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COLORFUL BAND PARADE A FINE PLACE TO DREAM Section East lowans Strut Their Stuff'. Picture Story on Tree Houses (In Section C) A (In Section B)

CITY Weather- Mostly cloudy and FINAL cool through tonight. Occasional light show- 20 CENTS ers. Highs today in 50s. Partly cloudy and a little warmer Monday. ASSOCIATED PRESS, UPI, NEW YORK TIMES CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA, SUNDAY, MAY 19, 19(58 VOLUME 91—NUMBER 131 DE GAULLE TAKES COMMAND s KM WordS Birthday Present: Returns To vc s/ie Hit Face Worst By Kosygin New TOYor™k Timenmes Newr,,w>s Servic«...«"e < | Minutes after the first shells) SAIGON-The Viet Cong fired, whistled into the city at about j

IK'thTSTo , SS5!•en -in•e y- ••**» -v£' Govt. Test ! early Sunday. i flareships swarmed into For Czechsi Some of the shells were re- the sky. The southern and east- PARIS (UPI) - President rted to PRAGUE (UPI)-Soviet pre-iP° have exploded in a ern fringes of the city glowed Jharles de Gaulle dashed home A in the yell W llght from Bucharest Saturday night mier Alexei Kosygin assured, y^ng 0'J winding auTasTsix ° and took personal command of Czech reformist leaders Satur-.Americans'. Three South Viet- France, trapped in chaos by a day their liberalizing moves are namese policemen were killed enemy burgeoning labor revolution that "met with understanding" in the and another wounded when paralyzed vast sections of in- Kremiin and appsren.iy gave. JJ. ^j*-J» £ ^ Th'e shelling was lhe first sig- dustry and public service. i hope of receiving a Soviet ther shell De Gaulle arrived in Paris Fragments from ano after cutting short his state 'that landed south of the palace. --° y ^ drive on tne city visit to Romania to find more Kosygin slipped into a side;wounded an American military 'fi le| out than 100 French factories seized door of Prague castle, seat of!policeman. i niuvAltnoueh had been noj by workers and transportation the government, at noon to con-1 A South Vietnamese police; f> reports in-i a nightmare. fer with the entire Czech lead- j source said some civilians had! at- There was mounting doubt ership in the midst of their Deen hurt in the shelling.. tack, mman y South Vietnamesenamese increasingly tense dispute over. The presidential palace was : - the even De Gaulle himself could 11 not check the worst crisis of his the Czech "democratic socialist nol damimageaged anandd Presidenmsuemt ~ ati n strjke jn Cornrnemor 0 administration. revolution." Nguye..„_,—n Van Th.eu was not be- ^ ?8th birthd today o[ Ho| The 77-year-old general was At the same time Soviet De>-. liPVPrlievedl to havPe beehoen imn ththe ebuil buildd - ^.m ^ ^ ^^ of North, fense Minister ing at the time of the attack. ; expected to make a dramatic . gesture to try to stem the and the political chief of the; Several of the explosions . Alexei Yepishev. met j started fires and one of them, mushrooming rebellion — much of it aimed at toppling his dec- with Czech Defense Minister j near the market place swept jf| p DA»f II lift Martin Dzur and later President i through an entire block of build- iV*H« BW J HUI 1 ade-old regime. Ludvik Svoboda. iings. Flames leaped 50 to 100 Censure Vote The Czech news agency said i feet into the air. In Bike Mishap The Gaullist government of Gazette Photo by John Mclvor Kosygin told Czech communist; - | Premier Georges Pompidou, partv secretary Alexander Dub-;f*; ;| Ced»r «*pid« New*— VM Ten-year-old Matthew Fishel.l i which faces a risky censure cek.'Premier Oldrich Cernik.V of 1867 B avenue NE. was taken i Queen Connie from Traer vote in parliament Wednesday national assembly president Jo- Rppaks Out In to University Hospital at Iowa Connie Claussen, Traer junior, was crowned queen of the 1968 Eastern Iowa Band Festival Sat- that could throw it out of of- seh Smrkovsky and President **•«««» ^" Citv last fice, appeared paralyzed before PJ4-W evening with serious urday «t « banquet served in the Montrose hotel. Officiating was State Senator Tom R.ley, grand mar- Svoboda that their democraliza- Maryland v^lTV^ITy,y ^ injuries ^^ wncn his the mounting unrest. shal of the Band Festival parade. Originally scheduled for Greene Square, the crowmng was conduct- , The national railway system s«=y«tt f-rv. -;-- -—--r w. ed inside because of rain. (Other Band Festival pictures on pages 3A and SB). __ j was brought to a halt by strik- ing workers, air traffic was spotty and Orly airport was hit " «-"~ ,.,-sTaTcial f ^rj^'^-rsra- ^.. This is the same °"' Eencv existed Saturday as civilipened shortly after 6:15 P-m. ,. by a strike of air tower control phrase issued after Dubcek was ^isorder broke out in Salisbury., in an alley between C and D Cras^Landing Kennedy Opposes Idea of technicians and workers who oc- summoned to the Kremlin May TWQ arrests were reported be-Avenues NE in the 1800 block. Fa cupied the Air France hangers. 4. indicating to observers that cause of ^ disturbances. The, Officers said the boy rode his( . ; Many of the strikes were call- both sides remained firm on - ffice in Annapolis i bike from between two build- j A • CU Guaranteed Annual Wage rnor s O IWOW •ed by young laborers without their opposing views. * ^ were several in. ings into the path of a car dnv- > ™' »" , WASHiNGTON (UPI) -Rob-, the poor more advice," the New WASHINGTON (UPI)— Vice-j the consent of union leaders. -The solution of a number of. ^ o[ looting but nothing en by Allen Fay Bennett, 19, of ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (UPI) fll9 r t SF w n in an ert F. Kennedy said Saturday an York Democrat said. president Hubert Humphrey!Not content with mere wildcat concrete economic questions on - ™<,hth ** »* -A•n- «=F-ll• "' l »-takin"-g =*part in an _:r ... t.ii.;im or-tiAn wnrtprs nf!CUDiefl arising from the current require-! ments of the Czechoslovak econ-| omy is being approached." ^1^^ JailUcU oaiuiuaj u«i/ *«w j«"*-« an iauimc.a » fc«w jj»»*j*w* —•«- — - \ * ,

dklrllVi T ,JU»W» ..«— , W««| *.««v. —. - ovllllasential IlaUiV/iioi auua'/iiruv*. *wi •* of the captured bruises ... . r it _„_„. J ! i_:_ r«.«:1.. i>« 41* *t xirtiiwfftr onH ference took up a possible $400$400 ;! - . hnl was transferred to Iowa City the pilot nor any of the crowd i welfare system «which embit. SlTirttt^oTmsdf^li Humphrey emphasized the action probably would be felt million loan sorely needed byi A curfew was imposed to help - by ambulance, and was iisted was injured. thP fycchs to rescue their I officers clear the streets. , ition. Iters all those who come in con- the jn fai.„.. cond AirAir Iorv;forcee ulutuUofficialBs MI'saiUd ...v.|t t ,th it» ineipeaSdTSfa 10 uuuu fuu ASSa uuu.iuj. :^ !«- —"Ma,^ ;- in_-- a . quesUon and -"—5*^-bn transport was expecte^d ™l tact with it." a floundering economy. '• Protest Shooting *.*/„. . Plane was making a low-level ™ ^i-word policy paper';™ Participant in its great answer session following an ad- P ^ bank$ wQU,d be ublic Some observers believe the; broke o u t late; Police continued their mves-i^. i fly-b^y whfnwhe n ththpe piviliaciviliann Dipilotiot. ,^on ^he VVelfare Crisis", Ken-!P ventures. I am a man.' dress at a meeting -o f the As-j , closed by striking tellers. Other a hit-and-run _acci-jFred Voorhies of General Dy- nedy attacked "the myth that; "First Task" sociation of American Editor- j pubijc services may also be in- namics Corp., brought it in for the ,„, and unemployed do not. ,lFor this reason » he said,'ial Cartoonists. jterrupted or shut-postal work- pressing an emergency landing. to work" and said society-.. , ,^ first domestic 'task of any At the same time, he indica- ers have already stopped sort- L*;ilts\nc> nt /Inllorc anH .1 « AI. _ ing mail in Paris and other cit- billions of dollars anandd administration must be, and the Ld that release of the crew of "Frank" Ta.ks f a (Continued: Page 3, Col. 1.) fatal shooting O a car struck his! forces indignity on the poor by !first iorit of my administra- g .- be „ t and ies. The news agency said politic- burglary suspec, by a the U y street SW not providing jobs. tion will be to create jobs and-i ™ ™ " Television Strike al problems were discussed "mofficer. the viaduct a spirit of comradely frank-; Unruly crowds drifted into the , Tne boy was stjii listed in sat- Today's CH«ck,e ^r^V^ ^eS"^»L^£^ Sf " "'^ ** 1^^^°^ Z ness" which in communist Ian- downtown area of the city of>isfactory condition )ast njght. A yawn is Nature'Naturess wayy 01of.cienc. *•"-•»-yj »"«and• ^.«.familvy —-~o--v.--—taintegrity, not,tax incentincentivesives,, t1o0 encouragentouragee pri^u-- "Not The Ship" | rks said Saturday night they . . ' . . I.- « moccino nour cvtoncinn nf wpl-1 . • , ..... ». i_- - iu- j-ui ' - «TUI»»O »**m j o guage often means a dispute. 16,300 after the demonstration | The car and driver jnvoived jn letting a married man open his!a massive new extension of wel-!yate industry to hire the jobless,! : "There are some indications were ready to strike, but gave rrtu- ~«~_n.. Antsl Kr»fVi cirip*; iKfrtlra nn anrf nnlipp said Win-:.. . , . .. ____ _i:u L-:_ _. ,r copyri, ,.hk.t fare, honot a greaereat new outpourinoutoounneg '' ---- The agency said both sides up and police said w>n- !the accident were still being mm.th 9 hat may release no date. agreed communism must not be of guidance counselors to give (Continued: Page 22, Col. 3.) (Continued: Page 3, Col. 3.) Bought. ie crew — the crew but not In Cannes, on the Riviera, "endangered" in this nation. ic ship," the Vice-president the international film festival "The first meeting already aid. "I want to emphasize the was cancelled Saturday night showed signs of the continued word 'May'—they may release after several Red film workers positive relationship" between ie crew at some future uncer- seized the festival hall in sup- and Prague, the agency ain date. When we talk about! (Continued~P~age 3, Col. 4.) said. /ietnam, it (release of thej While the communique tried rew) may well be part and (o give a picture of harmony, larcel of the talks." i the official Soviet press con- tinued its anti-Czech campaign. •Humphrey also said the re-: Newspapers panned the Os- ease of the men might result rom talks with the Soviet Un-| Today's Index car-w inning Czech movie, i on. | SECTION A "Closely Watched Trains," as a Late New* 1,3 1 "rude, cynical farce' that Crew Is Safe ' Deaths 3 proved "art in Czechoslovakia Editorials f> Humphrey said diplomatic j Youth Beat 15 had begun to retreat from the jources report the surviving Report card 50 traditions of (socialist) real- crew members are safe. North city Hall Notes 23 ism." Other Soviet newspapers i« East German press. mantled for communist study. Food . .. 1 Later, in talking with news- You and Iowa 10 Political Calendar 17 Nixon Delegates men, Humphrey emphasized Marion 12 that nothing was imminent. "I Building 13-13 don't want to give the impres- Movies 19-21 Win in Vermont Record Reviews 21 sion that something is going to Farm .. 22,23 MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI)- happen next week or next The presidential candidacy of SECTION C month." Social l-7t New York Gov. Nelson Rocke- He said the issue was "diplo- Around the Town 7 feller suffered a setback Sat- matically alive," but did not New Books J urday when the Vermont Re- identify any sources of indica- SECTION O publican state convention elec- Sports 1-9 tions the crew might be re- 9 ted nine of its 12 national dele- Outdoor Iowa leased. Financial io-n gates favorable to former Vice -UPI Tclephoto by Kvoichi Sswada New York Stocks 10 14-J5 President . Koreans Killed want Ads Rockefeller secured only two Crossword . 11 SEOUL (UPI) - A South Ko- delegates with Republican state Saigon Cleaning Up, Too rean army deserter threw two Parade Maflazin* chairman Elbert Moulton elec- South Vietnamese last week began the task of sifting ly destroyed in the recent communist spring offan«.vB. The Comics ted uncommitted. Both Nixon grenades into a movie theater through rubble to find usable construction materials in prepara- scene was reminiscent of the aftermath of last week s tornadoes Saturday killing seven Koreans and Rockefeller backers had and wounding about 50. predicted support of at least 60 tion for rebuilding their homes in Saigon's Cholon district, large- in the Midwest. per cent of the state delegation.