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■mu, jla. luau exit was aiso closed, since it eventually runs into 1092. But there was a ray-of hope when a guard waved motorists through at the Missis-s i p p i 607 exit which goes through the Mississippi Test Facility.
The roads through the center where the giant moon rocket is test-fired were cleared and there was little sign of major damage until the route began to run parallel to U.S. 90 on the outsorts of Clermont Harbor, a posh subdivision near Waveland.
All along the highway the scene was too real. Motels had been blown apart. Tourist shops that once displayed clay birds and other wares were reduced to piles of rock. House trailers were overturned, homes wrecked at every glance.
MORE TROOPERS were stationed about eight miles before the approach, to the Bay St. Louis toll bridge, the route to Pass Christian.
That was the end of the road. The four-lane bridge was closed to all but emergency vehicles.
The car plowed through mud roads to get to Beach Boulevard, the once-scenic route
mes oi tne storm, me strange qurks of nature clearly a- silk ' ~ There was a roof lying in
iuii ai uie xvuuseveii nuiei, saiu
yesterdf- that New Orleans will “probE be the first deep South Cicy to obtain collective bargaining for teachers, thereby improving schools.
The current situation is inferior, he said, because of overcrowded classrooms, low teacher salaries, and racial imbalance.
“YOU CAN’T get men to teach here without offering! ON HIGHWAY 53 between them all sorts of moonlighting Lyman and Poplarville, a tav-
j.v	nr
icajuiic, ticca
on one side of the highway are blown down to the north. On the west side, they are felled to the
the middle of Gulfport’s main!sout^-street	yesterday	morning. No-!	At Long Beach, a drug store
body	knows	where	it	came! s vanished, but its neon sign
from	! on an adjacent post is un-
the new’har™ed-
as	if itA bnck veneer Gulfport
In Long Beach, public' library looks
hasn’t even seen a heavy rain.
possibilities,” he said.
Selden, holding a news conference, said he is opposed to freedom of choice desegregation plans because “they run counter to race mixing. Freedom of choice results in one kind of school for the well-to-do and another type for lower and middle classes.”
He said the racial imbalance is a matter of politics in Louisiana and the South.
“I think it is time for the people in Louisiana to tell these politicians they are sick and tired of it. Instead of harping on this one string, politicians should get around to other issues,” Selden said.
describe.
THE PRESIDENT of the 175,000-member federation of teachers said New Orleans
probably improve ;jmeu™auVn U1 e union’s strengthjbonal Guardsmen
here and the overall labor, ty tnere-movement in the city.
However, Selden said he does not support holding the i convention in cities where the
house isn’t anymore. All the shingles are intact, but ■ the bricks lie around the foundation like corn cut from a cob.
er„ is , pile of rubble. There isjtlle ^ virtually no debris around it — -the beach. That part is nothing, just a stack dl wood, bric'k and Just nothing, equipment piled inside what re-!	*
mains of its foundation.	PrivCJte-ColIege
Not far away is a pine tree' r n _ that will bow as long as it lives., oroup vj€TS orant There isn t a crack in it. It’s i The Louisiana Foundation just bent about two feet from;for Private Colleges has re-the ground and the top is lying iceived a contribution from the on the ground.	|	Union	Tank	Car	Foundation	for
On Highway 90 at Gulfport, i$250
draw^SSedaffiltSi ^ co«^utk,n will be
fin cion In thL	thp!used for the support of current
fic signs in the middle of the;	,- pvripncpq nf itc mpm
highway. Thev look as if some-i°^ratl™ exPenses of lts ™em
one carefully'nadded the Dosts lber coIle§es> Louisiana college one careiuny paaaea me pos>is..in Pineville> st Mary’s Dominican College in New Orleans, and Centenary College in Shreveport.
ON OLD PASS Christian Road between Gulfport and Long Beach, the roof and front of a liquor store are gone but most of the bottles still are
that runs along the bay The;^^‘ ^ju” pr^ably" improve I J>ned,n®atly .on the shelves. Na-scene there was even harder to because of the union>s strength;tional Guardsmen are on sentry
Traffic fatalities in the firsl quarter of 1969 compared with the comparable period last year show a 2 per cent rise.
THERE WAS NO more “scenic route.” Pieces of concrete were piled up near once
stately homes. The road was- .	„
eroded away and sometimes ™101} does. serve as collec- ( dropped 12 feet to the shoreline, tive bargaining agent for teach-St. Stanislaus High School, ajers 'n the school system, boarding school for boys run by| Earlier today, Robert the Holy Cross brothers, lay in Smith, president of the Orleans ruin. Right alongside in similar'Parish School Board, was condition was St. Joseph Acade-;s c h e dul e d to offer opening my for Girls and Our Lady of,greetings to the convention. Al-the Gulf Catholic Church. though his name appeared on Every building from the]the program, he was not among beachfront to near the Louis-(those who addressed the con-.ville and Nashville railroad vention.
track was destroyed. Homes were blown off foundations and only one store remained in the small, downtown district. The bottom floor of that store was gutted, leaving only a shell of the second floor.
WIRES WRE everywhere and downed trees and smashed-in cars were commonplace.
Rounding the bay, the devastation was even greater than expected. Railroad trestles approaching Bay St. Louis were torn from concrete pilings.
Wood and debris piled about 14 feet high could be seen at the bridge toll plaza on the Pass Christian side.
RETURNING TO NEW Orleans was easy as long as the sinthe.
SELDEN SAID he recom- j mended that Smith should not speak. Since the local board has: not agreed to collective bargaining and the recent strike of; r teachers in New Orleans proved; I unsuccessful, Selden said| x Smith’s talk would have been1 “provocative.”
Selden’s prediction for sue-; cess in gaining collective bar-! gaining for teachers in this area! was based on possibilities that board members will change! their minds or that new board members will come along with! different ideas.	;
Wormwood is an aromatic herb related to sagebrush, whose foiliage yields a volatile oil used in the making of ab-
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