Gastonia Gazette (Newspaper) - September 17, 1966, Gastonia, North Carolina CLOUDY Increasing cloudiness todays Mostly cloudy tonight and day with scattered rain and showers spreading over t h e slate Sunday Continued cool 75 and 60 Fight Your Own War On Jackpot THE GASTONIA GAZETTE THE PIEDMONT'S GROWING NEWSPAPER TODAY'S REMINDER We have in our words jackpot this week See puzzle in Sunday Gazette and got your entry to us by midnight PUBLISHED SEVEN DAYS A WEEK FINAL EDITION GASTONIA N C SATURDAY AFTERNOON SEPTEMBER 17 1966 PRICE Singla Copy IQc Daily Me Sunday 12 PAGES India in Our left Window American Pilots Shoot Down MIG Under Our Nose By THE PRESS To the great joy of nation America's twin Gemini 11 astro- splashed safely back to earth Thursday after having been farther from it than any human ever before At one point in their day journey astronauts Lt Richard F Gordon Jr and Cmdr Charles Conrad Jr reached an altitude record of 850 miles It's said com- mander pilot Conrad from on high I've got India in the left window and Borneo under our nose When their onboard computer directed them to a near bullseye landing close lo the earner Guam off Bahamas the ended a highly successful that saw Link up wilh an Agena get rocket on their first orbit Fly two orbits tethered lo the Agena a useful experiment for future satellite repair and link up with the Agena four limes a record Gordon also took a space walk which was shortened when he began perspiring ily We just don't know all the answers about space said Dr Charles A ry flight surgeon But while he was Gordon Agena like a cowboy and later stood halfway out of capsule tor an riod snapping pictures of he stars Back aboard Guam Con- rad said After a couple of nights sleep we're ready to go again A BATTLE AGAINST SPACE Id's left hand dangling Gemini 11 Astro- naut Richard Gordon floats in space during his flight with his space twin Charles Conrad after he left his cabin 10 join the spacecraft to an unmanned Agena target vehicle 160 miles above the earth in last Tuesday's flight Gordon experienced some difficulty during this walk foul succeeded In icing the two space vehicles together AP in Viot Nam since 1961 passed through After the Democratic against cloture were 21 By KELLY SMITH WASHINGTON AP Agnes Hatfield ran second in a lican congressional primary in Maryland without even Irvine not make a single speech not spend a cent on her campaign another candidate in the sarne race not want to win Mrs Halfield says it all has to do with where your name is on the ballot hers was first She suggests her finish should make people start thinking A professor of child studies at the University of Maryland she ran ill a field of four cans in Maryland's District Lawrence J Hogan second on the ballot won last Tuesday's primary He will face cratic incumbent Rep Gilbert in the general election I did this as a test and it apparently proved a Mrs Hatfield said It doesn't make any difference whether a ballot is arranged ly or by the color of your eyes but the first name on it has an edge She proposed a study of the and suggested giving each candidate a certain centage of ballots with his name first Some stales already follow this procedure Mrs Halfield 45 who lives in suburban Hyattsville Md re- votes compared with Hogan's 5.134 The date she endorsed William R Martin finished last wilh 201 votes Mrs Halfield has never held political office and doesn't plan lo run for anything again She said she is afraid she might win the mark Despite all the hazards 80 per Tuesday's primaries were cent of South Viet Nam's 5.3 reported to be on the whole million registered voters went pleasing to President Johnson convention passed over him for another term he decided to run anyway He easily beat LI Gov A M Sandy Keilh 37 taking 68 per cent of the vote What was needed was strong support but that was not forthcoming Sen ett M Dirksen of Illinois the to the polls on the score that they supported Edward J Republican leader personally nation's biggest election They his Viet Nam policy He was McLormack nephew of the opposes the mainly because chose 117 people including 10 reported not so happy at House speaker beat out a John of the provision military officers to write a constitution lo the try to civilian rule next year Nobody expected miracles but dences of white backlash F Kennedy aide for the After the first defeat Sen In New Jersey W Warren tor governor Mike Mansfield of Montana the 42 campaigning on the m-m to was Democratic leader said lie P O'Donnell One would try again on Monday but iet Nam in fhe free world there was cy smashed David Frosl 40 a Casually in Massachusetts llis were considered satisfaction The Viet Cong professor had opposed the Joseph W Jr 81 had not been able lo disrupt the policy in Viet Nam by He Republican about 10 lo won the mary to Margaret M Heckler for U.S JJ a political neophyte who beat President Johnson's support for Senate and will oppose elections by terror only 10 tary were elected and no nesty was discovered in the lot ing Amid the ballots here were slill bullets Steady guerrilla skirmishing was climaxed at week's end by a U.S Marine landing just below the zone South and North Viet Nam The Marines were hoping to trap an old foe North Vietnamese Di- vision They had killed more than 900 of the enemy in a first encounter in July At same lime total United Stales brighter Even Mansfield asked if he expected to win said I doubt it The White House said can Sen Clifford Case in No- In Maryland George P lioney 65 a political unknown apparently won Democratic nomination for governor His campaign was built on the gan Your home is your caslle vote to it In a way race bie while backlash was the margin of victory for Maboney In Minnesota Gov Karl F Rolvaag 53 proved he was not tin with a clipping from 1921 in which Martin first won election by saying his opponent was loo old to effectively sent President Johnson's civil rights suffered a serious perhaps fatal defeat on Wednesday The Senate voled 54 lo close off a filibuster against the and 42 against Wilh 06 present a vote of would have been needed for cloture Among the 42 voting Your Column Begins William Gaston Nat Com Featured In Sunday Gazette Monday Sept 19 is the an- of the birth of liam Gaslon distinguished ber of the General Assembly the U.S Congress and the Stale Supreme Court and for whom the county of Gaston and ils county seat Gastonia were named Joe Jones in a ender special tells about the early American Catholic er and Tar Heel statesman Don't miss the latest in the world of entertainment and TV in The Weekender magazine section of The Sunday Gazette Remember Nat Corn was convicted ot the murder of his boss z Lincolnton man and sentenced to die His life was spared and in the ing years be escaped numerous times and was a national ure for his mischief Corn ly turned over a new leaf and was paroled Lyle Edwards who covered the spectacular trial I hat convicted Corn re- cails his impressions of Corn and the trial in Sunday's zette Gastonia The City of ing is also the city of growing New Look tries come to town and bring with a host ot new dents Beginning in the Sunday zette a new feature Meet Your Neighbors will put the light on a Gaston County family However families who have lived in the area tor many years will share this spotlight from time lo time wilh comers Kicking off the series will be the family of Gastonia's new city manager Peter You'll find the feature each week in tlie woman's section A A full page feature with tures concerning the work of the Pink Ladies at Gaslon Hospital will appear on the Sunday front of the an's section See Iho story for a close-up look at various services performed by Ibe pital auxiliary members Everybody remembers King Arthur If you want to read a poignant and article on turn to page 4 and find Paul Harvey's slory It's one brief shining moment of thinking back on talcs of literature Rep Sam Gibbons claims he has enough voles to strip Rally Rep Adam Clayton Powell of his powers as man Page 9 The new million Metropolitan Opera opens with a bang fage 8 w it Jj Soviets and Hungary may make voluntary contributions to Page 8 if it d Highway men plan new of access road lo Gaslon College after meeling with the college board of Page 2 Ask Andy Deaths 2 Astro Guide 3 Editorials 4 Bridge 3 Movies 9 Classified 11 Sports 10 fl Crossword 3 Woman's Hews s DETROIT AP Both in- dustry and the United Auto Workers Union may get a belter idea Sunday of how prevalent discontent is among skilled workers in auto plants and major supplier shops The International Society of Skilled Trades which is trying to lure tradesmen away from membership In UAW has called R rally for Sunday More than UAW bers are skilled workers Bui they are outnumbered about seven to one by workers of union the measure has not but a political defeat seemed surely in store for him In Britain Prime Minister Harold Wilson successfully con- cluded a delicate tightrope act He managed to keep the Com- from falling apart over tlie Rhodesian revolt and yet managed to keep from slamming the door outright on the Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith In a final communique Brit- ain told Smith to make peace with Britain by tlie end of the year or Britain would withdraw all settlement offers and never agree to Rhodesian ence without majority African rule While lie stern message could cause A final break of flimsy ties between and bury it also may have averted a dissolution of the wealth a majority of whose members felt force would have to be used ultimately The also wanted no discussion with Smith re- gime but left open a possibility of He also didn't go all the way to meet Commonwealth de- mands for a complete trade boycott against Rhodesia It would apply the communique said only lo selected ual commodities They changed prime ters in South Africa But there was no change in the racial cy of Eight days after Prime ter Hendrik F was assassinated Minister of tice Balthazar J Vorster was elected by a parliamentary cus to take his place I will walk further along road set by Hendrik said Vorsler SO who was jailed in World War II for sympathies Deaths of the Anne Nichols 75 of Abie's Rish a ly successful stage comedy that became a theater legend Thursday at a nursing home in Englewood Cliffs Gertrude Berg 66 known to millions as Molly Goldberg the original Jewish mother of radio television stage and screen Wednesday of heart trouble at a hospital In New York City Quote iof the week This old world really looks good from the deck of this rier Bui I'll lell you something else really looks great from 850 F Gordon Jr Briefly Said Money Talk WASHINGTON AP dent Johnson's key economic advisers may testify next week before a House committee con- Johnson's proposals congressional sources said The sources said Chairman Gardner Ackley of Council of Economic Ad- visers and council bers probably will appear be- fore Ways and Means Committee in closed session Tie committee concluded public hearings Friday on two of Johnson's suspension of 7 per cent business investment lax credit and the de- preciation writeoffs allowed on some forms of real estate Guards Guarded HONG KONG was reported today to Have moved regular troops into ton streets to curb violence by local teen-age Red Guards in that southern China metropolis Arrivals from Canton said the army regulars began patrolling the streets Wednesday night or early Thursday after a group of Peking Red Guards left Canton Wednesday They said the Peking and Canton Red Guards had clashed several times over the Cantons insistence upon using physical violence against persons of bourgeois habits and customs Red Threat LONDON AP Kenya's Vice President Joseph says a Soviet arms buildup in northeast Africa threatens a stranglehold on the Canal Interviewed at the close of con- ference Friday said the Russians have recently shipped a large supply of arms into Somalia the desert lic on Kenya's northern frontier These supplies are far in excess of Somalia's internal be said It is obvious they are going to use them Pray For Peace VATICAN CITY AP The Vatican announced today Pope Paul VI will issue an encyclical letter Monday dedicating Octo- ber as worldwide month of prayer to end the war in Viet Nam A from Valican described the coming encyclical fourth of rope Paul's a pontifical menl of notable importance an encyclical letter in which the Holy Father will invite the faithful of all the world to cial prayers in the coming month ot October Hanoi Says Jets lost SAIGON South Viet Nam AP U.S pilots downed a Communist MIG in one of wo dogfights over North Viet Nam Friday but two American planes were lost in other action over the north a U.S military spokesman reported today The JUG was knocked out of the sky by a Sidewinder missile in an engagement northeast of Hanoi in which three Americans piloting Phantom Jets were outnumbered by four The pilot of the struck MIG bailed out An Air Force spokesman said the two downed American planes brought to 375 the ber lost over North Viet Nam A total of 120 have been shot down in the south He said 206 copters also have been downed in the south and three in the north On lie ground a Communist force of more than battalion strength opposed two companies of U.S Marines today just three miles south of the demilitarized zone The Marines were believed to be fighting a reinforced North Vietnamese army battalion or possibly two battalions A Marine spokesman said the two companies don't seem to be in any particular The fighting began about noon Friday Since then the Marines had killed 50 Communists cording to body count They 110 more of the enemy have been killed but this figure was not confirmed The pilot of one plane knocked down Friday was listed as ing hut lie two-man crew of the other was rescued by helicopter Their Phantom was hit while they were striking supply gels in the panhandle area just north of the demilitarized zone and they bailed out over the zone It was the second lime the pilot 1st Lt Bernard D Giere of Chicago had been shot down and rescued and the third time for the copilot 1st Lt Henry J Knock 27 of Akron Ohio The downed JUG was the lost by Hie enemy in aerial com- bat over North Viet Nam com- pared with five U.S planes A second dogfight also cast of Hanoi took place be- tween two MIGs and four The MIGs fled after a brief encounter ently with no damage to either side On Die ground units of the U S Marine battalion which ed Thursday just south of the demilitarized zone came under North Vietnamese mortar and automatic weapons fire in a predawn attack today Associated Press Horst Faas reported from the battle area that two Marine companies operating about yards south of the buffer zone suffered light to moderate alties in separate attacks mhe Marines look one wounded North Vietnamese soldier as prisoner The units were part of a forced battalion of more than 200 troops which landed by ships and helicopters in Operation Deckhouse 4 to seek infiltrated units of North Viet Nam's Division On the political front Premier Nguyen Cao Ky today pledged to speed up transition of his government into a civilian democracy as a result of last Sunday's successful elections Speaking to the foreign press corps at a luncheon Ky said the elections were a severe blow to Communists and their claims of and over large sections of the ple Now that we have set out on the road to democratic ment we cannot slow he said We cannot detour or rest on the excuse that we are only a caretaker government In ground action Friday U S troops reported killing 26 enemy soldiers in two in South Viet Nam and a South ese spokesman Vietnamese infantrymen killed another 11 Viet Cong in an engagement in the Mekong Delia 75 miles south of Saigon CROWDED RIVER CRUISE Vietnamese Infantrymen and their can advisor crowd In a fiberglass raft us they cross a river In Vinh Long province about 50 miles of Saigon The rait accompanied troops along ho riverbank The river which usually can be waded was swollen after heavy monsoon rains The advisor center with glasses is Raymond Ft Pierce Fla AP Hopes To Persuade Rusk For Treaty Against Spreading By HIGHTOWER AP Special Correspondent WASHINGTON API of State Dean Rusk plans a new effort in New York next week lo persuade the Soviet Un- ion to conclude a treaty against spreading nuclear weapons without linking that issue to West German's role in the Atlantic alliance If the Soviet Union and ers want to talk about the lem of Rusk told a news conference Friday they will find that the United States is willing to go all the way to insure that here is no proliferation of nuclear ons Rusk is scheduled to go to New York this weekend for con- with foreign on hand for the opening of he United Nations General Assembly Tuesday One of those he is known to be most interested in meeting is Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko Officials say the clear weapons issue and disarmament questions will be high on Hie agenda of any Gromyko meeling along wilh the question of peace ties in Viet Nam Rusk will lo ton late week for a ence Johnson and West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard The United Stales and its NATO allies have discussed ting up an allied nuclear ons system which would include Germany but various plans have been shelved A reporter asked Rusk er Erhard might be told by Johnson that Germany is not to gel a finger on trigger of nuclear weapons under NATO The secretary replied that he States has never dis- cussed in NATO or elsewhere any arrangement that would involve the transfer of clear weapons into the hands of nonnuclear powers or the trans- fer of control of those weapons into the hands of nonnuclear powers Obviously speaking with the Soviet Union primarily in mind he said what is important now is to separate he two problems BARBS A psychiatrist's main trouble is that he spends his days ing to peoples trouble the issue and the issue His lhal the United Stales is willing lo go all tha way or nonproliferation this is the line he intends lo lake in his talks wilh ko f have no doubt that if we could all concentrate on Ihs problem of ther spread of nuclear we could make substantial and rapid Rusk said In past negotiations the Soviet Union has consistently linked the treaty proposal and the question contending that the United States intends to provide West Germany with nuclear weapons I do not myself despair of possibilities of in field of Rusk said He I would hope that we could conclude a space treaty that would insure that space lies are concentrated on ful purposes We would like lo see some progress on a comprehensive ban trealy But thus far we have not been able lo solve the problem of providing sufficient guarantees of compliance among all those that might be parties to the treaty Jackpot Growing Every Week This Game Ain't Rigged Worth This game isn't rigged and you have a chance of beating the house What's more it costs nothing to play We've got sacked away and you can have it provided you can turn the trick on the Contest Amid poverty inflation more jobs than people war production tax soaring interest rates cost of living Increases and constant com- plaining about not being able to make ends meet just stands by growing and growing But it isn't the fact that money ts cheap and plentiful that makes this jackpot fatter by the week It appears we have a stickler too tough for our reading public At least that's the picture for the past year or more The weekly word game has in that period back about a half million not one was able to navigate it So this is another week a new game and more in the kitty If you feel lucky consult about this get in on the fun The effort may be worth it Clip out the puzzle in Sunday's Gazette fill in the blanks and mail to us not later than midnight day You become eligible then After a thorough checking if your card Is without error you either win all the money or split with those who also correctly submit a winning entry However the tax problems you en- counter with your winnings is in- dividual responsibility All we want to do is get rid of Help us