Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1962-04-28

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1962-04-28 Erbe Leads Governors' Rebellion over Cutback of Guard (Combined from Leased Wires) nedy's Administration was intent Iowa units - listing departure homes by Aug. 5 if IlQt sooner. The revolt cut sharply across will not accept the proposed reduc­ asking tbe states to designate WASHINGTON - The Army or­ upon "elimination oC the guard." dates, unit and home station - in­ President Kennedy previously an­ political party lines. Erbe is a Re­ tion in our National Guard units." guard units Ihm would be elimi­ cludes: publican, but he wa joined by nated under the pl1m. dl.'red Friday that all 110,000 re­ In otb r tales, adjutant generals nounced that the reserves and Na­ Erne I F. Hollings, governor of servists and National Guardsmen Aug. 1 - 301st Field Hospital, such Democrats as Govs. Michael Soulh Carolina, called it "obvious­ California's Brou said he op­ took up the rally cry. Army bead­ Cedar Rapids; 41lth Ordnance tional Guardsmen would be re­ V. Di Salle o( Ohio, Orval Faubus called to active duty for the Berlin quarter in Washlllgton aid it was ly incorrect and improper" and posed any Pentagon plan to cut crisis la t fall be returned to civil­ Battalion, Maintenance and Sup­ leased in August, but left the Clact of Arkansas, Edmund G_ Brown said he would resist "with every California guard forces by direc­ besieged with protest calls and ply Headquarters, Davenport; 1063 dates up to the military services. Calliornia and Frank B. Morrison ian lire by Aug. 11. telegrams. reasonable efCort." tiveJ from Washington. DiSalJe of Aviation Company, Fixed Wing, The Navy announced earlier that of Nebraska. The Army said it realized the Ohio said "the loss oC key units The 10-day demobilization will Erbe reque ted a personal audi­ Waterloo. it 8.000 reservists would be re­ begin Aug. 1. Faubus said he was "unalterably guard cutback could not be put would be a loss of the guard." ('nce with Kennedy to protest the Aug. 5 - 495th Engineer Baltal­ leased Au,. I, while the Air Force opposed" to the move. "They (the Utah Gov. George Clyde termed Meanwhile, a governors' revolt Administration's plan to cut the into efCect without the approval of ion, Combat, Burlington. bas Dot yet completed a release alional Guard Bureau) want com­ state governors as required by law. it "disturbing news." against the proposed cutback oC National Guard from 400,000 to Aug. 7 - 404th Signal Company, schedule. plete reorganization so they can units snowballed aC!ross the nation. 367,000 men. He said previous e(­ Bul it insisted that a plan for the Otber states that voiced opposi­ Command Center Operations, Wat­ A United Press International sur­ have more control at Wa hinglon, It forts to arrange a meeting with the reduction must be completed for tion include Minnesota, Missouri, Governors in slale aCter stale erloo. vey showed that governors or other he aid. submission to the governors, the Kantas, Oregon, Alabama, Tennes­ joined the rebellion sparked by President on the matter had been Members of Wisconsin's 32nd Na­ oCficials of more than half of the fruilles . Gov. Price Daniel oC Texas called De(ense Department and Congress. see, New Hampshire, Vermont, Gov. Norman A. Erbe of Iowa, tional Guard Infantry Division states had expressed opposition to the Administration move "un­ The Nat ion a I Guard Bureau North Carolina, Oklahoma, Illinois, who charged that President Ken· The demobilization schedule for were scheduled to reach their lhe planned reductions. thinkable" and said nally: "Texas sparked the uproar Thursday by Pennsylvania and Montana. Union Boa rei Movie The Weather R.in dampenad 1_. Frld.y puttl", • tempor. "Fraulein" is the Union Board movie presen­ .ry and to the st.te'l wlrm spell. The showers tation Sunday at Macbride Auditoriu",. This Ir. expaetH to ttMI thil moml",. HI, ... todlY Clnem.scope production stars Dana Winter and onr the st ... should rlnge from SS to " In the Mel Ferrer. The movie begins at 7 p.m. oi· owan northe.lt to nelr 7D In tha lOuthwe.t. Serving the State UnioerBity of Iowa and the People of IOWlJ City Established in 1868 Associated Press Leased Wire and Wirephoto United Prell International Leued Wim 5 Cents per Copy Saturday, April 28, 1962, Iowa City, la. u.s. Fi 2nd Aerial Blast Major Art Collection Given Also Test Lo,w-Yield Device To SUI by CeRe Attorney . Underground in Nevada An art collection oC 50 major Iprints, rllre jade, antique silver Combined From Le.sed Wlr .. paintings and nearly 1,000 prints and several drawings. The econd blal( in the new U.S. nuclear test series was Cired at will be given to the SUI Art De· No estimate of the value oC the dnwn Friday, a repeat performance o( the initial aerial explOllion oC pnrtment - if the University can collection was made. two days ago near Christmas Island. house them adequntelY, President H.ncher c.lled tha gift of tha Hancher announced Friday. Ced.r Rlplds Ittorney "I g_r. Tbe Pacllic tests could be part of this country's attempt to pack A gift of Owen and Leone EI- ous Ind slgnlflclnt contribution more punch per pound into intercontinental missile warheads, Iiolt, the col\eclio~ was ~athered to tha Universlty'l service to Less lhan (lve hours after announcing the Pacific explosion, the ?ver a. 4~-year perIod, ,It .lncludes, the Irtl." It I. In Iftermlth, he Atomic Energy Commission also announced that a nuclear device of m addItion to the pamtlngs and .ald, to the recent medernlzl- low yield - explosive force equal to leSll than 20,000 tons 1)1 TNT - tion of SUI's Irt exhibition flcill­ had been exploded underground in Nevada. ties, which .re "too smlll to The "intermediate yield" device detonated in the Pacific, like the j Dance Review- hou ... collection of lueh m.g· first on Wednesday, had an explosive force lying somewhere between nitude." 20,000 tons and 1,000,000 tons of TNT, Most probable, It was in the Hancher said the University 100,000 ton range, Dancers Give hopes to build an oddltion to the This is 5 to 25 times more pow­ Art Building to house the colletl.ion. erful than the World War II 20 This would enable bolh students 5 Russians m gaton bomb that levelled Hlro· Highest Level ond visitors to view the coUection shima but it is weak in comparison to best advantnge, he said. 10 some of this country's hydrogen The proposed addition would con­ Will Visit SU I bombs, rated ot 20 million tons of tain gallery space for the collec­ TNT power. Performance tion and additional teaching facili­ Five Russian experts in hydrau­ The Nevada test was the 30th ties to replace some now housed lics will arrive in Iowa City this announced underground U.S. nu­ By MOHAMMAD IDREES in temporary buildings. afternoon for a three-day tour of clear explosion there since Presi· Reviewed for the Dilly low.n The addition would cost .n the SUI Institute of Hydraulics, dent Kennedy ordered the no-fall­ The SUI Orchesis Club will give estimated $1.1 million without Dr. Hunter Rouse, director oC out tests on the beels of Russia's the last perFormance of its annual aqulpmant, Hlnehar 111d. Mechanics and Hydraulics, will big test serlee last tall. dance concert, "Orchesis in Mod­ Terms of the Elliott bequest re­ conduct the tour, which was ar­ L.st Tuesd.y the Prelldent re· ern Forms," at 8 p.m. today in quire that suitable housing be ranged through the United States luctantly ordered I ....ha.d on Macbride Auditorium. provided by the summer of 1967. State Department. U.S. atmospheric tests In the P.· C~ught cHic to kHP the United St .... The concert's £irst evening Fri. "My wife and I do not wish to The tour is part of a plan under A policeman lifts a frightened student by his sweater during a .bre.st - or lhe.d - of RUlli. day climaxed the year·long pre­ seem impatient," Elliott said in which live Uniled States hydrau­ In we. pons th.t lelentlst. said demonstration in front of the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, Friday. A parations made by the club, an all­ discussing the bequest, "but we lics specialists visited the Soviet could only b. fully tested .boy. I.rge group of students, members of the leftist Zengakuren Stu­ women modern dance group oC the hope to see our collection 10 its Union last September. ,round. dent Federations, demonstrated for the third day. The demonstra· Women's Recreation Association. Cinal location during our Jife\imes. The Russians, who came here The first almospheric test fol­ tions are in protest to the American nuclear tests in the South Pa· The 20 dance numbers were in­ if possible." The ElliotLs will re­ [rom the Massachusetts Institute lowed the next day at 9:45 a.m., cific. -AP Wirephoto spired by the various studies de­ tain a lifetime interest in the col­ oC Technology, wl\l leave Monday CST, or daybreak over the mid­ scribed by world famolls composer lection. for visits at the University of Min­ Pacific. The second test Collowed and accompanist Louis Horst in Elliott $lid he Ind hi. wife IuId nesota, the Bureau of Reclamation Friday at about the same time, 10 his book, "Modern Dance Forms in chosen SU I .1 their first eholca at Denver, and the Army's water­ a.m., CST. Like the earlier test, American Embassy Relation to the Other Modern to recelv. the coll.ctlon "plrtly way experimental station at Vicks- the weapon was dropped Cram an Arts.
Recommended publications
  • Major League Baseball's I-Team
    Major League Baseball’s I-Team The I-Team is composed of players whose names contain enough unique letters to spell the team(s) for which they played. To select the team, the all-time roster for each franchise was compared to both its current name as well as the one in use when each player was a member of the team. For example, a member of the Dodgers franchise would be compared to both that moniker (regardless of the years when they played) as well as alternate names, such as the Robins, Superbas, Bridegrooms, etc., if they played during seasons when those other identities were used. However, if a franchise relocated and changed its name, the rosters would only be compared to the team name used when each respective player was a member. Using another illustration, those who played for the Senators from 1901 to 1960 were not compared to the Twins name, and vice versa. Finally, the most common name for each player was used (as determined by baseball- reference.com’s database). For example, Whitey Ford was used, not Edward Ford. Franchise Team Name Players Angels Angels Al Spangler Angels Angels Andres Galarraga Angels Angels Claudell Washington Angels Angels Daniel Stange Angels Angels Jason Bulger Angels Angels Jason Grimsley Angels Angels Jose Gonzalez Angels Angels Larry Gonzales Angels Angels Len Gabrielson Angels Angels Paul Swingle Angels Angels Rene Gonzales Angels Angels Ryan Langerhans Angels Angels Wilson Delgado Astros Astros Brian Esposito Astros Astros Gus Triandos Astros Astros Jason Castro Astros Astros Ramon de los Santos
    [Show full text]
  • My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014
    My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014 A complete record of my full-season Replays of the 1908, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1975, and 1978 Major League seasons as well as the 1923 Negro National League season. This encyclopedia includes the following sections: • A list of no-hitters • A season-by season recap in the format of the Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia- Baseball • Top ten single season performances in batting and pitching categories • Career top ten performances in batting and pitching categories • Complete career records for all batters • Complete career records for all pitchers Table of Contents Page 3 Introduction 4 No-hitter List 5 Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia Baseball style season recaps 91 Single season record batting and pitching top tens 93 Career batting and pitching top tens 95 Batter Register 277 Pitcher Register Introduction My baseball board gaming history is a fairly typical one. I lusted after the various sports games advertised in the magazines until my mom finally relented and bought Strat-O-Matic Football for me in 1972. I got SOM’s baseball game a year later and I was hooked. I would get the new card set each year and attempt to play the in-progress season by moving the traded players around and turning ‘nameless player cards” into that year’s key rookies. I switched to APBA in the late ‘70’s because they started releasing some complete old season sets and the idea of playing with those really caught my fancy. Between then and the mid-nineties, I collected a lot of card sets.
    [Show full text]
  • Seventh St. Dilemma Despite Trian and Motor Vehicle Traffic No Doubt As to the Position of Pub- and Friday
    (ism' Greek Club Applications t.reee, as Reflected et,ternat Student orientation leader ap- Theater" mill be reviewed lub is IN plications for the fall semester Kuth Mckenzie. professor tic lo Pr. are av ailable In the College Petry at the 111(4'611g of the at .prech. Union. Interviews far the posi- Greek club Tuesday at %Udall tions will he conducted April 2- remenb, rooms A and B of 00 p.m. la IS in the Union by the com- oing their Dr. McKenzie %sill of cafeteria. mittee. to Illustrate her Ms- a2tatz 00 slides a Greek theater. President. raceion of the in at re. SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE 1g the on(. Acts edlep L49 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1962 No. 91 nes Fargee e5oryas. as. music, ol.1 als of the Amendments Internationally-Known Violinist s per. ,s wirier the 'Seventh Frosh St. Dilemma' VA, et Pass; DN. ical In edues. Concert Appearance Tonight Elect Officers Internationally - known violin several countries behind the silledego, virtuoso Ruggiero Ricci will ap- KENNEDY Iron Curtain. In the spring of By TOM pear in concert tonight at 8:15 1961, Ricci toured the Soviet constitutional amend- in Morris Still Three Dailey Remains auditorium. Unsolved Union with 12 concerts under passed by heavy ma- Students who have were not ob- the invitation of the Goscon- By JOAN JACKSON traffic problem in the campus vie- I idmann declared his talk with four of five candi- tained free tickets hem .:ties, while the Stu- cert, the State Concert organi- San Jose State today appeared laity under study for some time, the public works director had elections to freshman dent Affairs business r,t,s man office, zation of the USSR.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ledger and Times, May 2, 1962
    Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 5-2-1962 The Ledger and Times, May 2, 1962 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, May 2, 1962" (1962). The Ledger & Times. 3947. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/3947 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. •••• Ikieded RiA Bat All Round Reutucity Community !mime In Largest God Circulation In The City We Large-st 0 Trust Circulation ln The County IN OUR 83rd United Press International YEAR Murray, Ky., Wednesday Afternoon, May 2, 1962 a I ia Is \\ Po Pl I kilo\ 10100 Vol. LXNNIII No. 104 Nancy Scull Is Winner Of Mrs. Gertrude • • Calloway County Dress Review Thurman Dies Riots Follow As The Calloway County Dress Re- modeled a black wool dress and view was held Monday evening tailored jacket with pink acces- This Morning at the Little Chapel on the Mur- sories. OAS Blows Up ray State Campub. Carolyn Murdock was runner- 161 girls modeled their gar- up. She is the daughter of Mr. M r s. Gertrude ments. 30 of these garments were and Mrs. Billy Murdock of Lynn Thurman. BO, died this morning advanced work, 46 were first Grove. This is Carolyn's sixth at 9:30 o'clock at the Murray dresses, and the remaining were year sewing project.
    [Show full text]
  • Jlu! HOU 5 VOL
    HIGH TI LOW TIDE 5/19/ 5.6 AT ~ -- 5119/ 007 AT 1018 5/19/ 4.9 AT 1614 6/19/ ° 6 AT 2214 :Jlu! HOU 5 VOL. 3 No. 1122 KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS FRIDAY 18 MAY 1962 ICC INVESTIGATES RED HELD LOAS TERRITORY u.s. TROOPS SET UP THAILAND BASES VIENTIANE, MAY 16 (UPI)--THE CHIEf BANGKOK, MAY 17 (UPI)--EIGHTEEN HUNDRED U S. MARINES TRAINED FOR JUNGLE Of THE INTERNATIONAL CONTROL COMMIS­ WARFARE AGAINST COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS SET UP BASES WITHIN STRIKING RANGE OF SION (ICC) ON LAOS TODAY SAID THE THE LAOS-THAILAND BO~DER TODAY, JOINING 1,000 U.S TROOPS, AIR FORCE PLANES PRO-COMMUNIST FORCES HAVE PROMISED AND THE BO,OOO-MAN THAI ARMY IN THE JOB OF CONTAINING LAOS' PRO-COMMUNIST NOT TO ATTACK THE BORDER TOWN Of REBELS BAN HOUEI SAl UNLESS ASSAULTED BY BRITAIN ANNOUNCED IT WAS READY TO DISPATCH MILITARY fORCES TO THAILAND AND GOVERNMENT TROOPS HAD ALERTED AN AIR FORCE SQUADRON IN S,NGAPORE. AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND THE ICC'S INDIAN, CANADIAN AND SAID THEY WOULD SEND IN TOKEN fORCES IF ASKED AND PAKISTAN AND THE PHILIPPINES POLISH DELEGATES fLEW INTO REBEL­ WERE PREPARING TO DO THE SAME. I--------------------------------------~ THE U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT SAiD IN HELD PLAIN OfNJARS THIS MORNING TO SEEK WAYS Of SHifTING THE WAR FROM KENNEDY HOPES FOR AGRE~MENT WASH I NGTON A TOTAL OF 5,000 UQS. COM­ THE BATTLEfiELD BACK TO THE CONfERENCE BAT TROOPS WOULD BE USED IN THAilAND TABLE. BETWEEN LAOT IAN PR INCES TO PREVENT DIRECT I NVAS! ON BY SEALI NG ICC CHAIRMAN AVTAR SINGH Of INDIA WASHINGTON -- PRESIDENT KENNEDY SAYS OFf THE BORDER AND TO HELP THE THAIS SAID ON THEIR RETURN TO VIENTIANE HE IS COUNTING ON THE THREE LAOTIAN COMBAT COMMUNIST INfiLTRATION.
    [Show full text]
  • NEWS From: the AMERICAN LEGION 280 INDIANAPOLIS 6, INDIANA P
    NEWS from: THE AMERICAN LEGION 280 INDIANAPOLIS 6, INDIANA P. O. BOX 1055 • ME 5-8411 National Headquarters AMERICAN LEGION NEWS SERVICE (ALNS) FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 9-7-62 LEGION NEWS IN A NUT SHELL National Commander Charles L. Bacon of The American Legion has announced that Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy has accepted his invitation to he the guest of honor and to address the National Commander's dinner during the Legion's M+th National Con- vention in Las Vegas, Nev., Oct. 5-11. An audience of more than 1,000 is expected to attend the affair, scheduled for Oct. 9 at 7:30 p.m. in the Flamingo Hotel. The Anheuser-Busch, Inc. Post 299, St. Louis, Mo., has defeated a spunky team sponsored by the Kau-Tom Post 11, Honolulu, Hawaii, to become the 1962 national champions of American Legion Baseball. The llrth annual breakfast of the National Association of American Legion De- partment Historians will be Monday, Oct. 8, at 7:30 a.m., in the Terrace Room of the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas, Nev., during the Legion's I962 National Convention there. The annual election of officers will be at that time. Many Sons of The American Legion and junior members of the American Legion Auxiliary, along with thousands of other teenagers, did a grown-up job this summer as volunteers at the Veterans Administration's 169 hospitals across the nation. The American Legion's Patriotic Memorial Program will be at the Las Vegas High School Auditorium, Sunday, Oct. 7, during The American Legion's 1962 National Convention in Las Vegas, Nev.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ledger and Times, August 17, 1962
    Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 8-17-1962 The Ledger and Times, August 17, 1962 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, August 17, 1962" (1962). The Ledger & Times. 3831. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/3831 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. o I. • 'ST 16, 1962 Selected As A Belt AS Round Kestucty Community Revrarispee Largest Circulation in The City Largest Circulation In The County rear United Press International IN OUR 83rd YEAR Murray, Ky., Friday Afternoon, August 17, 1962 MURRAY POPULATION 10,100 1=mineene.. Vol. LXXXIII No. 195 eINSMINEY .HOSPITAL BID IS WITHIN CAPABILITIES • Duel Fought ' Low Bid Yesterday Leaves' Over Refugee Funds For Equipment ttrs. Alice Too 4, of Wash- BERLIN !UPI: — East and West ms at Re- "The apparent Berlin police fought a tear gas low bid of have to receive approval of the ii Hospital Hartz-Kirkpatrick duel today over the body of a Construction is Calloway Fiscal Court and the es of daily within the refugee shot and killed by the capabilities of the city Murray City Council. er in tutla and county" Mayor Communists as he tried to scale Holmes Ellis On approval the construction said yesterday following the wall.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1959-09-12
    • ~ 01 owan side. Servi,l!! The State (lflirenitr, 0/ /olca rmd 'he People of Iowa City 11_ Established In 1863 Associated Press Leased Wire And Wirepb,to Iowa City, Iowa, Saturday, September 12, 1958 II_ I the ,h.n ~ h. IK In hold China; InCiia Talk Peace; the lerner New ·Hampshire Davis (Tut) llional But Nehru Denies Red ~seed· feels llaele . think ave a Group Launches how ," Claims, To Land Areas Iitch Chil. tmph Hlr. Chou En-Iai Icelanders Protest Wayne Morse 1mb· too dllr, Rockefeller. Draft s • Asks Mutual U 5 s· t I A t D'elays Senate Bra· 'd' '.. en ry 5 C ~ and Un d erstan Ing WASHINGT9N ~ - Ice~and Thors, who was bristling indigo Possible N.H. close protested to W.ashmgton FrIday nanlly as he carried the protest Adiournment natch Sources Speculate that an AmerIca~ sc~tr~ had in to Foy Kohler acting assistant WASHINGTON IA'I - Sen. Wayne ~inn., forced two IcelandIc ofifcIals at ' g 4-6, Kh~ushchev Position gunpoint to lie in a puddle, arms secretary for European a{fair~, Morse (D·Orc. l, said Friday he Primary BaHle outstretched, for 10 minutes. cmerged an hour later saying they will do his utmost to stem Con· TOKYO IA'I - Talk of burying eeded the hatchet swelled anew Friday The State Department ' promptly had had an amicable meeting. gress' homeward rush well into Calif., Nix~n last in both Red China and India. Gov. expressed concern over this and Thors indicated that a relatJve. next week. Against :I out· ernment leaders of each country another recent GI incident in Ice· Iy inactiv,e Icelandic-U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • (Iowa City, Iowa), 1962-05-02
    Kennedy and AMA Faif To Reach Agreement on Medicare Some. Doctors J6ped The Weather .S. ~~ Back Social Mostly fa ir and warmer through ~ Uni. tonight, hi,hs in ttt. 701. Increa .. om ~he In, cioudinesl and continued mild ~, bet Security Plan of owan Thursday. I ~ersity WASffiNGTON (UPI) - Serving the State University of Iowa and the People of IOWtl CUy Presf1cialside ofnt th Kennedye American and 1edicaltop of- Established___________________ in 1868 AssocIated Preu1eaJed_______________ Wire and Wirephoto United___________________________________________ Press InternaUonaI Leaied WlreI 5 Centa per Copy Iowa City, Iowa, Wednesday, May 2, 1962_ A sociation (A fA) talked al­ most an hour on Tuesday and wound up stili poles apart on the issue of medical care for \.be aged under social security. Also unresolved was the question of who asked for the meeting. The White House said the doctors did, I the doctors said the President did. Faculty Petition Kennedy he'd firm'y to Ills view I that soci., .ecurity i. the proper Ipproach to medicar •. The doc· tors .merged still flatly opposed to the plan, which they consider ~\I\hed medicine. Meanwhile, another segment oC the medical profession launched a nationwide campaign among physi· Asks 'New Probe clans olf behalf of 'the President's medicare program. This group, headed by director Caldwell :S. Es· selstyn oC the Rip Van Winkle Clinic in Hudson, N.Y. , is called the Physicians Committee for Health Care for the Aged Through Social Security. The White House meeting came aft e r Democratic congressional Of Hankins Case leaders told the President at their weekly get·together that on their Easter visits home they found overwhelming grass·rools support for the social security idea.
    [Show full text]
  • GAME INFORMATION Mississippi Braves Media Relations Department Trustmark Park • 1 Braves Way • Pearl, Ms • 39208
    GAME INFORMATION Mississippi Braves Media Relations Department Trustmark Park • 1 Braves Way • Pearl, Ms • 39208 Mississippi Braves (25-35) vs. Pensacola Blue Wahoos (24-34) RHP Kyle Wright (3-6, 4.37) vs. LHP Seth Varner (2-0, 3.03) Game #61 • June 8, 2018 • 7:00 p.m. (CST) • Pearl, MS • Trustmark Park TODAY’S GAME: The M-Braves continue their sixth homestand of the season today with game one of a five-game series against Pensacola. The M-Braves were swept in a five-game series by Record Breakdown Pensacola in the first leg of the 10-game homestand. Following the series, the M-Braves will travel Score First ............................................... 20-7 Opponents Score First .............................5-28 to Biloxi for a five-game set, June 13-17, to close out the first half. Shutouts ................................................... 4-7 Score in 1 inning ........................................2-7 Score in 2 innings ................................... 6-11 Score in 3 innings ....................................10-8 LAST TIME OUT: The Montgomery Biscuits finished off the five-game sweep of the M-Braves on Score in 4 innings ..................................... 4-1 Score in 5 > innings ...................................3-0 Thursday night with a 5-2 victory. LHP Michael Mader suffered the loss in the start and allowed 4 Leading after 6 innings ........................... 21-4 Leading after 7 innings ............................23-2 runs, 3 earned on 3 hits with 4 walks and 2 strikeouts. RHP Enderson Franco relieved Mader and Tied after 6 innings .................................. 2-2 Tied after 7 innings ...................................2-4 tossed 5.1 innings giving up 1 run on 4 hits with a walk and 5 strikeouts.
    [Show full text]
  • Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
    PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter
    [Show full text]
  • Bent Upon Putting Fight in Club Pair Accused Os Not Telling Os Bribe Offer Higgins Fired, Senators Call up Big July Money Races NASHVILLE
    f piaf Two Lookouts Jurges at Red Sox Helm Today, PORTS Suspended in S THE Gaming A-14 EVENING STAR Probe Wathington, D C., Saturday, July 4, IM9 Bent Upon Putting Fight in Club Pair Accused Os Not Telling Os Bribe Offer Higgins Fired, Senators Call Up Big July Money Races NASHVILLE. Tenn.. 4 (AP).—Two Chattanooga base- New Pilot Sees Mele to Plug ball players, one of them the club's all-time home run leader, Hitting Team Coaching Gap Attract Hillsdale were suspended indefinitely yesterday on charges they BALTIMORE, July 4 (AP). By BURTON HAWKINS failedj to report a bribery at- —Bill Jurges, an aggressive ¦Mr BMfl Writer tempt. !|shortstop in the National NEW YORK, July 4.—More And Round Table Charles Hurth. president of ; League for 17 seasons, says he’ll By the Southern Association, said , expect the kind of play than 21 years after he turned the Associated Pres* including 17 to the English- same the action against Jess Levan , from the Boston Red Sox when down a chance to become a The 73d running of the SIOO,-! ! bred Amerigo, the second the 000-added and Waldo Gonzalez was ] he takes over as manager to- major league manager, Bill Suburban Handicap choice, and 18 to How Now, such charges in , at first taken on day. Belmont Park is the richest winner of the American last the 74-year history of the Jurgea gets his second oppor- race today's national turf “We’ll do the best we can on year. league. , tunity today when he takes program.
    [Show full text]