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JOURNAL VOL. 26, NO. 3457 Daily Entered As Second Class Matter Post Office Ogdensburg, N.Y. OGDENSBURG, N.Y. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15,1971 Republican Established 1830 Journal- established 185B HIGHLIGHT Waddingloii Engineering Report Says Developer Should Pay - Page 9 SINGLE COPY 15 cents 'FOLKLORICA' - National Dances de Mexico, will appear in Ogdensburg Nov. 9 at the George Hall auditorium. The company of 50 dancers, singers and instrumentalists from the province of Aztlan will tour here under the patronage of the Mexican Ministry of Fine Arts and appear here under the auspices of the Com- munity Players. All season ticket holders should have their seats pegged at Frank's Decorator Corner before Oct. 22 when in- dividual seats go on sale. Season tickets are $12 for adults and $10 for students. Individual tickets will be $4.50 and $3.50. Nixon's China Team Laden With Experts WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon's 10-man advance team leaving for China this weekend includes experts in diplomacy, nuclear submarines, communications and public relations. And, since two of the team members speak Chinese fluently, Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, leading the group, will not need interpreters. The advance team is to arrange President Nixon's agenda for con- ferences with mainland leaders, work out travel and accommodations arrangements, lay the groundwork for press facilities and decide how best to set up communications. Here are the principals and the roles they will play: Kissinger, 44, professor of govern- ment and international affairs on leave from Harvard University while serving as Nixon's top adviser on national security affairs. He'll discuss with Chinese counterparts the framework of the Nixon visit and the general agenda. \This is a preliminary survey—there will be no final decisions made on this trip, \he says. Alfred LeSesne Jenkins, 55, senior State Department official, from Man^ Chester, Ga. A former superintendent of schools who joined the foreign service in 1946 and was assigned as a Chinese language trainee in Peking. His posts in China-area included Tientsin, Hong- Kong and Taipei. He is the China specialist Kissinger will be counting on most heavily. Now director of the Office of Asian Communist Affairs in the State Department, Jenkins also served on the National Security Council during the Johnson administration. Dwight L. Chapin, 30, graduate of the University of Southern California, who worked in Los Angles and New York of- fices of the J. Walter Thompson ad- vertising agency and as personal aide in Nixon's 1968 presidential campaign. He is deputy assistant to the President, serving as Nixon's appointment's secretary, responsible for general scheduling of the President's time. An experienced advance man, he will work on the intricate scheduling. Timothy G. Elbourne, 33-yearK>ld Los Angelan, journalism graduate of USC, public relations background. He left a job as special assistant to Walt Disney to join Nixon's 1968 campaign and came on the the White House as an assistant to press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. He has advanced numerous Nixon trips in the United States and abroad, con- centrating on press facilities arrangements, and communications. From Kissinger's NSC Staff: John Holdridge, 47-year-old New Yorker, former Army officer, senior staff member for East Asia and the second member of the entourage who speaks Chinese. Educated at Dartmouth and West Point, he also took China studies at Cornell and Harvard. In the foreign service he served in Thailand, Hong Kong and Singapore. Winston Lord, 44, another New Yorker, educated at Yale and the Fletcher School of Law and! Diplomacy, who joined the foreign service in 1962. He has served on the Kennedy Round tariff negotiations in Geneva, and in the Defense Department's Office of International Security Affairs. Holdrige and Lord went with Kissinger on the secret trip to Peking in July. Navy Cmdr. Jonathan T. Howe, Kissinger's military assistant, 36, from San Diego. Graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, he has a Ph.D. from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and has served primarily in nuclear- powered submarines. He has been on the NSC staff since July 1969. Two other military men in the party are: Army Brig. Gen. Albert Redman Jr., 50, from Toledo, Ohio, commanding officer of the White House Com- munications Agency. He's been in the Army 29 years; supervises commu- nications for the President, has served with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and was chief of the Defense Communications Agency in Southeast Asia. He'll get into such problems as whether com- munication by satellite can be worked out with the Chinese. Col. Ralph D. Albertazzie, 48, Nixon's personal pilot, from Morgantown, W.Va., will command a military air crew flying the advance party in one of the presidential jet planes, giving Albertazzie a look at Peking air facilities before taking Nixon in. Stock Market Prices Lower NEW YORK (AP) - Stock market prices opened sharply lower in today's moderate trading. Declines Jed advances by more than 2 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange. Big Board prices included GAF, up % at 203/4; Skyline, off 1% at 543/ 4 ; Braniff, off V 4 at 13%; General Electric, off % at 61; and Litton Inudstries, off y 4 at 23%. Stock market prices had heavy losses in Thursday's moderate trading. The Dow Jones index of 30 industrial stocks fell 10.44 to 878.36. The New York Stock Exchange index of some 1,300 common stocks dropped .49 to 54.27. INDEX Women's Page Sports Classified Editorial Jack Anderson TVKorner Comics Letters to Editor Shriner's Parade Page 4 Page 6,7 Page 11 Page 13 Page 13 Paee 10 Page 14,15 Page 10 Page 9 U.S. Army Plans To ners PHNOM PENH (AP) — The U.S. Army plans to get around the Cooper- Church amendment's ban on American military men in Cambodia by hiring $200,000 worth of foreigners for non- combat work, American officials report. \They are people who can do under contract what we are forbidden to do,\ a U.S. source declared. Another source said they would be cheaper than American civilians. Cooper-Church, passed by Congress last year, bars American military ad- visers, training personnel and combat troops from Cambodian soil. The sources said the foreigners, known in official circles as \third country nationals,\ would supplement Peking Trip Possible Within Six Weeks WASHINGTON (AP) — If history is any guide, President Nixon's history- making journey to Peking will take place within the next six weeks. The White House announced Thursday that Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, the chief executive's foreign policy aide, will leave here Saturday on a 10-day mission to mainland China during which he and government specialists will make final preparations for the Nixon visit. In the past, advance trips of this type normally have preceded presidential journeys by, at most, a few weeks. Nixon must be in Washington in early November to greet India's prime minister, Indira Ghandi. He also has a Nov. 9 commitment to attend one of nearly two dozen Republican fund- raising dinners to be held around the country. As of now, Nixon's public schedule after Nov. 9 is blank. Precedents would point strongly toward a China visit later next month. However, no American president ever has gone to the Chinese mainland and, after nearly a quarter century of only roundabout contact between the two countries, past prac- tices might prove deceiving in this case. Kissinger is due back in the United States about Oct. 25 and has said an announcement of dates for the Nixon trip will follow soon hereafter. The presidential aide and his group, flying aboard a presidential jet com- Mildred Lillie, Friday Top Court Prospects WASHINGTON (AP) —Legal sources peg a woman judge and an Arkansas lawyer as frontrunners for nomination to the Supreme Court. But a high ad- ministration spokesman says at least 15 persons are under consideration. Only six names have been submitted for examination by the American Bar Association, a move Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell says will be made for any person he recommends. Among those six are Herschel H. Friday, 46, a Little Rock municipal bond attorney, and Mildred L. Lillie, 56, a Los Angeles appellate court judge, who are said to be leading contenders to succeed Justice John M. Harlan and the late Justice Hugo L. Black. But the high-lev4l spokesman Thur- sday discounted reports the six are finalists in the search for two names President Nixon will send to the Senate for confirmation. The spokesman said at least 15 per- sons are on the list, which may be ex- panded even further. White House press secretary Ronald L Ziegler had said Thursday more than six are under consideration, but he refused to say how many. The high-level administration spokesman who later spoke of 15 refused to be named. Nixon says he will announce his nominations next week. Asked if the list of 15 might take more time for the ABA to investigate, the spokesman raised the possibility more than two federal circuit court judges are under consideration. If that were the case, the selection process would be speeded because circuit judges are rou- tinely investigated by the bar association- Two circuit court judges are -among the six in primary contention: Paul H.. Roney and Charles Clark, both of whom sit on the 5th Circuit Court. Others among the six are Judge Sylvia A. Bacon, District of Columbia Superior Court and Senate Democratic Whip Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia. manded by Col. Ralph D. Albertazzie, Nixon's personal pilot, will make a 48- hour stop at a resort hotel in Hilo, Hawaii, en route to China. Nixon also is expected to pause for about two days oil his trans-Pacific journey in order to rest and adjust to the physical and psychological rigors of passing through successive time zones at jet speed. Hilo presumably will be his stopping place, too. Kissinger's route is likely to duplicate Nixon's, again if precedents mean anything. It is standard practice for presidential pilots to traverse in ad- vance the international routes their bosses will follow, in order to familiarize themselves with airports and navigation facilities along the way. The Kissinger, route: from nearby Andrews Air Force Base, Md., to Travis Air Force Base, Calif., to Hilo to Guam— for an overnight stop—then to Shanghai and Peking. He will return via Anchorage, Alaska. Kissinger's major mission will be to arrange a detailed agenda, in collaboration with Chinese officials, for Nixon's substantive talks with Premier Chou En-lai and other officials, presumably including Chairman Mao Tse-tung. . Others in his party will be responsible for planning logistics and timing, presidential protection, com- munications with Washington, and press arrangements. the American military equipment team which is responsible for handing over arms and- ammunition to the Cam- bodians but is forbidden to show the Cambodians how to use the equipment. Headed by Brig. Gen. ' Theodore Mataxis, the team's current strength is 113 men, with 50 officers and enlisted men assigned to the Cambodian capital and the rest in Saigon. The Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee on Thursday voted to limit to 50 the number of foreigners hired in Cambodia. Most likely they will be Ko- reans, Nationalist Chinese, Australians or New Zealanders experienced in dealing with the American military in South Vietnam or Laos, where some have been engaged in hazardous un* dercover work for the Americans. The $200 million U.S. military assistance program for fiscal 1972,. which is now the subject of congressional hearings, includes \a line\ for third country nationals, a source said. He added that salaries for foreigners in Cambodia might total $200,000 a year. The foreigners would be employed in supply depots and maintenance shops behind front lines, although the sources did not rule out an eventual role as combat advisers. The sources said the use of foreigners had been recommended by teams of military experts who visited Cambodia to study supply snarls. The sources noted that a handful of foreigners are already being paid by the American military assistance program to Cambodia. They include about 10 Air America maintenance crewmen who keep Cambodia's T28 fighterbombers flying, a representative from Bell Helicopters and three Filipinos brought here from Laos to set up ah English language school. U.S. Reconsideration Needed For Israel U.S. To End Case Monday In Col. Henderson Trial ground and in the air—failed to reach command attention) and beyond. The Pentagon did not become aware of the incident until a year later when a GI wrote to congressmen. Koster was charged, along with 12 other officers, with participating in the alleged coverup, but the charges against all except Henderson were dropped. The secretary of the Army said Koster was reduced in rank from major general because he did not fully \utilize all the investigative staff resources available to the division either to conduct an in- vestigation or to review the inves- tigations which were conducted.\ UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. IIP) - Secretary of State William P. Rogers says the United States will have to reconsider its military commitments to Israel because of the Soviet promise of more military aid to Egypt. Rogers conferred for an hour Thur- sday with Foreign Minister Abba Eban. The Israeli said afterward he put \great emphasis\ on Israel's request for more U.S. planes. Warplane shipments are reported to have halted last July at the expiration of the contract. The Israelis especially want more Phantom jet fighterbombers. The Soviet pledge was issued Wed- nesdy night after President Anwar Sadat of Egypt wound up two days of meetings with Soviet leaders in Moscow. A Soviet-Egyptian communique said the two sides agreed \on measures aimed at further' strengthening the military might of Egypt.\ Noting the pledge,\ Rogers told newsmen after his meeting with Eban: \In view of that, we will have to carefully consider our position, par- ticularly in the light of President Nixon's commitment when he said that the military balance in the Middle East wiil not change.\ A U.S. official toldneVsmeh the Soviet promise prompted an \active\ review of the Israeli request for more war- planes and that the review would begin \pretty promptly.\ Eban said most of his discussion with Rogers was devoted to the U.S. proposal for an interim agreement to reopen the Suez Canal. \I understand the United States is maintaining and expects to intensify its exploration of the possibilities of a Suez Canal agreement,\ said Eban. Meanwhile in Washington, 76 senators have signed a 'resolution urging President Nixon to act \without further delay\ to resume shipment of F4 Phan- tom jets to Israel. A resolution, to be introduced today by Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott, is the latest in a long series of Senate ac- tions designed to resume the flow of U.S. arms to Israel as a means of countering Soviet weapons deliveries to Egypt and other Arab states. The bipartisan resolution also calls on the government to oppose any attempts at the United Nations to alter a No- vember 1967 resolution by the U.N. Security Council on a Middle East peace settlement. FT. MEADE, Md. (AP) — The prosecution has nearly completed its case against Col. Oran K. Henderson with testimony from the former com- mander of the Americal Division that Henderson never reported a massacre at My Lai. The final government witness in the drawn-out court-martial will be called Monday. The jury was excused today while attorneys worked on documents to be submitted as evidence. Henderson, 51, is charged with con- cealing the slaying of civilians by U.S. troops at My Lai by failing to report allegations of war crimes, conducting improper investigations and lying to an Army probe. Brig. Gen. Samuel W. Koster, who was censured and demoted because of My Lai, testified Thursday that Henderson told him on at least two occasions that only 20 civilians died in an infantry sweep through My Lai March 16, 1968, and that those casualties were caused by artillery, gunships and small arms. \Did Col. Henderson ever tell you that a pilot believed all the bodies he'd seen were civilians and in excess of 100?\ Koster was asked by Maj. Carroll J. Tichenor, the prosecutor. \No said the general. \Did Col. Henderson ever tell you that the pilot reported seeing a ditch filled with bodies?\ \No.\ \I accepted his report,\ Koster said. \I thought he had brought all the facts to me. He indicated the casualties were caused by a contested combat operation and, that while he wasn't closing the ' case as such, he didn't feel further in- vestigation was warranted.\ In his three hours' of testimony, Kostershed no light on the question that is in the background in the trial: How the story of th& bloody operation— with more than 100 American soldiers on the WEATHER Partly cloudy tonight. Lows in the low S3 %££X%£Z t JOURNAL CARRIERS-Saturday is National important asset to all newspapers. From left to 50s winds variable at 5 to 10 miles per Newspaperboy Day. These boys represent the 50 right: Dave Pearson, Ken Sovie and Jettrey hour tonight. Journal carrier boys, The carrier boy is an Kerry. We salute them! (O'Donnell Photo) Kiwanis Spaghetti Day Saturday, St. Mary's, 5 Until 7 P.M.