Oshkosh Daily Northwestern (Newspaper) - October 16, 1963, Oshkosh, Wisconsin CLOUDY Goody with scattered ers tonight and tomorrow Low tonight High 70s Details on Page 14 Oshkosh Daily Northwestern ond International Evening October 16 1963 48 Prie 10 Erhard Elevated BONN Germany wig directed West Germany's miraculous postwar economic recovery was elected chancellor today to succeed Adenauer West Germany's lower house the Bundestag voted to elevate the Erhard I io top government spot left vacant by Adenauer's reluctant retirement Tuesday There j were 24 abstentions and one m- valid vote 1 Erhard needed 250 votes to I win His Christian Democrats i were joined by their partners in j the coalition government i Free Democrats The Socialists voted against him j The chancellor will go before the Bundestag later today to take the oath of office He will I present his new Cabinet to i President Heinrich L e b k e I Thursday Feels Erhard Incapable j Erhard has been economics 1 minister throughout Adenauer's tenure as West Germany's only chancellor since the Federal Republic was created in Russ Accept Terms British Convoy Rolls Tito to Confer Crashes Kill With President Demand To Dismount Is film i At White House L ve tate Turned Down RUSS COSMONAUTS ARRIVE FOR NEW YORK VISIT Soviet cosmonauts Maj Yuri Gagarin and following flight from Mexico City They Tereshkova first man and only plan a one-day visit in New York AP woman to orbit the earth posed Tuesday photo night at New York's International Airport Park Elected Korean Chief Strongman Who Seized Control In Coup Two Be New Tax Commissioner MILWAUKEE TX Hogan 36 an insurance SEOUL Korea Thursday Chung Hee Park who seized control of South Korea in a military coup two years ago has won the dency through a general tion unofficial returns showed AgO Ballot ny markets research aid said Tuesday night he had not de- Hours before a spokesman of ex-president Yun civil rule party had virtually ed victory to the strongman resigned his commission to campaign but remained chief of the ruling junta Yun himself went into hiding Tuesday after the balloting The party's spokesman Kim said in an informal We apologize to the people fought to the end despite various bad laws and other obstacles in this election A spokesman for Park's republican party issued a statement The battle is over We afl should let bygones be bygones and be united in our work at building the third republic Unofficial returns gave Park votes and Yun 550 Three minor collected votes These would have changed picture if the opposition had been united behind Yun It seemed apparent that the final tabulation would not end the fierce struggle between the military leaders who have ruled Korea for 29 months and the civilian politicians they dis- placed in the May 16.1961 coup The losing side was sure to think the winner had not re- sufficient mandate to unchallenged The race was close from the time the vote counting began Tuesday No one appeared more surprised than Yun's supporters Many had thought Park 45 would easily a four-year term and go on to form a national sembly in elections Nov 25 Park went into the election against the advice of advisers who counseled a crackdown on the civilian opposition He to hare hopes of a slide victory endorsing his ord his record as chief of the military junta The election showed that Park had lost much of tie popular support he had when he seized power Many military ranks he felt in August when he Today's Index 2 6 14 14 25 Page 41 42 44 44 45 Want 45 retired as a his cause In Wonju and where thousands of soldiers ed Park lost He also failed to win big as he expected among the rice paddy farmers he had cultivated Park showed surprising in some cities He edged out Yun in Pusan traditionally a city tbat votes against any tional government Seoul the capital went to Yun better than The government's Democratic Republican party prepared long and hard for the election using much more money and influence than Yun could command One opposition candidate for- mer Premier Song was Jailed and severe restrictions were placed on others Yun's party charged the with irregularities in voting procedures But many observers of Korean politics believed the voting was most honest in Korean history An honest election was the main goal of U.S officials who helped pressure Park into sub- bis rule to the judgment of the people The U.S State De- maintained strict in the whether he would take the a year job as state tax commissioner The Milwaukee Journal and the Milwaukee Sentinel said in stories Tuesday that Hogan has been offered the post by Gov John W Reynolds Hogan staff economist and assistant director of markets re- search for the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co de- scribed the post as a very im- portant position in the state He added that he felt that one offered the post should not comment out of the governor is out of the state Reynolds will return Oct 28 from Japan The tax post was left vacant when John A was selected as master general by President Continued on Page 27 Col 1 Pictures Prove Point For Motorist MADISON API Accused trafic violator Minot Stilliman Jr 5 of Madison marched into Traffic Court Tuesday armed with photographs to prove Ms point and walked away with no blemish on his record And eight other drivers charged got off too Stilliman had been given a ticket charging him with ing an at an East Side intersection He denied the charge before Judge William Buenzli and pictures he took of the intersection and a sign and ar- aued that directions were con- fusing Buenzli agreed and dis- missed charges against others who were to have followed man to the bench City traffic engineers agreed to remove the sign It Two-way traffic keep right MEXICO CITY slav President Tito files to the United States today to continue his campaign to find a workable formula for peaceful tence Tito will confer with dent Kennedy at the White House Thursday after a long visit to Brazil Chile Bo- livia and Mexico The first chief of a European Communist state to visit Latin America Tito carefully avoided independent brand of communism according to aids accompanying him Pact Mexico Instead the time guerrilla leader discussed with Latin-American presidents two issues on which they share common The need to consolidate ful relations among nations with no intervention by little in domestic affairs of other nations and the need to find additional means to speed the economic progress of de- countries in Latin America Asia and Africa Tito and Mexican President Adolfo Lopez Mateos signed a joint communique Tuesday night recommending that an in- code be drafted to give legal strength to the policy of peaceful relations They asked the United on Page 14 Col 6 TESTING England UPI Rear Adm Philip Gick ordered 30 sailors to stage a boas sitdown outside the Royal Naval Air Station here day to test how the station could deal with an cy Wisconsin's 1963 Highway Toil Hits 682 Compared to 736 in 62 Ban Is Approved By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The deaths of five persons in separate auto accidents have raised the 1963 way toll to 682 compared with 736 on this date a year age Jerry E Gerzine 20 of waukee was injured fatally Tuesday night in a col- on Milwaukee's South Side A girl riding in car was injured slightly Michael E Moore 18 of osha was killed Tuesday night when his car missed a curve Segregationist Is Democratic Mayor Choice ALBANY Ga AP A year-old white segregationist has won the Democratic nation for mayor of this ly troubled Southwest Georgia city where a Negro sought the office for the first time Attorney James V Davis re- votes Tuesday well over a majority of in a record turnout off unnecessary Nomination in the primary means election Slater King a Negro tion leader was second with votes The second white man in the race architect Edward V Jones was third with votes He also is a ist and opposed formation of any biracial committees Little Change The outcome indicated little if any change in race relations in this city where more than 1.200 arrests were made during intermittent demonstrations the past two years Davis said he thought that what will be done for the col- ored people will have to be done within the framework of gation knocked over s large tree and crashed into a ditch on Highway 43 about five north of Kenosha Doris Severson 24 of Eleva was killed Tuesday when her overturned on Highway 10 a mile west of Strum in County She was thrown from the auto and then pinned under k Eugene Thompson 22 of cine died Tuesday from ies suffered when the car in which he was riding struck a tree in Seiners Township about five miles north of Kenosha Sept 14 Bert F Seaman 78 was killed shortly before noon Tuesday in a collision a short dis- tance from his home on South Side Killed in Virginia CENTRAL Va H Kolbow a business executive from Wauwatosa Wis and his wife Alice were killed Tuesday in the collision of their car and a tractor-trailer truck at an in- about 25 east of State police said Kolbow and his wife both 55 died in the crash Two men in the truck were not injured was secretary of George Watts Co a kee retail glass and china firm Day of Prayer Observed in U.S WASHINGTON cans observe the annual al Day of Prayer today In a proclamation last week President Kennedy called on ail Americans to pray that a full measure of dignity freedom and brotherhood will be achieved by all people The President was scheduled to observe the day by visiting one of Washington's Roman Catholic churches to pray and meditate Last year the dent went to St Matthew's Congress called for an annual day of prayer in 1952 BERLIN Brit- ish military convoy held on the Berlin Autobahn by the Russians today moved westward a Brit- ish spokesman The British spokesman said the convoy continued Its interrupted journey on our terms That meant the British refused the Soviet demand for the British soldiers to dis- mount to be counted The convoy of nine vehicles carrying 28 men was stopped by the Soviets at Babelsberg their checkpoint just outside Berlin where a U.S convoy was blockaded last week It was kept waiting nine hours until the Russians gave up their insistence on men dismounting and lifted the barriers for S to proceed The convoy still had to go through a second Soviet point at at the der of West Germany on the western end of the way It was still a question er the Russians would repeat their delaying tactics at ienborn Called Deliberate The British said the Soviet blockade was deliberate and protested vigorously The U.S State Department had gested the American con- voy was held up by confusion at the local level The scene was the same for both incidents the checkpoint at within sight of Berlin The halting of the convoy did not interfere with civilian on Page 14 Col 4 PICK ONE ROME Italian parents soon may be able to name their children Joe or Ivan The cabinet voted Tuesday night to submit a repealing an old Fascist law that Italian children could not be given foreign first names LOW BRIDGE DUNDEE Scotland UPI Four women bridge ers were hurt Tuesday when the ceiling fell in on them while they were playing in the Dundee Unionist ation bridge club rooms Personal Income Is at New Level WASHINGTON sonal income jumped by almost billion in September to 3 record annual rate of lion the government reported today The Commerce Office of Business Economics said the September figure was billion or 4.5 per cent er than for the same month last year Nearly all of the September increase was in wages and salaries Part of it reflected increased payrolls un- der the new federal minimum wage law effective Sept 3 The bureau said that since February when there was a slight dip personal income has advanced by an average of billion a The increase during the third quarter aged a month The third quarter increase was just half the billion monthly gain reported during the quarter Factory payrolls hit an annual rate of billion in September about one-third of a billion er than in August Higher ings longer hours and higher employment all contributed to the advance The gains were generally small but spread Small payroll gains were noted in trade transportation communications public utilities and the service industries wages and salaries in- creased as state and local employment continued in For the first nine months of this year personal income was at an annual rate of nearly sig billion on a basis This was or 4.5 per cent higher than for the first nine months of 1962 Most of the increase was accounted for by rf SIS 5 billion rise in bor income income includes wages and salanes the net in- come of proprietorships farm and as well as dends and interest set rents re- by landlords and other types of individual income No More Excuses SAVANNAH Ga common cold no longer will be an acceptable excuse for ing school the Chatham ty School Board said Tuesday Acting on s recommendation of the Georgia Medical Society the board said that a student with a cold should go to school unless he has a temperature of 99.3 degrees or higher The board took the action to counteract a high percentage of absences from school because of the common cold UNITED NATIONS N Y AP A resolution outlawing the orbiting of nuclear weapons in outer space was approved unanimously today by the eral Assembly's main political committee The proposal sponsored by the United States the Seviet Union and 15 other countries now goes io the sembly itself where approval is expected tomorrow While the action is not binding it is regarded as a moral obligation since the United States and the Soviet Union drafted the plan and voted for it Actually it is in he form of an appeal to all countries io re- -j fram from placing in orbit ob- carrying nuclear weapons or weapons of mass j iion or from installing such weapons in outer space in any manner i The resolution first tangible Coid War breakthrough since the limited nuclear steins from an announced Oct 3 after talks here by Secretary of State Dean Rusk Soviet Foreign ister Andrei A and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home j IS Join In All members of the Geneva Disarmament j enee except Franca joined in j sponsoring the proposal France has boycotted the Geneva i ings The United States and the j viet Union have conceded that j the advantage of orbiting ar weapons in space is more psychological than military j Introduction of the resolution j highlighted the opening of the I committee's disarmament de- bate Tuesday U.S Ambassador Adlai E Stevenson told the committee his country hopes to include un- nuclear tests in a comprehensive treaty provided that adequate verification and on-site inspection is guaranteed He challenged the Russians to out what scientific ery they will accept such India's Mrs Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit sister of Prime Minister Nehru accused France and Red China of threatening the ed test ban treaty by not ing it She asked the to bring moral pressure on all ab- staining countries to sign the pact President's Dealings With Russia Assailed WASHINGTON fAP With the election still 13 months off the political guns already are hi on their targets President Kennedy's dealings with Russia are in the center of the crossfire Republican National VOLUNTEERS HELP IN Volunteer firefighters help clear paths through burning woodlands near Eden N Y to allow equipment to get through The BURNING WOODLANDS fire burning since Monday covered 15 acres of land AP Wirephoto man William E Miller rolled up the GOP artillery night at a fund-raising birthday ty for former President Dwight D Eisenhower There may be j connivery in moves Miller said Manning the defenses for the administration earlier in the day was Vice President Lyndon B Johnson It is Johnson told a Liberal party rally in York to lower world tensions without lowering our guard A frequently applauding array of Republican notables heard j Miller say that many people j are wondering what really lies I behind these moves to conciliate i and cohabit with the Soviets in nuclear affairs cial transactions and space ex- ploration When Eisenhower was in of- j Miller said the people were never worried over the j possibility of secret deals i vate understandings and very with the leaders of the i Kremlin i Johnson said the Kennedy ad- 1 ministration believes it can make some progress toward peace by agreements such as the limited nuclear treaty and the decision to sell wheat to the Soviets without re- American defenses We are not gambling with our national Johnson said We are not taking any needless risks for peace But neither are we foreclosing our future In an apparent barb at Sen Barry Goldwater a leading contender for the GOP nomination Johnson said he and Kennedy will meet headon Continued OB 27 CM 1