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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER 123TH YEAR NO. 131 FINAL EDITION 1IUDAY AUGUST 20, 196. I'UICK 10 UOML DELIVERED 50c A WEEK 0 Moloney, 0 Boy Hits AF Funds 1 im erves 0) Mean New Jobs At GE $90 Million In Contracts Zeroes All ay tell me it's going to happen again." The reference was to the June 14 night back home at Crosley Field when he shut out the New York Mets without a hit for 10 Innings, only to lose In the 11th, 1-0, on a home run. The anxiety, ended, however, when Leo Cardenas hammered his eighth home run against the leftfleld foul pole. Maloney a wledged that he might have pitched better games, but none in which he had better stuff.

Informed he made 187 pitches, Maloney said: "I throw a lot of pitches In every game, somewhere around 135, I wasn't as sharp as I have been, but when I had to make the pitch I made the perfect pitch" corded, there Is a self bullt reason. "Actually, he was telling newsmen clustered at his dressing room In ancient VYrigley Field, as teammates readying themselves for the second game of the double-header, slipped through to shake his hand, "I approach every game with the Idea of pitching a perfect game. "But if they get a hit off me. I try to pitch a one-hitter. As I said.

I'm Just happy to win It." It was obvious, therefore, Maloney knew all along he had a no-hitter, although his teammates were reluctant to mention It. "Nobody said a thing." Maloney recalled. "For some the bench says anything about a no-hitter. "It makes no difference to me. They could have said something.

They knew it." HE SMILINGLY recounted a bit of drama and a spice of comedy that developed en route. The funny stuff uncovered in the eighth when he came to bat with two out and the game scoreless "As I stepped to the plat Bailey (Cub catcher Ed Bailey, a one-time teammate) said to me: 'Say, Jim, you're perfect out there today, but we got a guy In the weeds who'll get The drama, and perhaps Moloney's only fearful moment suddenly Jarred him after he completed nine hit-less innings. "My gosh, I thought, don't Two Air Force contracts valued at more than $90 million were announced Thursday for General Elcc-trlc's Evendale plant. And David F. Shaw, plant general manager, said the work force Is expected to move up from 10.200 to about 11,000 by early 1966.

One of the new contracts was for $88,273,000 to continue production of turbojet engines for the Air Force F-41) Phantom II fighter interceptor and lis reconnaisance version. The other was for for kits to modify engines on the B-58 Hustler bomber. The contracts were announced by U. S. Rep.

John J. Gilligan Cincinnati). MR. SHAW said the turbojet contract had been expected "and will not In Itself require adoY ional employees." But he said It provided the base on which the plant received other new contracts requiring the expansion. "The overall result Is a present need for additional employees, primarily engl-neers and salaried techni reason and I don know what there Is a baseball superstition that nobody on I1" Jim Looking To October JuiiiiMii Jmi 1 my right-hander pitched a 10-lnnlng.

1-0. no-hitter aeainst the Chicago Cubs Thursday. On the other side congratulating the hurler are second baseman Pete Rose and third baseman Deron Johnson (No. Hi AP Wlrcphoto Cincinnati catcher John Edwards leaps up to hug Jim Maloney alter the Reds' for a homer that's only common sense. So I pitched him low and away.

He tried to pull the ball, but he hit to Cardenas for a double 1 play and that was the ball game." I Then, looking ahead, he added: "I pitched a one-hitter in April, a no-hitter in June and a no-hitter I today, in August The next one in sequence should be in October. And that should be the World Series." CHICAGO (ITI) Here's Jim Maloney'a version of the "big" last three ouU in his no-hitter Thursday. "In the 10th I walked the first hatter. The next batter was Billy Williams, who has bothered me in the past- Hut Williams flew out to left on a 3 and 1 pitch. "The next batter was Krnie Banks.

I figured Hanks would go Study Minimum Pay Currently. Ohio has mandatory minimum wage scales only for women and minors Marines Kill 550 Reds, Wound 1000 cians, but also skilled pro duction workers, especiallj ian- toolroom machinists instrumentation mechan ics," Mr. Shaw added. Besides the new contracts, he noted, "we have been relatively successful in our efforts over the past 18 months to provide diversified manufacturing work load for our shops such as fuel tanks for the F-105." THE LATEST Air Force announcement comes on the heels of a flurry of recent disclosures of new work for the Evendale plant. It was picked for example, as one of four manufacturers to receive a total of $148 million in contracts to continue developing the nation's supersonic airliner.

GE's share was $36 million. Earlier, GE was chosen to develop Jet engines for a 600 passenger troop carrier. That contract could total $750 million. The Heat's On When you advertise your household articles with an Enquirer Gold Chest want ad, the heat is on the many readers to call and see you first. Take the Gold Chest ad of Mrs.

Peggy Palmer, 3440 Custer, for example. She sold her dining room furniture to the first person who called. Get hot response for your household articles. Advertise them in The Cold Chest by phoning 421-6300 today. i A V.

RV BILL K)KI) Of The Enquirer Staff CHICAOO Curly-headed Jim Maloney accepted congratulations for his 10-ln-nlng no-hlt victory Thursday afternoon In extraordinary calm, almost as IX he expected to pitch It, which he did. "I'm Just happy to win," he said In the Reds' dressing room alter the 1-0 triumph over the Chicago Cubs. "But 5-4 would have been all right with me. I'd be happy to win 5-4 every time out." If the 25-year-old righthander sounded stuffily professional in the moment of glory few pitchers are ac iM(sxzamwmmmwmm And Then Tin Don Ijuidrum wrecked what would have been a perfect day for the Keds when he belted a two-run homer with two out in the ninth inning to give the Cutm a 5-4 victory in the second game. The homer came off Rilly McCool, who had just replaced starter Joey Jay.

Jay had just fanned the previous batter, Joe Amalfitano. U. S. military spokesmen reported scattered ground action In South Vietnam. Including three Vict Cong attacks within nine miles of Saigon.

"Heavy casualties were reported In one of these. Marine officers at Chu Lai described the Leatherneck losses as "light in proportion to the number of troops involved." Marine commander Maj. Lewis Walt Thursday pinned Purple Heart decorations on 29 Marines wounded In the Chu Lai fighting. Many were still wearing blood-soaked uniforms. The Marines Thursday night were mopping up In the Von Tuong area, a group of villages 16 miles south of Chu Lai.

They were using high explosives and flame-throwing tanks to either flush the Viet Cong from their concrete pillboxes and tunnels or seal them in, As the launching crew raced against time black clouds advanced on the cape, and a thunderstorm broke over Pad 19 where where the 10-story Titan rockets stood. At 12:43 p. m. the shot was called off. "The straw that broke the camel's back." said G.

Mer-ritt Preston, was a lightning surge In the power system of the launch complex. The deputy director of the Kennedy Space Center said that would have made necessary a thorough check of the computer system and Its memory banks. No such delay could have been toler-aed because of the need for at least three hours of daylight for the recovery operation. The splashdown would have t-ume on the eighth day at approximately the same hour the spacecraft was launched. Cooper and Conrad, wearing gleaming space suits with American flags sewed on thesleevcs, had entered the capsule which la about the size of a Volkswagen's front seat at 10:42 a.

m. working in food establishments, hotels, laundries and dry cleaning. combat assignment since the Korean War. The Marine airstrip at Chu Lai is on the coast 60 miles south of the big Da Nang air base. The fighting was taking place about 12 miles south of the smaller base.

The U. S. victory was partially ofl.set when Viet Cong troops overan the district capital of Dak Sut, 280 miles north of Saigon and inland from Chu Lai. There were 12 American advisers and 300 Vietnamese troops at the outpost. Eight of the Americans were rescued by helicopter but the other defenders were feared killed or captured.

THE DAK SIT Special Forces camp is one of the last barriers to Red Infiltration Into South Vietnam. Typhoon Mary in the South China Sea prevented U. S. planes from carrying out the daily air raids against North Vietnam Thursday. SAIOON (UPIl The major U.

S. Marine victory over Communist forces near Chu Lai killed almost 600 Viet Cong but resulted In the heaviest U. S. casuall-ties In a single action In the Vietnam war, an American military spokesman said Thursday. The Leathernecks killed 550 Viet Cong by actual body count and wounded more than 1000.

Thursday night, they were mopping up the remainder of a 2000-man guerrilla force with rifles, grenades and flame-throwing tanks, a Marine spokesman said. Regulations do not permit disclosure of the actual number of It. S. casualties. The two-day operation wjiS the Marines' toughest is? COLUMBUS A proposed Ohio minimum wage regulation for 170,000 women and minors working In retail stores was under consideration Thursday by William O.

Walker. Industrial relations director. A small mountain of statistics including charts on present wages paid persons surveyed In the last eight months Is being turned over to Mr. Walker. He will make a study before deciding whether to convene a wage board to make recommendations on the a 1 1 r.

Mr. a 1 er could either reject, accept or ask for more studies. The Ohio AFL-CIO and the Ohio Consumers League of Cleveland petitioned Mr. Walker to convene a wage board to set a mandatory minimum wage In retailing. Twenty-three state Inspectors checked pay scales of women and minors In the retail business.

Categories are department stores, variety stores, mail order, dry goods and general stores, food markets, apparel and accessory shops, home furnishing and appliance stores, drugstores and specialty stores. New Polio Cases BLACKBURN, England fUPI) Confirmed cases in Blackburn's polio outbreak reached 33 but doctors said there were signs the situation was Improving. BOOSTS Rhodes leads Ohio" tour boosting Page 5. CALM calm reigns as seeking rioting that BACK OX Dodgers 15 inning National drops St. Louis, ISuddics Help Wounded to an evacuation helicopter near Van Tuong.

South Vietnam 1 beaches near Cape Kennedy only to be chased off by the thunderstorm. Others receiving life terms: Former S3 Sgt. Oswald Kaduk, 58, described as the "Butcher of Auschwitz." Josef Klehr, 60, former medic, who admitted he personally administered fatal carbolic injections to 250-300 Inmates. Former SS Capt. Frans Hofmann, 59, convicted of murder and abetting In the slaying of more than 2000.

Former SS Corp. Stefan Baretzkl, 48, convicted of murder and participating in murder of more than 8000. Emil Bednarek. 58. convicted on 14 counts of murdering fellow Inmates.

Gemini Foiled, May Go Saturday The families of the astronauts and millions of others followed the story of Washington BACKS LB The Senate votes to arm President Johnson with $1.65 billion for his second-year offensive in the "war on poverty." Republican efforts to cut back the program and restore an absolute veto to the nation's governors on every project are buried. Page 3. World-Wide NO PROGRESS: It appears certain the 17-nation Geneva Disarmament Conference will have to report no progress to the UN General Assembly in September. Page 2. State And Nation CHEESE: Gov.

Jamea A. his "wonderful world of to Northwestern Ohio the state's cheesemakers. RETURN'S: Aftcr-thc-battle in Los Angeles Negro district officials probe week of violence, causes and cures for took 34 lives. Page 8. Sporls TOP: The Los Angeles edged San Francisco, 8-5, in to regain first place in the League pennant race.

Milwaukee to second after losing to 5-4. 17 Nazi Agents Convicted For Wartime Massacres the days frustrations on television. Hundreds also had gathered on the A number of, former Auschwitz Inmates who heard the verdicts expressed disappointment that some sentences were not more severe. Most of the millions who died In Auschwlts were Jews, but many Poles, Russians and others also were gassed, shot, hanged, burned or tortured to death at this largest of the Nazi extermination ramps. Wllhelm Bofrer, 55.

former SS (Elite Guard) sergeant, was sentenced to life imprisonment 114 times for murder, plus five years for aiding In murder. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (Pt Stormy weather and troubles in the spacecraft washed out Thursday's ef-for to launch the Gemini eight-day space flight. Another try was scheduled at 9 a. m.

(EST) Saturday. Man's most ambitious space venture, a 3.12 million mile voyage, was called off after a losing battle with a thunderstorm and the fuel and telemetry systems In the capsule. Dr. George Mueller, as-assistant administrator for manned space flight, told a news conference that the new launch time was set with some uncertainty. A preliminary analysis of Thursday's troubles, he said, indicated that none of them was major, but he emphasized that there still Is testing to be done.

"Aw, gee, you promised a launching," Astronaut L. Oordoi. Cooper Jr. grumbled as he wedged himself out of the tight confines of the capsule where he had waited more than two hours with his co-pilot, Charles Conrad Jr. for the blastoff.

jiMtT ngV Page Amusements Bridge 19 Business 43-45 Classified 26-38 Columnists 7 Comics 18, 19 Court hews 12 Cross woi1 18 Deaths 22, 26 Editorials Garden Horse People Society Sports Star TV-Radio Tell It Women's Word FRAN KFURT. Germany Twenty years after World War II, a German court Thursday convicted 17 Nazi agents for their part in thousands of deaths at Adolf Hitler's Auschwitz extermination camp. Six received life terms. Eleven drew 3' to 14 years. Three were acquitted.

A nine-Judge court heard the trial over a period of 20 months. It was the longest and most costly in Germany's history. The defendants were charged with mass murder or aiding In the wartime massacres of Inmates In the camp In Nazi occupied Poland. Page News 14 Sense 13 In News 2 News 15 39-42 Oazer 19 16 To Blck 18 13, 14 Game 14 Mostly sunny and mild. Low In early morning near 60.

High for day In low 80s. Tonight fair and cool with low In low 60s. Saturday outlook: Fair and a little warmer. Five-httf News, Features Pug 10 oiiaiij. map on paoi Ttltphont T2I-2700 Classified 421-6300 CIRCULATION SERVICE 721-2700 7 fJWoVJ,.

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Pages Available:
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