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fll 1 ML V It *J? ’ % Jb t-. 5 .. -' ’■ j y bOBbB| ST" y?_y» >fl W» fc. Test Pilot Joe Walker wears a real down-to-earth grin after flying his X-15 rocket ship 66% miles into space over California—2,3oo feet higher than the plane had previously flown. The angle of his flight, it was explained, kept his speed to a mere 3,614 miles per hour.—AP Wirephoto. Israel and Syria Take Charges Before U. N. UNITED NATIONS, N, Y., Aug. 23 (AP). —lsrael and Syria square off in the United Na tions Security Council today, each accusing the other of ag gression. The special Council session had been set for Monday but was advanced at the insistence of Israeli Ambassador Michael Comay. He claimed Syrian guns shelled two Israeli settlements near the Syrian border Wednes day night. It was the first time in 10 years that Israel had originated a complaint in the Council in stead of following up Arab charges with counter charges. In preliminary talks with Council members, Mr. Comay said the 11-nation group’s ac tion would show whether Israel could get satisfaction from the Council, where the Soviet Un ion has exercised its veto occa sionally on behalf of the Arabs. Will Defend Self The Israeli parliament said Wednesday night that Israel would exercise its right of self defense unless the Council halted the alleged Syrian ag gression. The Arab world, split on many inter-Arab issues, rallied to support Syria. Some delegates predicted Israel would encounter a tough time in the Council because she has boycotted the Israel- Syrian mixed armistice com mission since 1951. The Coun cil called on both nations in April 1962 to take “all steps necessary for reactivating the mixed armistice commission.” While Syria has taken com plaints about incidents in the Ball Is Sent to Soothe Portugal and Pakistan By the Auoclated Preu President Kennedy is sending Undersecretary of State George Ball to Portugal and Pakistan in an effort to rub out sore spots in relations with the two allies. Announcing Mr. Ball’s 10-day trip yesterday, the White House said the State Department’s No. 2 officer would fly to Lisbon next Wednesday. There he plans to confer with I Pact With Japan On Textiles Due By the AuocUted Preu A formal announcement is expected Tuesday on a three year agreement on Japanese textile imports into the United States. The United States, acting un der a long-term international cotton textile agreement, had asked restraints on some 40 categories of Japanese textiles on grounds they threatened to disrupt the United States mar ket. Under the agreement, signed at Geneva last year by 23 na tions, an importing country—in this case the United States— can request an exporting coun try—in this case Japan—to re strain cotton textile exports if the importing country’s Indus- , try is threatened. __________ LOST ' " i ADDBEBB BOOK. bl»clt. with Ute. . number*, lost oft c*r. vic. Wl*. eve., betw. Bethesda and Cedar lane; re word, OL. 4-5872. . BEAGLE, female, vic. Capitol Bill. on Thuraday; answer* to "Ju . 7 i mo*, old. 547-0191, , CAT—AII black, male, white marklnu under chin. Langley Pk. area. Reward. Call 434-9215. . and white, femal*. Mon. vic. Ashton-Olney areaj jenerous r*- | ward. 054-7223 or 498-43 W. . mfilOliD BING, yellow kold setting. lady's, vicinity of Thayer av*. Safe- 1 way and 811. Bp*. Library, on Coles ville rd.i liberal reward. JU. 8-3090 or JU. 8-7344, ETfGXASSES. lost Tues., p.m.,; slngls vision, too half frame, med. dark, med heavy; bottom clear; reward. I 285-7313. , GERMAN SHEPHERD, blk.-Un. scar on head, white under neck: vlo. Bry- 1 Un Park; reward.s3.l-1324. ( PARAKEET, blue, wearing band; an swers to “Peedle ; in Piney Branch Apia., at Bilgo Creek pkwy, and Piney , Branch rd.; SIS reward: Ju. ‘ 9-8273. I POODLE, male iray. lost In vic. < Clinton. Md.; ''Louie' 1 ; reward. Phone 1 CT. 7-5985. I .Si 1 and Michlkan aye, n.e. 422-7181. ( BlNG—lnitial "H.” VtC. Bladensbark . lM”»-8^ ni " I,a r>lu * ! WAIST WATCH, lady’s, diamond. Au*. , S 2; vic. WAL. 10th and O n.w.. or us marked Riverdale, at 3:15; gen erous reward. LA. 9-1921. ( FOUND 1— | COMPRESSED AIR TANK, found in . SOO blk. Taylor st. n.w. TU. 2-8850, ■ after o weekday*, ] DIAMOND RING—Boy who called JU. , 11-3090. please call Ju. 8-3090 In re- 1 *ard to abov*, < GUNMAN SHEPHERD Pt'PPV. vic . Western Junior Hlih School. Can 1 OL. 2-5027. I Si SS^^e C rn r S: ' ’interior 1 , 4 8 a.m. l lT| ] FaRAKEBT. no band: lost in vicinity I of 7th and Van Buren n.w. tor nearly , I's vks. BA. 3-1041, I x» 4. NEW RECORD FOR X-15 demilitarized zone before the commission, Israel has argued that only the commission chair man—a U. N. man—is auth orized to handle such com plaints. Aggression Charged Both Israel’s and Syria’s i current complaints allege mil itary aggression inside the de militarized zone north of the Sea of Galilee. The zone is forbidden ground to all mili tary forces under the 1949 armistice agreement between Israel and Syria, last of the Arab nations to stop fighting in the Palestine war. Israel claims the area as her territory. Syria contests the claim and accuses Israel of making “repeated attempts to annex this area by force.” Israel’s complaint, filed Tuesday, charged that 10 Sy rian soldiers killed two Israeli farmers in an ambush Monday night. Syria, in a complaint sub mitted the next day, charged that about 15 Israeli armored cars fired on Syrian positions Tuesday. Each nation accused the other of a troop buildup along the frontier. The U. N. truce organization in Palestine has proposed post ing inspectors in the border area to avert new fighting. Israel said it would accept the proposal if Syria did. Maj. Adnan Shaban£ chief of the Syrian aide of the mixed armistice commission, an nounced it had accepted the inspectors as a means of easing tension. Premier Antonio Salazar and other high officials. From there he will fly to Pakistan for discussions with President Mohammed Ayub and other leaders from Sep tember 3 to 6. Colonies in Question Both Portugal and Pakistan are United States allies, Portu gal being a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organ ization and Pakistan belonging to the Southeast Asia and Cen tral Treaty organizations. And with both, Washington has been having troubles in recent months. Portugal and the United States are at odds in their poli cies towards Portugal's African territories. Mr. Salazar has criticized United States refusal to side with Portugal in the U. N. moves aimed at promot ing independence for her pos sessions. Also unsolved is the question of United States bases in Por tugal’s Azores Islands. The old agreement for United States use of the bases expired at the end of last year and has been continued on only a provisional basis. Portugal has reportedly treated the base issue as part of any broader deal it makes with the United States. Mr. Ball was said to be hope ful of persuading the Portu guese to moderate their colonial policy and perhaps make prog ress on the base question too. Arms Irk Pakistan United States-Paklstan rela tions took a turn for the worse when the United States rushed arms to India following Red China’s attack last fall. Washington has assured the Ayub government that United States military aid to India is to be used only against the Chinese Communists. But the Pakistanis, who have long re ceived United States arms aid, are sensitive about military strengthening of their neighbor and rival. The Pakistanis have been engaged in more dealings with Red China than the United States likes. They worked out a boundary settlement with Peking at the time India- Pakistan talks were under way on the Kashmir territorial dis pute. And they are planning to run a commercial air service through China. Mr. Kennedy’s emissary is not expected to do much about the Kashmir dispute, which is still far from settlement. Buffalo Strike Ends BUFFALO, N. Y„ Aug. 23 (AP). Workers hauled grain from lake vessels to grain ele vators today as a result of the settlement of a three-day wild cat walkout. The walkout, in volving 225 members of Local 190, International Longshore men’s Association, ended yes terday after the workers agreed to a contract providing an 8- cent wage increase per hundred bushels of grain handled. IF YOU'RE TALL, DARK AND HANDSOME* AND CAN RECOGNIZE A TERRIFIC VALUE THIS SHOULD KNOCK YOUR EYE OUT I > •(or, if you're short, blond and look something like Winston Churchill) I | ■ /111 _ kl L 1/4 wN 1 fi Ij— l WSISRISMr v ■ Ji toru, •/ couth! ■ HE ~ Ww » is ‘T ■ I 4 cWg?:' 81 tfv ■ 11 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ...». Ja A CLOTHING SALE THAT TOOK THE BRAINS' AND RESOURCES OF TWO GREAT FACTORIES ■ o • Who pulled the switch in the clothing industry? Confidentially, it was our Buyer, a joe named Dave.... who went to ONE factory to get the FABRICS ond to ANOTHER, to get the TAILORING... Irt the trade, Dave is known os one of America's outstanding clothing Buyers because he makes some fantastic buys... knowing, of WHO has food fabrics ... ond WHO does goad tailoring. Dave figures if you put the two together you hove on odds-on favorite that con't be topped ... ond Dav» is right! You'll never guess where the Fabrics came from... but we'll let you in on the other half of the secret... because the famous label will be m every suit.., This is no time to brother you with details... but you should know that every suit is brand now... ond in A WIDE RANGE OF SIZES... Also thot there are plenty of tw^' button as well os throo-button models... Also thotyou will bo able to choose either PLAIN or PLEATED trousers ...Lastly, these ore the medium-weight year'round worsteds, sharkskins, unfinished worsteds, ond even, twists... EVERY pair of trousers with the PERMANENT CREASE THAT WILL NEVER CEASE... >•**» * ' fi* advance fall suit sale OH WITH FABRICS USUALLY FOUND IN *7O and *75 SUITS ; . ♦ ■ 4 THE FABRIC STORY: 4H THE TAILORING STORY: J If we could give you the name of the cele- MI/ XU A W And if we could only spell out the first few brated mills that supplied these fabrics . . . X letters of this maker's name ... we could you'd quit reading right here and yell for a X K send the labels back to the factory ... but taxi. .. . You'd recognize the names that are X K we didn't ... we insisted upon having the never, never identified with anything less than labels intact . . . altho we promised not to S7O and $75 clothing. .. . Those are the kind advertise the name (and we're keeping that of fabrics we insisted upon for this sale . . . K promise). ... But you'll recognize it ot a glance... EXTRA: EVERY TOPCOAT AND OVERCOAT IN STOCK NOW 20% OFF! | Th* Htcht Co.—M|j'» Clothing—Downtown, Silvor Spring, PARKingjgn. Princo Georgei Wow, Morlow Hoight* * ° n,y Fallout Qiusing Cancer, Physicist Tells Hearing By the Aieocihted Preee Between 97 and 320 ad ditional cases of cancer among American children now living or yet unborn may be expected over the next 15 years as a re sult of fallout from the 1961- 1962 Russian and American nuclear tests, according to a Pittsburgh scientist. Dr. Ernest Stemglass, ad visory physicist to the Westing house Electric Corp., gave that wide-ranging estimate at fall out hearings of the Senate- House Atomic Energy Commit tee yesterday. He said the additional cases, over and above those that would occur naturally, could be expected to result from the children being irradiated while still in their mothers* wombs during periods ranging up to Khrushchev, Tito Travel to Brioni BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Aug. 23 (AP). Soviet Premier Khrushchev took off today for a roundabout trip to President Tito's Brioni Island hideaway and talks there with the Yugo slav leader. Mr. Khrushchev, Marshal Tito and their wives flew South to Titograd, the capital of Montenegro. From Titograd the party was to preceed west to the Port of Kotor to board the Tito yacht for a two-day cruise north ward along the Dalmatian Coast to Brioni. Stops were planned en route at Dubrovnik and Split. five years following that series of tests. Those tests contributed 100 megatons of fission yield, with the Russian series contributing 85 megatons of this. Dr. Sternglass, who also is chairman of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Federation of American Scientists, indicated his calculations of this possible effect of the fallout on child hood cancer Incidence were based largely on previous find ings by a Harvard scientist, Dr. Brian MacMahon. Dr. MacMahon has reported indications that embryos ex posed in the womb to radiation resulting from pelvic X-ray ex aminations given their mothers during pregnancy may have a 40 per cent higher cancer risk in the first 10 years of life than children who had not been so exposed. Dr. Sternberg, in a report in the journal Science in June, voiced views similar to those in yesterday’s testimony. His published article drew a chal lenge from the Atomic Energy Commission. Yesterday Dr. Sternberg indicated he still feels he’s correct. Janet Leigh Robbed NEW YORK, Aug. 22 (AP).— Burglars broke into the hotel room of actress Janet Leigh and her husband Robert Grant and made off with $8,500 worth of jewelry and SBO in cash, police reported today. The thefts occurred last night while the couple were attending the theater. TWO MASKED MEN APPROACH BANK, BANG... THEY FLEE ARLINGTON, Mass. (AP).—Two men pulled up in front of a branch of the Arlington Five Cents Sav ings Bank in a black sedan yesterday. They wore trench boats and white handkerchief masks. They walked toward the bank. BANG ... a truck back fired. The bandits whirled, leaped back into their car and sped away. Marriage Promise Charged in Suing J. B. Gay Estate The estate of Julius B. Gay, retired Washington produce merchant who died last May, has been sued by a woman who claims she took care of him but was left out of his will. Mrs. Helen B. Taylor, listed at 2475 Virginia avenue N.W., said in papers filed yesterday at United States District Court that she cared for Mr. Gay for three years before he died. Mr. Gay, who was 73, was supposed to marry her, Mrs. Taylor said, but later promised to leave her $25,000 instead. Her suit seeks this inoney and $23,150 for taking ctre of him. Mrs. Taylor, 59, also seeks title to Mr. Gay’s co-operative apartment, which she said had been promised her. The apart ment, at the Virginia avenue address, is in the Potomac Plaza. Her suit said that the execu tor of Mr. Gay’s estate has refused her requests for com pensation for caring for Mr. Gay and for his breach of his promise to make her his wife. THE EVENING STAR Washington, D. C., Friday, August 23, 1963 East European Policy Review Urged by Kennan By the Auociated Preu George F. Kennan, retiring United States Ambassador to Yugoslavia, feels "we ought to have a good hard look at our relationships with Eastern Eu rope and see if our own policies are the best we can devise." Mr. Kennan gave this per sonal view at the White House yesterday after conferring for nearly an hour with President Kennedy. The ambassador said significant changes are under way In Eastern Europe. He said he thinks there is a readi ness there to recognize that the world situation has changed. “I think the Soviet-Chinese dispute has had a profound effect on this area.” Mr. Ken nan said. “They realize that their choice is wider than it used to be.” In Washington, D. C. STEAKS for the Carriage Trade Parckw’s Restaurant* 20th & K, N. W. FE 7-6320 Char,* Aecoenf* HanaraS Fr«« Dinner Parking Kennedy Flying To Cape Today By the Aeiocleted Preu President Kennedy flies from Washington to Cape Cod today lor his eighth consecutive week end at the summer White House on Squaw Island. Mr. Kennedy is scheduled to arrive at Otis Air Force Base on the Cape about 6 p.m. » Mrs. Kennedy and' the couple’s two children have been at Squaw Island since early July. She is recuperating from the premature birth of a son two weeks ago. Tfcrbaby lived less than two dXf*. CHEDNG-SHAM Wj (from Hong Kong i ray* £7 X, inode Th BMk dns— ,-7 / w» onptiml Wl: j ad flf trinmed. Ain * * Mid _ ' .‘ 7 I b I w™ I : 4 «■ --X | “Wortingrtn-t Newest * 1 Orient fayu lwi” ' MOONBEAM 4907 Wisconsin Am, O. j 3621277 A-3