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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 1
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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 1

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

in i ti ri Saved by .1 inrrica's Greatest Xczvx Services i iiil mm Ijl IJujLjjdi At the Crossroads of Natural Gas and TV A Powtr Telephone Apine 5-1221 VOL. 58 Xo. I ll Second Oem Postage Pfl.d at Nashviii. Term. NASHVILLE, WEDNESDAY MORNING.

SEPT. 18, H'63 10 CENTS 2S PAUKS to on Exit the Uninvited Campbe ..100 000 021- Los Angeles St. Louis .000 000 0000 Pad uca V. New Liquor Bill Provides Majority Vote Includes Some Clauses From Vetoed Measure By FRANK RITTER Metropolitan Council passed last night on second reading an ordinance which would require a ma Smith Faces 2nd Charge Of Tax Theft jority vote of the council ir. i if I to make any change in the On Route 64-Mile Link Connecting Jackson, Hayti, Urged on President; Prompt Study by U.S.

Promised By LOIS LAYCOOK, Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON Nashville -to -St. Loui3 Inter-state 21 will enter Kentucky near Ft. Campbell and leave it at Paducah, under a plan submitted to Tresi-dent Kennedy yesterday by Gov. Frank Clement and the chiefs of three other states. However, the four governors -through whose) states the new superhigh-! zrrs Bomb Probe status of liquor stores.

The bill contains several sec tions which are identical to By JAMES TALLEY, Staff Correspondent those contained in a bill which Mayor Beverly Briley vetoed KNOXV1LLE William P. Smith ousted state tax inspector, goes on trial the second time here to last week. Council approved the bill sponsored by Councilman Robert day this time on charges of taking almost $2,800 in sales tax money and gifts from a liquor dealer. Lillard, by a vote of 23 to 10, with two abstentions. The action was taken shortly His trial will start less than 24 hours after a after council sustained Briley's criminal court jury- veto by a vote or 21 to 17, standing seven for acquit The law which the mayor vetoed would have prohibited tal and five for conviction the establishment, transfer or dent also recommend new 64.

mile interstate MnWinfl lA0 deadlocked on an em removal of whisky stores with Moss, Oliver Plan lo Retire out the written consent of the bezzlement charge mayor and the councilman in whose district the store was lo against him. A mistrial was declared by Judge J. cated. It was sponsored by Miss highway section connect-! I'lWIIIiy IIVII ing Jackson, By BILL K0VACH Hayti, Mo. guff CorrponUnl The Jackson-Haytl strip 58 1 miles of which would be in Ten-1 BIRMINGHAM The Investl- Fred Bibb.

Frances Dovle, representative from the 17th District. Smith, former regional super visor of the State Revenue De LILLARD'S bill would embrace the provisions of the partment office in Knoxville was tried first on charges of Doyle ordinance and require, ncssee would demand construe- Ration Into Sunday's bombing tion of a bridge over the Mis, hers which killed four Negro Hissippi River at a point i8 "moving well." Jef. Dyersburg, 80 miles north of Memphis. There Is a County Sheriff Mel Bailey further, that the entire council embezzling in sales taxes that Tennessee said an auto approve any establishment or firm, Weaver-Edsel Sales at this point now. said yesterday as one ot ins vie- change In liquor store licenses.

Councilman-at-large Dan Mav owed. Smith denied the charges. told the council after it had The President Immediately di-ltims was being burled, rected Rex M. Whltten, admin-1 "I am optimistic that ars istrator of the federal Bureau 'on the way toward a of Public Roads, to order a Bailey said, "Most cases la this EVEN AFTER today's trial Metro's two superintendents of education, J. E.

Moss of the county and W. H. Oliver of the city, said yesterday they expect to retire next year and will not apply for the post of Metro school director. The Metro Transitional Board of Education will Interview prospective school directors and will submit nominations to the first permanent Metro school board1, to take office July 1,1964. Moss, 64, -with the county system 40 years, expressed interest some time back in retiring, and Oliver said yesterday he may accept a college teaching job here.

THE' METRO charter required separate superintendents approved the Lillard bill that "Mayor Briley will probably veto this measure." Councilman Glenn Ferguson immediately study or tne proposal, wniuen which probably will continue through tomorrow Smith is to be tried on nine other separate indictments brought by the State Revenue Department and charg Is expected to assign officials stooa up and said: to confer with state highway See editorial, "Burden of Non-Violenee," and Tom Little's cartoon, page 8. chiefs of the four states soon. "I would hate to think that the mayor is qoinq to start veto ing embezzlement, conspiracy MISSOURI GOV. JOHN Dal- and bribery. ing every law that we (the coun- mn lom newsmen inai ne, cilmen) pass!" Charles Warfield, special coun Clement, Kentucky Gov.

Bertl. A wh unnal In other action during the sel for the state, said the case ending in mistrial yesterday will Combs end Gov. Otto Kerner of about tMn People ar, be. iour-nour session, council: be set again, probably in Novem uiinom nu iwi.ru u.mn gl ln airvAAtnant" niraii (ha fntitlnM Af Approved by a vote of 25 ber. He and Dist.

Atty. Gen. for the Nashville and Davidson County systems until the two UPI Telephoto UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Two U.N. security men help a "Free Cuba" demonstrator from the General Assembly chamber after 11 youths interrupted the U.N.

General Assembly's opening session with an anti-Castro demonstration. U.N. Session Opens With Air of Harmony to 13 a motion to defer action on Councilman-at-large Tom Mc- are merged next year under a Grath's "prevailing wage" bill. single executive head, to be Mclirath requested the delay. director of education.

Approved a motion to es Oliver, 59, with schools 34 years, told the school board last tabllsh a special council com Interstate 24, but he added: BUT THE sheriff would not "We. will not agree to the elaborate or point to anything route unless we get a bridge specific about just what he crossing the Mississippi." meant by "moving well." The plan which the four gov h'rlff s.a'd the rrM' ernors adopted after years tw? ln the dath of haggling-calls for 1-24 lr Wa.f; can? leave St. Louis on a faiHy! result of an informant. VVar straight line to Paducah, where "8 sot th violent upheaval it wiuld cross the Ohio River. af cr the Sunday bombing, and run through Eddyville, development-mss.

mittee to investigate the liquor Thursday he win not be a can didate, but that he would be inousiry in tne Metropolitan area. Vice Mayor George H. Cate Jr. said he will appoint willing to serve the school be claimed the assembly as one of Lambertus N. Palar expressed UNITED NATIONS, NT.

CP) yond the July 1. 1964, date, in some capacity if needed and the committee at the next session reservation to the seating of the hope for mankind. of council. An atmosphere of hope and requested to stay. delegation representing the new Late In the day the assembly Heard Councilman May re (Turn to Page 5, Column 3) harmony-emphasized by the first (Turn to Page 4, Column 1) (Turn to Page 2, Column 4) Council Kills Cavert Project Metropolitan Council passed unanimously last night on final reading an ordinance to kill plans to make $129,000 worth of improvements at Cavert Junior High School.

There was no debate. However, Councllmen Richard Taylor and Glenn Ferguson announced before the voice vote nation of Malaysia. The federa received a jolt when demonstra "I'm not anxious to retire," Oliver said. But, he said, he private meeting between top U.S. port tnat he has tape recordings to prove that members of tors touched off a brief uproar, and Soviet representatives pre does not wish to complicate matters if the director should Eleven youthful, shouting dem tion of Malaya, already a U.N.

member, changed its name to Malaysia with the birth of the new country, but in the aftermath Malaysia severed relations onstrators burst into the hall the old City Council had referred constituents who wanted zoning changes made to an attorney, who reportedly would vailed at yesterday's opening of the United Nations General As They ran down the aislps dls have the opinion that a former superintendent would be in the Protestants, Catholics, Jews Fix Prayer Service tributing anti-Castro pamphlets. with Indonesia and the Philip sembly's ISth session. decide the matter. This statement set off a series THEY ELUDED the guards Anti-Castro demonstrators pines. The assembly elected as presi by breaking away from one of touched off a brief uproar, and (Turn to Page 2, Column 3) the U.N.

guided tours "and two controversial issues were streaming through a side door. dent Carlos Sosa-Rodriguez, 51, a lawyer-diplomat from Venezuela who immediately pro Protestants, Catholics andiof religious people who wanted Some of the demonstrators got In tt'ill pvnrnu Hif.il- mncm anrl to the front of the speaker's concern over the churchlwho are asking all churches and form before U.N. guards ewedibomblna, Rirmincham at Dray, avnaeorues to ioin in. snonsota was taken that they have filed another bill which will place Cavert School back Into the them and hustled all 11 out way. Moss, some educators believe, might stay for a brief period, possibly a year or so, to ease the transition if the board requested this.

He Is a former teacher and was supervisor of the county's vocational program before becoming superintendent In 1949. He holds a B.S. degree from the University of Tennessee, a master of arts from Pea-body College, and has done post M.A. work at Peabody and UT. OLIVER, who holds the (Turn to Page 2, Column 4) er services today.

jof the services said. Cooperating churches and! The Rt. Rev. Charles M. WIN The pampleta identified the 1963-64 budget.

IN ADDITION, the council- demonstartors as members of the i synagogues will provide places liams, chancellor of the Catholic Cuba Nationalist for an offering and this money'diocese of Nashville, requested Rain Likely NASHVILLE! Considerable cloudiness today, tonight and Thursday with only a chance of light rain Thursday. High today 78 to 85, low tonight in the 60s. Map, other data page 22. In a surprise move Albania, rather than the Soviet Union, called for debate on the admission of Communist China. Albania is aligned with Peking in the ideological dispute now raging between Russia and China, but the Soviet delegation indicated it would support the Albanian proposal.

I INDONESIAN ambassador No 'Politics' Joe Hatcher is on vacation. His column, Politics, which appears in THE NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN six days a week, will be resumed upon his return early in October. men said, they will bring before will be sent to Sixteenth StreetjCathollcs attending mass or the council six weeks from now a resolution which would ap All were released after questioning by U.N. security people. The assembly was in the routine business of electing chair- (Turn to Page 2, Column 1) Baptist Church in Blrmingham making visits to a church today for its rebuilding.

I to offer special prayers for the 'peaceful settlement of the racial THE IDEA for local prayerj services grew out, of a mecting (Turn to Page 2, Column 1) prove the issuance of $135,000 in (Turn to Page 2, Column 2) K.v,wA-Mtv.v.v.v.vv.:Aw.v.v;TOviA Dotaae With Dahlias, Devotee Declares! IDodge sXT i Goodwin of Antioch let a red fox squirrel crawl around his neck. A total of three squirrels, two rabbits, one pheasant and 24 quail scrambled through the booth. Next door, their natural to spot ln tall grass," observed fireman A. C. Gregory.

"They stick those claws in a leaf, turn upside down and are hidden by the leaf." Rosa Lee Richardson, 4, of 1145 Ardee felt the softness of a tiny quail as conservationist and farmer W. B. Fifteen baby quail held court ln the Davidson County soil conservation booth in the demonstration club building. They were hatched Sunday. And they have held center stage ever since.

"I'VE SEEN 10,000 of those and they're almost impossible sturdy and you have to dig them up." He admits to being the only male in the house when he addresses some garden club audiences, "but I'm old enough to be safe." Although he knowns names of 300 varieties, he maintains each plant is distinctive. "Just shows the diversity of God's creation. No two things are alike, plants or people. And you get a lot of happiness and satisfaction out of doing something to make others happy." It might have been "animal" day at the Fair yesterday. (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) TY II 'si 'WuVn-'W- I By JULIE HOLLABAUGH What's a good way to keep young? "Grow a li a advises John B.

Floyd of Louisville, nationally recognized grower and judger of dahlias. The retired credit manager Is president of federated garden clubs of Louisville and grows more than 100 varieties of dahlias. Yesterday he spent the morning judging the best of See editorial, "Here Comes Fall," page 8. Tennessee dahlias at the State Fair as countless growers thrust treasured plants in milk bottles and waited for the verdict JUDGES, according to Floyd, look for such things as "distinction," size, bright clear color, foliage, substance and uniformity. And, he stressed, dahlia-growing is a man's hobby.

"You try to see who can grow the biggest flower. Some are bigger than dinner plates. Some of mine I've grown under aster cloth are nine feet tall. They're massive and i7 i Tennessean Today Page Medical 11 22 12 Jt ttVf V. II jIM News Obituaries Radio-TV Snorts Weather Map Page Amusements 6 Ask Andy 19 Bridge 10 Jean Bruce 10 Classified 22-27 Comics 19 Crossword 22 Editorials S.

9 Horoscope 2t Markets 20-22 14-18 22 10, 11 Staff photos by Jack Corn And then there's the downy softness of a baby quail held in Goodwin's palm to the excited amazement of Rosa Lee Richardson, 4. Staff photo by Jack Corn It's hard to be a judge, admits dahlia judge John B. Floyd of Louisville as he appraises a giant yellow flower grown locally. Woman's Men like Clarence H. Rogers, state conservation aide, are wary when a hungry chicken hawk samples a plate of raw meat in fair booth.

It could be "animal day" at the State Fair, as farmer conservationist W. B. Goodwin of Antioch holds up a playful red fox squirrel. World Word Game 19.

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