Notable news of past Septembers include: the surrender of Geronimo, the imposing of the draft for military service in the United States, the first Black Miss America and 9/11.
Sept. 7, 1886: Geronimo surrendersAnd What the Hostiles Were Forced to Accept.The last of the hostile Apaches surrendered in Skeleton canyon Saturday. General Miles arrived at Fort Bowie late last night bringing with him, not only the good news of surrender, but also the persons of Geronimo and Natchez and three of their best and most trusty warriors. The remainder will reach Fort Bowie in three days, guarded by Captain Lawton's command.
BATON ROUGE, La. Sept. 8 ─ ─ Senator Huey Long, Louisiana's political"dictator," was shot through the right side tonight in the state capitol with a pistol in the hands of Dr. C. A. Weiss, an eye specialist of Baton Rouge and member of an anti-Long political family. As the senator stepped out of the house door, spectators said, Dr. Weiss walked up to Long and pressing the muzzle of a pistol close to his body, fired one shot. Then the bodyguards opened fire, killing the doctor, and assisting Senator Long down the stairs to an automobile.Long was staggering and bleeding at the mouth. He maintained consciousness and talked to his assistants. At the hospital he was rushed to an operating table, and Dr.
The body of Dr. Weiss lay on the corridor for more than an hour until it could be viewed by the coroner. Many of them at the time of the senate speech had taken Long's fears lightly. They were well aware, however, that he almost constantly took precautions of having bodyguards in the vicinity when he appeared in public.In the August 9 speech, the Louisianan took the floor during a dull afternoon and said two of his supporters had sat in a hotel room in New Orleans adjoining an apartment where the reported plot was discussed. Some senators laughed while others listened closely.NEW YORK, Sept. 8.
The governor read the contents of his telegram in a news conference called suddenly at the state capitol. Then the governor, whose troops are surrounding Central High School and Hall High, the city's other high school, read in an emphatic voice: Once during the exchange of pleasantries, which went on so long it seemed more like a Senate filibuster, Mr. K. appeared to wink jovially at reporters.
No one knows why Eisenhower appeared so glum. As an old military man, he has always seemed willing to make the best of these formal occasions.As you may have guessed, the extent of preparations for these affairs is fantastic.Reporters were handed a detailed map of the area in which each object and each dignitary was plainly marked. For example, one spot on the map was marked"grass," which investigation showed was exactly right.
The ceremonial detachment from Ft. Myer, for example, had been routed out of bed at 3 a.m. and by 5 a.m. they were at Andrews Air Base. By 5:15 a.m. they had rolled out the famous red carpet, a full seven hours before anyone needed it.Giant vacuum sweepers were going over the runways, sucking up trash that might foul the plane's engines. But they also stirred up dust, small bits of paper and a weed seed that looks like dandelion.
"You don't invite someone and then let him know directly or indirectly, what you spend on the dinner," a department official remarked.Some Highlights Of Rival Candidates' ViewsHere is the way Vice President Nixon and Sen.
Within hours after the dynamite explosion shattered an already shaky racial calm, two Negros were killed in shootings and three other persons were wounded. Mayor Albert Boutwell, voicing shock and disbelief, urged everyone to keep off the streets. Leaders of a white segregationist group seeking to start private schools called off a rally and asked followers to go home.
"The entire forces of the state will be utilized to maintain law and order," said Wallace in a statement. They apparently were in a lounge in the basement of the old brick church. Cynthia Wesley was hit by the full force of the blast. She could be identified only by clothing and a ring. "It's just making hate," said a Negro bystander, 38-year-old Andrew Anderson, former professional fighter."This town is gone now . . . I know it's gone."
Crowds of Negroes gathered quickly after the blast. Some of them wept. Others cursed. A Negro mother, clasping a shoe in her hands, wept softly on another woman's shoulder. The resentment welled. "They had lined us up and were proceeding to cut our throats," said one of the captive guards, Frank Wall, who stated that sharpshooters saved his life."They got the man who was going to cut my throat just as he began to pull the knife across."
A spokesman said planning for the military-type operation began three days ago. The launching of tear gas from helicopters against the rioters was a prelude"to make them so sick that they would have no will to resist." The violence at Attica spread an aura of tension to others of the state's prisons. Some inmates were kept locked in their cells. Precautionary measures were common against large gatherings of convicts.
When bank officials opened up the vault Monday morning, however, it was cleaned out. There were indications that the burglars had been hiding in the strong room area when police checked it. The first two Israelis were killed early Tuesday morning when Arab commandos, armed with automatic rifles, broke into the quarters of the Israeli team. Nine other Israelis taken prisoner were killed later in the airport shootout between the Arabs and German policemen and soldiers.
Bavarian Interior Minister Bruno Merck said the Israeli hostages had agreed to go with the Arabs to Cairo. But the German authorities felt"this would have been a certain death sentence for them," he said."We had to take a chance and attempt to free the hostages." HOUSTON ─ Audacious Billie Jean King struck a blow at all male chauvinists by crushing Bobby Riggs 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 Thursday night in their circus-like, $100,000 winner-take-all tennis Battle of the Sexes at the Astrodome.
Billie Jean was borne into the huge domed area on a litter like an Egyptian Cleopatra. The litter was carried by four muscled men with others leading the way carrying plumes on long sticks. The match was nationally televised and the Trendex rating service reported that an estimated 50 million television viewers watched for the first hour. There were no figures available for the final 90 minutes.
The seven-page decision, climaxing a long and complicated history of litigation, denied that Tucson's ordinances violate the First and Fourteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution and said they are but"statutory applications of the English common law offense known as indecent exposure." "We cannot say," Struckmeyer wrote,"that these ordinances are aimed at serious works which lift the spirit, improve the mind, enrich the human personality and develop character."
The decision"will enhance the new regulations which I now have under advisement," Moore said."To me it leaves it very clear that we have the authority and responsibility to enforce the ordinances throughout the state and put the regulations into effect."Former President Shows Remorse The former President responded from his home in San Clemente, Calif., with a statement in which he admitted no criminal wrongdoing but said,"One thing I can see clearly now is that I was wrong in not acting more decisively and more forthrightly in dealing with Watergate."
In announcing the pardon, Ford said any move to try the former President might have taken months or years, during which"ugly passions would again be aroused, our people would again be polarized in their opinions, and the credibility of our free institutions of government would again be challenged at home and abroad.""My conscience tells me clearly and certainly that I cannot prolong the bad dreams that continue to reopen a chapter that is closed.
"To lose to a beautiful canyon and river like this to me is not a real loss," said Knievel, the right side of his tanned face cut from the impact of the crash landing. Promoters of the leap, probably the most publicized in history, had given Knievel a check for $6 million weeks in advance of the jump and promised him 60 per cent of the profit from closed-circuit television showings and related deals. His take was unaffected by his failure.Manson Disciple Points .45 Pistol At PresidentSACRAMENTO, Calif. ─ A young woman pointed a .
The FBI said it took over the investigation and said it will cover the possibility of a conspiracy. One of Manson's prosecutors said he believes Manson masterminded the apparent assassination attempt. Mrs. Ford, asked if she would let the President go on another campaign trip next week, said:"Of course."
The President said later that as he passed the place where the woman was standing,"I saw a hand coming up behind several others in the front row, and obviously there was a gun in that hand."Police, Firemen Stay Out; Castro Offers Guard HelpAt least 125 Tucson police and firemen ─ more than half of those scheduled for duty last night ─ claimed illness and either did not report for work or left their posts after wage negotiations collapsed in a procedural dispute at the start.
Valdez said he had assurances of help from South Tucson for additional police and from Davis-Monthan AFB for additional fire protection, and was told by the governor that Dept. of Public Safety agents or National Guardsmen would be ordered into the city if requested by Mayor Lew Murphy. "One hundred per cent moral support" for the police action was voiced last night at a meeting of some 150 to 200 members of the county sheriff's deputies lodge of the Fraternal Order of Police, according to lodge president Clarence"Butch" Powell. He said sheriff's deputies, who are paid less than city police and last week said they want equal salaries, are not planning any walkout, but are trying to set up a wage meeting soon with the county Board of Supervisors.
Asked how long the"sick-in" would last, Belman said,"We won't sit down with anything short of the mayor and all of the council." As far as could be determined, Murphy was the only one still insisting on public negotiations.The Police-Fire Assn., a joint bargaining group formed just last week, is asking for a 30 per cent immediate pay increase for the police and firemen.
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