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» ‘ 4 Ready For The Jaycees vs. Beta Sigma Phi Softball Game| vom, ey x ‘ aes Poe 10 mH. KEY WEST CITIZEN Thursday, August 26, i ee oe 823 8 E nation’s leading jet ace. E 4 : i ments of Dacron, Orlon, nylon, ra- By EUGENE LEVIN _ India W—The Prime Minister three years ago, spoke up in a foreign policy de- ; which--Nehru ‘had. launched The former Cabinet member said Nehru has a “‘certain hostili- ty’*toward the United States and 4 shows “repugnance” at anything suggested by America. This, he asserted, Minister also fears Russian reac- tion. “The keynote of our foreign pol-| icy is to solve the problems of other countries, but not our own,” Ambedkar said. Earlier in the debate Nehru found himself in the unusual role of defending the United States when he told Communist. question- ers; he does not believe the Ameri- . “yp Sg sending or will send arms to Portuguese Indian settle- ments India wants to take over. Hungary Clerics Invite Council Executive Group EVANSTON, Il. —Churchmen from Communist Hungary invited the World Council of Churches to hold a future executive meeting there, with the promise of “full freedom.” Bishop Albert Berecsky of Buda- pest extended the invitation last wom” Apple May. Rose Gipsy and Bubbles line up, left to right, to session of practice for the softball game they will play against Phi Sorority Friday night. The game, proceeds from which will go to the emerg- of Dimes, will be played at 8 p.m. at Bayview Park. Oh, yes, the “girlies” are bet- as Jaycees Everett Sweeting, Bob Youmans, Adolph Lastres and J. W. Smith—Photo Politicos Vie In Battle For Senate Control By JACK BELL ‘WASHINGTON (#—Republicans and Democrats are putting their political blue chips down in 17 states in an all-out battle for con- trol of the Senate in the sth These same states, along with nine others where there are mar- ginal districts, also may prove to be the major battlegrounds in con- tests for command of the new night at a session of the council’s | House. assembly. He said: “Without doubt the. members of eee Ty ie gies SRE Aa Fg Fee Ey 23 a ‘g FrFi in Kore SS eaEREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE g Dacron thread, available in 20| Presumably, Berecsky’s invita- rs, can be used to stitclt gar- ~ was for this group to meet ere. » acetate, silk or wool fabrics. Pang imkresistant and) Read The Citizen | Famous Maker Cool, Comfortable Solid Colors, Small Prints, Checks and Plaids *2° and *3°° Terrific Scoop in MADE TO SELL A GREAT DEAL SIZES 28 TO 42 ye Key West’s Smartest Men’s Shop ' HIONS fer MEN ickok BELTS $1.50 - $2.50 - $3.50 Interwoven Anklets 65c c - BSc - $1.00 Sizes 10 to 13 As the situation now stands, with active campaigning just starting, the two parties appear almost evenly matched in their chances to alter'the present hairline mar- gins in Senate and House. The Senate lineup is now 48 Re- publicans, 47 Democrats and 1 in- dependent; the House, count, 218 Republicans, 213’ Democrats, 1 in- dependent.and.3 vacancies. Thirty- seven Senate and..all 435 House seats are at stake this fall. As party leaders-analyze the matter, nine Senate seats now held by Republicans and eight held by Democrats are in varying degrees of danger, Republican incumbents who ap- parently face stiff challenges in- clude Senators Cooper of Kentucky, Cordon ‘of Oregon, Dworshak of .| Idaho, ~ Ferguson of Michigan, last | Mundt of South Dakota, Saltonstall of Massachusetts and Kuchel of California. Republican-held seats in New Jersey and Wyoming also fall within this category. Democrats likely to be hard pushed by their opponents include Senators Anderson of New Mexico, Douglas of Illinois, Frear of Dela- ware, Gillette of Iowa, Humphrey of Minnesota, Murray of Montana and Burke of Ohio. The seat be- ing vacated by Sen. Johnson of Colorado also is among these. House seats in most of these states will be hotly. contested. In addition, there are marginal dis- tricts in Virginia, West Virginia, Florida, North Carolina, Maryland, Missouri, Pennsylvania, New York and the Nevada atlarge contest where both parties figure they have a chance. That doesn’t mean that states like Connecticut, Indiana, Kansas, Washington and Wisconsin will be overlooked. But the parties’. major national efforts are likely to be turned elsewhere except perhaps for a few individual congressional districts. In Senate races, Democrats are claiming a 146 edge over Repub- licans in what they regard as al- most certain victories. Republicans contend: they are certain to elect two senators in New Hampshire, two in Nebraska and re-elect Sen- ators of Kansas and Margaret Chase\Smith of Maine. Democrats figure as safe the seats they now hold in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mis- sissippi, two in North Carolina, Ok- lahoma, Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia, , While Republicans will conced most of these, they haven't given up hope of upsets in Oklahoma, Rhode Island and West Virginia. Republican National Chairman Leonard W. Hall said in a state- ment today that the “final blue- print” for the Republican effort Hall said that despite the narrow Republican margins, the accom- plishments of the Republican Con- gress which just ended “match those of any Congress in a gen- eration.” “Think . what this Republican team — the President and a GOP Congress — could do with a sound working. majority,” he said. ‘With an economy to be. brought firmly on to’ the pathway of American free enterprise after 20 years of wandering off into Socialist experi- ments and with prosperity-with- peace at long last within our grasp, we still have a tremendous job to do.” ‘ Nixon, in announcing yesterday that he will make an eight-state campaign swing beginning Sept. 15, said he wants to help,the Republi- cans. complete the job started with Eisenhower's election in 1952. “I feel that we only did half the job in 1952 and that we must put forth at least as much or more ef- fort this. year to assure that we have a Republican majority during the 84th Congress,” he said, Nixon has mn assigned by Ei- senhower to make several cam- paign tours before the Nov. 2 election. Beginning with a speech at the Ohio State Republican Conyention in Columbus Sept. 15, he said he will visit Kansas Sept, 16, Missouri Sept. 17, South Dakota Sept. 18, Nebraska Sept. 20, Michigan Sept. 21, Minnesota Sept. 22 and Indiana Sept. 23. Party leaders. expect him to make a New England swing fol- lowed by a later visit to the Rocky Mountain states. KLEIN APPOINTED WASHINGTON — Chairman Bridges (R-NH) of the Senate Ap- propriations Com mittee today named Brig. Gen. Julius Klein of Chicago as a special consultant to the subcommittee on military ap- propriations. Klein will make a study in Eu- rope this fall on “matters pertain- ing to our military establishments there,” Bridges said. Soldiers Jailed After Battle With Teen-Agers GRANITE CITY, Ill. —Soldiers at the Granite City Army Engi- neers depot are confined to the base for two days after a near riot involving civilian teen-agers in Granite City. ' Lt. Col, Frank E, Lambert, who heads the 593rd Engineers Group at the base, said last night he was told that 100 soldiers and about 200 young civilians met near a skating rink Tuesday night to settle dis- putes of previous nights in which several soldiers were beaten. Police arrived in time and pre- vented trouble, Lambert said, The confinement period began last night, ‘Lambert said the young civilians apparently resented dating of Granite City girls by the soldiers, YMCA Head Dies Wednesday EVANSTON, Ill. @ — John Forrester-Payton, 71, of ‘Alloa, Scotland, the president of the World Alliance of Young Men’s Christian Associations, died late last night. He was here as a delegate from the United Free Church of Scot- land to the Assembly of the World Council of Churches. He collapsed on a bus and was taken to Evanston Hospital, where he was pronounced dead shortly thereafter, apparently of a heart attack. 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