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URUGUAIANA, Brazil (AP) —
Brazil and Argentina pledged
themselves Friday night to fight
Communist penetration in the
Western Hemisphere and backed
President Kennedy's ‘‘Alliance for
Progress’ program for Latin
America.
In a historic move, Presidents
Janio Quadros of Brazil and Ar.
turo Frondizi of Argentina alse
agreed to consult each other per
manently on all common matters
and to coordinate all their action:
lwithin the continent. It is the firs
time in history South America’s
two biggest nations have joinec
lin such close cooperation, one vet
‘eran diplomat said.
| URUGUATANA, Brazil (AP) —
Brazil and Argentina pledged
themselves Friday night to fight
Communist penetration in the
Western Hemisphere and backed
President Kennedy’s “Alliance for
Progress” HeOgran for Latin
America.
In a historic move, Presidents
Janio Quadros of Brazil and Ar-
jturo Frondizi of Argentina also
agreed lo consull each other per-
manently on afl common matters
and to coordinate all their actions
within the contifient. It is the first
time in history South America’s
two higgest nalions have joined
in such close cooperation, one vet-
eran diplomat said.
The icaders ended a two-day
conference here by issuing four
documents: a declaration of prin-
ciples, amounting to a firm sland
against Communist penetration
into Latin America; the conven-
tion on friendship and permanent
consultation; and {wo declara-
tions dealing wilh economic and
cultural matters.
Meeting in this southern Brazil-
ian port across the Uruguay River
frem Argentina, Quadros and
Frondizi were full of praise for
Kennedy’s Latin American pro-
grain,
They said the long-sought goals
fw Latin America, is contained
in the spirit of the Bogota Charter,
“have just recoived: their most
valuable support in the program
of ‘AHiance for Progress’ pro.
posed hy the President of the
United States of America.”
Their document suggested, fur-
ther, that Washington's plan he
augmented by Brazil's own ‘“Op-
cration Pan America,” a plan
originated by former Brazilian
President Juseelino Kubitschek.
In their joint declaration ol
principles, Quadros and Frondizi
| same | train |
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE
Calif. (AP)—Maj. Bob White flew
the X15 rocket plane to a new
eontrolled flight speed record o|
3,140 miles an hour Friday, de-
spite engine trouble and a leak
im his pressurized cabin.
The new mark is 235 m.ph
faster than White’s previous rec.
ord of 2,905 mph. last March 7
but the Air Force officer said he
felt no sensation of greater speed
The engine trouble came a spli
Second after the X15 drappec
away from its B52 mother shi;
240 miles east of here above Hid
den Hills, Calif.
The engine ignited briefly, ther
eut out. For the next 30 seconds
‘while the X15 fell helplessly from
45,000 feet to 37,000 feet, White
labored frantically to get the en
Sine restarted.
Finally he succeeded, The en
gine’s 57,000 pounds of thrus'
came on at full throttle, driving
him back in his seat with a force
three times that of normal
gTtavity.
White zoomed to 86,000 feet, the
altitude at which he reached the
new speed record, then shut of!
his engine.
At 90,000 feet his pressurizec
cabin sprang a leak. Instantly
and automatically, his space-type
fying suit inflated to compensate
for the loss of pressure in the
cabin.
“I was still able to function
normally,’ White said, so he can.
tinued the flight.
Momentum carried him on tc
103.000 feet, close to the planned
peak for the flight, Then came
the long glide back to base.
| EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)—A_ tes!
pilot coolly describes as “just routine’ a trouble-plaguec
flight in the X15 rocket plane that set a new controllec
flight speed record of 3,140 miles an hour.
Alr Force Maj. Bob White
zoomed more than 50 miles a
minute to an altitude of 103,000
feet Friday, thus breaking the
old record of 2,905 m.p.h. he had
set last March 7.
There were tense moments dur-
ing the 11-minute flight—when the
engine quit temporarily and mo
ments later when the swept-wing
Darts pressurized cabin sprang
a leak.
White later brushed aside the
miscues, saying, ‘We expect
some unusual things to show up
in an experimental program.”
Seconds after the X15 dropped
from its B52 mother plane at 45,-
000 feet, its rocket engine quit.
The X15 dropped 7,000 feet while
White frantically tried to re-start
the engine. At 37.000 feet the
rocket engine's 57,000 pounds ol
“thrust came on at full throttle.
slamming White beck in the
cockpit seat with a force three
times that of gravity Over the
‘radio came White's unemotional:
“That was quite a boost.’’
White pulled the X15 into a
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rocket plane shot like a bullet
‘on 1t8 first full power run. At
(80,000 feet, White had his record
and shut off the engine.
| different | train |
ee ee wer re SF
PARIS #—Foreign ministers of
the Atlantic Alliance today gave
their general agreement to the
Western Big Three's proposals for
easing world tensions
The ministers from other mem-
ber nations of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO! heard
a lengthy statement from U. 5.
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles, British Foreign Secretary
Harold Maemillan and French
Foreign Minister Antoine Pinay ex-
plaining the joint) memorandum
which the West will present to the
Soviet Union Thursday in Geneva.
At the end of a three-hour ses-
sion, a NATO official said, ‘There
was general agreement on the
basic proposals.”
| Dulles spoke for almost an hour
on the first and key section of the
memoradum covering Western
proposals for Germany's reunifica
tion and a general European se-
| curity pact.
Macmillan spoke briefiy on dise
jarmament proposals and = pointec
out that this problem is being han
died by a U.N. subcommittee. He
said the lask at Geneva would be
more to improve the atmospher¢
| to help the actual work in the U. N,
| body.
Pinay presented the Big Three's
views on improvement of East-
West relations, mentioning trade
tourism and information. He said
that progress in this field depends
mostly on a development of the
“Geneva spirit’ and particularly
on the progress the Big Four might
make on the key agenda item—
German reunification.
Middle Bast Not Discussed,
Officials said that the current sit-
| uation in the Middle East, partic.
ularly the threat of conflict be-
tween Israc) and the Arab states
in the wake of Czechoslovakian
| sales of arms to Egypt, has not
i been discussed
Dulles, Maemillan and Pinay
jreached “complete agreement”
| last night on the memorandum with
| which they will eonfront. Molotov
tat the post-summit meeting open-
| ing Thursday in Geneva. This was
‘their joint position on the items
| listed for discussion:
1. German reunification: Real se-
curity in Europe is impossible un-
less the German people are per-
mitted to come together under a
single government of their own
choice which can negotiate and
sign a peace treaty for all Ger-
many. Hence, Germany must be
reunited by free elections through-
out the divided country.
2. European security: To reas-
sure the Kremlin against another
aggression, the West is proposing
{a 14-power mutual defense pact
| joining the United States, Canada,
Britain, France, Italy, Belgium,
| the Netherlands and Luxembourg
from NATO with the Soviet Union,
| Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary,
Bulgaria and Romania, The West
_1is willing to tie German unifica-
»; tion and a European. security pact
-| together so both are achieved in
;| parallel stages.
. 3. Disarmament: The West is re-
peating President Eisenhower's
“open sky’ proposal at the sum-
*| mit conference last summer, offer-
>| ing to exchange military blueprints
|and acrial inspection rights with
the Soviets as a guarantee against
surprise attack,
|| 4 Better East-West relations:
, The West is suggesting that great-
er facilities be given for travelers
_| and information to cross the Iron
. | Curtain,
;| It appeared likely the Western
., trio and Molotoy would make the
- most progress on the last item at
| Geneva,
</s> | | PARIS— (AP) — Foreign
ministers of the Atlantic Al-
liance today gave their gen-
eral agreement to the Western
Big Three's proposals for eas-
ing world tensions.
The ministers from other
member nations of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) heard a lengthy state-
ment from U. S. Secretary of
State John Foster Dulles, British
Foreign Secretary Harold Mac-
Milland and French Foreign Min-
ister Antoise Piney explaining the
mt memorancuni Whoienh tiv
est will present to the Soviet
Union Thursday in Geneva.
At the end of a three-hour ses-
sion, a NATO official said, “There
was genera] agreement on the
basic proposals.”
Dulles spoke for almost an hour
on the first and key section of the
memorandum covering Western
proposals for Germany's reunifi-
eation and a general European se-
curity pact.
MacMillan spoke briefly on
disarmament proposals and point-
ed out that this problem is being
handled by a U. N. subcommittee.
He said the task at Geneva would
be more to improve the atmos-
phere to help the actual work in
the UN body.
Pinay presented the Big Three's
views on improvement of East-
West relations, ee
tourism and information. He said
that rage tgp in this field depends
mostly on a development of the
“Geneva spirit” and particularly
on the progress the Big Four
might make on the key agenda
item—German reunification.
Officials said that the current
situation in the Middle East, par-
ticularly the threat of conflict be-
tween Israe| and the Arab states
in the wake of Czechoslovakian
sales of arms to Egypt, has not
yet been discussed.
” "Thig was the joint position on
the items listed for discussion:
4. German reunification: Real
security in Europe is impossible
unless the German people are
permitted to come together under
a single government of their own
choice which can negotiate and
sign a peace treaty for all Ger-
many. Hence, Germany must be
reunited by free elections
throughout the divided country.
2. European security: To reas-
sure the Kremlin against another
aggression, the West is proposing
a 14-power mutual defense pact
joining the United States, Canada,
Britain, France, Italy, Belgium,
the Netherlands and Luxembourg
from NATO with the Soviet
Union, Czechoslovakia, Poland,
liungary, Buigeria and Romania.
The West ia willing to tle Ger-
man unification and a European
security pact together so both are
achieved in parallel stages.
8. Disarmament: The West is
repeating President Eisenhower's
“open sky” proposal at the sum-
mit conference last summer, of-
fering to exchange military blue-
prints and serial inspection rights
with the Soviets as a guaranice
against surprise attack.
@ Better East-West relations:
The West is suggesting that
greater facilities be given for tra-
velers and information {to cross
the Iren Curtain.
It appeared likely the Western
trio and Molotov would make the
most progress on the Jast item at
ianeva.
</s> | same | train |
BERLIN, May 10. ()—At one
minute past midnight Thursday
flag-bedecked traffic will end the
epic of blockaded Berlin.
So far there hasn't been a
hitch in final arrangements.
Gen. V. I. Chuikov, Soviet com-
mander in Germany, and the west-
ern powers both have ordered
that transport, trade and com-
munication services between their
zones resume at that time.
Things will revert back to the
way they were on March 1, 1948,
when the blockade began.
Sixteen freight trains wil move
into the city daily. Highways will
be open. The Soviets won’t—or
at least say they won’t—demand
travel permits. They also say
they'll not try to search allied
baggage.
Mail service will be resumed.
Western Berlin’s Mayor Ernest
Reuter ‘ordered the - black; red
and gold flag of the new west
‘German republic be flown on
street cars and buses.
The Berlin flag will be draped
over other buses which will speed
to the west German cities of
Hanover, Hamburg and Frank-
furt, ;
The first day, 10 trainloads of
coal and six others of fresh po-
tatoes and consumer goods are
scheduled to move into the city,
which has been supplied by the
airlift for ten months.
Twelve thousand tons of sup-
plies are to go into the city daily
—Jjust about the same figure the
airlift reached on its best day.
Throughout the border area
there was excitement in the air
as willing workers installed radio
and telephone equipment, repaint-
ed border signs and_ clipped
weeds beside the long-neglected
highway,
The British expected to have
the first train into the city.
| | BERLIN, May 10. (4)—At one
minute. past midnight Thursday
flag-bedecked traffic will end the
epic of blockaded Berlin.
That’s 4:01 p. m., central stand-
ard time, Wednesday.
« So far ‘there hasn’t been a hitch
in final arrangements.
Gen. V. I. Chukov, Soviet com-
ander in Germany, and the
Western powers both have ordered
the transport, trade and commu-
mication services between their
Zones resumed at that time.
' Things will revert back to the
way they were on March 1, 1948,
when the blockade began.
: Sixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily. Highways will
li open. The Soviets won’t—or
at least say they won’t—demand
‘travel permits. They also say
Hey'll not try to search Allied
Ag gage.
: Mail service will be resumed.
|The first day, 10 trainloads of
coal and six others of fresh pota-
taes and consumer goods are
en be to move into the city,
ich has been supplied by the
air lift for 10 months.
fTwelve thousand tons of sup-
Plies are to go into the city daily
—just abdéut the same figure the
aiy lift reached on its best day.
| same | train |
ae CR a eee ete
hower sel up a program of wel-
come today for (he president of
Guatemala as his fast official visi-
lor before he Jeaves iitzsimons
Army Hospital Friday,
He sent hig personal plane, the
Columbine I, fo St. Lauis to fly
Carlos Castillo Armas ta Denyey
along with Acting Scerelary of
Strte Herbert Hoover Jr, for a 30-
minute conference.
Highlights State Visi
The conference highlights Ar-
mas’ stale visit. Me has been
praised in American cities far his
successful revol{ against a govern-
ment considered under Conmu-
nist influence.
Armag will be Nowa on {a lous.
ton, Tex, for a speech tonight in
another government ship, in order
that the Columbine n he made
ready for Eisenhower's own flight
bark east.
The 65-year-old Bisenhower, al-
ready pronounced fil enough lo
wak io the plane Friday, will
make two brief talks (o the Amor-
ican people on that day, one just
before he takes off fram Low
Field, the other when he ar.
Fives af ihe Mililary Air ‘rans
port. Terminal in Washington,
‘There will be a warm send oft
from Denver, where the President
has been a visitor since Aug, 11
and a hospital patient since Sept
24 when he suffered i. “maderale’
heart attack.
Networks fo Carry Talks
Radio and television nelwork:
will carry his remarks around the
country from both the Denver anc
Washington Tanding strips. ‘lhes
will he rebroadcast hy the Vaiee
of America. °
The fialks are expected (to be
finple, straight-from-(he-heart ex-
pressions of gralilude for the treat-
ment he has received al ihe hos
(al, far {ho mersages ef sympathy
from around the world, and for ihe
prayers so Many thousands have
said Lhey offered for hlm during
Tle ttinpss,
</s> | DENVER (#) President Eisen-
hower set up a program of wel-
come today for the president of
Guatemala as his last official vis-
itor before he leaves Fitzsimons
Army Hospital Friday.
He sent his personal plane, the
Columbine Ill, to St. Louis to fly
Carlos Castillo Armas to Denve1
along with acting Secretary of
State Herbert Hoover, Jr., for a
30 minute conference.
> The conference highlights Ar-
mas’ state visit. He has been prai-
sed in American cities for his suc-
cessful revolt against a govern-
ment considered under Communist
influence.
Armas will be flown on to ae
ton, Tex., for a speech tonight in
another government plane in or-
der that the Columbine can be
made ready for Eisenhower's own
flight East.
The 65 year old Eisenhower, al-
ready pronounced fit enough to
iwalk to the plane Friday, will
make two brief talks to the A-
| merican people on that day, one
just before he takes off from
Lowry Airfield, the other when
he arrives at the Military Air
| Transport Terminal in Washing-
ton.
There will be a warm sendoff
from Denver, where the President
has been a visitor since Aug. 14
and a hospital patient since Sept.
24 when he suffered a ‘moderate
heart attack.
Talks are expected to be simple,
straight from the heart expres-
sions of gratitude for the treat-
ment he has received at the hos-
pital, for the messages of sympa-
</s> | same | train |
Fey FtPEe OME, | PRENSA
WASHINGTON (*—President
Kennedy meets with former Pres-
ident Dwight D Eisenhower to-
day in an evident bid t rally
strong national support for criti-
cal steps which he may consider
necessary to deal with the in-
creasingly dangerous Cuban cri-
sis.
A White Hotise announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md. — emphasized Cuba as the
topic for the conference. But it
did not rule out the prospect that
/Kennedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
tensifying cold war conflicts with
the Soviet Union.
| Before flying to Camp David
| by helicopter Kennedy met with
_the National Security Council,
presumably to discuss possible
future moves against the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
in the wake of this week's abor-
tive antiCastro invasion,
| In the midst of these develop-
iments, the President was report-
'ed to have ordered a thorough
‘study of freasons for the defeat
(of the rebel invasion attempt
| which began last weekend with
the United States’ moral support
;~and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. 58.
money and arms.
| The President was understood
|to be concerned about what some
| authorities called a failure to cal-
|culate accurately in advance the
‘strength of Prime Minister Fidel
| Castro's military reaction to the
‘rebel assault as well as possible
[errors in intelligence.
White House news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Eisen-
hower would meet at Camp Da-
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Gettysburg, Pa.. which
Eisenhower used for conferences
'with foreign leaders.
| The President arranged the
,luncheon session tn a telephone
'eall to. Eisenhower Friday morn-
\ing. The former chief executive
, Was at his Gettysburg farm.
| WASHINGTON (AP)—President
Kennedy meets with former Pres-
fdent. Dwight D. Eisenhower: to-
day im an evident bid to rally
strong national support for criti-
cal steps_which he may consider
necessary to. deal. with: the in-
creasingly dangerous Cuban cri-
sis.
A White: House. announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md. — emphasized Cuba as the
‘topic for the conference. But it
did not rule out the prospect that
Kennedy could” discuss: with his
predecessor a broad range of in-'
-tensifying cold: war conflicts with
the Soviet Union. — ;
_. Before. flying to Camp David
by helicopter Kennedy met’ with
the National: Security Council,
presumably to discuss: possible
future moves against. the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
_in the wake of this week’s abor-
tive anti-Castro invasion.
Orders Study |
In the midst of these develop-
ments, the President was report-
ed to have ordered a thorough
study of reasons for the defeat
of the rebel invasion attempt,
which began last weekend with
the United States’ moral. support
—and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. S. :
money and arms... °.[ ,
_ The President: was- understood
to be concerned about what some
authorities called a failure to cal-
culate accurately in advance. the
strength of Prime Minister Fidel
stro’s military reaction to the
bel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence.
White : House- news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Fisen-
hower would meet at Camp Da-
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Gettysburg, Pa.,’ which
Eisenhower used for confererices
with foreign leaders.
The. President arranged the
luncheon session in a telephone
call to Eisenhower Friday morn-
‘ing. The former chief: executive
Iwas at his Gettysburg farm.
Salinger said Kennedy wanted
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believing
that “as leader of the Republi-
ican party dnd as former presi-
ident -he should know what the sit-
uation is.”
Salinger also . disclosed - that
Kennedy had been in indirect con-
tact with Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
feller of New York, another Re-
publican leader, and that he had
conferred Friday with Sen. Barry
‘Goldwater, R-Ariz. - i,
‘The contacts with Republicans
| followed Kennedy’s meeting at the
White House Thursday with for-
mer Vice President Richard *M.
‘Nixon, his Republican opponent
lfor the presidency last year. -
| same | train |
WASHINGTON, April 22 (2)
—President Kennedy today ap-
pointed Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor,
former Army Chief of Staff, to
make a special survey of U.S.
capabilities. in the field of “non-
conventional” warfare such as
guerrilla activity.
Taylor immediately went on
the job. He attended a meeting
this morning of- the National
Security Council — one of the
few sessions of that major de-
fense group since Kennedy took
office,
Pierre Salinger, White House
Press Secretary, said that “non-
conventional” warfare in this
case is not used in the usual
sense of nuclear warfare but of
tactical operations,
Salinger said Kennedy decided
within the last few days that
such a survey is necessary and
asked Taylor Friday to conduct
it.
The study clearly was inspired
by events of the past week in
Cuba,
The White House announce-
ment was made only two hours
before Kennedy was to meet
former President Dwight D.
Eisenhower at Camp David, Md.
{Kennedy arranged that meeting
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the unsuccessful rebellion
jagainst Cuban Premier Fidel
i rite
bc: wed See: Whee: a
| CHICAGO (UPI) —A slow -
learning fifth grader, who brood-
ed about losing his standing as
a “teacher’s pet,” admitted Fri-
day night that he stabbed to
death his favorite teacher.
Arthur Lee Hester, 14, a
slightly built Negro who was
three grades behind in school,
confessed that he killed Mrs.
Josephine Keane, 45, in the hase-
ment storeroom where he used
to help her sort textbooks.
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) The lead-
ers of the world’s two nuclear super-
powers pledged in a landmark
agreement today to regulate their
relations in a way to reduce the risk
of nuclear war.
President Nixon and Soviet Com-
munist party Secretary Leonid I.
Brezhnev reached the accord in the
fifth day of their summit talks and
prepared to sign it at the White
House before heading for California
where they will conclude their meet-
ings Sunday.
In addition to its application to
U.S.-Soviet relations, the agreement
applies also to the relations of either
party with other countries. In this
way, although technically bilateral,
the agreement has multilaterul im-
plications.
| MOSCOW (AP)—Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev told President
Kennedy today the invasion of
Cuba is ‘“‘a crime which has re-
volted the whole world.”
“It has been established. incon-
trovertibly that it was the United
States that prepared the interven-
tion, financed, armed and trans-
ported the mercenary _ bands
which invaded Cuba,’ Khrush-
chev said in a message to Presi-
dent Kennedy, handed to FE. L.
Freers, U.S. charge d'affaires.
Khrushchev was replying to a
communication several days ago
from Kennedy.
As distributed by Tass, the Sovi-
et news agency, the Khrushchev
statement referred to a Kennedy
statement that rockets that might
be used against the United States
could be stationed in Cuba, with
the inference that this posed prob-
lems for the United States in rela-
tion to the whole Western hemi-
sphere, |
“Mr. President, you are follow-
ing a very dangerous path,”
Khrushchev said. ‘Ponder that. “g
The Soviet premier went on to.
mention the situation in the Far
East. He contended the United
States had seized Formosa, and |
said this started the United States |
*‘on the road of plunder.’ |
He said the United States
threatens war in case Communist |
China moves for unity with For- |
mosa.
“And this is being done by a/
nation which has officially recog-
nized that Taiwan (Formosa) be-
longs to China,”’ Khrushchev said, |
The premier continued:
“You may, of course, express |
your sympathies for the imperial- |
ist and colonialist countries and
this will not surprise anyone. For |
instance, you vote with them in’
the United Nations.
“This is a matter of io
morality, But what has been done |
against Cuba is no longer |
morality, Thig is gangsterism.” |
Khrushchev said the United Na-
tions must denounce these actions. |
“If the American government |
considers itself entitled to take |
such measures against Cuba as it)
has been resorting to of late, the
U.S. president must recognize.
that other countries ‘have no less-
er reasons to act in a similar way |
with regard to states on whose |
territory preparations are indeed |
being made which constitute a |
threat to the security of the So- |
viet Union,” he said.
“We, for our part, do not hold |
such views,”’ he continued.
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (4%-An alleg |
ed Russian attack on a U.S, Navy |
plane near Alaska raised deme unde |
in Congress today that this coun.
try reconsider ite plans for next)
month's Big Four sumeit confer
enee,
“Unless we pet assurances that
the attack was not premeditated,
we should not go to that confer
ence,” said Sen. Mansfield (D-
Mont). ;
Other senators also were quick
to question Russia's motives fol-
lowing announcement yesterday
that two Russian jet fighters, at-
tacking the much slower P2V5
Neptune patrol plane, had foreed
the U. S. craft to erash land and
burn on the American-held St
Lawrence Island in the Bering
Sea
The attack occurred Wednes-
day over what U. 8. officials de-
scribed as iwternational waters
between Alaska and Siberia,
Sen. Monroney (D-Okla) called
it “a cowardly attack by triguer
happy Russians,” and Sea. Cape-
hart (R-Ind) commented that
“this is an ineredible way to start
a peace conference.”
Perhaps with that in mind, the
government held up announce-
| of the Russian attack for
conferences among offi.
resident Flsénhower tuur-
hog ‘New England, talked with
State and Defense Depertment of-
ficilals here, Secretory of State
Dulles, in San Francisco for a U,
N. anniversary celebration, wes
directed to take up the matter
there with Soviet Fore'gn Minist-
er V. M. Molotov.
Molotoy was quoted as saying
he'knew nothing of the incident
but would investigate and report
back, He and Dulles met i a
private room of the hall where
both are attending the 10th anni-
versury celebration of the U. N.
The first announcement of the
incident, and of those steps al-
ready taken, came from Eisen-
hower's press secretary, James C
Hagerty, at Whitefield, N. H.,
during the President's New Eng.
land tour. Hagerty called the at-
tack “inexplicable and unwar-
ranted,”
The incident took on added dip-
lomatic jmportance in the light
of Russia's current peace offer
sive in advance of the scheduled
July 18 Big Four summit confer:
ence,
</s> | | WHITEPIELD, N. H, P--Pres!
ident Eisenhower's headquar «
‘announced Friday that on Wednes-
day a U. 8, patrol plane
‘was fired on “by Soviet planes"
over international waters in the
Bering Strait area and crash-land-
ed in Amenecan territory,
| Press Secretary James C. Hag-
ty told newsmen:
Ait the direction of the Presi-
dent, the secretary of state today
in San Francisco has taken up the
matter with the Soviet foreign Min-
Lister (VM. Molotov) who said
thar he was unaware of the inci-
dent but would at once investigate
and commumeate with the secre-
jtary of state.’*
</s> | different | train |
MPF FPWR ee, OVID A
DETROIT, May § 10.—(tP—Ford
Motor Company and CIO officials
meet today to attempt settlement of
a six-day strike against two key
Ford plants that will idle a total of
85.000 workers by tonight
Reopening of negotiations
came as bord scheduled imme-
diate shutdowns of 11 assembly
lines, with the remaining eight
to close by next Monday.
Henry Ford Il. youthful head of
the company, accepted a union offer
to reopen peace talks which were
cut short last Thursday when 62.200
United Auto Workers struck at
Ford's River Rouge and Lincoln-
Merrury plants.
_ Tr his bid to reopen negotiations,
Waller Reuther, president of the
UAW, asked Ford to lead the com-
pany negotiating team personally.
Férd declined the invitation, but
said “we will be happy to meet with
you‘at 2 p. mm.”
Reuther referred to a letter the
Ford president wrote to striking
workers last week. in which he said
the ‘walkout was “unnecessary.”
“Since your letter expresses
concern for the Ford workers,
we would like to suggest that
you assume vour personal obli-
sn to participate in nego-
ations.”
"This will also afford you the op-
portunity.” Reutber said, “of being
appraised of all facts in the situa-
tign, which obviously you do not
have.”
Ford said John Bugas, Niompentle
dent in charge of industrial rela.
tiers who led previous peace ettorts,
d conduct company Bom apmeeone
‘the “fut: ‘Support: king
of ‘ the management.”
| DETROIT, May 10.—Ue—Ford
‘Motor company and CIO United
Auto Workers’ union officials re-
sumed negdliations today to at-
tempt seitiement of a strike against
two key Ford plants that will Jeave
85,000 workers idle tonight.
Peace talks in the six-day-oid
walkout were renewed as Ford
scheduled immediate shutdowns of
11 of fts assembly lines,
DETROIT, May 10. — i) — The
Ford strike—idling 65,000 men and
threatening as many more—was
earried to the peace table today.
On the sixth day of the “speed-
up” deadlock, management and the
CiO United Aulo Workers sought a
solution together.
Young President Henry Ford JJ,
acting swiftly, accepted a proposal
for talks from President Walter
Reuther of the union.
Face Idleness
A full 40,000 more Ford workers
face idleness within a week it the
strike is not settled. Ford has given
warning it may have ta shut down
all its 49 plants, i
He declined two accompanying
proposals from Reuther, however.
Ford said he would neither ap-
pear personally at the negotiations
nor would engage in a public debate
with Reuther if the dispute weren't
settled by Friday.
The red-haired union chief, in a
(Turn to Page 4, Column 3)
| same | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Re-
publican member of the Senate
Watergate committee says the
Nixon administration has
“stepped on” anyone willing to
search for the truth about Wa-
tergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr.,
who made the claim Thursday,
also said that fired White House
Counsel John W. Dean III
should be listened to when he
appears before the panel. Dean,
who has said he discussed
Watergate and a_ possible
coverup with President Nixon,
will be the lead-off witness when
the hearings resume next week.
“I think there is a great deal
of credibility to a story that he is
going to go ahead and tell, and I
think the committee owes it to
him to enable him to tell that
story in full view of the public,”’
Weicker said on a Public
Television show, ‘‘Evening
Edition.”” He was interviewed
by Martin Agronsky.
“Is his testimony credible? I
think it is. ‘‘Nobody’s attribut-
ing 100-per-cent credibility to
him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out
there and that’s no small thing
when you were in his position
and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on
this young man at the time to
decide that you're going to step
forward and tell the story to the
American people.”
Weicker was the sole oppo-
nent of the committee’s decision
to postpone Dean’s appearance
for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit confer-
ences this week between Nixon
and Soviet Communist Party
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.
“Tt should be clear from vari-
ous public statements that have
been made that any institution,
whether it’s a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and try
to find out the truth and try to
tell the truth is gonna’ get
stepped on by the executive
branch of government,’’ the
Connecticut senator said.
| WASHINGTON (AP) — A Republican
member of the Senate Watergate
committee says the Nixon administration
has ‘stepped on"’ anyone willing to search
for the truth about Watergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr.. who made
the claim Thursday, also said that fired
White House Counsel John W. Dean III
should be listened to when he appears
beiore the panel. Dean. who has said he dis-
cussed Watergate and a possible coverup
with President Nixon. will be the lead-off
witness when the hearings resume next
week.
“YT think there is a great deal of
credibility to a story that he is going to go
ahead and teli. and I think the committee
owes it to him to enable him to tell that
storv in full view of the public.” Weicker
said on a Public Television show. “Evening
Edition.” He was interviewed by Martin
Agronsky.
“This man (Dean) was in the White
House from ‘70 to ‘72, so he has a window
on the White House during that period of
time,” the Connecticut senator said.
“Is his testimony credible? I think it is.
“Nobody's attributing 100-per cent
credibility to him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out there and
that’s no small thing when you were in his
position and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on this young
man at the time to decide that you're going
to step forward and tell the story to the
American people.”
Weicker was the sole opponent of the
cammittee’s decision to postpone Dean's
appearance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit conferences this
week between Nixon and Soviet
Communist Party leader Leonid 1.
Brezhnev.
“It shold be clear from various public
statements that have been made that any
institution, whether it’s a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and try to find out
the truth and try to tell the truth is gonna’
get stepped on by the executive branch of
government,”’ Weicker said.
He cited Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's
recent attack on the Watergate panel as
one that ‘‘can hardly hope to find the truth
and hardly fail to muddy the waters of
justice,’ as an example of the executive
branch's efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee said it was
considering a halt (o the practice of talking
to prospective witnesses in secret because
so much supposedly confidential
information is leaked to the media.
“TE nearly despair of doing anything about
it.” committee Vice Chairman Howard H.
Baker, R-Tenn., said Thursday. “It means
that most if not all of our testimony will
have to be taken in public.”
Coramittee Chairman Sam J. Ervin Ir,
See REPUBLICAN, Page 2-A
| same | train |
' WASHINGTON, March i, (Pe
Oliver Wendell Holmes, associate
justice of the Supreme Court,
makes bis debut as a radio speaker
tomorrow night at 10:55 Rom,
eastern standard time, (5:55 p. m.,
Fairbanks time), in celebration of
us 90th birthday.
His speech will be che first Pub-
lic notice he has ever taken of
his birthdays, although numerous
times in the last few years his
friends and associates have been
attempting to have a celebration,
The radio broadcast will open at]:
10:30 p. m., eastern standard time,| |
with Chief Justice Hughes and!
ther notables speaking,
Dr, F. de le Vergne: left this af-
ternoon by speeder for Healy to
bring the Alaska Railroad road-
master there, who is Suffering from
neumonia, to St. Joseph's hospital.
| - Washington, Mar. 7. (AP)—Oliver
Wendell: Holmes, associate. justice
of the supreme court, makes his de-
but as a radio speaker ‘Sunday,
March 8—his ninetieth birthday.
In -his second floor study today
workmen tipteed about installing a
microphone. There is not.even a
radio ‘set in the house. One . -will
be connected after the microphone
is put in. The speech by the old-
.est Man -ever.to. serve on:the su-
preme bench, is the first public no-
tice he has taken of a birthday. ©
| different | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came home safely today
from man’s longest space jour-
ney and shunned stretchers to
walk smartly but unsteadily
across the deck of this recovery
carrier,
The wobbly 60 steps from the
Apollo ferry ship to a medical
laboratory indicated Charles
Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz had suf-
fered some effects from a
record four weeks’ exposure to
space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachuted
toward a pinpoint landing in the
Pacific after an 11-million-mile
journey: ‘‘We’re all in good
shape. Everything’s OK.”’
They splashed down right on
target, just 642 miles from the
Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later,
still inside the Apollo, they were
on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how
they might react to earth's
gravity after their long weigh-
tless exposure, were prepared
“o lift them out on litters.
But, after consultation with
doctors, Kerwin, a physician,
said they could walk to the
medical trailer where they be-
gan six hours of extensive med-
ical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from
the hatch and saluted as the
ship’s band struck up ‘‘Anchors
Aweigh” for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant
steps at first but gradually
picked up steam as he reached
the medical lab door. Kerwin
was slightly stooped and both he
and Weitz were somewhat
unsteady in their steps,
Doctors assisted both Kerwin
and Weitz by holding onto one
arm of each.
Experts immediately began
removing thousands of feet of
film and tape and equipment
from medical, earth resources
and astronomy experiments
that may tell man much about
his earth, his sun and his physi-
cal being.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can function
efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today to try to
repair a refrigeration problem
in their space station. But
Mission Control decided there
was nothing the astronauts
could do and told them to come
home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
and executed a series of
maneuvers that sent them
slamming into the atmosphere
above Thailand for the fiery de-
scent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
blue waters at 9:50 a.m. EDT
about 830 miles southwest of
San Diego, Calif. It was just
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tossed a
line to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
the astronauts to an elevator for
a ride to the hangar deck.
Hundreds of white-clad sail-
ors on deck and millions watch-
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat to a
U.S. man-in-space landing as
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
‘Everyone's in super shape,”’
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to se-
cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars.
| ABOARD USS 'TICON-
DEROGA (AP)—Skylab’s
astronauts came ‘safely
home from man’s longest
Space journey today
‘splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Paci-
fic Ocean after 28 days and
il million miles in orbit.
Good Shape
“We're all in good shape.*
Commander Charles Conrad Jr.
reported as the spacecraft de-
scended. “Everything’s OK.”
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit to try to re-
pair a refrigeration problem in
their space station, But Mission
Control decided there was noth-
ing the astronauts could de and
told them to come home.
So, 10 minutes behind sched-
ule, Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
from the station and executed a
series of maneuvers that sent
them slamming into the atmos-
phere above Thailand for a
fiery descent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
Pacific waters at 9:50 am.
EDT about $30 miles southwest
of San Diega, Calif., within
sight of the main recovery ship,
the USS Ticonderoga. It was
just. after dawn off the West
Coast.
Hundreds of white-clad sail-
ors on deck and millions watch
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat fo a
U.S. man-in-space landing as
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
“Everyone’s in super shape,”
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
jJeaped from helicopters. ta se-
cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars. tS
The Ticonderoga reported. the
astronauts had landed 6% miles
from the ship and that the ship
was 6% miles from the target
point, indicating a perfect
touchdown,
The Ticonderoga steamed to
pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, in
contrast to most earlier U.S.
flights when the spacemen
were lifted to the carrier by
helicopter.
Medical requirements dic-
tated the pick up method today.
Medical experts were not cer-
tain how the astronauts would
react after returning. to earth's
gravity following’ record ex-
posure to space weightlessness
so they’ decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as little
SPACE TRIP Page 2
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Re
publican member of the Senate
Watergate committee says the
Nixon administration has
“stepped on’’ anyone willing to
search for the truth aboul Wa-
tergate.
Sen. Lowell 0. Weicker Jr.,
who made the claim Thursday,
also said that fired White House
Counsel John W. Dean III should
be listened to when he appears
before the panel. Dean, who has
said he discussed Watergate and
a possible coverup with President
Nixon, will be the lead-off witness
when the hearings resume next
week.
“T think there is a great deal of
credibility to a story that he is
going to go ahead and tell, and I
think the committee owes it to
him to enable him to tell that
story in full view of the public,”
Weicker said on a Public
Television show, ‘‘Evening
Edition.” He was interviewed by
Martin Agronsky.
. “Is his testimony credible? I
. think it is, Nobody's attributing
, 100-per-cent credibility to him o1
any other witness, but he’s go!
_ the guts to stand out there anc
j that’s no small thing when yot
» were in his position and had al
, the pressures that obviously mus
have existed on this young mana
the time to decide that you’r
n going to step forward and tell th
, Story to the American people.’
1 Weicker was the sole opponen
i, of the committee’s decision t
Z postpone Dean’s appearance fo
one week last Tuesday because ¢
the summit conferences this
week between Nixon and Soviet
Communist Party leader Leonid
I. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from vari-
ous public statements that have
been made that any institution,
whether it's a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and try
to find out the truth and try to tell
the truth is gonna’ get stepped on
by the executive branch of
government,”” the Connecticut
senator said,
He cited Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew’s recent attack on the
Watergate panel as one that “can
hardly hope to find the truth and
hardly fail to muddy the waters
of justice,” as an example of the
executive branch’s efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee said
it was considering a halt to the
_ practice of talking to prospective
_ witnesses in secret because so
’ much supposedly confidential
information is leaked to the
media.
, “I nearly despair of doing
anything about it,” committee
, Vice Chairman Howard H. Bak.
; er, R-Tenn., said Thursday, ‘1!
means that the committee
1 probably will end its closed-doo
, Sessions with witnesses, whicl
t until now have been hel
e routinely in advance of publi
appearances.
News stories Thursday fez
it tured accounts of closed-doc
o testimony by Dean and Wate
w gate conspirator E. Howar
Hunt.
| WASHINGTON (AP) — A Republican
member of the Senate Watergate com-
mittee says the Nixon administration has
“stepped on” anyone willing to search for
the truth about Watergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr., who made
the claim Thursday, also said that fired
White House Counsel John W. Dean III
should be listened to when he appears
before the panel. Dean, who has said he
discussed Watergate and a possible
coverup with President Nixon, will be the
lead-off witness when the hearings resume
next week.
“I think there is a great deal of
credibility to a story that he is going to go
ahead and tell, and I think the committee
owes it to him to enable him to tell that
story in full view of the public,” Weicker
said on a Public Television show,
“Evening Edition.”” He was interviewed
by Martin Agronsky.
“Is his testimony credible? I think it is.
“Nobody’s attributing 100-per-cent
credibility to him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out there and
that’s no small thing when you were in his
position and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on this young
man at the time to decide that you’re going
to step forward and tell the story to the
American people.”
Weicker was the sole opponent of the
committee’s decision to postpone Dean’s
appearance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit conferences this
week between Nixon and Soviet Com-
munist Party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from various public
statements that have been made that any
institution, whether it’s a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and try to find out
the truth and try to tell the truth is gonna’
get stepped on by the executive branch of
government,” the Connecticut senator
said. ;
He cited Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew’s recent attack on the Watergate
panel as one that ‘‘can hardly hope to find
the truth and hardly fail to muddy the
waters of justice,” as an example of the
executive branch’s efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee said it was
considering a halt to the practice of talking
to prospective witnesses in secret because
so much supposedly confidential in-
formation is leaked to the media.
“I nearly despair of doing anything
about it,’ committee Vice Chairman
Howard H. Baker, R-Tenn., said Thur-
sday. “It means that the committee
probably will end its closed-door sessions
with witnesses, which until now have been
held routinely in advance of public ap-
pearances.
News stories Thursday featured ac-
counts of closed-door testimony by Dean
and Watergate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt.
Also Thursday, another congressional
investigation into Watergate-related
matters was announced, this one by the
House Internal Security Cammittee.
Chairman Richard Ichord, DMo., said
he wants to find out why the White House
formed the ‘“‘plumbers” group that bur-
glarized the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s
psychiatrist in 1971. President Nixon has
said he ordered the “plumbers”’ to plug
such news leaks as the secret Pentagon
Papers, which Ellsberg gave to
newspapers.
In New York, former Democratic
National Chairman Lawrence F. O’Brien
said the scandal has hurt both parties. He
called for limits on how much candidates
may spend in their campaigns.
| same | train |
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP}—Maj. Bob White flew
the X15 rocket plane to a new
icontralled flight speed record of
‘3,140 miles an hour Friday, de-
spite engine trouble and a leak
in his pressurized cabin. x
The new mark is 24 mph.
faster than White's previous ree
ord of 2,905 m.p.h. last March 7,
but the Air Force officer anid he
felt no sensation of greater speed.
Engine Trouble
The engine trouble same a split
'second after the XiS dropped
away from ite BS mother shi
140 miles east of here above Hi
den Hills, Calif.
The engine ignited briefly, them
eut out. For the next 30 seconds,
while the X15 fell helplessly from
45,000 feet to 37,000 feet, White
Jabored frantically to get the en-
gine restarted.
Finally he succeeded. The one
|gine’s 57,000 pounds of thrust
‘came on at full throttle, driving
him back in his seat with a force
three times that of normal
gravity.
White zaomed to 87,000 fect, the
altitude at which he reached the
new speed record, then shut off
jhis engine,
Cabin Springs Leak
At 90,000 feet his pressurized
cabin sprang a leak, Instantly
and automatically, his space-type
flying suit inflated te compensate
for the loss of pressure in the
cabin,
| “I was still able to funetioa
ermally,” White said, so he con-
tinued the flighl. .
Momentum carried him on to
103,000 feet, close lo the planned
peak for the flight. Then came
the jong glide back to base.
| SDUWARDS AIR FORCE BASF,
Calif. (AP) ~— A test pilot coolly
describes as “just routine” a trou.
bie-plagued flight in the X15 rock-
et plane that set a new controlled
Hight speed record of 3,140 miles
an hour,
Air Force Maj. Bob White zoom-
ed mare than 56 miles 4 minute ta
an allitude of 103,000 feet Friday,
thus breaking the old record of 2,
POS m.p.h he had set last March 7.
_ There were tense moments dur-
x the It-minute flight—when (he
engine quit temporarily and mo.
ments later when the swept-wins
Dart's pressurized cabin sprans
a leak.
Seconds after the X15 droppec
(rom its B32 mother plane at 45,
9 feet, its rocket engine quit. The
X15 dropped 7,006 feet while White
franlically tied to re-start the en
ie. AL 37,000 feet the rocket en
gine's 57,000 pounds of thrust came
‘on at full throttle, slamming Whltc
back jn [he cockpit seat with
force Ihree limes thal of gravily
Over tre radio came While's un
emotional: “That was quite ¢
‘boost,’
White pulled the XIS Intoa
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rockel plane shut Uke a bullet
or ils first full power run, AE >
1000 feet, While nad his record and
shut aff the engine,
itig mamentum carried him stil
higher, At 90,000 feet, Ihe cabin
sprang a Jeak and While compen-
sated by inMating bls spncetype
flying suit, At 103,000 fect tha X15
reached the lop of is fight and
Whlic¢ cased the plane's nace gently
into a glide back to a landing on
a nearby dry lake,
| different | train |
WASHINGTON @® —
{President Kennedy met
with former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower Sat-
urday in an evident bid to
rally strong national sup-
port for critical steps which
he may consider necessary
to deal with the increasing-
ly dangerous Cuban crisis.
A White House anhouncement
of the session — at Camp Dav-
id, Md. — emphasized Cuba as
the topic for the conference. But
it did not rule out the prospect
that Kennedy could discuss with
his predecessor a broad range
of intensifying cold war conflicts
with the Soviet Union.
THE PRESIDENT arranged
the luncheon session in a tele-
phone call to Eisenhower Friday
morning. The former chief exec-
utive was at his Gettysburg
farm.
Salinger said Kennedy “wanted
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believing
that “as leader of the Republi-
can party and a former presi-
deni he should know what the
situation is.”
Salinger also disclosed that
Kennedy had been in indirect
contact with Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller of New York, an-
other Republican leader, and
that he had conferred Friday
with Sen. Barry Geldwater, R-
Ariz, The contacts with Repub-
licans followed Kennedy’s meet-
ing at the White House Thurs-
{day with former Vice President
‘}Richard M. Nixon, his Republi-
lean opponent for the presidency
jast year,
NIXON SAID in New York
Friday night that he had told
Kennedy he would support him
“even to the commitment of
American armed forces.”
| Before flying to Camp David
by helicopter, Kennedy met with
ithe National Security Council,
presumably to discuss possible
{future moves against the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
lin the wake of this week’s abor-
|tive anti-Castro invasion.
| In the midst of these develop.
Jments, the President was re-
{ported to have ordered a thor-
ough study of reasons for the
idefeat of the rebel invasion at-
|tempt which began last weekend:
|with the United States’ moral
{support — and, it was generally
|believed here, with backing of
IU. S. money and arms,
The President was understood!
to be concerned about what
some authorities called a fail-
ure to ealeulate accurately in
Jadvance the strength of Prime
Minister Fidel Castro’s military
jreaclion to the rebel assault as
iwell as possible errors in intelli-
|gence.
| WASHINGTON (AP)—President
Kennedy meets with former Pres-
ident Dwight D. Eisenhower to-
day in an evident bid to rally
strong national support for criti-
cal steps which he may consider
necessary to deal with the in-
creasingly dangerous Cuban eri-
sis.
A White House announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md. — emphasized Cuba as the
topic for the conference. But it
did not rule out the prospect that
Kennedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
tensifying cold war conflicts with
the Soviet Union.
Possible Future Moves
Before flying to Camp David
by helicopter, Kennedy met with
the National Security Council
presumably to discuss possible
future moves against the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
in the wake of this week’s abor-
tive anti-Castro invasion.
In the midst of these develop-
ments, the President was report-
ed to have ordered a thorough
study of reasons for the defeat
of the rebel invasion attempt
which began last weekend with
the United States’ moral support
—and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. S.
money and arms.
The President was understood
to be concerned about what some
authorities called a failure to cal-
culate accurately in advance the
strength of Prime Minister Fidel
Castro’s military reaction to the
rebel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence.
Camp David Site
White House news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Bisen-
hower would meet at Camp Da-
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Gettysburg, Pa., whith
Eisenhower used for conferenoé#
with foreign leaders.
The President arranged the
luncheon session in a_ telephoné
call to Eisenhower Friday morn-
ing. The former chief executive
was at his Gettysburg farm.
Salinger said Kennedy wanted
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believing
that “as leader of the Republi-
can party and as former presi-
dent he should know what the sit-
uation is.”
Salinger also disclosed that
Kennedy had been in indirect con
tact with Gov. Nelson A. Rocke
feller of New York, another Re
publican leader, and that he had
conferred Friday with Sen. Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz.
Met With Nixon
The contacts with Republicans
followed Kennedy's meeting at the
White House Thursday with for
mer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, his Republican opponent
for the presidency last year.
Nixon said in New York Friday
night that he had told Kennedy
he would support him “even te
the commitment of American
armed forces.”
Nixon said that as a private
itizen he would back Kennedy
in such a.move if Kennedy con
sidered it necessary to “stop the
nuildup of the Communist beach
nead in Cuba.”
Both Kennedy and Eisenhower
arranged to fly & Camp David
»y helicopter, Kennedy going di
rectly from the White House and
“isenhower from his tarm. They
ast met on inauguration day.
Jan, 20, when Kennedy took over
be reins of government.
| same | train |
WASHINGTON, Aug. 29.—1#4-+
The United States Board of sledin-
tion announced tu-fay that an
Jagreement had been reached by the
execut{re officern of the Order of
Railway Conductors and the, Broth~
nrkood sf Tintiraad ‘Tralmmen and
fthe rallreads of the western terri.
livey in the dispmte between them
volving tates of pay and certain
rules
inal appreval of the agreement
subject to ratification hy the ts-
of
[xnclations of general eommlttes!
lthe western territory,
| Should approvat he dnnted by the
jemploya assoclations or generat
Leommitioes of the western territory.
ithe board sald the dispute wanid
continue to exist und would have
to be treated in accordance with the
Jaws, :
Meanwhile, tha hoard safd, ths
employe arganizations have uereed
to a provision luguring the president
and the board af mediation a rec-
onabie opportunity tu proceed w-
der the law, so far aa the calling
af 2 strike before any farther 2m
tion has heen initiated on the part
af the employes,
| rt was the Lellef of the board that
ithe agreement, which under th
law can not ba made public, will be
yiable to both sides tp the dls
w
The plan wuuld affect 76,0n0 &
ployes on elghiy railroads Involving
188 per event of the milengze west. of
jChicags.
‘The original demanda of the Ishar
erganizalens Snvelved a pay In-
crease ranging from 1% per sent for
yardmen to 1% ner cent for conduc:
tora and ather tratnmon, The rail-
paways offered & pay Increase amaunt-
tte approximately 7% per cent on
condition that certain working rule
Ino dropped. Tha jnerease wns Re-
lueptable but tho employes refisiod
to give up the rutes whieh the:
{maintained were more lmportant
fthan the pay qnestion.
The board of madiatian tas had
the matter under dizewssian with
{the partles In fie dianute slice July
i 22nd,
I
| Washington, March 6 ().—
President Hoover accepted the
resignation of Alexander Legge
of Chicago, as chairman of the
Federal Farm Board, and ap-
pointed James C. Stone, of Ken-
tucky, to succeed him today.
In making the announcement, Pres-
ident Hoover said he knew he reflect-
ed “the view of the argicultural com-
munity when I express intense re-
Zret upon the retirement of Mr.
Legge.”
The vacancy, President Hoover
said, ereated hv the elevation § «of
Stone to the chairmanship will not
he filled for two or three weeks.
“Chairman Legge has heen urged
by every farm organization in the
United States to continue his work,”
the President said, “and I have urge:
him with all the force I could com-
mand. He, however, feels that he
must go back to his business.”
The retiring Farm Board chair-
man came into office nearly two
years ago and has been a storm
center since the Hoover agricultural
policy was put into operation. On
numerous occasions he has become
involved in controversies.
In a statement at the Farm Boar‘
about the time the President name’!
his successor Legge expressed
“greater confidence in the ultimate
success” of the agricultural market.
ing act than when he undertook the
work,
The new chairman of the Board
has had many vears experience in
eooperative marketing, the funda-
mental principle on which the Farm
Board works.
He organized and was general
manager for a number of vears of the
Burley Tobacco Cooperative Associa-
tion of Kentucky, his native state.
He has been a member of the
Farm Board since its organization
and has been active particularly in
organit#ing cotton and tobacco coop-
eratives financed and directed by
stabilization corporations under the
direction of the Farm Board.
| different | train |
BERLIN — (U.P) — Russian authorities began lifting the
Berlin Blockade 40 hours before the deadline today when they
restored electric power to parts of the Western sectors.
The Soviet action gave American sector housewives unra-
tioned electricity in the middle of the morning for the first time
since power rationing was forced upon Western Berlin by the
| Soviet blockade last July 9.
Radios plaved and electric stoves
glowed as the power flowed into
American sector lines from the
Soviet sector. All of Berlin's major
| power generating stations are In
| the Soviet sector.
i German electric power authori-
files said the restoration of eler-
tricity to the Western sectors would
take place gradually
Full Service Tharsday
Full service, such as existed be-
fore the Russians cut off the power
{during the first weeks of their
_ blockade, will not be effected until
some time Thursday. they said.
Resioration of power was started
40 hours before the official time
set for ending the blockade — 12:01
ja.m, Thursday (6:01 p.m. EDT
Wednesday).
At that minute the first of 16 Al-
lied trains a day will begin to roll
into Berlin for the first time since.
the Russians cut off all surface
transportation 11 months ago.
In addition to the trains getting
ready to enter Berlin, barwe own-
ers in Hoburg announced that boats
capable of carrying 60,000 tons of
supplies were standing by to re-
sume shipments to Berlin on the
Elbe-Havel River.
Barges with a capaciiy of 40,000
tons also were waiting in Hamburg
for resumption of traffic with
Czechoslovakia aS soon as the
blockade ends.
Apply for Permits
The barge owners already have
applied for new inter-zonal _ per-
mits. It was not known when they
would be issued, bul the owners
hoped to have them by the end of
the week.
All freight and passengers on
the trains will be passed without
restriction. However, ihe Russians
still will retain the privilege of
licensing freight shipments going
westward out of Berlin.
The Western mark still will be
banned in the Soviet Zone “pend-
‘ling the decision on the question of
‘\currency in Berlin.’’
‘| The four-lane super-highway tc
| Berlin from the Western Zones wilt
‘lbe opened at the same time as the
-lrail line.
| OF Fin ASML TAT eI PRESS
An anti-Castro radio
broadcast from an island
off Central America today
told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on
Cuban soil that help was
on the way and urged them
not to surrender,
The appeal from Swan
Island was made a few
hours after the Castro gov-
ernment put before Havana
television cameras some
prisoners captured after
last weekend's invasion.
One admitted their mission
failed and said not many
rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from
Swan Island and North
America had misled them.
The Swan Island brondcast,
minotored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla, also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new smail
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
Virebel sources in Miami did say,
“lhowever, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
.|Cuba for a new invasion assault.
e| A dispatch from Havana de-
-; scribed the Cuban capital as a
njcity of fear and suspicion. It said
nia new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
f|family. Suspects jammed swollen
j{jails and living conditions were
»|described as growing worse.
hn! OFFICER WOUNDED
|} ‘The New York Times quoted a
idiplomatic source in Washington
S| as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
one of Castro's top aides, was
serionsly wounded in the head
earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing-
Iiton from a diplomatic source in
"| Havana,
‘| The diplomatic source said a
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32,
is Cuba's economic czar.
.| the government radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel Castro
unseen in public for almost 2
week, was personally directing
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad.
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime,
A Havana television station Frt.
o;day night prepared the people fot
-tbig ‘'Castro Day’’ victory celebra.
-|tions with a five-hour live inter.
ej view of prisoners the government
niclaims it captured during
ejahortiv? invasion by Cubar
j-| exiles
n SAD IN DEFEAT
One prisoner was Jose Mire
'-!'Torres, son of the top Cuban reb
itiel Jeacer Jose Miro Cardona
o|Miro Torres bit his lip and rockec
olin his chair as he admitted tha
@ | his force was defeated and hi:
joperation ended in failure.
| different | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP)
— Skylab’s astronauts came home safely
from man’s longest space journey today
and despite some early dizziness and
lightheadedness, they were pronounced in
excellent physical conditon.
Charles Conrad Jr.. Dr. Joseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz shunned
stretchers to walk somewhat unsteadily
across the deck of this recovery carrier
The wobbly 60 steps from the Apollo
ferry ship to a medical laboratory indicated
the astronauts had suffered some initial
effects in gravity after a record four weeks’
exposure to space weightlessness.
But commander Conrad reported as the
Apollo parachuted toward a_ pinpoint
landing in the Pacific after an 11-million-
mile journey: ‘We're all in good shape.
Everything's OK.”’
Dr. Royce Hawkins, the astronauts’
chief physician, confirmed this after
consulting with doctors on the carrier. He
told newsmen at the Houston Space
Center
“They look quite good. They appear far
better than I expected. They're excellent.”’
Hawkins said Conrad, a veteran of three
previous space flights, was in the best
condition, with normal blood pressure
and pulse and only slight lightheadedness.
He said both Kerwin and Weitz suffered
from dizziness and lightheadedness and
that Weitz’ blood pressure at first was on
the low side.
After splashdown Kerwin blew up an
inflatable suit over the lower part of his
body to help increase blood circulation,
Hawkins said.
The astronauts splashed down right on
target, just 6'2 miles from the
Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later, still inside
the Apollo, they were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how they might
react to earth's gravity after their long
weightless exposure, were prepared to lift
them out on litters.
But, after consultation with doctors,
Kerwin, a physician, said they could walk
to the medical trailer where they began six
hours of extensive medical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from the hatch
and saluted as the ship's band struck up
‘Anchors Aweigh” for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant steps at
first but gradually picked up steam as he
reached the medical lab door. Kerwin was
slightly stooped and both he and Weitz
were somewhat unsteady in their steps.
‘Doctors assisted both Kerwin and Weitz
by holding onto one arm of each.
Experts immediately began removing
thousands of feet of film and tape and
equipment from medical, earth resources
and astronomy experiments that may tell
a a Sk een eee) PR ee ee
| ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP} — Skylab's astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 2 8days and 11 mil-
dion miles in orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touch-
down Charles Conrad Jr., Dr.
Joseph P. Kerwin and Pau! J.
Weitz were hoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their’ Apollo ferry
ship.
“We're all in good shape.By-
erylhing’s OK,” commander
Conrad radioed as the space-
eraft descended through the
clouds and landed within view
of USS Ticonderoga, just 6%
miles away. That indicated the
astronauts had suffered no ad-
verse physical reactions on re-
turning to earth’s gravity after
a record four weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
Ten minutes ‘Jater they
climbed through the hatch,
smiled and waved as the ship's
band played ‘‘Anchors Aweigh”
for the all-Nayy Skylab crew.
They walked unsteadily to-
ward a mobile medical labora-
dory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ exposure
to weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can fune-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flihts. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
Scheduled for launch July 27.
Tne astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today to try
to repair a refrigeration prob-
Jem in. their space station, But
Mission Control decided there
was nothing the astronauts
could do‘and told them to come
home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
and executed a_ series of
maneuvers that sent them
slamming into the almosphere
above Thailand for the fiery de-
scent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
blue waters at 9:50 am. EDT
about 830 miles southwest of
San Diego Calif. It was just
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000on Ticonderoga
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tossed a
Hine to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
fhe astronauts to an elevator
for a ride to the hangar deck.
| different | train |
ABOARD USS TICON-
DEROGA (UPI) — Skylab’s
astronauts landed on target in
the Pacific Ocean tocay and
reported they were in ‘super
shape” after a fiery, strenuous
yeturn to earth from a record
28 days in space.
It was a flawless end to a
mission that started with a
Jailure. and the flight took a
yaiay step toward giving man
we in space.
Charles “Pete Conrad, Jo
seph P. Kerwin and Paul J
Weitz came back in the Apoll
command ship they took off in
four weeks ago. Their space
Station remained in orbit, reaily
for its next crew in five weeks.
The ship reported the as:
tronauts landed precisely or
target. 843 miles soulhwesl of
San Diego. The Ticonderoge
was 6! miles downwind at the
time.
| ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA
(UPI) — Skylab’s astronauts
landed on target in the Pacific
Ocean today and reported they
were in ‘‘super shape” after a
fiery, strenuous return to earth
from a record 28 days in space.
It was a flawless end to a mission
that started with a failure, and the
flight took a major step toward
giving man a place in space.
Charles ‘‘Pete’’ Conrad, Joseph
P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz came
back in the Apollo command ship
they took off in four weeks ago.
Their space station remained in
orbit, ready for its next crew in
five weeks.
Recovery forces and controllers
back at Houston’s mission control
waited anxiously for more than a
half hour between the time the
ship’s main braking rocket fired
and Conrad reported,
“everything’s okay,’ while the
ship was still in the air.
The capsule’s small drogue
parachutes and then its three
orange and white striped main
canopies blossomed out on
schedule and eased the astronauts
into the calm sea at 9:50 a.m. EDT
within view of a television camera
aboard this veteran _ aircraft
carrier.
‘‘Everybody’s in super shape,’
said Conrad, the veteran
commander of America’s first
space station.
The ship reported the astronauts
landed precisely on target, 843
miles southwest of San Diego. The
Ticonderoga was 62 miles
downwind at the time.
The aircraft carrier moved
quickly to the side of the bobbing,
scorched spacecraft and hoisted it
aboard, using a single nylon rope 1
5/8 inches in diameter.
It was the first time an Apollo
had been hoisted aboard a recovery
shop with its crewmen still inside.
This was done for the Skylab
recovery because doctors wanted
the pilots picked up with as little
exertion as possible.
The cone-shaped capsule was
placed on an elevator deck, 25 feet
above the water, at 10:28 a.m., a
fast 38 minutes after splashdown.
“We've all got our seat belts
fastened so hoist us right up,”’ said
Conrad, a Navy captain, as the line
was hooked to a loop at the top of
the command ship.
Before leaving the spacecraft
Kerwin, America’s first space
physician, took his own and then
the pulse rate and blood pressure
of his colleagues to determine how
their bodies were withstanding the
rigors of gravity after going
without it for four weeks.
Before the Apollo hatch was
opened, technicians attached plugs
and fuel vent lines to the control
rocket nozzles.
Kerwin briefed Dr. Charles
Ross, the Skylab flight surgeon, on
the pilots’ condition before the
hatch was opened.
Doctors had feared that blood
would rush to the pilots’ legs as
they stood because of a temporary
weakened condition of the
circulatory systems resulting from
the long exposure to the lack of
gravity. Such blood pooling could
cause a man to pass out.
| same | train |
} PARIS ‘UPI — Four rebel
French generals supported by
Foreign Legion paratroopers
seized Algiers in a bloodless coup
today and announced they had
taken over Algeria and the Sahara
Desert from President Charles de
Gaulle’s government.
Premier Michel Debre went on
a nationwide radio and television
hookup to appea! for “‘absolute
obedience” in France but already
minor right-wing violence was re-
ported in France itself.
A bomb exploded at the town
hall of the Neuilly District of Par-
is. Police said the bomb was the
type used by right-wing extremists
in past acts of terror against the
De Gatille goverament.
| The insurgent army and air
force generals in Algiers an-
nounced over Algiers Radio—re-
named “Radio France’’—that they
had proclaimed a state of siege
throughout the African territory.
The generals appealed to the
army, navy, air force and police
to join them.
De Gaulle apparently was taken’
completely by surprise, although
opposition among Frenchmen in
Algiers to his policy of permitting
Algeria eventually to become in-
dependent has been rising. But
the government reacted swiftly.
France cancelled all military
leaves. De Gaulle cailed a cabinet
meeting to consider further action
and conferred during the day with
Debre and Adm. George Cabainer,
chief of stalf of the French navy.
Debre maimed Gen. Jean QOlie as
new commander-in-chief in Algeria
to replace Gen. Fernand Gambiez
who was arrested by the insur-
gents. Olie flew immediately to
Algeria.
A rebel broadcast said the gen-
erals in Algiers were upholding
he promise io “keep Algeria
French” that the army made on
May 13, 1988, at the height of the
Algiers uprising that wrecked
“rance’s Fourth Republic and re-
urned De Gaulle to power.
(Diplomatic quarters in London
pressed doubt that today’s re-
‘elt could muster enough support
Oo topple De Gaulle.)
Police in the south French city
f Lyon arrested a number of
ightist opponents of De Gaulle’s
Igeria policies, and reliable po-
ice sources said there also had
een “numerous” arrests in Paris.
Rebel broadcasts suggested that
en. Raoul Salan, ai fermer
‘rench commander in Algeria,
‘as the leader of the revolt, Salan
‘d not go on the air himself. how-
ver, and jt was mol certain he
‘as in Algiers.
The general, who had been liv-
1g aS a reiugee in Madrid. couid
nt he located there ioday. The
cial Soviet acency Tass said
2 was in Alsi buat the report
vuld nat be confirmed immiediate-
At feast 2.000 and perhaps as
} iroaps of the For~
tsk paratroon rez
ent were said to be invalved in
Alseirs. The rebels
orl of troops
southeastern a.
In Paris. however, Information
inister Louis Terrenoire said the
ents controlled only Alsie
id the generals command
garrisons of Oran and Con-
intine, Algeria’s other principal
jes, Were loval to De Gaulle.
Pl’s Algiers correspondent Al-
Raymond telephoned Paris just
frre the government cut oif
“munications with Algiers.
TS.
| PARIS, (UPI)—Four rebel French generals supported by Foreign Legion
paratroopers seized Algeria in a bloodless coup today and announced they had
taken over Algeria and the Sahara desert from President Charles de Gaulle’s
government.
Premier Michel Debre went on a nationwide radio and television hookup to
appeal for “absolute obedience” in France but already minor right-wing violence
was reported in France itself.
an Rees 3 aot Ps eset
phone booth of the town hajl
of the fashionable Neuilly dis-
triet of Paris just west af the
Arch of Triumph. Police sald
it caused considerable damage
but apparently no casualties.
The bomb was of lhe type
used by right-wing extremists
in past terrorism against the
de Gaulle government. Police
noted that Neuilly Mayor
Achille Perretit is a Gaullist
deputy of the national as-
sembly.
THE INSURGENT generals
broadcast a seven-point order
of the day proclaiming a state
of slege and saying “all resist-
ance, from whatever quarter,
wil] be broken.” The proclama-
tion Was a declaration of a vir-
tual state of martia} law.
The insurgent army and air
force generals in Algiers an-
nounced over Algiers radio—
renamed “Radio France--that
they had proclaimed a state of
siege throughout the African
territory, The generals ap-
pealed to the army, navy, air
force and pollee to jain them.
De Gaulle apparently was
taken completely by surprise,
although opposition among
Frenchmen in Algiers to his
policy of permitting Algeria
eventually to become inde.
pendent has been rising, But
the government reacted
swiftly,
France canceled ali mili-
tary leaves. De Gaulle called
a cabinet meeting to consider
further action and conferred
during the day with Debre
and Adm. Georges Cabainer,
chief of staff of the French
navy. Debre named Gen.
Jean Qlie as new commander:
in-chief in Algeria to replace
Gen. Fernand Gambiez who
was arrested by the insur
gents, Olle flew immediately
to Algeria.
THE REVOLT was reportec
led by Gen. Raoul Salan, the
general who led a 1958 revol
which brought down — thé
Fourth Republic and brought
de Gaulle to power. Forelgn
diplomatic sources sald they
did not believe this revolt
would topple de Gaulle.
The government in Paris
said the revolt affected Al-
giers only and the rest of the
country was loyal to De
Gaulle. The French com-
manders in Oran and Con-
stantine {ssued calls for cairn
in an indication they still sup-
ported de Gaulle.
Debre’s broadcast to the na-
tion appealed to the armed
forces ta put loyalty to the
country above all. It said the
irresponsible insurgents in Al-
giers had “thus imposed on
France a new trial but the na-
tion places its confidence in”
de Gaulle and his peace plans.
“I appeal to you not to
throw yourselves into an ad-
‘venture that can only end in
tragedy,” Debre said,
Lt was stiil too early to know
the effect an peace negotia-
lions with the Moslem rebels
who have fought France for
642 years. Moslem Rebel
Leader Ferhat Abbas, in
Tunis, appealed to Moslems in
| Algeria to “oppose the provo-
‘eatlons of the French army.”
| Algerian Rebel Emissary
‘Taieb Bouiharof said in
Rome it was “too early ta give
_& serene judgment.”
In Paris police trucks
moved discreetly inta poten
_tlal trouble spots such as the
Arch of- Triumph area, a fav.
.orlte site for extreme right
wing demonstrations, The
Neuilly district is just west of
ithe arch.
Police raided the homes ai
Known “French-Algeria” sym
| pathizers. The raid was simi
ilar to that of last week wher
police hauled in 130 person:
for questioning following ai
jextremist bomb attack on th
stock exchange.
A rebel broadcast said: th
generals In Algiers were up
holding thé:promise to “hee
Algeria French” that the arm:
Imade on May 13, 1958, at th
AA BO Se Oe ee
that wrecked France's fourth
yepublic and returned de
Gaulle to power.
(DIPLOMATIC quarters in
London expressed doubt that
today’s revolt could muster
enough support to topple de
Gaulle.)
Police in the south French
city of Lyon arrested a num-
ber of Rightist opponents of
de Gaulle’s Algeria policies,
and reliable police sources
said there also had been
“numerous” arrests in Paris.
The sources said a number
of high Army and- Navy of-
ficers and civilian officials had
been rounded up for question:
ing.
Although there were no im-
mediate reports of digorders
in Algeria, reports from the
hig western port of Oran said
Euopean residents, belleved to
be rebel sympathizers, were
swarming into the streets.
Long lines of cars in the
streets of Oran honked their
horns in the “beep-beep-beep
beep-beep” rhythm of the anti-
Gaullist “French Algeria” sla-
gan.
i Officials at the U.S. em-
; bassy in’ Paris said they were
unable to communicate with
‘l the consulate in Algiers, but
they said there appeared to be
'jmo reason to worry about the
| Welfare of Americans.
: “They're not the terget of
this thing,” an embassy
‘i spokesman said.
‘| Rebel broadcasts suggested
"| that Gen. Raoul Salan, a ‘for-
mer French commander in Al-
Beria, was the leader of the
_, revolt. Salan did not go on the
;|air himself, however, and it
| Was not certain he was in Al.
:{ giers.
et The general, who had been
jliving as a refugee in Madrid
could not be located there to
day. The official Soviet agenc}
Tass said he was in Algiers
but the report could nat be
confirmed immediately.
| same | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came home from man’s
longest space voyage today,
splashing down in the Pacific
Ocean after almost being held
over in orbit to try to repair a
faulty system: in their space
station.
Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Jo-
seph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz ended their 28-day jour-
mey when their Apollo ferry
ship parachuted into the water.
The main recovery ship, the
aircraft carrier Ticonderoga,
‘was in the prime recovery area
about 830 miles southwest of
San Diego, Calif., ready to hoist
the astronauts aboard for a
series of vital medical tests to
determine how well they with-
stood their record exposure. to
space weightlessness.
Earlier, Mission Control con-
sidered holding Conrad, Kerwin
and Weitz in orbit longer to
troubleshoot a refrigeration
sroblem.
But controllers decided there
was nothing the astronauts
could do and gave them the
green light to start the home-
ward voyage.
They had separated their
Apollo ferry ship from the 118-
foot-long laboratory.
After separation they made a
45-minute fly-around inspection
of the station, televising pic-
tures of the odd-looking space
vehicle to mission control for
evaluation by experts.
Then in‘quick succession the
astronauts triggered engine fir-
ings to begin their descent to
earth,
The first firing dropped
Apollo’s orbit slightly below
that of the Skylab station, orbit-
ing 275 miles. high and in posi-
tion to accept the’ Skylab 2
crew late: next.month. :
The second ignition dropped
the astronauts into an elliptical
orbit ranging from 104 miles to
29 miles high.
Separation of the Apollo from
the Skylab was clocked at 4:55
am. EDT, 10 minutes later
The brief undocking delay re-
than planned.
sulted when the control center
had trouble stabilizing gyro-
scopes in the house-sized space
lab,
Shortly before that flight con-
trollers had commanded the
craft, with the Apollo ferry ship
attached {o one end, to point 45
degrees down. The maneuver
was necessary to warm a fro-
zen radiator -by pointing it
directly at the sun.
| ABOARD USS_ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came home safely today
from man’s longest space jour-
ney and shunned stretchers to
walk smartly but unsteadily
across the deck of this recovery
carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from the
Apollo ferry ship to a medical
laboratory indicated Charles
Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz had suf-
fered some effects) from a
record four weeks’ exposure to
space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachuted
toward a pinpoint landing in
the Pacific after an 11-million.
mile journey: ‘‘We’re all in
good shape. Everything’s OK.”
They splashed down right on
target, just 64% miles from the
Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later.
still inside the Apollo, they
were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how
they might react to earth’s
. gravity after their long weigh.
tless exposure, were prepared
to lift them out on litters.
But, after consultation with
doctors, Kerwin, a physician,
said they could walk to the
medical trailer where they be-
gan six hours of extensive med-
ical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from
the hatch and saluted as the
ship’s band struck up ‘Anchors
Aweigh’”’ for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant
steps at first but gradually
picked up steam as he reachec
the medical lab door. Kerwir
was slightly stooped and bot!
he and Weitz were somewha
unsteady in their steps.
Doctors assisted both Kerwin
and Weitz by holding onto one
arm of each.
Experts immediately began
removing thousands of feet of
film and tape and equipment
from medical, earth resources
and astronomy experiments
that may tell man much about
his earth, his sun and his physi-
cal being.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can func-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
| different | train |
Berlin, May 10.—UP)—At one min.
ute past midnight Thursday flag.
bedecked traffic will end the epic
of blockaded Berlin,
That's 4:01 p. m., central stan-
dard time, Wednesday.
So far there hasn't been a hitch
in final arrangements.
General V. I. Chuikov, Soviet
commander in Germany, and the
western powers both have ordered
that transport, trade and communi-
cation services between their zones
resume at that time.
Things will revert back to the
way they were on March 1, 1948,
when the blockade began,
Sixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily. Highways will
be open. The Soviets won’t—or at
least say they won't — demand
travel permits. They also say they'll
not try to search allied baggage.
Mail service will be resumed.
Western Berlin’s Mayor Ernest
Reuter ordered the black, red and
gold flag of the new west German
republic be flown on street cars and
buses.
The Berlin flag will be draped
over other buses which will speed
to the west German cities of Han-
nover, Hamburg and Frankfurt.
SUPPLIES TO ROLL
The first day, 10 trainloads of
coal and six others of fresh pota-
toes and consumer goods are sche-
duled to move into the city, which
has beeg supplied by the air lift
for 10 months,
Twelve thousand tons of supplies
are to go into the city daily—just
about the same figure the air lift
reached on its best day.
While most of the world hailed
the end of the blockade as a Soviet
diplomatic defeat, the official So-
viet army newspaper, Taegliche
Rundschau, today called it an “un-
questionable success of the policy
of unity which was always pursued
by the Soviet Union and the pro-
gressive forces of Germany.”
The paper said that now that the
Berlin blockade was ending, “war-
mongers” would make new efforts
to split Germany-—and “claimed
approval of the new west German
democratic constitution marked
such an attempt.
But throughout the border area
there was excitement in the air as
willing workers installed radio and
telephone equipment, repainted
border signs and clipped weeds be-
side the long-neglected highways.
The British expected to have the
first train into the city.
| * BERLIN, 7P — At one minute
past midnight Thursday flag - be-
decked traffic will end the epic
of blockaded Berlin.
That's 4:01 p.m., central stan-
dard time, Wednesday.
So far there hasn't been a hitch
in final arrangements.
Gen. V. I, Chuikov, Soviet com-
mander in Germany, and the west-
ern powers both have ordered that
transport, trade and communica-
tion services between their zones
resume at that time.
Things will revert to the way
they were on March 1, 1948, when
the blockade began.
Sixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily. Highways will
be open. The Soviet’s won't — or
at least say they won’t —- demand
travel permits. They also say they
will not try to search allied bag-
gage. Mail service will be resum-
ed,
Western Berlin's Mayor Ernest
Reuter ordered the black, red and
gold flag of the new west German
republic to be flown on street cars
and buses.
The first day, 10 trainloads of
coal and six others of fresh pota-
toes and consumer goods are
scheduled to move into the city,
which has been supplied by the
air lift for ten months.
Twelve thousand tons of supplies
are to go into the city daily
just about the same figure the air
lift reached on its best day.
Restrictions on movements be-
tween the Soviet and western sec
tors of Berlin are to be removed
at the same hour that the block-
ade ends.
Until then, search and seizure
continue to be the rule for eastern
and western sector police enforc-
ing regulations. But Thursday the
Berliner can go where he pleases
and carry whatever he wish e §,
without interference or fear of con-
fiscation of his goods or currency.
Throughout the border area there
was excitement in the air as will.
ing workers installed radio ané
telephone equipment, repaintec
_border signs and clipped weeds be
iside the long-neglected highways.
The British expected to have the
first train into the city.
| same | train |
py .he Assoctaled Press
An anti - Castro. radio
broadcast from an island off
Central America today told
two rebel battalions appar-
ently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way
and urged them not io sur-
render,
The appeal from Swan island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
orisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion. One admitted
SEM FORK CAP) — Two
American correspondents of
The Associated Press at Havana
are presumably under arrest
today.
They are Harold K. Milks,
chief of the AP’s Caribbean
services, ‘and Robert Berrellez.
Both have been assigned to
Cuba since 1959.
There have been various re-
ports since Monday that Ber-
rellez was in custody. For two
days the best available informa-
tion indicated Milks was free.
A message said: “Tell our fami-
lies we are OK." But subse-
quent investigation showed this
message was sent Tuesday.
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan is.
land and North America had mis-
fed them.
The Swan island broadcast
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also repeat.
ed troop movement instructions
it had sent out during the night
* * *
IT HAD TOLD earlier of new
small landings made in Cuba, but
(See INVADERS—Page 16)
| THE HAGUE (AP) — The In-
dernational Court of Justice
calied on France today to re
Train from nuclear testing in the
South Pacific pending a final de-
eision on the legalily of the tes}
series.
The court’s ruling followed ap-
plications Tast month by Aus-
tralia end New Zealand seeking
an injunction against the French
test series.
In their pteadings before the
courl, representatives of both
the Australian and New Zealand
governments said further mucle-
ar tests in the South Pacific
would present unacceptable
health and environmental dan-
gers lo the populalion of the
areas concerned,
| different | train |
ABOARD USS TICON.
DEROGA (AP) — Skylab’s as-
tronauts came home safely
from man’s longest space jour-
ney today and despite some
early dizziness and lighthea-
dedness, they were pronoucned
in excellent physical condition.
Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Jo-
seph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz shunned stretchers to
walk somewhat unsteadily
across the deck of this recov-
ery carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from
the Apollo ferry ship to a med-
ical laboartory indicated the
astornauts had suffered some
initial effects in gravity after
a record four weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
But commander Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachut-
ed toward a pinpoint landing
in the Pacific after an 11-
million-mile journey: “We're
all in good shape. Evervthing’s
OK.”
Dr. Royce Hawkins, the as:
tronauts’ chief physician, con.
firmed this after consulting;
with doctors on the carrier. He
told newsmen at the Houstor
Space Center:
“They look quite good. They
appear far better than I ex-
pected. They're excellent.”
Hawkins said Conrad, a vet-
eran of three previous space
flights, was in the best condi-
tion, with normal blood pres-
sure and pulse and only slight
lightheadedness.
He said both Kerwin and
Weitz suffered from dizziness
and lightheadedness and that
Weitz’ blood pressure at first
was on the low side.
After splashdown Kerwin
blew up an inflatable suit over
the lower part of his body to
help increase blood circulation,
Hawkins said.
The astronauts splashed
down right on target, just 6%
miles from the Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later,
still inside the Apollo, they
were on the carrier deck.
| WASHINGTON, May 10 —
(UP)—An_ ex-Commuiiist has
told House spy hunters that
the son of a University of Cali-
fornia official helped the Com-
munist Party to lure atomic
scientists into its ranks, it was
revealed today.
Paul Crouch, onetime Communist
party organizer in Alameda
County, Calif., told the House Un-
American Activities Committee in
a long, secret sessiori Friday that
the official's ‘son was himself a
Communist.
Crouch, it was learned, described
how the youth drove him by de-
vious routes to clandestine party
i meetings in luxurious homes around
Berkeley, site of the University.
He did not identify any atomic
iScientists recruited by the party,
or give the exact locations where
lithe ‘secret parly meetings Were
theld, .
The 47-year-old) Crouch re-
;nounced Communism in 1942 in
‘disgust at its methods. He had
worked for the party for 17 years
and had heen named an honorary
jofficer in the Red Army.
Crouch, who is now employed in
the mechanical department of the
Miami, Fla., Daily News, told the
committee that during the latter
‘stages of his Communist career.
he was “active in trying to in-
“'filtrate all scientific research at
‘the University of California.”
CONTACT HERE
During this period, he testified
he came into contact with -the
Communist son of the Universit:
official,
_| The House Committee is tryin
_|to determine whether atomic se
crets, developed in the University’
radiation laboratory, ever wet
transmitted to Russia through
Communist cell there.
The Committee plans to hold ar
j other hearing in its investigatio
on May 24. Steve Nelson, the Com
imunist organizer who succeede
iCrouch on the West Coast, an
‘three scientists who worked in th
‘laboratory in 1943 have been calle
‘to testify.
| ‘The three scientists are Josep!
© Weinberg, now of the University o
_Minnesota, Giovanni Rossj Loa
;manitz of Fisk University, Nash
iville, Tenn.. and David Bohm o
9] Princeton University.
rf Crouch himself’ ‘originally: wa
scheduled to testify at the May 2
hearing. But the Committee can
€leelled his subpena late yesterda
-iwhen the Justice Department sai
it wanted Crouch to be a witnes
tiat one of its anti-Communist pre
ceedings.
The Committee agreed earlie
e|this year not to question witness
r|Who were under subpena to th
r-{ Justice Department.
Tia a we . ~~ a
iS
a
| different | train |
CHICAGO, Aug. 28—(AP)—Over
the wire into the Cragin police sta-
tion early today came these words:
“May God have mercey on me. I
have just killed my son. Come
here.”
Pelice squads sped to the home
of Arthur F. Faik, Northwest Park
Commissioner, where they found
Falk kneeling in prayer on the
floor of a front room. Nearby his
wife and daughter wept hysterical-
Ty.
Upstairs ,in 2 bedreom, police
‘police found the body of Eldred
Falk, 22, his head almost severed
from the body by shotgun bullets.
| A disconnected story told by Falk
his wife and daughter. was that a
dispute arose between father and
son during which the youth an-
nounced he was going to leave the
house.
“You'll only leave here dead,”
was what police say Falk senior
replied.
The son then dared his father to
shoot. according to the story told
police. Falk got his shotgun and |
the shooting followed.
| EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE
Calif. (AP)—Maj. Bob White flew
the X15 rocket plane to a new
eontrolled flight speed record o|
3,140 miles an hour Friday, de-
spite engine trouble and a leak
im his pressurized cabin.
The new mark is 235 m.ph
faster than White’s previous rec.
ord of 2,905 mph. last March 7
but the Air Force officer said he
felt no sensation of greater speed
The engine trouble came a spli
Second after the X15 drappec
away from its B52 mother shi;
240 miles east of here above Hid
den Hills, Calif.
The engine ignited briefly, ther
eut out. For the next 30 seconds
‘while the X15 fell helplessly from
45,000 feet to 37,000 feet, White
labored frantically to get the en
Sine restarted.
Finally he succeeded, The en
gine’s 57,000 pounds of thrus'
came on at full throttle, driving
him back in his seat with a force
three times that of normal
gTtavity.
White zoomed to 86,000 feet, the
altitude at which he reached the
new speed record, then shut of!
his engine.
At 90,000 feet his pressurizec
cabin sprang a leak. Instantly
and automatically, his space-type
fying suit inflated to compensate
for the loss of pressure in the
cabin.
“I was still able to function
normally,’ White said, so he can.
tinued the flight.
Momentum carried him on tc
103.000 feet, close to the planned
peak for the flight, Then came
the long glide back to base.
| different | train |
DY £20 ASOOVUUAALEAP FHEOS
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
. Phe~appeal from. Swan Island
‘was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend’s invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them. |
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault.
A dispatch from* Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse.
The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
one of Castro’s top aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing-
ion from a diplomatic source in
Havana.
The diplomatic source said a
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32,
is Cuba’s economic czar.
- The government radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel ca
in public for a
week, was personally Reaction
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
A Havana television station Fri-
day night prepared the people for
big ‘‘Castro Day” victory celebra-
tions with a five-hour live inter-
view of prisoners the government
claims it captured during the
abortive invasion by $Ouban
exiles.
One prisoner was Jose Miro
Torres, son of the top Cuban reb-
el leader Jose Miro Cardona.
Miro Torres bit his lip and rocked
in his chair as he admitted that
his force was defeated and his
operation ended in failure.
The rebel leader’s son said on
Havana television that he had
been well treated since his cap-
ture. All his comments were in
the form of answers to his inter-
rogators.
“Then it is not just to say that
Cuban militiamen behave like hv-
man beasts?’’ Miro Torres was
“Abs utely not,” he replied he-
fore “etameras.
When wasked by the panel of in-
terviewers what he and his men
expected to find when they land-
ed, Miro Torres said:
“‘We thought the militia and the
army would join us.”
“That is what you were told. But
what did you find?”
“They fought us very hard and
defeated us.”
“Then you were defeated?”
Miro Torres was asked
“Yes,” he answered.
Miro Torres also responded
‘no’? when asked if any appre-
ciable number of invaders had
escaped.
Some of the other prisoners on
the show seemed to give com-
pliant answers, but one talked
back defiantly to his accusers.
See CTIIRA Page 2?
| py .he Assoctaled Press
An anti - Castro. radio
broadcast from an island off
Central America today told
two rebel battalions appar-
ently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way
and urged them not io sur-
render,
The appeal from Swan island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
orisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion. One admitted
SEM FORK CAP) — Two
American correspondents of
The Associated Press at Havana
are presumably under arrest
today.
They are Harold K. Milks,
chief of the AP’s Caribbean
services, ‘and Robert Berrellez.
Both have been assigned to
Cuba since 1959.
There have been various re-
ports since Monday that Ber-
rellez was in custody. For two
days the best available informa-
tion indicated Milks was free.
A message said: “Tell our fami-
lies we are OK." But subse-
quent investigation showed this
message was sent Tuesday.
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan is.
land and North America had mis-
fed them.
The Swan island broadcast
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also repeat.
ed troop movement instructions
it had sent out during the night
* * *
IT HAD TOLD earlier of new
small landings made in Cuba, but
(See INVADERS—Page 16)
| same | train |
Washington (?)— President
Kennedy met with his top
security advisers and then
met with former President
Dwight D. Eisenhower on the
Cuban situation.
He met Eisenhower at
Camp David, the presidential
retreat in Maryland’s Catoc-
tin Mountajns.
The new President obvious-
ly wanted to rally strong na-
tional support for whatever
further steps he considers
necessary by this country.
Repercussions from this
week’s invasion of Cuba by
anti-Castro Cubans was the
prime subject for the lunch-
eon discussion, but the talks
could range also over a broad
range of intensifying cold war
conflicts with Russia.
Miscalculation?
In the midst of these de.
velopments, the President was
reported io have ordered a
thorough study of reasons for
the defeat of the rebel inva.
sion attempt which began last
week-end with the U.S. moral
support ~— and, it was gener-
ally believed here, with some
backing of U.S. money and
arms.
The President was under-
stood to be concerned about
what some authorities called
a failure to calculate accurate-
ly in advance the strength of
Prime Minister Fidel Castro’s
military reaction to the rebel
assault as well as possible er-
rors in intelligence.
Kennedy also had been in
indirect contract with Gov.
Nelson Rockefeller of New
York, another Republican
leader, and conferred with
Sen. Barry Goldwater, (R-
Ariz).
Support by Nixon
The contacts with Republi.
cans followed Kennedy’s
meeting at the White House
with former Vice President
Richard Nixon, his Republi-
can opponent for the presi-
dency last year.
Nixon said in New York
that he had told Kennedy he
would support him “even to
the commitment of American
armed forces.”
Nixon said that as a private
citizen he would back Ken-
nedy in such a move if Ken.
nedy considered it necessary
to “stop the buildup of the
Communist beachhead ir
Cuba.”
Whether the President i
now considering direct U.S
intervention if the sftuatio:
_ continues to get worse ha.
not been disclosed by him o:
the White House. Adminis
tration officials generally
have taken the line in private
talks with newsmen that they
do not contemplate any emer.
gency steps but prefer to work
in cooperation with allies i
possible.
| WASHINGTON (AP)—President
Kennedy meets with former Pres-
ident Dwight D. Eisenhower to-
day in an evident bid to rally
strong national support for criti.
cal steps which he may consider
necessary to deal with the in.
ay dangerous Cuban cri-
sis.
A White House announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md, — emphasized Cuba as the
topic for the conference, But it
did not rule out the prospect that
Kennedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
tensifying cold war conflicts with
the Soviet Union.
Before flying to Camp David
by helicopter Kennedy met with
the National Security Council,
resumably to discuss possible
uture moves against the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
in the wake of this week's abor-
tive anti-Castro invasion.
In the midst of these develop-
ments, the President was report-
ed to have ordered a_ thorough
study of reasons for the defeat
of the rebel invasion attempt
which began last weekend with
the United States’ moral support
—and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. §.
money and arms,
The President was understood
to be concerned about what some
authorities called a failure to cal-
culate accurately in advance the
strength of Prime Minister Fidel
Castro's military reaction to the
rebel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence, i
White House news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Eisen.
hower would meet at Camp ci
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Gettysburg, Pa., which
Eisenhower used for conferences
with foreign leaders.
The President arranged the
luncheon session in a_ telephone
call to Eisenhower Friday morn-
ing. The former chief executive
was at his Gettysburg farm.
Salinger said Kennedy wanted
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believing
that “as leader of the Republi-
ean rty and as former presi-
dent he should know what the sit-
uation is.”
Salinger also disclosed that.
Kennedy had been in indirect con-—
‘tact with Gov, Nelson A. Rocke-
feller of New York, another Re.
publican leader, and that he had
conferred Friday with Sen, Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz.
The contacts with Republicans
followed Kennedy's meeting at the
White House Thursday with for-
mer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, his Republican opponent
for the presidency last year.
Nixon said in New York Friday
night that he had told Kennedy
he would support him “even to
the commitment of American
armed forces,”
Nixon said that as a private
citizen he would back Kennedy
in such a move if Kennedy con-
sidered it necessary to “‘stop the
buildup of the Communist beach-
head in Cuba.”
Both Kennedy and Eisenhower
arranged to fly to Camp David
by helicopter, Kennedy going di-
rectly from the White House and
Eisenhower from his farm. They
last met on inauguration day,
Jan, 20, when Kennedy took over
the reins of government.
| same | train |
| Paris, France, Aug. 27..-The Briand.
| Kellogg pact, by which 15 nations re
-nounce war as an instrument of na-
| tional policy, was signed here today.
| Less than ten minutes was required
for the affixing of signatures to the
instrument which, its sponsors agree,
_ has an immense perspective of world
peace.
Ancient ritual and intense methods
/ Of modern publicity were mingled in
| the ceremony. Ushers clad in blue and
gold trimmed coats, red velvet breech-
es and white silk stockings, directed
; the plenipotentiaries to their places
|and conducted the guests to their
| seats. A superbly uniformed Swiss
, fuard with a halberd, an inheritance
_of the court procedure of centuries
ago, led the solemn procession of
_ Statesmen from the reception room of
| Aristide Briand, foreign minister of
_ France, to the clock room, where the
| signing took place.
| While this colorful proceeding was
| taking place, forty cameras were
| clicking, color picture machines were
working and microphones gathered
_the faintest sounds of the spectacular
| program and broadcasting them thru-
| ome Europe to other continents.
Meet in Clock Room.
| The plenipotentiaries took their seats
at the horseshoe table just as the
, beautiful clock, which gives its name
, to the apartment, struck the hour of
| three. Before this moment came, dix
tinguished persons from many nations
were gathering. The scene was very
‘like an afternoon reception, with salu-
tations, introductions and gossip.
| Premier Poincare had an informal
‘levee, when he entered, all who were
‘seated arose. He particularly took
'note of Ambassador von Hoesch, of
Germany. He also spoke with each of
| the few ladies present, talking several
| minutes with Mrs. Kellogg, wife of the
' United States secretary of state.
Among other ladies who received at-
_tention from him were Mrs Parmley
| Herrick, daughter-in-law of the Ameri-
| can ambassador, Mrs. T. Bentley Mott,
| wife of the American army colonel
who is assistant military attache of
_the embassy here; Mrs. Harts, wife of
_General William Harts, military at-
_tache, and Countess Manzoni, wife of
the Italian ambassador.
Program Lasts 58 Minutes.
The program proceeded promptly at
its fixed hour and was ended in 58 min-
j utes. M. Briand alone spoke. Ordi-
| narily he prefers to make an extempo-
-raneous discourse, but this time he
ee cere tec —_ asses —_
| PARIS, France, Aug, 28.—-The Bri
and-Kellogg pact, by which 15 na
tions renounce war upon invitation 0
the United States, as an instrumen
of national policy, was signed her
Monday.
Less than 10 minutes was require
for the affixing of signatures to the
inatrument which, its sponsors agree
has an immense perspective of work
peace,
Ancient ritual and intense method
of modern publicity were mingled tv
the ceremony. Ushers clad in blue anc
) gold trimmed coats, red velvet breech
en, and white silk stockings, directer
the plenipotentiaries to their places
and conducted guests to Uigir seate
A superbly uniformed Swiss guar
j with halberd, an inheritance of’ th
court procedure of centuries age, le
the solemn procession of statesme
‘rom the reception room of Aristid
Briand, foreign minister of Frances
to the clock room, where the signin,
occurred.
| same | train |
ABOARD USS_ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
lion miles in orbit.
“We're all in good shape,”
Commander Charles Conrad Jr.
reported as the spacecraft de-
scended. ‘‘Everything’s OK.”
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit to try to re-
pair a refrigeration problem in
their space station. But Mission
Control decided there was noth-
ing the astronauts could do and
told them to come home.
So, 10 minutes behind sched-
ule, Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
from the station and executed a
series of maneuvers that sent
them slamming into the atmos-
phere above Thailand for a
fiery descent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
Pacific waters at 9:50 a.m.
EDT about 830 miles southeast
of San Diego, Calif., within
sight of the main recovery ship,
the USS Ticonderoga. It was
just after dawn off the West
Coast.
Hundreds of white-clad_sail-
ors on deck and millions watch-
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat to a
U.S. man-in-space landing as
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
‘“Everyone’s in super shape,”
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to se-
cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars.
The Ticonderoga reported the
astronauts had landed 612 miles
from the ship and that the ship
was 642 miles from the target
point, indicating a_ perfect
touchdown.
The Ticonderoga steamed to
pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, in
contrast to most earlier U.S.
flights when the spacemen
were lifted to the carrier by
helicopter.
Medical requirements dic-
tated the pick up method today.
Medical experts were not cer-
tain how the astronauts would
react after returning to earth’s
gravity following record ex-
posure to space weightlessness
so they decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as little
activity as possible until they
can be examined in mobilet
medical laboratories aboard the
Ticonderoga.
The landing completed an
historic space mission that last-
ed 28 days and 50 minutes. Dur-
ing that time the spacemen cir-
cled the earth 395 times.
Misson Control was kept in
suspense for most of the final
76 minutes of the flight — a pe-
riod when the Apollo ship was
out of radio contact with
ground stations.
The Ticonderoga’s radar
picked up the streaking craft at
a distance of 188 miles, 10 min-
utes before landing.
While out of radio contact, at
9:11 a.m., the astronauts con-
ducted the critical retrorocket
burn that slowed their 17,100
mile-an-hour speed by 130
miles, allowing earth’s gravity
to tug the spacecraft out of or-
bit and start the long glide
through the atmosphere to the
eastern Pacific.
The refrigeration trouble
caused considerable concern. A
maneuver intended to correct it
caused a brief gyroscope prob-
lem that caused the 10-minute
delay in the astronauts’ depar-
ture from the orbiting labora-
tory.
| ABOARD USS
TICONDEROGA (AP) —
Skylab’s astronauts came
safely home from man’s
longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with
pinpoint precision in the
Pacific Ocean after 28 days
and 11 million miles in
orbit.
‘‘We’re all in good
shape,’’ Commander
Charles Conrad Jr.
reported as the spacecraft
descended. ‘‘Everything’s
OK.”
The astronauts almost
were held over in orbit to
try to repair a
refrigeration problem in
their space station. But
Mission Control decided
there was nothing the
astronauts could do and
told them to come home.
So, 10 minutes behind
schedule, Conrad, Dr.
Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul
J. Weitz undocked their
Apollo ferry ship from the
station and executed a
series of maneuvers that
sent them slamming into
the atmosphere above
Thailand for a fiery
descent.
The Apollo craft hit the
calm Pacific waters at 9:50
a.m. EDT about 830 miles
southeast of San Diego,
Calif., within sight of the
main recovery ship, the
USS Ticonderoga. It was
just after dawn off the
West Coast.
Hundreds of white-clad
Sailors on deck and
millions watching
television around the world
again had a ringside seat
to a U.S. man-in-space
landing as the Apollo craft
floated down through low-
hanging clouds - and
dangling under three huge
orange and white
parachutes.
‘‘Everyone’s in super
shape,”’ Conrad said as the
spacecraft bobbed on the
water awaiting pickup.
Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to
secure the spacecraft with
flotation collars.
The Ticonderoga
reported the astronauts
had landed 6'2 miles from
the ship and that the ship
was 6!» miles from the
target point, indicating a
perfect touchdown.
The Ticonderoga
steamed to pick up the
Apollo capsule with the
astronauts still inside, in
contrast to most earlier
U.S. flights when the
spacemen were lifted to
the carrier by helicopter.
Medical requirements
dictated the pick up
method today.
Medical experts were
not certain how the
astronauts would react
after returning to earth's
gravity following record
exposure to space
weightlessness so they
decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as
little activity as possible
until they can be examined
in mobile medical
laboratories aboard the
Ticonderoga.
The landing completed
an historic space mission
that lasted 28 days and 50
minutes. During that time
the spacemen circled the
earth 395 times.
Misson Control was kept
in suspense for most of the
final 76 minutes of the
flight — a period when the
Apollo ship was out of
radio contact with ground
Stations.
| same | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Re-
publican member of the Senate
Watergate committee says the
Nixon _ administration has
“stepped on” anyone willing to
search for the truth about Wa-
tergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr.,
who made the claim Thursday,
also said that fired White
House Counse] John W. Dean
III should be listened to when
he appears before the panel.
Dean, who has said he dis-
cussed Watergate and a pos-
sible coverup with President
Nixon, will be the lead-off wit-
mess when the hearings resume
next week.
“| think there is a great deal
of credibility to a story that he
it to him to enable to tell
and | think the committee owes
it to him to enable hm to tell
that story in full view of the
public,”’ Weicker said on a Pub-
lic Television show, ‘Evening
Edition.’ He was interviewed
by Martin Agronsky.
“Is his testimony credible? I
think it is. Nobody’s aitribut-
ing 100-per-cent credibility to
him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out
there and that’s no small thing
when you were in his position
and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on
this young man at the time to
decide that you’re going to step
forward amd tell the story to
the American people.”
Weicker was the sole oppo-
nent of the committee’s deci-
sion to postpone Dean’s appear-
ance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit confer-
ences this week between Nixon
and Soviet Communist Party
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from vari-
ous public statements that have
been made that amy institution,
whether it’s a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and
try to find out the truth and try
to tell the truth is gonna’ get
‘Stepped on by the executive
‘branch of government,” the
‘Connecticut senator said.
| He cited Vice President Spiro
iT. Agnew’s recent attack on the
Watergate panel as one that
“can hardly hope to find the
truth and hardly fail to muddy
the waters of justice,” as an
example of the executive
branch's efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee
said it was considering a halt
‘to the practice of talking to
prospective witnesses in secret
‘because so much supposedly
confidential information — is
leaked to the media.
“Tl nearly despair of doing
anything about it,’’ committee
Vice Chairman Howard H. Bak-
er, R-Tenn., said Thursday. “It
«means that the committee
‘probably will end its closed-
door sessions with witnesses,
which until mow have been
which until now have been held
routinely in advance of public
appearances,
News stories Thursday fea-
tured accounts of closed-door
testimony by Dean and Water-
‘gate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt.
_ Also Thursday, another con-
gressional investigation into
Watergate-related matters was
announced, this one by the
House Internal Security Com-
mittee.
- Chairman Richard Ichord, D-
Mo., said he wants to find out
why the White House formed
the “plumbers” group that bur-
glarized the office of Daniel
Elisberg’s psychiatrist in 1971.
President Nixon hag said he or-
dered the ‘“‘plumbers’” to plug
such news leaks as the secret
Pentagon Papers, which Ells-
berg gave to mewspapers.
- In New York, former Demo-
eratic National Chairman Law-
rence F, O’Brien said the scan-
dal bas hurt both parties. He
called for limits on how much
candidates may spend in their
campaigns and urged use of a
mew provision allowing tax-
payers to designate a dollar of
their federal income taxes to fi-
mance political campaigns.
_ He spoke as an assistant to
special Watergate Prosecutor
Archibald Cox said a_ special
grand jury may be convened to
¢ (Turn To Page Seven)
| WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Republican
member of the Senate Watergate
committee says the Nixen ad-
ministration has “stepped on”” anyone
willing to search for the truth about Wa-
tergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr., who made
the claim Thursday, also said that fired
White House Counse! John W. Dean III
should be listened to when he appears
before the panet. Dean, who has said he
discussed Watergate and a possible
coverup with President Nixon, will be
the lead-off witness when the hearings
resume next week.
“1 think there is a great deat of
credibility to a story that be is going to
go ahead and tell, and I think the
committee owes it to him to enable him
to tell that story in full view of the
public,’ Weicker said om a Public
Television show, ‘Evening Edition.” He
was interviewed by Martin Agronsky.
“fs his testiroony credible? I think it
is. “Nobody's attributing 100-per-cent
credibility to him or any other witness,
but he’s got the guts to stand out there
and that's no small thing when you were
in his position and had all the pressures
that obviously must have existed on this
young man at the time to decide that
you're going to step forward and tell the
story la the American people.”"
Weicker was the sole opponent of the
committee's decision io postpone Dean's
appearance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit conferences this
week between Nixon and Scviel Com-
munist Party leader Leonid 1. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from various
public staternents that have been. made
Uhat any institution, whether it's a
witness, anybody thal’s willing to slep
out and try to find owt the truth and try to
tell the truth is gonna’ get stepped on by
the executive branch of government,”
the Connecticut senator said.
He cited Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew's recent attack on the Watergate
panel as one that “can hardly hope to
find the truth and hardly fail to muddy
the waters of justice," as an example of
the executive branch's efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee said it was
considering a hait to the practice of
talking to prospective witnesses in
secret because so much supposedly
confidential information is leaked to the
media.
“4d nearly despair of doing anything
about it,"’ committee Vice Chairman
Howard H. Baker, R-Tenn., said
Thursday. ‘'It means that the committee
probably will end its closeddoor sessions
with witnesses, which until now have
been held routinely in advance of public
apoearances.
| same | train |
SHELBY, N. C., Aug. 28.—(U.P)—
Three buildings in the business
district collapsed today when a
retention wall caved in.
Seven bodies were immediately
removed from the ruins and it was
believed others were in the ruins,
| as police, firemen and volunteer
workers started to remove the de-
| bris,
A bank, grocery store and a tail-
or shop were on the ground floors
of the three buildings, which were
two stories high. A large number
of persons were said to be inside
and it was feared the death toll
would mount steadily,
'
| An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soul
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Asosciated
Press in Miaml, Fla., also re
peated troop movement instruc:
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but na
other source confirmed this Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault.
A dispatch from Havana de
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse.
The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
tone of Castro’s top aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
‘earlier this week. The Times said
|the information reached Washing-
Iton from a diplomatic source in
| Havana.
| The diplomatic source said a
‘neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
‘legedly was taken. Guevara, 32,
is Cuba’s economic czar,
The governrhent radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
‘unseen in public for almost a
week, was personally directing
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
| A Havana television station Fri-
day night prepared the people for
big “Castro Day” victory celebra.
tions with a five-hour live inter-
view of prisoners the government
claims it captured during the
abortive invasion by Cuban
exiles,
One prisoner was Jose Miro
Torres, son of the top Cuban reb-
el leader Jose Miro Cardona.
Miro Torres bit his lip and rocked
m his chair as he admitted that
his force was defeated and his
operation ended in failure
The rebel leader’s son said on
Havana television that he had
been well treated since his cap-
ture All his comments were in
the form of answers to his inter-
rogators
“Then it is not just to say that
Cuban militiamen behave like hu-
man beasts’? Miro Torres was
asked
“Absolutely not.”’ he replied be-
fore the cameras
When asked by the panel of in-
terviewers what he and his men
expected to find when they land-
ed, Miro Torres said-
“We thought the milttia and the
army would join us "’
“That 1s what you were told But
what did you find?’
“They fought us very hard and
defeated us”’
Miro Torres was asked.
“Then you were defeated?”
“Yes,’? he answered.
Miro Torres also responded
“no” when asked if any appre.
clable number of invaders had
escaped
Jose Miro Cardona appealed
rom his New York headquarters
fo” Pope John XXIII, asking the
pontiff's intercession to halt fir-
ng squad executions of captured
rebels A Havana dispatch Fnri-
jay said the number shot had
reached 29 in three days
Miro Cardona said in his cable
o the Vatican that the Pope's
roice, ‘‘exemplfying Chmnistian
‘harity, could save the lives of
nany idealistic men” by interced-
ng through the International Red
"ross Muro Cardona also mes-
aged the presidents of 11 Latin
\merican nations, asking them to
‘act promptly’ to prevent more
Tum To Page 2, Col. 6
| different | train |
WASHINGTON, Mareh 7 (AP)
—Oliver: Wendell Holmes, asso-
ciate justice of the supreme court,
makes his debut as a radio speak-
er Sunday, March 8—his ninetieth
bitthday.
In his second floor study work-
men tiptoed about jnstalling a
micropfone. There is not even &
radio set in the house, One will be
eonnected after the microphone is
put in.
The speech ‘by the oldest man
ever to serve on the supreme
bench,-is the first pre notiee he
has taken of a birthday,
They have been events for a
long time to those about him, For
years -a deluge of requests from
newspapermen for interviews and
a series of plans ‘by admirers for
public demonstrations have pre-
ceded each anniversary,
His friends say his logical mind
can see no reason for a fanfaron-
ade over birthdays. His concession
on his ninctieth anniversary is re-
garded as reluctant yielding to the
desire of sincere ffiends to honor
him,
The radio program in his honor
fhegins at 10:30 p.m. E. S, T, Sun-
day night. Dean Charles BE. Clark
of the Yale law school, from the
studios of the Columbia Broad-
casting system in New York, will
introduce Chief Justice Hughes,
‘The Chief Justice will speak from
the Washington studio of the sys-
pai.
| ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nautS came safely home from
inan’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
lion miles in orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touch-
down, Charles Conrad Jr., Dr.
Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz were hoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their Apollo ferry
ship.
‘We're all in good shape. Ev-
erything’s OK,’’ commander
Conrad radived as the space-
craft descended through the
clouds and landed within view
of USS Ticonderoga, just 612
niles away. That indicated the
astronauts had suffered no ad-
verse physical reactions on re-
turning to earth’s gravity after
a record four weeks’ expusure
tu space weightlessness.
Ten minutes” later they
Climbed through the — hatch,
Smiled and waved as the ship's
band played ‘Anchors Aweigh”
for the all-Navy Skylab crew.
They walked unsteadily to-
ward a mobile medical labura-
tory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ expusure
tu weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can fune-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab inissions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today to try
to repair a refrigeration prob-
lem in their space station. But
Mission Control decided there
was nothing the astronauts
could do and told thei to come
home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
and executed aé_ series. of
maneuvers that sent them
Slainming into the atmosphere
above Thailand for the fiery de-
scent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
blue waters at 9:50 a.n. EDT
about 880 imiles southwest of
San Diego, Calif. It was just
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tussed a
line to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
the astronauts to an elevator
fur a ride to the hangar deck.
After separation they inade a
45-ininute fly-around inspection
of the station, televising pic-
tures of the odd-looking space
vehicle to mission control for
evaluation by experts.
Then in quick succession the
astronauts triggered engine fir-
ings to begin their descent to
earth.
The first firing dropped
Apollo’s orbit slightly below
(See ‘C’ on Page 2)
| different | train |
mee: Ae Seg, Ree
Roanoke police today threw
“every available resource” into
the seareh for the murderer of
Dana Marie Weaver. The 16-year-
old Jefferson High school junior
was found elain yesterday in the
kitchen of Christ Episcopal church
here, .
‘‘There’s just a whole world of
things we've got to check on,’
said E, A. Griggs, lieutenant of
detectives of the Roanoke police.
“Thera are s0 many angles —
we’re throwing every available
man, every available resource be-
hind this case. It was a partieu-
larly brutal one.”
Early today, however, there was
no clue to the identity of ‘the per-
son who clubbed the girl in the
head with a pop bottle early Sun-
day night while the church’s ree-
tor and members of the Young
People’s Service league attended a
picnic at nearby Calloway.
|
' ROANOK Roanoke ollee “oda throm
‘Fesource” “into. the’ ‘search for: the. murderer. of ee
The’ 16-year-old. Jefferson’ high. school . junior‘ was.’
terday. in:the kitcheii “of: Christ Epise opal church: hare. _
: SM Phere’s : . justea? ‘wholé' world of:. things. we've got’ to check on,”
igaid. B.A. Griggs; lieutenant of detectives - -of the the -Roahoke - - police.
FE NN eee ee ee
We're throwing every available
man,- every available resource be-
hind this case. It was a particularly
brutal one.”
» No Clues Found
Early today, however, there was
no clue to the identity of the per-
son who clubbed the girl in the
head with a pép bottle early Sun-
day night while the church’s rec-
tor and members of the Young
People’s Service league attended
a picnic at nearby Calloway.
Authorities worked on the theory
the girl probably was attacked
when she- surprised an intruder in
the church, She had gone to the
church for the Young People’s
meeting, unaware the group was
on the outing. “a 3
Dana Marie was last seen alive
by. three Virginia Polytechnic In-
stitute students from Blac burg,
with whom, she and two girl frien
went on an automobile ride Sunday
afternoon. The boys let the two.
girls out at their homes and. then
took Dana Marie to the.church.
Police questioned’ the students
and the girls. But the victim’s com-
panions could shed no light on the
killing, officers said, _. ‘
The city offered a $500 reward
‘in the search for the inet Ak
"She had put-up a terrific strug-
gle against her assailant: sometime
after 6 p. m. Sunday.night. Broken
‘dishes littered the floor. Two brok-
en pop bottles; probable. weapons
also lay-in:the litter. og
She had intended joining a
‘Young People’s le megting at
the church, But the’ young group
kad gone‘on 9 picnic ‘with the rect-
-or-and didn’t return ‘until areund
| same | train |
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
‘from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel batalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion, One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped, Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis.
led them,
- The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night,
New Landings
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source contirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 ana
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
‘Cuba for a new invasion assault.
A dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse. |
The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
‘one of Castro's top aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week. The Times said
‘the information reached Washing-
ton from a diplomatic source in
‘Havana.
| Sent to Hospital
The diplomatic source said a
neurosurgeon Was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
legedly was taken, Guevara, 22,
is Cuba's economic czar,
The government radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
unseen in public for almost a
week, was personally directing
‘mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
A Havana television station Fri-
day night prepared the people for
big “Castro Day’”’ victory celebra-
tions with a five-hour live inter-
view of prisoners the government
claims it captured during the
abortive invasion by Cuban
exiles,
Son of Leader
One prisoner was Jose Muro
Torres, son of the top Cuban reb-
el leader Jose Miro Cardona.
Miro Torres bit his lip and rocked
in his chair as he admitted that
his force was defeated and his
operation ended in failure.
The rebel leader's son said on
Havana television that he had
been well treated since his cap-
ture. All his comments were in
the form of answers to his inter-
rogators.
“Then it is not just to say that
‘Cuban militiamen behave like hu-
‘man beasts?” Miro Torres was
asked.
“Absolutely Not”
“Absolutely not,” he replied be.
lore the cameras,
When asked by the panel of in-
terviewers what he and his men
expected to find when they land-
ed, Miro Torres said:
“We thought the militia and the
army would join us,”
_ “That is what you were told, But
what did you find?”
“They fought us very hard and
defeated us.”
“Then you were defeated’
‘Miro Torres was asked,
Answers Yes
. “Yes,” he answered,
| Miro Torres also responded
“no” when asked if any appre-
‘ciable number of invaders had
escaped,
_ Some of the other prisoners on
the show seemed to give corm-
pliant answers, but one talked
back defiantly to his accusers.
| Ry TILE ASSOCTAN ED PRESS’.
An anti-Castro - redio: broadcast
from an island off Central “An
ica teday. ‘lof bivo rebel vallalions
apparently fighting. on. Cuban_.soil..
that help was on the way and
urged them not-to surrender:
| The appeal from Swait Is! land |
was .inskle “a felv Vioirs ‘after’ the”
Custra government put, before
Havana. television ‘camera’ ' same
prisoners’ ‘captured alter’ last
Weekend's invasion, |
heir
many
ind and North: America-had- mis-
fed thera, .
. The Swan Island _ broadcast;
monitored ‘hy é
“Press ‘in Miami;
vealed troop movement instruc.
‘tions’ it” had“sent out ‘uring the
| night.
It had ‘told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba,*but no
other source confirmed this. Somé
rebel. sources. in. Mlaml-did- say;-
however, that” betweet” 660°and
Use guerrillas- were. headed for
Gulk for a new. invasloi assail
Clty oF Peer ©
4 dispatch from: Hnyana _ di
ceribed the Cuban: capital as
Jelly of fear and suspteloh, It sald
& new wave. of. arrests- and: deten-
| tions ‘redehed ‘into. almost every.
| farnily, Suspects jammed swollen
ialls- and living ‘conditions, were
described as grawine -wor
The New York. Times quoted a
diplomatic source in. Washington
ag saying Mai. Ernesto Guevara,
one of “Castro's:.top ‘aides, -was
'| seriously. wounded _ in the head
‘tearller this wéek: The' Times said
*|the information reached Washing
lon from a diptomatic souree
4) Havana, :
‘The djplomatle source "sald: a
neurosurgeon was sent to.
vincial hospital where Guevarg al-
1! legedly’ was faken,
'| ‘The government radio- network
“\seid Prime Minister. Fidel Castro,
;junseen in public, for almpst &
| week, was personally. directing
mop-t tp operations in the interlor
agoinst the ‘surviving. rebel. invad
ers. syho. are. tryIng. to, overthrow
£| his -pro-Communist- regime.
ny . “Castro Day!
~{ A Havana television si
01
¥| day-night Prepared: the people -fo
°l hig ‘victory “celebra
| tions ve-hour live int
arérs the governmén
‘lelaims ‘it captured- during-~the
| abortive invasion’ ' bys: 7 Cubar
| exiles, .
One prisoner was Jose Mir
Torres, son_of the. top. Cuban reb
ei--teader Jose Cardona
Miro Tortes bit his lip’and rocker
in his chair as he admitted tha
r\ his. foree..was défeated“and hi
\Toperation-ended in- failure,
Al) The rebel leader's son sald oi
Havana television that .he ha
hee
Uhe form of answers to iis | inter
el rozators,
“Then
Cuban mil
man | beast
Sj asked.
“Ausolutely not, he Teplied by
fore the cameriis.. .
Ys! “When asked by the panel of
tterviewers “hat he and his “me
jexpected (o find when they lan
ed, Miro Torres said:
“We thought the militia, and tt
"That is what vou were fold. Bi
of what did you find?"
a “Thew foueht us very hard ar
defeated us."
a “Then you "were defeated”
a ‘© Torres-was asked.
es,” he answered,
Miro Torres also respond
ie na”? when asked if. anv apne
td; cistle number of invaders, h:
feseaped
| same | train |
Detroit, May (9 — (UP) —
Ford Motor cusupany and CIO of-
ficials meet today to attempt set-
tlement of a six-day-old strike
against two key Ford plants that
will idle a total of 85,000 work-
ers by tonight.
Reopening of negotiations came
as Ford seheduled immediate
shutdowns of 11 assembly lines,
with the remaining eight to close
by next. Monday.
Henry Ford II, youthful head
of the company, accepted a union
offer to reopen peace talks which
were cut short last Thursday when
62,200 United Auto Workers struck
at Ford's River Rouge and Lin-
coln-Mercury plants.
In his bid to reopen negotia-
tions, Walter Reuther, president
of the UAW, asked Ford to per-
~sonally jead the company negoti-
| ating team,
Ford declined the invitation,
| but said ‘‘we will be glad to meet
with you at 2 p.m. (EST).”
| Reuther referred to a letter the
Ford president wrote to striking
‘ workers last week, in which he
said the walkout was “unneces-
sary.”
| "Since your letter expresses con-
Bese for the Ford workers, we
would like to suggest that you as-
sume your personal obligations to
participate in negotiations,”
The mass of propaganda swal-
lowed -by the so-called intelligent
people of the United States is
little short of miraculous.
| Dy PAs & eee
United Press Staff Correspondent
DETROIT, May 12 (P\—Ford
Motor Company and CIO. offi
als mest today to ubtempt set:
tlement af a six-day-old strike
aeuinst two key Ford planta that
jwill idle a tatal of 84,000 work:
ors by tontht
Reopening of wega ns came
es Ford scheduled inmmediate shut-
dawis of 11 asgenbly lines, with
ninge cizkt to elose hs
Monday.
Henry Ford H, youthful he
of the company, accepted aun
valfer lo reapen peace tatks whitl
were aut short last Thursdat
when 62.200 United Auto Work
ers struck at Ford's River Roux
and Linealn-Mereury plants,
i In his bid to reopen negotia:
rtions, Walter Reuther, president
af the VAW, asked Ford lo per.
sonally lead the company negotiat-
ing team,
| same | train |
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP)—A test pilot coolly
describes aa “just routine” a trou-
ble-plagued-flight in the X15 reck-
et plane that sct a new controtled
flight speed record of 3,140 miles
an hour.
Air Force Maj. Bob White
zoomed more than 50 miles a
minute to an altitude of 103,000
feet Friday, thus breaking the
old record of 2,005 m.p.h. he had
set lasL March 7.
There were tense moments dur-
ing {he il-minute flight—when the
engine quil temporarily and mo-
ments later when the swept-wing
Dart’s pressurized cabin sprang
a leak.
Unusual Expected
White later brushed aside the
miscues, saying, ‘We expect
some unusual things to show up
in an experimental program.”
Seconds after the X15 dropped
from its B52 mother plane at 45,-
000 feet, its rocket engine quit.
The X15, dropped 7,600 feet while
White frantically tried to re-start
the engine. At 37,000 feet the
rocket engine’s 57,000 pounds of
thrust came on at full throttle,
slamming While back in the
cockpit seat with a force three
times that of gravity. Over the
radio came White's unemotional:
“That was quile a boost.”
Climbing Angle
White pulled the X15 into a
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rocket plane shot like a bullet
on its first full power run, At
80,000 fect, White had his record
and shut off the engine.
His momentum carried him still
higher. At 90,000 fect, the cabin
sprang a leak and While com-
pensaied by inflating his space-
type flying suit. Al 103,000 feet
the X15 reached the top ‘of its
flight and White eased the plane's
nose gently into a glide back to a
landing on a nearby dry lake.
| EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP)—A test pilot coolly
describes as ‘just routine” a {rou-
ble-plagued flight in the X15 rock.
et plane that set a new controlled
flight speed record of 3,140 miles
an hour, -
Air Force Maj. Bob White
zoomed more than 50 miles a
minute fo an altitude of 103,000
feet Friday, thus breaking the
old record of 2,905 m.p.h. he had
set last March 7,
There were tense moments dur-
ing the 11-minute flight—when the
engine quit temporarily and mo-
ments later when the swept-wing
Dart's pressurized cabin sprang
a leak.
‘Miscues Expected
White later brushed aside the
miscues, saying, “We expect
some unusual things to show up
in an experimental program.”
Seconds after the X15 dropped
from its B52 mother plane at 45,-
000 feet, its rocket engine quit.
The X15 dropped 7,000 feet while
White frantically tried to re-start
the engine. At 37,000 feet the
rocket engine’s 57,000 pounds of
thrust came on at full jhrottle,
slamming White back in the
cockpit seat with a force three
times that of gravity. Over the
radio came White’s unemotional:
“That was quite a boost.”
Shot Like Bullet
White pulled the X15 into a
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rocket plane shot like a bullet
on its first full power run, At
80,000 feet, White had his record
and shut off the engine.
His momentum carried him still
higher. At 90,000 feet, the cabin
sprang a leak and White com-
pensated by inflating his space-
type flying suit. At 103,000 feet
the X15 reached the top of its
flight and White eased the plane's
nose gently into a glide back to a
landing on a nearby dry lake.
| same | train |
ELBY, N. C., Aug. 28.—()—
Six persons were known to
have been killed and several more
were injured when three buildings
in the business section collapsed
here today. Several others known
to have been in the buildings are
missing.
The known dead are:
Miss Ora Ekridge. an employee of
the First National Bank: Seeb
Blanton, a farmer, and_ his son,
Carl; Guy Green and Alex Hoy’e,
clerks in the First National Bank:
one unidentified whiie man.
The buildings that collapsed were
the First National Bank, in tempo-
rary quarters: Goodes Grocery
Store, and a tailor shop. No cause
for the collapse was given although
workmen were said to have been
excavating under the building.
George Blanton. acting vice
president of the bank. escaped with
minor injuries. as did Forest Esk-
ridge, cashier. Clarence Mull, as-
sistant cashier, received a broke:
(feg and arm and cuts about the
ithead. His injuries were said by
, physicians to be serious.
| Two other clerks were said to
have been buried in the debris. The
"proprietor of the tailor shop was
‘missing and was reported to have
lbeen buried in the ruins of his
shop.
Four bank clerks were unaccount-
,ed ior but it was thought possible
ithat they were in the crowds about
‘the scene. A _ physician climbed
' through dangerous overhanging
|Walls to treat a woman bank clerk
‘who was pinned under twisted steel
ang brick.
: The two dead negroes were mem-
bers of the excavating crew at work
‘under the buildings. Others of the
,crew are missing.
' Construction gangs from all parts
of the city were working desperate-
‘ly to clear the wreckage and ex-
itricate those who may still'be alive.
Physicians from all city hospitals
‘were called.
| SHELBY, N. C., Aug. 28.—(P—
‘Six persons were known to have
been kliled and several more were
‘injured when three buildings in the
| business section collapsed here to-
‘day. Several others known to have
‘been in the building are missing. _
| The known dead are: :
. Miss Ora Eskridge, an employe
(of the First National bank; Seeb
‘Blanton, a farmer, and his son,
Carl; Guy Green and Alex Hoyle,
clerks in the First National bank;
,one unindentified white man.
| SHELBY, N. C., Aug, 28:—2—
‘Four people were known to have
j been killed and an undetermined
inumber injured here today when
‘three buildings in the business dis-
| trict collapsed. The dead are.
| Miss Ora Eskridge, a clerk in the
.First National bank; one unidenti-
fied white man and two unidentified
‘negro laborers.
| As construction crews worked
| desperately to clear the tangled
'wreckage it was feared that the
death ‘toll would mount when the
_ basements of the. collapsed struc-
, tures were cleared,
' <A eonstruction crew engaged in
excavating under the buildings was
still unaccounted for and little pos-
|Sibility of its escape was seen.
| The eollapsed structures are the
|First National bank, Goode’s groc-
ery store and Hadley’s tailor shop.
| Most of the injured, an early check
‘indicated, were employes or custo-
mers of the bank.
| The excavation under the build-
ings was thought to have caused
the collapse.
The crew doing the excavating
‘was said to have numbered from
five to seven men, mostly negroes.
iMr, Hadley was though to have
| been in his shop and was still un-
‘aecounted for after the first check.
| Hospitals, crowded with injured,
, were unable to give accurate esti-
;mates of the number brought in.
.In addition, several persons were
thought to have been slightly hurt
,and to have mixed with the crowd
| after regeiving first aid treatment
i ons Eta = ERE
| same | train |
Washingion —(UP)— The house
| veterans committee Tuesday tenta-
tively accepted a compromise bill
under which all needy 65-year-old
veterans of World wars I and Il
could qualify for monthly pensions
of $72.
Such pensions, under present reg-
ulations, are paid to needy veterans
who can show a non-service-con-
nected disability of at least 10 per-
cent. In practice, almost any 65-
year-old veteran is disabled to that
extent or more. |
The committee voted to write the
regulations into law, at the same
time wiping out the 10 percent
disability requirement.
Raise Limitation
It also agreed to raise somewhat
the income limitation that com-|
prises a test of need. And it voted
to wipe out the existing require
ment that the veteran be unem-
ployable to be eligible for the pen-|
sion.
The compromise, offered by Com-
‘mittee Chairman John E. Rankin,
is a substitute for earlier proposals
to pension all veterans, regardless
of need.
The committee rejected all
amendments proposed to the new
bill, but put off until Wednesday
a final vote on it.
The bill, in a nutshell, would
liberalize and write into law the
regulations by which the Veterans
administration has determined
what veterans are eligible for $60
or $72 monthly pensions for “total
and permanent” non-existing-con-
nected disability. :
For Men Under 55
These regulations provide $60
pensions for men under 55 who
can show a single disability rated
at least 60 percent or combined
disabilities of 70 percent. At age
55 the disability requirement is cut
to 60 percent, whether single vor
combined; at age 60 it is dropped|
to 50- percent.
At age 65 the pension goes up
to $72: the disability requirement
is cut to 10 preent. In all cases,
the income limitation is $1,000 for
single men, $2,500 for those wita
De aicimarc
| WASHINGTON—(UP)—— The
house veterans committee today
tentatively. accepted ‘a compro-
mise ‘bill under which all needy
65-year-lod yeterans of world
~war I and 1) could , quality for
monthly pensions of $72.
Such pensions, under present
regulations, are paid to needy
veterans who can show a non-
service-connected disability.” ‘of
at least, 10 percent. In practice,
almost any 65-year-old . veteran
is disabled to that extent or
more. .
The committee voted to write
the regulations into law,’ at the
|same: time wiping out the. 10
percent disability requirement:
- It is also agreed. to raise some-
what the income limitation that
comprises a test of need. And it
voted to wipe out the existing
requirement that the veteran be
unemployable to be eligible for
the pension.
The compromise, offered b;
comittee chairman John E, Ran:
kin, is a substitute for earlier
proposals to pension all _veter-
ans, regardless of need.
‘The committee rejected all a
-|mendments proposed to the nev
| bill, but put off until tomorrov
|.a final vote on it.
| same | train |
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was an the way’ and
urged them not to surrender,
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put. before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion, One. admitted
their mission failed and said not
‘many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla.,. also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
SMALL LANDINGS
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault,
A dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspcion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into’ almost every
family, Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living. conditions were
described as growing worse,
, The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
one of Castro’s-top aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing-
ton from a diplomatic source in
Havana. .
NEUROSURGEON
The diplomatie source said a
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32,
is Cuba’s economic czar,
The government radio network
Said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
unseen in public for almost a
week, was personally directing
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
;ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
A Havana televisicn station Fri-
| day night prepared the people for
big ‘Castro Day” victory celebra-
tions with a five-hour live inter-
view of prisoners the government
claims it captured during the
abortive invasion by Cuban exiles,
SON OF LEADER
One prisoner was Joe Miro Tor-
res, son of the top Cuban rebel
Jeader Jose Miro Cardona. Miro
Torres bit his lip and rocked in
his chair as he admitted that his
force was defeated and his opera-
tion ended in failure.
The rebel leader’s son said on
Havana television that he had
been well treated since his cap-
‘ture. All his comments were in
the form of answers to his inter-
rogators.
“Then it is not just to say that
Cuban militiamen behave like hu-
{ma beasts%” Miro Torres was
asked.
“Absolutely not,” he replied be-
fore the cameras.
When asked by the panel of in-
terviewers what he and his men
expected to find when they land-
ed, Miro Torres said:
“We thought the militia and the
army would join us.”
“That is what you were told. But
what did you find?”
“They fought us very hard and
defeated us."
“Then you were defeated?”
Miro Torres was asked.
“Yes,” he answered.
| Miro Torres also responded
| “no” when asked if any appreci
table number of invaders had ¢s-:
caped, ee
| BY rhe Associated Press
An anti-Castro radic broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend’s invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said aot
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by the Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault.
A dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse. _
The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara.
one of Castro’s top aides, was
seriously wounded in the , head
earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing.
ton from a diplomatic source ir
Havana.
- The diplomatic source said 2
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al.
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32.
is Cuba’s economic czar.
The government radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
unseen in public for almost a
week, was personally directing
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
A Havana television station Fri-
day night prepared the people for
big ‘Castro Day” victory celebra-
tions with a five-hour live inter-
view of prisoners the government
claims it captured during the
abortive invasion by Cuban
exiles.
One prisoner was Jose Miro
Torres, son of the top Cuban reb-
el leader Jose Miro Cardona.
(Turn to CUBA. Page 9)
| same | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Republican
member of the Senate Watergate
committee says the Nixon administration
has ‘‘stepped on” anyone willing to search
for the truth about Watergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr., who made
the claim Thursday, also said that fired
White House Counsel John W. Dean III
should be listened to when he appears
before the panel. Dean, who has said he dis-
cussed Watergate and a possible coverup
with President Nixon, will be the lead-off
witness when the hearings resume next
week.
“I think there is a great deal of
credibility to a story that he is going to go
ahead and tell, and I think the committee
owes it to him to enable him to tell that
story in full view of the public,” Weicker
said on a Public Television show,
‘Evening Edition.’ He was interviewed by
Martin Agronsky.
‘Is his testimony credible? I think it is.
“Nobody's attributing 100-per-cent
credibility to him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out there and
that’s no small thing when you were in his
position and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on this young
man at the time to decide that you're going
to step forward and tell the story to the
American people.”
Weicker was the sole opponent of the
committee’s decision to postpone Dean’s
appearance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit conferences this
week between Nixon and_ Soviet
Communist Party leader Leonid 1.
Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from various public
statements that have been made that any
institution, whether it's a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and try to find out
the truth ana try to tell the truth is gonna’
get stepped on by the executive branch of
government,’ the Connecticut senator
said.
He cited Vice President Spiro T. Agnew’s
recent attack on the Watergate panel as
one that ‘‘can hardly hope to find the truth
and hardly fail to muddy the waters of
justice,’ as an example of the
executive branch's efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee said it was
considering a halt to the practice of talking
to prospective witnesses in secret because
sO much — supposedly confidential
information is leaked to the media.
“T nearly despair of doing anything about
it,’ committee Vice Chairman Howard H.
Baker, R-Tenn., said Thursday. ‘It means
that the committee probably will end its
closed-door sessions with witnesses, which
until now have been held routinely in
advance of public appearances.
News stories Thursday featured
accounts of closed-door testimony by Dean
and Watergate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt.
Also Thursday, another congressional
investigation into Watergate-related
matters was announced, this one by the
House Internal Security Committee.
Chairman Richard Ichord, D-Mo., said
he wants to find out why the White House
formed the “plumbers” group that bur-
glarized the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s
psychiatrist in 1971. President Nixon has
said he ordered the ‘plumbers’ to plug ,
such news leaks as the secret Pentagon
Papers, which Ellsberg§ gave to
newspapers.
In New York, former Democratic —
National Ckairman Lawrence F. O’Brien
said the scandal has hurt both parties. He
called for limits on how much candidates
may spend in their campaigns and urged
use of a new provision allowing taxpayers
to designate a dollar of their federal
income taxes to finance _ political
campaigns.
| WASHINGTON (AP) — A Re-
publican member of the Senate
Watergate committee says the
Nixon _ administration has
“stepped on’ anyone willing to
search for the truth about Wa-
tergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr.,
who made the claim Thursday,
also said that fired White
House Counsel John W. Dean
III should be listened to when
he appears before the panel.
Dean, who has said he dis-
cussed Watergate and a_ pos-
sible coverup with President
Nixon, will be the lead-off wit-
ness when the hearings resume
next week.
“T think there is a great deal
of credibility to a story that he
is going to go ahead and tell,
and I think the committee owes
it to him to enable him to tell
that story in full view of the
public,” Weicker said on a Pub-
lic Television show, ‘Evening
Edition.”” He was interviewed
by Martin Agronsky.
“Is his testimony credible? I
think it is. ‘‘Nobody’s attribut-
ing 100-per-cent credibility to
him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out
there and that’s no small thing
when you were in his position
and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on
this young man at the time to
decide that you're going to step
forward and tell the story to
the American people.”
Weicker was the sole oppo-
nent of the committee’s deci-
sion to postpone Dean’s appear-
ance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit confer-
ences this week between Nixon
and Soviet Communist Party
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from vari-
ous public statements that have
been made that any institution,
whether it’s a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and
try to find out the truth and try
to tell the truth is gonna’ get
stepped on by the executive
branch of government,” the
Connecticut senator said,
He cited Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew’s recent attack on the
Watergate panel as one that
“can hardly hope to find the
truth and hardly fail to muddy
the waters of justice,’ as an
example of the executive
brauch’s efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee
said it was considering a halt
to the practice of talking to
prospective witnesses in secret
because so much supposedly
confidential information is
leaked to the media.
“I nearly despair of doing
anything about it,” committee
Vice Chairman Howard H. Bak-
er, R-Tenn., said Thursday. “It
means that the committee
probably will end its closed-
door sessions with witnesses,
which until now have been held
routinely in advance of public
appearances.
News stories Thursday fea-
tured accounts of closed-door
‘testimony by Dean and Water-
gate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt.
Also Thursday, another con-
(Continued on Page 2)
| same | train |
Washington,. August. 28—(AP)—
What will the Senate do is the ques-
tion which interests Washing) on,
now that the Kellogg-Briand peace
treaty has been signed.
The answer to it at this time is
that there appears to be no reason
why the pact should not be ratified
promptly but this view is qualified
by the admonition that many things
can happen in international and do-
mestic affairs before next winter to
change the current outlook.
Fortified by an undeniable public
will toward international pacts that
will make armed conflict less likeiy
and still absolve the United States
from foreign entanglements, the ad-
ministration is expected to put the
full force of its prestige behind the
treaty when it is presented to the
Senate. The capital view is that
there undoubtedly will be opposition
from some quarters but, on the
other hand, that the treaty will have
Many important friends.
Borah To Support Treaty
In the light of facts as they now
stand, Senator Borah seems certain
to be in the latter group. As chair?
man of the senate foreign relations |
committee, he will be a key man in.
President Coolidge’s request for ra-_
tification. The Senator is credited
with having been fully informed.
while negotiations for the treaty
were in progress and thus to have
been given the opportunity to pre-|
sent any objections he may have’
had. His full support, therefore, ts |
counted upon by the administration. |
What serious objections, if any,
the members of the senate would)
bring up to block the consent which |
is necessary to make the treaty
binding upon the United States, ts at
this time not altogether clear since.
few senators have expressed them- |
selves upon the subiect.
May Affect Navy Plan
The simple language in which the |
treaty is phrased, the success of Sec-
retary Kellogg in barring provisions |
likely to be objectionable to the Am-_
erican isolationist, and the fact that |
the treaty appears to impose no ob- |
ligation upon this country other than |
to renounce war as an instrument of |
national policy, are held in Wash- |
ington to be factors arguing for |’
senate approval. In addition, both |
major political parties have indorsed |
efforts to bring peaceful adjudica- |
tion of international disputes to ful-
fillment. fs
Among the interesting specula-
tions is whether the opponents of |
the administration's naval building |
program will use the Kellogg pact to |
reinforce their arguments. There is |
evidence that Washington offictals.
are experiencing some uneasiness |
over their task in reconciling the |
treaty with the request for more |,
ships but the hope is that the coun-
try can be made to understand that |
the additional armament is asked)
merely to maintain an adequate de-
fence i
| Washington, Aug. 28—(P)—What
will the Senate do is the - question
which interests Washington, now that
the Kellog-Briand peace treaty has
been signed.
The answer to it at this time is that
there appears to be no reason why
the pact should not be ratified
promptly but this, view dis qualified
with the admonition that many
things can happen in international
and domestic affairs before next win-
ter to change the current outlook.
The administration is expected to
put the full force of its prestige be-
hind the treaty when it is presented
to the Senate.
Senator Borah, chairman of the
Senate foreign relations conmittee, is
credited with having been fully in-
formed while negotiations for the
treaty were in progress and thus to
have been given the opportunity to
present any objections he may have
had. His full support, therefore, is
counted upon by the administration.
Few senators have expressed them-
selves upon the subject, but as Wash-
ington looks upon the question, par-
tisan political considerations may be
greatly subordinated inasmuch as the
presidential campaign will be so much
water over the dam by the time rat-
jfication is requested.
The fact that the treaty appears to
impose no obligation upon this coun-
try other than to renounce war as an
instrument of national policy, is held
ju. Washington to be a factor arguing
for. Senate approval. In addition both
major political parties have endorsed |
efforts to bring peaceful adjudication
of international disputes to fulfill-
ment.
| same | train |
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 28.—Prediction
that Gov. Al Smith of New. York, the
Democratic nominee for the presi-
dency, will receive 309 of 531 elector-
jal votes was made here late yester-
day by John J. Raskob, chairman of
the Democratic national committee, on
his arrival here with a group of east-
ern party leaders.
- In addition, Raskob declared that
Smith has an eryen chance to carry
other stafes and get a total of 57 more
electorial votes. Lie Ge
Raskob claimed for Gov. Smith “the
solid south,” including Kentucky, Ten-
‘nessee and Oklahoma, and New York.
: New. Jersey, Rhode Island, Wisconsin,
‘Arizona, Colora@o, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, Minnesota, New Mexico and
' Nevada. er ae
There seemed little doubt, Raskob
_ Said, that Connecticut, Delaware, Indi-
ana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wy.
oming should be classified for Smith.
These states, however, were set aside
in the statement from the list of states
which he said “any prudent business
‘ man would at this time classify fo
Smith.” :
Matching the maximum figure set by)
the Republican organization, chairmar
Raskob, today raised the Iimit. of the
Smith-Robinson champalgn budget t
$4,000,000. -° :
- Previous announcements had fixe:
the Democratic war chest limit at $3
600,000. ~ , ‘
| By Associated Preaa.
Bt Loule, Mo. Aug. 27—Jehn J.
Raskob, chalrmen of the demo-
cratic national committee, predict-
ed upon bis arrival here late to-
day with u group of Hastern demo-
rratic Jenders thet Gavernor Sialth
would receive 308 of the 581 clect-
oral volew for president
Naming the alaiey which be
thought Smith would carry, Ras-
kob’s formal statement, prepared
én route to the nollfication exer-
cises for Benatar Joe T. Robinson
at Hot Springs, Ark, claimed also
tor Bmith an even chance to carry
other states having a total of fitty-
seven electors.
Raskob, who will confer here
‘with democratle leaders of clght
‘Middleweslurn states before pro-
‘ceeding to Hat Springs Wednesday
night, claimed for Governor Smith
the “solid South,” including, Ken-
tucky, Tennessea'*and Oklahoma,
and New York, New Jersey, Rhode
Island, Wisconsin, Arizona, Colp-
rado, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Minnesota, ‘Montana, Nebraska,
Nebraska, Missouri, New Mextac
and Nevada,
‘There seemed little doubt, Ras
kob said, that Connecticut, Dela-
ware, Indiana, North Dakota, Soulh
Dakota and Wyoming should be
clusulfied for, Smith, ‘These states,
however, were set apart in the
statement from the list of states
which he said “any prudent busi
mesa man would at this thine clas-
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Kennedy today appointed Gen. Maxwell D. :
Taylor, former Army chief of staff, to make a special survey of U.S, capabilities in
the field of “nonconventional” warfare such as guerrilla activity.
Taylor immediately went on the job. He attended a meeting this morning of
the National Security Council—one of the few sessions of that major defense
om since ane took office. i
ierre Salinger, White House press secretary, said that “nonconventional”
warfare in this case is not used in the usual sense of nuclear warfare but of tactical .
Operauons,
Salinger said Kennedy decided
within the last few days that such
4 survey is necessary and asked
lor Friday to conduct it.
Pressed by newsmen for the
purpose Kennedy had in mind in
designating Taylor to conduct a
study of a specialized phase of
military operations, Salinger cited
the last paragraph of Kennedy's
speech two days ago before a
group of the American Society of
Newspaper Editors.
In that Kennedy said: “Let me
then make clear as your presi-
dent that I am determined upon
our system's survival and success,
regardless of the cost and regard-
less of the peril.”
| WASHINGTON — ( —
President Kennedy toda >
inted Gen. Maxwell [
aylor, former Army Chief
of Staff, to make a special
survey of U. S. capabilities
in the field of “non-conven-
tional” warfare such as guer-
ila activity.
Taylor immediately went
on job. He. attended a
|meeting this morning of the
|National Security Council—
one of the few sessions of
‘that major defense group
'since Kennedy took office.
The White House an-
/nouncement was made only
| same | train |
SHELBY, N. C., Aag, 28-—(?)—
Six persons were known to have
been killed and several more were
injured when three eee in the
business section collapsed here to-
day. Several others known to have
been in the buildings are missing.
The known dead are:
Miss Ora Eskridge, an employe
of the First National bank; Seeb
Blanton, a farmer, and his son,
Carl; Guy Green and Alex Hoy'e,
clerks in the First National bank;
one unidentified white man.
A construction crew engaged in
excavation under the buildings was
sti!! unaccounted for and little pos-
sibility of its escape was seen.
The collapsed structures are the
First National bank, Goode’s gro-
cery store and Hadley’s tailor
shop. Most of the imjured, an
early check indicated, were em-
ployes or customers of the bank.
The excavation under the build-
ings was thought to have caused
the collapse.
The crew doing the excavating
was said to have numbered from
five to seven men, mostly negroes.
Mr. Hadley was Le ere to have
been in his shop and was still un-
accounted for r the first check.
Hospitals, crowded with injured,
were unable to give accurate esti-
mates of the number brought in.
In addition, several persons were
thought to have been slightly hurt
and to have —— with _erowd
after receiving first aid treatment.
| SHELBY, N. C., Aug. 28 (AP:
—Six persons were known to hav
been killed and several in rer
the business section re La,
Several others, known to have k a
in the buildings are missing#~ —
| The known dead are: Miss Sarai
'Eskridge, employe of the > Firs
National Bank, Fred Morton,
i'farmer, and his son, Carl, —
Gruen, and Alex Hoyle, all
whom were in the First. N tion’
Bank. The body of one unidentt e
white man was also found, ~*~
The structures which collapr
were the National Bank, in tempol
ary quarters, a grocery store am
tailor shop. The cause ~ of: the ‘ee
lapse is said to have been tCaust
by workmen excavating
neath the buildings.
John Falcon of Los Angele
Morris Pollock of San Diego, Cal
had a trip to the Olympic ga
in Amsterdam and will make ;
day tour of Europe as a resu
winning championships “in —
“junior Olympic games” prome
by a number. of newspapers.
| same | train |
| BOULDER, Colo, May 10, (2>—
‘Joe Walker was convicted yesterda}
ue second degree murder in the rape
‘slaying of coed Theresa Foster by
‘a jury which sald it sought divine
iguidanece,
| The verdict carries a penalty o!
(10 vears to life in prison.
| District Judge George Bradfield
jeranted the defense 30 days in which
(to file for a new trial. He delayed
sentencing until then.
Walker only shook his head wher
‘he heard the verdict. It was deliv-
ered gust an hour short of three day:
ifrom the Ume the jury took the
‘case against the 32-year-old metal
| worker,
| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
_ An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
‘prisoners captured after last
Weekend's invasion, One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan _ Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Associated
| Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
‘peated troop movement instruc-
| tons it had sent out during the
night.
| It had told earlier of new small
‘landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
‘Cuba for a new invasion assault.
| A dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
‘city of fear and suspicion. It said
'a new wave of arrests and deten-
‘tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
‘described as growing worse.
The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
'as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
‘one of Castro's top aides, was
'seriously wounded in the head
‘earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing-
ton from a diplomatic source in
Havana.
_ The diplomatic source said a
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
_vincial hospital where Guevara al-
‘legedly was taken. Guevara, 32,
is Cuba's economic czar.
The government radio network
/Said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
“unseen in public for almost a
| week, was personally directing
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
| different | train |
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)—Maj
Bob White flew the X15 rocket plane to a new controll-
ed flight speed record of 3,140 miles an hour Friday.
despite engine trouble and a leak in his pres: Tized |
The new mark is 235
. faster than White's
previous record of 2,905
mph. last March 7, but
the Air Force officer said he felt
no sensation of greater speed.
The engine trouble came a split
second affer ihe X15 dropped
iaway from its B52 mother ship
140 miles east of here above Hid-
den Hills, Calif.
The engine ignited briefly, then
cut oul. For the next 30 seconds,
while the X15 fell helplessly from
45.000 feet to 37,000 feel. White
labored frantically to get the en-
gine restarted.
Finally he succeeded. The en-
-gine’s 57.000 pounds of thrusl
‘came on at full throttle, driving
‘him back in his seat with a force
three times that of normal
gravity.
| While zvumed {ov 80,000 feel, the
altitude at which he reached the
‘new specd record, then shut off
his engine.
| AL 90.000 feel his pressurized
‘eahin sprang a leak. Instantly
|and automatically, his space-iype
flying suit inflated to compensate
‘or the loss ef pressure in the
cabin.
"TP owas still able to function
normally.” White said. so he con-
tinued the flight
Momentum carried him on to
105.000 feet. close ta the planned
peak for the flight. Then came
the long giige back to hase.
| scOW (P) — Premier
wikia s. Khrushchev warned
President Kennedy today that
an American attack on Cuba
might be followed by a Soviet
attack against U. S. foreign
bases which he said threaten
Russia’s security.
Khrushchev said he had in-
controvertible proof the Unit-
ed States prepared the inva-
sion of Cuba and said, “Mr.
president, you are adopting a
very dangerous path. Ponder
t ”
HE SAID Kennedy has dis-
played a morality of gangster-
ism toward Cuba. He said he
had proof the United States
prepared, financed, armed and
fransported the “mercenary
bands” which invaded Cuba,
(The White House had no
immediate comment on the
Khrushchev message.)
He said the colonial system
is crumbling and becoming a
thing of the past and “for its
rt the Soviet Union is doing
everything to expedite the pro-
cess.”
“AND OF THAT we are
proud’” Khrushchev said.
Khrushchev said the United
States started on the road to
plunder when it seized For-
mosa and that now the United
States threatens war in case
(Communist) China takes steps
for a reunion with Taiwan.
“This is being done by a na-
tion which has officially rec-
ognized that Taiwan belongs to
China,” Khrushchev said.
Khrushchev said Kennedy’s
pronouncements to newsmen”
are bound to plunge the en-
tire world info alarm” and
questioned his statement if
might be necessary to apply
military force if necessary,
—0—
MESA, Ariz, UPD — Sen. Bar-
ry Goldwater said today he
would recommend active mili-
tary intervention in Cuba if
all else failed.
The Arizona Republican —
who met with President Ken-
nedy Friday in Washington for
a briefing — said the United
States cannot permit a Com-
munist country to exist so
close to its shores.
“As of this morning,’ he
fold a Rotary conference, “this
country is in greater danger
than it has ever been.
| different | train |
EDWARDS AIR FORCE. BASE,
Calif. (AP)—Maj. Bob White flew
the X15 rocket plane to a new
controlled flight speed record of
3,140 miles an hour Friday, de-
spite engine trouble and a leak
in his pressurized cabin.
The new mark is 2% m.p.h.
faster than White's previous rec-
ord of 2,905 m.p.h. last March 7,
but the Air Force officer said he
felt no sensation of greater speed.
The engine trouble came a split
second after the X15 dropped
away from its B52 mother ship
140 miles east of here above Hid-
den Hills, Calif.
The engine ignited briefly, then
cut out. For the next 3%) seconds,
while the X15 fell helplessly from
45,000 feet to 37,000 feet, White
labored frantically to get the en-
gine restarted.
Finally he succeeded. The en-
gine’s 57,000 pounds of thrust |
came on at full throttle, Giving |
him back in his seat with a force
three times that of normal |
gravity.
White zoomed to 80,000 feet, the
altitude at which he reached the.
new speed record, then shut off
his
engine.
At 90.000 feet his
cabin sprang a leak. Instantly |
and automatically, his space-type |
flying suit inflated to compensate
for the loss of pressure in the
cabin.
“I was still able to function
normally,’’ White said, so he con-
bisescad thin links
| EDWARDS AIN FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP)—A test pilot coolly
describes as ‘‘just routine” a trou-
ble-plagued flight in the X15 rock-
et plane that set a new controlled
flight speed record of 3,140 miles
an hour.
Air Force Maj. Bob White
zoomed more than 50 miles a
minute to an altitude of 103,000
feet Friday, thus breaking the
old record of 2,905 m.p.h. he had
set last March 7.
‘There were tense moments dur-
ing the 11-minute flight~when the
engine quit temporarily and mo-
ments later when the swept-wing
Dart’s pressurized cabin sprang
a leak.
White later brushed aside the
miscues, saying, “We expect
some unusual things to show up
in an experimental program.”
Seconds after the X15 dropped
from its B52 mother plane at 45,-
000 feet, its rocket engine quit.
The X15 dropped 7,000 feet while
White frantically tried to re-start
the” engine. At 37,000 feet the
rocket engine’s 57,000 pounds of
thrust came on at full throttle,
slamming White back in the
cockpit seat with a force three
times that of gravity. Over the
radio came White’s unemotional:
“That was quite a boost.”
White pulled the X15 into a
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rocket plane shot like ‘a bullet
on its first full power run. At
80,000 feet, White had his record
and shut off the engine.
His momentum carried him still
higher. At 90,000 feet, the cabin
sprang a leak and White com-
pensated by inflating his space-
type flying suit. At 103,000 feet
the X15 reached the top of its
flight and White eased the plane’s
nose gently into a glide back to a
landing on a nearby dry lake.
| different | train |
ABOARD USS TICON.
DEROGA (AP) — Skylab’s as-
tronauts came home safely
from man’s longest space jour-
ney today and despite some
early dizziness and lighthea-
dedness, they were pronoucned
in excellent physical condition.
Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Jo-
seph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz shunned stretchers to
walk somewhat unsteadily
across the deck of this recov-
ery carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from
the Apollo ferry ship to a med-
ical laboartory indicated the
astornauts had suffered some
initial effects in gravity after
a record four weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
But commander Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachut-
ed toward a pinpoint landing
in the Pacific after an 11-
million-mile journey: “We're
all in good shape. Evervthing’s
OK.”
Dr. Royce Hawkins, the as:
tronauts’ chief physician, con.
firmed this after consulting;
with doctors on the carrier. He
told newsmen at the Houstor
Space Center:
“They look quite good. They
appear far better than I ex-
pected. They're excellent.”
Hawkins said Conrad, a vet-
eran of three previous space
flights, was in the best condi-
tion, with normal blood pres-
sure and pulse and only slight
lightheadedness.
He said both Kerwin and
Weitz suffered from dizziness
and lightheadedness and that
Weitz’ blood pressure at first
was on the low side.
After splashdown Kerwin
blew up an inflatable suit over
the lower part of his body to
help increase blood circulation,
Hawkins said.
The astronauts splashed
down right on target, just 6%
miles from the Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later,
still inside the Apollo, they
were on the carrier deck.
| ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP) —
Skylab’s astronauts came home safely
from man’s longest space journey today
and shunned stretchers to walk smartly but
unsteadily across the deck of this recovery
carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from the Apollo
ferry ship to a medical laboratory
indicated Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph
P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz had suffered
some effects from a record four weeks’
exposure to space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad reported as the
Apollo parachuted toward a pinpoint
landing in the Pacific after an 11-million-
mile journey: ‘‘We’re all in good shape.
Everything’s ok.”
They splashed down right on target, just
6% miles from the Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later, still inside the
Apollo, they were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how they might
react to earth’s gravity after their long
weightless exposure, were prepared to lift
them out on litters.
But, after consultation with doctors,
Kerwin, a physician, said they could walk
to the medical trailer where they began six
hours of extensive medical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from the hatch
ami-saluted as the ship’s band struck up
“Anchors Aweigh’’ for the-all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant steps at
first but gradually picked up steam as he
reached the medical lab door. Kerwin was
slightly stooped and both he and Weitz
were somewhat unsteady in their steps.
Doctors assisted both Kerwin and Weitz
by holding onto one arm of each.
Experts immediately began removing
thousands of feet of film and tape and
equipment from medical, earth resources
and astronomy experiments that may tell
man much about his earth, his sun and his
physical being.
How well Conrad; Kerwin and Weitz
fared in the weightless world will play a
major role in determining if man can func-
tion efficiently in future long-duration
flights.. The first of the two 56-day Skylab
missions is.scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were held over in
orbit today to try to repair a refrigeration
problem in their space station. But mission
control decided there was nothing the
astronauts could do and told them to come
ishome.
ja Ten minutes behind schedule, Carad,
Kerwin and Weitz undocked their Apollo
ferry ship and executed a series of
maneuvers that sent them slamming into
the atmosphere above Thailand for the
fiery descent.
The Apolio craft hit the calm blue waters
at 8:50. a.m. CDT about 830 miles southwest
of San Diego, Calif. It was just after dawn
off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga quickly
steamed alongside the three-ton Apollo and
tossed a line to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and the
astronauts to an elevator for a ride to the
hangar deck.
Hundreds of white-clad sailors on deck
and millions watching television around
the world once again had a ringside seat to
a U.S. man-in-space landing as the Apollo
craft floated down through low-hanging
clouds and dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
“Everyone’s in super shape,’ Conrad
said as the spacecraft bobbed on the water
awaiting pickup. Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to secure the
spacecraft with flotation collars.
The Ticonderoga reported the astronauts
had landed 6% miles from the ship and that
the ship was 6% miles from the target
point, indicating a perfect touchdown.
| different | train |
ABVUARD USS LILUNVDEDNUUA LAr) —
Skylab’s astronauts came home safely
today from man’s longest space journey
and shunned stretchers to walk smartly
but unsteadily across the deck of this
recovery carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from the Apollo
ferry ship to a medical laboratory in-
dicated Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz had suffered
some effects from a record four weeks’
exposure to space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad reported as the
Apollo parachuted toward a_ pinpoint
landing in the Pacific after an 11-million-
mile journey: ‘‘We’re all in good shape.
Everything’s OK.”
They splashed down right on target, just
642 miles from the Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later, still inside the
Apollo, they were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how they might
react to earth’s gravity after their long
weightless exposure, were prepared to lift
them out on litters.
But, after consultation with doctors,
Kerwin, a physician, said they could walk
to the medical trailer where they began six
hours of extensive medical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from the hatch
and saluted as the ship’s band struck up
“Anchors Aweigh’”’ for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant steps at
first but gradually picked up steam as he
reached the medical lab door. Kerwin was
slightly stooped and both he and Weitz
were somewhat unsteady in their steps.
Doctors assisted both Kerwin and Weitz
by holding onto one arm of each.
Experts immediately began removing
thousands of feet of film and tape and
equipment from medical, earth resources
and astronomy experiments that may tell
man much about his earth, his sun and his
physical being.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz
fared in the weightless world will play a
major role in determining if man can
function efficiently in future long-duration
flights. The first of the two 56-day Skylab
missions is scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were held over in
orbit today to try to repair a refrigeration
problem in their space station. But Mission
Control decided there was nothing the
astronauts could do and told them to come
home.
Ten minutes behind schedule, Conrad,
Kerwin and Weitz undocked their Apollo
ferry ship and executed a series of
maneuvers that sent them slamming into
the atmosphere above Thailand for the
fiery descent. ee.
The Apollo craft hit the calm blue waters
at 9:50 a.m. EDT about 830 miles south-
west of San Diego, Calif. It was just after
dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga quickly
steamed alongside the three-ton Apollo
and tossed a line to frogmen in the water.
A orane then lifted the craft and the
astronauts to an elevator for a ride to the
hangar deck.
Hundreds of white-clad sailors on deck
and millions watching television around
the world again had a ringside seat to a
U.S. man-in-space landing as the Apollo
craft floated down through low-hanging
clouds and dangling under three huge
| EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP)—A test pilot coolly
'deseribes as ‘ust routine” a trou-
'ble- plagued flight in the X15 rock-
‘et plane that set a new controlled
flight speed record’ of 3,140 miles
an hour.
Air Force Maj. Bob White
zoomed more than 50 miles a
‘minute to an altitude of 103,000
feet Friday, thus breaking the
old record of 2,905 m.p.. he had
‘set last March 7
| There were tense moments dur-
ing the 1i-minute flight—when the
‘engine quit temporarily and mo-
‘ments later when the swept-wing
'Dart's pressurized cabin sprang
‘a leak.
| White Jater brushed aside the
miscues, saying, ‘We expect
some unusual things to show up
jin an experimental program.”
| Seconds after the X15 dropped
from its B52 mother plane at 45.-
000 feet, its rocket engine quit.
The Xi5 dropped 7.000 feet while
White frantically tried to re-start
the engine. At 37.000 feet the
recket engine’s 57.000 pounds of
thrust came on at full throttle.
slamming White back in the
cockpit seat with a force three
times that of gravity. Over the
radio came White's unemotional:
“That was quite a boost.”
White pulied the X15 into a
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rocket plane shot like a bullet
on its first full power run. At
80.000 feet. White had his record
and shut off the engine.
His momentum carried him still
higher. At 90.000 feet. the cabin’
sprang a leak and White com-
pensated by inflating his space-
type flving suit. At 103.000 feet
the X15 reached the top of its
flight and White eased the plane's
nose cently into a glide back to a
landing on a nearby dry lake.
| different | train |
BISMARCK, N. D., Aug. 28.-—
(UP)—Governor Arthur G. Sorlie,
of North Dakota died here at 3:45
a. m. today of heart disease. He
was 54 years old and had twice
been elected governor on a -re-
publican ticket. Mrs. Sorlie and
other members of the family were
at the bedside.
| Bismarck, N. D., Aug. 28.--(UP)—
Governor Arthur G. Sorlie, of North
Dakota. died here at 6°45 a. m, to-
day of heart disease. He was 54
years old and had twice been elect-
ed governor on a Republican ticket.
Mrs. Sorlie and other members of
the family were at the bedside. His
death was not unexpected.
Bowsers Dollar Shoe Sale for best
bargains.
| same | train |
ABOARD USS TICON.
DEROGA (AP) — Skylab’s
jaatronauta came home safe-
Hy today from man’s long~
leat space journey and shiuri-
ned stretchers to walk
sinartly but —unsteadily
across the deck of this re-
covery carrier.
‘The wobbly 69 ateps-from the
Apollo ferry ship’to a. medical
laboratory indicated’ Charles
Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph, P. Ker-
win ant Paul J. Weitz had suf-
fered some eifecta from a
Tecord four weeks’ exposute to
space weightlessnean,
But: Commander ‘Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachuted
toward a pinpoint landing in
the Pacific after an 11-millign-
‘mile journey: “We're all in
geod shape. Everything's OK,"
‘They splashed down right on
target, just 644 miles from the
Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later,
still inside the Apollo, they
were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how
they might react to earth's
gravity after their Jong weighs
lesa exposure, were prepared
to Ltt them out on litters,
But, after -consuliation._with.
doctors, Kerwin, a physitian,
said they could walk ‘to the
medical traiter where they be=
gan six hours of extensive met=
ica} debriefing,
‘They emerged smiling from
the hitch and satuted as the
steps at first bit gradually
picked up atcam ag he reached
the medical lab door. Kerwin
was slightly stooped and both
he and Weitz were somewhat
unsteady in their steps.
Doctots assisted bolh Kerwin
and Weltz by holding onto one
atm of each,
Experls immediately began
removing thousands of foet of
tlm and tape and equipment
from medical, earth resources
and astronomy —experimente
thot may tell man mich shout
his earth, his sum and hin physi.
cal being.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightlesy
world will play a major rate in
determining if man tan func.
tion offictenily in future long~
duration flights. The flrst of the
two 58-day Skylab missions ia
scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit taday to try
lo repair a refrigeration prob-
lem in their space station, But
Misslon Control decided thera
Was nothing the astronauts
could do and told them to come
home,
‘Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Welt: un+
docked thelr Apailo ferry ship
and executed a series of
Maneuvers that gent them
slamming into the atmosphere
above Thaltend for the flery de-
acent.
The Apolta craft hit the calm
blue waters at 9:50 a.m. EDT
about 80 miles southwest af
San Diego, Callf. Tt wag just
alter dawn off the West Conat.
The 42,000-ton ‘Ticonderoga
’Qontinued om Pare $
| CHICAGO, Aug. 286.—44)-~-Over
the wire into the Cragin police sta-
tion early today came these words:
“May God have mercy on me. I
have just killed my son. Come
here.”’
Police squads sped to the home
of Arthur FP. Palk, northwest park
commissioner, where they found
Falk, kneeling in prayer on the
floor of a front room. Nearby his
wife and daughter wept hysterical-
ly
Upstairs, in a bedroom, police
found the body of Eldred Falk, 22,
his head almost severed from the
body by shotgun bullets.
A disconnected story as told by
Paik, his wife and daughter, was
that a dispute arose between father
and son during which the youth
announced he was going to leave
“You'll only leave here dead,” was
what police say Falk senior re-
plied.
The son then dared his father to
shoot, according to the story told
police. Falk got his shotgun and
the shooting followed.
| different | train |
ABOARD USS_ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came home safely today
from man’s longest space jour-
ney and shunned stretchers to
walk smartly but unsteadily
across the deck of this recovery
carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from the
Apollo ferry ship to a medical
laboratory indicated Charles
Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz had suf-
fered some effects from a
record four weeks’ exposure to
space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachuted
toward a pinpoint landing in
the Pacific after an 11-million-
mile journey: ‘‘We'’re all in
good shape. Everything’s OK.”’
They splashed down right on
target, just 6% miles from the
Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later,
still inside the Apollo, they
were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how
they might react to earth's
gravity after their long weight-
less exposure, were prepared to
lift them out on litters.
But, after consultation with
doctors, Kerwin, a physician,
said they could walk to the
medical trailer where they be-
gan six hours of extensive med-
ical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from
the hatch and saluted as the
ship’s band struck up “Anchors
Aweigh” for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant
steps at first but gradually
picked up steam as he reached
the medical lab door. Kerwin
was slightly stooped and both
he and Weitz were somewhat
See SKYLAB, Page 2
| WASHINGTON (AP) — The
leaders of the world’s two nu-
clear superpowers pledged in a
landmark agreement today to
regulate their relations in a
way to reduce the risk of nucle-
ar war.
President Nixon and Soviet
Communist party Secretary
Leonid I. Brezhnev reached the
accord in the fifth day of their
summit talks and prepared to
sign it at the White House be-
fore heading for California
where they will conclude their
meetings Sunday.
In addition to its application
to U.S.-Soviet relations, the
agreement applies also to the
relations of either party with
other countries. In this way, al-
though technically bilateral, the
agreement has multilateral im-
plications. |
The two leaders declared in
the agreement that they were
“conscious that nuclear war
would have devastating con-
sequences for mankind’ and
said they wanted “to bring
about conditions in which the
danger of an outbreak of nucle-
ar war anywhere in the world
would be reduced and ultimate-
ly eliminated.”
They pledged their countries
to ‘‘act in such a way as to pre-
vent the development of situ-
ations capable of causing a
dangerous exacerbation of their
relations, as to avoid military
confrontations, and as to ex-
clude the outbreak of nuclear
war between them and between
either of the parties and other
countries.” |
Nixon and Brezhev also
agreed that their countries
“will refrain from the threat or
the use of force against the oth-
er party, against the allies of
the other party and against oth-
er countries, in circumstances
which may endanger _inter-
national peace and security.”
At a news conference prior to
the formal signing, presidential
assistant Henry A. Kissinger
skirted questions on whether
this clause would forbid U.S.
bombing of Cambodia or would
have prevented the Soviet in-
vasion of Czechoslovakia.
Kissinger noted, however,
that U.S. air strikes against
Communist forces in Cambodia
were under way at the time the
agreement was being nego-
tiated and that the bombing
“was not raised as applying to
that particular situation.”
When newsman asked
whether the agreement would
forestall any Soviet action
against China, Kissinger re-
sponded that the accord was
“not conceived as _ protection
for any country” but added it
would “have the practical con-
sequence of applying to the sit-
uation you described.” |
“I'll see you tomorrow at the|
signing,’’ Nixon reminded)
Brezhnev just before midnight
Thursday as he left the Soviet).
Embassy after a banquet of |!
vaviar, borscht, Russian beef ||
and fish, two kinds of vodka |‘
and Soviet champagne.
The agreement is of unlimit-|'
od duration and, unlike a
reaty, does not require Senate ||
‘atification. |
The 600-word document calls
or the countries to “imme-
liately enter into urgent con-
sultations’”’ at any time inter-
iational tensions reach a point
vhere the risk of nuclear war
s involved.
The agreement was reached
is the two leaders looked ahead | §
© a reunion summit in Moscow
n 1974—the target date for for-| ,
nally limiting the atomic arse-| .
ials of the two countries.
| different | train |
| BONN, Germany. (UP) —
‘The lower house of Parliament
‘began final aclion on the West
jGerman rearmamient pacts to-
‘day. Passage was believed as-
‘sured despite a serious split in
i Chancellor Konrad Adenaver's
jgoalibion government,
Hondreds af police ringed the
uilding Jong before opening of the
Icbate lo guard against Commu-
Inist demonstraliuns, ‘They were
joined during the night by 500 re-
enforcements from neighboring ci-
ties and strengthened by twa riot
jsduads armed with waler cannon,
; A heayy snow began falling aut-
yside the Parliament building and
! See ARMING PACTS
| (Page 10, Celurmn 1)
</s> | BONN, Germany (UF}—The tow.
er house of Parliament began final
action on the West German re-
armament pacts today, Passage
Was believed assured despite a ser:
lous split in Chancellar Konrad
Adenauer'a coalitlon government,
Uundreda of police yinged the
huliding long before opening of the
debate sto guard against Gomme
nist demonstrations, They were,
Joined during the night by #00 re-
intorcoments from neighboring ei-
tles-and strengthened by two rit
squads armed wilh waler cannon,
</s> | same | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP} — Skylab's astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 2 8days and 11 mil-
dion miles in orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touch-
down Charles Conrad Jr., Dr.
Joseph P. Kerwin and Pau! J.
Weitz were hoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their’ Apollo ferry
ship.
“We're all in good shape.By-
erylhing’s OK,” commander
Conrad radioed as the space-
eraft descended through the
clouds and landed within view
of USS Ticonderoga, just 6%
miles away. That indicated the
astronauts had suffered no ad-
verse physical reactions on re-
turning to earth’s gravity after
a record four weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
Ten minutes ‘Jater they
climbed through the hatch,
smiled and waved as the ship's
band played ‘‘Anchors Aweigh”
for the all-Nayy Skylab crew.
They walked unsteadily to-
ward a mobile medical labora-
dory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ exposure
to weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can fune-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flihts. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
Scheduled for launch July 27.
Tne astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today to try
to repair a refrigeration prob-
Jem in. their space station, But
Mission Control decided there
was nothing the astronauts
could do‘and told them to come
home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
and executed a_ series of
maneuvers that sent them
slamming into the almosphere
above Thailand for the fiery de-
scent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
blue waters at 9:50 am. EDT
about 830 miles southwest of
San Diego Calif. It was just
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000on Ticonderoga
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tossed a
Hine to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
fhe astronauts to an elevator
for a ride to the hangar deck.
| ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP) ”
Skylab’s astronauts came home safely
foday fram man’s longest space journey
and shunned stretchers lo walk smartly
but unsteadily across the deck of this
revovery carrier.
‘The wobbly 60 steps froin the Apollo
ferry ship to a medical laboratory
indicated Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Jaseph
P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz had suffered
some effects from-a record faur weeks
exposure to space weighticssness. .
But Commander Conrad repurted as the
Apollo parachuted toward 4 pinpuint
landing in the Pacifie after an LL mitlian-
mile journey: "We're alk in goud shape.
Sverylhing’s OK.”
‘They splashed down right on target, just
62 fram the ‘Ticonderaga. 5
Thirty-nine minutes later, still inside
the Apollo, they were an the carrier deck,
Deetors. not knowing how they righ
iy alter their jong
are prepared te Lift
react lo earth's gravil
weighlicss exposure,
item out un litters.
‘Anchors Aweigh fur the all-Navy crew
Conrad walked with |esilaat steps at
first but gradually picked up steam as he
reached the nroidical lat door. Kerwin was
slightly stooped andi hott he and Weite
were somewhat unsteady in Choir steps
Doctors assisted both Kerwin and Weitz
by holding onty ave arin af cach.
Experts immediately began removing.
thousands of fect of film and tape and
equipment iran medical, earth cesources
and astronomy experiments that may
fell man much dhout his earth. Ing sun and
his physical being.
Dr. R Hawking. Ule astronauts
chief physician. confirmed this aher
consulting with Hiectars an the carries. He
told newsinen at the Houston Space
Center
“They look quite gacd. They appear far
better than | expected They're
excellent.”
| different | train |
FF OSE a 6 lhl ow
WASHINGTON — The De-
fense Department says it—and
not two indignant Democratic
senators is responsible for a $10,-
000 special plane flight to bring
them home from Europe.
The Pentagon put out not long
after Senators McClellan (D-
Ark) and Stennis (D-Miss) step-
ped off a sg, mn 4 scheduled
Military Air Transport Service
plane from Paris. ;
The Pentagon apology backed
up the senatorial versions, say-
ing McClellan and Stennis “are
in no way responsible” for the
special flight and “it is: tted
that the incident caused embar-
rassment to the senators.”
</s> | WASHINGTON (t — The Defense Department says-it —-and-not
two indignant Democratic senators — is responsible for a $10,000 spe-
cial plane flight to bring-them home from Burope.
The Pentagon put out its public, apology. yesterday not long after
Senators McClellan’ (D-Ark) and Stennis (D-Miss) stepped olf. a regu-
larly scheduled Military Air Transport Service plane from Paris.,
McClellan and Stennis bric:ea att
reports they ‘had: demanded special
treatment: Earlier, the Defense De-
partment had -said it: dispatched a
88-passenger plane to pick-up the
touring:. ‘Senate’ Appropriations
Committee members at-Madrid.be-
cause. it-didn't ave regular -trans-
part. from that, area on the dates
the-senators wanted: to return, ©
The new, Pentagon statoment-said
that at the request of Sen. Chavez
(D-NM), another, Appropriations
Committee member who. plans to
fly back from Europe Nov. 3, a spe-
cial flight planned.to fetch him has
been canceled,
Chavez ‘said ‘last week he had
"requested nothing” by ‘wai
had’ been-estimated: at'$20' 007
McClellan suggested to news:
men that the Republicans’ in
charge of the Defense Department
might have been. trying to embar-
rass the returning travelers, who
have been abroad with their wives
oh committee business: and ‘thus
entitled to free government trans-
nortation: *
</s> | same | train |
MOSCOW (P—Soviet Premier
ikita Khrushchev told President
ennedy today the invasion of
tha is “a crime which has re-
ited the whole world.”
“It has been established incon-
pvertibly that it was the United
ates that prepared the inter-
mtion, jimanced, armed and
ansported the mercenary bands
hich invaded Cuba,” Khrush-
ev said in a message to Presi-
int Kennedy, handed to FP. L.
‘eers, U. S. charge d atiaires.
"Mr. President, vou are follow.
— a very dangerous path,”
wrushchey said, “Ponder that.”
| WASHINGTON, April 22 (2)
—President Kennedy today ap-
pointed Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor,
former Army Chief of Staff, to
make a special survey of U.S.
capabilities. in the field of “non-
conventional” warfare such as
guerrilla activity.
Taylor immediately went on
the job. He attended a meeting
this morning of- the National
Security Council — one of the
few sessions of that major de-
fense group since Kennedy took
office,
Pierre Salinger, White House
Press Secretary, said that “non-
conventional” warfare in this
case is not used in the usual
sense of nuclear warfare but of
tactical operations,
Salinger said Kennedy decided
within the last few days that
such a survey is necessary and
asked Taylor Friday to conduct
it.
The study clearly was inspired
by events of the past week in
Cuba,
The White House announce-
ment was made only two hours
before Kennedy was to meet
former President Dwight D.
Eisenhower at Camp David, Md.
{Kennedy arranged that meeting
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the unsuccessful rebellion
jagainst Cuban Premier Fidel
i rite
bc: wed See: Whee: a
| different | train |
May 9 ¢7—Walter
appealed rectiy 10
Ford Il today to resume
strike peace talks tomor-
row and Ford promptly accepted.
y g corspany oresident
rejected, howev Reuther’s In-
attend the conference
He also turned down
i Auta Workers
ident's challenge to a debate
ne peace talks fi =
Ford said his company wes go-
t into negotiations on the
peed-up” charge “on the
ptien that they will be con-
wed umtil this strike can be
brought to a close.”
He suggested that the peace
parler start at 2 p. m tomorrow.
'Reuther had suggested a resump-
if talks tomorrow morning.
agreeable time and
i
Debate Proposed
Reuther had proposed a debate
between Ford and himself in
Briggs Stadium Saturday or Sun-
{cay night if no agresment were
‘reached by Friday.
| Of this Ford said nothing “use-
ful can be accomplished by a pub-
lic debate on this matter.”
ues in this strike,” he
must be resolved on their
merits and by conscientious effort
at the bargaining table by both
i parties, and not by emotional ap-
peals."”
Ford said the company will be
“represented ai the peace talks by
!3oan S. Bugas, vice president in
charge of industrial relations.
Bugas headed the company dele-
gation last Thursday when nego-
jtiations were broken off.
Buras Qualified
Bugas, Ford said, “is fully in-
formed as to all Ford Motor Co.
policies” He “has the full sup-
port and backing of the manage-
jMent of ihis company.” he added,
“and has the responsibility for
speaking for it on all matters in-
volving relationships with your
union.” -
The company president said he
hoped for a quick settlement ‘zo
ithat the undue hardships being
suffered by thousands may, be
ended.”
Ford previously had expressed
willingness to negotiate the speed-
up issue. but said arbitration
would be the quickest and most
iefective means of settlement.
He had suggested that an indug-
ivial engineer consultant be called
in to determine whether assembly
ilines in one building of the big
Rouge plant make employes work
too fast
Toe UAW had contended that it
was a “human” preblem that
could be settled fairly only
ithrough direct negotiations.
Reuther said that if Ford would
[attend the renewed peace talks he
{would be “apprized of all the facis
lin the situation which you
tobviousiy do not have.”
His letter. detivered to Ford at
D. m., was answered less than
‘2 Hours later.
:
| ‘ Detroit . (AP) - Walter Reuther appealed directly to
Henry Ford II yesterday to resume Ford strike peace talks’
today and Ford promptly accepted. The young company
president rejected, however, Reuther’s invitation to attend
the conference personally. He also turned down the CIO
United Auto Workers president's challenge to a debate if
the peace talks fail.
Ford said his company was going
back into negotiations on the union's
“speed-up” charge “on the asstimp-
tion that they will be continued
until this strike can be brought to
a close.”
Public Debate Spurned
He suggested a resumption of
talks at 2 p.m., today. Reuther had
suggested a resumption of talks this
morning, at a mutually agreeable
time and place.
Reuther had proposed a debate
between Ford and himself in Briggs
Stadium Saturday or Sunday night
if no agreement were reached by
Friday.
Of this Ford said nothing “useful
can be accomplished by a public
debate on this matter.”
Reuther's invitation was the first
move by either side since the union
etruck Ford's big Rouge and Lincoln-
Mercury plants last Thursday noon
Negotiations were broken off within
minutes after the walkout began
The ijasue is a union charge of a
preduction speed-up.
Mediation Turned Down
Ford had rejected mediation of-
fers by Acting Mayor George Ed-
wards of Detroit and Mayor Orville
L. Hubbard of Dearborn, home o!
the company's key Rouge pliant.
Im rejecting Edwards’ second pro-
posal yesterday, however, he saic
the company still was willing tc
negotiate the technical argumen'
over production standards. He stil
maintained that the dispute could
Reuther’s peace overture « came as
thousands of workers in other Ford
plants and supplier firms were fac-
ing layoffs.
Only about 5,000 additional Ford
workers have been idied indirectly
eo far by the strikes at the twe
plants.
Piant Closings Arranged
Yesterday, however, the compan’
ennounced a timetable for future
plant closings. It indicated ftha'
virtually all its vast industrial em.
pire would be shut down within s
week.
By nightfall today, 14.000 mors
Ford workers are slated for layoffs
The list will increase through Friday
eccording to the timetable. wit!
materials in transit scheduled t
keep the Los Angeles plant operat.
ing until Monday.
| same | train |
Shelby, N. C.—(P)—SIx persone
were \known to have been killed
and several more. were injured
‘when three buildings In the buai-
ness section collapsed here todays.
‘Several others known to have been
in the buildings are missing.
The known dead are: Miss Ora
Eskridge, an employe of the First
National bank; Zeb Blanton, a far-
mer and his son.Carl; Guy Green
and Alex Hoyle, clerks in the First
National -bank, one unidentified
whité man.
The buildings that collapsed
‘were the First Nattonal bank, in
temporary quarters, Goodes grocery
store and a tailor shop. No cause
for the collapse was given although
workmen were said to have been
excavating under the building.
“As construction crews worked
desperately to clear the tangled
wreckage it was feared that the
death toll would mount when the
basements of the collapsed struc-
tures were cleared.
A construction crew engaged in
excavating under the buildings was
still unaccounted for and Httle poa-
sibility of its escapes was seen.
The collapsed structures are the
First National bank, Goode’s xzro-
cery store and Hadley’s tailor shop.
Most of the injured, an early check
indicated, were employes or cus-
toners of the bark,
The excavation under the bulld-
ings was thought to. have caused
the collapse.
The crew doing the excavating
was said, to have numbered from
five to seven men, mostly negroes.
Mr, Hadley was thought to have
been in his shop and was still un-
accounted for after the first check.
Hospitals,. crowded with injured,
were unable to give accurate estl-
mates of the number brought in.
In addition. several persons Were
thought to have been alightly hurt
and to have mixed with the crowd
after recelylng first ald treatment. -
| ics og ee ARSOCiated Press}
el he BEES AUK ELSI X Yer-
sons were known to have been kill-
ed and several ‘Injuregd when three
buildings in the business section
collapsed here today. Several oth-
ers Known to have been in the build-
jing were missing.
The known dead are:
Miss Ora Breckenridge, an em-
ploye of the First National Bank;
Zeb Blanton, a farmer, and his son
Carl; Guy Green and Alex Hoyle,
clerks in the First National Bank,
and one unidentifieq white man.
Tre buildings were the First Na-
tional Bank, in temporary quarters;
Goodes Grocery Store, and a tailor
shir. Workmen were said to have
been excavating under the buildings
but the exact cause of the collapse
was not immediately determined.
George Blanton, acting viee pres-
iden: of the bank, escaped with mi-
nor -njuries, as did Forest Eskridge,
eashier. Clarence Mull, his assist-
ant, was injured in the head. His
injuries were said by physicians to
be serious.
Two other clerks were said to
have been buried in the debris. The
proprietor of the tailor shop was
missing and was reported to have
been buried in the ruins of his shop.
| Four bank clerks were un-
accounted for, but it was thought
possible that they were in the
crowds about the scene. A physi-
gian climbed, through dangerous
overhanging walls to treat a wom-
an bank clerk who was pinned un-.
der twisted steel and brick. | |
The two dead nezroes. were mem-
bers of the excavating crew at work
under the building. Others of the
crew are missing.
Construction gangs from all parts
of the city were working desperate-
ly to clear the wreckage and extri-
cate those who may still be alive.
Physicians .from all city hospitals
were called.
he wrecked buildings wer? alt
two story brick structures rarmnine
practically one unit which housed
the three establishements. The ex-
cavators were enlarging the base-
ment under the Hadley Tailor shop
in what was knows as the Mc-
Knight building.
' Five members of the excavaiing
erew were brought out alive early
thie afternoon suffering frem in-
juries of varying sericusness. They
said that the crew numbered about
17 men many of whom they beiieved
were entombed in the clevator shatt
ark prohably were alive.
Coan hactemamremenes © 2
WASHINGTON.—The new secre-
tary of cormmerce, William F. Whit-
ing, said the Republican pclitical
outlook in Massachusetts is “very
good.” ‘ . *
we
| same | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDERUGA AP-
-Skylab’s astronauts came home safcly from
man’s longest space journey today and
despite some early dizziness and light-
headedness, they were pronounced in excel-
lent physical condition.
Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin
and Paul J. Weitz shunned stretchers to walk
somewhat unsteadily across the deck of this
recovery carrier,
The wobbly 60 steps [rom the Apollo ferry
ship to a medical laboratory indicated the
astronauts had suffered some initial effects
in gravity after a record four weeks’
exposure to space weightlessness.
But commander Conrad reported as the
Apollo parachuted toward a pinpoint landing
in the Pacific after an 11-million-mile jour-
“ “We're all in good shape. Everything’s
IK."
They splashed down right on target, just
6% miles from the Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later, still inside the
Apollo, they were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how they might react
to earth’s gravity after their long weightless
exposure, were prepared to lift them out on
litters.
But, after consultation with doctors, Ker-
win, a physician, said they could walk to the
medical trailer where they began six hours
of extensive medica! debriefing.
They emerged smiling from the hatch and
saluted as the ship’s band struck up
“Anchors Aweigh’ for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant steps at firs
but gradually picked up steam ashe reachet
the medical lab door. Kerwin was slightls
stooped and both he and Weitz were some-
what unsteady in thelr steps.
Doctors assisted both Kerwin and Weitz
by holding onto one arm of each.
Experts immediately began removing
thousands of feet of film and tape and equip-
ment from medical, earth resources and
astronomy experiments that may tell man
much about his earth, his sun and his physi-
rr] heing,
| ABOARD USS_ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came home safely today
from man’s longest space jour-
ney and shunned stretchers to
walk smartly but unsteadily
across the deck of this recovery
carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from the
Apollo ferry ship to a medical
laboratory indicated Charles
Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz had suf-
fered some effects from a
record four weeks’ exposure to
space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad re-
ported as the Apollo parachuted
toward a pinpoint landing in
the Pacific after an 11-million-
mile journey: ‘‘We're all in
good shape. Everything's OK.”
They splashed down right on
target, just 614 miles from the
Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later,
still inside the Apollo, they
were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how
they might react to earth's
gravity after their long weigh-
tless exposure, were prepared
to lift them out on litters.
But, after consultation with
doctors, Kerwin, a_ physician,
said they could walk to the
medical trailer where they be-
gan six hours of extensive med-
ical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from
the hatch and saluted as the
ship's band struck up ‘‘Anchors
Aweigh” for the all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant
steps at first but gradually
picked up steam as he reached
the medical lab door. Kerwin
was slightly stooped and both
he and Weitz were somewhat
unsteady in their steps.
Doctors assisted both Kerwin
and Weitz by holding onto one
arm of each.
Experts immediately began
removing thousands of feet of
film and tape and equipment
from medical, earth resources
and astronomy = experiments
that may tell man much about
his earth, his sun and his physi-
cal being.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can func-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today to try
(Concluded on Page 2)
| different | train |
Washington, May 10 (P--
James P. Warburg. former New
York banker and writer on inter
national affairs, said at the sen-
ate's Atlantic pact hearings (co,
day that the real threat from
Russia is political and not mili-
dary.
“There has been and is a very
definite Soviet threar to peace.”
he said. “But this Soviet threat
has been and still is primarily
a threat of Communist penetra
tian, of subversian and only ser,
ondarily a threat af nilitvary
conquest.”
The foreign relations commit
tee heard Warburg as the first
witness on a speed-up schedule
leaders have mapped out with
the aim of getting senate ap-
proval by Jitly 1 of both the pact
and a $1.300,000.000 arms-for
Europe pregram.,
This stepped wp schedule was
arranged after a conferenern hy
Secretary of State Acheson wi
Senators Connaliv 10-Tex) and
Vardenhurg 'R-Mich'.
The pact would pledge the
tnited Slates, Canada and 1
Western European nations ta
mutual aid in eppasing aggres.
sion. Signed here April 4. i) will
hecame binding on ihe United
States only when approved hy a
two-thirds senate vote.
| WY FASPEESNAP LIN, IBY i, tie
James P. Warburg, former New
York banker writer on inter-
national affairs,’said at the Sen-
ate’s Atlantic Pact hearings to-
day that the real threat f
— is poltical ang not walk
ry.
“There has bhen and is a very
detinite Soviet! threat to peace.”
he said. “But this Soviet threat
has been and still is primarily a
threat of Communist penetration,
of subversion and only secondari-
ly a threat of military conquest.”
The Foreign Relations Come
mittee heard Warburg as the first
Witness on a speed-up schedule
mapped out with the aim of get-
ting Senate approval July 1
of both the pact and a $1,300,000,-
000 arms-for-Europe program,
| same | train |
RSPY SARUM S SUNS
WASHINGTON, August 28.—Th«
United States board of mediation an-
nounced today an agreement had beer
reached by the executive officers of the
Order of Railway Conductors of th
Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen anc
railroads of the western territory in th:
dispute involving rate pay and certatr
rules.
| tp et ay et
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28—(LP)—
Chairman Winslow of the federal
board of mediation announced today
that conductors, trainmen and rail-
roads of the western territory had
reached an agreement on rates of
pay and working rules; This prob-
ably ends danger of a threatenrd
strike, it was believed. The associa-
tion of general committees in ine
western territory must‘ratify the
agreement, failing which the dispute
“will be treated in: eccordance’ with
the law,” Winslow stated,
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
leaders of the world’s two nuclear
superpowers pledged in a land-
mark agreement today to regulate
their relations in a way to reduce
the risk of nuclear war.
President Nixon and Soviet Com-
munist Party Secretary Leonid I.
Brezhnev reached the accord in
the fifth day of their summit talks
and prepared to sign it at the
White House before heading on to
California where they will con-
clude their meetings on Sunday.
In addition to its application to
U.S.-Soviet. relations, the agree-
ment applies also to the relations
of either party with other coun-
tries. In this way, although techni-
cally bilateral, the agreement has
multilateral implications.
The two leaders declared in the
agreement that they were
‘conscious that nuclear war would
have devastating consequences
for mankind" and said they want-
ed “to bring about conditions in
which the danger of an outbreak
of nuclear war anywhere in the
world would be reduced and ulti-
mately eliminated.”
They pledged their countries to
“act in such a way as to prevent
the development of situations cap-
able of causing a dangerous exac-
erbation of their relations, as to
avoid military confrontations, and
as to exclude the outbreak of nu-
clear war between them and be-
tween either of the parties and
other countries.”
Nixon and Brezhnev also agreed
that their countries ‘will refrain
from the threat or the use of force
against the other party, against
the allies of the other party and
against other countries, in cir-
cumstances which may endanger
international peace and security.”
At a news conference prior tothe
formal signing, presidential as-
sistant Henry A. Kissinger skirted
questions on whether this clause
would forbid U.S. bombing of Cam-
bodia or would have prevented the
Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia.
Kissinger noted, however, that
U.S. air strikes against Commun-
ist forces in Cambodia were under
way at the time the agreement was
being negotiated and that the
bombing ‘‘was not raised as apply-
ing to that particular situation."
When a newsman asked whether
the agreement would forestall any
Soviet action against China, Kis-
singer responded that the accord
was ‘not conceived as protection
for any country” but added it
would ‘have the practical conse-
quence of applying to the situation
you described.”’
U.S. allies in Europe have ex-
pressed reservations in the past
about any agreements’ which
would restrict their use of Ameri-
can-supplied nuclear weapons in
the event of a massive, conven-
tional Soviet attack.
| WASHINGTON (AP) — Th
leaders of the world's two m
clear superpowers pledged in
landmark agreement foday |
regulate their relations m
e[way to reduce the msk of nauele-
I-far war
aj President Nixon and Soviet
0 Communist party Secretary
a'Loonid I. Brezhnev reached the
accord in ihe ith day of et
summit talks and prepared to
sign if at the White House be-
fore heading for California
where they will conclude their
meetings Sunday.
In_ addition to its application
to US.-Soviet relations, the
agreement applies also to the
relations of either party with
other countries. in this ware al-
though technically bilateral
agreement has multilateral im-
plications.
The two leaders declared in
ihe agreement that they were
“conscious that nuclear ‘ar
would have devastating con-
sequences for mankind’ and
said they wanted “to bring
about conditions in which the
danger of an outbreak of nucle-
ar war anywhere in the world
‘would be reduced and ultimate-
ly _climinated.”
They pledged their countries.
to “act in such a way as to pre-
vent the development of situ-
aliens capable of causing a
dangerous exacerbation of their
relations, as to avoid military
confrontations, and as to ex-
clude the outbreak of nuclear:
war between them and between
either of the patties and other
did edigienig Hernia tie aide 1
| same | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) -- Skylab's astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
tion miles in orbit. ;
Just 39 minutes after touch-
down, Charles Conrad Jr., Dr.
Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz were hoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their Apollo ferry
ship.
“We're all in good shape..Ev-
erything's OK," cammander
Conrad tadioed as the space-
craft descended through the
clouds and landed within view
of USS Ticonderoga, just 6%
miles away. That indicated the
astronauts had suffered no ad-
verse physical reactions on re-
turning to earth’s gravity after
a record fur weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
Ten minutes later they
climbed through the hatch,
smiled and waved as the ship’s
band played “Anchors Aweigh”
for the all-Navy Skylab crew.
‘They walked unsteadily to-
ward a mobile medical labora-
tory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ exposure
to weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weighiless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can func-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
Misson Control was kept in
suspense for most of the final
76 minvtes of the flight — 4 pe-
riod when the Apollo ship was
out of radio contact with
ground stations.
The ‘Ticonderaga's radar
picked up the streaking craft at
a distance of 188 miles, 10 min-
utes before landing.
While out of radio contact, al
9:11 a.m., the astronauts con
ducted the critical retrorocke
burn that slowed their 17,10
mile-an-hour speed by Ik
miles, allowing earth's graviq
to tug the spacecraft out of or
bit and start the long glide
through the atmosphere ta th
eastern Pacific.
The refrigeration troub!
caused considerable concern. 4
maneuver intended to correct |
caused a brief pyrascope prob-
lem that caused (he 10-minute
delay in the astronauts’ depar-
ture from the orbiting labora-
tory.
“We're free"! Conrad report-
ed seconds after the control
center flashed the go-ahead for
undocking from the 118-foal-
Jong laboratory, .
They feft behind a space sta-
lion which they had salvaged
with some darffig, difficult and
aften ingenious repair tasks
after it was damaged during
launching May 14.
After the undocking, the as-
tronauts made a 45-minute fly-
around inspection of the sta-
tion, televising pictures of the
add-looking space vehicle ta
mission control for evaluation
by experts.
Then, in quick succession,
they triggered the engine fir-
ings that gradually dropped
them closer to earth from their
original orbital altitude of 275
miles.
To get the astronauts to med-
ical trailers on board as quick-
ly as possible after landing, the
carrier was (0 steam to the
Apailo capsule and hoist it on
deck with a crane. In earlier
U.S. manned space flights, the
astronauts were plucked by
helicopter from their floating
spaceships.
Speed in retrieving the astro
nauts is essential because doc
, tars are keenly interested it
their initial reaction to eart!
: (Continued an Page 3A}
| | WASHINGTON (AP)—~President
‘Kennedy today appointed Gen.
Maxwell D. Taylor, former Army
chief of staff, to make a special
‘survey of U.S, capabilities in the
field of “nonconventional’ war-
fare such as guerrilla activity,
Taylor immediately went on the
job. He attended a meeting this
‘morning of the National Security
‘Council—one of the few sessions
of that major defense group since
Kennedy took office.
| Pierre Salinger, White House
‘press secretary, said that ‘‘non-
conventional” warfare in this case
is not used in the usual sense of
nuclear warfare but of tactical
‘operations,
| Salinger said Kennedy decided
within the last few days that such
a survey is necessary and asked
Taylor Friday to conduct it,
The study clearly was inspired
iby events of the past week in
iCuba,
| different | train |
| SHELBY GN, ©.), Aug. 28.—(%)-—
Six persons were known to’ have
been flied and several more
wers Injured when three bulld-
Ings in the bustneay section col-
lapsed here to-day. Bevernl others
in ths bulldirigs are missing,
| Fhe known dead art
Miss Ora Esleridgr. ‘an employe o€
the Firat. ational Rank; Zehh
lanton, « farmer, and his ron, ¢%
Guy Green and Alex Hoyle. clerk
in the Firat National Banks one un-
identified while man.
‘Three Ruildings Fat
‘The buildings that collapsed were
the First Netonel Bank in tempor-
ary quarters: Goode's Grocery Store,
and a tallor shop. Workmen were
anid ie have been excavating under
tha bullding.
As nonetruction crews werkad
desperately to clear the tanglad
lyerecknme tt wan feated that the
death toll would mount when the
Vasetuents of the collapsed struc:
tures were clenred.
A construction crew engaged I
exeayatlug under the building was
[ntlll unaccounted for and Jittle por
[sibility of {ts eacane wag eon.
/° Most nf the Injured. an ears
chack Indicated, were employes 0
customers of the bank.
The excavation under the build.
ings wag thought to have caused the
collapse.
7 Seven Wen At Wortr
Tho crew floing the exenvaline
was said in have numbered fren
fiva to eeven inen, mostly Negroes
George Blanton, acting view presi.
dent of thy bank, escaped witl
minor {njuties, #8 did ures! Esh-
yidge, caghler, Clarence Mull, as
aletant cashier, recefved a broker
leg and arm and cuts abeut thy
pend, His injuries were sald bh:
physiciang to be serious.
Two olher clerks were said t
have heen buried in the debris. TH
proprietor of the tallar shap wa
Lintssing and was reported to hay
been buried in tho rime of his ehoy
Your bank clerks were unac
counted for but tt waH thought nes
sible that they were in the crowd
Jabout the acene. A physiela
iimbed through dangervus over
hanging walla ww treat mk wom
pank clerk whn wns piuned unde
Uwisted steel] and brick,
| SHELBY, N. C., Aug. 28.
(AP) —-Six persons were
known to have been, killed
and several more .were in-
jured when three buildings
in the business section col-
lapsed here today. Several
others known to have been
jn the buildings are missing.
The known dead are:
Miss Ora Eskridge, an employee
of the First National bank; Seeb
Blanton, ay farmer, and his son
Cari; Guy Green and Alex Hoyle,
clerks in the First National bani;
one unidentiwied white man,
SHELBY, N. C., Aug. 28.—(P?)—
Three people were known to have
been killed and an undetermined
number Injurcd today when three
bulldings collapsed. The dead are
Miss Ora Eskridge, clerke in’ the
First National Bank; two uniden-
{tiffed negro laborers.
‘The bulldings -that collapsed
were the First National Bank, in
temporary quarters; Goodes Gro-
cery store, and a tailor shop. No
cause for the collapse was given
although workmen were sald to
have been excavating under the
building. ..
George Blanton, acting vice pres-
ident of the bank, escaped with
minor injuries, as did Forest Eske
ridge, cashler, Clarence Mul, ase
sistant cashier, reecived a broken
( Continued on Pago 12.)
| same | train |
Rerlin, May 10 —At one
minute past midnight Thurs.
day flagbedecked traffic will
end the epic. of © blockaded
Berlin. : :
That's 5:01 p.m. E. 8. T,
Wednesday.
So far there hasn't been a
hitch in. final arrangements, -
Gen. V. I. Chiukov, Soviet
commander in Germany, and
the Western. powers both:
have ordered that. transport,
trade and ‘communication
services between their sones
reaume at that time.
Things will revert back. to
the way they. were on March
1, 1948, when the blockade
began.
Bixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily, Highways will
be open. The Soviets won't—~or
at least assy they won't—demand
travel permits. They also say they
will not try to search: Allied bag-
gage. * ee
Mail service will be resumed.
‘Weatern Berlin's Mayor Ernest
Reuter ordered the black, red and
gold flag of the new Weat German
republic be flown on street cars
and buses. ,
_ The Berlin flag will be draned
over other buses which will speed
to the west German cities. of Han-
over, Hamburg and Frankfurt.
The first day, 16 trainloads of
coal and six others bf fresh pota-
toes and consumer goods are
echeduied to move Into the elty,
which has been supplied by the air
Ut for ten months: .
Twelve thousand tone of sup-
plies are to go into the city dally— .
just about the same figure the air
Ui reached on its best day.
While most of the world hailed
the end of the blockade as a Soviet
diplomatic defeat, the official 8o-
viet Army newspaper, Tregliche
Rundechau, today called it an “un-
questionable success of the policy
of unity which was always pursued
hy the Soviet Union and the pro-
Srenssive forces of Germany.”
The paper said that now that the
Berlin blockade was ending, “war-
maonhgera” would make new efforts
to split Germany—end claimed ap-
proval of the new West German
Democratic Constitation marked
auch an attempt. .
But throughout the border srea
there was excitement in the air as
witling workers instalied radio and
telephone equipment, repainted
border signs and clipped weeds be
side the long-neglected highways,
The British expected to have the
first train into the city. ?
| BERLIN (# —At one minute past
midnight Thursday flag- bedecked
traffie will end the epic of block-
aded Berlin.
That's 2:01 p. m., P. 5. T. Thuts-
day.
So far there hasn't been a hitch
in final arrangements.
Gen. V_ I. Chuikov, Soviet com-
mander in Germany, and the west-
ern powers both have ordered that
transport, trade and ¢ommunica-
tion services between their zones
resume at that time. a
Things will revert hack to fhe
way they were on Match 1, 1349,
when the blockade began.
Sixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily Highways will
be open. The Soviets won’t—or
at least say they won’t — demand
travel permits. They also say
they'll not try to search allied bag-
Rage.
Mail service will be resumed,
Western Berlin’s Mayor Ernest
Reuter ordered the black, red and
gold flag of the new West German
republic be flown on street cars
and buses.
The Berlin flag will be draped
over other buses which will speed
to the West German cities of Han-
over, Hamburg and Frankurt.
The first day, 10 trainloads of
coal and six others of fresh pota-
toes and consumer goods are sched-
uled to move into the city, which
has been supplied by the air lift for
ten_months.
Twelve thousand tons of supplies
are to go into the city daily — just
about the same figure the air lift
reached on its best day.
While most of the world hailed
the end of the blockade as a Soviet
diplomatic defeat, the official Sov-
ief army newspaper, Taegliche
Rundschaw, today called it an “un-
questionable success of the policy
of unity which was always pur-
‘used by the Soviet union and the
‘progressive forces of Germany.”
CELLE, Germany #—The men
who fly the airlift count the end of
the Berlin blockade as a person-
al triumph.
They claim it was their airlift
which won the “battle of Berlin.”
And they think this cold war vic-
tory deserves the usual war's end
recognition—a special holiday.
How about a V-B day, they say,
to celebrate “victory in Berlin.”
“We have V-E day for victory in
Europe and V-J day for victory in
Japan,” said Lt. Truman Lucgs of
Indiapgnajis, Ind, “So why md 2
‘V-B, day? This victory may prove
to be just as important.’
The idea met a ready response
among the pilots and ground crews
who have been working night and
day to keep Berlin supplied with
food and ‘fuel.
“We could certainly use a holi-
day, all right—and I think we've
earned one,” said Corp. Joseph
Howard, Taunton, Mass.
Even the airlift commanders who
talked of carrying on the airlift de-
spite the blockade’s end agreed
with the men that they had earned
a holiday.
“The boys rightly regard this
blockade lifting as a personal vic-
tory, and they are proud of it,"
said Lt. Col Robert J, DuVal
North Hollywood, Calif, acting
commander of the big US. airlift
‘base here.
“They have really earned a
victory celebration and a holiday.’*
| same | train |
SPY SUNITA Sh. By
BERLIN, GERMANY (Pp — At
jone minute past midnight Thurs-
day flag-bedecked traffic will end
ithe epic of biockaded Berlin.
| That's 4:01 p.m. C. 8S. T., Wed-
.nesday.
-NO HITCH YET
| So far there hasn't been a hitch
in final arrangements.
Gen. V. I. Chuikoy, Soviet
commander in Germany, and
the western powers both have
ordered that. transport, trade
and commynication services
between their zones resume
at that time.
| Things will revert back to the
way they were on March 1, 1948,
when the blockade began.
Sixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily. Highways will
te open. The Soviet’s won’t-——or at
least say they won't--demand
travel permits. They also say
they’l! not try to search allied bag-
Berlin ....... See Page 6
| BERLIN, May 10—(4?)—-At one
minute past midnight Thursday
flag-bedecked traffic will end the
epic of blockaded Berlin.
That's 5:01 i ES.T,, Wed-
hesday. :
So far there hasnt’ been a hiteh
in final arrangements.
Gen. V. I. Chuikov, Soviet com-
mander in Germany, and_ the
western powers both have order-
ed that transport, trade and com-
munication services between their
zones resume at that time.
Things will revert back to the
way they were on March 1, 1948,
when the blockade began.
Sixteen freight trains will move
into the city daily. Highways will
be open. The Soviets won't-—or at
least say they won't —- demand
travel permits. They also say
they'll not try to search allied
baggace.
Mail service will be resumed.
Western Berlin's Mayor Ernest
Reuter ordered the black, red and
gold flag of the new West Ger-
man republic be flown on street
cars and buses.
The Berlin flag will be draped
over other buses which will speed
to the west German cities of Han-
over, Hamburg and Frankfurt.
The first day, 10 trainloads of
coal and six others of fresh po-
tatoes and consumer goods are
scheduled to move into the city,
which has been supplied by the
air lift for ten months.
Twelve thousand tons of sup-
plies are to go into the city daily
-—just about the same figure the
air lift reached on its Dest day.
While most of the world hailed
the end of the blockade as a
Soviet diplomatic defeat, the offi-
cial Soviet army newspaper, Taeg-
liche Rundschau, today called it
an “unquestionable success of the
policy of unity which was always
pursued by the Soviet Union and
the progressive forces of Ger-
many.”
The paper said that now that
the Berlin blockade was ending,
“war mongers’ would make new
efforts to split Germany-—and
claimed approval of the new West
German democratic constitution
marked such an attempt.
' But throughout the border area
there was excitement in the air
as willing workers installed radio
‘and telephone equipment, repaint-
'ed border signs and clipped weeds
beside the long-neglected high-
Ways.
| The British expected to have
, the first train into the city.
| same | train |
» ALGIERS (AP—A military jun-
ta of retired generals backed by
tough paratroops seized power in
Algiers in defiance of President
‘Charles de Gaulle today and
claimed contro] over the vast ter-
ritory.
The bloodless coup was carried
out be'ween midnight and dawn.
It sent a chill manning through
metropolitan France and caused
consternation in Tunisia where
the Algerian nationalists who
have been in revolt against
France for almost seven years
were preparing for peace talks.
De Gaulle Dispatches Aide
| It was not immediately clear
' how tight a hold the insurgents
had on Algeria and De Gaulle
sent one of his top lieutenants,
‘Algerian Afairs Minister Louis
‘Joxe. by jet plane from Paris to
find out.
_ The insurgent leaders took over
‘the government buildings of Al-
‘giers and in a broadcast over Al-
giers Radio claimed leadership
over all of Algeria and the Sa-
hara.
Although the rebels led hy Gen.
| Maurice Challe, former French
sacennvandet in chief in Algeria.
claimed to control the whole
territory this was disputed by the
De Gaulle government in Paris.
It said loyal soldiers were in con-
'itrol outside the City of Algiers.
Premier Takes Action
| Premier Michel Debre said the
rising was ‘“‘a premeditated and
. undisciplined act’ by retired gen-
ierals. He said they had seized
the government buildings in Al.
‘giers but ‘‘in all the rest of the
territory the situation is normal
[in every respect. The government
_|is taking all necessary measures
_|to insure that force rests with the
, | law.”
Alone with Challe the rebe
” | commumique broddcast by Algier:
,| Radio was also signed by Para
,: troop Gen. Raoul Salan, wh
played a prominent role in the
1958 rising in Algeria that brought
Gaulle back to power.
Salan recently has exiled him.
. | self in Spain. It was not believed
_{that he had arrived on Algeriar
.' soil but he was expected momen.
,' tarily.
| ALGIERS (AP)~A military jun-
ta of retired generals backed by
tough paratroops seized power in
Algiers iv defiance af President
‘Charles de Ganlle today and
‘claimed control over the vast ler
ritory.
The bloodless coup was carried
out hetween midnight and dawt.
I sent a chill ronning through
metropolitan Franee and caused
cansternation in Tunisia where
the Algerian nationalisis who
have been in revall against
France for almost seven years
were preparing for peace talks.
It was not immediately clear
how tight a hold the insurgents
had on Algeria and De Gaulle
sent one of his top licttenants,
Algerian Affairs Minister Louis
Joxe, by jel plane [rom Paris to
find out.
The insurgent leaders took over
the government buildings of -Al-
gicrs ard in a broadeast over Al-
giers Radin claimed teadership
over all of Algeria and the Sa-
hara,
Although the rebels fed by Gen,
Maurice Challe, farmer French
commander in chief in Algeria,
claimed to contral the whole
territory this was disputed by the
Ne Gawle government in Paris,
It said loyal soldiers were in con-
trol outside the City of Algiers
Premier Michel Debre said Lhe
rising was “a premeditaler ars
undisciplined act” by retired gen-
erals. He said they had seized
the’ government buildings in Ab
giers bul “in all the rest of the
terrilory the situation is normal
in every respect. ‘The government
is taking all necessary measures
to insure that force resis with the
jaw.”
Alone wilh Challe the rebe'
communique broadcast by Algier
) Radio was also sigued hy Para
troop Gen. Raoul: Salar, © whe
"!playad a2 prominent rele in the
1958 rising in Algeria that brough'
(| De Gaulle back to power.
.; Salan recently has exiled him
self in Spain, i. was not believed
that he had arrived on Algeriar
soil but he was expected momen
turily.
The rebel communique — sait
24"The powers held by the civi
.{authorities have entirely passer
-ito military autharities.”
.| French officers who have fough
-ithe Algerian nationalists in’ th
6%-year rebellion have — bec
1;among the bitterest opponents o
,/De Gaulle’s — self-determinatio:
,| Policy for Algeria.
»{| Other generals who joined th
revoll were Air Force Gen. Bd
p mond Jouhaud and Army Gen
.\ilenri Acher.
1) After the communique, Algier
.) Radiu said, “the individuals bay
ing participated directly in th
atlempl to abandon Algeria ane
the Sahara will be placed unde
arrest and brought before a mili
tary tribunal.”
The radio declared a “slate o
seige’ in Algeria bul promisec
*ythat all ‘Yurdamental libertic
i and guarantees assured by th
constitution are entirely main
| tained.”
The first reaction among Euro
peans in the city was one of ela
tion. Cars streamed through th
streets blasting their horns in thy
three-two cadence that = mear
“Algerie, Fruncaisu (Algeria i
* | French},
How many troops were involve
{lin the sudden coup was unknown
n' Nor was it clear yet whether th
army claim ty control of all Al
',|#eria was true,
-| There was no violence in th
oo: weeeecccdecanape: cance
| same | train |
to be concerned about what some
authorities called a failure to cal-
culate accurately in advance the
strength of Prime Minister Fidel
Castro’s military reaction to the
rebel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence,
White House news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Eisen-
hower would meet at Camp Da-
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Gettysburg, Pa., which
Eisenhower used for conferences
with foreign leaders.
Contacts Rockefeller
The President arranged the
luncheon session in a telephone
call to Eisenhower Friday morn-
ing. The former chief executive
was at his Gettysburg farm.
Salinger said Kennedy wanted
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believing
‘that “as leader of the Republi-
can party and as former presi-
dent he should know what the sit-
uation is.”
Salinger also disclosed that
Kennedy had been in indirect con-
tact with Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
feller of New York, another Re-
publican leader, and that he had
conferred Friday with Sen. Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz.
The contacts with Republicans
followed Kennedy’s meeting at the
White House Thursday with for-
mer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, his Republican opponent
for the presidency last year.
Nixon in Support
Nixon said in New York Friday
night that he had told Kennedy
he would support him “even to:
the commitment of American
armed forces.”
Nixon said that as a private
citizen he would back Kennedy
in such a move if Kennedy con-
sidered it necessary to ‘‘stop the
buildup of the Communist beach-
head in Cuba.”
Both Kennedy and Eisenhower
arranged to fly to Camp David
by helicopter, Kennedy going di- |
rectly from the White House and;
Eisenhower from his farm. They;
jist met on inauguration day, ;
Jan. 20, when Kennedy took over
the reins of government,
Salinger was asked whether)
Kennedy considered the Cuban |
stuation grave. He said the Pres- |
dent had expressed his own esti-
mates of that crisis twice in the
ast two days and Salinger had);
nothing to add. 1
| WASHINGTON (AP)—President
Kennedy met with former Pres-
ident Dwight D. Eisenhower to.
day in an evident bid to rally
strong national support for criti-
cal steps which he may consider
necessary to deal with the in-
creasingly dangerous Cuban cri.
sis.
A White House announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md, -—— emphasized Cuba as the
topie for the conference. But it
did nat rule out the prospect that
Kennedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
tensifying ‘cold war conflicts with
the Soviet Union.
Before flying ta Camp David
by helicopter Kennedy met with
the National Security Council,
presumably to discuss possible
future moves against the pro-
Communist’ government of Cuba
in the wake of this week's abor-
tive anti-Castro invasion,
In the midst of these develop-
ments, the President was report.
ed to have ordered a thorough
| study of reasons for the defeat
of the rebel invasion attempt
) which began last weekend witt
the United States’ moral support
|—and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. 5S.
(money and arms.
The President was understood
jto be concerned about what some
| authorities called a failure to cal.
culate accurately in advance the
{strength of Prime Minister Fidel
Castro’s military reaction to the
rebel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence.
White House news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Eisen:
hhower would mect at Camp Da.
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re.
treat near Gettysburg, Pa., whieh
| Eisenhower used for conferences
with foreign leaders.
4+ The President arranged _ the
(‘luncheon session in a telephone
‘Teall to Eisenhower Friday morn
ing. The former chief executive
was at his Gettysburg farm.
'{ Salinger said Kennedy wantec
‘lto bring Eisenhower up to dat
on the Cuban situation, belfevins
that “as leader of the Republi
can party and as former presi
See KENNEDY, Page ‘
| same | train |
By PAUL EVE
Paris (UPI) — Rebel gen-
erals supported by Foreign Leg-—
ion paratroops seized Algiers to-
day and claimed the army had
taken over Algeria and the Sa
hara Desert from President
Charles de Gaulle’s govern-
ment,
The insurgents announced |
over Algiers radio that they
had proclaimed a “state of siege
throughout Algeria, The gen-
erals appealed to the army,
navy, air force and police to
join them.
The French government im-
mediately canceled all military
leaves.
The bloodless coup d’etat ap-
parently was led by Gen. Raoul
Salan, a former French com-
mander in Algeria. The African
territory was reported calm in
the early hours of the revolt.
At least 2,000 and per-
haps as many as 6,000
troops of the Foreign Leg-
ion’s Ist Paratroop Regi-
ment were said to be in-
volved in the seizure of
Algiers. The rebels also
claimed the support of
troops in southeastern Al-
In Paris, however, Informa-
tion Minister Louis Terrenoire
said the insurgents controlled
only Algiers. He said the gen-
erals commanding the garrisons
of Oran and Constantie, Al.
geria’s other pricipal cites, were
loyal to De Gaulle.
- + +
| Communications Cut.
UPI’s Algiers corresponden
Alan Raymond telephoned Pari:
just before the government cu
off communications with Al
giers.
He said paratroops seized ih
official residence of Delegat
General Jean Morin, De Gulle’
chief civilian representative u
Algeria.
Morin was taken prison-
er along with Public Works
Minister Robert Buron,
who had just arrived from
France, and Gen, Fernand
Gambiez, the French mil-
itary commander in Al-
geria,
Raymond said Algiers we
calm early today, with Furc
peans and Arabs going abot
their business as usual. The onl
sign that anything had happene
was the unusual number <
troops in the streets.
The French government c
off all communications and hal
ed sea and air travel betwee
France and Algeria in an effo
to isolate the rebels.
sii aaa ieee
| ABOARD USS TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
lion miles in orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touch-
down, Charles Conrad Jr., Dr.
Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz were thoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their Apollo ferry
ship,
“We're all in goed shape.
Everything’s OK,” com-
mander Conrad radioed as
the spacecraft descended
through the clouds and fanded
within view of USS Ticon-
deroga, just 6% miles away.
That indicated the astronauts
had suffered no adverse phy-
sical reactions on returning
to earth's gravity after a rec-
ard four weeks’ exposure to
.Space weightlessness.
Ten minutes later they
climbed through the hatch,
smiled and waved as the ship’s
band played “Anchors Aweigh”
for the all-Navy Skylab crew.
They walked unsteadily to-
ward a mobile medical labora-
tory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ exposure
to weightlessness,
! How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can fune-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
The Rev. Darrell Rupiper,
OMI, of Omaha, son of Mr.
and Mrs, Norbert Rupiper
of Route 3, Carroll, has been
appointed by the general ad-
ministration. as a member
of the new seven-man Pro-
vincial Council of the Very
Rev. Francis George, OMI,
provincial of the Oblate Cen-
tral Province, The seven will
serve as consultors to the Pro-
vincial for the next thnee
years in working with and
being ‘accountable to 249 Ob-
late priests and brothers in
nine midwestern states. They
will be installed June 28 at
an 11:30 a.m. concelebrated
mass in Christ the King
Chapel at the Shrine of Our
Lady of the Snows in Belle-
ville, I,
two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today te
try to repair a refrigeration
problem in their space sta-
tion. But Mission Control de-
cided there was nothing the
astronauts could do and told
them to come home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
and executed a series of
maneuvers that sent them
slamming into the atmosphere
above Thailand for the fiery de-
scent.
| The Apollo craft hit the calm
blue waters at 8:50 a.m. CDT
about 830 miles southwest of
San Diego, Calif. It was just
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tossed a
line to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
the astronauts to an elevator
for a ride to the hangar deck.
Hundreds of white-clad sail-
ors on deck and others watch-
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat to a
U.S. man-in-space landing as
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes,
“Everyone’s in super shape,”
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup, Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to se-
cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars,
The Ticonderoga reported
the astronauts had landed
6% miles from the ship and
that the ship was 6% miles
from the target point, indicat-
ing a perfect touchdown.
The Ticonderoga steamed tc
pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, ir
coritrast to most earlier U.S.
flights when the spacemen
were lifted to the carrier by
helicopter,
| Medical “requirements — dic-
tated the pick up method today.
Medical experts were not cer-
tain how the astronauts would
react after returning to earth’s
gravity following record ex.
posure to space weightlessness
So they decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as little
activity as possible until they
can be examined in mobile
medical laboratories aboard the
Ticonderoga.
The Janding completed an
historic space mission that last-
ed 28 days and 50 minutes. Dur-
ing that time the spacemen cir-
cled the earth 395 times,
Mission Control was kept in
Suspense for. most of the final
76 minutes of the flight — a pe-
riod when the Apollo ship was
out of radio contact with
ground stations,
The ‘Ticonderoga’s radar
picked up the streaking craft
at a distance of 188 miles,
10 minutes before landing.
While out of radio contact, at
9:11 am., the astronauts con-
ducted the critical retrorocket
burn that slowed their 17,100
mile-an-hour speed by 134
miles, allowing earth's gravity
to tug the spacecraft out of or-
bit and start the long glide
through the atmosphere to the
eastern Pacific,
The refrigeration trouble
caused considerable concern. A
maneuver intended to correct i
caused a brief gyroscope prob
Skvlab .... See Pace 9
| different | train |
ABOARD USS _ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP)*— Skylab’s astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
lion miles im orbit.
“We’re all in good shape,”
Commander Charles Conrad Jr.
reported as the spacecraft de-
scended. ‘““Everything’s OK.”
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit to try to re-
pair a refrigeration problem in
their space station. But Mission
Control decided there was noth-
ing the astronauts could do anid
told them to come home.
So, 10 minutes behind sched-
ule, Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
from the station and executed a
series of maneuvers that sent
them slamming into the atmo-
sphere above Thailand for a
fiery descent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
Pacific waters at 9:50 a.m.
EDT about 830 miles southeast
of Sam Diego, Calif., within
sight of the main recovery ship,
the USS Ticonderoga. It was
just after dawn off the West
Coast.
Hundreds of white-clad saii-
ors on deck and millions watch-
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat to a
U.S. man-in-space landipg a»
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
“Everyone’s in super shape,”’
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to se-
cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars.
The Ticonderoga reported the
astronauts had landed 612 miles
from the ship and that the ship
was 6/2 miles from the target
point, indicating a_ perfect
touchdown.
The Ticonderoga steamed to
- pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, in
contrast to most earlier U.S.
flights when the spacemen
were lifted to the carrier by
helicopter.
Medical requirements dic-
tated the pick up method today
Medical experts were not cer
tain how the astronauts would
react after returning to earth’s
gravity following record ex-
posure to space weightlessness
so they decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as little
activity as possible until they
can be examined in mobile
medical laboratories aboard the
Ticonderoga.
| ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came safely hore from man's longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pinpoint precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 milion miles in orbit.
“We're all in good shape,” Commander Charles Conrad Jr.
reported as the spacecraft descended. “Everything's OK.”
The astronauts almost were held over in orbit to try to repair
a refrigeration problem in their space station. But Mission
Control decided there was nothing the astronauts cauld do and
told them ty come home.
So. 10 minutes behind schedule, Conrad. Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz undocked their Apotlo ferry ship fromm
the station and executed a series of maneuvers that sent them
slamrning into the almosphere above Thailand for a flery des-
cent.
| The Apollo craft hit the calm Pacific waters at 8:50 aun.
CDT about 839 miles swutheast of San Diego, Calif., within
sight of the main recovery ship, the USS Ticonderoga. It was
just after dawn off the West Coast.
Hundreds sf white-ciad sailors on deck and millions wat
ching television around the world again had a ringside seat to.
U.S. mar ia s| landing as the Apollo craft floated dow
througn low: ng clouds and dangling under three hug
parachutes.
: 5 super shape,” Conrad said as the spacecra
on the water awaiting pickup. Frogmen immediate!
OL
leaped from helicopters tu secure the spacecrait witt §
collars.
The Ticonderoga reported the
miles from the ship and that the ship
target point, indicating a perfect touchdown
The Ticonderoga steamed tu pick up the Apu
the astronauts still inside, in contrast to t
flights when the spacemen were lifted te the carrier by !
copter.
Medical experts were not certain hess
react after returning to earth's
sure to space weight)
_ should be subjected +
can be examined in mobil
conderoga
‘The landing conipleted on hy
28 days and 50 minutes. Dur:
the earth 395 times.
Mission Control was kept in suspe
- minutes of the flight — a period when the
4 radio contact with gre
The Ticonderoga’s radar picked
distance of 126 miles. 10 min
They lett behir ace station v1
ft with some daring, dif
ter it was damaged during launching
| same | train |
ABOARD USS ‘TICONDEROGA
(UPI) ~ Skylab’s astronauts Landed on
target in the Pacific Ocean today and
reported they were ‘in “super shape”
after a fiery, strenuous return to earth
from a record 28 days in space.
It was a flawless end to a mission that
started with a failure, and the flight took
a major step toward Biving man a place
in space.
Charles “Pete” Conrad, Jaseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz came back in
the Apollo command | ship they took off
in four weeks ago. Their Space station
“remained. in orbit, ready for its next
crew in five weeks. .
Recovery forces and controllers back
at Houston’s mission contro) waited
anxiously for more than a half hour
between the time the ship's main
braking rocket fired and Conrad
reported, “everything’s okay,’’ while
the ship was still in the air.
The capsule’s small drogue
parachutes and then its three orange
and white striped main Canopiés
blossomed out on schedule and eased
the astronauts into the calm sea at 9:50
a.m. EDT within view of a television
camera aboard this veteran aircraft
carrier. :
“Everybody’s in super shape,” said
Conrad, the veteran commander of
America’s first space station.
The ship reported the astronauts
landed precisely on target, 843 miles
southwest of San Diego. The Ticon-
deroga was 6% miles downwind at the
time. .
The aircraft carrier moyed quickly to
the side of the bobbing, scorched
spacecraft and hoisted it aboard, using
a single nylon rope 1% inches in
diameter.
It was the first time an Apollo had
been hoisted aboard a recovery ship
with its crewmen still inside. This was
done for the Skylab recovery because
doctors wanted the pilots picked up with
as little exertion as possible.
The cone-shaped capsule was placed
on an elevator deck, 25 feet above the
water, at 10:28 a.m., a fast 38 minutes
after splashdown.
“We've all got our seat belts fastened
so hoist us right up,” said Conrad, a
Navy captain, as the line was hooked to
a loop at the top of the command ship.
Before leaving the Spacecraft, Ker-
win, America’s first Space physician,
took his own and then the pulse rate and
blood pressure of his colleagues to
determine how their bodies were
withstanding the rigors of gravity after
going without it for four weeks.
Before the Apollo hatch was opened,
technicians attached plugs and fuel vent
lines to the control rocket nozzles.
Kerwin briefed Dr. Charles Ross, the
(See 1 on Page Two}
| Rambouillet, France, Augs2s ()—
| Doris Stevens, American feminist
(leader, and three others of. a group
fof feminists who tried to “crash the
| gates” of. the presidential” chateay
teday in behalf of the equal righty
tnovement, sere held-in custody at
the police cammissariat’ for ‘several
hours for failure to have their, iden-
tity papers.
They. were. released at. © 3:30
o'clock this afternoon after all of the
statesmen who had Junch with presi-
dent’ Doumergue ‘had gone. The
women had sought a 19. minutes’
audience with the president's ‘gyests
‘who yesterday. signed, the Kelloge-
Briand yenunciation: of war treaty.
|The plan ot the femininists was to
discuss with ‘them a project for. an
international treaty establishing
equal rights for-‘men and women,
Loming,. . 3
To the Daisy: Farm Wednesday
Aug. 29,:. eleven! entertainers and
'dance orchestra... Everybody. cor-
ally invited, Youngberg: Orches-
ta—ady, ar
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
leaders of the world’s two nu-
clear superpowers pledged in a
landmark agreement today to
regulate their relations in a
way to reduce the risk of nucle-
ar war.
President Nixon and Soviet
Communist party Secretary
Leonid I, Brezhnev reached the
accord in the fifth day of their
summit talks and prepared to
sign it at the White House bhe-
fore heading for California
where they will conclude their
meetings Sunday.
In addition to its application
to U.S.-Soviet relations, the
agreement applies also to the
relations of either party with
Other countries. In this way, al-
though technically bilateral, the
agreement has multilateral im-
plications.
The two leaders declared in
the agreement that they were
“conscious that nuclear war
would have devastating con-
sequences for mankind’ and
said they wanted ‘to bring
about conditions in which the
danger of an outbreak of nucle-
ar war anywhere in the world
would be reduced and ultimate-
ly eliminated.”
They pledged their countries
to ‘‘act in such a way 4s to pre-
vent the development of situ-
ations capable of causing a
dangerous exacerbation of their
relations, as to avoid military
confrontations, and as to ex-
clude the outbreak of nuclear
war between them and between
either of the parties and other
countries.”
Nixon and Brezhnev also
agreed that their countries
“‘will refrain from the threat or
the use of force against the oth-
er party, against the allies of
the other party and against oth-
er countries, in circumstances
which may endanger _inter-
national peace and security.”
At a news conference prior to
the formal signing, presidential
assistant Henry A. Kissinger
skirted questions on whether
this clause would forbid U.S.
bombing of Cambodia or would
have prevented the Soviet in-
vasion of Czechoslovakia.
Kissinger noted, however,
that U.S. air strikes against
Communist forces in Cambodia
were under way at the time the
agreement was being nego-
tiated and that the bombing
“was not raised as applying to
that particular situation.”
When a newsman asked
whether the agreement would
forestall any Soviet action
against China, Kissinger re-
sponded that the accord was
“not conceived as _ protection
for any country”’ but added it
would “‘have the practical con-
sequence of applying to the sit-
uation you described.”
“I'll see you tomorrow at the
signing,’’ Nixon reminded
Brezhnev just before midnight
Thursday as he left the Soviet
Embassy after a banghet of
caviar, borsch, Russian beef
and fish, two kinds of vodka
and Soviet champagne.
The two leaders popped a
surprise in their banquet toasts,
disclosing that Brezhnev had
extended and Nixon had accept-
ed an invitation to return to the
Soviet Union next year for a
third summit in as many years.
| Washington—The United States
Board of Mediation announced today
that an agreement had been reach-
ed by the executive officers of the
Order of Railway Conductors and the
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen
and the railroads of the Western
territory in the dispute between
them involving rates of pay and cer-
tain rules.
Final approval of the agreement is
subject to ratification by the Associa-
tions of General Committees of the
western territory.
Should approval be denied by the
employe associations or general com-
mittees of the western territory, the
board said, the dispute would con-
tinue to exist and would have to be
treated in accordance with law.
Meanwhile, the board said, the
employe organizations have agreed
to a provision insuring the president
and the board of mediation a rea-
sonable opportunity to proceed un-
der the law, so far as the calling of
a strike, before any further action
has been initiated on the part of the
‘emploveg.
| different | train |
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. CUPID
—The General Assembly, ending
its 15th session, today reversed a
committee decision to ask the Or-
ganization of American States to
seek a reconciliation between Cuha
and the United States.
The key paragraph of a seven
power Latin American resolution
to refer the U.S-Cuban_ situation
to the organization Fidel Castro's
government refuses to deal with
was killed.
Assembly President Frederick 1
Boland of Ireland gavelled to a
close at 6:02 a.m., EST, the ses-
sion that started last September
20 with a parade of world leaders
led by Soviet Premier Nikita S.
Khrushebev. [tf resumed Mareh 7
after an ll-week Christmas recess.
Boland said that although it was
the longest session in assembly
history, there was not sufficient
time to take up a number of
items on the agenda.
| Vnlled Nations, N. ¥_, April. 22,
The General Assembly, ending
its 15th session, today reversed :
commiffee decision to ask the
Organization ‘of American. State:
to seek. a reconciliation betweer
Cuba and the United States. -
The key paragraph of a seven.
Pewer Latin American resolution
to refer the U.S.-Cuban situatior
to the organization Fidel Castro's
Bovernment refuses ta deal with
was killed.
The Assembly wound up the
weeklong U.N. debate with a mild
appeal to ‘all member states te
take such peaceful action as is
open to them to remove existing
tensions” between the two coun:
tries.
A last-minute crisis developed
when the world parliament at
first refused to approve its budg-
etary committee’s recommenda-
Hon for a $100 million budget for
the U.N. Congo aperation for the
first 10 months 9f 1861.
India proposed a special session
Next week to take up the Congo
budget. But diplomats worked out
a formula to save the situation
when the United States proposed
that the financial discussion be
(Continued on Page Two)
| same | train |
MIAMI, Fla.: (AP)—Two rebel
battalions, apparently fighting
Castro forces on Cuban soil, were
urged not to surrender in a broad-
cast today from Radio Swan. They
were told help is on its way.
| The two units were identified
as “Battalions 2 ar 5” in a
broadcast heard at the Associated
Press Miami monitoring station.
The same broadcast repeated
previous instruction to a_ unit
called ‘‘Mision Alborada”’ to ad-
vance. ‘‘Alborada’’ is a Spanish
word for dawn. Dicti-naries give
it a military meaning of ‘‘dawn
battle.”
“Battalions 7 and 4’’ were urged
by the Swan broadcast to ‘‘Pro-
ceed to Point Z.’’ Instructions
also were repeated for ‘Air
Group North Point’’ to proceed
to point “‘Nino .3 N-£"’ “‘Squad-
rons 4 and 5"' were described as
protecting Operation Alborada.
Radio Swan is a powerful anti-
Castro transmitter broadcasting
from Swan Island in the Carib-
bean, off the Central American
coast. It can be heard in Miami
at 1190 on the broadcast band
and at 6 megacycles on the short
wave band.
The newscast said that exiles
in Miami are planning a hunger
strike.
The strike will continue until
the Organization of American
States and the countries of the
Western Hemisphere, including
the United States, act to stop
“the bloodbath ‘1 Cuba,” the
broadcast said
| Miami, Fla—(#)—Two rebe
battalions, apparently fighting
Castro forces on Cuban soil, were
urged not to surrender in ¢
broadeast today from Radic
Swan. They were told help is
on its way.
The two units were identifiec
as “Battalions 2 and 5” in ¢
broadcast heard at The Asso
ciated Press Miami STG
station.
The same broadcast repeated
previous instruction to a unit
called “Mission Alborada” to ad.
vance. “Alborada” is a Spanish
‘word for dawn. Dictionaries give
ita military meaning of “dawn
baltle.”
| same | train |
ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP) —
Skylab’s astronauts came home safely
from man’s longest space journey today
and shunned stretchers to walk smartly but
unsteadily across the deck of this recovery
carrier.
The wobbly 60 steps from the Apollo
ferry ship to a medical laboratory
indicated Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph
P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz had suffered
some effects from a record four weeks’
exposure to space weightlessness.
But Commander Conrad reported as the
Apollo parachuted toward a pinpoint
landing in the Pacific after an 11-million-
mile journey: ‘‘We’re all in good shape.
Everything’s ok.”
They splashed down right on target, just
6% miles from the Ticonderoga.
Thirty-nine minutes later, still inside the
Apollo, they were on the carrier deck.
Doctors, not knowing how they might
react to earth’s gravity after their long
weightless exposure, were prepared to lift
them out on litters.
But, after consultation with doctors,
Kerwin, a physician, said they could walk
to the medical trailer where they began six
hours of extensive medical debriefing.
They emerged smiling from the hatch
ami-saluted as the ship’s band struck up
“Anchors Aweigh’’ for the-all-Navy crew.
Conrad walked with hesitant steps at
first but gradually picked up steam as he
reached the medical lab door. Kerwin was
slightly stooped and both he and Weitz
were somewhat unsteady in their steps.
Doctors assisted both Kerwin and Weitz
by holding onto one arm of each.
Experts immediately began removing
thousands of feet of film and tape and
equipment from medical, earth resources
and astronomy experiments that may tell
man much about his earth, his sun and his
physical being.
How well Conrad; Kerwin and Weitz
fared in the weightless world will play a
major role in determining if man can func-
tion efficiently in future long-duration
flights.. The first of the two 56-day Skylab
missions is.scheduled for launch July 27.
The astronauts almost were held over in
orbit today to try to repair a refrigeration
problem in their space station. But mission
control decided there was nothing the
astronauts could do and told them to come
ishome.
ja Ten minutes behind schedule, Carad,
Kerwin and Weitz undocked their Apollo
ferry ship and executed a series of
maneuvers that sent them slamming into
the atmosphere above Thailand for the
fiery descent.
The Apolio craft hit the calm blue waters
at 8:50. a.m. CDT about 830 miles southwest
of San Diego, Calif. It was just after dawn
off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga quickly
steamed alongside the three-ton Apollo and
tossed a line to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and the
astronauts to an elevator for a ride to the
hangar deck.
Hundreds of white-clad sailors on deck
and millions watching television around
the world once again had a ringside seat to
a U.S. man-in-space landing as the Apollo
craft floated down through low-hanging
clouds and dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
“Everyone’s in super shape,’ Conrad
said as the spacecraft bobbed on the water
awaiting pickup. Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to secure the
spacecraft with flotation collars.
The Ticonderoga reported the astronauts
had landed 6% miles from the ship and that
the ship was 6% miles from the target
point, indicating a perfect touchdown.
| AGE ORDERSERE! BSR WR RCA
ELLENVILLE, N.Y. Aig. 27-4
narruw vailey in the Catskills, about
25 miles lane and less than a mile
jHeross at its widest point, late today
rSshouk ilself Jaose from the grip of
loudburst and tooded stream | ahd
counted its loss of ifr and property.
Through this little vailey, running
northeast lo Kingston, on the Hudson
river, the Rondeut creck winds a fairly
tranquil course under normal condi-
ttions, Yesterday*a cloudubrst poured
town Uiunsands of tons of water and
[sent a 20-foot wall of water tumbling
through the valley,
; ‘Today three persons were known
{dend; crops, livesLock and farm prop-
ferty were damaged tu the extent of
jhundreds of thousands of dollars; at
Hleast 20 bridges had been torn from
itheiy bases; highways had been washed
‘out, comununication had been disrupt-
led and scores of persous hud been ren-
‘dered homeless.
Of a score of villages caught in’ the
‘path af the torrent, the wacers wreaked
itheir fury for the most part on Mon-
lela, Lackawack, Napanoch, Wawar-
ing, Kerhonksen, Accord, High Falls
and Rosendale,
Stranded Motorist Drowned.
| Clfarles Lavery, 50, of Paterson, -N. dy
jmotoring through the valley with: a
companion, Joseph Hughes, also -of
iPalerson, drowned when his motor
{stalled in the flooded highway near Na-
i paunoeh, The two men stepped from
the machine and Hughes was dragged
\to safety while Lavery sank In a hole in
the road. Philip Blatt of Lackawack,
allcmpting to carry his wife to safety,
islumnbled and drewned on. the threshold
ol his home. An. unidentified infant
lalso was sald te have perished.
The waters of Rondout creek. swollen
to food preportions by the cloudburst,
were further augmented by tributaries
photil they tore into. Napanoch,. rising
jlo the level of second story windows in
ithe outskirts of the village and at the
iLackawnck country club, Jamming of
logs at a pulp mill formed a temporary
;dam and was said to have saved Na-
i panoch village from, destruction.
At Kerhouksen the flood spread out
over a five-mile flat, only to surge
through a narrow gateway to another
int. The two flats served to check
jmuch af the force of the torrent, but it
:gathered headway again in a gorge at
‘High Falls, and then spread through
ithe village af Accord until it covered
Uhe counter of the grocery stare, and
‘the pulpit of the village church,
i The flood reached its crest at Rosen-
‘dale. submerging that village under 20
feet of water. Villagers were removed
from the upper stories of their homes
in boals. and 15 men formed a human
chain to rescue one famlly.
i At Rosendale 27 small boys in a
junior naval militia camp on an island
‘were driven to tree tops and the yoof
of their mess hall by the water. There
ithey perched all night while would-be
scuers struggled to reach them. With
he coming of dawn they-were takén
‘in boats and removed to higher ground,
| Hundreds of guests at summer -re2
orts today were partly marooned and
sul off from. food supplies in part at
least. until receding water uncoversd,
jthe highways at. New Paltz and enabled
hem to reach railroads. _ At the. Lack-
awack country club, 300 members were
narooned for several hours, while the
asing and nine cottages were swept
way by the food.
The water began recéding last night
{ Ellenville. and late today was Te+
orted going down alls through the val-
Jey.
| different | train |
ABOARD USS 'TICON-
DEROGA (AP)—Skylab’s
astronauts came ‘safely
home from man’s longest
Space journey today
‘splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Paci-
fic Ocean after 28 days and
il million miles in orbit.
Good Shape
“We're all in good shape.*
Commander Charles Conrad Jr.
reported as the spacecraft de-
scended. “Everything’s OK.”
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit to try to re-
pair a refrigeration problem in
their space station, But Mission
Control decided there was noth-
ing the astronauts could de and
told them to come home.
So, 10 minutes behind sched-
ule, Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Ker-
win and Paul J. Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
from the station and executed a
series of maneuvers that sent
them slamming into the atmos-
phere above Thailand for a
fiery descent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
Pacific waters at 9:50 am.
EDT about $30 miles southwest
of San Diega, Calif., within
sight of the main recovery ship,
the USS Ticonderoga. It was
just. after dawn off the West
Coast.
Hundreds of white-clad sail-
ors on deck and millions watch
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat fo a
U.S. man-in-space landing as
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
“Everyone’s in super shape,”
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
jJeaped from helicopters. ta se-
cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars. tS
The Ticonderoga reported. the
astronauts had landed 6% miles
from the ship and that the ship
was 6% miles from the target
point, indicating a perfect
touchdown,
The Ticonderoga steamed to
pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, in
contrast to most earlier U.S.
flights when the spacemen
were lifted to the carrier by
helicopter.
Medical requirements dic-
tated the pick up method today.
Medical experts were not cer-
tain how the astronauts would
react after returning. to earth's
gravity following’ record ex-
posure to space weightlessness
so they’ decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as little
SPACE TRIP Page 2
| ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA
(AP) Skylab's astronauts came
safely home from man's s longest space
journey today, splashing down with
pinpoint precision in the Pacific Ocean
after 28 days and 11 million miles in
orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touchdown,
Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz were hoisted
onto the deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their Apollo ferry ship.
“We're all in good shape. Ev-
erything’s OK,’ commander Conrad
radioed as the spacecraft descended
through the clouds and landed within
view of USS Ticonderoga, just 6!» miles
away. That indicated the astronauts
had suffered no adverse physical
reactions on returning to earth's
gravity after a record four weeks’
exposure to space weightlessness.
Ten minutes later they climbed
through the hatch, smiled and waved
as the ship’s band played ‘Anchors
Aweigh” for the all-Navy Skylab crew.
They walked unsteadily toward a
mobile medical laboratory, showing
some effects from the four weeks’
exposure to weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz
fared in the weightless world will play
a major role in determining if man can
function efficiently in future long.
duration flights. The first of the two 56-
day Skylab missions is scheduled for
launch July 27,
The astronauts almost were held
over in orbit today to try to repair a
refrigeration problem in. their space
station. But Mission Control decided
there was nothing the astronauts could
do and told them to come home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz undocked
their Apollo ferry ship and executed a
(Please turn to page 2)
| same | train |
Miss Elizabeth May Heiner,
daughter of Mr. and Mys. Claude
E. Heiner, Spring Grove R. D. 3,
and Cpl. Sterling R. Bechtel, Ft.
Meade, Md., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard N. Bechtel, Hanover R. D.
2, were married Saturday at 2 p.
m. in Christ Lutheran (Roth's)
Church, near Spring Grove. The
double-ring ceremony was _ per-
formed by the Rev. H. Ear] Schlotz-
hauer in a setting of candlelight
with palms and vases of mixed
flowers. William S. Riale, York, so-
loist, Was accompanied by Miss Jo-
sephine Leppo, Hanover, organist,
who also played nuptial music. Giv-
en in marriage by her father, the
bride was attired in a ballerina-
(Continued On Page Sixteen)
</s> | C. M. Caraway, Ill, 14 year old
Future Farmer from De Leon
showed the champion Shorthorn
of the Junior Show at the San
Antonio Livestoex Show in San
Antonio Saturcay.
,
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. M Caraway. cr., cf De Leon.
The animal was selected, fit-
ted and shown under the direc-
tion of R. H. Campbell, teacher
of Vocational Agriculture in the
De Leon High School.
Left to right in the picture: C.
M. Caraway, J*, R. H. Campbell,
anc C. M. Caraway, III.
</s> | different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — A Re-
publican member of the Senate
Watergate committee says the
Nixon _ administration has
“stepped on” anyone willing to
search for the truth about Wa-
tergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr.,
who made the claim Thursday,
also said that fired White
House Counse] John W. Dean
III should be listened to when
he appears before the panel.
Dean, who has said he dis-
cussed Watergate and a pos-
sible coverup with President
Nixon, will be the lead-off wit-
mess when the hearings resume
next week.
“| think there is a great deal
of credibility to a story that he
it to him to enable to tell
and | think the committee owes
it to him to enable hm to tell
that story in full view of the
public,”’ Weicker said on a Pub-
lic Television show, ‘Evening
Edition.’ He was interviewed
by Martin Agronsky.
“Is his testimony credible? I
think it is. Nobody’s aitribut-
ing 100-per-cent credibility to
him or any other witness, but
he’s got the guts to stand out
there and that’s no small thing
when you were in his position
and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on
this young man at the time to
decide that you’re going to step
forward amd tell the story to
the American people.”
Weicker was the sole oppo-
nent of the committee’s deci-
sion to postpone Dean’s appear-
ance for one week last Tuesday
because of the summit confer-
ences this week between Nixon
and Soviet Communist Party
leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from vari-
ous public statements that have
been made that amy institution,
whether it’s a witness, anybody
that’s willing to step out and
try to find out the truth and try
to tell the truth is gonna’ get
‘Stepped on by the executive
‘branch of government,” the
‘Connecticut senator said.
| He cited Vice President Spiro
iT. Agnew’s recent attack on the
Watergate panel as one that
“can hardly hope to find the
truth and hardly fail to muddy
the waters of justice,” as an
example of the executive
branch's efforts.
Meanwhile, the committee
said it was considering a halt
‘to the practice of talking to
prospective witnesses in secret
‘because so much supposedly
confidential information — is
leaked to the media.
“Tl nearly despair of doing
anything about it,’’ committee
Vice Chairman Howard H. Bak-
er, R-Tenn., said Thursday. “It
«means that the committee
‘probably will end its closed-
door sessions with witnesses,
which until mow have been
which until now have been held
routinely in advance of public
appearances,
News stories Thursday fea-
tured accounts of closed-door
testimony by Dean and Water-
‘gate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt.
_ Also Thursday, another con-
gressional investigation into
Watergate-related matters was
announced, this one by the
House Internal Security Com-
mittee.
- Chairman Richard Ichord, D-
Mo., said he wants to find out
why the White House formed
the “plumbers” group that bur-
glarized the office of Daniel
Elisberg’s psychiatrist in 1971.
President Nixon hag said he or-
dered the ‘“‘plumbers’” to plug
such news leaks as the secret
Pentagon Papers, which Ells-
berg gave to mewspapers.
- In New York, former Demo-
eratic National Chairman Law-
rence F, O’Brien said the scan-
dal bas hurt both parties. He
called for limits on how much
candidates may spend in their
campaigns and urged use of a
mew provision allowing tax-
payers to designate a dollar of
their federal income taxes to fi-
mance political campaigns.
_ He spoke as an assistant to
special Watergate Prosecutor
Archibald Cox said a_ special
grand jury may be convened to
¢ (Turn To Page Seven)
| WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Re-
publican imember of the Senate
Watergate committee says the
Nixon adiministration has
‘stepped on” anyone willing to
search for the truth about Wa-
(ergate.
Sen. Lowell O. Weicker Jr.,
who inade the claiin Thursday,
als») said that fired White
House Counsel John W. Dean
II] should be listened tu when
he appears before the panel.
Dean, who has said he dis-
cussed Watergate and a_pas-
sible coverup with President
Nixon, will be the lead-off wit-
ness when the hearings resuine
next week.
“T think there is a great deal
of credibility to a story that he
is golng te go ahead and tell,
and I think the comiuttee owes
ote him to enable hin to tell
that story in full view of the
public,”’ We'cker said on a Pub-
lic Television show, “Evenng
Edition” He was interviewed
by Martin Agronsky.
“Is his testimony credible? |
think it is ‘Nobody's attribut-
Ing 100-per-cent credibility to
hin of any other witness, but
he’s gol the guts to stand out
there and that’s mo simall thing
When you were in his position
and had all the pressures that
obviously must have existed on
this young ian at the Udine to
decide thal you're gomg to step
forward and tell the story te
the American people
Weicker was the sole oppo-
nent of the comunittee’s deci-
Slon to postpone Dean’s appear-
ance fur one week last Tuesday
because of the summit confer-
ences this week between Nixon
and Soviet Communist Party
leader Leomd [. Brezhnev.
“It should be clear from vari-
aus public statements that have
been inade thal any institution,
(See'F’ on Page 2)
| same | train |
An anti-Castzo radlo broad.
east from an island off Centra’
America today told two rebe!
battalions apparently ‘fighting
on Cuban soll that help. was
ion the way and urged them
not to surrender. *
Thu appeal from. Swan Is:
Jand was made a few hour
after the Castro government
put before Havana television
cameras. sone prisoners cap:
tured alter. Jast wéekend’s in.
vasion, Onés.admitted — theii
mission fatledand said- not
many rebels had escaped, Oth
ers said propaganda | from
Swan Island ang North ‘Am.
erican had misled them.
The Swan Island broadcast
tmanitored by The’ Associated
Press in Miami, Fla, also re.
peated troap movement jn.
structions {t had sent. out dur.
ing the night.
it had iold earlier of nev,
small landings made in Cuba,
but ne other sources, confirm.
ed this, Some rebel sources in
Miami did say, however, ihat
bebveen 50) and 1,500 “guef.
nillas were headed’ ‘for Cuba
for a new invasion assault, |
The New York Times quoted
a diplomatic source in Wash-
ington as saying Maj Erneste
Guevara, one of Castro's toy
aides, was seriously woundec
in the head earlitr this week
The Times ‘said thé informa.
tion. zeached Washington tra
diplomatic ‘source fr He.
Vana. * — ¢
[re ipipmatic source sald
a -neurésurgeon was sent to =
pravincial hospital where Gue.
vara allegedly was taken
Guevara, 32, is Cuba's edd.
nomié czar. a
| An anti-Castre radio broadcast from an island off Cen-
tral America today tald two rebel baitalions apparenily fight-
ing on Cuban soil that help: was on the way and urged them
not to surrender, ‘
The appeal from Swan Island was made a few heurs
‘after the Castro government put before Havana television
cameras some prisoners captured after last weekend’s in-
vasion, One admitted their mission failed and said not many
rebels had escaped. Qthers said propaganda from Swan Is-
1GNnG GNG UNO” America naa
misled them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent ‘out during the
night. !
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba. but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion, assault.
A. dispatch from Havana de-
seribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new, wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and. living conditions were
described as growing worse.
The New York Times, quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj, Ernesto Guevara,
one of Castro's top ‘aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing.
ton frpm a diplomatic source in
Havana.
‘The diplomatic source said a
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro-
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
legedly was taken, Guevara, 32
is Cuba's economic czar.
The government radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
unseen in public for -almost a
Continued on Page ‘42, Column 8
| same | train |
NEW YORK & — The Cuban
ivevolutionary council says MIG
aircraft and Soviet tanks were
responsible for the losses sulfer-
ed by its forces on Cuba's beach-
es — a reversal if refused to call
a ‘defeat.
“tt is a setback,” said council
leader Jose Miro Cardona, who
displayed tears at times during
a news conference Friday,
He read in firm, solemn tones
a prepared statement in which
the council declared, “MIG air-
eraft and Soviet tanks have in-
flicted a grave reverse to Cuba's
cause.”
But he added “the majority of
those who tanded are actually
fighting. Tt was one more of
many landings thai have taken.
place and will continne to take
place.
“This dramatic episode of total
war, unleashed against our peo-
ple by the Soviet empire, neces-
sarily was played out under, dis-
advantageous conditions that im-
peded proper coordination be-
tween the forces inside the coun-
try and those that returned to
the fatherland.”
Miro Cardona repiuiiated “most
emphatically the intervention
carried on by the Saviet Union
in Cuba through its agents, its
tanks, its airplanes and its ‘tech.
nicians. ”
Miro Cardona, whose son and
those of two other council aides
were among those taken cap-
live by the forees of Cuban
Prime Minister Fidel Castro, ap-
pealed for an end to executions
on the island.
He said he had cabled Pepe
John XXIUU, urging him to in-
tercede through the Iniernat-
Sonal Red Cross to bring a halt
to the Castro firing squads.
Similar appeals were sent 4o
the United Nations and to the
presidents of 11 South and Cen:
tral American nations, he said.
The thick-set leader and his
top aldes dropped out of sight
after last weekend's Cuban land.
ings. Miro Cardona reappeared
Wednesday in Washington for
talks with President Kennedy.
Tt was speculated ‘that Miro
Cardona and some of the leaders
may have been with the revolu.
tionary forces right up te the
time they landed in Cuba.
| - (NEW YORK iA -- The Guban
revolutionary council says MIG
aircraft and Soviet tanks were
responsible for the losses suf-
fered by its forces on Cuba's
beaches —a reversal it refused to
call a defeat.
“It is a setback,’’? said coun-
cil leader Jose Miro Cardona,
who displayed tears at times
during a news conference.
| same | train |
Michael E. ‘Mike’ Drummond,
17, son of Mr. and Mrs, E. T.
Drummond, 808 South Johnston,
has been nominated by Tom
Steed, Fourth District congress-
man, as principal to the U, §,
Naval Academy.
Drummond _ at Ps is a
student at Sewanee Military Aca-
demy, in Tennessee. ;
</s> |
Fred Darby is able to be home a-
gain after several weeks stay at the
Veterans Hospital at Poplar Bluff.
Fred’s many friends here are glad
to see him at home.
Everett Stucker from St. Louis
spent last week here visiting with
his mother, Mrs. Mary Stucker.
A news item in the American Re-
publie states that Elvis Link, man-
ager of the meat department at the
Kroger store in Malden has been
‘chosen president of the Malden Jr.
Chamber of Commerce. Elvis is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Link of
Ellsinore and all his friends here send
congratulations.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Wilson and
her mother, Mrs. Watson all from
St. Louis spent Sunday here with
his mother, Mrs. C. T. Leach.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Case from St.
Louis were visiting here over the
past week-end at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kingen.
Ray Morlen from here was among
those who attended the Phillips 66
banquet at the Dunn Hotel in Pop-
lar Bluff Tuesday night.
The one of the advantages of tive
ing in a free country like ours is,
“If vou don’t like the weather in
the locality you live in you can move.
somewhere else and not like mn
either.”
Mrs. Carrie Moss is visiting iil
relatives in St. Louis this week.
Postmaster P. G. Wingo is able!
to be home again after quite a sick |
spell in the Doctors Hospital at}
Poplar Bluff.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenney Bowman and
children from St. Louis visited here
a part of last week with her parents
Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Winge.
A capacity crowd attended and |
enjoyed the Carter County singing
convention held here at the Ellsinore
General Baptist Church last Sunday.
The next meeting of the convention
will be at the Methodist Church in
Ellsinore on Sunday afternoon March
20. Remember the date.
Calvin Stratton from St. Lovis
was here over Sunday at the home
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Stratton.
</s> | different | train |
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend’s invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many revels had oseised, Other
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
minotored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new ‘sniiall
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however. that between 500 and
1,300 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault.
Fear and Suspicion
A dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost’ every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse.
The New York Times quoted a
diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
one of Castro's top aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week. The Times said
the information reached Washing-
ton from a diplomatic source in
Havana.
The diplomatic source said a
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro
vincial hospital where Guevara al-
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32,
is Cuba's economic czar.
The government radio network
said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
unseen in public for almost a
week, was personally directing
mop-up operations in the interior
against the surviving rebel invad-
ers who are trying to overthrow
his pro-Communist regime.
A Havana television station Fri-
day night prepared the people for
big ‘‘Castro Day” victory celebra-
tions with a five-hour live inter-
view of prisoners the government
claims it captured during the
abortive invasion by Cuban
exiles.
Operation Failed
One prisoner was Jose Miro
Torres. son of the top Cuban reb-
el leader Jose Miro Cardona.
Miro Torres bit his lip and rocked
in his chair as he admitted that
his force was defeated and his
operation ended in faflure.
The rebel leader's son said on
Havana television that he had
been well treated since his cap-
ture. All his comments were in
the form of answers to his inter-
rogators.
“Then it is not just to say that
Cuban militiamen behave like hu-
man beasts?’ Miro Torres was
asked.
‘Absolutely not,’’ he replied be-
fore the cameras.
When asked by the panel of in-
terviewers what he and his men
exr-ected to find when they land-
ed. Miro Torres said:
‘We thought the militia and the
ar ey would join us.”
“That is what you were told. But
what did you find?”
“They fought us very hard and
defeated us.”
“Then you were defeated?”
Miro Torres was asked.
“Yes,” he answered.
Miro Torres also responded
‘no when asked if any appre-
ciable number of invaders had
escaped.
Appeals to Pope
Jose Miro Cardona appealed
from his New York headquarters
to Pope John XXIII, asking the
pontift’s intercession to hait fir-
ing squad executions of captured
rebels. A Havana dispatch Fri-
day said the number shot had
reached 29 in three days.
The rebel radio broadcast mys-
terious instructions to three bat-
talions, two squadrons and an air
group at 4 a.m. today. It told
one battalion to advance and the
two squadrons bow far to pro-
ceed. It instructed the air group
to cover a certain position by
number. The signals were heard
clearly at an Associated Press
monitoring station in Miami.
President Kennedy was to meet
today with former President Ei-
senhower at Camp David. Md.,
to discuss at lunch the recent
events in Cuba. The two have nut
met since Kennedy took office.
AP Correspondent Bem Price
reported from Cuba that an un-
derground source there com-
plained bitterly over what he saw
as the reasons for the failure of
last weekend's invasion attempt.
The source said the rebels neglect-
ed to seize radio stations for ral-
lying the masses and did not fur-
nish themselves with proper aerial
support.
United Nations Action
The U.N. General Assembly
adopted 59-13 a mild resolution
asking all nations to take what-
ever peaceful steps they can to
remove existing tension between.
the United States and Cuba.
The assembly killed a provision
to assign a peacemaker role to
Latin American nations, reversing
the U.N. Political Committee.
Demonstrations for and against
Castro continued in the rest of
the world. Some Asian editorial
comment backed Washington.
The latest and biggest pro-Cas-
tro rally was in Mexico City,
where police used clubs, tear gas
and fire hoses to disperse a mob
of 10.000. Injuries were reported
as minor. Police moved in as the
crowd was about to burn an
American flag and a 10-foot ef-
figy of Kennedy hanging from a
lamp post.
| WASHINGTON, March 7—(AP)
Ollver Wendell Holmes, asscatate
ustice of the Supreme Court, makes
his debut as a radio speaker Sunday
Maroh &--his ninetieth birthday.
In his second floor study today
workmen Uptond about Installing a
microphone. There is nat even 4
Tadio set in the house. One will b:
connected after the microphone 1:
put In.
| different | train |
ABOARD USS_ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
‘point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
lion miles in orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touch-
down, Charles Conrad Jr., Dr
Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz were hoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
still inside their Apollo ferry
‘Ship.
| “We're all in good shape. Ev-
cerything’s OK,” commander
‘Conrad radioed as the space-
craft descended through the
clouds and landed within view
‘of USS Ticonderoga, just 6%
“miles away. That indicated the
‘astronauts had suffered no ad-
verse physical reactions on re-
‘turning to earth’s gravity after
a record four weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
Ten minutes later they
climbed through the hatch,
smiled and waved as the ship’s
band played ‘Anchors Aweigh’’
for the ail-Navy Skylab crew.
| They walked unsteadily to-
‘ward a mobile medical labora-
‘tory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ exposure
to weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
‘Weitz fared in the weightless
world will play a major role in
determining if man can funce-
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
‘two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27.
| The astronauts almost were
‘held over in orbit today to try
‘to repair a refrigeration prob-
lem in their space station. Bul
Mission Control decided there
\was nothing. the astronauts
‘could do and told them to come
home.
| Ten minutes behind schedule
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un
‘docked their Apollo ferry shit
‘and executed a_ series o
*>maneuvers that sent then
| slamming into the atmosphere
‘above Thailand for the fiery de
scent.
| The Apollo craft hit the calr
| blue waters at 9:50 a.m. ED’
about 830 miles southwest o
bows Diego, Calif. It was jus
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderog:
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tossed «
line to trogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
the astronauts to an elevator
for a ride to the hangar deck.
- Hundreds of white-clad sail-
‘ors on deck and millions watch-
ing televiston around the world
again had a ringside seat to a
U.S. man-in-space landing as
‘the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
_ “Everyone’s in super shape,”
‘Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
Heaped from helicopters to se
,cure the spacecraft with flota-
tion collars.
_ The Ticonderoga reported the
astronauts had landed 6% miles
from the ship and that the ship
was 6'2 miles from the target
‘point, indicating a perfect
‘touchdown.
The Ticonderoga steamed to
‘pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, ir
contrast to most earlier U.S
‘flights when the spacemer
were li‘ted to the carrier by
helicopter.
_ Medical requirements dic
tated the pick up method today.
Medica] experts were not cer-
tain how the astronauts would
‘react after returning to earth’s
‘gravity following record ex.
‘posure to space weightlessness
so they decided the astronauts
should be subjected to as littl
activity as possible until they
can be examined in mobile
medical laboratories aboard the
Ticonderoga.
_ The landing completed ar
historic space mission that last
je 28 days and 50 minutes. Dur
‘ing that time the spacemen cir
cled the earth 395 times.
Misson Control was kept in
‘suspense for most of the final
he minutes of the flight — a pe-
riod when the Apollo ship was
out of radio contact with
‘ground stations.
| The Ticonderoga’s radar
picked up the streaking craft at
_a distance of 188 miles, 10 min-
‘utes before landing.
_ While out of radio contact, at
9:11 a.m., the astronauts con-
ducted the critical retrorocket
burn that slowed their 17,100
| mile-an-hour speed by 130
‘miles, allowing earth’s gravity
‘to tug the spacecraft out of or-
‘bit and start the long glide
‘through the atmosphere to the
eastern Pacific.
_ The refrigeration trouble
caused considerable concern. A
ee intended to correct it
caused a brief gyroscope prob-
‘lem that caused the 10-minute
delay in the astronauts’ depar-
‘ture from the orbiting labora-
tory.
_ “We're free,” Conrad report-
ed seconds after the control
center flashed the go-ahead for
‘undocking from the 118-foot-
long laboratory.
_ They left behind a space sta-
ition which they had salvaged
with some daring, difficult and
often ingenious repair tasks
after it was damaged during
launching May 14.
After the undocking, the as-
tronauts made a 45-minute fly-
‘around inspection of the sta-
tion, televising pictures of the
odd-looking space _ vehicle to
mission control for evaluation
by experts.
| Then, in quick succession,
they triggered the engine fir-
(Turn To Page Seven)
| ABOARD USS_ TICONDE-
ROGA (AP) — Skylab’s astro-
nauts came safely home from
man’s longest space journey to-
day, splashing down with pin-
point precision in the Pacific
Ocean after 28 days and 11 mil-
lion miles in orbit.
Just 39 minutes after touch.
down, Charles Conrad Jr., Dr.
Joseph P, Kerwin and Paul J.
Weitz were hoisted onto the
deck of this recovery carrier,
aie inside their Apollo ferry
Sere’ re all in good shape, Ev-
erything’s OK,’ commander
Conrad radioed as the space-
craft. descended through the
clouds and landed within view
of USS Ticonderoga, just 6%
miles away. That indicated the
astronauts had suffered no ad
verse physical reactions on re
turning to earth's gravity afte
a record four weeks’ exposure
to space weightlessness.
Ten minutes later the}
climbed through the hatch
smiled and waved as the shin’:
band played ‘Anchors Aweigh”
for the part-Navy Skylab crew.
They walked unsteadily to-
ward a mobile medical labora-
tory, showing some effects
from the four weeks’ exposure
to weightlessness.
How well Conrad, Kerwin and
Weitz fared in the weightless
world will nlav a maior role in
Ww UGS 64452558555 °° ~*~ nlite. Alu
tion efficiently in future long-
duration flights. The first of the
two 56-day Skylab missions is
scheduled for launch July 27,
The astronauts almost were
held over in orbit today to try
to repair a refrigeration prob-
lem in their space station. But
Mission Control decided there
was nothing the astronauts
could do and told them to come
home.
Ten minutes behind schedule,
Conrad, Kerwin and Weitz un-
docked their Apollo ferry ship
and executed a_ series of
maneuvers that sent therm
slamming into the atmosphere
above Thailand for the fiery de-
scent.
The Apollo craft hit the calm
blue waters at 9:50 a.m. EDT
about 830 miles southwest of
San Diego, Calif. It was just
after dawn off the West Coast.
The 42,000-ton Ticonderoga
quickly steamed alongside the
three-ton Apollo and tossed a
line to frogmen in the water. A
crane then lifted the craft and
the astronauts to an elevator
for a ride to the hangar deck,
SAILOR’S WATCH
Hundreds of white-clad sail-
ors on deck and millions watch-
ing television around the world
again had a ringside seat to a
U.S, man-in-space landing as
the Apollo craft floated down
through low-hanging clouds and
dangling under three huge or-
ange and white parachutes.
**Everyone's in super shape,”
Conrad said as the spacecraft
bobbed on the water awaiting
pickup. Frogmen immediately
leaped from helicopters to se.
cure the spacecraft with flota.
tion collars.
The Ticonderoga steamed te
pick up the Apollo capsule with
the astronauts still inside, ir
contrast to most earlier U.S
flights when the spacemer
were lifted to the carrier b;
helicopter.
Medical requirements dic
tated the pick up method today
Medical experts were not cer
tain how the astronauts woul
react after returning to earth’
gravity following record a)
posure to space weightlessnes
so they. decided the astronaut
_,| Should be subjected to as littl
*t! activity as possible until the
t-lecan be examined in mobi!
| medical |aboratories aboard th
- Ticonderoga.
t RECORD MISSION
The landing completed a
—! historic space mission that last
ed 28 days and 50 minutes, Dur
ing that time the spacemen ci;
Cled the earth 395 times.
Misson Control was kept i
suspense for most of the fina
76 minutes of the flight — a pe
riod when the Apollo ship wa
out of radio contact wit
ground stations.
The Ticonderoga’s rada
picked up the streaking craft a
a distance of 188 miles, 10 mir
utes. before landing.
While out of radio contact, a
9:11 a.m., the astronauts cor
r-|ducted the critical retrorocke
t,}burn that slowed their 17,10
ajmile-an-hour speed by 13
le | miles, allowing earth's gravit
S (CONTINUED ON PAGE Two)
| same | train |
Kansas City, Mar. 7. {AP).—
Mrs. Myrtle A. Bennett rejoiced to-
day in acquittal on a murder
charge growing out of the bridge
game slaying of her husband.
“Words cannot express my
thanks for vindication,” she said.
The 35-year-old widow was freed
yesterday by the verdict of a jury
which had deliberated’ her fate
eight and one half hours.
The decision removed her from
jeopardy for the killing of John
Gilbert Bennett, 36, in their fash-
ionable apartment the night of
September 29, 1924. following a
quarrel over. his failure io fulfill
a four-spade bridge bid. The de-
fense contended Bennett was slain
in a struggle over a pistol he ask-
ed his wife to obtain for him.
John V. Hill, assistant prosecut-
ing attorney’ remarked:
“Tt looks like an open season on
husbands,” ‘
“®f course I’m satisfied,” said
James A. Reed, former. United
States senator and chic of defense
counsel. “But I’m out of the crim-
inal court business.” ‘
Leslie R. Choate, jury foreman,
said the state “did not prove her
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
| meee RRS FAMINE RAR ED? SS
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
jfrom an isiand off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
iCastro government put before
‘Havana television cameras some
[prisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many rebeis had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this, Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault.
A_ dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as 2
Jcity of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arresis and deten:
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
|jails and living conditions were
described as grawing worse.
The New York Times quoted «
diplomatic source in Washingtor
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
one of Castro’s top aides, wa:
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week, The Times saic
ithe information reached Washing.
ton from a diplomatic squrce in
Havana.
'| The diplomatic source said a
| neurasurgeon was sent to a pro-
jvincial hospital where Guevara al-
|legedly was taken, Guevara, 32,
‘tis Cuba's economic ezar.
The government radio network
; Said Prime Minister Fidel Castro,
unseen in public for almost 2
| Week, was personally directing
MOp-up operations in the interioy
{against the surviving rebel invad-
‘jets who are trying to overthraw
his pro-Communist regime.
'] A Havana television station Fri-
{day night prepared the people for
{big “Castro Day” victory celebra-
.|tions with a five-hour live inter-
ij view of prisoners the government
sjclaims it captured during the
,f abortive: invasion by Cuban
exiles.
| different | train |
Rockford, Ill. — U.P) — A young
husband confessed today that he
stabbed his estranged wife as he
kissed her passionately after she
spurned his plea for a reconcilia-
tion.
Thomas Gates, 25, was captured
after he knifed his wife, Wanda,
18, in her room here and then
leaped from a second story win-
dow.
Mrs. Gates was “near death” at
Swedish American hospital. Gates
was held in city jail on a charge
of assault with a deadly weapon.
He dislocated his wrist in his jump
from his wife’s window.
Gates told Police Capt. Ralph
Johnson that he came here from
his home in Beloit, Wis., to ask
his wife to return to him. They
separated last Tuesday after re-
peated quarrels over his family in
Beloit. They were married nine
months ago.
Brought 17 Roses
He said he brought 17 roses and
promised his wife that they would
move to Texas, where her family
— to get away from his fam-
y.
“I gave her the roses and tried
to convince her that she should
come back to me,” he said. “She
answered: ‘It’s too late. Anyway,
I’ve got a date for tonight.’ That
made me mad.
| Rockford —(?)— Police Capt.
‘Ralph Johnson said today
young husband told him -
stabbed his estranged bride of
nine months because she spurn-
ed his plea for reconciliation.
The wife, Mrs. Wanda Gates,
18, is in critical condition from
stab wounds in her side and
Thomas
| different | train |
(By the Associated Press)
An anti-Castro radio broad-
cast from an island off Cen-
tral America today told two
rebel “battalions” apparently
fighting on Cuban soil that
help was on the way and urged
them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Is-
Jand was made a few hours
after the Castro government
put before Havana television
cameras some prisoners cCap-
tured after last weekend's in-
vasion. One admitted their
mission failed and said not
‘many rebels had escaped. Oth-
ers said propaganda from Swan
‘Island and North America had
‘misled them.
Troop Orders
The Swan Island broadcast,
‘monitored by the Associated
‘Press in Miami, also repeated
|troop movement instructions it
jhad sent out during the night.
| It had told earlier of new
small landings made in Cuba
jbut no other source confirmec
‘this. Some rebel sources in Mi
lami did say, however, that be
|tween 500 and 1,500 guerrilla:
were headed for Cuba for ¢
‘new invasion assault.
Che Wounded?
or dispatch from Havana de
' scribed the Cuban capital as :
city of fear and suspicion, I
said a new wave of arrests anc
detentions reached into almos
levery family. Suspects jammec
‘swollen jails and living condi
tions were described as grow-
ing worse.
The New York Times quoted
a diplomatic source in Wash-
ington as saying Maj. Ernesto
(Che) Guevara, one of Castro's
top aides, was seriously
wounded in the head earlier
this week. The Times said the
information reached Washing-
ton from a diplomatic source
in Havana.
The diplomatic source said a
neuro-surgeon was sent to a
provincial hospital where Gue-
vara allegedly was taken. Gue-
vara, 32, is Cuba’s economic
czar. :
- The government radio net-
work said Prime Minister Fidel
‘Castro, unseen in public for
almost a week, Was personally
directing mop-up operations in
the interior against the surviv-
ing rebel leaders who are try-
ing to overthrow his pro-Come-
munist regime,
A Havana television station
Friday night prepared the peo-
ple for big “Castro Day” vic-
tory celebrations with a five-
hour live interview of prisoners
the government claims it cap-
tured during the abortive in-
vasion by Cuban exiles.
| Leader’s Son Taken
_ One prisoner was Jose Miro
Torres, son of the top Cuban
rebel leader Jose Miro Car-
dona. Miro Torres bit his lip
-and rocked in his chair as he
admitted that his force was de-
feated and his operation ended
in failure.
The rebel leader’s son said
on Havana television that he
had been well treated since his
) ‘
.capture. All his comments
_ were in the form of answers to
his interrogators.
| “Then it is not just to say
that Cuban militiamen behave
| (Turn to Page 2, Col. ))
| 1 BY 19 ASSVULALED FREES
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
lica today told two rebel battalions
/apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
SHOW PRISONERS
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro. . a oe overnment . Duk. before
Havana* television ene ‘some
prisoners captured after last
weekend’s invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many ‘tebels had escaped. “Others
said propaganda from Swan _Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast.
monitored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Flia., also re-
peated troop movement instruc:
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new smal
landings made in Cuba, but ne
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 anc
1,500 guerrillas were headed fot!
Cuba for a new invasion assault
CITY OF FEAR
A dispatch from Havana de
Iscribeq the Cuban capital as =<
city of fear and suspicion. It saic
ja new wave of arrests and deten
|itions reached into almost ever}
ifamily. Suspects jammed: swoller
jails and living conditions were
;described as growing worse.
| The New York Times quoted ¢
‘| diplomatic source in Washingto1
jas saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara
one of Castro’s top aides, wa
| seriously wounded in the hear
‘learlier this week. The Times sai
‘ithe information reached Washing
ton from a diplomatic source it
_|Havana.
.| The diplomatic source said |
,;neurosurgeon was sent to a vro
‘|vincial hospital where Guevara al
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32
is Cuba’s economic czar.
-| The government radio networ
-jsaid Prime Minister Fidel Castre
-junseen in public for almost |
-|week, was personally directin;
a/mop-up operations in the imterio
f'against the surviving rebel invac
-iers who are trying to overthrov
Oihis pro-Communist regime.
‘Continued on page two}
| same | train |
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. CUPID
—The General Assembly, ending
its 15th session, today reversed a
committee decision to ask the Or-
ganization of American States to
seek a reconciliation between Cuha
and the United States.
The key paragraph of a seven
power Latin American resolution
to refer the U.S-Cuban_ situation
to the organization Fidel Castro's
government refuses to deal with
was killed.
Assembly President Frederick 1
Boland of Ireland gavelled to a
close at 6:02 a.m., EST, the ses-
sion that started last September
20 with a parade of world leaders
led by Soviet Premier Nikita S.
Khrushebev. [tf resumed Mareh 7
after an ll-week Christmas recess.
Boland said that although it was
the longest session in assembly
history, there was not sufficient
time to take up a number of
items on the agenda.
| UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, (UPI)
—The General Assembly, ending
its 15th session, today reversed a
committee decision to ask the
Organization of American States
to seek a reconciliation between
Cuba and the United States.
The key paragraph of a seven-
power Latin American resolution
to refer the U.S.-Cuban situation
to the organization Fidel Castro's
government refuses to deal with
was killed.
The Assembly wound up the
weeklong U.N, debate with a mild
appeal to “all] member states to
take such peaceful action as is
open to them to remove existing
tensions’ between the two coun-
tries.
A last-minute crisis developed
when the world parliament at
first refused to approve its budg-
etary, committee's recommenda-
tion for a $100 million budget for
the U.N. Congo operation for the
first 10 months of 1961.
India proposed a special session
next week to take up the Congo
budget. But diplomats worked out
a formula to save the situation
when the United States proposed
that the financial discussion be
dropped temporarily to let the
delegates talk the situation over
| privately,
Approve pakistan Formula
By a 54 to 15 vote with 23 ab-
istentions, the assembly finally ap-
proved a new formula int
by Pakistan which raised from
75 to 80 per cent the amount of
reduction needy countries could
obtain in their share of the Conge
costs, levied under the regular
U.N. scale of assessments,
The Cuban question dominated
the world parliament's last day,
which began at 11 a.m, EST Fri
day with simultaneous meetings
of the assembly and its main po
litical] committee,
Cuban Foreign Minister Rau
| Roa eventually won success in hi:
battle to keep the Organization o
American States out of the Castre
government's affairs, even thoug!
the Latin American resolutior
took a roundabout way of refer
ring the issue simply to OAS
The %-nation political! commit
tee Friday afternoon approved by)
(Continued on Page 3, Col, 5)
| same | train |
CHRIST AND COMMUNION
“For as often as se cat this
bread and drink this cup, ye
do show the Lord's death.”
1 Cor, 11:26
He brake the bread and gave the
cup And said that when we
dine or sup.Each time we
should remember Him...But we
have in the interim..Let this
become @ holy rite For church-
observance and lost sight Of
Christ's injunction that we think
...Of Him each time we eat or
drink Why do we not im every
case... Belore we cat bow for &
“grace”?
Julien C. five
</s> | wT PPR ewe F rere Ser eves eer eee
“For as often as ye eat this
bread and drink this cup, ye
do show the Lord’s death.”
I Cor, 11:26
He brake the bread and
gave the cup... And said
that when we dine or sup
... Each time we should re-
member Him... But we
have in the interim...
Let this become a holy rite
... For church-observance
and lost sight... Of
Christ’s injunction that we
think... Of Him each time
we eat or drink... Why
do we not in every case
... Before we eat bow for
a “grace’’?
JULIEN C. HYER
</s> | same | train |
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion. One admitted
their mission. failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan _ Is-
land and North America had mis-
led them.
The Swan Island . broadcast,
monotored by the Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also re-
peated troop movement instruc-
tions it had sent out during the
night.
It had told earlier of new small
_ landings made -in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
rebel sources‘in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
1,500 guerrillas were headed for
Cuba for a new invasion assault:
A ‘dispatch from Havana de-
scribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swoller
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse.
The New York Times quoted
diplomatic source in Washingtor
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara
one of Castro’s top aides, was
seriously wounded in the heac
earlier this week. The Times saic
the information reached Washing
ton from a diplomatic source ir
Havana.
The diplomatic source said ¢
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro
vincial hospital where Guevara al
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32
is Cuba’s economic czar.
| |: WASHINGTON, March 7 UP)
Oliver Wendell Holmes, associate
justice of ‘the supreme court
| makes his debut as a radio speak
er Sunday, March 8—His ninetietr
‘birthday.
In his second floor study today
workmen tiptoed about instailin
a microphone. There is not ever
a radio set in the house. One will
be connected after the microphone
is put in.
Tne speech by the oldest mar
lever to serve on the supreme bench
is the first. public notice he has
taken of a birthday.
{ They have‘been events for a long
itime to those about him. For years
deluge of requests from news-
apermen for r interviews and a
erices of pians by admirers for
yublic demonstrations have pre-
“eded each anniversary. .
The newspapermen get no fur-
‘her than his secretary and the
admirers are always forced to bow
‘to his pronounced distaste of pub-
‘lic eulogies.
There is no frigidity and little
austerity in his consistent aver-
sion to publicity and display.
‘The radio program. in his honor
begins at 10:30 p. m. E. S. T. Sun-
day night. Dean Charles E. Clark
of the Yale Law School, from the
(Continued en page Six).
| different | train |
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP)—A_ test pilot coolly
describes as “just routine” a trou-
ble-plagued flight in the X15 rock-
et plane that set a new controlled
flight speed record of 3,140 miles
an hour.
Air Force Maj. Bob White
zoomed more than 50 miles a
‘minute to an altitude of 103,000
feet Friday, thus breaking the
‘old record of 2,905 m.p.h. he had
set last March 7.
There were tense moments dur-
ing the 11-minute flight—when the
engine quit temporarily and mo
‘ments later when the swept- wing
‘Dart’ 8 pressurized cabin sprang
ia leak,
White later brushed aside the
miscues, saying, ‘We expect
some unusual things to show up
in an experimental program.”
Seconds after the X15 dropped
from its B52 mother plane at 45,-
000 feet, its rocket engine quit.
The X15 dropped 7,000 feet while
White frantically tried to re-start
the engine. At 37,000 feet the
rocket engine's 57.000 pounds of
thrust came on at full throttle,
slamming White back in the
cockpit seat with a force three
times that of gravity. Over the
radio came White's unemotional:
“That was quite a boost.”
White pulled the X15 into a
climbing angle of 30 degrees and
the rocket plane shot like a bullet
on its first full power run. At
80,000 feet, White had his record
and shut off the engine.
His momentum carried him still
higher. At 90,000 feet, the cabin
sprang a leak and White com-
pensated by inflating his space-
type flying suit. At 103,000 feet
the X15 reached the top of its
flight and White eased the plane's
nose gently into a glide back to a
landing on a nearby dry lake.
| Dy PAs & eee
United Press Staff Correspondent
DETROIT, May 12 (P\—Ford
Motor Company and CIO. offi
als mest today to ubtempt set:
tlement af a six-day-old strike
aeuinst two key Ford planta that
jwill idle a tatal of 84,000 work:
ors by tontht
Reopening of wega ns came
es Ford scheduled inmmediate shut-
dawis of 11 asgenbly lines, with
ninge cizkt to elose hs
Monday.
Henry Ford H, youthful he
of the company, accepted aun
valfer lo reapen peace tatks whitl
were aut short last Thursdat
when 62.200 United Auto Work
ers struck at Ford's River Roux
and Linealn-Mereury plants,
i In his bid to reopen negotia:
rtions, Walter Reuther, president
af the VAW, asked Ford lo per.
sonally lead the company negotiat-
ing team,
| different | train |
Boulder, Colo., May 10 (®)—A
jury which said it sought divine
guidance convicted Joe Walker in
the rape slaying of coed Theresa
Foster.
The verdict of second degree
murder carries a penalty of 10
years to life in prison.
Walker only shook his head
when he heard the verdict late
yesterday. That was just an hour
short of three days from the time
the jury took the case against the
32-year old metal worker.
In Santa Monica, Calif., Walk-
-er’s wife said she refuses “to give
up hope for Joe until after the
ease has been appealed.” She
termed “very ridiculous” a ques-
tion as to whether she plans to
collect the $10,000 reward offered
‘by the University of Colorado
regents for the arrest and convic-
tion of the killer of the 18-year
old coed,
- Walker was arrested at their
‘home near here 12 days after the
slaying November 9 on a lonely
lover’s lane. His wife told police
she was suspicious of bloodstains
in his ear and on his clothing.
Walker admitted dumping the
girl’s body under a bridge. But
he said a blond boyfriend of Miss
Foster killed her after beating
Walker unconscious. His state-
ment was read to the jury but he
did not join the parade of 72 wit-
nesses to the stand in the 15-day
trial.
| By The Associated Press |
An anti-Castro radio broadcast
from an island off Central Amer-
ica today told two rebel battalions
apparently fighting on Cuban soil
that help was on the way and
urged them not to surrender.
The appeal from Swan Island
was made a few hours after the
Castro government put before
‘Havana television cameras some
prisoners captured after last
weekend's invasion. One admitted
their mission failed and said not
many rebels had escaped. Others
said propaganda from Swan Is-
land and North America had mis-|
led them.
The Swan Island broadcast,
monotored by The Associated
Press in Miami, Fla., also repeat-
ed troop movement instructions
it had sent out during the night.
It had told earlier of new small
landings made in Cuba, but no
other source confirmed this. Some
‘rebel sources in Miami did say,
however, that between 500 and
/1,500 guerrillas were headed for
‘Cuba for a new invasion assault.
| A dispatch from Havana de-
isecribed the Cuban capital as a
city of fear and suspicion. It said
_a new wave of arrests and deten-
tions reached into almost every
family. Suspects jammed swollen
jails and living conditions were
described as growing worse.
The New York Times quoted a
| diplomatic source in Washington
as saying Maj. Ernesto Guevara,
‘one of Castro's top aides, was
seriously wounded in the head
earlier this week, The Times said
the information reached Washing.
ton from a diplomatic source in
‘Havana.
| The diplomatic source said 2
neurosurgeon was sent to a pro
vincial hospital where Guevara al
legedly was taken. Guevara, 32
‘is Cuba’s economic czar.
| different | train |
ASHINGTON (AP)—President.
Kennedy meets with former Pres-
ident Dwight D, Kisenhaner to
day in an evident bid to rally
Strang national support for eriti-
cal sleps which he may consider
necessary to deal with the in-
creasingly dangerous Cuan cri-
sis.
A White House announcement
of Ihe session--al Camp David,
Md. — emphasized Cuha as lhe
lopie for the conference. But it
did net rule oul the praspect that
Keunedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
fensifying cold war confliets with
the Soviet Union.
Before flying lo Camp David
by helicopter Kennedy met with
the National Security Council,
presumpbly to discuss possible
future aves against the pre.
Communist government of Cuba
in the wake of this week's ahor-
live anliCaslro invasion.
In the midst of these develop-
ments, Ihe President was report-
ext ta hate ordered a thorough
study of reasons Cor the defeat
of the rehel invasion allempt
which began last weekend with
the United Slates’ morat support
~and, i€ was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. 5.
money and arms.
The President was understood
fo be concerned about what some
authorilies called a failure to cal-
‘|eulale accurately in advance the
‘|strenglh of Prime Minisier Fide
Castro's military reaction to the
[rebel assanll as well a3 possible
terrors in intelligence.”
| MEGS VVrivop ww
DETROIT, May 10.—(UP)—Ford Motor company and
CIO officials meet today to attempt settlement of a six-day-
old strike against two key Ford plants that will idle a total
» £8 OM AAR earn eclonmeae mes CAM orh+
wees phate Sete en ee ee ee
of 85,000 workers by tonight.
Reopening of negotiations
came as Ford scheduled im-
mediate shutdowns of 11 as-'
sembly lines, with the re-|
maining ‘eight to close by
next Monday.
Henry Ford II, youthful head of
the company, accepted a union of-
fer to reopen peace talks which
were cut short last Thursday when
62,200 United Auto Workers struck
at Ford’s River Rouge and Lincoln-
Mercury plants. ‘
In his bid to reopen negotiations,
Walter Reuther, president of the
UAW, asked Ford to personally
lead the company negotiating team.
Ford declined the invitation, but
said “we will be happy to meet
with you at 2 p. m. (EST).”
Reuther referred to a letter the
Ford president wrote to striking
workers last week, in which he
said the walkout was “unneces-
| sary.”
“Since your letter expresses con-
cern for the Ford workers, we
would like to suggest that you as-
sume your personal obligations to
participate in negotiations.”
| “This will also afford you the
|opportunity,” Reuther said, “of be-
ing apprised of all facts in the
situation, which obviously you do
not have.”
Ford said John Bugas, vice
president in charge of industrial
relations who led previous peace
\efforts, would conduct company
; negotiations with “the full support
‘land backing of the management.”
-| Reuther said he regretted that
| the Ford president would not at-
|,tend the meeting. He said he was
}}attending “even though it means |
will be unable to take my regular
| hospital treatment.”
Reuther’s right arm has been in
-\a sling since an attempt was made
|; on his life a year ago.
“The issues involved and the
welfare of workers on strike have
an importance that outweighs any
| personal consideration,” he said.
'| Loeals 600 and 190 of the UAW
' struck the two plants last Thurs.
day, charging the company with
speeding up assembly lines at the
.|risk of the “health and safety” of
| workers. The company denied an}
speedup.
The strike at the heart of the
Ford empire has shut down sev.
_eral small Ford plants, and causec
layoffs among the 3,500 major
supplier firms to the multi-billion
dollar Ford auto business,
The company’s tractor divisior
|at Highland Park, Mich., whict
/makes one-fifth of the wheel-type
|tractors in the nation, will closé
, tonight.
| Reuther wrote the Ford presi
jdent that the UAW “is willing t
|participate in further — effort:
| CEORER,, Aizeet negotiations in or
der to find a fair and equitabl
| settlement.”
| Ford replied in a telegram tha
(Continued on page 31, column 1)
| different | train |
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two fighter pilots
have been formally accused of misconduct for
actions during their years in North Vietnamese
prisoner of war camps, Pentagon sources have
disclosed.
The two men are Navy Capt. Walter E. Wil-
bur, 43, of Columbia Cross Roads, Pa., and Ma-
rine Lt. Col. Edison Wainwright Miller, 41, of
Tustin, Calif,
| WASHINGTON (AP) — Two fighter
pilots have been formally accused of
misconduct for actions during their years
in North Vietnamese prisoner of war
camps, Pentagon sources have disclosed.
They are the first officers to face such
charges, which were brought by Rear
Adm. James V. Stockdale, of Coronado,
Calif. Stockdale, a captain as a POW,
was promoted after he returned home.
The two men are Navy Capt. Walter E.
Wilber, 43, of Columbia Cross Roads,
Pa., and Marine Lt. Col. Edison
Wainright Miller, 41, of Tustin, Calif.
Miller, whose mother lives in Clinton,
Iowa, said he would have no comment
until he gets word of the charges from
official sources.
“IT don’t know anything about it except
what I’ve heard on the news, so it would
not be appropriate to say anything at this
time,” he said.
Wilber was the executive officer of a
squadron of Phantom F‘4 fighter planes
when he was shot down over North
Vietnam June 16, 1968.
Miller's Marine F4 Phantom went
down over North Vietnam Oct. 13, 1967.
The sources said Thursday that Stock-
dale mailed the formal charges to Navy
Secretary John Warner. Details of Stock-
dale’s accusations were not available.
On May 29, eight enlisted men were
formally charged by Air Force Col.
Theodore Guy of misconduct during their
years of imprisonment.
The eight men, all foot soldiers cap-
tured in South Vietnam, have denied any
improper activities.
Under a policy set out by former
Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird,
the Pentagon is making no formal
charges against any of the 566 returned
POWs. The accusations by Guy and
Stockdale are made as individual ser-
vicemen charging other individual
servicemen under the military code of
justice.
Both Guy and Stockdale were provided
with military lawyers who helped draw
up the legal papers, sources said.
Officially, Pentagon spokesmen say they
have neither discouraged nor en-
couraged any serviceman to take action
against any former POW.
Wilber has acknowledged making
antiwar statements while in captivity. ‘‘I
found out when I had time to think about
myself, where I was, what we were
doing, I found out that my conscience
bothered me,”’ he said in a recent in-
terview.
A Navy man since 1948, Wilber is
married and has three sons and a
daughter. Miller, a Marine since 1949, is
also married and has five sons.
| same | train |
Washington, May 10 (*) —The little guy, any
little guy on this 10th day of May 1949, wet his
finger and held it up to see which way the wind
was blowing. He couldn’t tell.
High in the sky he saw a bird flying. “The dove
of peace—maybe, maybe,” he said to himseif. He
wanted to think it was. He couldn’t be sure. He
trudged along, eyes straight ahead.
Russia and the West were going to end the
Berlin blockade and talk of settling things. But
they had been talking of that off and on since the
war and things hadn't been settled yet.
Knowing the nature of man, he couldn’t be
sure they ever would be and he thought: “I
wonder if they'll ever be settled in my lifetime
or anybody’s lifetime, now or thereafter.”
He didn’t feel blue or gay or happy or de-
pressed. He was living from day to day, wonder-
ing about next week and next year, hoping he
could just live his life quietiy.
But deep tides were running all over the earth,
tides of' people and ideas, changing the lives and
ways of people, tides that were lapping closer to
the shores of the world he lived in.
In China Comunism was roiling over 450,000,-
000 people, over 190,000,000 peopie in Russia and
Siberia, over more millions in eastern Europe,
trying to get through the edges of western Eu-
rope.
| WASHINGTON (P) — The lit-
tle guy, any ittle y on this
10th day ‘of May, 1949, wet his
finger and. held it up to'see which
way the wind was blowing. He
conidn’t tell. :
. High in the sky he saw a bird
flying. “The dove of peace — may-
be, maybe,” he said to himself. He
wanted to think it-was. He couldn’t
be sure. He trudged along, eyes
straight ahead.
Russia and the west were going
to end the Berlin blockade: and
talk of settling this. But they: had
been talking of that off and on
since the war and things hadn’t
been settled yet. :
Knowing the nature of man, he
couldn’t be sure they ever would
be and he thought: “I wonder if
they'll ever be settled in my life-
time or anybody's lifetime, now
or hereafter.”
* &
He didn’t feel blue or gay or
happy or depressed. He was liv-
ing from day to day, wondering
ebout mext week and next year,
heping he could just live out his
: life quietly. . ;
J * @
But deep ‘tides were running all
over the earth, tides of people and
ideas, changing the lives and ways
of people, tides that were lapping
closer to the shores of the world
he lived in. .
In China communism was roll-
ing over 450,000,000, people, over
190,000,000 people in Russia and
Siberia, over more millions in east-
ern Europe, trying to get through
the edges of western Europe.’
And here and in western Europe
people were banding together to
build dikes of steel and planes and
men in uniform to stop the east-
ern tides.
And while the tides moved and
the dikes were being built the
statesmen in their natty Homburg
hats were getting ready to sit
down together to find some way of
living side by side without explos-
_ions.
What would happen in the end,
he didn’t know, since he wasn’t a
prophet himself and didn’t know
anyone who was, although plenty
of brash characters bob up, claim-
ing to know truths, present and
future. . :
e % #
. _But struggle, struggle, strug- |
gle. He had read in beoks that |
mai is an animal and struggles
to survive and this»is a natural
thing. But couldn’t they strug-.
gle without eating one another? —
All he wanted was less shoving.
_% & &
Even here at home, the struggle.
But here it was a struggle of words
between Democrats and Republic-
ans in congress, arguments, wrang-
ling, denunications, politicking,
promises of “I can do it better.”
Show me, the little guy thought.
The little guy ambled alorg,
thinking suddenly of “Lippy”
Durocher af the Giants and he be-
gan to grin: .
“People go to baseball games to
have a good time, and even there
there’s struggle. Think of all the
scrapes Lippy’s been in. And the
fans pay their good money so they
can call people names.”
enone"
| same | train |
WASHINGTON, March 7. =
Niver. Wendell Helmes, agsociate
justice of thes supreme court, makes
his delut az-a radio speaker Sure
day. March §—bis 90th hirthday.
as fiptoed.| Dass patel euing ©
workemen thy al i %
microphone: There i iask wren a
radio set im the house. “Ong wily be
ecanected after the microphone iy
eat be, :
ere speech by ¢ha eldest man
aver to serve on the aupreme bench,
ba first public yietien he has
taken «af a. ire '
Bile frienda say his fagical mind
cRM see HO reason-for a fanfaronade
over birthdays. Hig concessian on
this, 80th anniversary is regarded
fan reluctant ylelding to the dosire
nf sincere irienda to honer him.
The doy, however, will be any-
thing bat’ succession of hand-
shakes and huagzas. He plans to
the radia program ta hia ero
begins at 8:36 p. m. central stand
ara time, Sueday sight. Deas
Charles 1. Clark of the Yale kaa
school, from the studies of the Ca
tumbia Bhromdeasting system fi
New York, will introduce Cale
Justice Hughes. The chief .
will apeak from. the Wask
studio of the syatem. Re d
atterwards will introduce | a
A. Boston, presiient of the Appi
can Bar association, live -aiit sae
from New York. Five maiyiées, ”
inning? et 8:85, beve been:
for Justice Moles. a p66:
He may have mate
wishes, but the pe She Y
wilt not take ihe % Yaleut:
falletted. Even oa, there pay be
‘sentence or twee thee’ wi ive, &
wite Raat
Bye out :
| THE HAGUE (AP) — The In-
ternational Court of Justice
called on France today to re-
frain from nuclear testing in
the South Pacific pending a fi-
nal decision on the legality of
the test series.
By an 86 vote, the court
ruled that Australia and France
should not take any action in
the meantime ‘‘which might ex-
tend the dispute or prejudice
the final decision of the court.”
The court’s ruling followed
applications last month by Aus
tralia and New Zeland seeking
an injunction against the
French test series.
The court said it would
schedule further hearings in
September and December. It
did not say if France, which
boycotted last month’s hear
ings, would be represented at
the forthcoming sessions.
In their pleadings before the
court, representatives of both
the Australian and New Zea-
land governments said further
nuclear tests in the South Pa-
cific would present unaccep-
table health and environmental
dangers to the population of the
areas concerned,
The Australian attorney gen-
eral, Lionel Murphy, said the
forthcoming series might be of
“a size and yield hitherto un-
equalled.”
The people of the southern
hemisphere ‘‘will pay with their
lives for the French decision to
go ahead with their spring test
program,”’ he added.
France so far has refused to
give any information as to the
nature and yield of the devices
which it proposes to explode.
The only indication so far
that the tests are imminent
were reports last Saturday
from Tahiti saying six French
navy vessels, known to be con-
nected with the tests, left there
last week bound for the Mu-
ruroa Atoll.
The Mururoa test atoll lies
7 miles southeast of Tahiti.
French opposition leader
Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber
said in the Tahitian capital of
Papeete Thursday the French
government plans six or eight
nuclear atmospheric tests in
the South Pacific this year, and
must start them by the end of
July,
The Radical party leader is
in Tahiti to lead a mass demon-
stration Saturday against the
tests.
The World Court's ruling still
left the door open for France to
step into the case should this
now be decided by the French
government.
| different | train |
Crops, Live Stocks and
Farm Property Damaged
to Extent of Hundreds of
\ Thousands of Dollars —
Cloudburst Above Ellen-
ville, N. Y., in Catskill
Mountains Sends 20-Foot
Deluge Through Peaceful
Vale Carrying All Before
It—Many Narrow Escapes
(SY 280 Soovescinu £405e/
Ellenville, N. Y. Aug. 27—A narrow
galley in the Catskills, about 25 miles
jong and less than a mile across at
its widest point, late today shook it-
gif loose from the grip of the cloud-
burst and flooded. stream and count-
ed its loss of life and property.
Through this little valley, running
portheast to Kingston, on the Hud-
gon river, the Rondout creek winds
a fairly tranquil course under normal
Yesterday a cloudburst
poured down thousands of tons of
‘water and sent a 20 foot wall of
water tumbling through the valley.
Three Known Dead |
Today three perscns were known
deed; crops,. livestock and farm
was damaged to the extent
of hundreds of thousands of dollars;
at least 20 bridges had been torn
from their bases; highways. had been.
washed out, communications had
been disrupted and scores of persons
bad been rendered homeless. |
Of a score of villages caught in’
the path of the torrent, the waters
qreaked their fury for the most part.
om Montele, Lackawack, Napanoch,
Wawarsing, Kerhonksen, Accord, '
Higa Palls.and Rosendale... ..
Charles Lavery, 50, of Paterson, N.
a> motoring ‘through the valley with |
g.companion, Joseph Hughes, also of |
Paterson, drowned when his motor
galled in the flooded’ highway © near |
Napanoch. The two men.stepped from
the machine and Hughes was drag-
ged to safety while Lavery sank in|
s hole in .the. road. — Blatt of |
lackawack, attempting to carry his’
wife to safety, stumbled and drowns |
ed on the threshold of his home. An |
unidentified infant also was said to.
have perished. |
Log Jam Saves Town
The waters of Rondout creek,
gwollen to flood proportions by the
cloudburst, were further augmented |
by tributaries until they tore into.
Napanoch, rising to the level of)
second story windows in the out-)
skirts of the village and at the)
Lackawack Country club. Jamming of |
logs at a pulp mill formed a tempo- |
rary dam and was said to have saved |
Napanoch village from destruction. |
At Kerhonksen the flood spread)
out over a five mile flat, only to.
surge through a narrow gateway to |
another flat. The two flats served |
to check much of the force of the
nen
|
ELLENVILLE, XN, ¥. AUR. 26 — te
& nexrow valley in cvhe Cataxils.
ahous 25 mules long and less than #@
mile across at 1s W.Gest point, late,
today Snook itself! loose from the grip
ef cloudourss and flomied s mm and
rm and
took acceunt of its loss of ife and
property.
Through this Hutle valley, 72 RINE
pomheass to Kingston. on the Bud-
soa river. the Rondoust creek winds @
Zairly tranquil course under 2107mal
conditions. Yesverdar 2 cloudpurs:
poured thousands of toms Of water
into the siream’s source. and sent 2
20-fo0u Well Of water wumbiag down
the valley.
Todey thret persons were KNOWN
dead: crops, Livestock and farm prop-
arty had been demages to tne exten
of hundreds of thousands ci collars.
at jJeast 20 bridges hac been Wri
trom theit beses; highways had beer
washed out m meny placts: com
munications hed been disvuptec an
scores of Demons had been rendere
homeless Dy the flooded cree
| same | train |
GTON, Fel. 23 un —
voled themselves a
oper cent pay raise taday, [rom $15,
000 a year to $22,500. The vole w
G24,
he prevailing arguement was
that living casts have gone up,
and il wouldid «le ta keep the pay
‘so low (hat only a rich man could
‘serve in Congress,
| ‘The Senate bill will bave to be
‘adjusted swith a more liberal one
voled hy the House last week 283.
‘110. The louse voted lo raise Con
Kress members lo $25,040).
*, Both hills cantinue a $3,000 in
"come (ax exeniplion granted mem
bers of Wie rounds they mus
smiuiniain Gyo lames. Bolh bill
Lalso would raise View Presiden
ixon axl House Speaker Rayhur,
from $i. a year fa $45,100,
During Senate dehbale, Ser
L-Knowland (t-Calift said few pen
ple “have iny idea of the burden
e carries hy a Senator.”
¢ Vie nated What sine menibers hiv
y diel in the Jast Conyress, and sai
Bwe haye na vavatians’ sian) *
s very seldam we spend less tha
12 or M4 hours ina warking day.”
Knowland sail he was sure Lh
eople dil not want ta tien th
, Senate ints a ich man’s chi
@.and suake tl impossible for anyan
lo serve whe does col have outsid
I income:
Sen. Lehman O-Lib, NW s:
@© be was financially independent au
the prapesed pay raise would
“virtually meaningless” te hin
's Neverthovess, he said, he felt wh:
he must vote tar higher salaric
a justice in ny colleagues, |
ar fairness {a the Congress and |
</s> | | WASHINGTON, Feb, 23 7 —
jSenators voted themselves a 50
(per cent pay raise Wednesday,
from $15,000 a year to $22,500. The
}vote was 62-24.
The prevailing argument was
that living costs have gone up,
and it wouldn’t do to keep the pay
so low that only a rich man could
serve in Congress.
The Senate bill will have to be
adjusted with a more liberal one
voted by the House last week 283-
118. The House voted to raise Con-
gress members to $25,000.
Both bills continue a $3,000 in-
come tax exemption granted mem-
bers of the grounds they must
maintain two homes. Both bills
also would raise Vice President
Nixon and House Speaker Rayburn
from $40,000 a year to $45,000.
During Senate debate, Sen.
Knowland (R-Calif) said few peo-
ple “have any idea of the burdens
carried by a senator.”
He noted that nine members had
died in the last Congress, and said
“we have no vacations’ and “it
is very seldom we spend less than
12 or 14 hours in a working day.”
Knowland said he was sure the
people did not want to turn the
Senate into a “rich man's club’
and make it impossible for anyone
to serve who does not have outside
income.
The Senate bill would raise Chief
Justice Earl Warren to $35,000 and
the other justices to $34,500 from:
$25,500 and $25,000 respectively.
The House bill makes it $35,500
and $35,000 respectively,
Judges of federal appellate
courts, who now get $17,500, would
receive $25,500 under the Senate
bill, $25,000 under the House.-
Federal district Judges and
judges on comparable U.S. courts,
now paid $15,000, would get $22,500
under both bills.
</s> | same | train |
CHICAGO, Aug. 28.—Arthur F.
Falk, Northwest Park Cominissioner,
shot and killed his son, Eldred, 22,
in a quarrel at the Falk home here
early today.
The boy’s mother, Mrs. Olga Falk,
and his sister, Bernice, 19, witnessed
the tragedy.
The senior Falk went to the tele-
phone and called pol&e.
“May God have mercy on ma I
have just killed my son. Please
hurry over here,” he said.
Police polit all three members of
‘the family too hysterical to give a
coherent account of what happened.
Between sobs, the father said his
son came home about 1 A, M, ‘and
admitted that he had’ been drinkine.
A quarrel arose and the son threat-
ened to leave the house.
“No you won't,” the older man is
reported to have said. “You'll only
leave here dead.”
The son is said to have dared his
father to shoot him.
In a burst of rage, the father
seized a shotgun and fired.
The gun had been a present to
young Falk from his father last
Christmas,
The senior Falk is prominent in
political circles on the northwest side
of Chicago; in addition to his post as
commissioner of the park, he acted as
secretary of the board.
| | WASHINGTON, May § (UP}—
Sen. Arthur V. Watkins (R., Utah)
istalxed out of senate hearings on
ithe North Atlantic Security pact
Monday, charging that Chairman
fom Connally of the senate for~
eign relations committee had
chided and humiliated him.
Watkins, a “guest” of the com~-
mittee, asked a question of Mrs.
Kathryn Stone, vice president of
the League of Women Voters,
who was testifying in favor of the
itreaty. Connally (D., Tex.) then
made a remark which could not
be heard at the press table.
‘Not Firat Time’
“This ts not the first time I’ve
been chided by the chairman,”
Watkins snapped.
“I have no complaint about try-
ing to find out the witnesses’ atti-
itude,” Connally replied, “but the
senatot spends a great deal of
time explaining his own attitude.”
“f shall ask no more questions,”
Watkins retorted. Shortly after-
ward, he walked out and issued a
statement, saying he refused “to
be lectured, humiliated and em-
parrassed any further.”
in the future, he said, he will
ask his questions on the senate
floor, ‘where I shall not he sub-
jected to a gag rule.”
Grudging Permission
Watkins contended that Core
nally had only “grudgingly"
granted permission for him and
Sen. Forrest C, Donnell (R., Mo.),
another non-commitlee, member,
to sit in on the hearings.
Before the flareup, fortmer Secy.
of War Rohert P. Patterson told
the committee that Russia’s “am-
bitions and power-hungry dictator-
ship” will withhold “the word to
march” if the senate quickly rati-
fies the defense treaty.
Patterson, a vice president of
the Atlantic Union committee,
said that, after the pact is rati-
fied, the senate should consider
formation of a union of the north
Atlantic states as a means of car-
rying out further the objectives
of the alliance.
Moscow Would Continue
He said Moscow would continue
its “ruthless aggression” in the
Hitler manner “as long as it ke-
lieves that it will not run the
risk of defeat by doing so.” He
believed that an Atlantic union
would give the democracies a
combined strength far beyond any-
thing Russia can muster,
The Watkins-Connally set-to co-
‘incided with Connally's move to
speed up the hearings and get a
See Page 2, Column4
| different | train |
Shy PAPERS th, PRANTL
WASHINGTON (AP'—President
Kennedy meets with former Pres-
ident Dwight D. Eisenhower to-
day in an evident bid to rally
strong national support for eriti-
cal steps which he may consider
necessary to deal with the 1n-
creasingly dangerous Cuban cri-
Sis.
A White House announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md. — emphasized Cuba as the
topic for the conference. But it
did not rule out the prospect that
Kennedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
tensifying cold war conflicts with
the Soviet Union.
Before flying to Camp David
by helicopter Kennedy met with
the National Security Council,
presumably to discuss possible
fulure moves against the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
in the wake of this week’s abor-
tive anti-Castro invasion.
In the midst of these develoo-
ments, the President was repoit-
ed to have ordered a thorough
study of reasons for the defeat
of the rebel invasion attempt
which began Jast weekend ‘with
the United States’ moral support
—and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. S.
money and arms.
The President was understood
to be concerned about what some:
authorities called a failure to cal-
culate accurately in advance the
strength of Prime Minister Fidel)
Castro's military reaction to the
rebel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence.
White House news seerefary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday:
neht that Kennedy and Eisen-
hower would meet at Camp Da-
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Getlysburg, Pa., which
Eisenhower used for conferences
with foreign leaders.
The President arranged the
luncheon session in a telephon2
tall to Eisenhower I*riday morn-:
ling. The former chief cxecutive
‘was at his Geltysburg farm.
| Salinger said Kennedy wanted
to brine Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believinz
that “as leader of the Republi-
ean party and as former presi-
dent he should know what the sit-
uation is.”’
Salinger also disclosed — that
'Kennedy had been in indirect con-
‘tact with Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
feller of New York, another Re-
.publican leader, and that he had
,conferred Friduy with Sen. Barry
‘Goldwater, R-Ariz.
| The contacts with Republicans
followed Kennedy's meeting at the
‘White House Thursday with for-
mer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, his Republican opponent
for the presidency last year.
Nixon said in New York Friday
night that he had told Kennedy
he would support him ‘even to
the commitment of American
farmed forces.”
Nixon said that as a_ private
citizen he would back Kennedy
in Such a move if Kennedy con-
‘sidered it necessary to ‘‘stop the
‘buildup of the Communist beach-
head in Cuba.”
Both Kennedy and Eisenhower
arranged to fly to Camp David
by helicopter, Kennedy going di-
rectly from the White House and
Fisenhower from his farm. They
last met on inauguration day,
Jan, 20, when Kennedy took over
the reins of government.
Salinger was asked whether,
Kennedy considered the Cubana
situation grave. He said the Pres-,
ident had expressed his own esti-
mates of that crisis twice in the.
last two days and Salinger had
See KENNEDY Page 2 ;
| WASHINGTON (AP) — President Kennedy meets with
former President Dwight D. Eisenhower today in an evident
bid to rally strong national support for critical steps which he
may consider necessary to deal with the increasingly danger-
Wie Ww Ub wi fatas
A White House announcement
of the session—at Camp David,
Md. — emphasized Cuba as the
topic for the conference. But it
did not rule out the prospect that
Kennedy could discuss with his
predecessor a broad range of in-
tensifying cold war conflicts with
the Soviet Union.
Discuss Future Moves
Before flying to Camp David
by helicopter Kennedy met with
the National Security Council,
presumably to discuss possibile
future moves against the pro-
Communist government of Cuba
in the wake of this week's abor-
tive anti-Castro invasion.
In the midst of these deveiop-
ments. the President was report-
ed to have ordered a thorough
study of reasons for the defeat
of the rebel invasion attempt
which began last weekend with
the United States’ moral support
—and, it was generally believed
here, with some backing of U. S.
money and arms.
The President was understood
to be concerned about what some
authorities called a failure to cal-
culate accurately in advance the
strength of Prime Minister Fidel
Castro's military reaction to the
rebel assault as well as possible
errors in intelligence.
Meet at Camp Dayid
White House news secretary
Pierre Salinger disclosed Friday
night that Kennedy and Elisen-
hower would meet at Camp Da-
vid, the Catoctin Mountain re-
treat near Gettysburg, Pa., which
Eisenhower used for conferences
with foreign leaders.
The President arranged the
luncheon session in a telephone
call to Eisenhower Friday morn-
ing. The former chief executive
was at his Gettysburg farm.
Salinger said Kennedy wanted
to bring Eisenhower up to date
on the Cuban situation, believing
that ‘“‘as leader of the Republi-
can party and as former presi-
dent he should know what the sit-
uation is.”
Salinger also disclosed that
Kennedy had been in indirect con-
tact with Gov. Nelson A. Rocke-
feller of New York, another Re-
publican leader, and that he had
conferred Friday with Sen. Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz.
The contacts with Republicans
followed Kennedy's meeting at the
White House Thursday with for-
mer Vice President Richard M.
Nixon, his Republican opponent
for the presidency last year.
Full Support From Nixon
Nixon said in New York Friday
night that he had told Kennedy
he would support him ‘“‘even to
the commitment of American
armed forces.”
Nixon said that as a private
citizen he would back Kennedy
in such a move if Kennedy con-
sidered it necessary to ‘‘stop the
buildup of the Communist beach-
head in Cuba.”
Both Kennedy and Eisenhower
arranged to fly to Camp David
by helicopter, Kennedy going di-
rectly from the White House and
E1senhower from his farm. They
Jast met on inauguration day,
Jan. 20, when Kennedy took over
the reins of government.
| same | train |