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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 12

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SI t'ael For Railroaders job rolcclion impiileut. i 'nt Soviet 1 1 i 1 5 1 i i i Buzzed 4Aain' been sideling ca.se The report was issued by White House Press Secretary George E. Reedy before President Johnson left his Texas ranch home for return to the capital. JOHNSON CITY, Tex. a) A presidential emergency board recommended Sunday that major railroads negotiate a job protection agreement with 150,000 shop workers.

The six shop craft unions involved in the dispute and the railroads have 30 days to negotiate an agreement on the basis of the recommendations. If no agreement is reached by then the unions, which function through the railway employees' depart ment of the AFL-CIO will be free to strike and the carriers to alter working conditions. The six unions involved represent about one-third of all non-operating employees and about one-fifth of all railway employees. The dispute, which began in October 1962, had its origin in the sweeping technological and organizational changes which have adversely affected railroad employment in the last 20 years. The emergency board has March 17.

tion for job protection would extend to losses, dislocations and demotions resulting from automation. These would include a five-year guaranty of his former pay to a man whose wages or conditions are reduced as a result of such change, and a monthly allowance of 60Cc of former earnings for up to five years if he loses his job. Members of the board included Jean McKelvey, pro- fessor of industrial relations at Cornell University, the first woman ever to have served on an emergency board under the Railway Labor Act. Other members were Saul Wallen of Boston, a professional arbitrator, who served as chairman, and Arthur Ross, professor of economics at the University of California. The six unions are the International Brotherhood of Boiler Makers; Brotherhood of Railway Carmen; International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Inter national Association of Machinists, Sheet Metal Workers International Association and International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers.

NICKEL DAYS ALL RIDES Ixcipt Ct Ktrts Flyln Ctgtt Tues, Wed. Thurs. August 11-12-13 RIDES OPIN I P. M. sVNTA BARBARA, Calif, i () woman who was apparently dead for 40 minutes after suffering a heart attack sat up in her hospital bed Sunday and said: "I feel kind of spooky now." She added, "I guess anybody who was dead that long would feel that way." Mrs.

Clara Allison, 53, was stricken at her home in nearby Goleta after a shopping trip. Her husband James, an oil company employee, tried to revive her, then called an ambulance. An ambulance attendant, Michael Brown, tried mouth-to-mouth resuscitation during the 15-mlnute trip to Cottage Hospital here. Dr. Frank Leckie said he found no heartbeat or blood pressure.

"Her skin was black," he said. "She was clinically dead." Nonetheless he gave her a shot of adrenalin and began chest massage. An anesthetist, Dr. John Green, inserted a plastic tube down the woman's windpipe In case there was an obstruction. "That's the first sensation I remember," said Mrs.

Allison, "someone sticking something down my throat." Dr. Leckie said he and Dr. Green worked with Typhoon Ida Rips China Mainland MOSCOW (UPI The Soviet Union charged Sunday that American military planes had buzzed Russian merchant and passenger ships more than 50 times since an official protest note on the subject was delivered last week. The Ministry of Merchant Marine, the Communist party newspaper Pravda said, had received radiograms from ships in the Atlantic, Pacific, Mediterranean "and other seas about new piratical acts committed by U. S.

forces." The Russians gave precise latitude-longitude coordinates for the alleged incidents and numbers for the American aircraft. One ship, the "Turkmen-ia," was buzzed 16 times in the North Atlantic, Pravda said. "This impudent and clearly provocative act took place at a point 33 degrees and 51 minutes latitude north and 55 degrees, 34 minutes longitude west," the newspaper added. The Soviet press Saturday charged that U. S.

planes continued to buzz Russian ships at "dangerously" low altitudes. ONE-DAY SERVICE own io a.m. HONG KONG (TJPI) Typhoon Ida slammed into the China mainland near the Portuguese colony of Macao Sunday, bringing the death toll in its three-day rampage to more than 20. Ida, packing winds of 140 mph, started landslides, tore down communications lines and uprooted trees In coastal settlements as it moved Inland. Two men were reported killed by flying objects and a third was electrocuted.

The killer storm roared in from the South China Sea where it left 13 dead and 20 missing in the Philippines. Damage was reported heavy in the tobacco growing provinces in Northern Luzon. Fringe winds from the typhoon battered Formosa Saturday night. All four crewmen aboard a fishing boat which sank off Hsinkang were missing and feared drowned. Two other fishermen drowned off Kaohsiung trying to swim to safety when the 50-ton Yi Fa sank.

Work QuirantteS a a BOCKENSTETTr JEWELER 9606 READING ROAD 821-6354 Carra ltu AntO Hotti llftiMi Soviet charges of American buzzing are not new. They have been periodic and fairly regular for many years. Rut the latest Soviet accusations, coinciding with the North Vietnamese crisis, will probably add a new element to Communist propaganda in building up the image of American "warmongering," observers said. "Even after the presentation of the Soviet government's note exposing provocative actions of the U. S.

armed forces on peaceful shipping lines, American military planes have on more than 50 occasions buzzed Soviet passenger and freight ships at dangerous altitudes," Pravda said. The Soviet note delivered here August 3 said the Kremlin "expects the United States Government to take necessary measures to discontinue actions violating the freedom of shipping in international waters." Fall In August Ilils Northeast By Associated Press Weather more like October than August covered the northeastern quarter of the nation Sunday. The chilly 47 In' Grand Rapids, and the crisp 40 in Pittsburgh early In the day established new lows for August 9. Chicago's minimum of 53 was Just one degree above the low for the date set In 1924. The mercury was expected to dive Into the 30s during the night in the Northern Appalachians and New England.

Most of the country en-Joyed Sun and temperatures in the pleasant range. But showers fell in Iowa and Minnesota. Thunderstorms drenched the Florida panhandle. More than an inch of rain doused the Naval Air Station in PSraj Like NgJr WE SERVE ONLY U. S.

PRIME BEEF NOT ONlr OUR FINEST STEAKS AND ROASTS BUT All THE WAY TO our tasty beef stew and yes, even our yummy hamburgersi you may Think we ri bracgins a bit but who eiss in cincinNATI can say this i SO WHATEVER YOUR TASTE MAY BE YOU AlWAYS GET THE VERY Af TH 0f 'Urtifiti bv Otvl. of Agriculture Mrs. Allison at least 25 minutes before she regained consciousness. 16,000 In Gems Of Actress Stolen HONOLULU iP) Yauko Asakura, vacationing Japanese film actress, reported to police Sunday that worth of jewelry had been taken from her. luggage.

Miss Asakura, 28, told Investigators that nine rings, two pins and a brooch were taken from her luggage in her Honolulu apartment. She valued the missing rings at $12,000. One Is a cat's eye with diamonds In a platinum setting. i vt Hr Is your new ccat here? Take a look at all the new styles. Dunlap's has even more that didn't get their picture snapped.

Every one is August Sale Priced. That means a savings of 10 or more on brand new 1964 coats. Look at the variety. Plaids, tweeds, herringbones, cashmeres, camel hairs, in split raglan, natural shoulder, balmacaan models. 4th Vine A A as 3 1 li.fr;?M4 'Sftf 3 Is I mmmmmmmm For Reductions On Fine Quality Furnishings Come To WNT fashions in FURN1TURe.

nn A AUGUST SALE ST COA SALE 5 Special Offering Of Early American Chairs SWIVEL ROCKER Warm snd wonderful is fhii swivel rocier of Early American desiqn offered at special savinqj durinq the Auqust Sale at Kent Fashions in Furniture. Perfect for rockinq qently beta's an open fire or television screen this winter. You wouldn't believe a chair so handsome could be so comfortable. Cov-ered in a spriqhtly print of red, brown or qreen. Regularly priced at 79.90 NOW 59.90 Burberry, Dunlap and Hart Schaffner Marx tailored.

Join the ranks of men that like a good buy plus convenience. Have your new coat altered and in your closet that first cold day. Get exactly what you want in size, color, model, sale priced at 76.75 89.75 125.75 other coats reduced proportionately Be billed November 1 90-day account billed in three equal payments in October, November and December WING CHAIR A comfortable chair in an attractive desiqn that's this winq chair, an authentic reproduction now available at authen-tic tavinqs at Kent Fashions in Furniture. Thil charmhq chair will be the center of attraction in any room. Offered in qold, charcoal brown and rustic tweed.

Usually priced at 79.90. NOW 59.90 Open Monday and Thursday Evenings dunlap's Shop Monday until 8:30 P. M. 417 Vir fASHIONSNFURNlTUf 12 E. Fifth Street on Fountain Square.

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,581,924
Years Available:
1841-2024