a Fommunity leaders are‘ more ‘same period 4 per rent ~ \eoncerned about .such incidents. There now. are an estimated now than they were two or three ‘720,000 Negroes in the county years ago, they admit, because and about 430,000 in“the city now they must view them Most Negro newcomers ‘to Los jthrough a perspective that. was Angeles land in eee ldltered drastically last, August. Watts. Triliee 14,-a measure that nulli-| For six days, as many as 10,- fied the state’s Fair Housing |000 enraged Negroes r1ofed Act. Proposition 14 was ruled |through an area of 50 square oeneenee ay the State Su- miles. All available police power | preme Court May 10 last, thus'and 14,000 National Guard Foles ; ps : How has this condition. . With Watts as a core. jeiving the redevelopment study |troops {finally quelled ‘the de-} evolved in southern California, ‘2X district broadens south and a green ight after nine months. .struetive Srgy. after clamping a long-regarded? N » wet to -the- Pascifie-Ocean. -be- | Once an &griculfural belt ‘on irigid: curfew over the riot area vm eenertasare Seorne rer the south fringe of Los Angeles,|and repeatedly scouring the —: the. Ne- : Ju , 1s i ghetto as whites leave Watt ; ~ still flock in from the U.S. south- ening as wae quickly carpet, wih arets block, by nek to iy Past tne ate ol 2am Bechipe-wates are higher ’ ‘ ad th? ere than in the southeast and iprovide homes for the thousands : wa cece ‘of Negroes who flooded the area la ‘ered. 388 oad. Aumually. ivi wets ‘leaders oe SS t el in. search of wartime Jobs in de- 40.00 lie |predicted long before last Au- | ed ee eee fence plants MPvidence that Negro discon. SUS that. Negro. endurance was |280. Negroes come expecting an VAC ; ‘ s d to the “breaking y ie im sou STILL GOING DOWN tent is: not confined to south- | being . straine ern California. To a degr : ee, | Now, two decades later, the central Los Angeles was pro- |PO!Mt. - siege many achieve it. ’ |cheap housing still is being lived |vided April 16 by more than 100; And~the Human. Relations, Bit they have also found - in by an ever-booming popula-|Negroes in suburban reantens, {Commission, in a study re-isome disappoint ménts. The jleased only laid out two months before these statis: | _jtion, still deteriorating steadily |who resisted violently : po- | jinto miles and miles of sun-blis-|lice tried to disperse a agen. the riots, ered, unpainted, overcrowded | |The battle was a ‘short one, |tics: jsmall homes and anonymous- with little damage and few in- Los |ghetto character of Negro hous- ‘ing imposes a de facto segrega- ition ¢ondition on ‘schools, so alluring that Negroes COming more, and more a dark-} \ ONE’S WHITE, ONE’S BLUE Every voter in First Kings has two ia ‘ lots to mark on Monday. By marking.an X beside Dan MacDonald on the blue | - | ballot and an X beside on the white ballot, voters .will send a Liberal government to the legislature. A Liberal government will put Prince Ed- -ward Island in tune with the rest of Canada. BRUCE ie e Stewart nA oo Mics Dominion of Canada. 1% vear- old Diane Coulter (LEFT) has been taken ill. and won't be able to appear in the Miss Universe contest at Mi ami Beach, Fla. Her replace- ‘ {looking apartment houses ‘juries, and waned in ; .All it took to ignite the fires hours. But here, too, of August, the most race riot in U.S. history, was a'with serious implications, over a the | Bee : ie a . - BEAUTY QUEEN BECOMES ST Farol Aes They of Hamiiton, : ment will be andther 18-year old, Marjorie Schofield of Bur- lington, Ont. Miss Coulter, is shown. here as she received the Miss Dominion of Canada trophy from the 1965 winner, last week, was teken ff at Grand Wala, N.B., where she was attending a potato festt- _val (CP Wirephate) Negro Residents Of Watts Fear Rioting Resumption’ fee Angeles County’ s Negro'churches and virtually all facets three |population (only 75,000 in 1940) of the negro child’s world. He the city rose from 217,881 in 1950 to 461, . rarely, massive realized its Negroes could brood, 546 in 1960—111.8 per cent—gad | affluent white society of nearby rose Beverly Hills, H611y wood-or \Toutine drunken driving arrest _'seemingly cut- and-dried episode. from 171,209 to 334,916 in the | Brentwood. city’s Negro ranks INTEEEAST! < A 4 rm if ever, even sees the | : and DAN MacDONALD tittle . oe Soy 2 + a ea er ey Watts has come te symbo- geles candidly expect more trou- ‘Deadwyler, 28, was rushing his ~~ ' lize. the bitterness and frus- ble this summer wife Barbara, also 2%, to hos- : : tration the American Negro From the ‘young Negrn direc pitat in the-mistaken—belief—-her : feels about his situation. {or of a neighborhood youth fifth baby was coming prema- Last summer that bitter® leentre: a aan Se. — unpre- “ ova, s r u J a aa van Week is Conditions, are no better, OF vithout provocation as he asked ° 2 es worse, than last August. So} 1 ad for this summer? The for an escort to the hospital : abe maybe tomorrow, next -week, a | at his following report tells what cat tacnth a Ws a Deadwyler slimped — inte ’ might he tn store. ore aka wife's lap. dying, and mur- ing a imured: ‘She's having a baby _ Re DAVE SMITH From John A -Buzes,Negro| Rove testified that a sudden LOS ANGELES (AP) opp executive director of Los An ‘jurch of Deadwyler's car threw ¢ ts veles County's Human Relations yim off balance and ‘caused could happen any se! now, any |Commission: him, unintentionally, té_ fre Yhe ‘ : : thay and —tord—-Gods-F# scared;——“Conditions inthe Negra CoM fatal shot F a4 ne Zo satd the middle - aged Negro munity have deteriorated since | Subsequentiy a eoroner’s Jury 5 iad from his small, eluttered groe-ithe riots hecause Negro expec including a Negro man—ruled . 5 a tations have not been met in the shooting an accidental homi- Ss Outside, in shabby streets still | terms of actual accomplish- Gide. District Attorney Evelle ___ deeply scarred by-last August’s |ments—what they can see, feel, younger then pronounced the 5 : ae Says reer -riotiog, etna owen Deadwvier-Bova case closed. - 7 voices echoed the grocer's fear. |DISCUSS SITUATION : Community leaders, average, And along the hot, brooding SNIPER AT WORK : : ritizens and, perhaps most omi-/streets young Negroes the . That night, shots were fired at nously.. idle young people in. the |schoo! dropouts, the delinquents,-/8 Police car by a hidden sniper ; : sprawling Negro district of the parolees, the unemployed in Watts and at least four fires : ines —+r-south-central~bos—An-rand—the—ones—whe-—aiwaye—fol-7 Were ee ee Sec SSeS: BEES EE 2 ae aa ee i :,; l0ow—talk among themselves line bombs hurled by embittered - 4 “This time it won't be no six |Negroes who roamed the still- $1 ANN 5 thre nme ote cama a scarrad..neighborhoods ‘4 < $ i PA man,”’ said a young Negro. ‘It's Of the 1,000 buildings either ial 7 or = “gonna go Hi there -aint-nandamagedor destroved tn the Au mec cseecyre sirenne eg te oo e: * ae _— . == es HOPE RIVER whiteys left down here in black gust riots, only a handful—per- 2 country.”’ haps ‘four dozen, a city official * iles from New . Feelings in the Negro area estimates--have been repaired ’ _ ‘miles New Glasgow were further inflamed bv the or rebuilt E wee ‘ ; —_;—milea—from—Cavendish- fatal shooting..May.7last-of Ne-+A-$98.000feasibility..study- for. En. fai 3 is ee slsaiis oe : * Ful course dinners Hot or cold lobster Strawberry Short- cake, dessert. “4 P.M. to 9 P.M. EVERY FRIDAY - subsequent eight We Trade * Furniture’ Television * Appliances FIRESTONE Home and: Auto Ltd. Dial 14-5547 gro-motorist-Leonard Deadwsier | ls possible $16,900,000 urban re- by a white policeman and the newal, program had hung fire dav inquest, because of a federal freeze on lor~>st_ in city history California urban renewal funds Testimony brought that after the 1964 passage of Propo- ADVERTISING CORRECTION Re Ellis Bros. Dairy Bar | Open Mon., Tues., Wed, & Thur. . 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