European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - July 23, 1963, Darmstadt, Hesse Tuesday july 23, 1963 the stars and stripes Page 7 lying Down on Job Don Flanagan leap free of his mount warpaint As the bucking Bronco hits the dirt to unseat his rider during a Rodeo at Salinas Calif. A photo Aims at railroads airlines Goldwater to push featherbed Law Washington up sen. Barry Goldwater said he would introduce legislation to ban so called Union Feather bedding on railroads and airlines on the Sam basis that other industries Are covered by other labor is a manage ment term for the existence of Job sit regards As not necessary. The Arizona Republican top gop member of the Senate labor com Mittee said his proposals if enacted would bring the railway labor act into line with the Taft Hartley Law and the Lea anti Petrillo act. Incorporated in Lawhe added that very few people appear to realize that prohibition against Feather bedding Are incorporated into Law for All industries except the railway carriers and the air transport he announced his plan As a Spe Cial panel reported to president Kennedy on a deadlock in the rail Way work rules dispute and the . Incomes set record Washington up the Commerce department reported that personal income reached a record annual rate of $462 billion in june a $2 billion increase Over the previous month s total. The figure also was about $20billion higher than the total for the same month last year. Wage and salary increases contributed $1.2 billion toward the june increase with the remainder coming from a Rise in corporate dividends according to the said that about half of the wage increase for the month was accounted for by commodity producing industries most of it manufacturing. President prepared to ask con Gress next week for legislation Todeal with it. Goldwater said his proposal would let an employer in the military s space role pushed Dayton Ohio up Goldwater r-ariz., blasted the Kennedy administration for relegating the military function of space to a secondary a speech at the Ohio Wing of the National air Force association Goldwater criticized policy declarations stating that we will not orbit weapons of mass destruction in space unless forced to do so bythe hostile actions of in Short he said we say Weill not utilize the military potential of space until such a times it will be too Goldwater who has been pick ing up support for the Republican nomination for president next year refused to talk politics. But he struck out at what he called the administration s failure to get started on military weapons programs in letting our military space Effort slip by As we have Bee doing Goldwater said we will have been unilaterally disarming ourselves in space by the simple expedient of never building the weapons in the first he said the space station project appears to be the logical step and what have we done about it there Are several minor projects bearing on it for which we have appropriated less Money Thane Are asked to spend to buy new helicopters for the White House this year Man two teen girls killed As car crashes into House broken Bow okla. A three persons were killed near Here when a car went out of control and smashed into a vacant House. Killed were David Earl Parr 23,Foreman, ark., and Donna Kay cokely 16, and Ellen Ruth Mur Dock 17, both of broken Bow. They were passengers in a car driven by Robert Benjamin John son also of Foreman. Johnson was hospitalized at Idabel okla., unserious condition. The Oklahoma Highway patrol said the car was travelling at a High rate of Speed when it began weaving from Side to Side. Everyone but Johnson was thrown from the car which came to rest upside Down inside the House. The House was demolished. Transport industries bring civil suits for damages and seek fed eral court injunctions against unions which tried to enforce alleged Feather bedding practices. He said the Standard of reasonableness would be used to de Termine whether . The latter practices he said would include requiring Payfor work not reasonably needed for work not performed and re Quiring More workers than Are reasonably needed to perform necessary work. Goldwater said he was unalterably opposed to compulsory arbitration which has been suggested by some As a solution to the rail crisis because it would interfere with free collective bargaining and the workers right to however he said i believe itis in the Public interest that this Gap in the Law be filled at Goldwater said the approach would follow that of the 1946 Lea act which was aimed mainly at the musicians Union then headed by James c. Petrillo. Auto salesmen gird for Busy Windup of 1963 Model year Detroit a . Auto salesmen who have sold Over 4 million new cars since Jan. 1 Are heading into some of their Busi est weeks As the 1963 Model year nears an end. Industry sources reported that More than a million 1963 cars 1,014,993 to be exact were in dealer hands or in transit to themas of july 1. That was the second highest to Tal for a july 1, exceeded Only by the 1,038,967 total in 1960.with autos still Selling at near record rates the inventory As of july 1 represented Only a 40-Day Supply and prospects for an orderly cleanup appeared Bright. One problem facing dealers was that availability of some cars was Low As some Auto makers started cutting Down on production. This was particularly True in the luxury sports car Field one of the hot test items in the Auto business this year where customers who still want a 1963 Model in a partic ular color with certain optional equipment May have a bit of trouble in getting the exact car they want. Overall the 1963 late sales Pic Ture appears Bright and dealers were confident they would have less than 250,000 new 1963 models on hand by the time the 1964 models go on Sale about Money one Survey showed dealers Hada so i Day Supply of Standard cars on hand july 1, with a 47-Day sup ply of compacts. Pontiac dealer continued in the shortest Supply with a 29 Day Supply. Dealers across the country were almost unanimous in reporting that they have made Money this year. A midyear Survey showed 30,881 Domestic dealers in opera Tion a decline of Only 94 from the Jan. 1 total. Chrysler corp., which lost 220dealers in the first half of 1962, came Back Strong this year. American motors captured theorize for consistency during the first half of this year. There were3,0% rambler dealers on july 1, just one More than on new year Day. General motors record was equally impressive. The corporation had an estimated 13,800 outlets midyear about a dozen less than at the beginning of the year. Ford ended the first half with7,695 establishments Down 97 from its Jan. 1 total. Studebaker lost118 dealer Points in the first half of 1963. Cutting its total to 1,95ft. Eclipse eye9 cases starting to turn up new York a american Eye experts fear a Rush of cases of Sun blindness following Satur Day s total eclipse. Already Many cases of children and adults who have suffered minor damage to their eyes be cause of looking too Long or with out Safe Protection at the partial eclipse before the Sun s face be came completely obscured hav been reported. One Philadelphia Hospital alone listed 30 cases of minimal Eye dam age after the eclipse. Eye expert feared More victims would appear some with permanently impaired vision through heat rays focusing too Long on the sensitive Retina of the Eye. Meanwhile scientists turned from the sky to their laboratories to Harvest their findings from the eclipse. With rockets radio beams spectrographs and other instruments As Well As the naked Eye the had mounted the most intensive scientific study Ever made of an eclipse. The Moon curtained of the Sun for a minute or two de pending on locality along a 10,000-mile arc Over Japan Alaska can Ada and Maine. They hoped for significant new clues concerning mechanisms of the life giving Sun possibly for improved Means of predicting solar flares with consequent radiation hazards for astronauts and for bet Ter understanding of the Iono sphere the highly electrified layer of the Earth s atmosphere and even for tips on slight solar effect in triggering earthly weather. He just grower the tuba remains the same but m Tom Tunks grew he did t outgrow his Fondeu for the instrument. Tom got his first licks in Toledo Ohio left and joined a band when he was in first Grade. Sixteen years later right Tom sounds off in his Mason mich., High school band. He will enter Michigan state University where hell study music of course. Up
