom
mend that the officers abide"
by a ruling of Superior Court
Judge H. L. Riddle, Jr.
This, Williams added, would
provide uniformity in the law
pending the appeal.
The five - member board
voted unanimously to appeal
Great Train Robbery
May Soon Be Solved
LONDON (AP) Scotland
Yard's hopes of wrapping up
the Great Train Robberty case
rose tonight as a captured
member of the gang said he
was ready to talk. Police also
picked up a clue to another
gangster still on the run.
James Edward White, drum
ming his fingers nervously on
the rail of the dock, listened
as a detective told a court in
Linslade the former comman
do had confessed to him:
"I am only too pleased to
tell you all about it. I was on
that job. I was in that (train)
coach when the money was
nicked (stolen) and at Leath
erslade farm afterwards."
The gang is reported to have
divided up the $7.2 million loot
in shares of about 14,000
pounds ($392,000) each at
the remote farm and then
split up. Only $758,000 of the
loot has been recovered.
Police surrounded the old
courthouse in Linslade, only
three miles from the scene of
the 1S63 robbery, while White
was brought in for a five-minute
hearing. Then he was wish
ed off to prison at nearby
Bedford, about 35 miles north
of London.
He was caught yesterday in
a Kentish sea resort where for "
and the Northern Idaho Pan
handle will stand alone as is
lands of daylight time in
standard time states.
Sponsors of the federal law
expect compliance from the
states both this year and next
and most states which previ
ously had offbeat dates for
starting and ending daylight "
time already have moved to
conform or are in the process
of doing so.
The law carries no criminal
penalties, but the Interstate
Commerce Commission can
bring injunctive proceedings
against any state which defies
the procedures set down in the
law.
The District of Columbia will
be on daylight time, but Texas
where the bill was signed
by President Johnson will
stay standard.
In some states the period
has been from Memorial Day
to Labor Day, adding to the
confusion in a nation with four
time zones and plenty of rug
ged individualism.
Next year, as this year, the
law is not mandatory. But be
fore the summer of 1967 rolls
around, any state that wants
to stay on "God's time" will
need a state legislative law
specifically forbidding Day
light Saving Time.
The feeling in rural areas
runs strong against the time
device which gives the city
golfer an extra hour at the
19th hole or the suburban gar
dener an extra hour with his
roses.
i'fT: ... i
THE DAILY
the case and to instruct local
ABC boards in the state to ad
here to Judge Riddle's injunc
tion enjoining Charlotte and
Mecklenburg ABC officers
from enforcing an attorney
general's ruling that brown
bagging and private liquor
clubs were illegal.
Asst. Atty. Gen. James Bull
ock told the board it woud
be sometime in September be
fore the appeal could be heard
by the high court and "a de
cision could possibly be reach
ed in October."
Later, he said, it would be
60 to 90 days before the ap
peal can be filed with the Su
preme Court.
Some state legislators have
urged that enforcement of the
liquor law be delayed until the
1967 General Assembly can
study the issue.
State ABC Director Ray
Brady had already issued a di
rective to state ABC officers
to disregard an earlier mem
orandum calling for enforce-
about a year, he had been liv
ing a quiet family life with his
wife, Sheree, and their 4-year-old
son. Neighbors called him
"a nice bloke."
"White's attorney told the
court that he "intended to sur
render himself this weekend"
anyway tired of being on
the run.
The assertion of Scotland
Yard's chief detective, Supt.
Thomas Butler, that White was
willing to talk was a break in
vestigators have been hoping
for.
Ten members of the gang
in prison five serving 30
years each have rufused to
talk.
Four still are at large in
cluding two believed to have
master - minded the robbery
1 A it 1
ana two omers wno were
caught and convicted but es
caped from prison.
J
A clue to Ronald "Bustex
Edwards, 33, suspected asa
ringleader, developed soonfc
ter White was tracked down
A man resembling Edwards
bought a farmhouse shortly af
ter the train robbery for 7,000
pounds ($19,600) but stayed
only a few weeks. The man
' told a neighbor he was going
' to South America, and another
that he was headed for Pana
ma.
White really gave Scotland
Yard the tip that led to his
capture after eluding an inter
national police search for near
ly three years.
He came out of hiding last
weeKena ana tnea to seil-'nfg
story to two newsmen at a reri'
dezvous in London, only a short
distance away from the head
quarters of Scotland Yard. He
had shaved off his mustache
The Yard put out new pictures
of him without the mustache
A tip from a woman followed.
Appearing in court, White
tried to shield his face with a
hat. He seemed restless. White
said nothing during the hear
ing. Detectives went to Dover
Harbor and towed away the 30
foot yacht Karelia, believed
owned by White under his ali
as of Bob Lane. It is under
stood the yrcht is being ex
amined. The robbery was pulled off
with military precision. The
robbers stopped the train with
a fake red signal near the
hamlet of Cheddington, one of
the line's loneliest stretches 40
miles north of London.
The gang seized the train's
crew, uncoupled the locomo
tive and the mail car behind
it, and forced the engineer to
take the engine a half mile
down the track where a truck
waited. The gang looted the
mail car of 124 sacks full of
old money being shipped to
London to be withdrawn from
circulation. The robbery took
only 15 minutes.
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TAR HEEL
ment of Bullock's ruling that
the home is the only place
where liquor may be legally
consumed.
In issuing an injunction Tues
day at Charlotte, Judge Riddle
said in effect it was legal to
consume liquor in public or in
bottle clubs in counties which
operate ABC stores. Lawyers
representing two Charlotte
supper clubs requested the in
junction. The State ABC Board met
briefly with Brady behind clos
ed doors before going into its
special meeting Friday. Board
member Fleming Talman of
Asheville proposed that the
state appeal Judge Riccle's de
cision. Lawrence Rose of Wrights
ville Beach then offered the
motion that local ABC boards
be directed to abide by Rid
dle's injunction.
"I certainly think the ABC
law should be uniform," Rose
said.
Before approving this mo
tion, the board was advised by
Bullock that it had the author
ity to issue such a directive
to local boards.
Weather Report
Variable cloudiness Sat
turday and Sunday with
widely scattered afternoon
showers or thundershow
ers. Somewhat warmer
Saturday. Highs 65 to 75
in the mountains, 74 to 82
elsewhere. Continued
warm Sunday.
Are Political Science
And Sex The Same?
CHICAGO (AP) A ques
tion of whether instruction in
sex and political science should
be placed on the same schol
astic level attracted some at
tention in Illinois today.
The question was raised by
James B. Hirsh, 16, a junior
at Niles Township East High
School. He complained that the
school board for his suburban
district had decided to drop
political science as a required
course and to offer it as an
elective subject along with such
others as one in sex educa
tion. "Political science," he .con
tinued, "is too important to
give the average teeenager a
choice of -whether he should
take it."
If given the option, he add
ed, most of the kids would go
for the sex course.
Hirsh, in letters to Ray
Page, Illinois superintendent
of public instruction, and some
legislators, also raised a ques
tion of whether Illinois stat
utes permit elimination of po
litical science as a required
course.
Robert F. Vespa, a legal ad
viser to the state school su
perintendent, looked for an an
swer in the law books down in
Springfield. He found:
"American patriotism and
the principles of representa
tive government as enunci
Patient Still
After Heart
HOUSTON (AP) - Physi
cicians attending Marcel De
Rudder, 65, said last night the
former coal miner possible suf
fered temporary brain dam
age during the six-hour oper
ation in which he received a
partial artificial heart.
"This condition has ben en
counted previously in open
heart cases," a Methodist Hos
pital bulletin said.
DeRudder has not recovered
consciousness since the oper
ation but the latest advisory
said his lack of response is
not due to the plastic heart
pump that still is working sat
isfactorily. Dr. Michael DeBakey feels
his unconsciousness is possibly
Supscription Manager
Job entails:
1. Mailing DTH subscrip
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2. Handling all finances and
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3. Promotions.
Potential earnings of $700,
salary and commission.
Viet Cob
To Es
SAIGON (AP) Survivors of
the Viet Cong's hard-core 1st
regiment struggled tonight to
flee U. S. Marines and Viet
namese troops who have kill
ed perhaps a fourth of the reg
iment and are trying to trap
the rest.
A U. S. Spokesman said four
or more allied battalions, back
ed by artillery batteries and
air squadrons, blocked Red es
cape routes from the battle
zone in foothills of the central
coast 10 miles northwest of
Quang Ngai.
He reported a count of 257
enemy dead from Operation
Hot Springs, launched with a
surprise attack Thursday after
a Viet Cong defector pointed
out the enemy camp, believed
to have contained some ele
ments of North Viet Nam's
21st regular regiment as well
as the Viet Cong. The spokes
man said allied losses remain
ed light.
Amid this stiffest ground
fighting of the politically trou
bled spring, word from Wash
ington was that plans are be
ing developed for U. S. Am
bassador Henry Cabot Lodge
to eeturn home next month for
consultation with President
Johnson and other high offi
cials on Vietnamese war prob
lems. Suggestions by Sen. Mike
Mansfield for a confrontation
at a peace table of the United
ated in the American declara
tion of independence, the Con
stitution of the United States
and the constitution of the
state of Illinois, and proper
use and display of the flag
shall be taught in all public
schools.
He was asked if that made
political science mandatory.
"It might," he replied.
"But," he added, "if its in
cluded in other courses, that
would be sufficient."
State Rep. Paul Elward, D
Chicago, said he will propose
that the Illinois legislature
tighten up on the requirement
that all students be given in
struction in the voting system.
And back in Niles Township,
Dr. John Harris, assistant su
perintendent in charge of cur
riculum, commented:
"we don't have a course m
sex education. We have ?
course in family living. There's
some discussion of sex educa
tion in that."
How does he feel about sep
arate but equal treatment of
instruction in sex and politi
cal science?
scnoois do teach govern
ment and should teach govern
ment," he replied. "The
schools do have a role in sex
education, and share this role
with families and other insti
tutions." Unconscious
Operation
due to temporary brain dam
age," the bulletin said. De
Rudder has been receiving the
type treatment ' usually em
ployed in these cases. It is
hoped that any possible brain
damage and edema will be
temporary."
The artificial pump now is
assuming about 75 per cent of
the work load normally han
dled by DeRudder's left ven
tricle, the chamber that does
most of the heart's pumping.
The advisory also said studies
indicate the artificial pump has
caused no destruction of blood.
An earlier advisory had quo
ted DeBakey as blaming the
prolonged unconsciousness
now in its second day.
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us
cape
States, Red China. North Viet
Nam and South Vietnamese el
ements drew further scoffing
comment from the Commun
ists. Hanoi brushed off as "a
new peace trick" the proposal
that the Senate majority lead
er trom Montana made m the
Senate Monday. Peking had
previously called it a hoax.
U. S. jet pilots were striving
again to block railway traffic
between Red China and Hanoi.
Saigon briefing officers told of
raids Thursday on the Red Riv
er Valley line, reporting its
Lang Bun and Thu Tho brid
ges were destroyed.
The Soviet news agency Tass. '
in a Hanoi dispatch unconfirm
ed here, said further strikes
were made Friday along the
80-miesl stretch between Hanoi
and Lang Son, a border sta
tion on the main line from
Peking. It said three of the
raider were shot down.
Implying that at least one
of the attacks was close to the
North Vietnamese capital, Tass
said "The roar of a cannonade
and bombs shook the - skies
over the city." U. S. Air Force
planes made their closest an
nounced approach in blasting
two surface to air missle
(SAM) sites, 15 and 17 miles
from Hanoi, last Sunday.
American authorities an
nounced the loss of a Navy
A6 Intruder from the carrier
Kitty Hawk in a raid Thurs-
Vday. It was the 215th plane re-
puneu lusi ill me muiui ouitc
the opening of the aerial cam
paign Feb. 7, 1965.
Accompanying pilots said the
twin-jet attack bomber burst
into a bright flash after it
was hit. It was not disclosed
whether the hit was by con
ventional antiaircraft fire or
by a missile. Briefing officers
are under instructions now to
withhold such information. The
Intruder's pilot and his radar
observed are listed as missing.
The targets of the Navy
raids, staged from the Kitty
Hawk and the Ticonderoga, in
-eluded the Hai Yen naval
base, eight miles northeast of
Vihn. They also pounded an
army supply area at Vinh and
a storage zone between that
city and Don? Hoi, 40 miles
north of the border.
Five miles south of the bor-J
der, U. S. B52 jet ' bombers
blasted a suspected Comrauh
unist concentration point. Thi
sappeared to be part of a con
tinuing campaign to disrupt the
reported buildup of Red forces
in South Viet Nam's northern
most provinces.
Vietnamese marines follow
ed up without luck a dive
bombing attack by U. S. planes
on suspected guerrilla positions
Cramming
Clowning
Crashing
Pubbing
Fragging
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in swampland and rice fields,,
only four miles outside Saix
gon. Bomb explosions rattled
doors, windows and tableware
in the capital. But the guer
rillas, if they were in fact in
the area, eluded the marines.
A rain of steel from the air
helped to nail down the Viet
Cong in the Quang Ngai sec-,
tor Battle. U. S. Marines met .
a blaze of automatic weapons
fire at the villages of Binh Bac
and Chau Nhai, but took both
and pushed on eastward to
help close the net.
As outlined by briefing offi- '
cers here:
Artillery opened up on the
Communists at 4 a.m. Thurs-
day.
U. S. Planes joined in the
bombardment at dawn.
Then the American Marines
and the Vietnamese marines
and paratroopers went in,.,
many by helicopter. They land
ed almost on top of the Com
munists. Additional American
Marines moved in late in the
day as a block force.
The alies have collected
more than 100 enemy weapons,
including 14 of crew-manned
types such as recoilless rifles
and heavy machine guns. ;
NOW PLAYING
1968
Academy Award
Winner
Nominated for
Best Picture
of The Year
WINNER
of
Best
Supporting
Actor
"A Thousand
Clowns"
starring
Jason Robards
Barbara Harris
Best Supporting Actor
MARTIN BALSAM
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