oan
iaanatiaeaia
Across New England S. J. Weather r
Bureau’ Eyes
New
BOSTON
Storm
(AP)—Hurricane
Donns,
treacherous spawn of the Caribbean 2a, raged into New England last night after the Middle
battering
states.
Atlantic
The storm’s force was reported still strong, with winds up to 90 miles per hour along a 120-mile front from
Connecticut
to
New
Hampshire. Killed by the storm were 13% persons, 20 of them on the mairy land and most of the remainder ia
Puerto
Rico.
Estimates
flicted rida
of
from rose
the
end to-
damage
to end
nearly
in
of Flo
$1
billioa
making it the most destructive storm in that state. But as a killer it fell short of other great hurricanes. The death toll ia Florida stood at eight. Weather experts, in marking its prior passage from Virginia to New York, called Donna one of the most dangerous hurricanes ever’to strike
that
HURR, CANE
LASHES
the rotks along
U.S. EAST
the coast by winds
COAST—This boat was om of many anmak onto from
hurricane Donna. Two
chusetts
the mercy of the waves. (AP Photo)
In
Ignores
YS
ion ow we Issues Fy
ARTHUR
EDSON
HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)—Sen. John F. Kennedy last night told
Protestant
ministers
‘he believes
in absolate separation of church
and state, with no Catholic prelate telling a: Catholic President: how act. A@ the same time, Kennedy said, he believes in an America where. no Protestant - minister tells: his congregation for whom the congregation should vote.
Sunday
in
Republicans
Ponce
that
the
have not taken
a stand on the religion in politics issue arising from the
Christian
Action
Party
movement. “We of
maintain
separation
of
the state
principle and
reli-
gion but that does not mean that the state an be an enemy
He
Party’s
Gives GOP Stand added that the Republican
stand
on
religious
in-
Catholic,
in predominantly Protestant (See KENNEDY, Page 21)
struction isnot unconstitutional. (ee FERRE, Page 21) -
is
a Roman
are
all
(Nixon Terms
Major Issue World Peace By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL INDIANAPOLIS (AP)—Richard
of religion. The state should not beliefs,” Ferré said.
The Republican nominee embarked
sterm.
more
thaa
11 public
schools -sur-
by flooded streets.
politan. New York area. (See DONNA, Page 21)
make it difficult for parents to give their children religious’ education in . their respective
struction is that timeoff from public school for religious in-
Kennedy
and
Ferré branded as “untrue” tne charge by Gov. Mufiog
of the
city,
Hospitals were placed on emergency basis throughout the metre-
to conduct the Popular Party political campaign.
they
York
from
rounded
By A. W. MALVONADO
because
in advance
New
cuated
Luis A. Ferré, Statehood Republican Party gubernatorial candidate, attacked the Mujioz administration yesterday on charges it has abandoned its governmental duties have no executive government in Puerto Rico today YSlors Ferré said.
a well-in-advance
2,000 pupils were successfully eva-
s Job For Politicking “We
But
States of emergency had been declared for Rhode Island and Massa-
fishermen, who fled
this eraft in Biscayne Bay, Miami, salvaged their fishing gear but left the boat to
Ferre: Munoz
area.
alert kept damage and loss of life te a surprisingly low level.
presidential on eight
weeks of campaigning—the grand
Rivera Santos Says Island Needs NoCattle- ‘Airlift Halted By
WALTER
S.
PRIEST
STAR Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON-The Air Air Fo Force yesterday shelved plans tp airlift dozens
of
cattle
to
after Commonwealth the
livestock
farmers
was
Puerto
Tattier ject
(See
Rico
not
needed
by
on the flood-battered
is-
Heifer
Pre
Darby,
Pa.,
Upper
AIRLIFT,
Page
+
5
-
Go To Polls
land.
National Red Cross headquarters said that Commonwealth Secretary of Agriculture Luis Rivera Santos told its representatives in Puerto. Rico he coud not in ‘good Seeatonee accont: Kae pal ele Mitra: tanlas informed Red Cross officials that the floods in the wake of hurricane Donna struck hardest at urban areas such as Humacao. He said farm areas were not as hard hit, a headquarters spokesman reported.
yesterday of
Hurricanes
officials said
finale of his drive for the White House. He said every state is a tonio Fernos Isern said a survey ~~ battle ground and there is! but a indicated the island lost about 240 head of dairy cattle. {
(See NIXON, Page 21)
Inc.
day
recently
Nicelas
Al-
“Keep your fingers crossed,” Higgs said, ‘this is an election year.” A look at the record of hurricanes in Puerto Rico reveals that they occur enly on eleo
tion
years.
1928—San Felipe. 4932—San_ Ciprian.
1956—Santa Clara 1960—Saa_ Lerenze
(Betsy). (Donna),
THE SAN JUAN STAR — Taeday, Senter 1, 1940
2
Army Jails Lumumba, Frees Him In 3 Hours GOLDSMITH
Kasavubu
also
planned
to
ask
freed
him.
between Premier
The
the and
power
struggle
Congo’s left-leaning its moderate presi
dent, Joseph
Kasavubu,
unresolved. Kasavubu, named a new
remained
as chief of state, 23-man government
te replace Lumumba’s red-backed regime and halt what Kasavubu has called a drift toward chaos and
Kasavubu’s Senate
_ premier-designate
president
Whatever
the
Joseph
Ileo.
viets have backed Lumumba a fleet
of
scores
planes,
100
with
of technicians,
and
meeting.
But Lumumba
represen-
CARACAS, military plot
controls.
ment
was told it could
the arrest. They met no resistance
“I do not want
said
the
who
became
goateed
Negro
British
chief
forces.
government
freed
Il, headquarters 3,000-man
Lumumba had sought Saturday to seize the station. He was turned
lanky,
Belgium
to fire if he tried te get into the station again.
any bloodshed,”
the Congo’
of
the
capital’s
back
The
Lumumba
made
the
trip
government
staff
N.
in a limow
Soviet
protests.
ter
seek
the
Council
Foreign
Zorin to
a
and
a
second
tatives also were heading toward About three hours New York with a similar request. | '‘mumba reappeared in
later
downtown
Last
he
meeta
in
vote of 92.
STANFORD
BOGOTA
mittee
BRADSHAW
(AP)—The
of
21
yesterday
g'
Com-
approved
the Act of Bogota, a far reaching economic for Latin
and social aid program America. The vote was
19 to 1, Cuba dissenting. Under the actthe U.S. make $500 million Projects, as voted
Congress.
President
Eisenhower
has given the plan hearted approval and
Cuba
yesterday
act
as
a
the
United
will
available for by the U‘S.
his whole support.
denounced
“political
the
instrument
of
States.”
Chile bluntly told Cuba to cease bragging about the right to speak for Latin American countries. “We are representatives of our
countries.
Our governments
been
constituted
in
with
constitutional
Walter
Mueller,
as
Ambassador to the U.S. The Chilean ambassador
(The U. N. announced that both
accus-|
for
the
economic
development of Latin America, but that he would try to get this
ed the Cuban representatives in| amount for the other nations. the
Committee
of
21
of trying
The
Cuban
ences
tries.” Then
Dillon Plan was'being attended
he added:
“I must
protest.”
suggestion that the birth of the by 19 midwives.
Mueller
spoke
up
after
Cuban
Mueller
said
Chile
felt
proud
delegate Manuel Serrano said of being part of the group and Cuba did not wish to partake of hopes to give the “child” (the the
$30
billion
it
had
suggested!
plan)
“a
vitamin
concentrate
so
“is
a
in
inter-American
to exchange
as pre-
pee
about
ated motions that they are completely: unacceptable to all.”
added
that when
such mo-
tions are opposed, Cuba declares the other Latin American nations Previously
Under
Secretary
C.
Douglas Dillon had objected to the Cuban proposal, and repeated
¥
the statements he had made
when
the project had been under discussion by the Committee of 21. Dillon said: “This subject
have
accordance
so eloquently
procedures,”
of
development,
dealt
with
by
‘Pan American Operation’ to be treated as a mere ment of propaganda.”
the
is not instru-
“We are now sending our fleet along the appropriate route for
the adoption of the ‘Act of Bogota’ with
which
we
plan
he
was
automobile.
badly
of dyna rode by
The
government
has
officers
what is plausible, but instead tries to introduce “such exaggerHe
24
Vene-
blamed
that!
on and
the won
charges from of American
Much of Betancourt’s domestie
eonfer-
opinions
‘an
trouble
are its enemies.
em
be
of
States.
vish nation” that does not parti-
energetically
a
a year
support for its the Organization
full of health, for
the benefit of all.” “Cuba”, said Mueller,
cipate
“systematically and without any right,” to speak for our ¢oun-
protested
it will grow
also
Chilean ambassador
arrests
assassination attempt Dominican Republic
postpone debate until the|represents Kasavubu. The delei The coun-| gation of Lumumba is scheduled proposal | to arrive later.)
necessary
than
June
zuelan
Act Of Bogota Okayed! OverCuba Protest By
the
burned when a cache mite exploded as he
PATRICE LUMUMBA ~--im and out of jail
James J. Wads-| the rival Congo delegations would it would be bet-| arrive during the evening. One
ter to ituati
with
sident.
proposed
li-
normal
ing his more
by
folLu-
si-
Minis-
new
by his wife | i Members of
mousine with his belongings lowed soon afterward.
de
announced
have
said.
the 20 men and the lieutenant, Betancourt’s coalition has been harrassed by plots of both do-, mestic and foreign origin dur-
Ghana
on the Congo yesterday
Deputy
Valerian
would
of
Security
debate late
Soviet
sine, accompanied and two children. Lumuba’s
lieutenant U.
to
gunpoint then by a
ferred tuation
garrison.
baggage-laden
at
-
A lieutenant and a national guard platoon seized control of a military installation and 60 minutes later were arrested. The government § announcement said the situation returned
200 soldiers of the Con-
when they surrounded Lumumba’s luxurious villa overlooking the Congo River.
Venezuela #—A against the regime
of President Romule Betancourt was put down early yesterday, an official government announce-
not be used to air his views. U.N. golese Army, being swiftly coor- Ghana troops, armed with madinated with U. N. forces, made |chine guns, said they had orders
all sent in
eutside U. N. channels. At the United Nations, Kasavu'u was prepared to ask for recognition of his government at the upcoming Security Council
command
week, Lumumba
Muzungo.
an} | June 30. “I will come with you.” He was taken to Camp Leopold So
trucks
Congo
Charles
the) when
outcome,
Congo is certaim to remain issue in the cold war. The
N.
Lumumba’s detention was made by his own chief of security,
Communism.
is
U.
Though the U. N. had put the station back im service yesterday morning after silencing it for a
About
Is Thwarted
Leopoldville. He demanded that he be allowed to speak over Radio Leopoeldville, which the
n
By MICHAEL
LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo | that the U. N. reorganize and army under (AP)—The Congolese Army in- train the national terned Patrice Lumumba for his command as chief of state. The: first announcement of three hours yesterday and then
Military Plot "In Yenetisla
to set up
come
who
from
have
military
tried
to
re-
impose a military dictatorship, Many have been backers of the deposed dictator, Gen. Marco¢ Pérez Jiménez, now Florida. Betancourt
called
on
‘derate
military
their
the
in exile in has often
unions
and
leaders
support
for
mo-
to
his
show
govern-
ment and turn back numerous attempts to seize power. , One high government source said yesterday’s effort was a long-shot attempt to trigger a
bigger rebellion. A group military men had planned
uprising,
the
informant
but the government
said,
nipped
Busy Border
of an it.
’
BONN, Germany (AP)—A toe tal of 21,465 refugees fled from Communist East Germany West Germany in August.
to
machinery to start the ‘Pan Ametican
Operation.’
Let
us
continue
on this route and let us not led astray by the intentions
be of
some of using the miseries of the masses in under-developed areas for propaganda “purposes.”
WEATHER FORECAST:
ARMY DONATION—Set. Jose F. Ortiz, right, incnh. uk for $1,000 for flood victims over to Col. Antonio Silva, director of the Red
Cross in Puerto Rico.
a gift of the Antilles Command
and
The To
Ortiz presented
the
check in behalf of Brig. Gen. John H. McGee, Antilles commander.
(Army
photo)
YOUR
PRINTING Quolity
Offset
Mailing Business }.
A.
St.
Corner
Ponce
de
Seutancs <->. Tok. 3-4022 By Appointme nt
Only
Leon
Service —
and
at your service. We can handle on aus
Brochures
problem.
Circulors — Letterheads Art & Design Service
Carrasquillo
Alcazer Bldg. — Stop 12 Trigo
Forms
Printing
: 7
i
Associates
nit
an
‘Basement) — vu .
PLUMBER
eaeen 3-3001
&
Puerto
-
gurantee
Rico Plumbing rto Service
1091 Wilson A
form
=
= Stop 16% TEL. 3-2752
San
Juan, Ponce with showers and thundershowers and Mayaguez—Mostly cloudy with| today and tonight. showers and thundershowers to. WINDS: Seutheast at 15 te day and tenight. 22 miles per hour. , PUERTO RICO and the VIR-| YESTERDAY’S HIGH: 89 at GIN ISLANDS—Mestly cloudy | 1:30 p. m. YESTERDAY’S LOW: 74.
TIDES
Tutsday,
San
STATESIDE:
September
Mich Teco
Juan:
Fajardo:
Mayaguez:
13
rain;
3:46 p.m, | partly
coe
3:37
p.m.
1:43 a.m. Lew Tides 8:33 a.m. be a.m,
10:27 p.m. 19:16 p.m.
Mayaguez:
8:15 a.m.
10:09 p.m.
THE
3:20 p.m.
cloudy;
,
; Chicage,
Denver, 78, 86, clear.
65,
partly
jy
cloudy;
partly
Dallas, .
Emergency
Registry
Sts. Phedsen
4gN0 u a
—
6 Full
Sept. 12 Sept 20 Sept.2 Oct. $
on
Night
Metropolitan
moon -
First Qir.
cloudy
=< Decters
ie 13:
sets today 1:15 P.M.
New
Lu
rain}.
Tuesday, September 13 All Night Pharmacy Juncos 1304, Santurce
MOON
, September
New
@,
phia, 65, rain;; Washinga)', 74,
2:03 a.m.
San Juan; Fajardo:
’ i Last Qtr.
Besten,
Call
Tel
3-2467
il inemnte ouaga for
information
assistance. Ruerte Neeve & Caparta Dr. Victor J. Pagan LA 2 Caparra Terrace
Tel. 8-9751
So Tel. 3606
Duty
Ares iin
Cageas
oe
Terrace
i
ané
| .
I
i
en
” +
i
'
\f
file sin OLN Stal Fucodl; Beptaler 135 1860
: at left, supervises activities in the new control room, as Patrolman Hector Correa checks area chart. Lt. Alfredo Aponte drops complaint
Patrolman
Sabind
Vazquez
photo:
Lt.
Center
phone.
the
over
complaint
and
belt
conveyor
on
receives
another
Ibanez
receives
Jorge
Much
In
witnessed theft, give information to Patrolman Pedro Torres. while Sgt. Bernardo Vifas- alerts patrol car in adjoining area.
who left,
(STAR photos by Gunter Hett)
complaint cards from control room and dispatches car in the immediate
Police
+
.
Evidence Now
Patrol Test Is Big Success call to investigate '
was immediately registered on a| after Maeso’s By GUNTER HETT Nine of the Police. Department’s | report card which a conveyor belt | his complaint. afternoon
yesterday
action
went
ears
patrol
new
106
radio
con-|
radio
The
door.
next
a
to
instantly
transport
into|
in the|room
ee
area to the scene of complaint. Right photo: car arrives minutes later on the scene, where a thief was reported stealing a bicycle. Children
ALL CARS—Capt. Ernesto Lugo Mendez, far left in picture
CALLING
”
|Mufioz, Ferre Blast Brawls Over Politics Mufioz
Gov.
Rey, children who had never seen
and
Luis
candidate
Republican
A.
for
Ferre,|issued
gover-|stressed,
yesterday.
however,
The
governor
that so far he
that the Popupolice activity, stood) in|" both condemned yesterday a/has no assurance Hato Rey section of the city to|trol officer then called. the car} such fight. the initiated Re-|lars and Populars between fight and corners street on groups patroled sys-|in the immediate area into a¢-| test the new motoriz governor disapproves of ‘‘The in|. . hey
publicans
cons-|
day
icia,
in
Guanica
Sunday
| i tion. ng in violence any actions resulti from a| Car 562 was the first one to| policia,”. es .the patrol car of| Which four were burt. The cars were directed differeat the of members among yester-| announced Fortaleza La The past. cruised area after-|the yesterday new spacious control room at the| answer a call state-
tem.
called
police-|
bi-lingual
where
Road
ter
Teachers
the
from
Maeso | patrol -
Julian
Jose
when
Carpen-|noon,
on
headquarters
central
Associa-|
| and telephone | tion Hospital in Hato Rey at 1:50 radio a theft. The p .-m. and reported
men manned operations.
each call! bairol car arrived just minutes|¥2S for ation Viel inform ons
7
as
By
tett.| "Tt © charge of yesterday's
Areas
<
we
“Now
effective
have
assistant
Cross,
Red
Sot ami ae
Up
€}since
business
contribu-}
individual
and
from
response
“phenomenal”
Darmanin the
said
that
Jaycess
up
had
to yescollected
134 tons of clothing, food, shoes and furniture. Although they had not yet tabulated all the money they collected, as contributions were still coming in, he expected that cash contributions will pass $10,000.
The
Red
Cross
reported
collections of $19,500. “$e far," said Darmanin, “we have gathered 72 tons of clothing, three tons of shoes (over 7,000 pairs) most of which are brand new, 20 tons of furniture and 39 tons of food. “We have had trucks out since Friday
delivering
much
of
the
merchandise to all towns that have put in requests for assistance. Friday night I received a call from Gov. Beaugau of St.) _
2. “We
asking
for
food
F.
to’S
p.
m
the
drive
in
up
and
cloth-
called the Coast Guard,’”}}
for
the}
La
Fortaleza
From Ponce, Ferre said that the Guanica police have as evidence
reports state that the|@ two by four “flag stick” used
IMPORTANT NOTICE T0 CONTINENTALS LIVING
by
Union Co.
six
bins
the
Good While It Lasted
began.
have
Grand flood
COLUMBIA,
been
“Buy
ur. vi
>
were
shirt
8. C.
made
and After
all,
IN THE PONCE AREA
his
off
himself
comfort-
over the week-
able in Columbia (end.
(AP)—The
pulled
soldier
set | 7OUDS
super-
Unions
signs
and
morkets one
tors,
terday,
C.
Conection
Jaycees, said that"he has receiv-] ed
and
donations|the Grand
that.
said
have been coming in “very well,”|
done
being
is
di-|retailers
Roach
on
the
said.
and
Cannisters are being jset up in ed almost $30,000 in cash contributions and 134 tons of food, cloth-} many ing and furniture for the victims | Cross of the recent floods. this Johnson,
parties,”
Four Republicans were|said.
days.|Party.
flown | modern devices to combat crime. Then he added
were
Chamber of Commerce reported|800ds and clothing yesterday they had so far collect-|to the island.
Charlotte
order-
Ramon | ment
campaign of order and respect. hurt. The will not answer aggresparty Our Populars| those censored Muficz high. seemed patrol the to signed n.” aggressio with sion statement! a in fight the in involved driAs Patrolman Pedro Torres,
MANUEL SUAREZ added Darmanin Red Cross and the Junior|day two tons of assorted canned
rector of disaster of the American|
had
Superintendent
Ernesto Lugo Mendez, who Torres Braschi to report ‘battle directly to him. ° with its
Capt. 5
area in a few Metropolitan
Clothing Given The
that the governor
Police
of|by Populars in the fight. Mendez will also head the opera-| battle started as a caravanFerre} Par‘The Statehood Republican Ferre accompanying automobiles will] tion when the patrol system went by a rally of the Popular|ty condemns this action,” ire| yp | 0 into effect covering the entire ‘Our party stands for @
; r
ed
tantly.
weather
the
was
terribly hot. posted in cooperation with the But shortly police rousted Junior Chamber of Commerce. Pvt. George R. Bpleza, 19, of Saturday a four-float caravan Baltimore, Md., from his commanned by members of the International Electrical Workers Union fortable position. The Ft. Jacksoldier was in the toured the San Juan area in search son-based of food, clothing and cash for South Carolina governor’s manthe flood victims.
The Instituto Cultural de la Comunidad of the courses Catholie University of Puerto Rico offers
in Spanish for beginners commencing on Sept.
18, 1960, Also in advanced Spanish, English,
GE OUR SPECIALTIES FOR “CRANKY” CARS: Automatic
Tune-Up Ignition
Cerburetion Brakes
French, Italian and Russian. For information call Mr. Isidoro Garcia, Phone 2-4150, Ext. 34, We cat you 2 key prea if the
Santa Marfa, Ponce, P. R.
Specialist in Masterkeying and
combination
changes
KEY SERVICE
Stop 25%
Fernandez Juncos Ave.
| 701 MayolSt.
—
Santurce
=
READ
OUR CLASSIFIEDS
THE SAN JUAN STAR— Teeaay, September 15, 1960
4
Two Working Taxless Homes For Owners In Ditch Die Is Party Aim, Says Muno In Landslide By A. W. MALDONADO
Gov.
Two pipe line construction workers were killed yesterday they were,buried alive. A
when land-
slide trapped them in a ditch they were working on in Rio Pie-
dras. Killed were foreman Colon Vega, 50, of 161
Alejandro Paraguay
St., Hato Rey, and Angel Maisonet Romero, 41, of the Gil Brothers Housing Development, Rio Piedras. Colon and
Maisonet
were
ins-
pecting the pilings supporting the 3@-foot ditch when the sides caved im
on
them,
police
reported.
Both men were employed by the Hato Rey Construction Co., which
is
laying
a sewer
from
Ila Prades to Highland mew development being the 65th Infantry Road. The
men
were
dug
Vi-
Park, a built on
out
at
1:30
Pp. m. and taken to Rio Piedras Municipal Hospital where they were pronounced dead on arrival.
Populars Plan New ‘Code Of Ethics’ Popular
Democratie
Party
presidential committee met yesterday in the San Juan Party Headquarters to work party’s code of ethics.
out
the
Gov. Mufioz returned to the eity to attend the two-hour meetimg
with
berto se
Secretary
Sanchez
Sola
leader, lisa
Rincon
The
San de
State
Vilella,,
Morales,
and
of
Ro-
Yidefon-
Senate
Juan
floor
Mayor
Fe-
Gautier.
code of ethics, Sola Mora-
les said yesterday, will govern the
conduct of all Populars
in or out
of publie office.
The
Senator said
that
will
be
the
code
says
that
finished
munist
Travel
(AP)—The
restrictions
Restricted
Western powers are hitting hack at
on
West
German
travelers
to
East
Issuance of travel papers to East Germans wanting to go
that no property tax be paid on a house lived in by its owner. The Governor reviewed the Popular
Western
live
in
taped
their
own
homes
Party
platform
interview
shown
night
on
view week
had ago
television.
and
on
a
Sunday
The
had been postponed flood disaster.
due
to
the
tecture
problem
Puerto
here
China
juvenile delinquenin
To
Gather
Oct.
8-16.
Other
delegates
the United States, Colombia, Cuba, Uruguay, Venezuela and Haiti.
Mufioz also announced that the
cy
Architects
BUENOS AIRES (AP)—Architects from Pyerto Rico will be among delegates to the 10th Pan American Conference on Archi
government is preparing a wide program designed to deal with
the growing
officials.
Pan-Am
inter-
been taped over a but its presentation
Gives
HAVANA
Rico.
Cuba
(AP)—The
will
come
from
Chile, Mexico,
Embassy
Ambassador
Inter American University, of San German, has announced the schedule of entrance examinations for the second semester, to be held throughout the is-
Property
of
Nationalist
China
ty will deal with the problem of medical care cost for the middie class which, he said, is pro hibitive.
TOKYO (AP)—A Pacific yesterday. U.
Offers Course For Special Students
S. Africa Tries Would-Be Assassin PRETORIA, South Africa white farmer, yesterday went
tas; at 10 am,
Inter-American University in San Germén announces that it will offer a special eourse for high
packed
in
Nov. 19, in San Nov.
26,
Arecibo. Enrollment
mester
for
will be
the
second
from
8 am.
se-
graduates
admissions. soon.”
replaced the governor as the gupreme head of the party .
Inc. Elzaburu St. ,
to
grades, they will regular students the University. held
from
a
South
the
Africa’s
criminal
Pratt: chose
southwest
of
Guam’ moving
north-
winds were 40 miles an hour,
(AP) — David B. Pratt, wealthy on trial on charges of attempting
segregationist
Prime
Minister
Henrik
court
to be
in
tried
the
Palace
by
a
of
Justice.
three-judge
The
court
52-year-
rather
than
Pennsylvania
Rail-
jury.
PHILADELPHIA Toad
strike
(AP)—The
was
settled
were
not
1I1-day
yesterday.
old
Agreement
has
reached
on
work rules which the union wanted changed to insuife jeb security. Wages
Belgian to
then| become |
at issue.
Trusteeship
To
Be
Freed
BRUSSELS (AP)—Belgium expects to grant full independence the Ruanda-Urundi trusteeship territory in the first half of
1962, the Belgian Ministry for Afriean
Affairs announced
yesterday.
General elections will take place at the beginning of next year the presence of United Nations observers.
Enrollment will be is
in
Guinea Chief Talks In Peiping TOKYO
(AP)—President
dent Liu Chao-Chi talks” im Peiping The
A NEW
west
‘Pennsy’ Railroad Strike Ends
i
8 a. m. to 4 p.m,
murder
old
having an aca-
with
miles
Verwoerd. The defense indicated it would plead temporary insanity. A heavy guard of armed police was on hand as a big crowd
Eligible students will be as special students and be given an opportunity to enter the university for a semester on trial, The special students may take up to 10 semester credits, Luis Acosta, director .of admissions, said. He added that if y pass
The presidential committee has their courses
505
west at four miles an hour. Maximum
to demic index between 1.60 and 2.00,
4 p.m, Dec. 9, at the University. Christmas vacation will be from Dec. 19 to Jan. 9, 1961, according to Luis Acosta, director of “very
school
was
new tropical storm spawned in the western S. Air Force weathermen said the storm
Examinations will start at 10 a.m., Oct. 12, in Fajardo; at 2 p.m., Oct. 29, in Aguadilla; at 2 pm., Nov. 6 in Guayama; at 10 am., Nov. 11, in Barranquiat 2 pm,
Lia
New Storm Spawns In Pacific “Irma”
and
China,
government.
Inter-American U.
German,
Argentina,
Peru, Paraguay,
Yu-wan, yesterday’ handed over to the Cuban government the embassy’s property. Liu is leaving the country. His government broke relations with Cuba nine days after Fidel Castro announced at a popular assembly that he would reeognize the Communist
Entrance Exams Planned By IAU
sion _ viet
broadcast,
Sekou
Toure
of Guinea
and
Presi-
of Communist China “continued their friendly yesterday afternoon, Peiping radio reported,
however,
gave
no
details.
It
was
the
second
held between them since they started their talks Toure arrived in Peiping Saturday after visiting Unipn. . :
Bishop Deported JOHANNESBURG,
ses
Sunday, the So
By S. Africa South
Africa
(AP)—The
Anglican
bishop
of Johannesburg, the Rt. Rev. Ambrose Reeves, was deported from South Africa by air yesterday. Reeves—a frequent outspoken critic of South African government racial segregation
Policies—had returned to Johannesburg Saturday after an absence of five months in England. He had gone to England because he
Hato Rey
MOVING STORAGE PACKING FACTORY MOVING EXPORT PACKING
GENERAL TRUCKING No Obligation
PUERTO RICO'S FINEST MOVERS
Patrolman Sioned |Flood Vidim's By Santurce Mob Body Is Found mob him
COMERIO—The body of Maria Secorro Tirado Cruz, 13, was discoveyed Sunday afternoon on
started throwing stones at at Boston Braves section,
the
Santurce.
. Rodriguez was investigating a complaint of a street fight when he was assulted. He was taken to. San
He
Juan
Municipal
Hospital.
suffered a possible left
fracture and bedy lacerations.
banks
of Pina
Creek
near
this town. Authorities said they had been looking for her since last Tuesday
when
she was car-
ried away by flood waters ‘at Lake Honduras, near her home town
of
Barranquitas.
The girl was
one of twin
14 sis-
ters and the daughter ef Mrs, and Mrs. Agusto Tirade Lozada. Her body was found by Rafael Escribano, 11, of Bario Pina,
Charlie Darmanin, President
6-3329
_
ern countries has been restricted. A spokesman question of giving travel facilities to East Germans in but in the meantime, travl restrictions have been in effeet sinee Friday, the day after the new Communist -restriction becam effective, That was taken to mean that only East Germans with very urgent reasons for travel are being helped on their way by
i
Free Estimates
German
BERLIN
the
Capitol Transportation, 182 Manuel
East
effort includes, he said,
Popular Democratie Party’s pholosophy on housing is that all Puerto Ricans eventually
land.
For Party Members The
Mufioz
The
News In Brief
6-3157
I
who was scouring the shore for
objects swept downby, the flood. fit
a | THE SAN JUAN STAI — Tuesday, September 13, 1960
SIU Still Determined To Organize At UPR By A. W.
MALDONADO
The |vise-president
paign to ward off the S{U move-| nefits of joining the SIU. ment
of! the “See-
farers| Internatiogél Union (AFL-
at the ene
The SIU held a
that the
union
will
continue|™°"2img
in
which
UPR
workers
are
which
leaders | attended the meeting.
Efforts by| Suarez said.
the be-| Mufioz Dieppa to dissuade work-!
.
had
announced,
in
re-
For
SIU movement in that any union is
free to attempt to workers but that
service.
can
furnish
workers
in
cooperation
with
THE NEW LAW .
employ-
‘“‘subject to the limitations
Benitez
medic¢al
.
of law.” ference to the the university,
funds cannot fur-
he said,
The university, he added, due| university.
ed is no “impediment”. to the SIU. Suarez said that the SIU will proceed
adequate
Sanday | arictral experimental sllion|temuclves and” thelr fame,” this service without cost to the
its drive to bring. University of|°™Plained to the
answer to a statement from UPR chancellor Jaime Benitez last week, said that the special situation in
to its limited
“University workers are in ur-| nish
the} and San Juan campuses and the} gent need of medical services for}The SIU,
CIO) ia Puerto Rico said yester | ONVEREY
day
‘About, ers from’ attending failed.
150 workers from the Rio Piedras|
vehicles
and
traffic
has
the
following regulations over right of
organize UPR law prohibits
the university from entering into a collective
bargaining
relationship
|
with any union. University workers, Benitez said, are already organized by the Independent Syndicate of University Workers which has operated within the limitations of law.
he
situation
Suarez said, of municipal now SiU
|
|
| }]!
at the university, is similar to workers who
that are
under SIU contract. wants to “reassure the
The peo-
ple of Puerto Rico,’’ Suarez said, that if the university administration wants to cooperate with improving “there
the will
Suarez caie
lot of be no
referred
as
a
been
to
the
‘company
Meanwhile, Francisco
its workers]. problems.”
Syndicate Munoz
syndiunion.”
president Dieppa
conducting
his
has
own
cam-
ILA Board e
Right of way will be gives to olf vehicles coming |
come to the intersection. When both come to
rter
ole Association
nican
longshoremen’s’
aoa
the intersection ot the deme time, the driver of
The International Longshore-
men’s
When
(ILA)
te pass at the same time, the descending vehicle
to the vehicle on the right (2) except in. inter-
(1) on seid grade will give right of way to the
sections controlled by traffic lights, signs, or the
withdraw its controversial Domi-
recti Win lad thamesileh iin @ matesi Shee an
width of the road is insufficient to allow both
. the left hand vehicle (1) will give right of way
may
two vehicles driven
ascending vehicle (2).
Police.
charter
“until the situation straightens out” between the United States and the Dominican Republic, loeal
ILA
chief
Eusebio
Moreno
said yesterday. Bit no definite action will be taken on the affiliation of Dominican stevedores withthe ILA until the union executive com-
mittee meets Sept. 24 in New York, added Moreno. The powerful longshoremen union has been under pressure from AFL-CIO president George Meanoy to serve relations with the
Dominican
longshoremen,
on
the grounds
that the labor move-
ment in the is a puppet
Dominican Republic operation of strong-
man Rafael Trujillo. The recent action of the Organization of American States, which saw member nations at the
San»,Jose
break
off
lations
and
Conference
normal
:
vote
diplomati
:
~ |
to
right
nai
arms ship.
embargo
ot a pedestelen
ments to the Dominican Republic i
to
the ich ‘charkee i Eatin Amore
eeu
cud Aaaee hes
stopped
vehicle
ithdrawal
ibl
ret
of enoth
is also considered a factor —
tute
. sie
Moter vehicles using ¢@ principle thoroughfare . (2) will have preference to pass intersections
a are
aoe
ged
over those vehicles traveling through @ secon-
— ;
dary ‘hod be troll (Descent controlled
reduced
velocity in order te sive the pedestrian sight of
et intersections
or other traffic signe
treffic
a. Last January, ILA general organiger Thomas (Teddy) Gleason ‘was
quoting
as
saying
his
union
would follow the lead of the State Department with respect to the Dominican Republic. The Gleason statement was
made in refusal demands by ant ruil ae ofney that the] ‘can
shipping.
’
.
NS As Nt
be oe Gant
teat
|
.DEPARTA
aie fn Sreeeare:|
LIBRE ‘DE OBRAS
aeloneeniseeisere mieten:
iranian:
PU DE |e
PUERTO ICAS =
-
RICO NEG
Cl
O
OF
TRANSITO
the
THE SAN JUAN STAR — Tuesday, September 13, 1960
And Cheerful |Stocks Decline In Light
Get A Job As An Executive age man today be a boss. Ask
him
probably
why,
say,
ponsibility,
never
doesn’t
too
aver-
want
and
he
“Too
mueh
many
ulcers.
week,
to
live
You
This
picture
I’d rather worry—and
of
the
executive
ulcer-riddled,
cutive
medern
tension-ridden
as
in-
pel of
highly
After
ters them
and
blic.
quarrel
Why
But about
to
fictional
themselves.
all,
it
impresses
blindly
laving
for
work.
disflat-
recent
and
World
results
Report
of
a
of
executives made J Johnson, head
COFFEE NEW Neo. amd
YORK
(AP) -Coffee
Bales
8
at
spot
and
futures closed 15 contracts. High
19
35.75-
higher.
Lew
Clese
3.75 35.06
35.84N 35.10N
4.75 higher.
MBO Sales 8
High
Lew
Clese
6.42
45.42
45.42N
4.80 closed 12
eontracts. Sep
Dec
483.99
A-— Asked;
NEW
FUTURES
YORK No.
43.98N
N- Nominal.
SUGAR mutures
43.98
(AP)-—Domestic
6
closed
4
higher.
sugar Sales
26
contracts.
High
Nov
World
230
Oct Mar May dty Bep
Raw
sugar
lewer.
futures
Sales
sugar
Lew
612
spot
132
Clese
611
No.
6.11
310 3.10 3.11 309 3.15
ther hour’s a 15-minute
day, and weight.
6.62.
Dr.
mode-
fellow
can’t,”
seven
hours
or
Well,
sleep walk
a night, take three times a
maybe there
lose
you
are.
a
little
Now
are
you afraid to be a boss? Responsibility probably won’t worry you into a skeleton. It is more likely to make you plump and cheerful
—if
you’ve
got
enough
horse sense not to let the job get you down. The next time anyone offers you
a
$50,000
a
year
post, don’t
shrug
an
Accept
ingrate.
RICE
Clese
3020 305) 306 6307) 311
mis-
$20
«(3.02 8=—3.05-06 3.06 3.89 3.13
NEW
him
clined,
his offer.
yesterday
Itd
Aluminum Co
a
303
Amerada Pet
advanced
jj ~1%|Dow
Armco Steel Armour Assoc D @
61% 33 6%
Bendix Av
6%
Cdn
|Firestn |Ford
j§$ -%
|Gen Motors
jj.—1
|Gen Tel
1+—%
|General Tire
2%
Unch | Gillette
|Glen Ald | Goodrich
5% 3B
+% ~—%
17%
‘—%
25%
Pac
Celanese
j-% | Inge Rand
Unch|int Bus.M %—% |Int Harv
31%
—%
3%
Cer dePas
Champ Pap
|Grace & Co
25% 10%
j+%
30
|Int Nick
|Int Paper
+1 «| Int Tel & Tel
Chemetron
21
Cities Sv Coca Cola
43% Mm
Coln Palm
Yq
—%
21%
%
Chrysler
—%
44%
|Joy Mfg
Unch| Kaiser Al ~—% —. f
—% | Libby Owens Unch ea hte
166% 64
Container
[Jones & L
+%
S Ce
DOW JONES NEW
YORK
averages: -
INDUS
3
UTILS
RRS
(AP)—Closing
°
nos
433.76 %.92
mst
[Lorient
Dow
Jones
onan
off
Off
Of
:
.
Martin
chines,
Industrial
Vacuum
Cleaners,
Penels,
We
0.53|Mpl
174] iinn
Hon
Me Mig
Nat
Nat Nat
SANTURCER
Service
AIR
Maintenance
&
CO. Supplies
.
DELIVERY
lest
since
shares
Aug.
2
changed
when
2,090,000
hands.
YARD JUNCOS
TEL. 23387
7
“Me —%
|Repub
Stl
60%
—h%
+%
|Reyn Met
44%
+ %
3%
43% 29
—%
|Soeony Mobil
-%
|So Am
31%
52% 13% 82% 15%
36 36% 27% 69% 540%
41%
53% 94 40% 61% 33% 37%
TT%. 385% 52% 84% 25 22 4M 4% 53
39 151 69% 38 30% 80 572 61%
55% 81% 1942 42 11% 33% 40% 482
Airl
Olin Mathi Elev
=
‘+1%
|Rean Ant
|
| Roy Dutch
|StReg Pap
-5% 1%
|Sears |Shell
—%
3%
+%
33%
+%
54% 33%
—“% +M%
35%
Roeb Oil
|Shell Tran
+%
| Sinclair G
&
—-&
175
—Ve
36
+MY,
374s
tM,
P
6
+ %
—5 |So Cal Ed Unch | Southn Co
+%
|Sperry
6675 48%
‘tl Ye
-\%
|Std
47
MY
+% =
|St Oil (St Oil
41% 37%
tM eR
—-Y% -% +%
|St Oil (NJ) |St Oil Oh |Stud Paek
405% 48% 12
= wy = 3%
+¥% | Texaco —1% | Thom R W
T4% 58
el2 %
-—% -% =-%
| Tidewat Oil | Twent Cen |Tran W Airs
17% 41% 12
UM 1% r%
1%
| Un Carbide
Rd
21%
Brand
Cal Ind
+1
114%
+14
‘+% Unch
|Un |Un
Oil Cal Pac
42'2534
+ Ve we Wg
—% -—% —% +%
|Unit Aire (Unit Fruit |US Indust |US Lines
40% 204s bay 29
1% Unch —% Unch
+¥%
|US
Rub
47
5
+%
|US
Steel
11%
1%
—Y¥
|War Lam
123%
—% —%
|West Uni |Westg A Bk
1 ~%
45 29% 953%,
-1% Dnch + ¥
1% | Worthin -Y% |Yale And Towne —3% |Yng Sh & T —1% | Zenith
1%
45% 28
122
—% | Market Tene =i Tetal Sales
2%
Lower 2,160,008
~% | Of Special Interest = %
1%
Unch
—% —%
| sosassenyar [a | Merril.
Lynch,
Central
eat eee
Pierce,
Feaner
| Chase Manhattan |Com.
Oil
Ref.
;\Fajardo
East. Sug. pf. 28%
Pan A Air
1% 15%
Param
—1%
Pict
+%
Unch -%
|Maule Industries | Pueblo Supermarkets |P. R.
Telephone
55.
|P. R. Sugar
ee
59% 4%
22
-% —%
Patino, M
Ask
4%... 75%
Pac G & El
of
& Smith,
59 Co.
Unch | Fajardo East. Sugar Unch
cae
Bid 222
Aguirre
—1% | First Natl. City Bank
30 NS
75% ;
15% }
'
ai
+% | London Tower's Rival
| Pfizer
A
Plumbing &
‘+%
119 31% 34% 63% 39 80%
CONDITIONING J) pepsi Cola
eee AND REPAIRS
+% +% 1% —% —E%
Me
Cent
Otis
14 46% 124% 30% 50 18% 38%
2735
Dis
Unch , Philip Mor —% |Phillips Pet -% |Proct & G +% |Pure Oil -% |Quaker O
59
LONDON
Electrical
(AP)—A _ 12story
office building is to challenge the Tower of London’s 90@-year
INC.
dominance over the tiled ‘roofs of the East End. The housing ministry approved plans for the
Div,
Tel.
Dow
down 4.77 to 609.35. Volume fell ‘to 2,160,000 shares compared with 2.750,000 shares traded Friday and was the smal-
|Rayonier | Raytheon
building, close to the tower, des-
6 Deposito $t. San Juan PROMPT
average
fell 1.30 to 216.70. Jones 30 industrials
| RCA
Gyps
Nwst
EFRIGERATION
MENDEZ
Press
about
-% ~¥%
N Am ae Ohio Oil
NY
>
ete.
Hospitals, ete.
Associated
lost
-—%
NatLead
coreCAMPOS hsasime LUMBER
Cash
Nat Dairy
PLYWOOD
1855 FERNANDEZ
Ch
Mont Ward
HARDWARE
Buckets
Factories, Institutions, Office Buildings, Hotels,
220
Exchange
31
83%
Merck
1.00 | MGM
Motorola
=. WALLBOARD
and Wringers, Insecticides, Liquid Soap, Paper Products, Steel Strapping, Slotted Angles and
for more,
29% 81% 21% 191% : 2
58%
+% | Goodyear
23%
Cater Tr Case (J. L)
Oil
|Getty
+—%
2%
Ind
Che
—-% |Gen Dynam Unch | Gen Elec j$—% |Gen Mills
42%
!
K
Boeing Air.
Burin
jj|§§ —% j$-—%
35%
Beth Steel
49% 18%
=%—1 | Food Fair
61% 48%
Atl Refin
41%
-¥% |Dress In $--% |duPont Unch | East Air —% |Eaast Ko
9%
Am Tob Anaconda
Co
Zell
|Distill Corp |Doug Air
PAINT
Sealers, Polishing and Scrubbing Ma-
and
on
|Curt Wr
—Y% —\%
q 63% 2 12%
.
Am Tel Tel
Blaw
—%
48%
Am & FP Am Smelt Am Sugar Am Std
Pd
—1%|Cro
19 38
Am Cyan
Oil
Corn
Unch | Crane
59%.
Airlines Can
Cont
31%
| UMBER &
Waxes,
but
x
issues.
Monsan
JANITOR SUPPLIES
$
and Poor’s:500 stock |" Standard
68
.| & STKS
Let Us Supply You With
a share,
were unchanged.
55
Comw Ed off like Con Edis
(AP)—Traders
heavy
2642
Chal
Allis
QUOTATIONS YORK
$2
Steels, autos, rails, aircrafts, electronics, utilities and nonferrous metals declined. Of 1,183 issues traded, 660 de-
canons
a
around
speculative
trad-
as
to
a few
the range went to around some higher priced and
some transporicati fa-|
executive
gave the following quotations
cents
lashed New
less of sleep per night.” { Borden | * His opinion is that all most Borg War executives need is to get ano- Bridg Brass
4 clesed 7 to
contracts. Bigh Lew
a
stable,
averaged
winds
losses ranged from
it
Based
Closing Stock Quotations
from
lower-salaried
cutives
Santos
SS
to
35.85 35.06
futures
aver-
volume
high
disrupting
a
said Dr. Johnson. “We have found that executives get too little sleep; 77 per cent of exe-
at 36.06-36.75A. Cost include Satnes Bour-
36.75-37.00A
Mar Jy
Bep “M”
the
FUTURES
4 ex-dock closed freight offerings
bons 3S 36.08A ~B”
U'S.
afternoon
complained
that
normal,
in
light
and
York, 4
rately healthy group.” The corporation executive, however, does differ from the ordinary business employe in one significant way. Tee Little Sleep “He can afford to dissipate—
some
an
the
rain
tension
by an executive, observed:
regular,
by Dr. Harry of the Life Ex-
tension Foundation. Dr. Johnson found: Executives worked
for
from
under no more tension than anyone else...They’re just a nice,
S. News 6000
out
Most
on Friday.
this indicator, the quoted value fall stocks listed on the New
on Friday.
ing. Hurricane Donna was blamed
Am is far from realistic, .. They're... Am
truth lead-
carried
poll
substantially
Alumin
corpora-
of U.
cent
under
lost nearly as much as it gained rese 37 cents
market was mixed at the opening, but turned lower in the first hour. Prices went down
bore-
suffered
MCKEE
ay.
mistake Johnson
Not by their own
issue
from
JOHN
Allied Chem
testimony.
A
By
NEW YORK (#—The stock market declined in light trading
“The Hollywood concept of the typical American executive
it?
a
union
take hv a janitor could be far more tragic to him than a $20,000
god?
No, Indeedy!
per
their
the pu-
what is the actual American industrial
came
they
13
were
ers? Are they really dollar-mad robots who wreck their lives tion
group
they
portrait
with
a
Pointing
Bosses Like It have done litfle
this
fatigue
Only
Hood. Bosses
most
ulcers or heart attacks no more than their underlings in the same age bracket.
around the early from
a heart attack has become as much a part of popular folklore as Cinderella or Little Red Rid-
ing
do
dom rather than overwork. About 75 per cent of the executiyes were in good health, and
as a harried,
dividual who works elock and succumbs
as
Fatigue From Boredom In three cases out of four exe-
longer.”
business
just
members. Only 30 per cent took office work home with them, will jand these averaged only 4% res- hours a week at it.
get the job off your mind.
ht kills you young. bave less pay, less
a OnDonn Trading Blamed At the close the market had index fell 34 cents to $55.77.
age of only 35 hours a week. They worked only five days a
BOYLE (AP)—The
i
HAL
YORK
f
By NEW
jee
To Be Plump
pite protest that it will ‘overshadow the gray turrets of Lon-
2-2865
don’s most
a
a
famous
' |
@
Pade
1
Top Prices prices
on
construc-
tion materials, electrical. equipment, and household: items, effective
yesterday.
Juan T. Peftiagaricano, agency administrator, said maximum prices have been fixed on wood, nails, zinc, roofing material, electricat material and other similar items, and on gas stoves, rope,
and
flashlights.
He
necessary
in
been
said this has view
of
{ SHOULD BE PRECEDED BY A REDUCTION OF VELOCITY IN GRADUAL FORM AND TAKING THE FOLLOWING PRECAUTIONS:
the
Tise in prices on these items due to the increase in demand as a result of the hurricane warning and flood damage. Maximum
prices
previously
fixed on cement, he added, continue in effect. In addition, all these items must be sold under normal conditions of sale, and the agency expressly prohibits the “convoying” of any of these items, and other
similar
irregular
LEFT TURNS
(5)
these
items,
so
rf
of
ea
ante
practices.
The public is urged to report to the administration any instance of inerease in prices on any
ee
it may
take appropriate action. The agency requires sellers ef these
the street or highway
center line.
es close as ponible
items to post a list of maximum Prices in a conspicuous place in their establishment.
i
;
13, 1960
OF VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC STATES:
Stabilization fixed maxi-
certain
STAR — Teeniay, September
The Ne P w Law
To Fixing Of mum
i
baan
THE SAN SUAN
The Econemic Administration has
"
Strike In Chile Could Tie Up Much Of World's Copper NEW Tribune
moking the hend signal and look te the ad tek elon beginning the ture.
the signal foe a left hand turn end = velocity et @ distance
of no
less
YORK (®—The Herald has noted that “a labor
struggle which may tie up 9 per cent of the world’s copper
supply is fast coming in Chile,” The newspaper, in by
AJ.
Glass,
te a head an
quoted
M. Brinckerhoff, president, as saying
there
is”a “strong
of
strike
a
im
, move your vehicle
article
the center line.
Charles
Anaconda here that
possibility”
the
company’s
Chuquicamata mine in Chile on Oct. 1. The Herald Tribune noted that employes are demanding pay increases. “The danger is that the pact, which will set a precedent for later settlements, will price Chile out ef the. world’s copper markets.
“Right now there is mere than
enough
copper on hand. United
|
States consumption has slumped | badly and domestic producers [ are now hard-pressed to main-] tain their basic price of 33 cents a pound. cleses
down,
it |
would help maintain present levels.
prices
at
“If
Chuqui
“Should
a strike there be re-
inforced, by a political downs jn Katanga and
closeNorth-
ern Rhodesia, the total effect could bring an increase in world copper prices."
Japan, South Korea
on Pact InformatiDeal
SEOUL, South Korea (AP)— Japanese Foreign Minister Zentaro Kosaka said Japan and South Korea have agreed to exchange technical information in science
and
medicine.
between, rean
Foreign
Hyung,
The
Kosaka was
and
agreement, Seuth
Minister
announced
Ko-
Chung
at
Il-
the
end of Kesaka’'s 23-hour visit.
_ SSTADO, UBRE ASOCIADO
oe
og
DEPUERTO
RICO
@
DEPARTAMENTO
NEGOCIADO DE TRANSITO
DE
OBRAS
PUBLICAS
Your
SAN JUAN STAR
— Tuesday, September 13, 1960
Critics Praise Miss Robles For Stratford Performance
Neighbor Cooks
Family Loves Her Dumplings “By Mary Esther
Flamm’s
natural
lities,
Esther
says.
Sammy
is
a,
Dee ™®*
|
«
David, now in the tree charm and enjoyment of peo- reader; ple is a natural asset to her climbing stage, a potential athlete. All three attend St. John’s here. husband, Jerry, who as pubThe Flamms arrived on the lic relations director of IBEC Puerto Rican scene in early 1956. (International Basic Econo- Their spacious, breezy Garden my Corp.) meets and greets Hills home is humming with the persons from all over the activity of the boys all with difworld.
ferent
Both Ether and king-size Jerry are native San Franciscans. He
- Esther does ing, mending
is a former
tion. Her interests are many— particularly ballet—which she
newspaperman
and
public relations director for Pan American World Airways in Rio
de
Janeiro.
attended
San
Although
the
same
Francisco,
until
a
they
both
highschool
they
University
didn’t of
in
California
she passed her state board exams on the first try and although she doesn’t practice her profession,
posted
and
has
her
license
renewed every year. Jerry Calls Her ‘Dec’ ‘Doc,’ as Jery calls his pretty
blond
wife
boys, main
17-year-old interest is
is the mother
of three
Daniel, whose in sceince and
his
ham
radio
who for and
writes a school news column the STAR). Sammy, eight, David, six. The two younger
boys
get
their
completely
along
operation,
famously opposite
‘and
despite persona-
and
warts’ throb,
author
and
Jimmy
wart, “I’m thinking as this sort of dates Active
in Ladies
hard
as
a
Here’s a Flamm —Esther’s recipe
SHLISKAS”
of
toes, about one cup of flour, 1% teaspoons salt, two eggs and two large diced onions.
eggs.
Mix
and
added
to handle
knead
lightly
More flour may the
dough.
un-
be |
Tear
off pieces of
the dough and
roll
inte
floured
(The
shape
in
hands.
in diameter and three inches long.) Drop the dumplings into rapidly-
boiling, salted water in a large pot. Stir occasionally so the pieces will not Cook about 15 cooked through
dish until ready for serv-
ing. Serves persons.
from
six
to
University’s
concert
German.
in San
said,
public
at
with
was
string
She
Stratford
that
the
places.
those
was
and
its
Canadian
series
In
large
Maria many who is Carlos Last
of
small
the
home,
©
voice, which she rises to perfection,
a dynamic personality, and a most attractive
appearance
on
stage.”
Lenore Crawford, writing in the London, Ontario Press, said: ‘‘The highlight
of
erchestra was
the
the
string
concert
in
performance
congress
the
Avon
of Bachianas
Brasilieras. Maria Esther Robles, the Latin American soprano, was the singer, giving just the right tones
or
smooth
as vanilla
exquisite
as
lotus
ice
cream
blossoms.”
she
has
sung
in
‘‘Bachinas-Brazilieras the International Con-
ference of Composers at Stratford. She was showered with invitations to sing in Austria, Belgium and Mexico
TODAY—The Puerto Rican Council to Benefit the Aged will meet at 5 p.m. on the sixth floor of the Sam Rafael Building in Miramar. Dr. Guillermo Arbona, the Commonwealth Secretary of Health, will preside over the meeting. meeting
who
of Europe’s capitals and scheduled to premiere Gian Menotti’s new opera, ‘“The Superman’ in Paris next
Villa-Lobos. No. 5.” at
Weekly Calendar |
“TOMORROW—General
affairs.
Esther,
year, rated bravos for her superb interpretation of the late Hector
MRS. JERRY FLAMM e..a former San Franciscan.
as a result.
Praise From Critics A. V. Frankestein, music critic for the San Francisco Chronicle | F and
guest
critic
for
the, Toronto | 2
Civicas To Fete Press At Meeting Sept. 20
month-
of the Little Theater
The Women’s Civie Club of Puerto -| bers
-Rico will
of
the
press
honor at
mem-
their
first
meeting of the 1960-61 season to be held Sept. 20 at 2 pm. in the Fiesta Boom of the Condado
Saute onions in butter or olive oil until golden brown. Pour over
covered
sang
Esther Robles, soprano, and the cello ensemble was an oustanding piece of musicianship,” Molly Graham, writing for the Stratford Beacon Herald said. ‘Senorita Robles has everything—a warm rich
believes, you get to know people much easier than milling around
stick together. minutes or until to center. Drain.
the dumplings. They may be kept warm in a low oven in a
the
who
parties in private homes, instead of large cocktail gatherings in
the
Dump-
children
said. One of the pleasantest things,
family favorite for “POTATO
(Roumanian
Luis
is
‘Inter-American
she
chap-
lings): Ingredients necessary are two pounds or four large pota-
Juan
life,
‘From the top officials to the taxi drivers and _ porters—they just can’t do enough for you,” the black-eyed, vivacious soprano
Ste-
Rican
two
as delighted
Auxiliary
member
of
Mrs.
private
music festival as city was with her.
of changing me.”
board of the Puerto ter of Hadassah.
in
as soloist earlier this summer at ithe Festival Casals and at the
Esther is active as vice-president of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Jewish Community Center and works
Esther,
mother
heartof Ste-
dumplings should be about % inch
|
Maria
i. Marquez
all her own cookand home decora-
still her screen “‘but,” she says
til smooth.
HEAVY-DUTY
} rio, Canada.
their friends.
Peel and boil the potatoes then mash and add the salt, flour and
ae va
critics in the U. S. for her performances recently at Stratford, Onta-
studied as a girl—and piano, which she hopes to commence again seriously. Pearl S. Buck is her
favorite
meet
Spanish course. Esther, incidentally is a licensed optometrist—
keeps
interests
Pixyish Maria Esther Ro- Star, commented on the perform. bles, Puerto Rico’s own love- ance: ‘“‘gorgeously sung by Maria ly lyric soprano won raves Esther Robles.” “The performance of Maria from some of the top music
THURSDAY—Mexicans here will celebrate the 150th Anniversary
of
their
eight dence with dade
Beach
STARTING
country’s
a party Hotel: at
indepen-
at the 8:36
Conp.m.
THURSDAY
Beach
Hotel.
for
the
first
meeting
It
chub to
traditional dedicate
the
press.
Lillian Torres Braschi nals will preside.
de
its Mrs.
Ca-
1
3rd. ANNIVERSARY SALE at all our stores
is
to
ESTHER ROBLES ... acclaimed
A—>E
THE
by
critics:
MIAMI DRAPERY 1863 @
LOIZAT
ST.,
SANTURCE
DRAPERY
FON
@ BEDSPREADS
@ TRAVERSE & STATIONARY SOLD
@
THEM
AT “ban
ah NO
aa FLEE
oh its
sane arenes aes = pon 3 eee
OR
AT
KELVINATOR
ANY
THROUGHOUT ISLAND
DEALER
THE
vur=->oamo
Deep Turbulent’ WASHING ACTION ©
INSTALLED
FREE ESTIMATES
with exclusive
SEE
&
‘ RODS
TEL.
3-2111
) ae Floral
ngements
Corsages WE
Plants WIRE
FLOWERS
JARDINES | VILLA ANGELA 361 Sen Jorge St., Sonturce TEL.
2-3030 >
<P
¥
{
ee om ae ar ae
}
-f
me ef
|
ee
f
|)
THE SAN JUAN STAK -— ‘Tuesday, Neptemper 13, 1900
Women's College Club Sets Saturday For First Meeting
®
The had my mother with me all of my married life—35 years. She is domineering, critical, inter-
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Maybe you'll say this isn’t a problem but for me it is. Despite
fering
my
of toothpaste should be squeezed
from the bottom, they insist on squeezing all tubed products in the mid#ile, or even worse—at the top. Not oaly is this wasteful, but @ tube squeezed at the top is a sorry-lpoking sight for the next
squeezers.
middle
are
on
expert
an
with
ed
I
motivations .to learn WHY people do/ this. The answer: “A ‘established
pattern
life
in
early
fs difficult to break.” It’s too late for your wife and
daughter.
do
can
you
Maybe
with your grandchilthey are under six years
so! dren (if of age).
It
had
left
Last
week
Mother
Ym back on pills, dead tired, and nervous. I know) now that my mother’s continuous presence has a devastating effect on me. I would love to be free of her
but after all
these
for
your
After
35 years
you owe apelogies to no one. It’s high time you threw off the chains. ees
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You must be an old maid with lumbago or something. This letter is being
written
by
old girls who used advice was good any more. You told “Blue year-olds should
two
13-year-
to think your but we don’t Lady” that 13not be going
to dances. What should they be doing—riding
around
in
Mrs.
Juan
corresponding
member
years
A
Sabater,
secretary;
at large.
major
problem
of
the
club’
is to provide student loan funds at the institutions of higher learning on the island. A fund of $1,500, known as the Martha Miller Harvey Fund, js in effect at the Inter-American University in San German, while $1000 grants have been made to the University of Puerto Rico, Santa Maria University in Ponce, and the Colegio Universitario del Sagrade Corazon in Santurece. . Annual Card Party
mother.
home.
|
Mrs. Perry Holland, recording secretary, and Mrs. Robert Auld,
Offer te share in the expense if the only alternative is to put her in a.rest
aj) Ge-
vice-president; Miss Elvia Campbell, treasurer; Mrs. Joaquin Marrero,
what can I tell my family? Please help me.—TRAPPED. DEAR TRAPPED: Your mother must be nearly 80. Tell the family yeu’re worn out and you need their counsel and help in making other living arrangements
president;
manners to slam
returned.
E
cause. I'm included in the 70% who
summer. she
Money
If if i
worthy
this
nm for
a
this time
seEeeFg ErPRes
should be squeezed? you—HARRY M Sorry, Dad, HARRY: a poor choice in seek-
products. Thank DEAR you made ing
tubed
which
in
manner
weeks first
be San
to
continue
these
MRS. JOSE DE JESUS -..- president of Women’s College Club.
Association To Honor
pro-
grams is raised at an annual card
“pi
wives are squeezing tubes improperly, Will you help me in this crusade to educate people es to the practical, and consicerate
the
5
of 10
out
seven
that
disclosed
friends
our
among
conducted
which
survey
five
was
will in the
Hilton on Saturday, Sept. 17 from 3 to 5 p.m. All women who |; haye had at least two years of} college are cordially invited to attend and to join the club. i The Women’s College Club, founded im 1922, is one of the oldest women’s groups here on |the island. Officers for the eurrent year are Mrs. Jose de Jesus,
FFsite
personal
A
fer
tea
ronimo Room of the Hotel Caribe
seliish.
me for more than a couple of days. I felt like a new person. I didn’t have to take any medieine and my health, which I had always considered poor, was perfect. Everyone noticed the change. I was full of pep and I happy as a lark.
it.
use
must
who
one
and
Rico
membership
Mother went to visit my sister
tube
a
Puerto
of the
for the Club of
é
show
why
season College
f
daughter
and
wife
te
efforts
patient
my
first meeting
1960-61 Women’s
baby
carriages?
We've
been
going
is
to
ear,
Syer going
steady
Ee
One of
right now.
us
We,
think you are a narrow-minded, crummy old bat and your advice is rotten. we are ladies
Ingredients: 1 large egg, 1 tablespoon Yemon salt, pepper,
juice, % teaspoon 8 large paper-thin
slices
1-%
(about
tender
have
very
OF
fine
LAN-
DERS DEAR HATERS: Thank you for your letter. I enjoyed the refined, well-bred way in which
in
This
crumbs.
Heat
half
thought.
maining veal the same way adding we walked out. It made me feel
“NV ti it H}
vet faaien . ee
oe
samuact.» R
ee
°
and Thursday nights!
eee
Cervantes, just off Ashford Ave.
To acquaint you with the FINEST dry cleaning on the island. the presentation of this coupon will
ew
Skirts
Shorts”
WHITE DRY CLEANING
entitle you to a
ee
‘_.
served. both Tuesday Enjoy the most different and delicious Buffet
in
SUL ALY
,
AA
October.
Lai
Puerto
Rico
in the beautiful
the first, 1960
bl
i
44
% at
4
Club
La
Concha. Every Tuesday and Thursday from 7 to 10 PM and only $4.50 per person. Dance
to 2 orchestras and see the complete floor show at 11 PM. Reservations suggested.
we
Dresses
POPULAR-OUR De LUXt — BUFFET—
No
cover
charge.
ee
KNITWEAR
ae
SPORTSWEAR
eee
ee
Quatity
T
ms
and monosodium-glutamate.
=
This will introduce you
ee
herbs
ee)
sorvings. Note: The prepared bread crumb m.x called for ¢ontains toasted crumbs, Italian cheese, spices,
y ~wewrwrerwreeweewenw ew weewewes wes
ee
butter as needed. Keep hot in a 250 degrees oven until all pieces are ready for serving. Makes 4
ii
Fag
EERE
the butter in a large (about 12The other evening we were inch) skillet and add as many veal visiting in the home of friends. slices as will fit in one layer. When we left they slammed the Over medium heat brown on both deor shut on us seconds after sides—about 4 minutes. Cook re-
ec
slice
then
and
LANDERS:
a may seen, at first glance, a triflto combine. Dip ing matter. But, please, before in the egg mix- you discard it, give it a minute’s
of pepper
salt
Ss
veal
ture,
juice,
SS
each
dash
lemon
=
in
ANN
a ®
beat
ses
DEAR
eee
% eup butter, tomato sauce. Method: Beat egg until foamy;
aif |
veal (from leg), 2/3 cup you expressed yourself. The adbread’ crumb mix, 1/3 vice stands.
HiHd i (I H
to
pounds)
wé@
manners——HATERS
® z
bone’ prep
and
We are not hoody kids; , well-bred young
| ee Lh
yy
4
LUye
7h
10
THE SAN JUAN STAR — Tuesday, September 13, 1960
STAR
Washington
NEW don’t
Bureau
YORK—“A know.
jences for Nixon-Lodge, Statehood, and luis Ferre in most eases. (At the time the Christian Action Party had not registered. There
state...I
Maybe
a
common-
wealth. But not the way it’s working now. I don’t like the way Munoz is working now.” This was the reaction of a 36year old radio repairman asked by a STAR reporter to discuss
the
“status”
recent York’s
question
during
Monwealth
during
any
interview
and by no means typical. Nevertheless ,it did underscore rather pointedly the uneasiness many Puerto
Ricans
apparently
feel
to-
ward the island’s future and perhaps their own. In essence, a large
group of Puerto Ricans today seem to be saying “We're proud of the Commonwealth as far as it has gone...but where is it going
:
to
go?”
This troubled
mixture
of pride
and doubt also appeared to influence the answers in a seven
part poll designed to test whether the
as
“status”
question
could
serve
a mainland campaign issue. Mock Referendum In probing for attitudes on in-
sular
issues,
asked
Puerto
ferendum
on
statehood,
wealth
and
dition
they
their
were
choice
for
and
Ricans
were
to take part in a mock independence. asked
In adto
island
say if they would
re-
commonname
governor
like “to see
Puerto Rico a state of the Union.” The three questions were also arranged
to
show
how
governor
of Puerto
Rico?”
time,
per cent; undecided,
In
Luis Munoz Marin 58% Luis Ferre 22% Independence candidate 2% Don’t know 18% Democratic
there
possessed
another
Mufioz
7.7. per cent.
cross
policies
|.
eomparison
took
a
statistical
Ultimate Seventy-five
Flavor
“.
Choice
per
cent
of
a decidedly
entered
Democratic
some
67
per
cent
of the
the
picture
66 per cent expressed a Only 33 per Talks with
popular
a
Law use
6-311
Number of air
Said
of
the
141
horns
party
A Strong Winner ‘Would you like to see Puerto Rico a state of the Union?” Yes 65% No 23% Don’t
section
As
Traffic
with
the
sirens.
prohibits
the
use
and installation on motor vehicles of sirens, bells and air horns, mechanically or electrically operated or of compressed air. How-
ever,
it
farther
states
are
authorized
“trailers’’
that to
the
use|.
air horns on sharp curves on winding roads outside of the urban zone and where the trailers may constitute danger to other vehicles approaching.
PE
Dow
BEd
the
Debate,
back
permanent
holiday
on
and
whole
thing
inquiry
alive
and
forth
all
—
peo matwill
and
growing,
of
shouting
manner
are indispensable
to free go-
vernment. But questions about men’s private lives are really not proper subjects for debate
thumping
WHITE
of the same group desire for stotsHbod. cent said “No.” Puerto Ricans gave
approach
ought
to be
approched,
if we
simply
with the greatest possible reserve. Efforts Have Opposite Effect is much to be said, in these matters, for
There quiet.
and
must
them,
No
one
could ‘capitalize
on
the
tur-
who
writes
politics
the
Suggest
you
two
a
union;
tional
civil rights legislation
lation.
scientist.
selfconscious
can
doubt
that
the
‘ creative
a
more
efforts
profarm
subsidy
and
and
anti-farm
subsidy;
anti-additional
pro-adci-
civil rights
legis,
,
An fits
11%
affecting
war
memory
tolerance
made
up
These
men
know,
a
trailer is
The
not a
self-propelled vehicle; it is a fourwheel wagon which is towed by a truck-tractor or other vehicle such as a passenger car or a jeep. Even three-wheel scooters are towing small trailers. A semitrailer is a two-wheel wagon which is coupled to a_truck-tractor by means of a Sth wheel forming a‘ truck-tractor-semitrailer unit. As
labor
bulent emotions generated by the “status” issue. Its a problem for a psychologist, not a political
trailer
or
semitrailer
can
trailer as commonly used in Puerto Rico and they are removing
the air horns on all trucks.
of
If they
want
to enforce
the
law
American
that
every
authorized
to have
an
air horn
were voters
handle
the
is
of
came
kind
the
upon
of
vast all
and
true
fighting
religion.
This
and
un-
in
out-
men
was
not
brougit
public
of the
fact that he
there have
to one
do
one
job
now:
business—not
job,
either
is a Protestant
to
to
because
or
fight
elect
a
together.
President
of
or
a Catholic.
in
Any
to
spite
other
voting
motive is unworthy—and unfair to both candidates. This correspondent has known long and well both Democratic candidate Kennedy and Republican candidate Nixon and also their running mates. It is my deep conviction that none of them wants
these
they have to remove the air horn night. All on the truck-trailer when these units are travelling without the gotten. trailer which very often occurred. According to the law any fellow who has a trailer for his boat, go-car or any other gadget is
so-called
would
be
religious
happy
TODAY’S
issues
if the
BEST
to
topic
FROM
be
hashed
could
be
over
day
and
filed
and
for-
EUROPE
on
not be equipped with any kind of his private car, jeep or threehorns, apparently the authorities wheel scooter and he is not violathave interpreted the word trailer ing the law if he uses the air to mean the complete unit, a truck- horn on sharp curves. tractar to which is coupled a semiAs you see the law authorizes
Mw
POTOMAC
|REdTRDMD
RD
air horns on light vehicles if these
Ew
vehicles
FEVER
are
towing a
dis-
trailer,
regarding the capacity, and prohibits its use on real heavy trucks. We are using in Puerto Rico By FLETCHER KNEBEL OS RWW WW e|very heavy six-wheels trucks of STAR Wasbiegteon Bureaus over 25 tons capacity. These units Republicans organize “Doctors Ike says he won’t meet Khrush- are not classified as trailers acfor Nixoa.”” Dermoerats, see'ing jchev in New York. Ike doesn’t cording to the law but actually safety in numbers, will retaliate ‘mind chatting with Mr. K, but they are larger and heavier than with “Patients for Kennedy.” it’s such a nuisance toting the certain trailers. These units also es *# & need the air horn on sharp curves ‘lie detector machine around. to warn the motorists of the apeee Speaking as a labor leader, t AFL-CIO Chief Meany says Ken-| The confusion between “up” proaching danger. Paradoxically, nedy’s 100 per cent “right,” .and “down” among elevator pas- the police are removing the air Nixon 100 per cent “wrong.” |sengers shows what chaos would horms on these big units because Speaking as a taxpayer, depo-'strike our civilization if an ele they are not trailers according to , nent sayeth not. ;vator could go three ways instead their interpretation. The law must be amended to ‘ eee ‘of two. authorize the use of air horns on Racial crisis on the American eee heavy trucks as well as on heavy integrated Olympic team: Big ar-' Ist Republican: “I hear Nixon combination while gument as to whether a Noerc!is going great.” 2nd Republican: truck-trailers they travel im the rural zone. or a white man will lug all the “Yeah. He’s almost as far ahead Rafael; ae
gold medals back home.
a
Tomorrow: some bitter words and “status” the shattered image of Gov. Nel- ‘abont hy eonstontly taliing awuut muwarerent were these Te | ligions. It was brought about by letting the subject alone and that ‘while Puerto son A. Rockefeller. treating it for what it is—a strictly personal one.
know
Comparing
LAW
deals and
be
swans Gane Beabonpl tiie
much
new
keep
those
LETTERS Sir: Section
to
vote, Ferre 30 per cent, and the the impression that “status” is | are made to put down “the religious issues” the more they con; Independence party three per not a politieal issue at all. It’s tinue to rise. And whenever and wherever attempts are made to describe cent. (In 1956, Mufioz received an emotional prop, perhaps part /62 per cent, Ferre 25, and the of an intense struggle for indi- in dramctic terms a “Catholic vote,” a “Jewish vote,” a “Pro| Independence party 13 per cent.) dual or collective identity. The testant vote,” an instant if unintended disservice is done to the ; is good, but a whole electoral system. Asked to choose a “status” for Commonwealth To begin with, every such attempt lays down as an implied the island, Puerto Ricans voted state is better,” said one woman. Better for whom? She didn’t say. fact a premise that is doubtful to start with: that there ARE like this: To many Puerto Ricans strug- decisive blocs which more or less infallibly will vate, regardless Commonwealth 449% gling for security in a bewilder- of the proper and measurable public issues of which any camStatehood 32.1% ing urban society, statehood is paign is surel,; full enough, solely on private religious views, Independence 3.5% an “approved” goal, the 110 per This is by no means automatically true. It may become true, Don’t know 19.5% cent American “thing to do.” however, if there is ceaseless agitation tending to set one reliIn both the “referendum” and Statehood is desirable, said one gious group against another—to say in effect: “Look, -you Piothe question on statehood alone man, “because I am an American.” testants (or Catholic or Jews), what those other fellows are doing. such words as “now” and “evenFinality Appeals They are all lining up together. Hadn’t you better do the same?” tually” were deliberately left out. To be sure, every political observer knows there are some The overhelming tendency, how‘in the religionists who will thus act automatically. But, it does not ever, was to assume the “refer- creteness al eyes of many Puerto fe “It’s follow that all, or anything like all, will automatically do the endum” was being held “today” final,” said one. same. For Protestants, Jews, Catholics are just people—rich, m de while the other involved a “long Indications are that neither dling, poor; Democrats and Republicans; pro-labor union and antiterm” choice.
nal? this ticking off prefer. iPous
AMEND
ought
But it is quite as true that the more point out how regrettable it all is, no their total sincerity, the more they
ple ter
f
beating.
flavor. Dividing the “don’t know” figure between the candidates indicates that Mufioz could expect
ties, issues and parties. As might be expected Republicans seored
MUST
WASHINGTON.—There
was , the
Interviews disclosed that as in favoring Mufioz as governor ¢h--e the presidential preference part Commonwealth as the desirable of the poll, the undecided vote status. But when the long range
identification there was between insular and, mainland personali-
high on
same
unduly elaborated discussions, surveys-in-depth and polls deal ing with so-called religious issues in this campaign. siness' about ‘the direction Puer- | in it as a political group.) A constant clacking is going on over a_profoundly intimate New York Puerto Ricans look- to Rien is going. area of infensely private human affairs that is no proper part ed at the insular elections like Of those who chose Common- of any public policy. True, religion is obviously going to play this: wealth, 57 per cent said .they -r¢gs some role in the Presidential election. True, “If the election were held te- would like te see Puert6 Rico a this is regrettable and cannot be wholly and day, which would you pick for Sist state. Those opposed 34.6 always ignored.
a
perhaps the harshest heard about the Com-
the
SS"
‘By WILLIAM S. WHITE
also seemed to be little interest: also evidence of deep-seated unea-
three-day survey in New Puerto Rican eommunity.
His was comment
Ricans think statehood is a nice “idea” they~<aren't buying anything sight unseen. At
Deploring Keeps Issue Of Religion Alive
MAMAN
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second in a series of articles on, the political attitudes of New York’s Puerto Rican Community. By WALTER S. PRIEST
7
N.Y .Islanders For Commonwealth. Now, Statehood In The Long Run
as Dewey
was.” |
ei
ee
«
Pit
Bia bi
ibe
Papee,,]
-
Be
Luigi
de Simoni
%/3
“What do you mean he should be on horseback?
keep up with the times!” ah
SOAS
UGH)
the
itk
im
One must uresgie
THE SAN JUAN STAR — Tuesday, September 13, 1960
~the San Juan Star William
§.
Porvillier
William
J
Kenaedy
Published
Managing
every morning except Sunday at San Juan, P. &. by the Star Publishing Corporatien Gardner John
Cowles,
A.
Zerbe,
Chairman
Executive
Tel. 3-8400
of the
Vice
Mail| *
Sebscription Bates - United States, 1 ¥r. 6 Wee einccce.ccceecncs: = $ 3.08 hcwssccneenescncss $133.00 (Payable im Advance) Rates to other coustries on
Meculas Ble Me
Board
President
Passessiogs. Mes. $14.69 $69.08
Territories 3 Mes. 3 7.00 $35.00
1 Mes. 8 2.50 $12.00
request
EDITORIALS Anti-Crime
Campaign
The police department’s new patrol system receiv-
ed a test run yesterday and it looks good.
Only nine
of the 106 new patrol cars acquired for the “block-byblock” patrol system were in action, but the test |
gave
promise
of highly
effective
protection
against :
crime when the full system goes into operation.| Almost daily now, there are strong indications that the trend is upward in the quality and efficacy
of our police protection. The traffic fatality rate has decreased in the last two weeks, and last weekend saw
the
lowest
number
of reported
thefts,
23, of any
weekend in several months. While it is impossible to attribute the decline in thefts reported to a new patrol system which had not yet been inaugurated, it is probable that the thieves might have lost some of their enthusiasm in anticipa-
tion of the new system. The
test
run
:
yesterday
police could move
showed
how
quickly
the
to a trouble spot after receiving a
phone call at headquarters. When all the 106 patrol cars are cruising their assigned beats, they will be able to cover the entire metropolitan area within:
minutes
of receiving
radio
calls transmitted
to the
car nearest the scene of the crime, For people with telephones, this will be a great consolation, especially in sections plagued by night burglari
The
people
will
be
grateful
for this
improved
drive against crime which had all the earmarks of getting out of hand just a few months ago. We wish the police every success with the new patrol system.
INCH BY INCK
e Big Winds The Weather Bureau’s records of hurricanes in Puerto Rico show that the big ones usually hit us during election years. In 1928 San Felipe came, San Ciprian in 1932, Santa Clara, alias Betsy in 1956, and a damaging near miss this year by San Lorenzo; familiarly called Donna. Somehow, the big winds, created by nature and by politicians, have an affinity. The records fail to show which type of wind is more damaging jin the long run, but we’re sure evidence could be assembled to justify supremacy for either side on occasion. The two types of big winds differ in some respects,
however.
One is in duration.
Pig Was Symbol For Ole Earl, But He Was An Honest Pig Nt By RALPH MCGILL (Editer,
Earl attack
years.
The
often
take
shelter
when
forewarned
of
their
ap-
proach.
the
white-domed
the
House
side
sz
Progress At Any Cost? Mankind’s
ceaseless
drive
for
material
We
have in
e
the
authorities
.
construc-
pig
at
the
United
“If
States,
is. to
it was Earl bellow
some
and justify it by sayanything
ever
happens
We
tical
it
ethics
were
best
symbo-
lized by a pig, he was also an
McGILL honest pig. He made no pretense to manners or political morality which would have made a pig uncomfortable. He
route
a
truction, even the relocation of Snoopy’s house. We are gure this can be done, and must be done} before public opinion becomes even more incensed iy simple this
deed.
change to make.
It should
be
;
It’s just a little bitsy house.
tively,
pret Fale 145%
im
genuine
affection
for
his
opponents
in
with
be
Ole
the
Earl
colorful
is more, he a symbolic
But
the
old
fraud
crowd
he
knew
was,
him
and
knew they knew. He was protest against all they
to
what
for them disliked.
They couldn’t hit out at it, but Ole Earl could. The hill country people of Louisiana, who are called “Peckerwoods” or “Red Necks,” are
a picturesque
Ole
Earl
lot.
campaign
A
reporter
was
who
appalled
watched
by
the
po-
verty, illiteracy and crudeness of the crowds from areas in the backwash of the agricultural-industrial revolution.
that turned counterparts
but
who
the
belabored
can-
it,
it is those
for
He
closed
be argued that there is great improvement there-
If it is not too late, and we do h not, we urge most sincerely that responsibility
gusto.
the most scurrilous, slanderous manner. Truth rarely was able to appear on the platform
“Great Lord,” he said, “I haye covered Southern politics for 20 years, and those crowds
tried to make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. He was admired because he was'so wholly without scruples. It was possible to entertain
the
equal
God
was not.so much picturesque as he was grotesque. But he was honestly so. He never
hold
NOW
Constitution)
this big mouth, Earl Long.”
Snoopy has called his own for as long as he has existed. We. cannot find justification for the engineering negligence that failed to de-
the freeway will take, act at once to prevent the des-
thoughtless
a
by created. If Earl Long’s poli-
sign the freeway to bypass Snoopy’$ house. a
first heart
nil nisi bonum,” the symbolic pig
custom
Death
not any
tion of a freeway will do to the home which )
of
to close help Ole
a cherished environment. what
his
chasing
In his speeches
= ing,
fall victim to this insatiable hunger for speed, for progress at any cost, for what on occasion amounts to a callous disregard for tradition and the pEmenys ton of in mind
Capitol
of ijt, that
= vulgarism
progress
these times to remain mindful of the helpless who may
have
while
Long’s
often intrudes on privacy in a cruel way.
We
suffered
ago
of greed, mud, slop and ignorance into the governor’s office three times and almost to
In either case, it would seem the better part of to
Long
ancient proverb, “Demortuis that Earl Kemp Long chased
is as humid
as nature’s, and just as difficult to stop. valor
years
“little ole pea patch farm.” The pig is an excellent symbolism. It may be said, without doing any violence to Solon’s
Hurricanes last several
political wind
Kemp
his
hours, while the political blows are with us for months in election
10
Atlanta
him
because
he
was
so entirely coarse and callous. He never tried te wrap himself in the flag. He was never a pious hypocrite. If he wished to frolic with a strip-tease dancer, he did not conceal it. He was never, as far as the record (pees, ‘dis:
ene with’ himself. Ole ‘Earl’ gave out hams and promises with
out for Uncle Earl made their in Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama
or South
Carolina,
Harvard
Board
In general, mula developed of efficiency by
look
like a meeting
of the
of Overseers.” Earl Long followed the forand brought to a high state his late brother, Huey Long,
the Kingfish. This was to exploit the discontent in the meagerness of life lived by thousands: in Louisiana, rich with oil, sulphur, natural
gis
and
shipping.
This
wealth
caused
A. J. Leibling, of the New Yorker Magazine, to describe Louisiana as being something like
one
of the oil-rich sheikdoms
by
a
was
Neither Huey no principle
But
set
they
of
feudal
gave
nor Earl involved. in
in Arabia,
run
barons.
return.
were They
racists. wanted
There votes.
One
of
Ole
Uncle
Earl’s last historic statements was, in fighting the White Citizens Councils, “You've got
to learn the Negro
is a human
being.”
THE SAN JUAN STAR — Tuesday, September 13, 1960
12
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13, 1960
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13
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ee
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14
I
—-
CROSSWORD 1
2
13
j4
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Sb
e
in
V7
3
is
F
ie
AT 17
3 Le
:
PW)
Li
7,
33
37A
LA 38
. Y%
2
VY)
ES
42
North
|
43
921095)
L JO
8
131
VW)
South carried on to a slam,
A42
West
®KeQ10
0 87 2A986432 South
GY qd
48
‘So
East
KQJ 75
L,
7
WZ
$2
Z
SS
1. struck 6. first-rate 9.sea eagle 12. Brother of Moses 13. former
Austrian
41. fills with
reverential fear 43. masculing name (Scot.) 44. finale
crown-land
i7.spread drying
able
of
cat
20. knave
4.—— the
clubs
mark
21.——
49.defender of the people
5. abstract being é
50. Phrygian cap 51. bishoprie 52. postscripta (abbr.)
6. Mohame medan prince (var.) T. altercation
Answer to yesterday's puzzle.
ber-piece
3
26. knots
in
cotton fiber 28. disorderly states
29. monster: comb.
form
33. mineral spring B4. peaceful 35. cry of sheep $8. characters \ istic spirit
Of Peoples
mp anecdotes
BVRO
j
UE
Tit
[F/ETIIN VIE EWE
NIE}
E
H
which
Three rounds of trumps were now taken and declarer ruffed off the remaining diamond in dummy—
A
interesting
South
over
‘worm 27. prefix: before 30. liar $1, combustible materials
$2. Peruvian
plant
for
bid
vulnerable
with
the
HERMAN
jack.
out mark-
The jack of clubs new was play-
West Pass Pass
ed and West grabbed the ace and North | exited with a club. The king won 4D in dummy and declarer cashed the 5H queen as East showed out. East’s original distribution now was
Pass!
Pass
crystal
declarer make logic. It should many
to
preemptive overcall
SHOULD
see
three of be
clear—
seven
diamonds,
a be}, that
hearts]
bid.
A
sey
spades
a preempa very
good
hand. Yes, an informatory double would be all right but South expected more bidding with his freak
distribution. He was right, too. North’s hand was
much
too good
ed West for only one spade. So, declarer banged down his ace of spades
THE BETTER HALF
amd
captured
the king.
And
By Bob Barnes
35. monetary
units of
nest
39. loatheg
|
42. blood-
+3
relation 44 Assam aiikworm 46, drinking ‘veasel 47. man of law (abbr.
i
uu
Average time of solution: 28 minutes, 48. New
— (¢ 1960, King Features Synd, Inc.)
RDLRTDFL
port
Guines
LHVROFE
WVBBDWVZT, _ ¥esterday’s Cryptoquip: BAD GIN RUMMY LOSERS ARB GRUMBLING LOUDLY.
13
“if you introduce me once more as your ‘first wife’ will be the last words you ever utter!” ney
© wo
DON'T BE SILLY. HE'S STARTING THE COUNT- POWN NOW
1960, King Features Syndicate, Inc, World rights, reserved.
|
I THINK THE ‘GENERAL |S AFRAID TO FIRE THAT ROCKET
TEN --NINE-- EIGHT... SEVEN--SIX FOUR--THREE--TWO..
Address
your
of this newspaper.
ing East with seven diamonds.
merely
East's
ruffed
noting that West showed
\
Pass
tive bid
G
SIT
GEYPTOQUIPRS
paper
22. prophets 25. S-shaped
he
Opening lead: Eight of diamonds | ‘¥® — this cold
TODAY.
request to William Seamon in care
able
9 AKI873 05 ° ez
South 3H 48 68
Watch slam on
BRIDGE
36. cognizant 37. eagle’s
T
RIElr
IVIDZ
of
East 3D Passe Pass
have been
:
To have more fun at the bridge table, send a stamped, self-ad-| dressed envelope for the leaflet; containing basie principles of
Siam
GC
T
14. fortify 18. emotions
harvest
23. ship’s time 24,
2.breed
position
le
18. clique 19. athletie 2 event . female swan 21. goddess of
work Bacchanalian cries ascended disagree-
correct
seeds
47, African for
9. . VERTICAL 10. i.plant juice LL
3. puts into
bean
16. absorb
8. unit of
pendent (var.)
45. string
15. works
steadily
53. cuirass
might
@©9AQ852
The biddings 9-15
HORIZONTAL
eight of diamonds
all of this without one peek.
10963 te ruff the second club play. : ‘ Declarer won the ace and played back a diamond
'
5
led the
(a very poor choice of leads East * | although the result would act have 10764 cee cero. ae ee st 9 wclubs looks best ause
West ax 9 642
Vues
V1.
4g
for a raise to four hearts so North cue-bid four diamonds. South now shewed his other suit and bid four
East deals
27
Z
Seamon
zs
2G
TERT \
By William
2Z
28
Bridge Today
Tis
///1\9
Le z
A
10
+
21
24
WY,
[6
[i
2°
Y/LY
I7
By Eugene Sheffer
—MINUS ONE-_. - MINUS TWO-. ~—MINUS THREE
By
Clyde
Lamb
By Milton Caniff WHAT OTHER FIKM GIVES YOU THE CHANCE IO HELP CHOOSE YOUR. OWN BOSS 27 “—
j{
boveda - ~~. -- — oJ lew Hampshire.
ELECTIONS S
.
Nev.
5 Prim—@
sesow Yorkmrna Ete-Ae] a8fod bee | Pom $ Nor. ¥ —
4
Carolina_.-] 28 May-ee Fone |
|
eoccceesl
<
awed
Wendt!
SOLVED THE CASE/-BUT,
OF HIS
eate
3-8400
FOR All LINES INTO The San Juan Star Re
A EE
A RR
ag?
.
e*
of
e
i
Pe
eS
Oe
eS
.
) 1
San eB ie arial che ok ae ak Lt
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srtiat
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PHONE
HES
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HAA AAA AAAI AISI
rhe
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2 OHAESEEEEAASESEREEEE
ee
ae
\9
SHEBABU
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APF
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| 8 Horn.
sy
FOSDICK7—YOU'VE
. gue. hos.
O Wow. lncwcces-|
sa
Carctina...
SINCE IT WAS ALL
Lf
8
Wer.
=
Mi
or Runoff Primary— 2% June Myf Pres rs
jwiy
ot 20 2 Mi jay
Prime—26 Apett
{HE SAN JUAN STAR = Tucoddy, Seplember 1% 1960
16
Gary Crosby Weds
OFF
Nevada Show Girl LAS
VEGAS,
Following
Nev.
the
other
Crosby
whom
married
Crosby's
(AP)
tradition,
boys,
three
of
Bing
clan, married Stuart here.
show
son,
Gary,
ba-
Gary and Miss Stuart, each 27, were wed in a civil ceremony
performed
at the Flamingo
by justice of Treem. They there.
Hotel
the peace George will honeymoon
Dave Victorson, the hotel’s director of entertainment, was best
raan.
Miss
by
Liz
Stuart
Graham,
Gary's
a
was
attended
friend.
brothers—Dennis,
Ryan
Phil-
_
his
reaching
The
bride
ing in a Gary has in
been
appear-
Flamingo show and been doing a single
Reno.
The marriage was Gary’s first, Miss An
Stuart’s
second.
average
American
four
uses
about
hot
water
family
of
gallons
of
a year.
ae
beh
Rood
44,000
ing to ote
THEA TRES
ee
;
who
is
housekeeping
establishing
a
cottages
for
rent.
rst
i ventions
and Latin
Canada
S,
Auverica,
Pastor, Jr. left Sunday for Troy,
to
Host
is John is
P
con
tiie ta
. Sutherland,
N.Y. where he will attend Rens | San Juan Hotel manager...
ol
n
erican
over 1,000 hotel managers from
me
bece be has. David Paristhe where from last month. spending
Becomes
Stev
la
S
A
FINE
OF
SYMBOL
5
Jr.,
beach club there. He’ll also have
=
re
Butler is
ens
tas
na
COBIAN'S
Jim
tip-
.
paren
-
RS
st
Sab
*
*
.
evening,
Derothy has been given the in. .Nichoterior decorating chore. las and Mayi Albors are now bouncing a new baby boy on looking Marine you ever saw, their knee. Young son Carlos Friday night. last © \is visiting her sister and bro- was born ther-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Heri- Nicholas is the manager of El berto Alonso. Herbie is the ex- Barranquitas Hotel, and Mayi is to Gov. Mufioz... of the famous hotel family, the ecutive ass’t Mrs. Livia Steen is visiting her Melias,. of Ponce...Over 100 hoand the Europe ts, Mr. and Mrs. Sergio telmen from East will meet here Oct. Middle home Maria Santa their at Seijo of star featured the is Lobato WISTFUL MISS—Nelida Elmer Toro, now 10-12 during the International at the Hilton|---Attormeyin N.Y., the Lebato dancers currently performin is making a Hotel Assn. Convention, and will aun area residing (ca Hotel’s Club Caribe. In the same show is back to his trip remain to attend the American business brief Sirelda. old home town before return- Hotel Assn. from Oct. 12-15, with
Bing.
has
last Thursday
ping the scales at not the slightest fraction of an ounce off those seven pounds. Named Bethann, she is the happy Ryans’ second, both girls...Lt. Sonia Rivera, U.S.M.C. and about the best
lip and Lindsay—in Los Angeles, phoned their best wishes to the couple. Gary tried to phone his father in Rome, but transatlantic cable difficulties prevent-
ed
CUFF
Polytechnic Institute, Bernus Aeldert and A. Wollen- selaer weber, of the German embassy studying nuclear engineering. He in Ciudad Trujillo, are at the is the son of David and Maria Paster...One hundred Condado Beach Hotel for a few Eugenia federal employees days visit...Dr. Alejandro Roces, thirty-one the Greater New York columnist for “The Manila Times,” from and dean of the arts and scientes area left yesterday after a ninefaculty of Far Eastern Universi- day vacation at the Condado ty in Manila, is visiting in San Beach Hotel—as part of their Employes RecreaJuan... “Papi” and Nellie Ca- Government rrion left Saturday for Cincin- tion Assn. Inc., plan. Their eneat where Papi will deliver a tire trip, including air fare and talk on the Caribbean situation a week-end at St. Croix cost to a group of Ohio businessmen only $259 each...Jim and Doro...A seven pound dream-giri thy Weber spent a long week-end was born to Paul and Ruthann in St. Croix visiting their son,
the
girls,
eldest
chelor of the girl Barbara
all
show
—
of
THE
By Chuck New assassmsmmsnn,
tear vos] TELEVISION | RADIO-AM wecoWrcAn yera icfi2 ng ESE es for ngs | Watts METROPOLITAN 2s35 || joingnD!oa to [Moscow news, Tine’ American
Daily
shows
Sat—
1:15
—
4
8:15
and
$un.
and
4:00
—
P.M. || everyone
te work
first American
Holidays
4|State-run
P.M,
8:15
She
Stacia.
as
fer the | Monitor.
considered
ballet,
and
zine
is had
the
Stacia
Red-haired
‘by|
Christian
Science
started
her
her, parents returned
.
organization,
<2:
Ao nablig 2058 A SS de
ta Moscow]
became the eee
first]
Sidney
ee ace omy in
let but it’s a wonde
chance,”
Dorothy Dandridge
she said. Her father, Edmund
Ballet School, Besides teaching Stevens, | daneing it also gives a complete}
Poitier -
Davia
APA-680Ke WKBM-~ (ii) | WwENA—1500 Ke Tuesday, setdear 1s September 13 sdicies tae mag Desnmentales 2 9:30 Wee a TeleGesta de la Tarde
Tuesday,
13:08-(@ 1:3-@
See WHEO--Dine Jeckey, Hivice
¥ Blaace ao critics the world’s leading | baflet training in Rome. When | 12.9-\ip Eu Rojo,el Azul Abismo”
SEATS AVAILABLE
born cow
Je:
es Or
in Denver,
in
Moscow
the
30's
came
and
University. :
| American
te Mos-|
studied
at
There
he
pupilin the
Bolshoi]
, course. first the Stacia almost flunked because of the intricacies|
grademic .
and married Nina A. Bon Of Russian grammar. But she Distr. by Columble Pictures }} met darenko, a collective farm girl stayed on four years and the highest] in June with ‘is become a duated reese PARAMOUNT Phone grades in dancing. possible went en a 3-3512 espondent.
‘
She then applied for a job Richard Burton - Barbera Rush || While he was covering the Me-| “THE BRAMBLE BUSH” diterranean froat in World War| With the bellet. Finally last took
in | Week she was called to the of-
2-2 Corts, Musicales de 4toias tie Bossa Aver”
_——
4:3-@) Cocina det
|
(6) La Hora del Nite Les Bucaneros (4) Cartoons f:t9-(> ‘Thulares’
~Vide
6:30- WWWW
4USIC HALL Mess
:
3
nD
Continuous Shows Starting 2:00 P.M. Kirk Douglas - Kim Novek “STRANGERS WHEN WE MEET”
“En
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ee ek hee
WHOA-Hit
Oke
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11: WHOA - Midnight Matinee 11:15-WWWW-Bohemia Continental
From
6:45
WIPR-FM-—389.37
A.M,
to 11
P.M,
Mc.
Me. Mc.
CINEMA
PRESENTS At the Penciana Room Sept. 13 — 15 — 17
DEL
CAMPO
TWINS
Teesday, September 18 PARADISE: Never 80 Few aeErees Pillow Talk, AMBASSADOR: Gambier’s Choice, Tor-| ROOSEVELT: “Yadead ome Curse Saree of Ee Lye Miracie, Dangerous Youth | agreca: CAPABRA GRAND: La Guerra TERRACE Emp jieza en 3 Once More With Feeling, The HOLIDAY: Flying Fontaines El] Pequeno Ruisenor PUERTO
7:15
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Sunday
9:15
For reservations cell 2-1140 te 2-1148 Oa
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j
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ANS
Cul ba,
NUEVO
Delilah KRESTO-DENIA: Gazebo HALL: Samson Strangersand_ Whea We Meet MARTI: Dr. Jekol and br, Hovde, The CORCELLES:
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WFID-FM-—95.27
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Shall
| 7:30-WHIO_ Music Far’ Many
AMBASSADOR - 12 M. “"GAMBLER’S “TORPEDO
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7:00—WHOA—Where
fea
a
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WKYN - Financial News 6:15—WWWW -Sports Caravan
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(6)
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at
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Panamericano
Shew
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a
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(4)
ic
ie deRundowa $:09-WKYN-Mov sP. R. WRIO-Tarde nt $:18-WETN- BotrrtsinmeGuide
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8:30—WAPA-Club 680
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1:20-(4)
rme EI Eamecio” "*°iD EE, Antonoven Or) 1m). f Coorsdirector. ahe| 2 oBolshoi ThereWel-|vid, Sats. ilesleyte Untet LORRAI2nd.NE Week— 12 M, |picked Seabee’ from degree a up (4) Instante Musical She now has the job. (Mass.) College and Sta-{ It Mrs.
“
‘o
4
1
tir labecawe
Usted
ms
i
are
i
’
Stevens,
ia
girl,
the family,
All
born,
was
cia
JOHNSON
By STANLEY
ie
TO D
LTE Be
BROADWAY: Dos Hijos Desobe-| TentacteBush dientes, Edad dehe IaBramble PARAMOUNT: RIALTO: liege
:
How
ee
Unwed
Mother, The Hidden | FOX-DELICIAS:
sorter’ Dre
RIVOLA;
1
‘EN:
Ren,
a
Monster,
Dead
—
pres
to Make
00m at the Tov INTEDNATIONL O88. IN:117 7 Outer Seece,DRIVE Sean
Cail
Yo Pecador ‘
TT
PUERTO RICO: Fort Massacre Mighty PARAISO: The Long Arm
hrs i
aa
| 17
JUAN STAR— Tuesday, September ‘13; 1960
Most Soviet ‘Bac ple Believe Red Chinese
Surrendered Too. Much, Work Too Hard unlike
Soviet
Union
pist China. The first is the
paper
headline
tions,
with
and
Commu-
banner
and
news-
the
gesticulations,
ora-| about
|’
the “indestructible unity” of the Communist camp. It is a cliché,
but
it
represents
a
truth—the
realization in Moscow Peiping that an open
as in quarrel
of
can
significant
great damage
unites
the
proportion
do
to the cause that | ; two
Communist
reality
powers. Another image, which has been developing over the past two years, is also a cliché and it, too, represents a truth. It is typified by a lame little joke that is now going the rounds in Moseow. “Name six grades of movies,” says the jokester, who then promptly supplies the answers: “Excellent, good, and Chinese!”
fair,
poor,
they
avoid
or succumb
many
Wes.
eey . »
their
interdependence.
independent
a
seem much
PEIPING STREET SCENE—A billboard shows a: hand, “the Chinese people,” reaching for the U. S. “crab” on legend
reads:
view
use
cad
rece
by
Peiping.
they made life miserable for the
in Moscow to less tangible
support
center on considera-
tions. ~ Images of Poor vs. Rich In analyzing the disputes, however, some of the most respected Western observers in
to
Taiwan. The ways last?”
ee
action
The Chinese not only undercut Soviet propaganda; they severely complicated Moscow’s efforts to win the goodwill of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. And
e€ nk, wil remier | Indian Communists who we |Khrushchev, that science will caught between two masters. ne solve the Chinese food problem. In public the Soviet leader Often they quip that direct con- has warned the Chinese against flict might, indeed, develop — independent adventure to test “when all our problems with the “the stability of the capitalist capitalists are over.” system by force.” He said “the ples”— presumably including The top-level disputes between e Soviet people—would never the Soviet and Chinese leaders
bad
hackneyed propaganda. And by this measure, Chinese s in Moscow are worse than bad. The cliché forming in the popular mind is that the Chinese are stuffily devoted to the worst and dullest features of Communist dogma, that they know no fun, no humanity. Finally, there is the image of diplomats in ornate Moscow
of
They so mute their disputes that outsiders can only ghess their depth and range. Russians smile when they hear a suggestion of this threat
The sophisticdted Muscovite is supposed to understand. More and more Russians do understand. Films to the Russians are good or bad to the extent
that
which
terners had of Russians in past
By MAX FRANKEL New York Times News Service Three distinct images come to mind when you think in Moscow about relations between
the
that
for the Russians—and that yviolence as well as non-violent agidecades. The Russians opel tation and subversion had to) be wonder how the Chinese could used to promote communism in surrender so much privacy and other nations—a point for the ineseé. personal feeling—and property Chinese See Gain by War —to the state. In thinking about In the face of Premier Khruthe Chinese, Russians maintaim a Western sense of superior (de- shchev’s oft-expressed faith that votion to human values and Communism can triumph over comforts. the West without nuclear war —which he believes would irrepRussians Considered “Soft? injure both sides—the And conversely, according to arably have continually deRussians, the Chinese are be-~ Chinese even tactical comprocoming haughtily suspicious, of Hounced Mises and profess confidence their Soviet allies, spted' the that capitalism, not communism, {them too much tempted creature comfort and unstable would perish in war. The Chinese border dispute supporters of the world-wide with India was perhaps the best Communist mission. recent example of how Soviet Both nations clearly reeog- efforts to make communism renize the necessity of their altable and to negotiate with ~ liance against the West and the ppce the West were undermined by
EDITOR’S NOTE: Following1s the second of four articles by a correspondent of The New York Times who has just returned after three years in Moscow.
Moscow
tend
to employ
the same
images that ordinary Russians are building up about both sides
‘yeux “eal
—images
of
a
more
prosperous,
such
action.
' But the Chinese kept arguing back with less and less delicacy, They denounced those who “exaggerate
the
consequences
of
the destructiveness of nuclear war.” A new and superior Communist civilization, they de¢lared, would flourish “on the debris of dead imperialism.” The argument was raging at
when the
relaxed, “bourgeois” Soviet Un- full cry on May Day, toward the Chinese ion in conflict with the eco- Russians captured the U-2 rethe European Communist states Russians appear to be not directly re- nomically deprived, overanxious connaissance plane. The Chinese without the Chinese. seized upon the incident as evinegotiations between lated. Trade embassy salons busily comparand less-refined China. dence for their side: the imThe attitudes of ordinary Rusing notes on the mounting evi- the Soviet Union and China each The Soviet rulers, the “haves” perialists could never be trusted have become sians appear to derive not from appear to dence of a serious strain in year of the Communist world are or dealt with at summit meetsessions of prolonged serious affairs of state but from Chinese-Soviet relations. This is painful thought to distrust the more ra- ings. often lasting three the disparity in Soviet and Chievidence of which the average wrangling, dical Chinese formulae, both for Russian hears very little and and four months. There have nese standards of living. The domestic and foreign advance. | Nuclear arms is a sore point, pecause the Russians have done Russians are building up a picwhose meaning remains unclear. been recurring reports that the To Moscow, which is beginning their best to keep the Chinese Chinese now often turn back ture ef the Chinese Communist Omit China to face problems of consolidation themselves denuclearized. The diplomats have noticed Soviet goods as inferior or not as a fanatic who embodies the and industrial maturity, the revolution, “knows no Sunday,” Ban Would Affect China up to contract standards. that a number of Communist Chinese seem to be breaking all | and feels compelled to wage a So far, the official strain and pronouncements on world afTo diplomats, one ‘of the most 1 government—j. of sound sparring between private war against everything rules fairs have in recent months ideological features in; Moscow’s finteresting even of sound revolution—by Lecentl revised ment and Peiping and the “bourgeois.” been presented as the views of Moscow rushi t breakneck pace to-|Tecently revised . disarmamen' It is a stereotyped image, not emerging attitudes of ordinary _ ® oa P plans was the stipulation that the Warsaw Treaty nations — J ward the “pure” Communist so P
ciety
By
Carroll
Righter
HRAKAADDARAIADA
AAA
—
*%|appear and the
HA
that
the
poly
on
OF
on
‘must
nations
nuclear
the
pledge
to
not
share
their
jweapons and that non-nuclear ot nations—like China—must cease
|work on such weapons. resent the in criticisms to assumption Moscow | §till, observers tend P Kremlin
has
a
mono-
Com-} ‘producing
for
blueprints
ithat within ithe Chinese
two will
to agree to five years themselves be
weapons.
nuclear
So
munism. larmed, it seems certain that The Chinese appear to resent |iney will then try to generate their dependence upon the So |crisis in order to win a set
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) During A. M. you can have a find eee on viet Union, economically and|in major international councils Get busy in P. M. and carry | diplomatically, They reg@rdjanq will no longer suffer Mosthrough with any plans themselves _ideologicall the |cow’s unflattering suggestions
‘arrived at,
CAPRICORN
LEO
(July
22 to
you can now persuade allies to see things your
and |way.
(Aug. 22 to
22)
Make it a point to assist come to you for help. P.
out socially.
LIBRA
(Sept.
Important
who M. go
|
23 to /Oct.
data you have
Be dynamic,
SCORPIO
right
py.
(Oct. 23 to Nov.
Don’t make the mistakeof
ing harshly ‘to ‘obs Pho| ia, BhN4)
22)
wanted
can be had directly
sources.
more faithful heirs of
and |that China, with India and Indo-
Lenin. They denounce “fevision-|nesia, be recognized as an im-
a great ism” in @ way that betrays their | portant power. 21) By 20) You can accomplish approach, deal now, but it is first important belief that the Russians have} pipiomats in
Aug.
using a more friendly VIRGO
(Dec, 22 to Jan.
31)
you win over some co-worker formerly inimical to you. Be cheerful.
ee
become
lax
revolutio
s
who
day
and
Moscow fear that
some
insist
that
the
yield to un-Socialist methods at/Kremlin must fear it also. They home and “compromise with | believe it will be decades be-
ee (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) imperialists”
abroad.
Communist
The
fore the Chinese enjoy the indus-
bloc mations|trial
maturity,
the
confidence
:|admitted the seriousness’ of the|and the propaganda-free movies quarrel by convening in Bucha-|that seem to restrain the Rusrest
at
the
end
of June
to
re-|sians
affirm their “unity.” Actually|the they could produce only a thin|the
and
make
them
act
“bourgeoisie” opposite Chinese “radicals.”
Tomorrow: Surpass
like
the
Soviet battle cry: the United States —
=
fe
AAAI AAD
“lie
AKIRAII
ve" :
BAHRAIN
7
: inet
the start of disarmament
procedures,
“have-nots”
Chinese
The
What The Stars Foretell gE
eee SH
oh panennennnhnhnbentannnananennnhinl SA SAS
of the|from
of the textbooks,
communes.
Ae
egg
TARA eRR
}
ez CLASSIFIEDS THE
HELP
the San Juan Star
space
Migimum
charge
charged
5
words
rates
apply
per
706 through
Man. 3042
type.
(see type
Lim.
GIRL
5%
below?
PART babe
TIME *:
OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS for sale. New business is maki
a7 SELL
49%
or
51%
of
going
busi-
9-12
Yearly net $15,000. — easy possibility ef $50,000. $10,000 will handle. Selling out te put 100% effort in larger business.
AM.
3000
Cosmetics offers opport-
RP.
ELECTRIC
917
WANTED
WANTED
3 tines-
to solid set
BUSINESS
FANS
MALE ELECTRIC
IMMEDIATELY
FANS
4 sophisticated young man (25-35) who can sell an intangible service to (a University degree) business and industry. Commission basis for remuneration.
for single .asertion, 7
#1
AUTO
unjty to make $50-$100 weekly, working part time onty. Villa Capri L—179, R.P.
He Abeve
Wed.
HELP
for,
AIR CONDITIONEEBS
914
STUDIO
8, 1960 Consecu-
time)
SALE
ness. Only one weak competitor in P. R.
Pee Day _ |.18{.18|.17).17|-17|.16).15|.14 (estimate
FOR
WILL
Tum HF & 5 6 15) 30
Minimum
FURNITURE
FEMALE
3051
Rafes & Information
Times
—
3-8254 DIRECT LINE
SECRETARY-STENOGRAPHER, English & dictation. Some bookkeeping
CLASSIFIED ADS EFFECTIVE AUGUST Rates Per Line For tive Insertions:
WANTED
SAN JUAN STAR — Teesday, September 13, 1960
pt.
Type No. 5 sec SAME
RATE
Type No. 4 i°tsee ora SAME
RATE
as
type
N
Type
SAME
GELP RATE
as
O. S times ordinary type
3
WANTED
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED fer psycho logical research survey. Telephone 3-8262.
CARS FOR SALE TYPB peice.
Mr.
6-2513. 3061
Dawsen,
Caribe
&
Ail casceilations must be submit ted before 12 noom the business day befere publxation, Aa ordered at
least
once.
1857
DEADLINES All
ads
before
must
be
12 noon
publication
AM.
submitted
on day
Saturday
for
by
11
drive, $1800.
JEEP
Good
And
amy
errors
be
responsible
correct
915
1956.
tires,
top
and
the
price
is
just
right. Call Mr. 917
3 MONTH OLD FALCON Slightly over miles. Cash
immediately
sale
STAR will
for only one
4
3048
Advertisers are requested to as THE SAN JUAN
WILLYS
radio, 3-312.
Braschi — phone 3-0903.
Monday
paper. report
BELVEDERE,
seats im perfect condition. You will buy a let of milesof dependable service.
before
weekdays,
PLYMOUTH
hardtop. Push-button equipment. Sacrifice 3059
$1975.
DETECTIVE
Call 36524.
3037
BUREAUS
MOVING
913
CONTINENTAL
in-
insertion.
DZTECTIVS BUREAU: Agency - tn “Latin
“THE PLEASURE ts yours” when the moving job is ours. Whether you're movim locally or Stateside. we are equipped te pack and traasport your mest Precious belongings. as scheduled, with the dependabis care you look for and Id: find. Teieph 63157, 6-3328 Capitol Transportation, inc. for a free estimate. Agents for Atlas Van Lincs. BS ur
DIAL
if
3-8400
»
38254
ye ti f LE
PM.
POSITIONS EXECUTIVE GUAL Puerta ment,
Write
Box
| i HH(
1i@1, Hato
Rey. o7
WANTED-WOMEN CONTINENTAL
BILIN-
Secretary, 7 years residence in Rico, seeks permanest employreliable. serious ercganizatien.
Shorthand 3041
Li i
6
in English
only.
Cal
25847. 914
Bj i
after 2976
2 Hy
E
|
3-1400 Apt. #1
MR. POSITIVE
2 | i | ii
916
STATION WAGON — 1959 DELUXE RAMBLER Like new condition. All de luxe features. 1468 Ave. 3-5388. 2984 914
MH dist
Bayamoa.
*F
iH Ht
Rosa,
td
Call between 3 - 7 P.M.
Santa 3027
ft
i Fy
i
Are you looking for a top man, young, wise and shrewd? Then this is your opportunity. Answer this ad and in 6 months youll be working for me.
ié
IS
MR. BUSINESSMAN
i
WANTED—MEN
rt
POSITIONS
913
Speeay!
Condado.
ti
Street,
278
prized possessions. Please cali us af 3.4835 er 2-1473 for a tree estimate 2431 * as
fe
MAD, Preferably bilingual. Geod salary. See Mrs. Vergne, Apartment 5. 38 Luisa
by
WANTED
ity
HELP
ret
Fi Z|
seanel are specialists in handling your
ii oi
DOMESTIC
gse|
Bed
i i
ii Fi
Service,
: || ||i E
Secretartal
legal documents, contracts, reports, tree pick-up aad delivery. Cali Gini Lebaugh day or night -— 12-8350. = or
:
fast
MOVING WITH CASE EVERYWHERE — United Van Lines, Inc., through tts local agent, Continental Moving and Storage. offers you the exclusive sanitized vans for local and overseas moves. Our neatly uniformed and highly-trained per-
j
EFFICIENT,
SERVICE
E
SECRETARIAL
72
is
Ext.
& STORAGE
3 i
rum
ii
@tust
; f
1 ORDINARY
“il
No.
i Eig
Type
GENERAL COOLING (O.. COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION
Engineering Specialists
24 HOUR on
SERVICE
all mekes
Phone 2-3013
Ext. 218
oe
CLASS JEU D
19
UAN STAK — Tuesday; w/premper 13, 1900 ©
i
3-8400 Ext72 REAL ESTATE
FOR
3-8254
DIRECT LINE NS
HOUSES FOR SALE
RENT
FACTORY
SURPLUS
NALS WANT
TO
BUY
stove with drawer
standard
3-1400,
AM or 4-8
apartment
electric
Call telephone
71.
913
RIDE WANTED: from Isla Verde or Santurce to 65th Infantry near House Beautiful, or direct to Antilles Military Academy, by 7:80 AM. Call 3-9468 days.
STORES FOR RENT Call 3-6090 Room 624 $10
30”
space.
PM.
913
{ i
LOTS m5
ROOMS —
a
bath. Ave.
FOR mear
Moderate — 22883.
RENT
La
Concha.
Cool, private
FOR
SALE
CORNER LOT, 1340 sq. mts., in Santa Maria. Completely flat. Close to §an total $12 per meter, Ignacio College. price price $16,000. Part of purchase write cam be financed. Call 2-0621 or
rates.
GAEDEN meter.
HELLS: High, 36
1146 sq. mts. «mts. frontage,
9 $12 per sewer
lie
919 914) WANTEDTO
RENT
LADY ONLY: furnished room with Continental lady & 3 year old daughter. bh
BEAUTIFUL
RESIDENTIAL
R-1)
lot,
in highest and breeziest 4150 meters section next to Rio Piedras. Good for farm. Restrictions favorable to buyer.
: ii i ; a
;
3 |Etiale
hi
a |
|
He |
TT
If
pill ie
He i
tatit
YOUR
E-1
926 LOT
in
BUCARE,
Piedras — Caguas Road K 17.2. per sq. meter up. Call 67291 or Saturday & Sunday. 2788
BOATS
FOR
Completely
$4.50 come UF
Thunderbird
cushions
Co-
Folding
top
Ventilating
equipped.
sea
Rio
SALE
2 FT. FIBERGLASS Foam _
boat.
Twin
Fast
and
35 HP
wind-
an
ex-
Evinrude
heavy outboard engines. Gator tandem whee! tilt trailer. 1 year Used very little Lists jn U.S. $4,500. old. Seli for $3800. Cdr. P. F. Wells, U. 8. Naval Station, Roosevelt Roads. P. R.
Lark duty
teen aftgi
i
atta
E
i Le a | iat iS
BUY
919
WANTEDTO BUY
ART PATTY
SCHOOLS
PEASE
monthly, of class.
of Painting re16th, $10 - $23 on number & type Tuesday, Sept. 13th.
School
depending Call after
1011
NURSERY
_fiuest Houses
CONCRETE residence or part of 15 acre farm, Km.
att
tN
|
Rie Piedras-Cupey Alto. Rio Piedras. Caguas, &
SCHOULS
NURSER Y-KINDERGARTEN : education of children 2 — 6 day,
half
day,
or
by
hour.
Care years,
Mrs.
&
Rivera,
Reasonable terms on mortDirecter, BA in Education, social workDays 2-2575, Carmen er. 65175. 461 Carbonell St., Roosevelt, 914 . ners | 2920
aL
g
k
Real Estate Corner
ie
iit
i
coe
i
83
3
1706 Pumarada
off San Jorge,
in,
a
elit ot not | & sun porches. Private beach
. 676 | arranged.
Tschud
3
a
Siued
a
neue
ry
Robert
8
i
r8
:
8
i
conditioned with expensive draperies and many
Ui
a z
three
air woven
§
ENNY’S:
SANTURCE INDUSTRIAL — 419 meters - mear docks in heart of Las Palmas heavy industries. Sou nd wood and al nd
:8
itis
ol
ok
un
usec
rH
ts
a
MORE CLAS SIFIEDS. ON
4
5
0
Creer Succeeding Preston As Commander ht Ramey
Advertisement
State of New York. se aplica: “Cig
Arti-|
Articulos (Corr
a
que
se i
aplica: “Whisk: Registro Fede-
Sweetheart
Propietaria:
conformidad con la Ley de MArcas FAbrica y su reglamento se hace
saber que Marcas y
ducts
Street,
les siguientes registros de traspasos han sido presenta-
dos en el Departamento de Puerto Rico para su archivo
que
Co.
se
The
Maryland
Direccion:
Baltimore, aplica:
“Drinking Ns8 U0
Estado de y registro:
Paper
1100
Maryland.
Pro-
South
Eutaw
Articulos
a
straws.”
With wartime service Canal Zone-and postwar
DAIHATSU
in
Propietaria: Daihatsu Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha. Direccién: No, 3, 2-Chome, Daini-Higashi, Oyodo, Osaka City, Japan. Articulos a que se aplica: “Vehicles, ships and other carrying machines, and appliances and parts thereof”, in Class 19; ‘‘machinery, tools and instruments and parts thereof not belonging to any other class, and also belts, hoses and packings,”
im
Class
Gen.
aplican:
“motor
cycles,
motor
polymers, synthetic elastomers and rubber chemical cempounding ingredients
arts may
used.”
“Safety vices
razor
for
blades
safety
and
razor
scooters,
to
brandy
and
de-
biades.”
Propietaria:
pongo
ido
Chesebrough-Pond’s
Ine. New Direccién: 485 Lexington Avenue, York, State of New York. Articulos a que se aplica: “Toilet and cosmetic preparations.” (Registro Federal Enero 13, 1959) Articulos a que Scotch
Nam. se
672.616
expedido
“Blended
aplica:
whiskey”
Articulos a que se aplica;
Direccién:
165
of
139.388 renovado)
alcohol,
se
de
anteceden:
las
Abril
Federal
teceden: se,.
“Motor
Num.
Seager,
Evans
reccion: 350 a, Stateof New
Avenue,
New
dos
marcas
que
Motor
Co.
Wisconsin,
Federal
Ligwett
be
5 McQUADE Sapolim Paints
removado.
presentado de los uma
dos
cuales
documentos
Blatz
Brewing
en Com-
organizaday corporacion existiendo bajo las leyes.de Wisconsin, traspasa los dos registros de marcas eae _satecoten (a Bats Brewing. Comorganizada
Inc.
an
aviation
1942,
with
as
the
cadet
Num.
Biatz
Sixth
Air
379,647
expedi-
547.383
Ame-
Norwalk,
Com-
se aplica:
more than 250 hours of anti-submarine patrol. In 1943 he joined the Eighth Air
Force
in
England
as
the
34th
Bomb
do
Mayo
“Wines”)
27
Num.
1958,
(Registre Federal Pea)
and
que
662,345 expedise
aplicaa
Num. 659,457 expediee ae aren 8
“DuBOUCHETTMANY, BLANC a
liqueurs and Inter-
150
New “Ve-
DURHAM
Myers
Avenue,
State
of
New
que
se
aplica:
prepared
&
“Cordials,
cock-
rope
Group,
which
end: of making general
Propietaria de las dos marcas que an3 Underwood Corporation. DirecPark Avenue, New York, State York. SEVIN Articulos a que se aplica: “Insecticide”
eion: 1 et New
Articulos pellent” ceden:
a
BEPELAQUA que se aplica:
SS
Union
Carbide
peaglame 50 Wet tied State ef New York.
“Sar
Baek
“Water
ee
corporacion
oOrganizada
y
exis-
Madrid,
returned
was
seats Vtiee cepa
Wrigley,
as
the
deputy
16th
Air
Madrid
and
Spain.
from
command
of the 8(ist
Division at Lockbourne Ohio, Sept. 12, 1953, and ‘promoted
to
brigadier
gen-
eral Nov. 20, 1958. Gen. Creer is married to ‘the former Vivienne Taylor, of Provo, Utah. They have two ¢hildren, Carolyn, 15, and Elizabeth T., 13.
cases cases.
The
from Wm.
and
of
Seven new cases of paralytic polio were reported to - Health Department last week,b ng the, year’s total to 413 ic
i <I Propictaria;
in Eu-
Cases Are Reported
ow Ye,
ne reo oc
Sacecceccocs
Head-
Powers
Seven New Polio
re-
mee ae
Cerporation.
Siseee,
uma
tiendo bajo las leyes de Delaware, con oficinas en 350 Fifth Avenue, New York, State of New York.
ma.- -
Supreme
(SHAPE)
Force,
TILFORD
the
Allied
commander
Air AFB, Inc.,
Articulos a que se aplica:t “Adding
-—=—n
Tebacce
York,
He
of
mm
652, 971, expe-
630 Fifth
New
assumed
Ree Gere
Direceién:
Avenue,
PARK
ADD-MATE
“Gin
for
quarters,
Articulos a que se aplica: “Typewriting | Machines and parts thereaf.”
ELEGANCE
(Registro Federal
a
Bomb Group. Shortly thereafter he was appointed commander of
sion),
“Whiskey”
(Registro Federal Num. 650,229 expedido Agosto 13, 1957) Articulos a que se aplica: whiskey”
Articulos
Douglas
&
TEUVAL Propietaria: Truval Shirt Company, Inc. Direccion: 350 Fifth Avenue, New York, State of New York. Articulos a que se aplica: “Men’s and boy’s outer shirts, Pajamas, cabana sets, and swim trunks.”
expedido
GOLDEN “CAGES? expe-
Force
in the Canal Zone as aircraft commander on a B-17. While ia the Caribbean area, he flew
as a Combat Command pilot. Among’ his duties following VE Day were those of serving as Chief, Operational Plans Branch (Policy and Plans Divi-
York. (Registro Federal Num. Septiembre 4, 1951)
\in
a captain, he
squadron commander in the 94th
Fifth
a que
Hunter
Direccién;
Limited.
Pi
London,
han
York,
aaety AaB (Registro
(Registro Federal Nam. dido Octubre 15, 1957) aria:
as
In
participated in 17 bombing missions against continental Europe
do Julio 16, 1940, renovado) Articulos a que se aplica: “Vodka”.
Broadway. New York, State of York. Articulos a que se aplica: netian blinds”
Company.
Co.
1947,
Propietaria
Carporation.
OF
&
9,
virtud pany,
8, 6582 expedido Julio
y Numero
Articulos a que se apiica:
South
DUKE
1949.
post he held until the the war, meanwhile colonel. Flying a B-17, the
-Hbcatom EVITALUZ
national
B.S. in chemistry at Brigham Young University in 1934 and his Master’s in international relations at Stanford University
served
expe-
cuales
meticut. Articutos aque se aplica: “caps and hats for men, women and children; leather and fabric gloves; men’s and women’s coats, suits and neckwear, as follows; mufflers, scarfs, neckties, and fur neck-pieces; also for coats, fur capes and fur muffs; also women’s outer skirts; also men’s and women’s sport-coats and sport-suits.”
Propietaria:
339,786
cago,
Federal Nam. 130, 198, 13, 1920, renovadeo) Hat Corporation of
Direccién:
CREER § commandant
GEN.
. Rew
1935. renovado
Propietaria:
rica.
BRIG.
career
a
KNOX
(Registro
ria: Dale Carnegie Publishers, Direccion: 15 West 46th Street,
New York, State of New York. Articujos a que se aplica: “Books, pamphlets, magazines, and publications.” TOPAZE (Registro Federal Numero 328,608 expedido Octubre 1, 1935, renovado) Propietaria: Avoa Products, Ine. Direccion; 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York. State of New York. Articulos a que se aplica: “Perfumes”
The general began his militéty
e dido
Pr Inc.
“Whiskey”
aplica: “Propulsion thereof for vehicles”
Milwaukee,
He
New
Articulog bacoa.”
Harley-Davison
Direccién:
reas
AFB.
in
<p=paoo Ow Propietaria:
being
pepper-
SEAGER’S
Propietaria:
Articulos a que se apparatus and parts
is
Malmstrom
Ine.
Street,
aplica:
and
(Registro Federal Num. 342,096 expedido Enero 5, 1937, renovado) Articulos a que se aplica: “Dry gin and orange gin”
Direccion:
que
Preston to
expedi-
OPPER a
a
expe-
Num.
1, 1921,
syrup,
(Registro
Articulos Scooters”
nor
expedi-
Greenebaum,
Chambers
Federal
Febrero
mint flavoring; cherry brandy, ginger brandy, ginger gin, “eee liqueur, sloe gin, and as Old Tom.”
MAJESTY
BONNIE LASSIE (Registro Federal Nim. 658,609 do Febrero 18, 1958)
York, State of New York. que se aplica: “Hams and
neweomer
area
Articulos a que se aplica: “dry gin, peach bitters, orange boven, which consists of syrup, alcohol, and orange flavoring; orange bitters; peppermint, which
SCOTTISH
do Octubre 7, 1952) Prepietaria: M. H.
late Sept-
a
DALE. CARNEGIE
consists
564,386,
com-
Bomb-
Advertisement
cordials”
Nam.
in
neither
as,
72nd
Caribbean
Gen.
Propietaria: Philip Morris Incorporated. Direcciéa: 100 Park Avenue, New York, State of New York. Articulos a que se aplica; “Cigarettes”
Articulos a que se aplica: “Whiskey” Propietaria de las dos marcas que ante ceden: Joseph S. Finch and Company. Direccién: 350 Fifth Avenue, New York, State of New York.
Federal
the
signed
MELROSE
(Registro
Preston
Wing
FARM
Nam. 359,845 expedido renovado) Articulos a “Rum, whiskey, gin,
alcaholi¢c
J.
of Ramey’s is
William
will succeed Maj.
stranger among Hispanic people,
MARIMBA (Registro Federal Agosto 30, 1938, que se aplica:
Gen.
the missile field.
Born in Spanish Fork, Uta, in 1012, Gen. Creer received his
ALPINE
Inc. Direccién: York, State of que se aplica:
dispensing
ember,
Propietaria: Pepperidge Farm, Incorporated. Direccién: Norwalk, — Articulos a que se aplica: “Frozen and unfrozen biscuits, bread, cake, coffee cake, cookies, muffins, pies, and rolls; and bread crumbs, meliba toast, and stuffing “dried bread and seasoning mixture.” (Corresponde tambien al Registro Federal .Nam. 688,316, expedido Noviembre 24,1959).
Propietaria: E: I. du Pont de Nemours and Company: Direccién: 1007 Market Street, Wilmington, Delaware. Articulos a que se aplica: “Organic vulcanizable
KRONA Propietaria: Eversharp, 350 Fifth Avenue, New New York, Articulog a
ardment
motor bicycles, mopeds (motorized bicycles), and parts of the aforesaid goods, mamely brakes,. back-pedaling brakes, brake hubs, frames, saddles, tandem seats, luggage carriers.” PEPPERIDGE
be
Brig.
Joseph
| mander
Propietaria de las dos marcas que anteceden: NSU-—Werke Aktiengesellschaft. Direccién: 24 Sulmstrasse, Neckarsulm, Wurttemberg, Germany. Articulos a que
23.
for general use in the industrial where natural or synthetic rubber
Madrid,
E. Creer, who
will enter
the ase
a
Jr. Company.
Direccion: Chticago, Iiineis. Articulos ue se aplicng “Chewing gum,”
a
14
and
seven
the
five
non-paralytic
cases
were
previous
However,
a drop
week's total
Health
Depart-
ment officials stressed that areas affected, heavilyby last ‘Tpesday’s floods did not report.
oe
|
York, a que
pete
Vy
New culos
$
A
:
——
Advertisement
Advertisement
—
20
De de
yer
THE SAN JUAN STAR _ ‘Tuesday, ‘September 13, 1960
wal
‘i
4
ner Donna ‘Closes Schools ti
STAR
EAM
| vUteyg 5 fee (ltt i 5 g é ng i Be i 4 Ee
i
i
with
buffeting force.
Loss
Health feyer, the reported yesterday.
des¢rib- | ™4uled resort cottages and ‘ mo
rector of the Humacao health center, said “health conditigns are what they should be” jin this flood stricken area where
eis
Atlantic City, N.J., a section of the resort’s famed “million dollar pier” was ripped off and parts of its boardwalk mangled. The fringe of the storm hit of York in midmorning New the day that schools reopened
for 1,400,000 pupils. The Board
to
government
Federal
the
which operates of Education, most public schools on a twobecause of session-a-day basis 500,000 ordered over-crowding,
sell semi-rural homes built here
of
Texas, as well as in many other
Houston
Ministerial
As-
sociation that he is sorry this is so, that he thinks far more important issues confront this country. “But because I am a Catholic,” Kennedy said in his prepared speech,”
and
no
Ferré
carried his
real
in
campaign
has
where
the
said, is it:
im
an
America
separation
of
chureb
and state is absolute—where Catholic
prelate
would
no
tell
President (should he be Catholie)
where
no
3.
single
JEAN
Baltimore
LILLEVANN YORT FRONTENAC GATEWAY CITY
overriding
dom
throughout the world.”
The question, he said, is who
urging, Business
Bu-
Bayamon,
Hu-
districts
of
Ferré
disaster
Guayama
and
macao, areas.
:
The
Ferré said that he has also arranged for the Alcoa Steamship Co. to ship truckloads of
lumber
to the
New
York
felt as far as 100 miles
TO
ARRIVAL 8.J. DEPARTURE 8J. Sept. 13
Weather
inland,
OR
will
they
said
Authorities
keep a close lockout for typhoid fever as the disease has an incubation period of two to three weeks before it breaks out. from rain and swollen streams.
side-
teeming
normally
The
were
vir-
took cover from the heavy and force of the wind.
rain
York
New
of
walks
tually
pedestrians
as
deserted
eas
_
Trinidad, Port-of-Spain, In Donna left three known dead and caused extensive property damage as it swept through the Leeward Islands.
Anguilla
was
hit
Hardest
their
lost
persons
three
where
lives, many were hurt and scores are
also
Damage
missing.
still
in Antigua was considerable and Barbuda. Over 1,500 persons were left homeless and damage to crops
Waterman Line
Ponce, Mayaguez
Bull
Lines
1s
Ponce, Mayaguez
Bull
Lines
West Indies,
19
2
‘Antwerp, Rotterdam,Hambars
__Bamburs. Jacksonville
-_10 Ty
36 B
Hamburg Wonce, NYC,
ua
B
‘Tampa, WC cetemee.
a
$e
_rea
sucercems
-
be hat in
Barbuda
On
islands.
the
blown
all bakeries were
AGENTS
La Guaira, Part Cabello, Maracaibo
u
-
parks.
athletic
OPERATOR AND/ | away.
9
Wiablit No Ocieans
in one of the town’s
up yesterday
because
2
a
Bu-
reau warned against high tides and flooding of coastal areas and be
Sept. 9
shift
morning
operation Sunday and a tent city for the homeless was being put
Lo- | highways. It said flooding might | was reported at about $1,500,000 the
San
area.
Port of Spain
MONARCH GF 3a
issue:
the
New Vork
EISHUN
“Keeping the peace without surrender and extending free
his Small
reau in Washington has declared
FROM
ANITA
1)
the
govern- ' renzo
Hambure, Antwerp
cae
Through
said,
the
confined to classrooms until the storm abated. Teachers were dispatched to nearby groceries to augment school lunch supplies for the captive students. Schools Don’t Open An additional 500,000 public school children booked for afternoon sessions were directed to remain at home. Four thousand residents of Fire Island, off Long Island’s south shore, were evacuated.
flooded
and other
on
children
SHIPPING SCHEDULES
Mufiez
the
That
in Humacao
areas.
surplus
|
SHIP
man
Page
5,000 people.
campaign points) are: the Populars ‘have
are bankrupt.”
NIXON from
Lajas,
failed to solve the island’s unemployment problem. 2. That “our small farmers
is denied public office merely because his religion differs from the President who might appoint him or the people who might elect him.”
(Continued
ta the
Guanica,
aj} KATHRYN
how to act, and no Protestant minister would tell his parishoners for whom to vote—where no ehurch or church school is granted any public funds or political
preference—and
he
and Cabo Rojo where he spoke
been obscured, in some quarters less responsible than this. “So it is apparently necessary for me to state once again—not what kind of church I believe in, for that would be important only to me—but what kind of America I believe in.”
believe
campaign
towns of Yauco,
His main 1. That
the
“}
that Sunday
to a total of over
President,
This, Kennedy
said
has
elected this
against any religion.
Catholic
ever been issue
tion of their original cost. Mu-
fioz, Ferré said, attacked the idea in 1956, and now. he has iv-| adopted the plan as his own. Ferré said that, as candidate has been he for. governor, does not give the state the con- obligated to do all in his power stitutional right to be hostile to help the distressed families
parts of the nation, this has be come an important, if not the mest important factor, in the presidential election. Last night Kennedy told the Greater
federal funds to the famliving in them at a frac-
‘with ilies
it.
into
put
was
service
Water
tions. Populars have 4 That the failed to live up to their, pro
‘he had been in Washington urg-
1)
floods:
lives in last Tuesday’s
state
their
lost
people
80
than
more
(Continued From Page 1)
ing
di-
Gonzalez,
H.
Héctor
Dr.
for help on the wrought millions of dollars in: da- mariners’ calls two minutes every of average | . s. mage in the Carolina
He declined, however, to whether his party supports | legislation authorizing this time
|
as of yesterday.
Guard reported
The Coast
than 1954s hurricane Hazel,
reported
cases had been
No
:
ive | tels.
ea Donna as even more
been
have
area
typhoid vaecinated so far against Department
refuge in pubtookers’ vacation
dees
eet
Humacao
in
people
15,000
than
More
the
as their own ideas that were born in the Republican Party. As early as 1954, Ferré said,
Page
adrift.
ason ds of late-se shore, hundre
mises and that they have taken
(Continued From
torn
of
ip- | power brought industry to a virtual at Suffolk, Va. is Maryland’s eastern
City Police in Morehead
i
i Ht Se a
8
< PE. &
! ik iit © BR
nia
gas and electricity. ee
' a aT
“The storm moved on into Virgi- as boats were
(Continued From Page 1) Hall directed a hurri
oe
ay
he)
|
ae
21 15,000 Vaccinated Against Typhoid In Humacao Area
°
weet
Horn Line Sealand of P. RB. WN.Y.K. Line
NEED
!. CTION PROTE LINK CH
EL MORRO
ARD
en ea
FENCE...
ais — Waterman te — || THAT NEVER SLEEPS.
A DAY FLL EMBER
Antwerp. Roetierdam,Hamburs Amsterdam, KNSM Line
YOUR PROTECTOR
AROUND
THE
CLOCK...
NOW
you
can
have
added
security
with
Woven-Wire
Window
BY SENATOR KENNEDY EL MORRO FENCE CORPORATION
Here, in hig own words, is Kennedy’s story—with exclusive pictures—of the
por deans should have an opportunity ae ener a ee candidates not just on the basis. of party labels but the basis of
thie issues oa which they stand", whe
af
i“
ine
2
VED
memorable day after he had won the
a
Democrati¢ Presidential nomination!at
I€’s in the issue of LOOK your newsstands now! Don’t miss it!
TEL.
:
’
Get LOOK today! -~
ton
san al OE ae ee ce phe.
sat
no
patio’
i y
mete
anteater
ibwet)"
gtd)
Fernendez
Stop 214%
obs
#94
gn wee prota
ygatieys
eR
are
2-5267 Junces
—
Ave.
Senturce
Oot
i.
——
as
|
telat
:
ct
AebaitenS?..
» Hel
1
i"
he
%
r
THE SAN JUAN STAR — Tuesday, September13, 1980
22
CHICHI (Continued From Back
Roundup
Blanda Throws 4 TD Passes In American League Opener fledgling American
ball League swung into action with four games weekend, a full two weeks before the veteran George
Blanda
of
ton Oilers was week’s star as TD
passes,
the
Hous +
easily the he threw
kieked
four
sions and added a the Oilers tripped Raiders in Kezar
first four
conver-
field goal as the Oakland Stadium, 37-
22,
before 12,703 Sunday. Up in’ Boston, the Denver Bronces came alive after losing five exhibition tilts with a 13
10 defeat
of the
Boston
Friday night. Gene loose
for
a
Patriots
Mingo shook
79yard
punt
return
in the third period that made the difference for the Broncos. This tors.
game
In
drew
New
21,597
York,
the
specta-
Titans
tled| rain, mud and wind in overcoming the Buffalo Bills, 27-3, before
9,607
soggy
fans
in
two}
and
l5-yards
Yorkers strength
as
the
showed after a 14
exhibition
games.
On Saturday night, season AFL Western battled
the
through
Los
came
a
the prefavorites
tough
Angeles
set
Chargers
AFL
W.L.T
Houston
New York Boston
©
Buffalo
010
1
0
Results
yesterday.
.
High
play
sible. Scheduled to meet in men’s singles today are Australia’s Rod La-
ver and Neale Fraser. Bueno of Argentina and Hard of the finalists.
U.
S.
are
MAJOR
eo
Los
a"
New
York
on
LEAGUE 590
1
80
59
576
8
Washington Cleveland
70 68
69 70
;504 .493:
: :Los Angeles 13 ! San Fran. 14%! | Cincinnati
Detroit
63
76
453
20
61 48
78 90
.439 348
34%!
Today’s
Was
(Sullivan 6-15)
land (Harshman
3
$
iS
gone.
was
back.
He
golf is a very
living.”
MAJOR
were
570
73
63
.537
11
63
77
450
23
| Phila.
68
69
at.
wl Pittsburgh
Mays,
Francisce
HOME
Suimmwsn
Francisco
(McCormick
12-
322 325
nati
17-8),
night.
Mere’ gen Wout isco ane
ow
BATTED
was
beat.
described
Machen
as a cruel
insensible.
But
CANNON
the
left
was
flabby
less,
to
appear
frail
although
he
is
muscular
and
lean
with
an
athlete’s hard lines. Over him, like a genie risen from a bottle to attack the magician who released it, loomed Liston. But Machen, using the quick trickery insecurity inspires in a heavyweight, made him harmless as he took sanctuary in flight.
The
Hoofer
from
Liston
in
nimble
patterns
of
evasion.
Occasionally,
so
desperate were his moves, Machen turned sideways, the way a hoofer might finish his turn and stride, graceful and swift, into the wings. The flat feet of Liston were not intended for movement; 'His
shoes
have
the
bulging
look
of
a chop-house
waiter
who has
-
who occasionally stopped long enough to hook. The blows, although they didn’t damage Liston, infuriated him. He continuously hit Machen low as he used both his slow hands to the bady. = In the lith round, after being hit- below the belt ‘lin = Machen crumpled and fell forward, resting on his knees a gloves. The referee allowed him to go to his corner to recuperate. The magistrate only penalized Liston three points which I thought was lenient. Never a man who allows anger to evict him from
ioe
M@7™ Pao mag
AMERICAN
LEAGUB
ruaneis, <a." Smith, Chicago
his
haven
of caution,
Machen
was
aroused
enough
to
impersonate
a fighter and he came to Liston in that round. Timidity immediately conquered his rage but his insolence bewildered Liston. After nine consecutive knock-outs, he was
astonished to find Machen
still ridiculing him with his agility
this late in the fight. They tussled after the bell, shoving and mauling,
the
way
enthusiastic
they wait for the modated them.
bar-tender
drunks
to
The Mob
scufflé
bust
it up.
in
a
The
bar-room
referee
as
accom
Exaggerated
The fight mob have exaggerated Liston’s legend. They discussed him as if he would impale Floyd Patterson on his lance
of a left, the
way
a botanist
needle to embalm it. It was their theory would
SAVE! ° SAVE!
talk
concede
through
his
any
might strength
opposition,
that, after twelve
spear
rounds
an
would including
of chasing
insect
with’ his
guarantee the
that
he
champion.
a guy
who
I
didn’t
SAMSONITE LUGGAGE CHANEL No. 5
fight much, Liston was still fresh and eager in a surly fashion. But Machen was able to wrestle him on the ropes and timed him with ease. There is no heavyweight besides Patterson to create trouble for him because he flourishes on punishment. But he is mot a puncher, the way Joe Louis was, and his left jab was a battering ram that turned to taffy when he jabbed. He hit Machen many shots in the belly, and at times was able to string up té five
ARPEGE
See
Custom’s Duties & Taxes on A Complete Line of
PANAMA
PARADISE STORE Main
punches together. But the abuse didn’t put the brakes on Machen ees
Pell cease
Eee
ont
a
Re
vy
a
the
HATS
And Many Other Items For Men & Women
. Ponce de teén $20:Stap 34-Heto
left hand
= letons of steers. The cleaner punches were landed by Machen,
IN
TRANSMISSIONS overhaul
he
of doing
*
MOTORS OR Complete
sick
S00
(Burwell 0-0) at Cincin-
(Purkey
something
was
trudged too long through saw-dust. His style resembles a! man -318 trying to chop down a tree with a dull hatchet in each hand. But the sapling, although it bent and shuddered, still held to its roots at the end of the fight. Action causes Liston to cower in confusion behind his thick 36 arms which could be boa constrictors equipped with the ske
t.
Chicago
and
-320
a
|
games.|
demonstrating
before
would
away
51 86 372 33% | Mathews, Milwaukee
including yesterday’s Teday’s Games
The
The most of the fight, Machen had the impulses of a dancer trying to impress his audience with his steps as he hurried
BUNS
Th name Smcale,.,
16%!
man
Machen
ous
omy
6%
406
a
tough
LEAGUE
— | Coneda.San cit
TT 60 562
a doll.
didn’t smear Machen’s features. The right was just a nudge seldom landed. Immense and sombre Liston, who trained for the fight ra¢ket by beating up cops in the alleys of St. Louis, is formed like the statue of a gladiator torn from its pedestal in a Roman forum. He caused Machen, who weighs 196 pounds, fifteen pounds
was
Larker, Los enue Groate, Pittsburgh
58
smashing
and and
:
Tl
Louis
; Chicago
(24), _hight.
had
he
way to make a
St.
|‘Milwaukee
at Cleve
he
that
Tournament
LEAGUE
of
performed
it. The
| _Asked if the thought he would 1.000, like to be a tourney pro or a 1.000| club professional, Chichi had a .000| ready answer: 000; “I want to be a club pro.
(Law 19-7),| New York (Ford 98) at Kansas | j11) at Pittsburgh night. City (Daley 1414), night. | at St (Buhl 149) Milwaukee Baltimore (Pappas 13-9) at De | Louis (Jackson 16-12), night. troit (Bunning 912), night. Los Angeles (Podres 11-11 ani Washington (Kralick 7-4) at Chi- Williams 13-8) at Philadelphia este 8-12 and Mahaffey 5-1), cago (Shaw 13-12), night.
Boston
glad
000 | Slad
84 52 618
\Sam
Games
tures
had
on
(Based on 850 or more at bats.) (Net imoluding yesterday’s games.)
ATIONAL
Not
backspin
Games
357
City
get
Oakland Sunday’s
82
Boston Kansas
seen
.000|
Pittsburgh
child,
mallet,
ever
ae =
—
ferocious
have
at
599
and
pole which would disfigure Machen and poke him into a stupor. After that, the right, a club which Liston uses as if it were a
LEADERS
LEAGUE
immense
Tommy Bolt of all the players he met on the tour. “Bolt hits the ball like a machine,” Rodriguez said. “He is the only man I
Pet
STANDINGS .
some
fight mob talked as if a deer had challenged a grizzly, and that’s the shape the fight took. But it razed the myth of Liston whe pre viously had demolished opponents like a man shattering a delicate vase with a sledge hammer. He won but his reputation as a pug who ruined people with a brutal drudgery was defaced. He fought with the ponderously slow ges-
20. -
55
-
Chichi, who weights only, 116 pounds, was most impressed by
Games
82
Chicago
stick jike
“ee
York
Baltimore
at the
esults
.
Dallas
women
right
at
AMERICAN New
ae
27, Buttalo
Ou:
opening
and the ball rimmed the cup,’ narrowly missing an eagle. The crowd swarmed towards the green cheering Rodriguez’s brilliant recovery shot. Bayer, who was in the middle of the fairway, said to him as the crowd closed in, “take all those Indians with you.”
the ball out of deep grass.” Rodriguez was _ sitting comfortably in the shade outside
‘Siesta
a:
Maria Darlene
the
Fdiday’s
=e
impos-
the
told the caddy I had I ¢ould put it on the Rodriguez said. | a seven iron through
1 © © 1.000; °%f Dorado’ pro shop as he re1 0 0 1.000 viewed his story yesterday. He
Forest
Hills
over-
STANDINGS Eastern Division
(AP)—Hurricane second post-
and rain made
as
the Dallas Texans, 21-20.
Division 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 10
winds
New
surprising record in
Western Denver Los Angeles ponement of the National Tennis Dallas Championship singles finals at Oakland NEW YORK Donna forced the
the
Polo Grounds Sunday afternoon. Quarterback Al Dorow, former bencher in the Redskin and Eagle camps, scored on runs of
bat-
Hurricane Delays Forest Hills’ Finals
green. “I a hunch green,” “I hit
over the National
professional gridders kick off.
At times, as Sonny Liston beat Eddie Machen across twelve dirty and boring rounds, it didn’t seem like a fight at all. was more like a hunt and as thrilling as a bull fight between a tethered animal and a matador who forgot his sword. 1 It was supposed to have been an act of vandalism with Liston,
inch opening for his shot to the
Foot-
wuvae SEREER
(AP)—The
By Jimmy Cannon
BLS
YORK
Liston Legend
The
Page)
Bayer, the biggest hitter in golf. A large gallery was following them. Rodriguez, one under on the fifth tee, was stymied on the fiith hole. He had a five-
if 2
NEW
Sports Today
i
Football
Street,
St. Thomes, ¥. i Tel. 308
There suit
will be those
of Bob
Pastor,
compare never
this ficht
was
able
to
to Louis get
pur
inside long
they. miss when ‘he eventually gets rid of them, like a guy trying
to function while still imprisoned in a dream. There was no doubt he won, and Machen is
movement myth
1ve
who Louis
enough to turn combinations loose, and Liston did. He has neither deceit, nor stealth and his right hand responds to feintg and
rated heavyweight
ae
But
ended
in the world.
at all.
He
last
night.
fought Maybe,
But Liston
a. difficult
guy
I anticipated
the
second-
can’t handle =
who. too
ran
much.
but his
oe EE
>
rine alert9
a
EAE NY PERT TT.
rT
STAR — Tersday, September13, 1 960
Ltiit
it
ee
*
MARINE. WINS—Bill McMillan of Turtle Creek, Pa. on the Olympic firing line where he fook 2 gold medal in the rapid fire pistol event. He won in 2 shootoff with a Finn
Cruz Thinks 16 Feet Possible In 10 Years
to
reader’s
tell him
weren’t
they're
a
win 2and tha was because of
cinch
133-0 in the
paper
error.
And
take the reporter
that besieges
the sports desk at all
x an
I have
reason they
z
and a Russian.
Frem
(Continued
McMillan shot a 147 out of a possible 150 points. (AP Wirephoto).
Back
of the day and night inquiring of his beloved Baltimore Oriok 1 tell you, it gets me. rm stuck with the Phillies, but not for long. I have avowed
In
Page) | brittle, fiberglass pole, said that,
interview
an
some
expects
-[he
inches.
clear|
to
one
before
his
He
earned
three
the world’s pole vaulters. I was| But I hope so.”
|
well-coached.”
fourth vault.
in
fimsh
place
He left at 11:30 last night from
He said with the help of Pup-| International Airport.
He said that he was helped| peny,
who also coached Bragg,
[Re Bragg and Ron Morris| he will make 15 feet while a| ofby theDon United States whe finished | freshman at Villanova, one of Rich
collegiate competition, but that he will be able to enter invita-
ourne The Star Bowling terday
meets.
ional
Set
inter | J
in
te compete
Taegibie
Bowling
track
foremost
the country’s
i
points
if he could possibly | for Puerto Rico, its only points,
Asked
the Olympics. I was| make the unprecedented height,| with his against the cream of|he replied, “I don’t think so.| the pole
fourth at competing
Olympie
mark
yesterday, | 16 feet within the next 10 years. | effort.
Cruz said, “I was lucky te finish|
his
146 for
He later cleared best
announced
yes
Center
plans te start
a Banco Popular Scratch Singles
Russians Weak
that would Classic onal He said that the Russian pole | tnyitati
vaulters
be caught
with
another
Philadelphia,
winner
of
one
Ome
pennant in |
last 40 years. I have to be with 2 champion, and if I have to switch teams every month to be with one, Ill do it.
were
finished
top
not
and
sixth
a guarweeks and havemoney grade.| run 41 first of prize one | anteed $1,000
exghth.
Cruz first took up pole
and
second
moneyof
vault- | $500.
the sixth grade in 1954.)
1. Each
Oct.
Entries close
was Carlos Cartage-| bowler, at a cost of $20, will na. He contineed practicing last bowl in a 10-week, 40game eli
school
prep sburg Academa y, conversations around the barbecue
pits every Friday evening. . andes Being a natural rebel—Stamford chapter—he picked the Pitts-| M; in New York,
burgh Pirates, as lowly then as the Phillies are now. He felt sure the Bucs would never make it, and that he would never have to express any maudlin emotion for a group of men chasing
a little,
be more
white
ball
around
a green
pasture
which
aptly used as a housing development for the poor.
But
look
winner,
where
the
Pirates
as much as I am with
Will
one
some
please
are.
He must
be suffering,
a loser.
for two years.
(Continued From Back Page) will
~$1,000 their with
cost
more clubs jet
each
team
each year here
travel
the
by
for
only
to send jet.
distance
And in-
volved is not very important. MaeDonald expects that the park rental—both ancient Esco-
some
time
situation
in
San
on
the
Juan.
baseball Through
Miami's connection with the Baltimore
teams
we
intend to help the San Juan
Se-
nators
and
Philadelphia
(Leith’s
Winter
set a new American
record
hice for
a
South|
each
Tuesday,
until the pleted.
40
bow)
feur games
Oct.
starting games
are
Call Delta for
Madonald Says Decision Nov. 1st it
coe
limited 72 berths im Petersen Singles Clas-
a
Roberts?
buy
has
deter-
te
homte—
tournament. | @t Madison Square Garden,andCon-|in| sie yopeful “Georgia and Ponce ‘|venti s will on Hall in Boston, — gor be team —eretrl
epuld with
who
mination
mine the meets | a 31-week
im Pennsylvania. He competed in indoor
Super Convair Tourist Hights !
League
entry) in whatever way we can, MacDonald said. Leith then made a short statement to the press in he said that an International League team playing in the summer would not hurt the Winter, League. Owners of all the Puerto
Lv. Sundayot 11:30 am
HAVANA *69”" NEW ORLEANS +82” PORT-au-PRINCE Ser $120.00 Reund-Tiip
$37
4,
com-
.
| SPORTS San
Juan, Puerte Rico, Tuesday,
September
STANDINGS AND
PAGE 22
LEADERS
|
13, 1960
Miami Switch Looms
Trick |Marlins Owner Declares ChichiPullsHatT rick, Before Big Galleries San Juan In The Running By PETER t
By PETER ANDERSON Rodriguez, the mightiest mite to hit tourna-
Chichi ment
golf
since
Bob
after a successful
Toski,
has
returned
shot at the summer
to Puerto
The
But
what’s
rado
the
Beach
mal
had
Mame
he
problably
than
assistant
a
chance
golfers
Hew
gallery 2.
to
How
in
about
enjoy
to
stride,
take
the
next
a
a
MacDonald said. MacDonald also said his general manager,
bad
round
think
the
money
holes.
time be
are
shot.
After
a
four
very
period
of
:
of
assurance
wccording
expected the hole he
to
him with
made
a
But tional
good
I
did
didn’t,”
yesterday.
and
some-
“The
crowd
said
was
al-
ways waiting for it.” Rodriguez finished fourth at Baltimore, winning $1,400, his biggest purse to date. He had less luck in other tournaments, howe-
FASTEST WHEEL—Mickey
man
on wheels, posts his 406.6 miles-per-hour record on
sign
at the famed
racing
here.
Thompson, the world’s fastest strip at Bonneville
Salt Flats.
He broke the mark held by Sir John Cobb of 403.1 set in 1947.
Chichi
had
a
hot
guy said to me you're only one “IT
took
putted.
the
And
gas
and
12 and 13. I finished the back nine in 41 after having 34 on the
front
$2,500 Chichi
side.
| wound played
Instead
(AP
up with the
final
The
$475.”
round
of the Eastern Open with George (See
CHICHI,
Page
22)
League
franchise
for
sev-
about
the
MANUFACTURED
21
tending
Puerto
Saturday, Villanova
Rican,
will
be
College
the
next
year
atout-
in the pole
P. R. FILTERS, INC. -
1904
Col.
Irigarry St. Stop
mitch than
I
Stady
Made
Some of the problems MaeDonald and Ryan have considered are
transportation
expenges,
rental of the ball park and eoncession rights at the park. “We have studied the ‘be sportation costs and found that (See
|
MACDONALD,
Page
23)
PARTIAL SCORES
Besides
no
baseball
a former
(4)
and
SOLD
2614
IN
PUERTO
Ccteeat
P. B.
RICO B
Los Angeles at Philadelphia, titi. ——
golf
when
the
Canada
Cup
the two-man team which may
(See CRUZ, Page 23)
be
allowed te compete. ‘The Canada Cup was played in Ireland earlier this year, Mexico
the
year
before
and
Tokyo in 1958. Rodriguez was bern on the island. Cooper is from Florida. But William McDonald, Miami Marlins president who
NOW AVAILABLE TO YOU IN ANY SIZE - ANY TYPE CAN
SUPPLY
FILTERS
HOME WINDOWS UNITS.
\
Post-
matches are played at Dorado Beach next year. Peter Cooper, touring professional at Dorado, and his assistant ChiChi are the likely members of
under the tutelage of ViHanova track coach, James Puppeny. Cruz did 14 feet, 11 Ys inches in the Olympics, bettering the South American and his own mark of 14 feet, six
WE
Smith.
Puerto may the first time in its history—may be represented in international
who I vanit
side Philadelphia. to major in Business Administration. Cruz hopes to clear 15 feet within
AND
“knows game
do.”
FILTERS FOR AIR CONDITIONERS FILTERS
—*
P.R. May Be in| Canada’
Wirephoto)
young
turns
of
good
more
Denna
competition.
11,
a
said.
eral manager, who
Miller
the XVII Olympiad where he finished fourth in pole vault
three-
I three-putted
I
MacDonald, however, Seredjeil the fact that he would I¢éave the final decision to his gen-
men
By PEDRO ROMAN Rolando Cruz left his Salinas home yesterday, bound possibly for greater glories than he achieved at Rome in
‘sink that and stroke off the
lead.”
baseman,
it,” MacDonald
today are in it for the money. “Team owners must love base-
final
round going out. “I was only two shots out going into the tenth hole,” Rodriguez said. “I knocked it up within 10 feet, and this
stands
ball or get out of it. As
"im rim one ma UZ Hopes For 15 Feet Within A Year gan,
third
San Francis¢o 000 000: 00 Pittsburgh 110 301: 6 interest in a company here, I Sanford, Loes (4), Choate 5), think it might be a good combinaMaranda (8) and Schmidt; Ha tion—baseball and _ business,” and Burgess, MaeDonald said. SS eetneenee seen : sites Milwaukee 020 20 100 00 equally as good elsewhere, but St. Louis Spahn and Crandall; Gibson, my business gives me an interest
fans
Rodriguez
Juan
a large amount of stock in a local busines firm. “Since my wife and I have an
putt.
I
San
MacDonald has recently bought
}3
frivolity. the
Montreal,
everal reasons. In the first place,
to playfully cover his hat each time
“Sometimes times
and
Chichi
Juan,
Ss | chance of obtaining the Interna-
time, Rodriguez had the galleries following him in large numbers. | * During the Eastern Open at Baltimore, the golf fans got a big kick out of Rodriguez’s dis-
play
San
Jersey City and Norfolk, Va.
times.
short
that Joe
as to where the club well be f|moved. There are several «| possibilities. Among them
Puerto Rica’s first and only} native-born professional played | in eight tournaments. He made | § the cutoff in six, and finished |} in
amateur
cerely considering San Juan as to where the club will be
°_
large
it and 18
Hilton.
Ryan, will make the decision
to take more
hitting
the|
it. a
forget
3. How fore
with
next
“And I am seriously, sin- the game and enjoy pro
professio-|
of the things
play
and
* Caribe
Do-|
action.
some
certain to be moved
Donald—amillionaire, baseball, golf and racing enthusiast— made these statements last night at a press conference in the
circuit in the States.
im- a
the
to study
in
These are learned: 1.
more
money,
Miami Marlins are “almost
season.” “The decision must be made by Nov. 1.” William Mae
Rico
Rodriguez, in his first extended try for the big money, earned $2,100 in eight PGA poumnanents.
portant
ANDERSON
FOR
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READ JIM DOUGLAS PAGE 23