Police arrest suspect - The Guardian [PDF]

Dec 17, 2008 - New York, .November 22. President John 'Fitzgerald Kennedy, the thirty-fifth President of the. United r S

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Police arrest suspect From ALISTAIR COOKE New Y ork, .November 22 President John 'Fitzgerald Kennedy, the thirty-fifth President of the United r States, was shot during a motorcade drive through downtown Dallas this afternoon. He died in the emergency room of the Parkland Memorial Hospital 32 minutes after the attack. He was 46 years old, and is :the third-President to be assassinated in office since Abraham Lincoln and the first since President McKinley in 1901. : JLate this afternoon , the Dallas police took into custody a 24-year-old former marine, Lee H; Oswald, who is alleged to have shot and killed the policeman outside a cinema. He is said to have remarked only : " It is all over, now." He is the chairman of a group called the " Fair Play for Cuba Committee," and is married to a Russian girl. He is described at the moment as " a prime suspect.-' -Presiden t Kennedy is succeeded at once by the Vice-President, Lyndon Baines Johnson, a 55-year-old native Texan, who took the oath of office in Dallas at five minutes to four at the hands of a woman Federal Judge.

' n. This is being written in the numbed interval between the first shock and the harried attempt to reconstruct a sequence of fact from an hour of tumult. However, this is the first assassjnation of a world figure that took place in the age of television ; and every network and station in the country abandoned .its daily grind and took- up the plotting of the appalling story. At this hour, it begins to form a grisly pattern , contradicted by a grisly preface : the projection on television screens of happy crowd and a grinning President only, a few seconds before the gunshots. . . " ' The President was .almost at.the end of his Jwxwiay tour of Texas: He was to make a . luncheon speecti'.iif the' Dallas' "trade " :mart Building* and his :"m"otb^processiqnjhad From RICHARD SCOTT about' another mile to go. He had had' the ^warmest . \Vqshington , welcome of his trip, from-a.great-crowd' at the airport; and - -- -- ¦ 'November '^22: theories and ,pleas for-a personal touch were so engaging Lee Oswald , who is that Mrs Kennedy tpbk the lead;and walked.froni.the ramp under, arrest in-.Dallas as the ,prime suspect in Mr - of the;Rresj deritial;'piane to a" fence tbatf .hej fr tne^ crowdMn; She was .followed quickly by the President, and th ey^both Kennedy's ' assassination , went to ' Russia, in 1959 seized hands and forearms and smiled gladly at the people. and married a Russian woman who.bore him one Security p recautions child. He returned to the United , States':.. with his family last year. - The Secret Service and the police were relieved to get 'dcsected '. after OswaldJ them into their car where Mrs Kennedy sat between the ¦ ¦ his . discharge - from the President and John B. Connally, the Governor of Texas. Marine 's," and.ilater 'told The Dallas police , had instituted the most stringent the *. US E m b a s s y in M o s c o i o that • he had security precautions in the city's history. They wanted no app lied f or Soviet citizenrepetition of the .small but ^disgraceful brawl that sJ iip.v.While in Russia he humiliated Mr >Adlai : Stevenson in' .their city when he is said to have 'wor ked in a Minsk; factory . attended a United Nations rally on October 24.' Last; year .he. applied t o The motorcade was going along slowly but smoothly be allowed ito-retur n to when three muffled shots, which the crowd first mistook l Ametf ca ,:and was granted for fireworks, cracked through the cheers . One hit the an; ' exit! ? is a by the shoulder - blade and the wrist of Governor-Connally, who Sovietauthor ities. He was was taken with the President to the hospital, where his recently f ined in New condition is serious. The other brought blood trickling Orleans f o r distributing from the back of the head.of the sitting President. His Communist literature^ and is -reported to have been right arm flopped from a. high wave of greeting and he chairman of the - " Fair collapsed into the arms of Mrs Kennedy, who fell unharmed . Play f or Cuba Committee." She was heard to cry, " Oh, no !" and sat there all the way cradling his head in her lap. The President was taken to the emergency room of the Parkland Hospital and Governor Connally was taken Britain to into surgery. Mrs Kennedy went in with the living President, and less than an hour later came out with the dead man . in a bronze coffin , which- arrived . shortly after two priests had administered the last rites of the Roman Catholic. Church. The body was escorted by Generals Clifton and McHugh, the President's chief military and It was announce d from 10 Air Force aides , to the Dallas Airport and flown thence to Downing Street that a national Washington. '

Defector who came back

hdld national service

service of commemoration will : held for - P r e s i d e n t Kennedy. The date and place will be decided within the next day or two . ; It "was also announced that, after consul tations " with the Opp osition ,- the G o v e r n m e n t intended to propose that the House , of Commons, should sit at 2.30 =- pin.-- on .Monday for the purpose -only of-paying tribute 'to Presi dent-' Kennedy and should thereafter .¦- ad j o u r n for the remainder , of the:day. I The- Lord Chamberlain 's office has; ; instructed jthe flying of flags at half mast on public buildings today " and again on Monday.

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Snip er 's nest Within an hour of the President's death , the Secret Service had found a sniper's nest inside the building from %vhich .the first witnesses swore the bullets had been fired. It is a warehouse for a school text book firm , known as the Texas School Depository, on the corner of Elm and Houston Streets. In an upper room , wh ose op en wind ow comman d ed the route of the Presidential motorcade, the Secret Service men found the remains of a fried chicken and a foreign rifle with a telescopic sight Alongside it lay three empty ¦ cartridge cases. , The Secretary of State, Mr Dean Rusk, and 'five other Cabinet members were in an aircraft on the way to Japan. The plane turned around in mid-Pacific and headed back to Hawaii and then on to Washington. In the:- Senate, it so happened that the President's brother, Edward Kennedy, a freshman Senator from. Massachusetts, was presiding, when the Chief Democratic Whip, Senator .Mike Mansfield ,- went , to th e rostru m an d told him the news. The Senator put down his- gavel and went from the chamber.

Lying in state

-

The .'Speaker of the House, Mr. John W. McCormack, who . is now the.; next in line of Presidential .succession, and was promptly .assigned the Secret Service detail that belongs to the Vice-President, announced that- the body of the dead President will be taken tonight to Bethesda Naval Hospital , will go to the." White House tomorrow, and thereafter will lie-in-state in the Rotunda under the great dome of the Capitol until noon on Monday. ; It will-then be removed for the burial - service, which will be held in St Matthew's Cathedral in Washington. As a war veteran , the late President could be buried in

ArHnc r ton J SJatinnal

Pom /itot ni hn* thj ii-A mop. pama *.*>..1..

Mrs Kenne dy bends over the body of her dying husband in the back of th e car. An unidentifie d man ' is standin g on the bumper. Below, Lyndon J ohnson is sworn in as the new President in the cabin of the Presidential plane. By bis side is Mrs Kennedy

Facin g the Johnson AdminMtmtion From ALISTAIR" CO OKE

Mrs Kenned y with Mr Robert Kennedy, -watching the casket containing the Presi dent 's body beine placed into an ambulance

New York -/*November 22 - Kenned y could comma nd will be It is traditional' for all his. Cabinet officers to submit But every Presiden t re,their resignations , to the ' new. arranges ¦ V th" e elements' around President, and this ". will be him." Some influential -men wi ll done when the y are all go into decline, other anonymous will. come, up- . .There is assembled in Washington , helpers no cause to fear tha t the main tonight or tomorrow/ ' : • ' trend of the Government' s policy, President • - Johnson arrived either forei gn or domestic, will jus t afte r six o'clock th is evening be arrested any more than it has aboard th e Air Force plan e that alread y been < arrested by . the brou ght the body of the ' dead mulishness tif . Con gress. Pres ident back to Andrews - Air 1 Force base in Maryland; He came Coaxing power to a stick of microphones and What how begins to stir the said : politicians , , an d after them the , " We have . suffere d a loss nation, however, is the identity " that cannot be weighed. For of the next President , .Lyndon me iv is a . dee p- personal Johnson was never a great votetragedy.I know that th e world getter , he Has had one moderately •shares the sorrow ' th at Mrs severe- heart attack ,--and he has Kenned y and her family.bear. not shown in public -at any rate I'll do -my best , that is all I tha t he has a captivatin g air of can do. I ask your help and leadership. What ' he, does have God's." is an unrivalled knowledge of He will spend the night at the how to coax Congressional power. Wh ite House -seeing some of the It is possible that ' the next Cabinet and- the Congressional Congress will move faster under ' he the wh ip he laid down when lea ders of both parties. resi gned from the Senate. 1 Uniquely equipped There Is still the question , if Once the first blow wore off. one can raise questions , in ' the the people looked at President mourn ful stupor .we are now liv¦ Johnson . arriving with his new ing-through , whether the DemoSecret Service detail , and th e cra tic Party, once its decent grief ¦ very unfamiliarity of the > . title is over, wil l begin .to challenge aroused their political "instincts the President' s automat ic right to which had been anaesthetised - be the. next nominee ^ ¦And for with all the rest. We now have the Republicans , after a sombre to face the Johnson Administra- interval, there is a . wholly new tion , ' an d after that what ? prospect of:picking a man with After eight years in the House some persona l dynamism to and 12 in.the Senate , and three defeat Johnson. Running against President as a Vice-President who was privy to, all the bus iness- of the Kenned y was a labour that four National Security Council the or five men at most were anxious new P resident, it is being rightly to under take , and none of them The Queen has sent messages said , is almost uni quely equipped would relish - Runnin g In an open to Mrs Kennedy and Mr to carry on the- Administrative field ,. against a fledgling Presi' of government. In all dent,' is quite another sort -pf functions Lyndon Johnson. , from the Bay of Pigs challen ge; , and one ' that - may the crises The one to Mrs Kennedy was : " I am so deeply distressed to to the civil rights eruptions and soon, quicken more Presidential learn of the tragic death of the tax bill manoeuvres , he has hopes than we had dreamed of Texas President Kennedy. My husband been always close at hand ; and this morning. in¦' the.happy ¦ the expert , advice th at sunshine. , -.-.- joins me in sendin g our heartfelt all and sincere sympathy to you and your family. Elizabeth R." To Mr Johnson, she said : " I am shocked and horrified to learn of the tragic death of President Kenne dy. On behalf of my. people I send my sincere sympathy to the Government and to From - HELLA PICK the Congress and to the people of the United States of America. " United Nations (NY), for that matter , a Jew. " Speechless, " terrible: awful, Sir Winston Churchill said : November 22 ' terrif ying. . . : " - The vocabu"This monstrous act has taken tragedy of this day is "The lar y ma y seem dul l, but it was from us a great statesman and a wise and valiant man. " Those beyond instant' comprehen- genuine as it came from ¦delegate • .coming after Mr Kennedy must sion. All of us who knew him. after delegate. strive the more to achieve the will bear the grief of his Only Cuba 's Ambassador curtly ideals of world p eace, human said that he had no comment happiness , and dignity to which death to the day of ours. And whatever to make , an d ev en all men everywhere who love absent ed himself from the brief his presidency was dedicated. MOSCOW : Radio and tele- peace and justice and freedom Assembly ceremony . But among vision programmes were inter- will bow their heads." the other Communis t delegates rupted to give the news, and the These were Mr Adlai Steven- there wer e hearts -as heavy,: as radio then played solemn organ son 's words toda y. But in this the rest And their reason , too , music. world kaleidoscop e, delegates tol d them tha t today 's loss-w as PARIS : President de Gaulle from every shade of country were grievou s for the world. said : " President Kennedy died expressing the same obviously A Polish delegate said : "We ilke a soldier, under fi re, for his genuin e grief. The Genera l needed his strength to fight, the Assembly met briefly at its duty and in the service of his reac tionary forces of the world. " countr y. . . I salute this great appointed hour of three o'clock to Another asked : " What kind of example and this great memory." hear its President " perform the civilisation is tljis ? " UNITED NATIONS : Diplo- sad dut y of announcing the Ambassador Taied .. Slim, of ma tists from 111 nations stood in tragic death of President Ken- Tunisia, echoed a . great - many silence as the UN General nedy and convey the Assembly 's others when he called President sympathy to his family and to, Assembly adj ourned. Kennedy a champi on for ' peace BONN : The former Chancel- the American nation. " who had slowly helped to win U Thant standi ng by the side greater lor, Dr Adenauer , sent a telegram equilibrium for the to •¦Mrs Kennedy sayin g her of the Assembly 's Presiden t, world slowly added his profound sorrow , husband " will go down in the Air Lyndon Johnson Is to most and then for a very long minute , members of th e United Nations histor y of mankind as a martyr the Assembl y stood in deep an unknown factor. Few cared to for freedom and peace. " silence, heads bowed . The public specu late about the future and galler ies were crow ded ar.d from some sa id they would " hesitate their more unin hibited members to make a pronouncemen t but came the sounds of sorrow. the y greatly feare d the conseWith news of his dea th con- quen ces of the year which must firmed , the first ra iKtlnn /.f m*nu

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Cbsns a Black & Uedter D.suu ur Staniey Bridges Nconlc IfB IT Nr» 6/16" chucsj . rpll Matter 's gtiar.. plus free accessories ( Sft Hems) ; Rubber ba cking pad , lamb's* : wool bonne t. 'calico u>op. 31 sand ing discs. 13 twin drills , coubtertink . grinding wheel . 3 arbors 4 outers. Drib Saw. . 5 Sheffield circular an , t saw hole cutter s, paint sllrrer . masonry dnlL Free extras : Bri ll bracket wttb B A D . sidehandle with Bridg es. Slttt driit rtquh ed. , Afoueyfr act fiur* Calien welcome. MAIL ORDER TOOLS LTD. (Dept. O.41), 59 Lluon Stree t. London N W.l.

BIRTHS , M A R R I A G E S , AND D E A T H S

taken by the Government about min isterial responsibili ty and it iis unlikely tha t one will be announce d until well into the New. Year , or perhaps not until after the general - election. But even if two Ministers are decided on the growing .- expectation in universities is that this will itself be a temporary , arrangement — lasting perhap s five years—which will give way to a single Minist ry.'

Harder problem

1 Another of the subjects discussed yesterday . afternoon— ¦ the place of teacher-training colleges in higher education—may be more difficult to resolve if two Ministries of Education remain distinct , There is general sympathy in the universit ies for th e Robbins pro posal that they should have some - administrative responsibility for training colleges. But yesterday there were doubts about how this could best be done and how relations could be the ' local mainta ined ¦ with authorities whose res ponsibility the colleges now are.

Indecent haste on Police Bill, says alderman

By our own Reporter Alderman B. S. Langton , of people concerned would not be to the public in the Manchester, ' vice-chairman of responsible same way that local authorities the police committee of the were. This could very easily lead

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Funer al service st awSwrneW Ctitastormm . Brln j ngtj n. ^ Wedn«d W ., J p'S t l engtg«nBnt ~ U ll 30 a.m IuquuIcs to Georg e Twylord unouno rdbetween FREDSRICRMICBAEL. and Sons Ltd. Tel LON 13» . only son ot Mr and Hr »-», -HUGHES of B£ID.—On .Novjmttrr a x home , 43 awtnaie , Dorset, and MaRY . MARGARIT , cornhHI Road . Oavrbulme. THOMAS ' w»y dautM er ¦ of MJ and ¦Hn w G. MOFVAT RErO. former direct or ot Crorf a • SJOTH.-Of Chf t dle H iUme Chrthlr * st»rk snd Sons Ud , G^yr» Park Psper Mills. OImbow-N.W ^ Servln aod commiusl ¦ rtu scs—U>MAS —The engatro wrjt is at the Manchester cre matorium oo Tuuday. November 36 . at 3 p.m. Prtrcds tosomcad between IAH ywiocw son of Mrs H. D KUtKUS. ol FuUord . • piflsae accept thts Itfce only) • tntimsuon. Mr aad «u) Si«r PHO IBE trstJC N. nnrW Rn flowers, by t«w«. InouliV. tn J S.

.Nov«n&tr. 1361 sttK«KElt— la memory of my fn died on November S4 19B Iron: wounds sustained In the Firs t World WaS Ccmaxmoratlng happj assoctst lon. ¦Joea Jvert sdaoti of shejrec 's .—. ^ n ,,. u7 * r *ntjnr»v lTn dk hmhas P > A.Ni> Si UUKUUN , LIU PhOIie

'Blot' of child cruelty

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BUUbANU tABl-1 9 ss a.m. Sunday Session. u «•!! ts Mor nfnt Service. I 15 p.m. Headwsy. 1 3S Farming Comment. 1 49 Rtisby LM gue. 135 OS.S 3 5 cbost Snuad

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I & %?* ., ***. Rtm*. M SS: Record nvnnv s While. You Work. 11 g : Recent Releaics return of money lenu BLGIONb Roundabout. 3 0: Music Has No Frontiers. Kemrdl 11 3B^_ Gardeners ' au csuoo Sir Andrew Clark ,' QC, for Mr Midland. —7 15 a.m.: Angler's Comer. 2 3!. Mij im^ Helod r. « SI: There « fFleming, said : "My whole case is a }°7& ™> ' °£ Tna. Sone AnSST . H . FootbaU. ]„ *?>,&,£& % %£«& » i "" i that the novel was written to boost « U: Eltra Tlme ' S °= Sport * Rep°rt a '•-« '5 Srfwd^' l A- kin ui»in^"'fv CK "tl Jwtn' "' ln' ! Fom3 ' r mTTmUtt. the screenplay and it could not do nSt-dili Fro nfa'ciftoSer^i'lo.Vck * " ¦ • 0: 3m Clul)' ' * NeM ' B4llU> " Sctllrf , -7' 10-7 iS a m.! Pro fnunm ^ « 4e Week. 4 0: Th?£ Y01! H.™ reeL 1 15: Football. J J l: Concert Hall- ' „ ?{!{ "£• that if it did not reproduce the p roinunme. To iS.STfe?: News, f SO: Concert—Part mde. 4 10-4 45: Football. « 4»! Scottish M2S1 ™ iS:. A. v"" 1? or Sound 5 0: Pirt 1, 8 30:lW.! incidents in the I screenplay. " 1* Dancmg. X . SO: Old Ttoe H U: * &&££$£¦ Whether this made Mr McClory a Af U Sr ' lSSi °B *M-1D 'BS s UM! *8SJ co-author was a matter of law, he "* S?iSS%m.-I ^W JSSriT^ *«* &£^&< l »° £ * p f added. I 'sty. S SO: Pls r •• The airay y.ar r ' »•: Wetab.—41 1S-8 10: ChrM. !• »•»¦: » «•: §=rma = for B«ln j»-ji. 4 ft sa-3 Talk ing About alusta. Sound. 4 ft

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that although only in its-first year , the scheme operated to , the convenience ,. and • advan tag e: of both applicants arid schools.- -.The. improvement will:¦; undoubtedly , ' - •, .' ¦ t continue. "; : „, . . Dealing-with the Circular put > out to schools by the council, th» statement says it was issued " not to correct any previous error .but as an essentiah partof the clearing u p scheme." • The council had not , In fact, put out any previous circular. ' " '

A NNO UNCEMENT S TRANSFERS BOOKS MANCHESTER CHUR CHES '. MANCHESTER CATHEDRA L. '"-

" * , -' TO-MORROW , SUNDAY: • Holr communfcm • 0 ¦-m;> Matins :.... 20 30 s ny StnsDn ............*....'.......... 11 o »-m7' Prettier Canon RONAL D PKE8TON: Ml Ho!; Communion (Choral) 11 IS s.nu1 Svensoog ...3 30 pm. Freich ei: Csnon RONAL D PRESTON. ,t ffveniiii smlw (Volualat r Choir) 7 0 p-nty ~ PreacW. usnoa a. . HOD &1K.

ST ANN' S CHURCH , Manches ter. -

Rftator: Cuton BfUC SAXON, BA.J B.D. CHOI H SUNDATf .,» 0 a.m. HOLY COMMUNION. - - " ' 10 15 a.m. CONFIRMATI ON SZ3VK3. ;Prescb*r: \- * ' ¦Th« Rt. Her. KENNETH V. RAMSCT -. * -~ .' - ' . M A.. BJ>. - ¦" - -, THE BISHOP OF BVXint 6 30 pjn. evensong. -Pnuha: - - ¦ ..- ; The Rector - "Tfcs Coming Kad.** -~ . .: TUESDAY. November 26, at 13 *5 pjk OBCAM RECITAL b? W. HARPWIC g. . * :

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A LBERT HALL, Peter

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. 10 tt a.ai Rev. K R. Skinner B.A., B J> M ' 8 30 p.m. THAT OLD-TIME RELIGION. ., Preacher REV. .REGINALD UALLETT, Bj£ ¦ aub]K:t:; 'I Tn» Moment ouruth. ' J l Special - servlco vlUi ¦Saoker Hrmns. ?,. Irapl rlpg Singing and Siangell otl Messsge.-

{¦"ENTRAL HALL , OldhamSt . M/ C v^ 10 « «.m. ana e 45 pj n. - • REV. HABBV WAXEF 1BU> .. . (ex-C Tulrmia oX Ibe Gambia District). 1 ^ ' 5 0: ANNUAL OVERSEAS MISSIONS ¦ - - . . MKETMC.

CENTRAL HALL . OldhamSt , M/c V/

TUESDAY. 13 «S toJ 1 4*. preac ber : j ; REV. CANON EDWARD BVPATSS T , MA. . - ( Coventry ).

PROS S ST. CHAPEL , Manchester;

^ To-day: CHRISTMAS FAIR and BRING AND BUY SALE, to be opened U 13 noon or MR. . HARRY JACKSON. ; Chalrmsn: Mr. C. LAMBERT. Sunday Services. 10 be thereby lacumd wtS . ncovtf TtE e ' jsnw from t£*m by distrttie . ud.- sc2« of ' tiMdr goods and ¦ onatuls or , OUjor wlM' . , . ._' -. , . accordJec to Ltw. Dated this 30th day of Hovt gatm ' .'lagv,' '

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Tension in The man ^f tOim^j M f ' Western Kennedy j s- -, member of Congress to enlist in The " New York Times " said : the United States armed forces ; "We seriously, .doubt that Mr he joined up on December 10. Johnson has"helped the cause-of 1941; three days after . the the United- States very much ' by Japanese attack on Pearl Harb or, behaviour which at times seemed He was commissioned as a more reminiscent of election Lieutenant • Commander in the campaigns "in Texas, or ^.-more Navy, and won -the Silver Star designed to ^ .make news rather diplomatic for gallantry in the South Pacific than to achieve :¦ serious ' His rise in the Senate , was objectives." - :} \ In Kara chi, while'driving from meteoric. He; was elected Democratic Whip in 1951, an d in 1953 the airport , to President Ayub Khan's residence, he halted his he became . his par ty 's leader in the Chamber—the youngest man car .to . talk to a camel " cart driver ,' walked .across to; a 'bus to fill , the post. . and. embraced a passenger's 2In mid-1955, a few months year-old before President Eisenhower pencil. child ,' giving , hi m . a suffered his heart attack, Mr Shortly after the Berlin wall Johnson was stricken with a grave heart . attack. - He said it was erected in 1961; ¦;..'Vicewbj " as 1 ad as a man can have President Johnson played perhaps and still live." But he seems his biggest political role when as today to be able to cope with President Kennedy's emissary, his demanding routine with' little he visited , the city to assure .the Berliners of the military backing difficulty. of the US. : On.the lighter side, the • visit was marked by Air Involved distribution of hunJohnson's As chairman of the Senate dreds of ball-point pens as be Preparedness Subcommittee, he mingled with the " crowds. -J involved himself in the defence In September of this year he ; issue when the Soviet Union visited the Scandinavian countries launched its first sputnik in ~ 1957. on a two;week tour: The group's report was regarded as sufficiently „ wide-ranging and Expensive clothes non-partisan for the Republican One of his idlosyncrasie^.is .to members to sign it as well as the Democrats. like everything . connected; .with Mr Johnson is a firm supporter him to bear his "LBJ?• iultiab. of the North Atlantic Treaty This is the name of .his luxurious Organisation and other defence ranch In Texas, and the same alliances. He 'fought hard in support of President Eisen- initials are borne by all- his ' ,, hower's foreign , aid programme. f amjly ., ' .;. He once ¦- said :^- - " A—.-vital > :His wife , whom he married in Government ' cannot accept a 1934, is called Claudia , but has stalemate in any area. Our been' known ¦as "Lady ::Bird ." nation must aid in providing since she ..was . aged two; Their world leadership to effectively two daughters are Lynda Bird meet the challenge of godless Johnson and Lucy .' . Baines communism." ... Johnson. Even the family dog This type of forthright' speak- is-called Little Beagle-Johnson. ing brough t an unusual < tribute • Mr Johnson has the reputation from Mr Khrushchev. When the of being a lavish entertainer ; he Soviet leader was introduced to wears expensive clothes, . which him in Washington , Mr Khrush- are usually monogrammed. -

' Carried the hopes of the world ' Speaking on BBC television last night, the Prime Minister, Sir Alec Douglas-Home, said of the assassination : " There are times in life when mind and heart stand still and one such time is now. "All of you ' will have felt, as I did , that everything in one cried out in protest at the news that President Kennedy was dead at the hands of an assassin. This young, gay and brave 'statesman, killed in the full vigour of his manhood , when he bore on' his shoulders all the cares and the h opes .of the world." Mr Kennedy was, first of all, a man of peace, a man with a deep religious faith dedicated to healing the divisions between men. President Kennedy was a casualty in the war, and very often in pain. But he was a man who was determined that "this curse " of war should never scourge mankind again , if he could do anything to arrest the dangers.

Such power

"He had held In his hand such power as had never been given before in history of man, and he used it always for high purp ose and always to make the world a better and a safer place for ordinary men and women to live in. "I recall him as a iust man—a

man who hated bigotry, who believed all men were equal in the sight of God and acted in that belief. If we can help to brine to men the liberty, justice.: and peace for which he did so much , then we shall be doing something to serve the causes in the service of which he himself died." Mr, Harold Wilson, speaking after , the Prime Minister, said : " What- he did achieve .was to bring a new sense, of purpose to the American people. He did wake America and get them moving in the ' economic sense. . He got a sense of purpose into the social field and In tne field of education and he got a sense of social purpose into - the political - scene, especially as far as the welfare of old people was concerned."

Shocked

Mr Jo Grlmond , Leader of the Liberal Party, said ,the ordinary people of Britain ' feel shocked and hurt as-though it were one of their .own relations who .had died in this unexpected tragedy. But the full shock of the President's death "would be felt" not only in the Western world, but in the East too ' and in Russia, there would be genuine sorrow at the passing of this great leader of the American people. In the horror of this tragedy, the sympathies of the people of Britain and all peoples of the world, must go to Mrs Kennedy and her children , the bereaved family of a great man struck down in the peak of l:is manhood.

President Johnson consoles Mrs- Kennedy (right) a few moments after he was sworn in aa President. On the left is Mrs [ohnson ' " ' '

Merseyside has 20,000 j obs in 'the p ip eline9 Postal draft forgers get 7 years

158 fi r ms seek factories

¦¦,On the second day ' of his ijt factrfinding tour of.the North. ,wesWJ^^E.dward Heath, .the j S esc$dra (V UoirbulcJ, me l«tvdf Extgl . nirtei Ut cJ s m U0 tMMii Open winier & cummer Park UoteL Firat-ciaia EcUrei y mooern • ¦ u«M 160 ¦ txd» Ail oomforu, Cover t beaiec sminmu t* oooi *

. Davos (Grtsoas) Ani.elerr t A Goltbo t d. Dec.-AW . from C3/1O ul ind Pleas, atmosphere, spec, ut Jaa

Grlodelwald (BerneseOberland)

•Befitna Grt od, * at ttue bote l with exevt wmte/ «)orti Croat Cbnstau * tUl Easter

Kloslers (Grisons)

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Uontre ux (take Geneva)

Part

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of the Roman rumi ol Volubtlu

by Will am Seymour

MADL two serious errors in my visit to i Morocco. I went native too often with the cous-cous, and 1 toured the country during the fast of Ramadan. A heavy mutton stew with semolina proved too much for a stomach attuned to the milder pabulum oi homely egg dishes ; its indigestive qualities, combined with the noise of gun and siren awaking the true believer , made certain that this part icular infidel got remarkably little sleep. Except for the month of Ramadan (this winter it is due to start on January 16) Aiorocco is as lovely a place as anywhere on a Riviera that now stretches almost from Israel to Portugal. And it has set itself out to attract the visitor, whose money is a much needed source of income. There is ski-ing at If rane, fishing in many of the Atlas mountain streams, floodlighting in Fez. and folklore in Marrakesh. Tangier makes a good starting point ant) a day trip to Tetuan and particularly Xauen provides as good a reason as any for spending two nights there. Only four hours away Fez. the intellectual capital of Moro cco, inclines dramatically up a loop hillside and. like most of the mam towns. !s a blending between East and West, whf'Je both communities exist together ii» -'^ contented -W turmoil. The holy city of Moulay Idris and the ruins nf thp Ro man citv of Vnluhi li.s arp within

easy motoring distance of Fez. Less than 5(J * years ago any European foolish enough to appear in Moulay Idris would almost certainly have been killed ; now tourists. are constantly exploring the narrow alleys witb their guides —although non-Moslems may not spend the night '.here. Marrakesh , with its luxurious but.expensive Mamuuma Hotel set In a garden vast and > vivid with flowered tree-shaded , walks , is 300 miles of good road from Fez. I liked it more than any other place in Morocco, and long to return to see . the snake charmers and acrobats in Toaln Square, revisit the lovely .... Aguedal Gardens near to the Saadian tombs, :;,' piay a tittle golf, and take my chance in the icasino Mohammedia is a pleasant coastal reson for those who are tempted by the prospects •/ of winter bathing, and it is close to the capital, Rabat. Here on Friday mornings the King, escorted by his cavalry witb their mounted band, goes in procession from the .. royal.palace to the Djamaa Abel Fes mosque. , Morocco has come far in a very-few years ; .;perhap s In some ways It is.already a.little spoilt , but there remains a benign winter. ., beauties of seashore and mountain, and above all the courtesy and unservlle friendliness ; of the people. Cheapest method o] travel Is night f light to -¦ (£34 return), then f erru 8s Gibraltar to • Tanaier (£2 17s return).

' Saanenmttser (Bernese Oberland)

at »TEPONA-MARB£I.LA Nnot . tnoet ituturioua . atr condltj ofied All rooma priTate batb. .ter r acea tactnj ' sea, or enooklne roll. ,. coarte . private beach, sal t .wate r iwlmmln s pool, aaltln g.' warei turn s. fUhrnt. tennis, horseback ridin g oj gtt' dub. superb Frencb cuisine special diet menus . • - -¦ _¦-.*

¦SoTtr tu Hotue. A levtllij i Qotr l to * tauU cft . ntoR. Winter uuou: middle ot Decemtxj to middle ol hU ich

Palma (Mallorca)

At next week's public inquiry into Salford corporation 's £10 millions central redevelopment scheme, the Broad Street Traders ' Association is not to persist in its four years'. ( opposition to. demolition of the: 147 main road shops and their replacement with a traffic-free shopping precinct. After a series of meetings with town planning and legal advisers, the executive of the Association has decided that the trend of events has made this position untenable and that there are no hopes of the Ministry of Housing and Local Government's agreeing to ribbon redevelopment of a six-lane trunk road—which Broad Street (A6) will become after widening and improvement. The association is still strongly critical of the size and scale of the proposed precinct, .-and will also seek to ensure that displaced traders are adequately compensated and are offered precinct tenancies on terms that will enable them to continue in business.

Uotel Uclphla (opened &lay. 1W3>. Moat modern. F irst dua A Reauuram aad lounges Air conditioning. . SwlmmLhR pool Garden. Boohin g iu reservation: Reservation Mana ger. HOTELS DE SOL . S A ., PC. Box 33. Torremoruoa . Spain. ' cabin: BOOKHOSOL.

Saas Fee (Valals)

- a.ec«a Ad»an», " Car Rental Seme*. O3c« In toallorc f—tne - . Sunnj island. Eojoj . your - vacation - time - travelllnff . m oar laxar r cara. TM tsoai: CesertiT Dooxi 4 Patoa de MaJlorca. ^ MeSbeV ¦or. dSs's duo ana of Cart * Blanch *. Betel liletaa. First ' they, use it For when Palin remembersJo pass, which' he?docs wdl, instead' of to punt which 'he ;'docs ;poorly, .the Northumberland rltoe-potentially is fast,-\-thrustfuL ^ and - efficient. Whether , Bre presence of Gascdgne. who replaces Scurfldd. injured, will disrupt^ ltsj'rijyttmij 'remains-to be ¦ teen.'-"- Even so this;could prove a rA - 'rt t fRoiilt In beat on their own

nen tri * hnlf

Sunderland , the leaders of the Second Division, have not been beaten at Swansea since the 195859 season , and there is no logical reason why the sequence should be broken today. Leeds United will not have matters all their own way at Leyton, and Preston North End , who have the easiest looking task of the afternoon—a home game against Rotherham United , who have not won away this season —could step up Into second place. Leyland, Tranmere Rovers' goalkeeper who was sent off the field in Rovers' League match at Stockport on November 9, has been suspended for 14 days from next Monday for "kicking an opponent." PS.—I think Everton will beat Stoke City at Goodison Park. I only hope they do not stop that pretty young iady tossing pieces of toffee amons the crowd. . .

A club has It in its power to discipline a player at any time. If It chooses to ignore this authority then it has only itself to blame if that player is saddled with a bad name. If clubs will not discipline players, then referees should —whether the culprits be world famous or unknown. Wagging a finger and an occasional entry in a notebook serve no lasting purpose. A deliberate foul needs condign punishment, and if a player has not learned his lesson by being sent off once, then his next dismissal merits a severe sentence. A great pity it is that the spotlight has fallen on Everton when it so easily might be shared, that so many spectators are being scourged for the sins of the minority, and that so many players believe that their reputation—or fame might be a better word— preserves them f rom punishment. And the greatest pity of all is that discipline , unlike charity, seemingly does not begin at home any more. Which brings me belatedly and with rather less enthusiasm than usual to this afternoon 's League

more suppliers agree to take remedial action (such as withholding of supplies), a g a i n s t dealers who undercut prices is dealt with more severely. It is declare d unlawful in any event But a condition as to prices agreed between a single supplier Militancy and a purchaser from him can The official ETU reason for be enforced by the s u p p 1i e r aga inst any one acquires such strenuous action was that those goods with. who knowledge of the m a n a g e m e n t simply the condition.

which threatened to call out all its members at Pagenham and thus make it likely that the whole Dagenham complex would fa lter and founder through lack of p o w e r from the ETUdominated power plant. ,

presented members with a takeit-or-leave-it scheme for providing maintenance cover for the new shift system without any prior consultation. But it is not difficult to link the union 's action with the current executive elections for which the new leadership has to prove that it is no less militant and successful than the old Communist regime. The union's principal gain i-i the dispute has been to secure that two weeks out of four their members will work shifts beginning at a conventional hour in the morning. The management originally proposed that t h i s should happen only one week in three. Fears of yet more trouble at Dagenham works lessened yesterday when union representatives and workers agreed to a fuli-scale card check of all union members in the plant. On Thursday, men in the press shop warned union officials that they would not work with colleagues with lapsed cards. They gave them a fortnight to find a solution .

Stole policemen s cycles" Two youths, stopped by policemen as they were cycling in the early morning were found to have stolen the cycles, from the police headquarters yards, it was alleged at Middleton (Lanes.) yesterday. They were sent to a detention centre for three mont hs.

A proposal to bar New Zealand Athletics athletes from competing in South Africa under the present racial conditions there was heavily defeated at the annual meeting of the New Zealand AAA in Welli ngton yesterd ay. The proposal asked that athletes visiting South Africa should be allowed to compete only at meetings controlled bv an inter-racial body. P. Snell, New Zealand's holder of the world reasserted mile and half-mile records, is due C a m b r i dg e to visit South Africa in March. their athletics supremacy over Oxford with a convincing victory by five events to two in the University field events match at Iffley Road, Oxford , yesterday. Nine days previously O x f o r d had gained their first athletics drew at SL Helens; they are only success over Cambridge in three a point behin d the Hull side and years when they won tne freshhave played a match fewer. Dooler man's match, but yesterday they plays scrum half for Featherstone, had only the consolation of the Fox remains at loose forward. day 's best performance, by the Wakefield Trinity visit. Widnes, American, S. Sanders , whose discus whom they have caught at an throw of 155ft. 7in. was au indiviinopportune moment, for their team dual match record and contributed already weakened bv injuries was to a record aggregate of 561ft. further weakened yesterday when lOJi n. Karalius withdrew oecause of the injury he received when playing against the A u s t r a l i a n s on Thursday. Three of Hunslet's seven id. sin . P. b-Fwnn sn-JKaJ; SB'- JffiLeague defeats have been sustained at home, and unless they show a marked Improvement in form they may suffer a fourth at the hands of. Warrlngton. . R. Francis, the new coach at Leeds, has a difficult task ahead for the side has' lost seven of Its las eight League games and is only Jordan 3Stl. WU three places from the bottom 6>,ln.. ."L,™ • Polo V»ulL—1, OasbridM '^ C. Dubo!j their own .ground. Hull's position is Oifor A. ^ »rt . 61n. M sprt sts do v»un rtcsreed. even more desperate; they have Slntf ilr no vtult t«orte d)J :) m sustained eight successive League Wellht. —I. Oxford IS Siaiim **n. S' j lo. . r defeats, have won only one match In f - i§.l.N-. !« '¦S£ ten , and with Keighley. arc at the &£*g i£S«^i W a?: foot of the League. ' . i rSSBt ' l^sfg? an. P D Sb»TOK» *" - HI" 1. In the Second Division' Oldham. STrt ISfift zln I IHuns.—1. CWfonl (Suidt ra J SSIt. ,?

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