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The Post-Standard from Syracuse, New York • Page 58

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Location:
Syracuse, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
58
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tenacious Fino Sees Hope for U. S. Lottery From Tin Pttl-StattAord WASHINGTON Rep. Paid A. Pino, flu dapper Bronx Republican wants the federal eovemmen-t to conduct a notional lottery, is betfreuig to rankle "When he first cum ben, All thought hia lotteiy wee ecatkwt." commMiU a vetena member.

"Now. some ot us arvn't sa SUM. Maybe- he'a making progress." Fino, wtoo hac fought vainly lor the cstebushmwt of ftd- toril lottery commloafoa for in of We yews in Congress, lift can a new among leilow Encouraged, he coideues, "I'm havtac trouble felting them to WIIM with me about it." Some members of Ccngrese ant not at 401 happy wMi the thought of tatting a stand on this volatila issue. But Hiariki Flnc'i unUi- tng campaign, and added interest sported by Mow Hainp- shin's approval this year or a state lottery, a growing number Rrt finding the Mibjeet creeping Into their Urea. Even though he endowett legalized, on a nMunal scale, Fbk trttt to fc dear he tt not encouraginc gambling.

He then is "human Ifarat lor which wdl be set lifted, either Itfiltj- or fllfgilly. By making most kinds of tumbling aganGt the law, the government, he says, forces honest ctb- zsns to deal wttti the underworld, and deprives itsett of bOUocw at in tax revenues. mat national lottery would provide a controllable ouUet for natural urge to water, and the saint time drive UK criminal syndicate Into tmnkiMptw. TtK tral lottery could easily a J10 billion a yen biwinea, whose pntitf would flow into national treaSitrj, lit While In coagreSi. and that In Mew York Stati legislature.

has frequently denounced the "bluerose that tit lottery plan from com- A nwdonty ol the American peaplc would support the Idea, 11 fiven the facis, Although the ULuttion looki brighter now, tbe York GonjresanMn has jia illus- onx. bill is Mill hopeleialj burled. Lti the and Commutes, and tU od reaching floor ws- sion an- nil. Many of congress arc quietly hoping tiis' bill tucked away tor tome yean to come, Tlwy may BW privrttly that they puraocally think lottery ia worthwhile, but preclour lew ready to tty publicly. However Ippeqlflkg the though of tapping a rich new jource of funde for the federal treasury may be, whit polMdan wants to qotMLdend condoning Immorality? In January.

Flno twit to even, at 431 other congressmen, ashing for their dews on his lattery bill. To hit disappoint- hfl ot back than In inwi, the either afilnat or non-eoounl'U In an effort to torw of them Into taking a pnltion, recently expo unJ Ing In tht Hecord on of gmmbltng in Individual fates. itlr up Interest in tht mendobed, bttdglnj fmbll- ctty to rEatm lirttery, and pei- Col. fl METROPOLITAN FINAL THE POST-STANDARD Weother Sumy and warmer today Rich today IX Low lt 4S 136th YEAH lit Honbtr SYRACUSE, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1963 TWENTY CENTS Drysdale Beats Yanks, 1-0, on 3 Hits Three in Row for LA! Bfocktd Punt and First Touchdown John Paglio (78), Syracuse guard, blacked John Wheaton first period punf at the Holy Cross five- yard line and then recovered the loose ball in the end zone for the first Syracuse score. Jim Gravel (20) of Holy Cross and Syracuse players Ron Oyer (18) and Joe Dzlekonskt (60) are also shown.

(P-S Photo by Dick Bandy) SU Routs Holy Cross 48-0 By BILL KEDDY Rolling steadily against what seemed to be a ub-jw Holy Cross team, Syracuw Unjver- siLy'i football team made it look easy with a 48-0 victory before an estimated sun- splashed Arditwld Stadium yesterday. In a complele reversal or forni a. poor showing in' a defeat at Kansas a. week earlier, the Orangemen tent seven different athletej into end urne for touchdowns. Tim was the largest of victory the series began in 1905, and ft wu demonstrated early the Cni- posed no icnoui WaUey Mahle.

whoae tack bdency in hbd been criticized ii ttie first two this time. ran ball nine times for yards Chat included 1 8-yard touchdown jaunt. More important for 5U hopes aeuon, the Junior quarter- ack threw eight passes in Ine irst halT. completed six at them, one for a touchdown. Inside Today MCtlH 1 Telegraph 1-9-1-10 Sen.

Goldwitv 4 PoliUcil Front 4 4 Mail Crouworj JourTMl 9eeMtfi It Society 11-1M3-1MS-3D Muriel T. Kerr Around ttie PaddocN 19 Amujemtnti 14 Music The Aria Rjrtlio A TV Itodkt TV Llsttnn 17 IB Just fell John SI Death Record 9 Farni A Garden tt Houac of Week Aitrotoffkal ForecaH Marked Almrc fl FuwJe Selullon 90 tfOHAD N0U4 WHW ooked. on the (round and Witat't more, one cf the two asea was dropped by DutJt- ett on a pertect prtch ror what seemed kke a aiire touchdown, Duckett Htoived for that miss by hanging onto another pass, however, and lugging It across the goofl line. Outnumbered and outclassed, the Cruiaders kept battling all the way, but alter an early thrust got them tt 16. they bottled up In their own territory Dor nil but out other dfive, pttiod that died on SyracuM 26.

Coach Ben Schwartzw alder sent 44 men into the onesided affair, and the. Orange showed such relentleiu power that the home club punted just twice, Mahle led llie ground attack that piled up 333 yards over- Page 31) Flora Turns Away from U.S. Leaving Untold Number Dead (AP) Hurricane Flora flailed eastern Cuba for 2t hours with wind ind rain, then slowly back Saturday toward tta Caritbeen Sea from whert she csmt- The dramatic, shift in direction cft EdMurrow Loses Lung Edward R. Murrow, diftCtOTOf the U.S InlonnaliDn had his left lung removed Sfttury during a three-hour operation. A for the Washington Hospital Ke was in satisfactory cmdiUon.

The operation was Tor the moval ot a tumor In his tell lung, bill the spokesman said Uie location ot tumor hid macfe necessary tit remove the entire lung, The hospital running teats to IK wtattar then was any malignancy. first indication of the condition laft wwk when Morn M.wffsred a ton throat during a Apcech Id entered the hon- centef for observation latt indicated Ihe and mrftty tvttcutu Mat ol Airing PI) nil 1 tw- The her threat tn Florida and the Stalled by an intense hifh-prei- surc to the north, Flora thrashed aimlessly among the mountains of Cuba all day, then began slbwly to the Her atny over laml had weakened and knocked the shape out of wild and vicious storm. The turn brought hurricane warning flags down in the board- Dihamis. ind worried Floridlanj relaxed. In Flora's violent wake In the Caribbean lay untold number! of dead vast ot deiUuc- tion.

Dr. Gerard Ptilleppsau. Haitian minister of health, described that Negro nation is sodden trash heap, with towns ravaged and bodies floating In the strtets. ol dangerout flooding began to comft from Cuba. A hurricane, a dangerously low- pressUre syslem in iVttit.

Vends lo move toward other low pressure and away from a "high," which is a system of stable thai resists bting rtfawn into the hurricane circirttiwn, A "hi sircteMng from down (A Florida Strait? forcftt Flora's liira away from her nnrthwvttt LUUISC. for e'jfit btmn, the of Ifte hM lUDM 71 milts toutlKftit of CsfflafMey, Cuba, then drift to the Elfft AMDS JSWVMWAHY SAT.K WT. At Nassau, forecaster Arthur Pihe said Flora would move of the south coast of and near Grand Cayman Island on a course toward! Yucatan Peninsula. At chieF forecaster flor don Dunn the (uture LOS ANGELES IAP) Don Drysdale, A tell, hands part- time TV actor, pitched the Los Angeles Dodgers to their thir straight World Series victory Over the reeling New York Yankee? urn ph. One mare defeat Sunday nt the lutile YanXs will go down the drain, victims ot their own patented I r-straight killer punch.

No club In 39 previous Series ever has been able to bounce back liter losing three in a row. The Yanks, with a total or three runs in three garries and a Sandy ax ahead, don't look like the to rewrite the book, even hough they hold the record for lour-straight sweeps six. again the Dodgers pinned Yanks to the mat by an eerly lead. In this case it only one run but it did the with Drysdale. Dodger speed, young Jim Bou ion's wildnssR and the inabilii; of the highly touted Yfitikfie JQ field come up with the big pla at the right time added up lo tha ndy run, Wild Plfcb Vltfll With one out in.

the first, Jim Illlam worked tht 24-year-olt Yankse right-hander to a 3-3 roun and finally walked. Willie Davi Ined out wickedly to-Johnny Elan chard, filling Jn lor the injuret oger Maria in right Held. Working carefully on Tommj avJs, Bouton let his fifth pitcl wunce Into the dirt away from catcher Elston Howard for a wil pitch. Gil Lam quickly dashed second. Davis, hitting star of the Series then smashed a single through th usually dependable Bobhy Rich ardson that rolled Into short righ center, far enough lo permit th speedy Gilliam to score UK onl run.

Tommy's smash appeared scoot oil the edge ol the i nil el and happed off Richardson' toot. The Dodgers were not smash tig the ball, but the Yank weren't doing a thing. They wen quietly Inning after inning as Big blew them down. Not until thi seventh did a single Dodger out 1 elder have a putout. In fact, thej tad three all, All by Ron Fairly Thrilling Finish The futile Yanks gave the crowd ot 55,912.

largest in the his or plush Dodger Stadium, a ftrill on the last out. Joe Pepi ane tore into a Drysdale pitc' and lofted It to deep right fiel near the Yankee bullpen. Fairly who doubles a first basema or outfielder as the occasion de mands, raced back and pulled i down about five feet chort run territory. New York had one big chanc to get Drysdale. That opportunlt hicnt of the storm remains "vary very uncertain, with the lack of- a It, Ct), in the second inning whe Mickey Mantle dropped a bun single behind third base lor first hit of the Series, and tone was hit by pitch With men on first and second an nobody out, Big was In troubl Page JL Passers-by stop to watch as flames envelop a young Buddhist monk who sits impassively In the central market square in Saigon, South Vietnam, yesterday during a ritual suicide in test to government anti-Buddhist poll- cies.

Hundreds saw the ghastly Ucle, the sixth such protest suicide by Buddhists. (UPI Telephoto) Monk Takes Life by Fire U. S.Prolests Beating Of Newsmen in Saigon SWOON, South Viet Nam (AP) --A jhaven-headed young Buddhist monk himself to death before hundreds o( stunned spectator! in Saigon Saturday arid the political crisis South Viet Nam hR ft new and dangerous peak tension. monk's fiery suicide set a rapid-fire chain of events. brought another confrontation between the U.S.

government and iht fluthoritarian regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem. It also raised the specter of more pro- tcsi suicides and anligovemment demctnilrations that could topple regime. Tht monk, who appeared to be fn his enrly 20s. snt In the "lotus" position in a main square, poured soline over hii btown robe and touched a match to it. He died in three minutes.

Three U.S. newsmen abtcniptiiuj to cover the grisly suicide outside Gollup Poll Goldwater Boosts Lead By GEORGE GALLUP Director, American ImtHite of labile OphlM PRINCETON, N. Among Republican voters across the nation, Sen. Barrv (rolchvateF has infreased his toad over field of 19M GOP hopefuls. Currently, forty-two per Cent of tht nnk-ftiid-fUc of thli party wwM Ukc lo convention nominate Gold' water next year, Ctor.

NelsM ttockefelfer to GoMwiMT dbHcc of per cent OOP TMen to to the It 1IM tiov. Cleorge Romney of Mlchfgfln holds down third place, winning the support, of 11 per cent imrmg this group. Among the Important bfoc of Inde- pemfeni vfHcm, compdHion Iween the two chmr-CT OMwif cr aoWs a to 27 per cent edge over Rockefeller. Following Is the question asked and a cumpraison of the latest choices of Republican voters with the earlier standings: "Here Is a list of men win have been MCitloMd at pwftMe presMcMlal fur fte party 1N4. WHM one woiM ym like ttt KC imHlHatoJI ag Ike RepwoHcaR can- dktate for PreaMent hi 1M4?" CHOICK8 OF GOP WHh Saigon's lemming central market re brutally by plainclothes Vietnamese police.

Henry Cabot the new U.S. ambassador, promptly delivered penonUy Strong prJ- OB Page ft Shakes Up Staff in Viet Nam WASHINGTON AJ TheU.S. intelligence chief In South Viet Ham, John H. Richardson, and some other senior American officials at Saigon probably will be recalled In a shakeup of nel under Ambassador Henry Cab. of conflict ot Lodge.

Reporting this Saturday informed sources said Richardson I being trough! back to- Washmftton "for consultation" but Lodge has asked for permanent replacement. The others who may (n the diplomat lomJlitary trouble were not named. It was said 1 that Lodge, who look over as am- in August, feels lhal are needed For a more effective in prevailing ififljOT (flfricuKT has bnm with the authoritarian re Prealdwil Hga DtnTt Diem. At orn point WaaMnjtlmi hoped Piem wonW gel rid of his Inrhien liiil Ngo Wnh Nho. who Is iTfftMfit powerful forties ttl Klf With Wsshifipfln trying hnl fall.

tn get Jflnr rf HH iff trr (A cIMnvE fsti tere that SnTpilt wIHf Rflff tWrfiiffl Wlwf rrftll 'fHJW Itl nf AetMti WfnWtef Vhett hwt httfl 4 iw XJ.S. Ctrilrui telligence Agency men In South Viet Nam over whether should be changes in the Saigon government. Richardson's job Is said to required him to work closely with IThu, nead of the South Vietnamese special forces and secret police. Richardson is not pubiicty Lifted as CIA chief in Saigon. Intelil- fence personnel abroad normally operate under some other designation, The official rosier usls John H.

Kichardcon flj 41 first secretary and a special assistant to the ambassador, assigned lo Saigon on April 1982. Good Day For Owing Lett Mfce ride and view frrliaffe at atid be ninny and Wftrrner wily. Iff Will 72 rtPffrtt, the Thr nwrmr win climb to rteffrm.

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About The Post-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
222,443
Years Available:
1875-1978