Times Recorder, The (Newspaper) - October 22, 1967, Zanesville, Ohio The Times Recorder 104TH 251 60 Pages In 6 Sections OHIO 43701 SUNDAY OCTOBER 22 1967 TWENTY CENTS Reading On The Inside The Baffle Of H lie's Volunteer The New Breed Of Meet Ida Page Nothing's Sacred With Bob Warship Sunk By Egyptians CAIRO boats fought a naval battle an Israeli warship and sank it off the northern entrance to the Suez Canal an ry spokesman reported day night The fight was reported just a few hours after Prime Minister Mrs Indira Gandh of India and IMR President Gamal Abdel Nasser a joint nique demanding that Israel withraw from Arab captured during the Middle East war The communique was issued shortly after Mrs Gandhi flew ending a three-day visit She said she and were particularly concerned at the serious situation still prevailing hi the Middle East The al battle w as reported just a few hours after she departed The military spokesman said that the Israeli ship had entered Egyptian waters north of Port Said during the afternoon Radio Cairo interrupted its regular programming to an- the naval fight Tlie communique did not identify the type of Israeli ship other than to say it was an Israeli naval unit It said that the Egyptian forces observed the ship ing Egyptian waters in the Mediterranean north of the canal's entrance went out and engaged and sank the ship then returned safely to their bases Thre was no report on whether atty Israeli crewmen aboard the boat had been captured or saved after their boat was sunk Sue Shafer a junior from Berea was smiles as she held the official football and a bouquet of jellow prior to the game with Capital which highlighted College's homecoming celebration See articles and pictures on Page and in sports Great Day For Old Grads Football Win Marks Mushie Homecoming Stokes Gets Support Of Plain Dealer CLEVELAND UPI Cleveland Plain Dealer which startled the by endorsing Negro state Rep Carl B Stokes for mayor in the Democratic primary in Sunday's edition endorsed Stokes in the Nov 7 election In a front-page editorial The Plain Dealer said that an era ended at hall when Stokes defeated incumbent Ma j o r Ralph Lorher Oct 3 Stokes The Plain Dealer said has the determination desire and drive to find solutions to the many problems of the city The Plain Dealer said Stokes as a native Clevelander had grown up with the city's lems and had made public ice his career Sunny skies a colorful parade and a football victory gave old grads returning for the annual Muskingum homecoming Saturday all tHey could ask for More than filled the stadium to watch the procession with its 13 floats and eight bancK and tne game which the Muskies won from Capital a score The winning floats were those of the club in the women's division and the Ul- ster club for men The former depicting a stage coach and bearing the title Coach Your Team to the over- all winner Three visiting high school bands winning top honors which entitles them to an in- to participate again next year were those of ville Riverview and Tri-Valley Runners-up were West gum R o s P v 111 e and South junior high school Steel Truckers Vote On Pact PITTSBURGH ers of an steel haulers strike declined Saturday to make recommendation to drivers on a settlement proposal adopted by 50 trucking companies A reception in The Hollow followed Saturday's football game and a homecoming dance in the John Glenn gymnasium last night climaxed the event Boy Dies 5 rI In Co A boy was reported killed and five injured late night when an automobile over- turned after it went off a Noble County road six miles east of Caldwell The injured were taken to Good Samaritan Hospital here Killed was Kenneth Hall 19 of Caldwell Route 5 His body was taken to McVey Funeral Home Caldwell Injured were Gary Bailey 15 son of Mr and Mrs Harold Bailey of Morgan Carolyn Hohman 14 daughter of Mr avid Mrs Elmer Hohman Caldwell Route 4 Tim Couch 16 son of Paul Brown of Caldwell Kathie Shuster 16 daughter of Mr and Mrs Daud Shuster of Caldwell Route 2 and Rodney of were brought here in Murphy and Estadt ambulances The World This Morning Global MOSCOW Russia's Venus 4 landed planet as gently as a toy falling off a according to the Soviet news agency Tass Page President-elect yen Van urgers voters to go to the polls today in South Vietnam's election of a member house of tives Page LONDON A raQ that brought chaos to Britain's freight and passenger services collapses under government threat to move in troops Page UNITED Singa- pore Premier Lee Yew says he and Secretary Thant feel no conclusive is likely in Vietnam until after the presidential tion Page The Nation ST CROIX V I with troubled by antiwar jump ship for home as National Conference cruise ship heads toward New York Page MERIDIAN Miss more reputed Knights of the Ku Klux Klan go on trial in a Hattiesburg racial case next month Page BENTON HARBOR Mich Nude body of Mrs Millie E widow of a former police chief is found in her ransacked home Page B Around Ohio DOVER rocket launchers complete with tank rockets are found in the Tuscarawas River near the dam Page OXFORD Dr Edward R Butler admissions official at Muskingum College is elected president of the Ohio sociation of Page Ind State surprises Purdue with a fine all-around attack to upset the makers Page 2-D HOUSTON United States professional golfers build up a advantage over top British pros to take an almost mountable lead in Ryder Cup play Page 1-D The Weather FORECAST Simny and er today and Monday De- tails on Page Nightsticks Used By Marshals Pentagon Is During Antiwar Rally Viet Cong Beaten In Graveyard S troops and their can advisers shouting curses as they charged killed 225 Cong trapped on a bloody graveyard battleground The fight just below the Zone DMZ was one of three reported Saturday in which 341 Communists died The Vietnamese troops were enraged when they found the Viet Cong battalion had crated the graves of generations of ancestors by digging in burial mounds They charged into the teeth of and mortar fire and mound by mound virtually wiped out the battalion in a fight Over North Vietnam two Navy pilots streaked through withering antiaircraft fire to bomb and siak four of six Vietnamese torpedo boats they found ore mile off shore It was the most crippling blow to the Communist Hanoi regime's navy since 5 1964 when American warplanes sank eight of the swift torpedo boats in retaliation for attacks on U.S 7th Fleet warships There was speculation that the patrol boats might have been part of a pack gathering in the south to attack American warships The ships have been pounding the panhandle area where North Vietnamese troops have built up preparing for a massive thrust across the Demilitarized Zone Elsewhere over the north a thick layer of clouds from Typhoon Carla blanketed much of the country and limited American bombing missions to 51 on the lowest number m six months The fight that flared Friday in the graveyard near Quang Tn about 20 miles south of the Demilitarized Zone reportedly caught the in the midst of plans to attack a government outpost The attack reportedly was to take place Saturday night in an effort to disrupt Sunday's voting for the nation's house of representatives In other fighting U.S 1st Air Cavalrymen killed 75 in a series of hit-and-run raids along the South China Seacoast about 360 miles northeast of Saigon and just 30 miles south of Da Nang troops also re- ported killing 46 Viet Cong m a Mekong Delta fight that hurled the Communists out of a held lair 90 miles southwest the South Vietnamese capital i is I Troops in riot formation line up in front of mall entrance to Pentagon to hold back thousands of antiwar demonstrators Insert shows Secretary of Defense Robert S McNamara inside the Pentagon watching from a window Additional photo on Page Blackout Continues Rallies Also Held in Asia Auto Contract Talks And Europe lilt Unexpected By United Press International Hundreds of thousands of war tors marched and chanted in European and Asian cities Saturday in a day of tional solidarity with the Washington rally protesting U.S policy in Southeast Asia U.S embassies and other American installations abroad were key targets of many leftist marchers But incidents were rare Some of the biggest took place in Japan where the National Police Agency said a total of 205.000 persons participated in marches and rallies in 367 localities throughout the nation An estimated 60.000 union members staged a big rally in Tokyo where about 3.000 leftists marched around the US shouting kee go home Police arrested 11 of the demonstrators In Europe hit London Pans Dublin Stockholm Oslo Frankfurt Moscow Berlin and Munich Smaller were reported elsewhere in Europe Inside The Times Recorder Page Sec Books 3 B Builders Page -7 B Classified D Commentary 6 D Crossword Puzzle 10 B Deaths Funerals 6 B Editorial Page 4 A Financial News 5 B Gift of Roses 4 A Global View 8 A Mam Stem 4 A Minnie Predmore 5 C Money Clips 7 A Ohio Politics 4 A Page Sec Old Photo Mourn 6 A Photo Highlights 6 D Profiles 10 D Question Of B Radio-TV New s 5 D Review of 6 B Roy 7 A Sally Round 4 C Sports News D Stamps 9 B Theaters 2 B Map 4 B Women's News C 8 B DETROIT snag dragged auto labor negotiations into Saturday night despite agreement between strikebound Ford Motor Co and the United Auto Workers on most points of a million contract package Bone-tired negotiators ing the mark in a weary week of talks bargained behind a shroud of secrecy under an news blackout the longest in auto labor history Despite repeated the union and company were within minutes of final ment on one of the biggest settlements in the histon of collective bargaining rhe talks dragged on A source close to negotiations said Ford and the U still were at odds over the contract clause giving workers automatic raises when the ernmevit's c o s t of living COL index rises The rescheduled a Sunday morning gram in Detroit for at noon It was expected the union planned to tell workers ab: ut the new pact and urge them to ratify it A souice to the said the total increase in wages and benefits over the period averages more than SI an hour per man Here is how the figure was compiled pact reportedly rails for an immediate wage increase of 20 cents an hour Skilled trades workers who demanded a raise would get an additional 30 cents basic pay for would go up 11 cent1 an hour in the second year and 12 cents an hour the third year The skilled tradesmen would receive ing extra in the final two contract receiving the same raises as their assembly colleagues average I worker now makes 41 an hour His pay at the end of the new contract period could be up at least 43 cents The skilled workers would have the 43 cents plus the 30 cents extra from the first contract cost of living COL factor still under negotiation could raise the total to more than 60 Tian SO cents for the skilled workers Tiie union has agreed to an ceiling per year on cost of living raises but when the COL raises would start had not been settled to that is the additional cost of the increases as reflected in overtime weekend work and holiday IS cents per man per hour there is the fringe benefit teed income me to cost another 10 to 15 cents This brings the total package wages and included to more than SI an hour years Calm Settles Over Los Angeles LOS ANGELES uneasy clam prevailed in the area of the city Saturday after a night of and confrontations between police and groups of young Negroes The climaxed a afternoon in which police placed on tactical alert clashed with groups of in the area near Manual High School scene of sporadic bottle and rock throwing Fast aition firemen and failure of several of the Molotov cocktails to ignite their targets kept damage minor More Than 150 Jailed Many Hurt WASHINGTON sands of shouting Vietnam protesters besieged the Penta- gon Saturday in the largest antiwar rally in the capital's history But massed troops swinging nightsticks turned back most of their attempts to storm the doors One small group did get inside the vast defense nerve center briefly in a three hour confrontation between troops and U S marshals flown in to defend the Pentagon and a diverse throng opposed to U.S policies in Vietnam Teargas was spewed at demonstrators at one point Arrests numbered well over 158 and scores of protesters stormed lues around ths defense center were dubbed Soldiers with bayonetted rifles and troops carrying teargas were as much in evidence as were matrons and hippies As dark fell some tors started bonfires as others began drifting to the buses that carried them to the tions from as far away as Texas and California Pentagon spokesman son Fryklund said about soldiers had been used ing the military center and that others were being held in re- serve He declined to say how many were still available if needed Even as relative calm de- on grounds soldiers still stood 12 deep in spots where tors made their deepest tration of defense lines said between and protesters were at the Pentagon at the peak period of about 4 p.m EDT I can't talk about future plans said when asked the was gong to do about demonstrators who trv to or Pentagon grounds after the demonstration permit expires at midnight Despite the influx of sands of demonstrators both President Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert S McNamara went to their offices as usual Police officially estimated that between 50.000 and 55.000 persons were on hand for the rally that climaxed a weeklong nationwide protest against US policies in But of the demonstration claimed a much higher up to 200 000 one point during the Confrontation Vj t g g jj tha protesters and troops flown in to cope with them about a screaming youngsters managed to get inside building But L S marshals massed in the corridors quickly forced them out but let them remain for some time inside the original lines drawn in a permit for the rally I PI reporter Jed Stout reported teargas was used against one group trying to force its through the lines V defence department man insisted none of the government forces had unloosed tear gas in defense of the Pentagon He further it was that the possessed tear gas and may have used it E WS P 4 PER