
There is cautious but growing optimism among Soviet and East European leaders that the long unfulfilled Marxist prediction, of a spontaneous collapse of capitalism may finally be at hand. Communist predictions during past economic crises that the collapse of the West was imminent have proved unfounded, so the language currently in use is fairly restrained. But leading economists and political theorists in the Soviet bloc leave no doubt that they believe the current economic crisis in the West is qualitatively different from earlier ones, and that it will be vastly more destructive to Western economic and political traditions than any of its predecessors. Certainly, much of the present Communist reporting on Western economic trouble is intended to improve domestic morale. Such news presumably makes people in European Communist countries feel less unhappy about rising prices in their own. But more than anything else, there appears to be real satisfaction on the part of governments and their spokesmen that the classical Marxist purists are at last on the verge of vindication.
The Soviet Union today denounced Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger, accusing him of playing a “dangerous game” by making “belligerent statements” about American policy on the use of nuclear weapons. An article in the Communist party newspaper Pravda charged that Mr. Schlesinger, rather than working to help lessen the risk of a Soviet-American nuclear confrontation, was moving the Pentagon toward a “strategy of possible use by the United States of nuclear weapons in any critical situation.” The article, which was phrased in generally terse language, coincided with a new round of press attacks on Mr. Schlesinger for his recent statements envisioning conditions in which American nuclear weapons might he employed. Mr. Schlesinger recently declined to rule out the possibility that the United States might resort to first use of nuclear weapons if drawn into a conventional war, Both statements were cited today by Pravda, which tended to gloss over the nuances of the Defense Secretary’s remarks and all but implied that he was in favor of a pre‐emptive strike against the Soviet Union.
A tacit understanding was reached today at the European Conference on Security and Cooperation that a concluding summit session would begin on July 30 in Helsinki as planned, although Malta’s call for a reduction of armed forces in the Mediterranean continues to block formal agreement. The understanding was indirectly confirmed when Finland officially informed the 35‐nation conference that since a large measure of agreement existed on the July 30 date for the summit gathering she was rushing preparations to play host. The Finnish announcement evoked no comment from any delegation at the brief meeting the conference held this morning. The summit session date “has been set through the back door,” one North Atlantic Treaty Organization representative commented. The spokesman for one of the neutral nations said that the Finnish announcement meant that the “train is now on the tracks.”
Military units in Portugal were put on an alert as the split widened between the Communist party and its military allies and moderate and conservative groups. The break between the military leaders of the government and the Socialist party became wider with the acceptance by the ruling High Council of the Revolution of the resignation of two Socialist ministers and five deputy ministers. The alienation of moderates from the government was expected to increase this week with the departure of the centrist Popular Democratic party.
Henry Kissinger flew into Bonn in a torrential thunderstorm last night and stole the show. Chancellor Helmut Schmidt had put on a combination dress ball and “happening” in the Bonn Municipal Theater as a summer festival, where 1,500 politicians, showbusiness personalities businessmen and selected ordinary folk got together with their leader. It turned out to be a chance for all of them to see “Henry,” as the Secretary of State is widely known here. Wherever he went — propelled along in the middle of a buffer of burly bodyguards who could be distinguished from the guests because they were not drinking steins of Kurfürsten Pils — he was accosted by autograph seekers. Tanned and beaming, he obviously loved it.
Four jets of the Spanish Air Force’s acrobatic team, rehearsing for an airshow, collided during formation flying after taking off from the Murcia–San Javier Airport. All five persons on board were killed.
The Exxon corporation made between $46 million and $49 million in political contributions in Italy over a nine-year period, including, apparently, $86,000 to the Communist party. The corporation also acknowledged having authorized its affiliate, Esso Italiana, to make $27 million in contributions to Italian parties between 1963 and 1972. It said that the other $19 million to $22 million had been made by an Esso Italiana employee on his authority.
Two American researchers in Washington said it is so certain that Israel has nuclear weapons that the Soviet Union and the United States should decide how they will react if atomic war breaks out in the Mideast. Drs. Robert J. Pranger and Dale R. Tahtinen, head of the foreign and defense affairs section of the American Enterprise Institute, a nonprofit, nonpartisan, privately funded research organization, said that nuclear weapons may well be used in the Mideast in the near future, perhaps in the next round of fighting. Arab nations are likely to develop their own nuclear stockpile to offset an apparent Israeli advantage, they said.
The United States is considering the possibility of American technicians taking over electronic surveillance stations maintained by Israel in the strategic Sinai mountain passes. This could remove one of the principal issues preventing Egypt and Israel from reaching a new agreement on disengagement in Sinai. Israel insists on control of early-warning radar and monitoring stations that she has in western Sinai. Egypt apparently suggested, as a compromise, that the United States man the stations. The United States reluctantly agreed to consider the proposal, newsmen on Secretary of State Kissinger’s Bonn-London flight were told.
Colonel Ernest Morgan of the United States Army, who was kidnapped by leftists in Beirut on June 29, was released unharmed and taken to the home of Premier Rashid Karami. Colonel Morgan, whose abduction increased tensions in Beirut, said to a crowd of Lebanese and foreign newsmen, “I am glad to be alive.” His release was greeted with expressions of relief by President Ford, who was in Chicago. He said “many in the United States and Lebanese governments have worked together to secure this release.”
Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi said today that the number of people arrested in India in the last two weeks had been “very meager,” compared with the total population, and that in any case three‐fourths of those arrested were common criminals, not political prisoners. The population of India is estimated at nearly 600 million. Since even the censored press has reported arrests totalling more than 5,000 in the crackdown that began on June 26, the statement today amounted to an official admission that at least 1,200 political opponents had been rounded up. Independent estimates here still put the total arrested for political reasons at several thousand, including people who were marching or chanting slogans, now illegal. In addition, the national state of emergency has provided an opportunity to arrest large numbers of smugglers, profiteers and hoarders.
The police of the proud old port of Madras, which is feeling pressure from India’s central Government, yesterday arrested seven persons who were promoting a time‐honored local cause: independence for the state of Tamil Nadu, of which Madras is the capital. The fact that the arrests were made in a state whose governing party has formally advocated secession reflected the extent of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s authoritarian policies. Tamil Nadu, on the eastern edge of southern India, is the homeland of the more than 40 million Tamils, members of an ethnic group noted for skill in weaving bright cottons and in the performing arts. “The government here must pursue a cautious course these days.” a Tamil business executive told a visitor. The state government is controlled by a Tamil nationalist party whose leaders have been maneuvering carefully since last month when Mrs. Gandhi began a crackdown on her political opponents around the country.
Militant students who seized the United States headquarters of the Agency for International Development in Vientiane, Laos, last May turned the compound over to the Lao Government today, the newspaper Xat Lao reported. Khamsay Sourinthone, president of the student group, said household items valued at. 532,570 that should have been turned over to the Laotians were missing. He did not directly accuse the Americans of taking the goods. The aid compound was seized by the youths almost two months ago along with a large American housing complex and several other homes rented by Americans.
The French government ordered the assassination of South Vietnamese President Ngô Đình Diệm in 1963, according to the former chief of South Vietnam’s internal intelligence agency. Colonel Anh Ba told the San Diego Evening Tribune that “the order to kill Diệm came from the French, not the Americans.”
South Korea put its entire armed forces on emergency alert today and charged that six North Korean navy vessels had violated South Korean waters. The South Korean Government said it had upgraded Ihr alert status Of all government workers, including the armed forces, from grade two to grade one. The action followed an announcement by the Defense Ministry that five North Korean navy craft and a civilian’s boat had crossed the border in the Yellow Sea seven miles north of Paengnyong island and 130 miles west of Seoul on Friday afternoon. A spokesman said that the civilian boat had approached within two miles of the island but fled northward when South Korean troops fired warning shots. He said that the North Korean navy vessels entered South Korean waters to escort the civilian craft from the scene.
Japan has decided to buy Lockheed PC-3 Orion antisubmarine aircraft. produced in Burbank, for its self-defense navy. Japanese newspaper reports said. A decision on the date of purchase is to be made in August, but delivery would not begin for several years, the reports quoted government sources as saying.
A Chinese newspaper accused the exiled Dalai Lama of responsibility for events in Tibet in 1959 and 1960 after his flight to India and China’s takeover of Tibet. In one of the rare instances that this subject has been mentioned in the Chinese press, the paper said that the uprising, which foreign reports say cost 17,000 Tibetan lives, had been fomented by a “reactionary clique” of upper-class Tibetans led by the Dalai Lama.
Canada and the United States expect to sign in two or three months a treaty regarded in both countries as an essential step toward the construction of a natural gas pipeline from Alaska and Canada’s Mackenzie River Delta to the main part of the United States. Officially, Washington and Ottawa are not committed to the 2,600‐mile line proposed by the Arctic Gas Consortium of Canadian and American companies. In fact, both governments are reliably reported to be leaning toward it.
Two wealthy landowners and three army officers have been arrested as suspects in the disappearance of two priests, one American and one Colombian, and two women, a Honduran official said. Missing are Michael Jerome Cypher, 35, of Medford, Wisconsin; Ivan Betancourt, 34, of Colombia, Maria Elena Bolivar of Colombia, and Ruth Garcia of Honduras. The four disappeared two weeks ago after a protest march by farmers demanding agrarian reform.
Ecuadorian authorities have uncovered a “military connection” in a giant drug trade linked with neighboring Colombia, Interior Minister Guillermo Duran announced in Quito. He said three Colombian air force men and their military seaplane loaded with 265 pounds of cocaine, worth about $50 million, were captured when they lost their way over the jungle June 26.
Fighting between Angola’s rival nationalist groups continued today with people fleeing their homes as the death toll since the troubles began reportedly stood at more than 2,500. Portuguese troops and a joint force of the three nationalist movements sought to quell the fighting. Some of the troops were ordered to shoot on sight any armed civilians. Seven Portuguese soldiers were reported injured. Looting was also reported. According to an unofficial count about 200 have died in the latest flare‐up which began on Wednesday night, despite a truce agreement in Kenya last month by the three nationalist. movements.
Uganda President Idi Amin reshuffled his cabinet, giving four of five new appointments to military officers. The military now holds eight of 13 senior cabinet posts. Diplomatic observers said the new appointments reflected Amin’s disenchantment with civilian rule and his desire to concentrate power in the hands of close allies following recent reports of coup plots.
São Tomé and Príncipe was granted independence from Portugal, as Portuguese Admiral Antonio Rosa Coutinho and Sao Tome Assembly President Xavier Dias signed documents ending Portugal’s colonial rule. Manuel Pinto da Costa was sworn in as President afterward, along with Miguel Trovoada as Prime Minister. Pinto da Costa would jail Trovoada and become dictator in 1979, while setting about to create a Marxist economy that would lower production of the nation’s largest export (cocoa) by two-thirds in a decade, before yielding to a multiparty system in 1989.
The stalemate in negotiations between the Rhodesian Government and black nationalists seemed as if it might soon develop into another full-scale confrontation. The government announced yesterday that in a week or two it would put into effect a secret plan to step up counterinsurgency measures against black guerrilla forces. “We will get back to the position where we are in total control of the security situation and dictating the course of events ourselves,” said the Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office, Ted Sutton-Pryce. Last December 11, Prime Minister Ian D. Smith released from long detention a number of black nationalists so they could join in negotiations. He offered to hold a new constitutional conference on the future of this breakaway former British colony.
President Ford said he would send to Congress this week a proposal for “a responsible, well-timed decontrol” of domestic oil prices that would lead to a gradual, rather than a sudden, removal of controls. Mr. Ford made the statement in a news conference in Chicago, where he touched on foreign, domestic and political topics. He had been on a trip to the Midwest. The decontrol of so‐called “old” domestic oil — that is, oil produced from wells in operation prior to 1973 — has been a major issue. The price is currently pegged at $5.25 a barrel, but the regulating authority runs out August 31. Mr. Nessen said Mr. Ford would meet with his energy and economic advisers Monday morning to give final shape to his proposal. But it was clear from Mr. Ford’s remarks today that he favored gradual decontrol over perhaps as much as two years rather than allowing prices to soar at once.
The President also said at a news conference here this morning that he hoped it would be possible for the United States to sell wheat to the Soviet Union, even though he conceded that such a deal might cause an increase in bread prices at home. Perhaps recalling criticism of a similar sale in 1972, Mr. Ford said: “I have no idea at this point what the amount will be of the sale to the Soviet Union, if it does materialize. But I think the fact that we can make one is a blessing, and I hope we do make one. But I want to assure you, as I do the American consumer, that we are alert to the danger of too big a sale or too much shipment overseas, because the American consumer has a stake in this problem as well. So we have to find a careful line to tread, of selling all we can, but protecting the rights of the American consumer and utilizing the productivity of the American farmer to help our balance of payments, to improve our humanitarian efforts overseas and to indirectly help us in our relations with other countries.”
On still another topic, Mr., Ford said that while he had no “specific information” to indicate that Alexander P. Butterfield or any other White House aide in the Nixon Administration had been secretly employed by the Central Intelligence Agency, his Administration was looking into that possibility. Mr. Ford said, “There are no people presently employed in the White House who have a relationship with the CIA of which I am personally aware.” But as to CIA activity in the Nixon Administration, he was much less firm, stating that “that matter is being analyzed.” “I can assure you that the facts will come out, if I have anything to say about it,” Mr. Ford added.
Later, in Traverse City, Michigan, Ron Nessen, the White House press secretary, said the President would be pleased to see Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the exiled Soviet author, if Mr. Solzhenitsyn wished to see him. Responding to questions while Mr. Ford played in the Walter Hagen golf tournament, Mr. Nessen said that “the President doesn’t want any misunderstanding.” If the meeting takes place, he said, “it shouldn’t be viewed as undercutting the process of relaxing tension in the world.” On June 30, when Senator Jesse Helms, Republican of North Carolina, attempted to arrange a Ford‐Solzhenitsyn meeting, he was told the President’s schedule was too full. That stand was reportedly taken because of fears that a meeting between the two men might disrupt détente.
Thousands of jobless Americans —the first victims of the recession and the epidemic of layoffs that began with the Arab oil embargo late in 1973 — are running out of the unemployment benefits that have kept them financially afloat until now. For the most part, they are workers who were the earliest, of the expendables — the old, the young, and the least skilled — who are now likely to be among the last hired as the nation’s faltering economy begins to recover. The repeated extension of federal unemployment benefits by Congress to soften the effects of the recession — to a maximum of 65 weeks for some workers — has provided, an economic prop for the vast majority of unemployed. Most of the 6.2 million people who now receive federal assistance under various unemployment benefit programs still have many weeks or months of additional eligibility, according to state and federal officials. Manpower officials interviewed around the country said, however, that many people eligible for the full 65 weeks of aid had already exhausted their eligibility. And others who, because they had not held jobs long enough to qualify for the maximum period, were not eligible for the full 65 weeks, and their benefits, too, had run out.
The Postal Service will have to cut service drastically unless it gets higher postal rates soon, its chief financial officer said. Ralph W. Nicholson, senior assistant postmaster general for finance, said that without new revenue the Postal Service faced a financial crisis within a few months. The Postal Service has announced that it will raise the price of a 10 cent stamp to 13 cents if it can get the authority. Nicholson blamed rising labor and fuel costs and a decline in mail volume because of the recession for the Postal Service’s $850 million deficit in the recently ended fiscal year.
In his first important decision on an issue involving the conflict between energy development and environmental protection, Secretary of the Interior Stanley K. Hathaway has ordered the final preparation for a controversial environmental impact statement that seeks to justify the massive leasing of more federally owned coal deposits in the West.
A nationwide truck strike proposed for July 27 was averted when the group representing 26 national trucking organizations voted overwhelmingly against it. The National Independent Truckers Unity Committee called instead for the transfer of $96 million from the Federal Highway Trust Fund to the Small Business Administration for loans to truck owners. The money, committee leaders said. would help the truckers through their present economic crisis. The committee was formed after last year’s trucker strike, which stopped thousands of rigs and led to some violence.
A break in the deadlock over the New Hampshire senatorial election is expected Tuesday, when the Senate is to vote on the first of 35 New Hampshire election issues that have snagged the chamber for a month. The Senate will vote on whether to grant Republican candidate Louis C. Wyman’s request that the Rules Committee recount ballots cast in 10 precincts. An initial count of all the ballots after the November election had showed Democrat John A. Durkin a 10-vote winner over Wyman, but the state Ballot Law Commission retabulated the votes and awarded the election to Wyman. The Rules Committee had deadlocked 4 to 4 on whether the ballots in the 10 precincts should be recounted.
A month-long investigation by the Veterans Administration has failed to solve the mystery of how a wheelchair patient was “lost” in Chicago’s Hines Veterans Hospital for 25 hours on May 1-2. Hospital personnel first said they believed the patient, Erwin A. Pawelski, who was awaiting brain surgery and was unable to speak, somehow had been left on a busy elevator and went unnoticed for more than a day. But the VA inquiry ruled out that possibility. Pawelski underwent surgery on May 12 and died on May 18. His widow, Dorothy, has charged the hospital with negligence, incompetence and a “total lack of compassion.”
The intimate diaries of Cosima Wagner, mistress and then second wife of Richard Wagner, will be published in their entirety after having been kept secret for almost 100 years. Scholars and music specialists have long sought access to the diaries, which, Wagner authorities say, are expected to contain significant revelations about a major period in the composer’s life, his ideas about music and opera and his strongly unconventional life. World rights have been sold to a Munich publisher. An English translation in two volumes is scheduled for publication in the United States in 1977.
All entrances to Crater Lake National Park in Oregon were blocked by state policemen and forest rangers after an outbreak of nausea forced the abrupt closing of the park, which has about 40,000 visitors a week. A broken pipe had leaked raw sewage into a spring and 500 to 1,000 visitors and employees recently suffered vomiting, stomach cramps and diarrhea. Public health officials said victims risked hepatitis. Letters have been sent to all visitors who had left their names, warning them to see a physician. A spokesman said the park would be closed for at least several weeks until a new water supply system could be set up.
British Open Men’s Golf, Carnoustie: American Tom Watson wins 18-hole playoff by 1 stroke over Jack Newton of Australia; first of 8 major titles; first of 5 Open Championships.
Major League Baseball:
Homers by Darrell Evans, Earl Williams and Dusty Baker helped power the Braves to a 9–4 victory in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader before the Expos came back to win the second game, 7–3, with the aid of two circuit clouts by Gary Carter. Evans and Williams hit their round-trippers successively in the first inning of the opener to tie the score at 2–2. The Braves then took command with four runs in the fifth. Carl Morton doubled and scored on a single by Marty Perez. After Williams walked with two away, Baker hit his homer to add three runs to the Braves’ total. In the nightcap, Carter drove in three runs with his pair of homers. Bob Bailey accounted for two RBIs with a single and sacrifice fly. Larvell Blanks hit a homer for the Braves.
The Reds struck for three runs, all unearned, off Jerry Koosman in the first inning and made them stand up for a 3–2 victory over the Mets. Pete Rose led off with a single and Dave Concepcion was safe on an error by Millan. Joe Morgan singled to load the bases. After Johnny Bench popped up, Tony Perez singled to drive in Rose. George Foster went out, but Merv Rettenmund singled, scoring Concepcion and Morgan. The Mets counted their two runs off Pat Darcy in the second, but then were held scoreless by the pitching of Tom Carroll and Rawly Eastwick the rest of the way.
While Steve Carlton pitched a four-hitter, the Phillies went on a batting rampage with 18 hits, including Greg Luzinski’s 25th homer of the season, to trample the Astros, 14–2. Bob Watson homered in the first inning to produce the Astros’ pair, but that lead quickly vanished in the second when the Phillies exploded for seven runs on seven hits and three walks. In addition to his homer, Luzinski had a single and double, giving him seven consecutive hits, plus two walks, in two games with the Astros before the slugger struck out with the bases loaded in the seventh.
Continuing his red-hot hitting, Willie Stargell drove in three runs with a sacrifice fly, homer and triple, but the Pirates’ slugger had to share the honors with Bill Robinson in a 6–4 victory over the Padres. After Stargell’s triple drove in Al Oliver and tied the score at 4–4 in the eighth inning, Robinson came to the plate and smashed a homer for the winning runs.
Adding drama to “We Hlove Hrabosky Hbanner Hday,” the Cardinals’ reliever gained credit for a 2–1 victory over the Dodgers in 10 innings. The Cardinals arranged for the banner display for the nationally televised contest to allow fans to show their resentment because Dodger manager Walter Alston had failed to name Hrabosky to the N. L.’s All-Star team. The Dodgers, who scored on a homer by Davey Lopes off Lynn McGlothen in the fifth inning, had a 1–0 victory in their grasp until Reggie Smith tied the score with a homer off Al Downing in the ninth. Hrabosky, who pitched the last two innings without allowing a hit, was the winner when the Cardinals broke through against Rick Rhoden for their winning run in the 10th on a single by Ken Reitz, sacrifice by Mike Tyson and pinch-single by Bake McBride, scoring pinch-runner Buddy Bradford.
Rick Monday drove in two runs with a double and Jerry Morales produced another pair with a single as the Cubs piled up an early lead to defeat the Giants, 6–4. Derrel Thomas and Dave Rader hit homers for the Giants off Steve Stone, who survived a major threat in seventh inning by striking out Glenn Adams, Von Joshua and Thomas in succession with runners on second and third.
Carl Yastrzemski drove in three runs, Doug Griffin accounted for two and Jim Rice hit a homer as the Red Sox defeated the Rangers, 10–4. Mike Hargrove had two of the Rangers’ eight hits off Luis Tiant and batted in three runs. Tiant became the first Red Sox pitcher to have a turn at bat since the last game of the 1972 season. When designated hitter Cecil Cooper entered the game at first base, Tiant batted in Yastrzemski’s place in the eighth inning and flied out.
The second place (American League East) Brewers edge the White Sox, 5–4, as catcher Charlie Moore has a pair of hits, 2 RBIs, and a steal of home on the front of a double steal. Moore provided the Brewers’ deciding hit, driving in their last two tallies with a single in the third inning. Slaton gave up three runs in the fourth and then was removed after Bill Melton homered in the seventh. Jim Slaton picked up his fifth straight victory. Eduardo Rodriguez saved the game.
After 14 innings, a 1 a.m. curfew halted play between the Twins and Yankees with the score tied, 6–6. The game was to have been resumed prior to the next day’s regularly-scheduled contest, but it was rained out. A new date was to be set later (play resumed on July 19). When it did, Catfish Hunter, who started for the Yankees, was rapped for homers by Steve Braun and Tony Oliva but held a 3–2 lead going into the ninth when the Twins erupted for four runs. Hunter was removed after a leadoff double by Danny Thompson. Dick Tidrow gave up an infield hit by Dan Ford. Sparky Lyle took over and yielded a run-scoring single by Rod Carew, safe bunt by Johnny Briggs and single by Oliva that put the Twins ahead, 4–3. Doc Medich then became the Yankees’ fourth pitcher of the inning and was tagged for a two-run single by Larry Hisle before retiring the side. The Yankees rallied to tie the score in their half. Jim Mason singled to chase Jim Hughes and Rich Coggins homered off Tom Johnson for the first two runs. Rick Dempsey kept the rally going with a single and, after an infield out by Roy White, Thurman Munson singled to drive in the tying tally.
Bill Freehan homered in the second inning and the Tigers added another run in the third on a double by Aurelio Rodriguez and single by Ron LeFlore to defeat the Royals, 2–0, behind the six-hit pitching of Lerrin LaGrow.
Nolan Ryan, who had not been a winner since June 6, was handed his sixth straight setback when the Indians defeated the Angels, 9–1. The Indians decided Ryan’s fate when Boog Powell walked, George Hendrick singled and Oscar Gamble homered in the fourth inning. Dennis Eckersley held the Angels to five hits and gave up their lone run on two walks and a single by John Doherty in the eighth.
Jim Perry yielded only three hits in pitching the Athletics to a 7–1 victory over the Orioles. Jim Palmer, who had been bothered recently by tendinitis, started for the Orioles and was ineffective, going out in seventh inning after giving up all of the A’s runs. including three on a homer by Billy Williams.
Montreal Expos 4, Atlanta Braves 9
Montreal Expos 7, Atlanta Braves 3
Texas Rangers 4, Boston Red Sox 10
Cleveland Indians 9, California Angels 1
San Francisco Giants 4, Chicago Cubs 6
New York Mets 2, Cincinnati Reds 3
Philadelphia Phillies 14, Houston Astros 2
Detroit Tigers 2, Kansas City Royals 0
Chicago White Sox 4, Milwaukee Brewers 5
Minnesota Twins 7, New York Yankees 8
Baltimore Orioles 1, Oakland Athletics 7
San Diego Padres 4, Pittsburgh Pirates 6
Los Angeles Dodgers 1, St. Louis Cardinals 2
Born:
Cheyenne Jackson, American stage and screen actor and singer, in Spokane, Washington.