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President Names C. F. Haynsworth to U.S. Supreme Court
U.S. Troops Clash Tw with Enemy
By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP)
— President Nixon named federal Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. of Greenville, S.C., to the Supreme Court of the United!
States Monday, calling him “an eminently qualified jurist, scholar and intellect.”
Haynsworth, a 56-year-old Democrat from five generations of distinguished South Carolina lawyers, considers himself a middle-of-the-road jurist rather than a liberal or a conservative.
But there still may be some'^e ^rs*- ^rne in many years, controversy and opposition be-! Nixon is on record as “say-fore Haynsworth’s nomination! ing he does not consider comes up for the necessary Sen- there is a Jewish seat or a ate approval.	;	Catholic	seat	or	a	Negro seat
Nixon did not clear it with pol- on the court. iticians or the American Bar
By WILLIS JOHNSON SAIGON (AP) - Heavy fight-must pass on the nomination, ling broke out Monday near the set a hearing for Sept. 9. The;South China Seacoast south of Mississippi Democrat com-!Da Nang. Soldiers of the Ameri-mended the choice of Hayn-ical Division twice clashed with sworth.	'strong North Vietnamese army1
FILLS FORTAS POST	| forces.
The U.S. Command in Sai- i
Gulf Com Leveled i
DAMAGES HEAVY, ON COUNTRYSIDE
Haynsworth was appointed to1	,	,	m
fill a vacancy created when Abe| gon rep0. ® 3“	h	Miss. Woodlands, Rural
Fortas resigned last May during!	had been k! !ed and :	Tnwri Tl ,	,
an uproar over his accepting! *at AT^n cas"alties	i	iown Jumbled
fees from a family foundation ofi “ men ^^nd 48 mounded i	---------
imprisoned financier Louis E.l ^/ated ^ correspond-1 By D0N LEE KEITH Wolfson	^	Richard	Pyle	reported	from	{jimes-Picayune	Staff	Correspondent)
With Haynsworth on the J*®	»U«.
preme Court the bench would'!? * reacnedl43 dead and j d hugging the backside of r . ,	’	T	.	^	.that	sporadic	fighting	was	still:	•	■	,	~	T • t>
be without a Jewish justice for|onin(7	(Mississippi’s St. Louis Bay
Monday looked like Paul
Bunyan had picked the spot for
a kicking contest with Babe,:
his blue ox.
The tallest and strongest of;
going on at midnight.
Command spokesmen said the first action erupted Monday morning 33 miles south of Da Nang, when elements of the Americal’s 196th Brig-
ade ran into an enemy force .	.
The Haynsworth	nomination!	0f unknown size and there	jPines	had	been snapped in	two.
Association, the Western White was the second for	the Presi-!	was a sharp exchange of auto-	as if	they'd been toothpicks.
House said.	|dent. That of Chief Justice War-;	matte weapons and small-	jMammoth	oaks, some three	and
In Greenville, Haynsworth said he will “strive earnestly” to justify Nixon’s confidence.
ren E. Burger last June, to re-: arms fire.
!four feet in diameter, had been
?h*CLrJ;tiring Earl Warren’ wasj Fighting continued into the1, Cont in Sec. l, Page 14, Col. 4
the first.
In contrast with a televised
afternoon and helicopter gun- -ships and tactical air strikes;
Coast Wi
In Washington, Chairman!ceEe?1™y at w^ich he an- were called in to support the;
James 0. Eastland of the Sen-jnounced	Burger appoint-,Americans. When the action
ate Judiciary Committee, which; Cont. in Sec. 1, Page 14, Col. 1 !died out there after nightfall,:
headquarters said, the bodies!
Gist of the News	!&,«'""* werem ,he
,,i	,	...	.	,	"By'	WlLLIAM F. KELLY
—Tuesday Morning:, August 19, 1969—	I u.o. casualties were put at * t ^ BRENT MANLEY
T .	-i	A,,	•	;L°ur tolled and 21 wounded.: r j ft New 0rleans Interna.
International Affairs	,TJe second engagement began	J Ai Mond about
j shortly a f t e r noon, spokes-12.36	t0	check	daniage
Editor's Not*: The following is an eye-witness account of the hurricane damage to the Mississippi coast as told bv New Orleans home bunder William F. Kelly to reporter Brent Manley:
—	,	.	.	..	*	,	-	irfAAw*	U	* t V 1 IXvUtl^ Mk/VIVWiJ
U.S. troops clash with enemy twice m heavy fighting near;men said) w^en another Ameri-!
South China seacoast.	—Sec. 1, Page 1
In Northern Ireland, ecumenical group urges wider use of peace-keeping forces.	—Sec. 1, Page 11
Body of famed heart recipient Philip Blaiberg is cremated
, ,	. . Ion my subdivision, Oak Harbor,
calforce a sweep ran into an ^ j located at Pearlington, enemy unit and heavy fighting. Pearl River went on throughout the after- As the ,ane entered Mis. noon and into the night. That ac- sissi i l was somewhat
firtn nnnrni*nrt	thi>nn mi nnl	1	r	’
in Cape Town.	—Sec. 2, Page 2 ^on centered about three miles, startied -when I saw large
U.N. command asks meeting with Korean military com-j Cont. in Sec. 1, Page 15, Col. 2 i pine trees below, snapped in mittee to discuss missing U.S. copter.	—Sec.	4,	Page	18]	m	!	two ma*ch sticks.
Avondale Loss
National Affairs
President Nixon names Judge C. F. Haynsworth of South Carolina to fill Supreme Court vacancy.	—Sec.	1, Page	1
Government orders Mississippi to delay spending portion of $32.1 million in federal education aid.	—Sec. 1, Page 5
Head of Remember the Pueblo Committee says three copter crewmen survived downing inside N.	Korea.	—Sec.	1, Page	5
Jets drop silver iodide crystals	into	Hurricane	Debbie	in j
attempt to tame the storm.	—Sec.	2, Page	3
Local Affairs
Members of domed stadium design development team receive $1.6 million in fees.	—Sec.	1, Page	4
Giarrusso says flooding conditions in Industrial Canal area cease to threaten community.	—Sec.	1, Page	6
AFT president, David Seldin,	predicts	collective	bargaining
for	N.O. teachers.	—Sec.	1, Page 10
Six men arrested Sunday	night,	the	night of the	hurricane,
in two separate burglaries.	—Sec.	4, Page 18
Reported Light
Probably no one is more aware of the difference between Hurricane Camille and Hurricane Betsy than Avondale Shipyard personnel.
During Betsy in 1965, Avondale had five ships beached by the high winds, and two $12 million ships under construction were sunk in the Mississippi River between Kenner and the main shipyard.
During Camille, however, the only damage was a small redwood fence which was blown over Sunday night, an Avondale spokesman said.
Not
just an occasional large tree, but acres of pine trees were broken and lying on the ground.
Some of the houses were damaged badly at Oak Harbor, which was on the fringe of the hurricane.
As we (another passenger and the pilot) flew over Clermont Harbor subdivision near Waveland, we were stunned by what we saw.
There was no way to describe what was beneath us: not one single building was left standing for as far back as 1,500 feet from the beach.
We flew along the beach from Clermont Harbor to Ocean Springs.
The bridge across Biloxi Bay was out of position and the con-


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