Palo Alto Times For 1964-10-02

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    T O D A Y IN T H E TIMESB r i d g e .. . t3 O b i t u a r i e s . . . . 4B u s i n e s s 6 S o c i e t y . . . . . . 11C o l u m n s 25 S p o r t s 26C o m i c s 31 T h e a t e r - M u s i c 21C o m i n g E v e n t s 2 1 T V - R a d i o 20E d i t o r i a l s ....24 Vital Stat ist ics 4G a r d e n 16 W a n t A ds .... 33M a r k e t s $

    .72nd YearNo: 237 ~~AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

    WEATHERFair through Thursday; high, 72 to 82;low, 47 to55. High inPalo Alto onThursday, 80; low this morning, 48;barometer at 8 a.m. today, 29.87. Hu -midity at 1p.m. today, 46 per cent.More weather data on page 4.

    44 PAGES, FOUR SECTIONS PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 2, 1964 I Oc Copy$175 MonthStudents stagemass protest;

    v buildi

    Students rough up policemanBerkeley policeman Phil Mowerer isdragged down steps of Sproul Hall by University ofCalifornia students durinq demon- strafion.

    holdB ER K ELEY - Fifteen hun-dred students launched a th i rdst raight da y of demonstrat ionswith a noon rally today againstthe University of California ad -minist rat ion for banning^ c a m -pus solicitation of funds for off-campus pol i t ical pro jects.At th e center of th e millingmass outside th e administ rat ionbuilding," Sproul Hall, was ared year-o ld campus po-lice ca r contain ing^Jack Wein-berg , 24, the 1963 UC graduatearrested Thursday as demon-st rat ions reached near-rio t pro-port ions.

    , The car has been t rappedmore than 24 hours with Wein-berg voluntari ly inside. It s roofhas sagged from being used asa speakers ' p lat form theday's purpose it served at to-day's quieT ral ly against UCpolitical solicitation policies an dagainst the "indefinite suspen-sion" Wednesday of eight s tu-dents for disregarding th e solic-itation rule.Campus pol ice arrested Wein-berg at 11:30 a.m . Thursdaynear Sather Gate for t respass*^ing after he refused to stop so-liciting funds for the StudentNonviolent Coordinating Com-

    lice carmit tee (SNCC) in behalf of civilrights in the SouthuU n it e d P r e s s I n t e rn a ti o n alsaid 100 demonstratorsrlay downin front of the campus pol ice ca rto prevent Weinberg's beinghauled off to j a j l ^ a n d 80 satdown behind th e vehicle .

    And Weinberg rem ained in thecar, which ha d been blocked allnight by demonstrators whosenumbers dwindled to200 over-night bu t burgeoned again withthe dawn.Groups of students identifiedas fratern i ty members gathereda r o u n d the demonstratorsThursday n ight in a display offreeing the car , but backed offwhen demonstrators threatenedforce, police said.The demonstrat ions cont inueddespi te p leas for reason by thestudent body president, CharlesPowell, an d a strong wartiingfrom Gov. Edmund G. Brown.In San Francisco , Brown saidthat such behavior "will not betolerated." He""said he "supportsfully" th e position ofU.C. Pres-ident Clark Kerr an d BerkeleyChancel lor Edward Strong insupporting the indefinite suspen-sion of the^eight students."Thisis'Cptirely an d simply ana t t e mp t on the part of the s tu-

    dents touse the campuses ofthe u niversity, unlawfully by so-liciting" funds and recrui t ingstudents for off-campus activi-t ies," he said ."This will not be to lerated .We must have and will con-tinue tohave l aw and orderon ourc a mp u se s . "At the height of th e demon-st rat ion Thursday 17 officerstried toremove the screaming,shouting, chanting young m enand women from th e administ ra-tion hall bu t soon retreated*Two officers were knockeddown and one was draggeddown th e hall. Later on e officerreported he had been bitten onthe leg.

    At fi rst demonstrators wereprotesting the s u s p e n s i o nWednesday of eight students foral legedly v io lat ing universi tyrules against distributing polit-ical literature and solicitingme mb e rs an d funds on the 27,-500-student campus.Both liberal - oriented studentgroups an d theCalifornia Stu-dents for Goldwater Organiza-tion opposed the ru les.

    (See page 2 for Stanfordru les relat ive to organizat ions. )

    100,000 persons flee giant Hurricane Hilda.NEW ORLEANS ( U P I ) Fringe winds of gigant ic hurri -cane Hi lda neared th e low-lyingLouisiana coast today andspeeded up an orderly exodus ofmore- than 100,000 residents.Louisiana Cajun country andp a r t of th e upper Texas coastwere abandoned to approachingHilda.At 11 a.m. PDT, Hilda wa s180 miles off the coast, with150-mile-an-hour winds in thecenter an d gale winds up to 73miles anhour extending for asmuch as 200 miles north an deast . ' It was 235 mijes south-southwest ofNe w Orleans t rav-eling north at1 miles pe r hour.Residents of the southwesttip of th e Missouri Gulf Coastwere ordered to evacuate to-day although th e Weather Bu -

    reau said th e coastal Mississip-pi area w as in no i mme d i a t edanger.Forty-foot seas rose in thegulf an d lashed abandoned off-shore oil rigs. Skies over south-ern Louisiana darkened as theprelude tothp s t o rm.RESIDENTS LEAVEOfficials ordered people outof seven Louisiana parishes(counties). Morgan City with

    13,5Q0 residents and Frankl inwith 8,700 were becoming ghosttowns. The Southern^Pacific sentin boxcar freight . t ra ins to helpbrjng them out.T h ^ Re d Cross said 73 shel-ters in 12inJand parishes ha dbeen set up, some asfar as 75miles infrom th e coast. Anoth-er 102 shel ters were ready inTexas. ,

    Sabine an d Sabine Pass, Tex.,empt ied . The 200 residentsmoved- in land.The Re d Cross wa s flying 10,-000 cots a n d ' 20,000 blanketsfrom Atlanta toNe w Orleans,mo re ai d shipments were com-ing from Texas and the U. S.Department of Agricul ture or-dered food supplies sent in.The Duke - Tulane footballgame Saturday n ight inNe w

    Orleans w as canceled and Tu-lane suspended classes. Sqhoolswere closing throughout th e af-fected area.Th e U.S. Weather Bureaucalled it "one of th e most pow-erfu l hurricanes ever seen inthe Gulf."In size i t was almost as big mLouisiana an d Mississippi com-bined. Tides began rising today,more coastal towns empt ied , an d

    ihe Coast Guard raced to help aship feared sinking in thestorm. WARNINGS UPHurricane warnings were dis-played along all of theLouisi-ana coast west of th e mouth ofthe Mississippi River.Th e U.S. Weather Bureausaid winds would reach galeforce late today in an a re afrom Galveston, Tex., toMo-

    bile, Ala. Tides were on therise and were expected toreach 3-6 feet. Th e bureau saidthe season ' s e ighth hurricanehad the potential to producetides up to 12 feet near an djust east of th e center when itstorms ashore. More than 52,000 people wereordered evacuated inSt. M a ryParish , which includes MorganCity an d Frankl in , La .

    Presidential safetyJ . Edgar Hoover cautionsagainst 'gestapo' methodr

    WASHINGTON - FBI Di-rector J. Edgar Hoover has cau -t ioned against establ ishment ofGestapo tact ics in efforts tosafeguard the President , theEvening Star reported today.He spoke ou t intestifying be -fore th e Warren Commission in-vest igat ing th e assassinat ion ofPresident John F . Kennedy, th eStar said ina-copyrighted ar-ticle, saying "w e don ' t want aGestapo. We have to, I think,

    maintain an even balance."He testified also, th e Star said ,about a State Department docu-ment which it said indicated thatLee Harvey Oswald , Kennedy'sassassin , wa s a thoroughly saferisk .Hoover' s test imony has notbeen made public by the War-ren Commission . It referred tohis test imony in its report ont h e assassinat ion , publ ishMonday. Inthat report , itcr i

    8 0 persons aboardm issing a ir linerPARIS (UPI) - A DC6 air-liner with 80 persons aboardIs missing between Palma,Majorca, andPort Etlenne,Mauretania, itwa s announcedtonight.The disclosure was made bythe airline, the Unio Transport

    Awromaritimes.The company said the air-

    liner, carrying 73 passengersand a crew of seven , l e f tParis Thursday night and aft-er a stop at Marseilles tookoff from Palma this morning.Airline sources in Paris saidthere were no Americans onon Itsw a y to Nouakchott,Mauretania, and last reportedits position by' radio when itwas near Alicante, Spain. ,

    cized theF B H o r ''anundulyrestrictive view of its ro le inpreventive intelligence work pri-or to the assassinat ion ." Thecommission indicated the FBIwas remiss innot, report ing tot he s e cr e t s e r v i c e O s w a l d' spresence in Dallas.The Star, in a story by J e r r yO'Learya longtime friend ofHooversaid a t ranscrip t o? his:ay 14 test imony wa s ma d eavai lable to the Star today.

    * NO COMMENTTh e F BI s o f a r has ma d e noc o mme n t on the commission ' sfindjng, bu t officials have indi-cated that th e report w as takenbitterly by high FB I officials.Hoover' s test imony also in-cluded recommendat ions forprotect ive measures that hethought might be more success-ful than those employed by thesecret serv ice up to th e t i meKennedy wa s slain last Nov. 22.I don't think you can getabsolu te securi ty wi thout a lmostestablishing a police state, an dwe don ' t want that ," Hoovertold th e commission .

    U.S. dropss p y caseNEW YORK (AP) - Th efederal government today un-expectedly dropped its spycase against ^Russian couple"in the interesnof national se -curity."U.S. Atty. Joseph P.Hoeym ov ed f or d i smi ssa l of theconspiracy indictment againstAlexandra Sskolov and hiswife shortly after a jury of 11men and one woman had beenselected totry the couple inBrooklyn* federal court.Hoey told Dist. Judge JohnF. Dooling Jr. that the ortiyportion of the indictment thatconnected the two defendantswith an international ring ofRussian espionage agents per-tained tomeetings inN e wYork and Washington on June15 and 16, 1963. "The a t t o r n e y g en er al ,"Hoey continued, " h as Instruct-ed me In the interests of na-tional .security 16 offer no testi-mony whatsoever regardingthese overt acts."These are the o n l y a c t swithin theconspiracy whichconnect the two defendantswith this conspiracy. There-fore, I move todismiss theindictment."Judge Dooling agreed, anddischarged th e jury.

    Senate OK's compromise foreign aid billWASHINGTON ( AP ) - TheSnate sent to the White Housetoday a compromise $3.5 billionforeign aid authorization billover stormy protests of some ofi t s members.The vote was 35 to 15.Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore.,called thecompromise, passedearl ier by the House, "Themost unacceptable conferencereport tocome before the Senat e in my 20 ye a rs in thisbody." He forced a roll callvote on itsadoptionSen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y..Italian policerecover fortunein lost gemsCUNEO, Italy ( AP ) - Policereported today they have recov-ered several hundred thousanddollars worth of jewfclry lo stlast year in th e crash of KingSaud's private jetliner along theAlpine border between Franceand Italy.The police said they stoppedthree teen-agers in th e T u r i nrailway station Thursday, foundpart of th e jewels on them andrecovered therest from thei rhomes inCuneo.

    said he thought it "shamefuland most unfortunate" that Sen-ate conferees agreed to drop anamendment expressing congres-sionaj condemnation of persecu-tion of Jews in the Soviet Union.Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark.,chai rman of th e Senate confer-e e s , said substitute languagesimply expressing condemna-tion an a repugnance of an y re

    ligious persecution of people ofall faiths, without singling outRtissia, wa s agreed to. He saidthe House conferees opposedputting the issue on the foreignaid bill.Completion of congressionalaction on the authorization billc leared the way for expectedHouse approval of a $3 25 bil-lion appropriations bill provid-

    ing the actual money, for fcreign aid spending, which theSenate passed Thursday.A controversial rider aboutreapport ionment , tacked to thebill Senate after weeks of debatewas st ripped out by the confer-

    ence commit tee.Both the Senate andHouseaccepted this action inpassageof the bill.

    W oodwa rd warns councilfacing change in balanceMayor Bert Woodward, sin-gling ou t C o un ci lm a n R o b e r tDebs for c ri ti ci sm , w a r n e dThursday afternoon Palo Alto'srole as anexceptional city willbe in jeopardy at the City Coun-cil elections next M ay .Addressing th e Palo Alto Ki-wanis Club, Woodward said thebalance ofpower on the councilcould be shifted to a "vocalminori ty" which st resses "de-lay, confusion and emotionals t re s s . "Woodward, a c o u n c i l m a ns i n c e 1957, n o t e d a " re a lc h a n g e " in the complexion of

    ci ty government "and the type,of people serving on th e coun-c i l " in the past five years.

    "Some say facetiously thecouncil is afflicted with the fourD's diddle, dabble, delay an dDebs, " t h e mayoj quipped. "Igo along with this/'He called for election of threepersons " that ar e team players,can think on ahjfyad basis, canaccept criticism and get off thedeck and m a k*e the decisionsthat ar e necessary Upkeep thecity growing in til?^ren.'Ibnwewant it to grow " .,Only three councilmen will be: elected next May, as reductionof the council ordered by votersin June begins.COUNCIL CU TThe council presently ha s 15me mb e rs . It will be cut to nine

    over theperiod of three elec-tions (by 1969).Neither Woodward norDebswill be up for e l e c t i o n ^ May.The expiring terms arethoseof Robert W. Byxbee, Noel E.Porter and Lee Rodgers, all onthe council sjnee 1953, Dean R.Cresap and H. Christian Zweng.Porter and Cresap have indi-cated th e y defin i te ly wi ll notseek re-election. Byxbee says hep r ob a bl y w o n' t. R o d g e r s and7. w e n g h a v e not commit tedthemselves.Woodward's main topic wasthe city's public works depart-ments. He announced the city's1,200-acre F othills Par k will beopened to the public May 1.Board calls off probe in move to ease unrest in M t . V iew schools

    Thursday night wa s hailed asa major turning point towardpeace inthe squabble-wrackedMountain Vi ew ElementarySchool District, as the schoolb oa rd v o t e d unanimously topostpone its request for an out-side probe of dist ric t unrest . ,In postponing th e probe theyhad requested from th e Califor-nia School Boards Association(CSBA), the board was uphold-ing its end of a previous infor-mal agreement with the teach-ers that each group would post-

    pone its investigation if the oth-er would. Th e teachers agreedinformal ly Tuesday to delaytheir investigation bythe Cali-f or ni a T e a c h e r s A s s oc ia ti on(CTA).Specifically, the board post-poned the CSBA probe "untilfurther not ice ," they agreed tohear a report somet ime beforeF e b . 15 from acting Supt. Rol-jland Jones on the progress heand the teachers areable tomake toward permanent peaceduring the next four months. At

    the first meeting inMarch, th eboard wi l l re-examine th e needfor a CSBA probe, based onJones ' report .CLOSED MEETThe Thursday n ight turn ingpoint came largely as the resul tof Tuesday afternoon's unprece-dented closed special meeting ofthe ent i re d ist ric t staff. Jo n e swas given a standing ovationfor hi s accomplishments in eas-ing tensions, which had grad-ually increased over aperjodseveral years. Jones and a com

    mittee of seven teachers andtwo administrators developed aprogram toreconcile the vari-ous factions.At the Thursday night boardmeeting, leaders of all three fac-tions the administration, theteachers and the trustees of*fered odes tothe new era ofpeace and cooperation."You've heard of the spirit toldof Camp David and the spiritof Yalt*," said Trustee Shermanof McCormick, the board's strong-est critic of the dissident teach-

    ers in the past. "Well, this is thespirit of solution."RESOLUTIONJones revealed that 213 of thedistrict's 215 teachers signed aJoint resolution urging coopera-tion with the acting superintend-ent inhis efforts tosolve thedistrict's problems and agreeingto call off the CTA probe. Hethe Times afterward: "Ifwe alt live up toour commitments, I think this marks thebeginning of the end of our prob-l ems."

    A letter wa s read aloud fromJohn Siemens, chai rman of th eMountain View charter of theAmerican Federat ion of Teach-e rs (A FT) . He sawMhe chapterc o mme n d s th e board an d admin-istration for b r i n g i n g a boutwhat appears to be a periodof reapproachment " The AFTwa s at the forefront of the dissi-dent movement inth e past , butthey pledged to "work for thesustentat ion" of the p e a c et re a t y .Last year, when thedistrict

    strife w as at its height, McCor-mick and Siemens often ex-c ha ng ed h e a t e d a n d bittercharges, wi th Siemens serv ingas a leader for the dissidentteachers. But Thursday n ightMcCormick visited S44*m e n s 'home to thank him personallyfor his letter of cooperat ion .Another comment came fromJack Gibson, a parent whospearheaded a mass rally las.tye a r of parents demanding thatSupt . E. J. Lindst rom (now on

    sick leave with heart trouble)explain some ofhis administ ra-tive decisions that were fol-lowed by unrest . Lindst rom hadinsisted he was forbidden by lawto discuss personnel matterspublicly."The manifestat ion of sincer-ity, the open andcandid re-sponse toqueries bythe (act-ing) administration is impres-sive and disarming. Th e frtshai r c i rculat ing in the central of-(Continued on page 2, col . 1)

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    2PALO ALTO TIMES, FRIDAY, OCT. 2, 1964

    Horse takes a swimBourbon went for dip last night in the pool of owner RalphRichey in W oods i de .

    1+ was a lovely morningfor a dip in the family pooWOODSIDE - Unlike Mr. Ed,Bourbon, an eight-year-old palo-mino will never be able to tellthe world how he wound up ina large plastic swimming poolhere this morning.' Whether, like Tom Sawyer,Bourbon likes to take a swim"now and then tokeep off sleep-iness ," is purely a mat t e r ofconjecture.At any rate, when Mrs . RalphL. Richey rolled out of bed this

    window of her home at 215 Jos-selyn Lane:"There was Bourbon s tandinghip-deep in the pool ."Mrs. Richey said she was sur-Board callsoff probein M t. View

    (Continued from page 1)fice is pleasant to take," saidGibson Thursday night.He added:"However deep - seated at t i-tudes of doubt and disrespectar e notquickly dispelled. Timeand effort will build confidenceThe situation is explosive andcareless conduct by anyone willput us m deeper trouble than wehave known."M any of us citizens feel itis imperative that all par t iesbe well informed. There is noplace here for silence, secrecyor evas iveness ."Siemens said the friction be-tween personali t ies has . beeneased but that the deep-seatedproblems remain to be solvedand that this will be the ulti-mat e t e s t of the new atmos-pher e .

    prised but not awie-stricken bythe sight, one of tjlvo horses thefamily owns, is an independenthorse and does a number of un-usual things."It ' s not unusual to see himeating dahlias in the flower bed,but this was a little different."Mrs. Richey was not excitedbecause Bourbon was not hurt ."Apparently, he cl imber on thedeck of the" pool and then slippedoff. How long hehad been in hispredicament 1don't know," shesaid.Did he get out of the pool?Yep.The Peninsula Humane Soci-ety arrived on the scene, andalthough it took three hours toget the proper equipment onhand, Bourbon was hoisted gent-ly from his watery- bed by aswing hoist just after noon.

    Circulation callsService cal ls to the TimesCirculat ion Depar tment maybe made dally from 8 a .m . to7 p.m. If your Times is notdelivered, phone 326-1200. Anextra copy will be sent out.

    T O M O R R O WA T 7:40 P.MJST A N F O R D VS .U C LA .PLAY-BY-PLAY:DO N KLEIN

    M an sentencedto prison termfo r shooting sonREDWOOD CITY - WilliamMendez, saying he is "not bi t terat anyone," was sentenced to-day to one to 14 years in s tateprison for shooting his 4-year-old son, Paul.San Mateo County SuperiorCourt Judge J. A. Branson pro-nounced sentence after rejecting a plea by defense at torneyThomas E. Paige for a countyjai l term ins tead.Mendez, 48-year-old SanFran-cisco merchant seaman, wasconvicted of assault with intentto commit murder by J u d g eBranson, without a jury.He fired seven shots into theches t , abdomen, arm and legof the boy while thTtwo wereon a walk near South San Fran-cisco High School last July 6.The boy wtfs critically injuredbut recovered.Bab Alto fflimes

    (Founded In 1893)Ownr; Peninsula NewspapersIncorporated.An Independent NewspaperPalo Alto Newsand Pale A lto Shopping R eview245 Lytton Ave., Palo AltoPublished afternoons Except Sunday*at Palo Alto, Calif .Charles T. Tyler, PublisherAlexander Bodi, EditorF. J. O'NaH l, Business ManagerMember Audit ' Bureau of C irculationsMember of The Assocleted PressSecond-class postage paid.

    Supervisorswill discusschange planSAN JOS E A reorganizationplan for the Santa Clara CountyPublic Works Depar tment wil lbe considered by the board ofsupervisors Monday.The proposal was made byPublic Works Director James T.Pott. It is the extension of aplan which ear l ier had been ap-proved by the supervisors during budget hear ings .Pott said his recommendationis to create "a s trong^manage-men t t eam."The proposal cal ls for an -as-s is tant depar tmental directorprovide the . neces-sary immediate supervis ion ofthe depar tment and its 705 em-

    ployes. Such a post would resultin the abolishment of the $18,-500-a-ye.ar assistant-director-forbuildings position now held byOtis Calhoun.The plan would have somedepar tmental duties transferredh J i l d i ^ i divi-, a newTJepar tment di-vision of adminis trat ion and^ would be created. Itwould be responsible for fiscalmanagemen t and be headed bya chief of adminis trat ive serv-ices .Pott said thereorganization isnecessary because of the de-par t men t ' s d i ver s if ied d u t i e s .For ins tance, it is responsiblefor expressways , cons tructionsupervision, the county's build-ing program, mass transpor-tat ion, airpor ts and mintenance.

    Clark property22 acres offered to city for parkDr. Esth er Clark- has offeredto sel l Palo Alto 22 acres of landnear Old Trace Road for parkpurposes , she said today.Dr / Cl a r k s a i d she envis ions

    the level land, used as an air-port by an ear l ier owner; as alarge, neighborhood park for thelower foothills.Both she and City Manager

    Jerome Keithley s tressed thatdiscuss ions are ''in a' very ear lys t age . "Neither would discuss the ask-ing pr ice.

    Keithley said there isn't afirm figure, yet. He said a re-ported price of $19,000 per acreis inaccurate.Keithley said he has not con-

    School aidbonus plandisputedA debate whether the UnruhAct "bonus" for unified districtsis really a bonus at all tookplace at Thursday night ' s meet-ing of the San Mateo CountyCommittee on School DistrictOrganization.The session was the first ofthree meetings the commiteemust hold before again submit-ting a unification proposal to theState Board of Education for theSequoia Union High School Dis-tr ict .Chairman J. Paul Bradleywon an agreement f rom commi t t ee member s to try to reachsome decision on a newpropo-sal when the group, meets againon Oct. 15."In myopinion, wehave twoa l t e r na t ives , " Br ad l ey s a i d ,"ei ther to resubmit the proposalthat was rejected by the s tateboard last month, or to submita proposal to unify the wholehigh school district."A plan to divide the Sequoiaarea into three unified districts

    was turned down by the StateBoard of Education, on groundsthat there were no "exception-al circumstances" to split thehigh school district.If the same proposal is re-submitted, Bradley said, then itscommittee must be prepared tospell out the "exceptional cir-cums t ances " if there is any hopeof persuading thes tate board tochange itsmind.He sugges ted that proponentsof the three-way switch maketheir pitch at the next meting.The new Uriruh Act grants anadditional $10 per pupil in s tatebas ic aid for all school dis tr ictsin California, plus a $15-per-student "bbnus" for dis tr icts whichvote in favor of unification.Mrs. S. J. Millward of PortolaValley said the increase in bas icaid places most dis tr icts in SanMateo County on a higher fi-nancial levelthereby makingthe" dis tr icts el igible for lessequalization funds."With one hand they give toyou and with the other hand theyt ake away / ' j s he dec l a r ed .Dr. Ernes t L. Nelson, of^SanCarlos , vice chairman of thecommittee, agreed that the s tatewas ' taking out of one pocketand giving it to another ."Goldwater plans5 TV appearancesWASHINGTON (UPI) Republican National Headquar terssays Sen. Bar r y M. Goldwaterwil l make at least five 30-minute televis ion appearances dur-ing the las t month of the pres idential campaign.He wil l appear Tuesday andOct. 13 on the NBC networkand Oct. 20, Oct. 29 and Nov. 2on CBS. The t ime wil l be 9:30p.m. EDT in each case.

    Cat-type protest not likelyto occur on Stanford campusStanford University could be

    faced withthat which an issue s imilar totouched off s tudentdemonstrat ions at Univeryity ofCalifornia, Stanford spokesmensaid today.But they confidently said theydon' t expect it to happen.Stanford normally doesn' t letorganizations solicit funds or re-cruit members on campus un-

    less they are approved "volun-tary" campus groups whichhave filed constitutions, lists ofofficers and annual reports withthe univers i ty and bank throughthe s tu3enrfund, according toDonald Winbigler, dean of stu-dents .The UC demonstrat ions s tar t-ed with protes ts aimed at uni-versity rules against political

    4-hour ordealSan Jose hiker, 19,rescued after fallSAN JOSE State forestryworkers fought through ruggedterrain for four hours Thursdayafternoon to rescue a San Joseyouth cr i t ical ly hur t in a falldown a cliff.The youth, Roger Marseil lan,19, of 10960 Fleming Ave., fell

    down the cliff while on a hikingjaunt with two fr iends in an areaRuling okayspromotionby PG&EfirmSAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Pacif ic Gas & Electr ic Co. maycontinue to spend money to pro-mote itself, the State PublicUtilities Commission has ruled.The PUC Thursday dismisseda complaint aimed at makingthe ut i l i ty cease expenditures oncompany publicat ions .The complaint was brought byRichard Miller , 36, of Berkeley,and 39 others , andclaimed thatPG&E's rates are high becauseit spends so much money onsales promotion, lobbying andpoli t ical act ivi t ies .Miller, a history professor atSan FranciscoArtInsti tute,

    three miles south of Highway 9and Skyline Boulevard. The areais in the Santa Cruz Mountains ,jus t over the county l ine.Marseil lan, a former s tudentat San Jose City College, re-cently returned f rom NationalGuard bas ic training, in Okla-homa.His mother , Mrs . Gilber t Marseillan, said her son and twoother friends went to the ar eain ear ly af ternoon "merely tohike."State fores try rangers saidthe boy apparently lost his foot-ing and fell down a sharp s lope.They indicated that at one pointof his fall Marseillan tumbledthrough 30 feet of space.Rescuers traveled into thear ea as far as they could byjeep, and then walked the res tof the way. M a r s e i l l a nwas brought out by s tretcher .He was taken toSan Jose Hos-pital where his condition wassaid to be satisfactory today.His injuries include a possiblebroken jaw, s p i n e , and r ightankle, and broken r ight wris t .The youth also sus tained numer-ous bruises about the face.The boy's father-is a chef.

    charged that PG&E used ratepayers ' revenues to convincethe ratepayers they were gett inggood service at low expense.In dismissing the complaint ,the PUC said it could find noevidence that theutility violatedany s tate laws .Former senatorplans campaignWAS HINGT ON ( AP ) -F or merSen. William F. Knowland ofCalifornia will make a numberof speeches in behalf of theGoldwater-Miller campaign, theRepublican National Committeeannounced Thursday.GOP national chairman DeanBurch said the California news-paper editor wil l campaign ex-tensively for theticket in the South Republicanand MiddleWest for the next three weeks .

    Alleged forgerof credit slipsnabbed by policeA 22-year-old woman who al-legedJy forged charge slips tobuy $925 worth of women's cloth-ing in Palo Alto Thursday wasarres ted later in the day ons imilar charges in Oakland.Palo Alto police said todaythe woman, Marlene Adams,address unknown, is accused offorging the name of S. W Av-er y to make charges .at I. Mag-nin, 50 Stanford Plaza.Miss Adams was arres ted inOakland when she attempted as i mi la r char ge t he r e , p o l i c esaid. They did not know the to-tal of the attempted charge atOakland. They have filed a holdon the woman so she can beprosecuted Ideally.Son. mother dieFamily tragedytwo suicidesSANTA MONICA ffl - A pow-erful sedan roared down SantaMonica pier, suddenly swerved,then burst through the railingand hur t led into the-sea.In two seconds it sankcarry-ing a 47-year-old investments ex-per t to his death.Ten hours later , eight milesaway, in Beverly Hills, theman's mother collapsed anddied before a doctor could besummoned. An empty pill bottlewas found nearby.Police today listed deaths ofboth Philip Zetzer, 47, and Mrs.Bertha Zeter, 75, as probablesuicides.Detectives said Mrs. Zeterapparently killed herself Thurs-da y in grief over the death ofher only son.But what was Zeter ' s motive?

    K C B S R A D IO74 AM &

    M o n d a y & T u e s d a y , O c t o b e r 5 th ft 6 t h , 7 : 3 0 p . m .S A N F R A N C I S C O AND SAN C A R L O S I S T A T 1 SINCLUDING A C O L L E C T I O N OPM O D E L H O M EF U R N I S H I N G S F R O M S A R A T O G A

    A Tremendous Collection of Cut Crystal CrvdVictorian Lovt Sta t It Matching Ch ain Larej* Rugs Danish & Mahogany Btdroom S uites CustomSofas Victorian Marble T op Chests & CommeeUsLamps Bric-a-brac Porctlains OccasionalTablas & Chairs M tdium Sizt Safes Near-nwApp liances. . iP r e v i e w S u n d a y , O c t o b e r 4 t h , 1 0 : 0 0 a . m . to 5 :0 0 p j n .ATHERTON AUCTION STUDIO171 PlfHt A V W I I M , U4tt4 City, Calif. 3M-2944 324-Otl l L I N I U N I Y , A U C T I O N I IK

    D i v e r s r e co v er e d Z e t ze r 'sbody from his1963 Lincoln Con-tinental on the sQidy ocean bot-tom 15 feet down.They at tached cables and at ractor and dragged the bat-tered', white sedan from thesurf. There were no notes onhis person, in his car, or in hishome.Zeter was dis tr ict managerof the Century City office of In-vestors Diversified Services,Inc., and a f irm spokesman saidhe knew of no financial prob-lems afflicting Zetzer.Fr iends said he was devotedto his wife and childrentwodaughters , one of them marr ied,and a sonand "unusually de-voted, not jus t to his wife andchildren, but to his par en t s aswell ."He flad been a bsent fromhome several hours when mem-bers of his family went to the

    Beverl y Hil l s P o l i c e S t a ti onear ly Thursday to r epo r t -h i mmiss ing.They mentioned, the reportshowed, "suicidal tendencies be-caus e of i l lness ."At about that same t ime awitness on the pier sawZeter 'ssedan suddenly accelerate andswerve into the guard rai l ."It hit out ab out 40 feet," saidSanta Monica Harbor Depar t-men t P a t r o l man Jim Ecker t ."It f loated about two seconds ,then wentwear our down,trunks We alwaysunder ourclothespeople are always try-ing to commit suicide off thispier and I ripped off myclothes anddived down."I t was no use. The doorswere all locked'. And the win-dows were only open about aninch."The af termath to the double

    You niect thenicest people on oH O N D A

    1 . We b e s e e c h to t e a c h2 . We w a i t t o d e m o n s t r a t e3 . We are b e n t to r e n t4. We r e p a i r w i t h o u t d e s p a i r5. We f i n a n c e w i t h r o m a n c e6 W e ' r e m a d e to t r a d e

    TRY US *.MO SfF '

    MOUSf-' OFc*MHONDA

    t ragedy came later Thursday atthe Bever ly Hil ls home of Isa-Idore andBertha Zetzer .Mrs. Zeter and her 79-year-jold husband were sitting togeth-er on a couch, gr ieving abouttheir son's death, then she felll o v e r .Detectives said she had appar-

    ently taken a whole bottle ofsleeping pills. They co uldn'tlearn when.Isadore Zetzer was so shat-tered by the second death hewas unable to give police co-herent detai ls about his wife'sdeath.M exico policehunt six killersACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) -Police are hunting six killerswho escaped from theprison inArcelina, near Acapulco, af ter ariot in which a police major waskilled and a policeman and twoprisoners were wounded.The r iot began Thursdaywhen several convicts at tackedand disarmed guards . Policereinforcements quelled the riot-ing af ter an exchange of shots .The pr isoners who escaped

    were serving terms for homi-cide.

    P l u m b i n g S H e a l in gt U S an Antonio ltd.ServicingPLUMBING &H E A T I N GA i r C o n d i t i o n i n gF u r n a c e s a n d R a d i a n tH e a t32M561

    II Co.n.iw

    groups soliciting funds or re-cruiting on the campus . Lead-ers decried this as a curb onfreedom of speech.Winbigler said the Stanfordregulations were established inApril, J963, when the universityboard of, trustees authorizedthe use ofStanford facilities bysectar ian and partisan politicalgroups .Approved voluntary politicalgroups also were given the r ightto use the Stanford name, pro-v id ed an y p ub li c s t a t e m e n tclear ly indicates the group doesnot represent or speak for theuniversity or its student body.The official student legislatureis barred f rom comment on^ off-campus matters because men*bership is compulsory, not vol-untary.The Stanford Board of Trus-tees last May adopted rules forpicketing and dem onstrations oncampus . If applied at Berkeley,many points would have beenviolated.

    The rules permit picketing anddemonstrat ions in public areasof the campus as long as theydo not interfere with vehicularor pedestrian -^traffic, cla sses,scheduled meetings , ceremoniesor other educational processesand are not held within univer-sity buildings, stadiums or fieldswhile university functions are inprogress or in the private res i-dential areas of the campus .Stanford does not specify theaction to be taken aga inst Vt6?lators . Each ca^e is handled orthe basis of circumstances in-volved.Campus police restrained onegroup of pacifists from carryingsigns into an annual ROTC re-view in the S u n k en Diamondlate in May, the only test sofar of the new rule.

    veyed the offer to the C i t yCouncil. An a t t empt to do sotwq weeks ago failed when sev-eral - councilmen s trol led awayafter a regular council meeting.Keithley terms the site lo-cated south of Palo Alto Vet-erans Hospital , "large and inter-es t ing." NEGOTIATINGHe hasbeen negotiat ing withStanford for about 30acr es ofland in a t r iangle bounded byFoothil l Expressway, FremontAvenue andAras tradero R o a dnear the Clark proper ty. Thiswould be for a park and athlet iccenter .Keithley indicated todayClark proper ty is being dis-cussed only for a par k .The council is on record asdesiring a park in the lowerfoothills area. It has suggestedthat the county share the cos tsand that the park be opened toEos Altos and Los Altos Hillsres idents .Dr. Clark is a pediatr ician andfounder of the Children's HealthCouncil of Palo Alto.She said she& would "ratherhave the l and us ed . as a parkthan cut up for houses ."Dr. Clark would retain abouteight acres, including her homeat 960 Old Trace Road.Lunob launchesfire preventionobservancesFire Prevention Week on theMidpeninsula was given a for-mal kickoff today at a SakuraGardens luncheon in MountainView attended by governmentand civic leaders, industry" rep-resentat ives andfire preventionofficials.The luncheon was sponsoredby the Foothill Insurance AgentsAssociation. It officially beganajweek-of fire prevention activ-ities that will lead to the "hos-ing down" publicly ofChief Byron Chaney oftain View or Chief Wilson Mer-riam of Palo Alto next Satur-day.Who gets hosed down dependson which depar tment comes outon top in a fire safety contestdur ing the week.

    eitherMoun-

    If s q iwho registered as RedBURLINGAME San MateoCounty's only voter to regis teras a "Communis t" said Thurs-da y it wa s all a joke that "wasfunny at the t ime, but doesn'tseem funny now."Alfred Willbrand, 45-year-old,self-employed "artist and writ-e r , " isdesignated asCommunis tin registration lists prepared bySan Mateo County Clerk JohnBruning for the November elec-tions.Contacted in his BurlingameMelabs, SRIawarded U.S. .contractsMelabs, Palo Alto electronicmanufacturer ,omponentsStanford Research andInstitute ofMenlo Park each received gov-ernment contracts in excess of$1 mUTTonrit was learned today.A $1,5 million contract wasawarded Melabs f rom the ArmyElectronics Command at FortMonmouth, N.J . , for microwavereceivers. The work will be per-formed in Palo Alto, and willinvolve an expansion of Me-labs ' staff, according to execu-t ive vice pres ident Perry Var-tanian.The award was announced by

    apar t men t , he said hisregis tra- -tion Sept. 10 under theCommu-nist label was a joke.When Willbrand registered onthe last day of regis trat ion, hetold Deputy Regis trar L. M.Roth that he was a "Commu-nis t ." .Roth asked Willbrand twice ifhe meant what he said, and Will-brand said he did, according toElection Division chief JohnKiefer.The San Mateo County Dis-trict, Attorney's office, ques-t ioned about the matter , g ave as-surance that nojer ime was com- mitted through "such regis trat ion."If false information weragiven on the affidavit of registra- (tion, it would be a cr i me , " ex-plained Dep. Dist. Atty. HowardE. Gawthrop. "But choice ofpar ty isnot something which caneasily be determined to be'false.' You don't have to havebeen a Republican in order toregis ter as a Republican, forexampl e . "The worried Willbrand said heordinar i ly regis tered "independ-

    tfie"6ffTce of U.S. Sen. PierreSalinger.Congressman J. A r t h u rY o u n g e r , R -S an M a te o , an-nounced the awarding of a$1,409,346 contract to SRI tostudy andevaluate potential ef-fectiveness of the Nike X anti-missile system. It is a continua-tion of acontract for work start-ed ear l ier , according to HomerMeaders , SRI public relationsdirector .

    en t . "NoCommunis t in San Mateo Countysince 1950.one else has regis tered

    G L O O MG et rid of i t T a k e the t e l e p h o n ea n d c f i a l L o n g D i s t a n c e t o f a m i l y orf r i e n d s y o u ' v e b e e n t h i n k i n g of.W o r k s l i k e m a g i c , a n d t h e y ' l l e n j o yt h e s e h a p p y m i n u t e s , t o o . Fo r n o t h -i n g s a y s Y O U ( i k e y o u r v o w J T

    @ P a c i f i c T e l e p h o n eR e m i n d e r : T o' c o m p l e t e y o u r c a l l sm o r e q u i c k l y , d i a l t h e m d i r e c t .

    ' ar fx liF roomA P P LY IT Y O U R S E L F N O S A N D I N G N O F I N I S H I N GP R O V I D E S T H E B E A U T Y O F C O R K H A R D E R T H A N O A KThe cost of Forrest W ood Block FJooring i* far below other w o o d * floor*i n g . No experience necessary to apply rt. Anyone can do a good job.So durable it is used extensively in roller rinks. W omen's spike heels,heavy furniture won't dent it. S atisfaction guaranteed. Also, ask aboutFORREST WOOD STRIP and 2 BY-FLOR.

    '' . . . , , , ,. t . t . M n i m

    MERNER LUMBER CO.795 EL CA MINO REAL PALO A LTO.

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    M ilitant farmgroup 'recesses'DE S MOINES, Iowa (AP) The National Farmers Organi-zat ion which hadbeen strivingfor 43 days to halt the m a r k e ting of livestock in a drive forhigher pr ices ended its holdingaction Thursday night .But Oren Lee Staley of Rea ,

    Mo., the NFO president saidthat itfwas only a recess in thecontrovers ial farm group's ef-for t to gain bargaining power onpr ices with meat processors .The boycott , which s tar tedAug. 20, wasthe longest in aser ies of such moves. Effectivein 23 states oncatt le, hogs andsheep, it was marked by violentincidents in the Midwest. TwoNFO men were kil led when acatt le t ruck backed over themat a loading station in Wiscon-s in.

    Slayingof infantsrelatedFRANKFURT, Germany (AP) Drunken SS guards torebab i es f rom t h e i r mo t her s 'a r ms , broke the children's backsacross their knees and flungthem into open f ires at theAuschwitz death camp, a wit-ness testified at Germany's

    larges t war cr imes tr ial today.Alexander Lebedov told thecourt t rying 20 former Ausch-witz guards and functionariesthis was the s tandard SS methodfor s laughter ing babies of in-mate mothers working as s lavelaborers in the German concen-trat ion camp."Those drunken SS men,'Lebedov continued, "r ipped thebabies f rom their mothers andcracked their backs across theirknees l ike pieces of kindlingwood before tossing them intolong trenches in which openf ires were burning."Many young mothers whodid not want to give up theirbabies threw their arms aroundthe jackbooted legs of theguar ds and begged in vain forthe l ives oftheir babies . Some-times , they were told their chil-dren would be kept for them inkindergar tens but they never-saw their" offspring again."

    No one would sayhow muchlives tock NFO men now will besending to mar ke t and wha t t hei mpac t on prices wil l be. Theorganization does not discloseits membership.Staley cautioned members notto dump their supplies . At Chi-cago Thursday catt le and hogprices were about the s ame asbefore Aug. 20 and were around$6 a hundredweight under mini-mums the NFO sought.Staley advised members notto sel l anything unti l the m arketpr ice has been es tablished onthe day they plan to sel l ."Keep production away fromthe terminal markets wherereceipts f igures are given allthe publicity and will be used todepr es s p r i ces , " he said.The NFO disclaimed respons i-bility for much of the violencethat occurred in September inMinnesota, Illinois, Iowa, Wiscons in, Nebraska, Missour i andother s tates and blamed outs idrs.There was a s teady s tream ofscattered repor ts f rom l ives tocktruckers that shots were f ired attheir vehicles or that their t i reswere cutby devices thrown onthe highways .Pact reachedin New Y orkbus walkoutNEW YORK (UPI)A sett le-men t was reached ear ly todayin a labor dispute which hadprompted z, bus company tosuspend operat ions ,nearly 90,000 children

    CHARGE R S HUF F L ENIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)-The San Diego Chargers havedropped passWhitehead and defender Budrunning backGerry McDougal and activatedveterans Dick Harr is andKeithKi nder man .

    stillCHAINEDto theIRONINGBOARD?

    D O N ' T I R O N . . . P R E S S !th modern SPAR TA NPRKS-O-MAT/C

    W A Y !

    caus ing manyof them phys ical ly handicappedto find other means of t rans-portation to school.The agreement came af ter as ix-hour meeting at City Hallbetween representat ives of theChildren's Bus Service Inc. andLocal 1181 of the Amal gamat edTrans it Union.Mayor Rober t F. Wagner ,who at tended the session, an-nounced the set t lement.Th e bus firm suspended op-erat ions Thursday af ter a four-day "s lowdown" bydrivers whocomplained that some of theequipment on the buses was de-fective and unsafe.Khrushchev saysSoviets to getconsumer goodsMOSCOWNikita S. (UPI) P r emi eKhrushchev hapromised the Soviet people thifirst dividends of his "goulashcommuni s m" they will getmore consumer goods and spendless fora r m s andheavy indus-try.Khrushchev made his pledgeat a recent Kremlin meeting,the government newspaper Izves tia said Thursday, It saidhe repor ted that defense andheavy indus try are in goodenough shape now that more at-tention can be paid to rais ingliving s tandards .He called for improving theconsumer goods indus tr ies andfor raising the s tandards of theoods produced so that Russ iacan sel l more of them abroad.Last April, while touring Hun-gary, Khrushchev told an auSi-ende ofworkers that a full plate

    of goulash wasa much be t t e rai m for communism than thewa r and v i o l e n t r ev ol ut io npreached by Communis t China.But observers recalled that10 years ago op-consumer goodsKhrushchevposed theplans offormer Premier GeorgiMalensky.

    NE W YORK ( AP ) - Th e In-ternational Longshoremen's As-sociation, AFL-CIO, ordered its60,000 striking dockworkers toreturn, to work at Atlantic andGulf Coast ports at 7 p .m. to-day, New York t ime.The move complied with afederal cour t res training orderThursday night halt ing thestrike for 10 days in the national

    interes t .Before the meeting of union

    (AP WIrephoto)Pineapple kid meets blind dateRobert Ventura, the "Pineapple Kid," holds 16-month-old Dawn Cope, after meeting herin San Diego, Caif., for blind date.

    Bo ttle floa ting in sea leadsto blind d ate with 'quite a girl'SAN DIEGO, Calif. (#> The Pineapple Kid met MissDawn Cope for a blind dateinspired bya note that f loatedfrom San Diego to Honolulu inan aspir in bott le.The Pineapple Kid is thenickname for mer chan t sea-man Rober t Ventura, 24.Miss Dawn Cope, however ,turned out to be the 16-month-old daughter ofM r . and M r s .Richard Cope.

    "Here's your date," saidMrs. Cope.Ventura smiled, groped forwords , then admitted thatMiss Dawn Cope is "quite ag i r l / '

    PALO ALTO TIMES, FRIDAY, OCT. 2, 19643'Striking dockworkersordered back to workThe regular work day in NewYork s tar ted at 8 a.m.just 12hours after the judge signed thepapers aimed at an 80-day cool-

    officials tomachinery set in motion thefor obeying U.S.Disk Judge Freder ick vanPeltBryan's order , ILA Pres identThomas W. Gleason said: "Weall went out together and we' l lal l go back together ."The judge acted ona declara-tion of national emergency byPres ident Johnson.The order was signed af terthe cus tomary 3 p.m. hour of' shaping up" the dock gangsfor the following day's work.Union officials said this hiringp r ac t i ce was the reason for thedelay in bringing the piers backto life.Some pickets showed up atNew York docks this morning,saying they had not receivedorders f rom their unidh shops tewards to pull down picketlines.A l it t le la ter the union noti-fied all ports to withdraw pi ** PATTERNS N>As the co nftosftion of t he r es i -d e nt ia l m a r k e t c h a n ge s , , h Cnoted, inves tment pattern*must change. The trend lowa$llonger term, higher ratio cSptt;ventional loans will continue. = * *

    However, he added, this migjifccause the over adventurouser to exper ience somelessons because he "can no lier depend on Inflation" tofy errors in judgment.De Bretteville, who, likebankers , is interes ted in sup]ing conventional loans , d eclaredthat emphas is onFederal Hep?*ing Administration (FHA) anNlVeterans Administration (VA>financing has shifted to the cpfl4ventional loan. * *i.However, he predictedFHA will continue to play;vital role in the home f inani

    industry.

    NEW CAR LOANS$4ooperl001

    lower rates in theMIMSBN FSDCRAL OePOtttT INSURANCE CORPORATION332 Lytton Ave. (corner of Florence) Palo Alto

    For Quick*CarCredit application come inanytimt from8:30 thru 5:00 and ask forEverett Olson, or phont himat 322-4541, orsend your name toBox 270, Palo Alto

    She's also the s is ter of KevinCope who l ikes to throw bot-t les in the seas .Kevin tossed one in las tJ une and s igned his s is ter ' sn a m e to this s imple message:"Dear , whoever you are,what is going on wherever youa r e ? "Some months ago, Ventura,f ishing near Waikiki Beach,found the bott le. He wroteDawn asking fora date whenhis ship arr ived in San Diego.The Copes agreed to theplan and Dawn was at thedock Thursday when Venturasship arr ived. So wer e hermother and Kevin.

    F O R M A LW E A RDo oil you ('"ironing"in half the time...WHILE SEATED!n SAVES MONEYID SAVES LABOR ID PORTABLE! ELIMINATES

    IRONING BO AUDIQuality pressing on at llinens andclothing

    See demonstration of the modem

    First informal wearsince 1906

    $M995Alto M*trd mocUli available forcommercial installation*

    Call * Writ*C O I N L A U N D R YE Q U I P M E N T , I N C .

    e I241-3181. 241-IOf*497 M fltktfcmta Clara

    S A L E S - R E N T A L SB UrilVEItSITYlDA 1-2770i Thursday until 8:30 p.r

    S J N fP A N C I S W O f l f l f l N D0 R ! R K f ! \ 1 S ' . f , P . ' . V T N r 0

    S f l H M A T f f ) P A I O A ! T O ^ H I O S F

    A rea scientiststo greetSen. H uhphreyThree well-known men of sci-ence from the Midpeninsula willbe on the platform at San JoseState College at 9:30 a.m. Mon-

    da y to welcome Democraticvice pres idential candidate Hu-ber t Humphrey.T hey are Dr. Russel V. A.Lee, founder of the Palo AftoMedical Clinic andpres ident ofthe Palo Alto Research Founda-tion, andtwo Nobel Prize hold-ers from Stanford UniversityDr. Arthur Kornberg and DrRobert Hofs tadter .Dr . Kornberg is head of Stan-ford's biochemis try depar tmentand won the Nobel Pr ize in 1959for medicine. Dr. Hofs tadter isproIessw-iJ isS^s ijcsand won theNoT&l Prize in 1961 for physics.All three men are representa-t ives of the Midpeninsula branchof the nationwide group knownss Scientists andEngineers forJohnson and Humphrey.S en . Humphr ey wi ll s p e n dMonday in the Bay Area cam-paigning.SIGN EUROPEANWINNIPEG (UPI)The NewYork Rangers s igned UlfSterner of Sweden Wednesday as thef irs t European to inka Nationa l H o c k e y L e a g ue c o nt r ac t .Sterner , who plays both centerand left wing, wasassigned toth e St. Paul farm club.

    C U S T O M - Q U A L I T Y R E D W O O D F U R N I T U R ENO W50" Round Tab!* with 4 Benches . . .64.50Gin Rummy (Pad* extra) 49.50Cha Ui Lounge (Pad extra) 26.50phildV Barbteu* Se^. 24.50HOUSE OF R E D W O O D

    P A T T YDUKEJUMPERSWonderful,wearable jumpersby Juniori te!Choose from aselection ofeight date-baitstylesall seen onthe Pat ty Duke Show,We have shownjust threefrom thecollection.Junior Pet i teSizes 3-13,17.00-20.00.Junior World,Street Floor.

    Rhode sSAN ANTONIO CENTER

    EL CAM1NO REAL ATSHOWERS DRIVE, MOUNTAIN VIEW. SHOP MONDAY, THURSDAY. FRIDAY IS TO:30.SHOP TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY 10TO :>., PHONE 948-0800.

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    '7=

    4PALO ALTO TIMES, FRIDAY, OCT. 2, 1964

    A R E A B I R T H SPalo AJto-Stanford HospitalSept. 28, 1964

    B o r n t o M r . a n d M r s . : *WILLIAM LINCOLN, 1798 Altschul Ave.f M e n l o Pa r k ,daugh ter , 10 pounds 5 ounceJOHN PAPP AS, 1 73 5 Al m a St.Palo Altp , a daughter ,pounds 6 pounces.DR . AND M R S. FR ANC IS MICHEL, 2020 Cedar Ave., Menlo Park , a

    ounces.son, 8 pounds 4

    J O S E P H DI GRANDE, 1134Werth Ave., Menlo Park, adaughter, 8 pounds 3 ouncesROGER CANNING, 1057 MenloOaks Drive, Menlo Park,daughter, 7 pounds 1 ounce.JOSEPH BAXTER, 740 ClaraDrive, Palo Alto, a daughter6 pounds 5 ounces.G AY LE AN B U R N E T T , 163Mariposa St., Palo Alto, adaughter, 8 pounds.JACK N. JOHNSON, 1142 Jamestown1 Drive, Sunnyvale, a son7 pounds 2 ounces.JACK GAUMNITZ, 52-B Escon

    El Camlno HospitalSept. 29, 1964JOSEPH CORDIA, 2357 DundeeDrive, Santa Clara, a daughter, 9 pounds.WILLIAM CUBBERLEY , * 45Valencia Drive, Los Altos, idaughter, 5 pounds 15 ouncesGRADY LAWRENCE, 10490 Cypress Drive, Cupertino, a son8 pounds 4 ounces.T. A. MILLS, 632 Bernal Ave.Sunnyvale, a son, 7 pounds 1^-Dunces.TRIVADOR A. MOHACSI, 2740Fordham St., East Palo Alto,a son, 6 pounds 15 ounces.WHITNEY OLSON, 161B Ste-vens Road, Los Altos, a son, 8pounds 5 ounces.EMMETT OWEN, 398 NorthFair Oaks Ave., Sunnyvale, a'L daughter, 6 pounds 10 ouncesRONALD SUTTORA, 1026 Es-sex St., Sunnyvale, a daughter, 6 pounds 8 ounces.ARTHUR THARPE, 476 NorthBayview Ave., Sunnyvale, ason,8 pounds 9 ounces.PHILLIP J. TUFO, 1656 Blued id o V i l l a g e , S t a nf or d,d a u g h t e r , 4 pounds 14 ouncesR ONAL D GR E E N, 888 Middle: Ave., Menlo Park , a son,p o u n d s .: FRANK CLEMENS, 2995 Lafay- et te St . , Santa Clara, a d a u g ht e r , 8 pounds 9 ounces.THERON HYLTON, 3361 Monroe St . , Santa Clara, a son , 6pounds 4 o u n c e s .RONALD PELL, 2953 MilesDrive, Sa n t a C l a r a , a d a u g rter , 7 pounds 2 o u n c e s .JOHN DE UT SC HL ANDE R , 3 0 1Bryant St . , Palo Alto , a-daughter , 6 pounds 15 ounces.

    Sept. 29, 1964DONALD WILKINS, 278-MonroeD r i v e , M o u n ta i n V i ew , zd a u g h t e r , 8 pounds 3 ouncesG E O R G E D E E T H , 874 Pe c a nCour t , Sunnyvale, a d a u g h t e r7 pounds 6 o u n c e s .PAUL CHESTNUT, 95-A Escond id o V i l l a g e , S t a nf or d, ad a u g h t e r , 6 pounds 14 ouncesRALPH WRIGHT, 37115 Ash St .Ne wa r k , a d a u g h t e r , 7 pound114 ounces.DANNY BROWN, 1886 Berni.ceWay, San J o s e , a son,"pounds 9 ounces.L E O NA R D G I L LE N W A T E R ,222 Escuela Ave., MountainView, a d a u g h t e r , 8 pounds12 ounces.THEODORE WALKER, 2370Cooley Ave,, Palo Alto ,' daughte r , 6 pounds 8 ounces.J O S E M A R Q U E Z , 3 19 1 G r e e rRoad, Palo Alto , a d a u g h t e r ,7 pounds 5 ounces.i M I C H AE L B RO WNE , 1 3 1 Ha wthome Ave. , Palo Al to , a son,8 pounds 2 ounces.DAN PARKER, 80Dona Ave.,Sunnyvale, a son, 6 pounds 12ounces.

    Sept. 30, 1964TED COOPER, 940 Menlo Ave.M e n l o Pa r k , a son , 7 pounds6 ounces.RAYMOND K U E N T Z E L , 1074Amaril lo A ve., , Palo A lto , aso n ,7 p o u n d s 8 o u n ce s .T HOM AS PR IC E , 248 WindsorDr i v e , San Carlos, a son, 6pounds 11 ounces.J E R O M E LOHR, 19802 ChartersAye., Sa r a t o g a , a d a u g h t e r , 5pounds 13 ounces s.G U R T A N J U , 570 RengstorffAve., Mountain View, a son,7 pounds 3 ounces.DON JOBSON , 1991 .Manha ttanAve., Palo 'Alto , a son; 6pounds.C HA RL ES N E L L f S T , 1450Olympic Drive, Milp itas, ason , 6 pounds 3 o u n c e s .CLAUDE HUGHES, 1093 Tan-l a nd D r i v e , P a l o A l to , adaugh ter , 7 pounds 15 ounces.WILLIAMS PATTON, 1822 Hig"don Ave., Mountain View, aso n ,7 p o u n d s 2 o u n c e s .J O E L B U T L E R , 4 330 A l p i n eRoad, Por to la Valley , a son,5 pounds 7 ounces.N O R B E R T R O M E L F A N G E R ,501 Gilber t A ve., Menlo Park ,a d a u g h t e r , 6 pounds 9 ounces.Oc t . 1,1964.JOHN LAZAR, 1056 Metro Cir-c le , Pa l o A l t o , a d a u g h t e r , 6pour ids 15 Ounces.G U S S I E G A N N , 310 E sc u e l aAve. , M o u n t a i n V i e w , a son,7 pounds 13 ounces .

    whereT H O U S A N D S ofC A 1 I F 0 R N I A N Sh a v e E A R N U )M I L L I O N S !

    Jay Drive, Sunnyvale, a son,8 pounds 14 ounces.Sept. 30, 1964Born to M r . a n d M r s . :RO Y J. HOLT, 757 Pett is Ave.,M o u n t a i n V ie w, a g i r l , 7pounds 2 o u n c e s .M AR T IN P. ME ER, 3440 War-bur ton Ave., Santa Clara, ason , 7 pounds"5 ounces.PAUL D. SEBESTA, 1221 LynnWay, Sunnyvale, a d a u g h t e r ,9 pounds 1 ounce.HARRY Y. ARNOLD, 1584 Bonita Ave., Mountain View, id a u g h t e r , 8 pounds 7 o u n c e s .C ONST ANT INE S.G L A D K O F F ,20796 Kirwin Lane, Cuper t ino ,7 pounds 8 o u n c e s .ANT HONY V. M A B E E , 1657Meadow Lark Lane, Sunny-vale, a d a u g h t e r , 6 pounds 1ounce.J A M E S I. JOHNSON, 868 SanJunipero Ave., Sunnyvale, ad a u g h t e r , 7 pounds 2 o u n c e s .GEO RGE H . EASTON, 2593 Ca-br i l lo Ave., Santa Clara, ad a u g h t e r , 5 pounds 14 ounces.

    Sequoia HospitalSept. 29, 1964O H N E R M A C O F F , 696 ThirdAve., Redwood City , a daugh-ter , 7 p o u n d s 8 o u n c e s .: HAR L E S DE T I E T R O , 1507Hess Road, Redwood City, ason, 6 pounds 3 ounces.Sept. 30, 1964Born to Mr. and Mrs.:OSEPH MARIMAN, 924 Mock-ingbird Lane, Sunnyvale, adaughter, 7"pounds 11 ounces.Oct. 1, 1964MICHAEL DREW, 2039 ClarkeAve., Palo Alto, a daughter,7 pounds 3 ounces.WILLIAM J. ARMSTRONG,1009 Minder mere, Menlo Park ,a daughter, 6 pounds 10 ounces.Oct . 2,1964'ATRICK LARKIN, 896 CanadaRoad, Woodside, a daughter, 6pounds 7 ounces.H eart attackgiven as causein girl's deathSANTA BARBARA .(AP) -coed_ whose body wa s foundy her roommate in the wom-n 's dormitory at the Universityf California at Santa Barbaraied of a heart attack, the cor-ner says.^ Theodore W. Richey, in aathological report to the coun-

    y coroner Thursd ay, said thatlespite 17-year-old Diane LeaCirk's record of good health,er death last Sept. 13 was thessult of a heart a t tack .The verdict ruled out the pos-ibility of foul play in the mys-ery death of Miss Kirk, whovas entering the university as areshman.

    mm: -m m

    3 O-P AV 11MPERATURE OUHOOK \

    A B Q V BNAU NORM AL

    Source U.S. WEATHER BUREAU(AP Wi rephoto maps )Weather outlook for next 30 days

    He re is how the U.S. WeatheU.-wBiTreau .sees the weather p ic tu re for the nex t 30 d a y s .Th d i i t i bd h d b h bThese tempera tu re and precip i ta t ion , maps are based on those issued by the bureauW a s h in g t o n . in

    W E A T H E R R E P O R TA r e a t e m p e r a t u r e s

    HighPalo Alto City Hall 80Palo Alto Times Build ing ... 78Redwood City Fire Stat ion 85L o s A l t o s F i r e S t a t i o n , 83Los Altos Hil ls Town Hall 89M o u n t a i n V i e w F i r e S t a t i o n .: 83Woodside Fire Stat ion 87Moffett Field Tower 76Sk y L o n d a F i r e S t a t i o n ' 87

    Lo w48 .525948

    1 5058475943

    T i m e st e m p e r a t u r e sOctober 1, 19644 p .m high 786 p.m 740 p . m. .. 64Midnight 59October 2, 19643 a.m 566 a.m. low 529 a.m 64Noon 79ForecastsFIVEDAY FORECAST, Saturday Ij toa.m. Thursday, Oct :N O R T H E R N CA LIFO R N IA Possib i l i ty1 l ight ra in extreme nor th; temperatureear normal.

    CE N T R A L CA L IFO R N IA N o ramperoture near normal.FRIDAY FORECAST.NORTHERN AND CENTRALtern-

    CA LIFO R N IA Fair through Saturday exceptincreasing fog or low clouds neor coasttonight and Saturday; cooler Saturdaynear central coast.S A N FR A N CIS CO B A Y Fair throughSaturday except morning fog near theocean; cooler Saturday, west wind aft-ernoons 10 to 18 m.p.h.SACRAMENTO AND SANJOAQUINVAL L EYS ANDSIERRA NEVADAFairthrough Saturday; l i ttle 'change in tem-perature; h igh in valleys 84 to 92, low52 to 62; south wind Sacramento Valley8 to 16m.p.h.; nor thwest wind San Joa-quln Valley 6 to 12 mp.h.MT . S H A S T A S IS K IY O U A R E A Part-ly cloudy tonight and Saturday; warmertonight but cooler Saturday. vS A N T A CLA R A AND L I V E R M O R EVA LLE Y S Fair through Thursday; sl ight-ly cooler Saturday with high Santa ClaraValley 72 to 82, ow 47 to 55; afternoonwind 6 to 14m.p.h.M O N T E R E Y BAY, SALINAS VA LLE YA N D S A N T A MA R IA S A N LU IS O B IS POC O A S T A L A R E A Fair through Saturday

    ['except some morning fog; cooler Saturday; west wind 8 to 15m.p.h.S O U T H E R N CA LIFO R N IA Mostly suniiy today and Saturday but heavy fogalong coast with par tia l midday clear fng;little temperature change1.

    Nat ionwideT e m p e r a t u r e sH i g h L o w P r .A l b a n y , c l o u d y 65 49A l b u q u e r q u e , c l e a r 84A t l a n t a , c l o u d y .. .. 72 62 .03B a k e r s f i e l d 88B i s m a r c k , c l e a r .. . 61B o i s e , c l e a r . . . . . . . 6iBoston, ^c loudy . x . 56B r o w n s v i l l e ., 85 ?Buf fa lo, c loudy .... 73C h i c a g o , c l o u d y . . . 74C i n c i n n a t i , r a i n .... 83C l e v e l a n d , c l e a r . 7 7D e n v e r , c l e a r 86Des .Moi ,nes , c lea r . 76D e t r o i t , c l o u d y . . . . . 71F a i r b a n k s , s n o w ... 37F r e s n o 89F o r t W o r t h , c l o u d y . 74H e l e n a , c l e a r 56H o n o l u l u , c l e a r 85

    CAltfOKNIAl485M I D E V E R Y 9 0 D A Y SiMSSfe0OKACCr$.fram$5Funds in by 11th earn rom1st.Withdrawals have always beenpaid on demand. Thrift by-roailpostage paid both ways.CaUf.res.only.5% I N T . m 11 $ 5 , 0 0 0 T H R IF TC E t T l fl C A T E S P A I D M O N T H L YA SS ET S O V f R $ 3 2 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0F I R E S I D EThrift Sttitrvjirfn

    * * A M A L T O Ifon. % 720tUt*ftttUy DA 6*944K M m t C O T 2S29fractal?

    32 injuredwhen Irishbattle policeBELFAST, Northern IrelandAP ) Thirty-two persons/ere injured Thursday night instreet battle between policend Irish nationalists after offi-ers removed the Irish Repub-c's flag from a building.It was the worst outbreak ofviolence in recent years in Brit-i fh- rul ed N o r t h e r n I rel a nd .Fifteen* demon strators werearrested .The injured included 20policemen.

    DEATHS

    4954626344434370576465603550613057 -583270

    .16

    Indianapolis, c loudy 77 59Ja c k so n v i l l e , c l o u d y 90Ju n e a u , c l o u d y ..- . 49 7643

    BONDIn Palo Alto. Cal i f., Thurs-day, Oct. i, 1964. Edward Bond ofSan Jose, husband of Gladys M.Bond of San Jose; father of LeeBond of Novato, Cal i f.; brother ofMrs. Lavern Hawkinson of La-fayette, Cal i f., and Mr. Wi l l i amBond of Sausal i to, Cal i f.; a nativeof Pine Bluff, Ar k., aged 52 years.A member of the Barbers Unionof Sunnyvale. Friends are invi tedto attend the funera l Mondaymorn ing at 10:30 o'clock at theTinney Funeral Chapel, 555 Col legeAve.. Palo A l to , In terment , Cy-p re ss L aw D M e m o r i a l P a r k .Colma.

    Las VegasLos Angeles, clearLouisville, cloudy .Memphis, cloudy .j Miami, cloudySouth Dakota , Father John Haus - j Mi lw mk pp r l nnH vmann. Pete and Chris Hausmann, I Milwaukee, CIOUCJVall of Iowa, and he late Charl ieand Joe Hausmann; grandmotherof 25; great -grandmother of 12;a native of Iowa, aged 77 years .F r i ends are invi ted to attend thefuneral services Saturday, Oct. 3.1964, commenc ing at 8:30 a.m. atthe Colonial Mortuar y (Joseph Cu-s imano, d i rec tor) , 96 El CaminoReal, Mountain View, thence toSt Joseph's Cathoi ic Church

    H A L L InSaturday' %SanSept F rancisco26. 1964. Ca l i fE v e l y n

    N O W !S U M M E R R A T E SSt., Sun.,Hoi. $ 1 3 09 hole* I

    ldyi $ 1 2 59 hoUiAdditional 97 5 *foundt

    Vo. SeottyMe B t hE M E R A L D H I L L SG O L F C O U R S E4 M i l . i -Up JffM*H Av*.Redwood City* tktm 3 I I . 7 I M

    N. C. Kai l , sister of Mrs . Farnc i sStacy of Palo Alto: a native ofClebourne, Tex. Friends are in-vited to attend memorial servicesat 11 a.m. Saturday , Oct. 3, atthe chapel of Roller & Hapgood.980 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto.Park ing prov ided on the grounds.McCLATCHIEIn Berke ley , Cal . f .Wednesday, Sept. JO, 1964. NellieM. McCla i ch ie , mother of MrsWini f red M, Thomas of Berke ley ,grandmother of Wi l l i am Thomasof El Cerr i to ; great -grandmotherof four; sister of Wal ter Bruce,formerl y of Palo Alto; born inMich igan In 1878. Funeral serviceswere neld today at the chapel ofRoller & Hapftood. 980 MiddlefieldRoad1, Palo Alto. Interment. AltaMesa Memoria l Park . Cont r i butions to the Nationol Audubon Society Sanctuary Fund, ?4?6 Ban

    croft Way, Berkeley 5 Cfe rred.

    K a n s a s C i t y , c l o u d y 80 60 .0362625468805945

    94807182847176

    A r e a deathsC rash kills M enlo manCharles A. Sundborg, MenloPark del iverymah cri t ical ly in-jured in a .Sunnyvale auto cr ashTuesday, d ied Thursday n ight atEl Camino Hospi tal .Hospital officials said Sund-borg; 72, died at 10:45 p.m. Hesuffered head injuries when hewas thrown from a vehicle whilem a k i n g d e li ve r ie s for L. D.Caulk Co., a Menlo Park dentalsupply firm.The accident occurred at fneintersection of Mathilda and Al-manor avenues.Sundborg lived at 923 TimothyDrive, Menlo Park .Funeral arrangements arepending.Mrs. SondgrothRequiem Mass wi l l be saidSaturday for Mrs. Gert rude A.Sondgroth, wife of the la te JohnS o nd g ro th w h o f o u n d e d theSondgroth Brothers Paving Co.of Mountain View.The Mass wi l l be said at 9a . m. at St. Joseph's CatholicChurch, wi th Mrs. Sondgroth ' sbrother, the Rev. John Haus-ma n n ofIowa, officiating. *The Rosary wi l l be reci ted to-night at 8 oclock at the ColonialMortuary, 96 El Camino Real ,Mountain View.Interment wi l l be at the San-ta Clara Cathol ic Cemetery.The family prefers sp i ri tualbouquets.Mrs. Sondgroth, 77, had lived

    in Mountain View since 1929. Shedied Thursday.Martha DresslarMartha Estel la Dresslar, 72,was found dead in her apart -ment bedroom at 850 WebsterSt., Palo Alto, Thursday, an ap-parent suicide, according to po-lice.Pol ice said Miss Dresslar wasfound with a plast ic bag overher head. She was in a lockedbedroom.The Santa Clra County coro-ner's office hasordered an au-topsy.Funeral serv ices are pending.Leo J. LanthierFuneral serv ices were held to-day for Leo J. Lanthier, 80, of544 Palm Ave., Los Altos, whodied Wednesday at his home ofapparent natural causes.Mr. Lanthier was a retiredpostal clerk and had lived inLos Altos for 24 years.He is survived by his wife,Ida, and a sister, Mrs. Henriet -ta Toner of San Francisco .Mr. Lanthier was a me mb e rof St. Nicholas' Catholic Church

    of Los Altos and belonged tothe San Jose chapter of the Na-tional Association of R e t i r e dCivi l Employes.Burial was at Santa ClaraCatholic Cemetery* after morn-

    ing services under the directionof the Los Altos chapel of theSpangler Mortuary.Mr. Lanthier was a nat ive ofSan 1 Rrancisco and had been apostal c lerk ' for 33 years.

    Vatican council hearscommon Bible appeal

    ? BanC a l i f , pr cSONOOROTH ~ In Mounta in V iew,Cal i f., Thu rsday. Oct. 1, 1964. MrsGert rude A, Sondgroth, widow ofJohn Sondgroth; mother of MrsHildegarde Holthbuse, Edwin Sondt oth, Mrs. Loret ta Tovar Mrsav ina Mat te i s , all of Mounta inView, Ralph, Thomas, Vernon andHarry Sondgroth , and Mrs. Col e t ta Garc ia , all of La* A l tos , andMrs. Marie Nunes of Palo Alto;sinter of Mrs. El izabeth Schwal ierHenry and Bil l Hausmann. all of

    D O N ' T S I G N !Any Real Kttat* loan applica-tion without calling

    R E E O T I N G H E RReal E state Loons5V}/o Interest

    Representing Western Mort-gage Corp. Loan Correspond-ents for Metropolitan LifeInsurance Co.434 R(MRono, P. A. DA 1-0454Ir d * M l n U * Al to* 84S-4673

    where a Requiem Mass wi l l be of-fered at 9 a.m. Interment, SantaClara Cathol ic Cemetery, SantaClara. Recitation of the Rosarythis evening at 8o'clock. Spiri tualbouquets preferred.SP.ANGEN BERG In Palo Alto.Calif.. Tuesday, Sept. 15, 1964, Dr.Karl Rudolph Spangenberg, hus-band of Mrs . Ruth B.Spangenbergof Los Altos Hi l ls; father of Kri s -tin L. Spangenberg, Eric KarlSpangenberg. Karen E. Spangen-berg. Karla M. Spangenberg,Kf l th ryn B. Spangenberg and Ru-dolph 8. Spangenberg, all of LosAltos Hi l ls; son of Mr s. BerthaSpangenberg of Palo Alto! broth-er of Elfe L. Spangenberg of PaloA l to ; a native cf Cleveland, Ohio,aged 54 ypars, A member of theFirst Methodist Church; pastprevdent of the Palo Atto KiwanisClub; and Fel low IEEE. Friendsare invi ted to attend the serv i ces 'Sunday. Oct 4, 1964, at 3:30 p.m.at thp First Methodist Church,P.ilo Alto. Contributions to theK a r lFund. At tn

    Churchi l l Ave , Palo Altp, preferrerl . Bishop-Jordan FuneralChapel. 744 San Antonio Road.Palo Alto, in charge of servicesSUNDBORGIn Mounta in V iew.Cahf., Thursday, Oct. 1, 1964Charles August Sundborg of MenloPark, husband of Mary Sundborgof Menlo Park ; fa ther of GeorgeSundborg'of Washington, D.C., andMrs. Ruth Tambl i n of San Diego;bro ther of Walter Sundborg ofOakdale, Cal i f.; also survived byeight grandchi ldren and sevengreat-gran%chtldren; a nat i ve ofSan Franljsco. A member ofTransport workers Union ofAmer-ica, Local 250 of San Francisco,and San Franctsco Federation ofMunicipal Employees. Friends areinvited, to attend the funeral Mon-day afternoon at 2o'clock at thTinney Funeral Chapel, 5SS CollegeAve., Pfclo Alto, Calif. Interment,Cypress Lawn Memorial Park,Colma.Parking provided on th premise*

    Mpls.-St.P., cloudyNew Orleans, c loudy 84 77New York , cloudy .OaklandOkla . Ci ty , c loudy .Omaha, c learPh i lade lph ia , ra in .Phoenix , c learPittsburgh, cloudy .Ptlnd, Me., clear ...Ptlnd, Ore., cloudyRapid City, clear ..Red Bluff"RenoRichmond, clear .SacramentoSt. Louis, cloudySalt Lk. City, ciearSan Diego, clear .San Fran . , c lear .Seattle, rainSpokaneTampa, c loudyT h e r m a l

    19

    Ito. Contributions to the! U/'ich notnn rni nSpangenberg Scholarship1 wasningTOn, rainAu ' l - : . . - f - . Kf.*!?'g'-. 7L5i ( M M i s s i n g ; T-

    65797580679674566576927860M7367737460588910263

    53615945576453394734563658M6132586156467&6558

    .11

    .34

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    SMOG HIGHS

    F U N E R A L D E S I G N SI L U M T O YOaily DeliveriesTo Allpanipsula Mortuarte*D A 4-0OMISM El Camino RealMenlo Park

    OaklandSan FranciscoRedwood CitySan J^seSan LeandroEye Irritation levelBay Area Ai r PollutionControl District Data

    .21.16.14.08.19.13

    Head injuriesin fal l fatalto women, 59SANTA CLARA Mrs. F ran-ces Burris, 59, of 774 MarketSt., died at 6 a.m. today, ap-parent ly of head injuries, sev-eral hours after shewas foundlying unconscious on her livingroom floor, according to theSanta Clara County Coroner,Her husband, Grover, also 59,a maintenance mechanic , to ldpolice he found her in that candition when he returned homeThursday night.Police Captain Stan Careyquoted the husband as sayjngthat Mrs. Burris apparent ly had

    struck her head when she fellto the floor.Burris summoned police aridan ambulance at 9:45 oclockThursday n ight . Mrs. Burris wastaken to San Jose Hospitalwhere she succumbed th is morn-ing. The county corone r's office,which is performing an autopsytoday, said the death was ap-parent ly caused by head inju-ries.Captain Carey said that Bur-ris said he'd been out when hiswife was injured.$165,000 in dopeseized in S FSAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Narcotics agents have seized$165,000 worth of heroin andarrested 21 persons during araid on a Mission District housein San Francisco.Seventeen men and four wom-en were charged in federal war-rants with the sale of heroinafter a raid Thursday on thehome of Jose Verdugo.

    B I N O C U L A R SQualify atAttraettv* PriectPeninsula Scientific2421 El Camino PA 326-4136

    PUBLIC AUCTIONRestaurant Equipment1959 FoYffftjn AutoBuilding to be Demolished

    MONTI 'S P IZZA174S El Camino R eal, Mountain Vtew

    TUE SD A Y , OC T . 6 S A LE S TAR TS A T 1 1 :0 0 A . M .I NS P E C T I ON MOND A Y . 1 0 :00 A . M . to 4:00 P.M.FOR I NFOR MA T I ON C A LL R OS S -D OV E C O . , V A 4 4 * 0 0MHi

    VATICAN CITY (UP I)-T heE c u m en i ca l C o u n c i l t o d ayheard an appeal for Catholicscholars to work wi th Protes-t a n t s t o w & x d U a commonBible. - -A p r o p o s a l for officialchurch sanct ion of a Bible iscontained in a constitution onthe sources of revelation whichthe more than 2,000 cardinals,archbishops, b ishops and ab-bots continued to debate in St.Peter' s Basi l ica .Bishop John Van Dodewaardof Harlem, Holland, called forcooperation between Catholicsand o ther Christ ians in bibli-cal studies while giving a re-

    port on the closing chaptersof the constitution.He said t ranslat ions of theBible in to modern languagesshould be encouraged and thatthe work "should be d o n ewith separated brethren inharmony wi th the pastoral andecumenical goals of the coun-ci l ."The constitution on th esources of revelation gives acompr omise solution, to wheth-er God communicated to ma nthrough Scrip ture alone, asProtestants bel ieve, or inde-pendently through traditionand Scrip ture , as the CatholicChurch maintains.

    Goldwater aide discountspublic opinion pollsBURLINGAMEOpinion pollsmay show Arizona Sen. Barry

    G o ld w at er t r a i l i n g P r es id e ntLyndon Johnson in the presiden-t ia l campaign, a top Goldwateraide declared Thursday after-noon, but "the only poll thatcounts is the one made^on Nov.3" at the ballot box.The speaker was Cliff White,former Cornell University pro-fessor and nownational direc-tor of the Citizens for Goldwater-Miller, who led a rally for 65San Mafeo County campaignworkers for Goldwater.

    The luncheon session was atthe Thunderbird Hotel here."Johnson has the thinnest sort'of support," White declared."His .workers come from theranks of those who fear re t ri -bution."White said oGldwater has re-ceived enthusiastic. welcomeswherever he has spoken, andcited the 15,000-person jam tohear Goldwater in Minneapoliscontrasted to the 5,000 personsin^ the sa me town who heardMinnesota Sen. Hubert Hum-phrey, Johnson's vice presiden-tial choice.

    Memorial rites scheduledfor Karl R. SpangenbergA memorial serv ice for KarlR. Spangenberg , electronicsconsultant and former Palo Altoschool board member, will beconducted in the First MethodistChurch of Palo Alto Sunday at3:30 p.m.A musical program will bepresented by church groups andsoloists.Spangenberg, 54, died of bonecancer Sept. 15. He resided at2100 Page Mill Road, Los AltosHills, and is survived by hiswife, Ruth: his mother, BerthaSpangenberg; a s i s te r ; fo u rdaughters and two sons, all ofthe Barron Park-Los Altos Hillsa re a .The musical program wil l in-clude selections by the church ' sChancel Choir, organist WilliamHowie and other inst rumentalsoloists. -Three ministers of the church,headed by Dr. T h e a d o r e H.Palm quist, will offer prayer sand scrip tural readings.

    A memprial fund has been es-tablished.Andrew Stephens, assistantPalo Alto schools sup erintendentand chai rman of the fund, saida commit tee wi l l be formed todetermine whether the moneyshould be used for scholarshipsor o ther memorials, such as acancer research grant , in Span-genberg ' s name. More than $700has been received, he said.Young grid playerin critical shapeSAN JOSE (AP) K e e n eYamamoto , a 13-y e a r-old -^opWarner League football player,was reported in critical condi-tion Frida y after participa tingin a pract ice session .He complained of headachesand dizziness andwas hospital-ized after the workout with aJunior Bantam Division teamWednesday. He underwent sur-gery.I 1 H A 4 A S S V

    2711 inirfrilcfiHtf road, .palo ;iiloL A D I E S ' P A J A M A S$199nd NIGHTGOWNS,Flannelette, sizes 32 -40,Ass or ted P r i n t s an dStyles. Outstanding Endof Clearance Value!A L S O G I R L S ' (Sizes 4-14) A N D B O Y S ' (S i ze j2 : 8 ) P A J A M A S . . . each $ 1 . 9 9 -

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    Boys" PajamasKnit Sk i Style S|7Ti z e s 6-16. Assortedprints. Stock up now andF I N A L C L E A R A N C EV:L A D I E S '

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    D ebate preludeChallenger Michael W . Golick, left, an d Supervisor M artin J . Spangler sat side by sideThursday before their debate in Sunnyvale.

    /face for supervisorSpangler's threat on parktermed 'shameful1 by GolickBy JOHN KEPLINGERMichael W. (Mike) Golick,North Santa Clara County su-pervisor ial candidate, Thursdayaccused his opponent, supervi-s o r M a r t i n J . S pang l er , o f

    "shameful" act ion in threaten-ing to evict a couple from itsland.G oli ck r e f e r r e d to M rand Mrs . Francis ' Quveneckwhose 1,600-acre Hidden Villa

    Mt.View Sch oo l Districtboard meeting highl ightsThe Mountain View Elemen-tary School District b o a r dThursday night:Agreed to r a i s e the dailysalary of substitute teachersfrom $18 per day to $20 per

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    Lockheed projectM ann ed spaceeffort stressedLockheed Missiles and SpaceCo. at Sunnyvale has put in-creased emphas is on nian-in-space efforts by creating a newManned Space Programs organ-ization, the company said today.

    H / W O L D T. LUSKIN

    .Harold T. Luskin was namedto head the new section. Luskinformerly directed Lockheed'sNational Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration (NASA) progr ams at Sunnyvale. He will re-port to vice pres ident R. R.Kearton, general manager ofthe Space Systems Division, andto vice president Gladyn HPutt .In announcing formation ofthe new depar tment, Kear tonsaid: "Both Lockheed at Sunny-vale and Lockheed's CaliforniaCo. in Burbank are now en-gaged in manned space devel-opments. With this neworgani-zation we intend to increase ef-fectiveness of both companiesin the field."The next manned space pro-gram likely to come to the stageof company proposals is the AirForce Manned Orbital Labora-tory (MOL). Lockheed has workin this area under way.

    U.S. takes measuresto stave off gold drainBy SAM DAWSONNEW YORK (AP)The priceof gold hasbeen rising again-onthe London market af ter a longlevelling period. And the U.S.

    government is taking furthers teps to stave off any attemptof other nations to drain Ameri-can gold reserves further.During August when the priceof gold was hold.ing steady inLondon, the U.S. ExchangeStabilization Fund managed toadd $28 million to its gold hold-ings. And the Treasury reserves ,which"don' t include the fund'sh o ld in g s, h el d a l m o s t un-changed.

    Employedand joblesstotals dropWASHINGTON (AP) - Withteen-agers returning to school,employment and unemploymentin September both declined seasonally and jus t about as expected, the Department of La

    bor said today.The unemployment rate was5.2 per cent , compared to 5.1 irAugust and 5.5 in September o:las t year .The total employed was 70.8million, a decline of 13 millionfrom August and approximately13 mill ion more than in Sep-t ember of las t year .The total unemployed in Sep-tember of this year 3.3 million,down 350,000 from August andthe lowes t September 1 e v esince 1959, the depar tment said.Approximately 17 millionteen-agers lef t their summerjobs to return to school in Sep-tember , while there was an in-crease of almost 500,000 in theemployment of adult women,pr imari ly as teachers and employes in schools.Bay A rea firmreports 15%sales increaseBERKELEY Hexcel Prod-ucts Inc. repor ted Thursday thatthird quar ter sales and earningsin 1964 will be about 15 per cenhigher than las t year .Pres ident W S. Powell of Atherton said he expects sales oabout $7 million. Profit will beabout $430,000. This comparesWith 1963 first nine months salesof $5.9 million with earnings o:$370,000, he said.Hexcel engages in the research and manufacture of honeycomb core mater ials . ,

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    In September the price of goldrose 3/2 cents an ounce in Lon-don, wherfrit can be bought andsold on the market . This weekthe pr ice cl imbed to $35.1125 anounce. The official price at theU.S. Treasury, is $35 an ouncewith purchasers required to payaround 8 cents more for han-dling charges .

    IMPORTANTThe London free ma rket is im-portant because if the pricemounts high enough to coverbuying charges and shippingcosts, the temptation r ises forforeign central banks to cash intheir American dollars for USTreasury gold. This happened inOctober, 1960when the price ofgold rose to $40 an ounce andU.S. reserves dropped sharply.Foreign central banks arepermitted to buy gold from theU.S. Treasury. American bus i-ness concerns also can buy goldfrom the Treasury for commer-cial and art purposes , butAmerican citizens can't on theirown.On Sept. 25 the official Treasury gold reserve was $15,460,841,203 compared With $15,583,-057,607 the s ame da t e in 1963ADVANCEThe Exchange Stabil izat ionFund transactions are repor tedonly once a month, and then aft-er a month has* passed. At theend of August , the fund's goldholdings had advanced $28 mil-lion to make the total, includingthe reserves, $15,657,000,000. Atth e end of August, 1963 thesecombined holdings came to$15,-633,000,000, as repor ted in theFederal Reserve Bullet in. Thetotal had reached its high pointin April 1964The success of the U.S. mone->tary author i t ies in protectingthe Treasury's official gold re-serves, although the holdings ofAmerican dollars by other nations has been advancing, is dueto a number of things .

    CLUB OF 10One is the club of 10 of thepr inc i pa l f i nanc ia l n a t i o n sworking together to prevenruns on member 's currencies orreserves . This has held drainsand fluctuations to a minimumAnother is the workings of theInternational Monetary Fund.And it is this source of helpwhich the United States is tap-ping again.It has jus t ar ranged to drawan additional $100 million fromthe fund in the form of currencies of others nations . Totadrawings now come to $400 million.The U.S. Treasury "can swapthese foreign currencies to othernations for dollars they hold.This keeps them from present-ing these dollars to the Treasuryfor U.S. gold. And the other nations use the currencies they getin the swap to settle their ownaccounts with the InternationalMonetary Fond.

    Economic expertDr. Dawn dies,CHICAGO (UPI) - Funeraservices will be held Saturdayfor Dr. Arnold R. Daum, 55,noted authority on Americaneconomic history and one-timeclarinetist in the Chicago Sym-phony Orches tra.Daum died in his homeWednesday night.

    COMPOSER DIESHOLLYWOOD (UPI) - ErnsToch, 76, who A won a PulitzePrize in 1956 for the third 61four symphonies he composeddied Thursday in Mt. SinaHospital following abdominasurgery. ^

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    'M oonship' due in M ountain ViewThe earth re-entry capsule of the Apol lo mooncraf t wi l l be a major "Space Exposition" feature. J/Moon flight craft modelto be exhibited in M t. View

    ~ P A L O A LT O 'TIMES, FRIDAY. OCT. 2, I 9 M T 'Hear ing exper imentsCats learn differencesbetween spoken words

    BALITMORE UP For whatit's worth, scientists at JohnHopkins Hospital have discov-ered that even al ley cats can betaught to tell the difference be-tween cats anddogs the spo-kenwords , that is. .With raw hamburger and lots

    of patience, Dr. Dickens WWarfield and her co-workershave taught 10 alley cats to dif-ferentiate between spoken words.Using the hambur ger as in-ducement, Dr. Warfield ha sbeen able to teach her chargesto walk to the side of a smallcage upon hear ing the wordcat ." Similar words as "batare ignored by the new sophis-ticated felines.The cats s tar ted with a two-word vocabulary, "cat"" and"bat ," then other words werethrown in at r andom.Dr. Warfield found that catsonly rarely confuted such words

    as 'dog" or "nag" with "cat ."However, the cats frequentlymis took "capt" for "ca t . "Dr. Warfield .also found thatshe could chop as much as one-third off the beginnings of suchtape^ecorded words as "dog"and "cat" before the cats failedto discr iminate between them.Liz Taylor pickedfor 'W oolf roleHOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Actress Elizabeth Taylor has beenchosen to play Martha, thehard-drinking, neurotic, tongue-lashing wife of a college pro-fessor, in the movie version ofthe stage hit "Who's Afraid OfVirginia Woolf?"Jack L. Warner announcedThursday night that Miss Tay-lor had been selected fromamong a dozen leading actress-es for the par t .

    Similar exper iments were coa-ducted with humans , and it wasfound that cats were able to rec>ognize "chopped" words aboutas well as humans .Other exper iments showedthat exposure to loud noises de-creases the ear 's abil i ty to dis-tinguish between words.The exper iments at the hos-pital's otophysiology labora-tory are par t of a ser ies beingconducted to help discover theexact functions of differentpar ts of the inner ear,PROCLAIMS VETERANS DAYWASHINGTON (UPI)Presi-dent Johnson Thursday pro-claimed Nov. 11 as "VeteransDay." He said the day shouldnot only honor the men andwomen who served in t ime ofwa r but also should demon*strate "our continued dedica-tion to the attainment of worldpeace . . . "

    A full-scale model of the Apol-lo moon flight re-entry craft willbe a major feature of the'space exposition" s c h e d -uled for Nov. 9 to 14 at theMountain View Community Cen-ter building.

    . The model to be exhibitedat the exposition will be provid-edalong w i t h about t wodozen other exhibits by theAmes Research Center of theNational Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration, Moffett Field.

    Financiers an d economistswatch inflationary trendsBy JESSE BOGUE

    NEW YORK (UPI)The ex-ent of inflationary trends inthe United States has begun tooccupy an increas ing share ofattention from financiers andeconomis ts .A few see a definite broadtrend; others say that whileprice inflation may show insome industries, it is not likelyto become an across-the-boardsurge.William McChesney Martin,chairman of the F eder a l Re-serve Board, said in an ar t iclepublished in Newsweek maga-zine this week that there waspotential inflation on the do-mestic s ide of the economy inthe near future.Many W all .Streeters regardthe wage set t lement reached bythe United Auto Workers withChrysler and Ford, and beingnegotiated with General Mo-tors, as unavoidably inflation-ary, despite declarat ions by themajor auto companies of theirdetermination to hold the priceline.

    PRICE INCREASESOne group of market analys tsnotes the creeping spread ofselective price increases in rawand manufactured indus tr ialmater ials , and says that thismust exert inflationary pres-sures . But others argue that insome areas where pr ice in-creases have been pos ted, com-petition is so keen that thereca n be no runaway.This latter group also notesthat productivity in manufac-turing industries has mountedalong with occasional pricer ises , so that there is nosqueeze.:. As for the auto wage settle-ments, anyone wishing to do soca n get, an argument -overwhether th,ey,j have set a pat-tern ,for all industry.The second largest union inmembership, the auto workers

    can make their demands fel tfar down the auto line, intopar ts and accessory manufac-turing industries; effects canbe widespread.But despite the general highlevel of business activity, notall industries have shown thegrowth of the auto makinggroup; others can be expectedto resist strongly when bargain-ing t ime comes around.. ,In its current "Executive Re-port ," Prentice-Hall summar-izes that "f irm pr ices and se-lective hikesbut no real Infla-tionary surgeare in prospectfor the months ahead. And, itsaid, an across-the-board in-crease on a whole range of anindustry's products is not inprospect .This analysis also noted thattoday's consumer is more of ashopper than he was 10 yearsago; he could postpone some ofhis buying if prices shoot high-er , and might be expected todo so. -A T&T incomesets quarterly,yearly records

    NEW YORK (AP) TheAmerican Telephone & Tele-graph Co. repor ted Thursday ithad reoord earnings in both thethree-month and 12-month peri-ods ended Aug. 31.The company, whose stock isowned by more persons thanany other corporation, said netincome for the quar ter was$419,629,000 or 81 cents a share.Net' income for the 12-monthswas $1,597,618,000, or $319 ashare, a record.The earnings figures com-pared with $383,147,000, or 78cents a share, for the fall quar^er of 1963, and$1,441,958,000, or$2,96 a share in the T2-monthsended in August , 1963

    It has been used for studiesof crew location, guidance in-struments, see-out visibility andadaptabil i ty of space suits forthe moon mission planned by1970.A one-third scale cutawaymodel of the Apollo spacecraftwill also be on exhibit at theexposition, showing provisionsthat will allow astronauts to livein a "shir ts leeve environment"until they land on the moon orundergo maneuvers requir ingspacesuit protection.The large-scale, countywidespace show will occupy mostof the floor space at the Com-munity Center building on Reng-storff Avenue in Mountain View.It is sponsored by the CivicAffairs (cultural) Committee ofthe Mountain View Chamber of

    Commerce, w ith NASA support .Other exhibits include aseven - story high, four stageScout rocket and a "space sci-ence theater" featur ing movies ,lectures and working models ofs pace "har dwar e" androckets .

    F u l l W e e k ' s. . . yours every Saturday.

    T V L O Gin a handy puU-out sectionfor easy re fe rra l , pl u sG e o r ge W i l l e y 's hum orouscorhments on the TV f a r e

    PROUD OF YOUR SCHOOL?Wear your school name right on your blazer but tons!Stanford, Sari ta Clara, Cal ifornia Universi ty, SanJose State, Oregon Universi ty, Oregon State,U.C.L.A., W ashington_ State, U.S.C., WashingtonUniver