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Northwest Arkansas Times
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Northwest Arkansas Times

   Northwest Arkansas Times (Newspaper) - September 23, 1966, Fayetteville, Arkansas                               YEAR-NUMBER 87 The Public Interest U The First Concern Of This Newspaper Wire and ARKANSAS FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 23 1966 Only Road To Peace Gromyko Tells U N Russia Demands U S Quit South Viet Nam AP King and NEA Fair and mild today anil Saturday barometer 30.10 ing winds N at mph rise Saturday sunset High Low Yesterday 80 46 Expected today 80 45 CENTS UNITED NATIONS AP The Soviet Union re- plied today to the latest U.S Viet Nam peace proposals by demanding the Immediate of all U.S forces as the only way to peace Soviet Foreign Minister An- drei A Gromyko told the General Assembly policy declaration in a major there are still no signs testifying to the seriousness of the intention of Washington to seek a ment of the Viet Nam war He dismissed the latest of U.S Ambassador Ar- thur J Goldberg as part of a so-called peace offensive and said each new peace move was followed by a further tion of aggressive actions Where is the solution of the Viet Nam problem be Gromyko asked The answer he said is ple and unconditional cessation of the bombing of the territory of the Democratic Re- public of Viet Nam withdrawal of all armed forces of the ed States and their allies from South Viet Nam removal of for- eign armaments the granting to the Vietnamese people of a chance to settle their internal problems themselves The aggressor has come to Viet Nam the aggressor should he said Gromyko declared that it was the duty of every government to declare its support to the heroic Vietnamese people from City Receives Planning Grant Approval of a federal grant for comprehensive ning in the city of Fayetteville under the Urban Planning sistance Program was an- today by Sen J liam Fulbright and Rep James Trimble The will he by in city funds making a total of able for the 18 month study City Manager Gerald Fox said today that funds would be used to prepare topographic mapping of the city and its environs to update zoning ordinances and subdivision regulations to pre- pare a revised land use and major thoroughfares plan and Dr R F Kruh To Leave For Kansas Dr Robert F Kruh dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Arkansas will become dean of the ate School at Kansas State Uni- versity at the end of the rent school year Kruh who has headed the University's largest college since June of 1964 said he had not sought out the position but that it presented an opportunity he could not forego He has been associated with the University since 1952 and of the chemistry department be- fore he was promoted to dean Kruh began his career In 1951 as assistant professor of at DePauw University The following year he moved to Ar- kansas He was promoted to professor in 1956 to full professor in 1961 and was named chairman of the try department in 1963 He holds his bachelor of arts and doctor of philosophy de- grees from Washington sity at St Louis As a student at Washington University he was elected to both Phi Beta Kappa the scholastic honor and Sigma Xi the orary science society As a teacher Kruh has taught classes in physical and general chemistry While his research interests are broad in scope he is best known for basic research on the atomic structure of and solids and his work has been supported by grants from the United States Atomic Energy Commission He is a veteran of World War II serving in a combat battalion in the European Theater of Operations A church leader he is serving as the con- president and pre- served as elder and dent adviser at the St John's Lutheran Church to inventory existing parking spaces in commercial and trial areas and plan for ment of additional space City will also be dated Fox said The grant from the ment will be administered through the University of Ar- city kansas and planning director Fox said the project will take approximately 18 months and that the city's share of the money will be paid out over that period Completion of me study is ex- about March 1968 Kickoff Is P.M Tomorrow Fans Expected Here For Game Burglar Gels Drugs In Pharmacy Breakin A large amount of drugs was taken last night in a burglary of the Medical Arts Pharmacy 241 W Spring St Fayetteville police reported today Ray Moore a night watchman discovered the break-in shortly before 2 and notified city police The thief or thieves en- tered the pharmacy by ing a window on the east side of the building After entering a storage room through the broken window the door to the interior of the store was forced open and the drugs were taken From ts was also reported taken ARKANSAS WEATHER ARKANSAS Fair with a slight warming trend through Saturday Low tonight 40s north to mid 50s south High day DEAN KRUH accept new pott Effort To Topple Powell Fizzles As He Forecast WASHINGTON AP They changed the rules on Rep Adam Clayton Powell but whether they're going to change Powell remains to be seen Both Powell and his foes claimed victory Facing cheering hundreds from his Harlem district ell flashed the smile of a winner Thursday as he announced the House Education and Labor Committee had put through a string of reforms by a vote In the New York Democrat said we have firmed the rules of the House by which we have always been bound I consider this a very progressive step forward That was also the theme of the leaders of the revolt against him Rep Sam M Gibbons who started the whole thing a CONTINUED ON PAGE By JIM KELTON TIMES Sports Editor Saturday it starts all over again By noon the airport will be overflowing the streets ing to Razorback Stadium hopelessly jammed and the Ar- kansas an hour and a half away from the p.m kickoff of their first home ball game of the 1966 season A record crowd of is expected for the 43rd renewal of the and a good many of those will Hurricane fans is the year the defending souri Valley champions will blow the off perch The Porkers victors over Oklahoma State last Saturday night at Little Rock have now won 22 straight regular season games and have a chance to run through their third straight regular season undefeated Their only loss since 1963 came of course in last year's Cotton Bowl by at the hands of Louisiana State Last week Tulsa opened against Tampa Fla and roared to a win The ricane is seeking its straight national passing and Saturday wiH be looking for its first triumph over Arkansas in seven years and its second in the last 12 Tulsa last year jumped into a lead but couldn't hold off a charge by Arkansas and finally fell Gone however is the quarterback that engineered that burst BUI son and with him went his No 1 Howard Twilley Saturday Greg Barton will be at the helm for the Hurricane and his prime receivers will probably be flanker Neal ey and end Brant Roberts both of whom posses more speed than Twilley and are most as experienced as he was at Uus time last season For Arkansas the game will be a proving after- OK PAGE EIGHT Rockefeller Says He Expects To Win By Big Vole By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Winthrop Rockefeller the Re- publican candidate for nor says he not only thinks he wiB win the Nov 8 general election but that he will re- a mandate Rockefeller carried his into extreme northwest Arkansas Thursday opening his headquarters at Rogers Meanwhile Johnson wife nominee Jim Johnson told a Little Rock civic club her hus- band was Indebted to the ple not the machine or the governor makers Rockefeller said at Rogers that be thought his 1964 for governor had peaked too early and that this year his campaign is better organized He said there are more GOP candidates on the ballot this year than at any other time in the state's history We are giving the people oi Arkansas a team in Rockefeller said But we have a lot of work to do in the re- maining 50 days before the this rostrum to denounce American aggression to de- mand its unconditional in the north and south of Viet Nam to demand the of all armed forces of the United States and their ies from Viet Nam Gromyko repeated the Soviet pledge to render all necessary assistance to the Viet Nam Communists On other issues Gromyko submitted three draft tions for assembly consideration backing up his attack on U.S policy They A resolution requesting all states to refrain from all actions which would hamper agreement on nonproliferation of nuclear weapons until a treaty on that subject is concluded A resolution calling for con- of all forms of inter- vention in the domestic affairs of states and warning states which undertake armed inter- vention in the domestic affairs of states that they must accept responsibility for A resolution requesting states possessing military bases in Asia Africa and Latin America to disband them at once and not establish them in the ture This appeared aimed at proposals for nuclear sharing among the North Atlantic Treaty tion allies The U.S offer of a mutual de- escalation of the war was made In the assembly debate day by Ambassador Arthur J Goldberg He said the United States is prepared to stop all bombing of North Viet Nam the moment it is assured privately or that North Viet Nam will promptly take corresponding and timely steps to reduce or bring to an end its own military Mrs Virginia of Democratic From what I can he said on Nov 8 we will nol only have a victory wa will have a mandate Earlier in the day ler said at Little Rock that he is not trying to buy the nor's office He said any such charge slapping at the integrity of the people of Arkansas I have something to ON PAGE Wirephoto EVERYONE IS THE ENEMY South Vietnamese boy is questioned by marine after sniper fire came from village Child was later re- leased Survey Shows War Turning Public Away From Johnson NEW YORK AP dent Johnson is in trouble with the American voter the war in Viet Nam says a survey prepared for the can The same sampling of opinion says those questioned think President John F Kennedy would have done better activities Nam against South Viet Bayonet Found Near Death Site KENILWORTH HI AP The Kenilworth police chief says a bayonet found in Lake Michigan could be the weap on with which Valerie Percy 21 was stabbed repeatedly by her killer But a Chicago police crime laboratory technician said the bayonet bore no traces of blood hair or fingerprints Sgt Irwin Haviland of the crime laboratory said Thursday night that although the type bayonet was not rusty it was not a new one He said it had several nicks on it The weapon has a blade with a black plastic dle A aide said the tiple stab wounds in Valerie's body were inflicted with a weapon such as a bayonet Ha added however that the weapon used to eon Valerie had a cone-shaped head or protuberance not present on the bayonet but which is commonly found on a fireplace poker 280 New Combat Planes Ordered WASHINGTON AP The Johnson Administration faced with a steadily steepening air war in Viet Nam has ordered 280 additional warplanes in cal 1968 at a cost of million Secretary of Defense Roberl S McNamara announcing this Thursday said most of the tional aircraft will go to the Navy which he said has had a higher loss rate per mission than originally expected The defense chief emphasized that thus far in the Viet Nam war the over-all aircraft loss rate is running somewhat less than we estimated But he also noted that sorties have ed original estimates by 5 to 10 per cent Pentagon figures show 505 U.S planes have been downed in Viet Nam fighting to date with 383 losses in North Viet Nam and 122 in the South In a statement McNamara said the boost estimated to be about 33 per cent over planned production was based on many factors including tions on number and types of sorties and predicted loss rates But another Defense source put it this We're going To lose more Navy planes than we thought However the poll says thi majority reject former Sen Barry Goldwater's views ant want no part of get out o Viet Nam policies suggested by Sen Wayne Full results of the survey re- leased today will be broadcas Sept 24 as ABC Th Viet Nam War John F Kraft Inc which took the poll concludes that In sum the American peopl don't like the war in Viet Nam and the fact that it is still going on is laid a he doorstep But because there seem to be no alternatives in frustration Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary o Defense Robert S McNamara get saddled with the blame The Kraft organization its conclusions represent observations and analysis o Kraft researchers regarding the significance of the salient find ings of the poll Kraft said that those who an swered the poll found sacrosanct about the and felt an investigation abou the conduct of the war might be all to the good Vice President Hubert H Humphrey the poll said is i anything in worse shape than President Johnson Twice as many people think he's doing a many people think he's doing good job than think he's doin a bad one although his favor able total of 49 per cent lower man Johnson's the pol said The poll was taken As for President Kennedy 86 jer cent of those polled though was doing a fine job at the one he was assassinated iVh ether they would have con- to think so if he had the poll commented was a question impossible to answer Aerial Attacks Reach Peak Intensity SAIGON South Viet Nam AP U.S bombed Communist North Viet Nam Thursday night for the fourth time in the war The bombers unloaded tons of explosives on ammunition dumps truck parks and storage depots in the southern end of North Vietnamese infiltration of militarized zone The heavy raid was part of the new U.S aerial offensive in the southern Panhandle to halt North infiltration of men and supplies into South Viet Nam through the zone The raid was preceded Thursday by waves of U.S Air Force Navy and Marine ers which hammered also at the infiltration routes in the south ern section of North Viet Nam Infantrymen of the South Vietnamese 22nd Division re- ported driving back successive waves of attacks today by two battalions of Viet Cong an mated men A Vietnamese military spokesman said 150 Viet Cong were killed in three hours fighting before dawn He estimated that the enemy carried away 100 more dead and wounded The fighting took place in gled mountain country 277 miles northeast of Saigon near the central coast The action was only miles from where troops reported killing some 200 Viet Cong Sept 8 The Vietnamese spokesman said seven Viet Cong were cap- tured in today's battle Ing one company commander and two platoon leaders He said government infantrymen were supported by artillery air strikes and armored cars which accounted for many enemy dead The spokesman said the Viet Cong objective was to capture the command post of the Regiment of the South ese 22nd Division He said forces captured 51 weapons Including antiaircraft and machine guns Vietnamese casualties were described as light The U.S military command reported scattered but small ground actions and the windup of two operations which had failed to produce any major en- U.S Marines opposing the North Vietnamese Division just below the demilitarized zone reported their front quiet with little or no contact The Marines however ered 17 more North Vietnamese dead 17 miles of Quang Tri City Brutal Attack Nets Thugs 7 Cents FEELS SORRY FOR HIS ATTACKERS EDITOR'S NOTE Martin Bailey Is a small middle-aged man with a wife and four dren He works at night as a cartoonist for the Miami ald Last Friday night while waiting for a bus at a lonely corner Bailey was attacked and beaten by four men in a less savagery that sent him to the hospital Injured seriously and awaiting surgery fiere is his account ef the 10 minutes of By MARTIN BAILEY of The Miami Herald bar columnist Bailey lifts himself in hospital bed with aid of MIAMI Fla AP The street was empty Nothing moved as I stood near the street light surrounded by deep Then from the south came two men on the sidewalk They were husky types wearing ver shirts As they neared they began walking slow too slow I edged dose to a tele- phone pole trying to keep the pole between them and me I averted my eyes to avoid antagonizing the men But I sensed each step they took as they closed in Then heavy forearm ceiled around my behind wedging me in vice Almost at the same time the second man stepped in front of me and struck My head filled with stars and pain It was unreal and I felt like a dazed spectator as I slumped in that iron grip The pain was pulsing behind my eyes as I saw two younger men emerge from the shadows across the street and run ward me silently like dancers Get his feet Lift him I heard them say They carried me away from the streetlight like a sack of into the darkness beside an abandoned and then put me on my feet again gripping me tightly Take off his watch bling hands Hurried breathing He ain't got no watch The dark figure suddenly struck me in the face again and then again I could feel blood pouring as fingers probed my pockets fingers that made my skin crawl as they found change All I had was 32 cents They also took my pen and tried to wrench off my wedding ring I struggled ing a fist of my left hand Then I suddenly found my CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT Owens Charged With Desertion SELMA Ala AP Airman 1C Donald Lee Owens 28 of Nacogdoches Tex has been charged with desertion Craig Air Force Base officials said Thursday Officials said Owens reported lo have drowned in Arkansas last month is being held at Maxwell AFB in Montgomery pending his trial which has not reen set On Aug 21 the base received a report that Owens was ing and presumed drowned in a lake in northwest Arkansas Military authorities picked up Owens in Selma Sept 7 said Owens vanished Aug 21 while ishing at Beaver Lake After lis empty boat was found men and volunteers dragged the ake for two weeks The search was called off by he Air Force after two men snid they helped Owens ake his death were arrested md confessed Officials indicated that ial difficulties were behind Owens attempt to drop of ight   

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