{ title: 'The Glens Falls times. volume (Glens Falls, N.Y.) 1922-1971, September 06, 1963, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1963-09-06/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1963-09-06/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1963-09-06/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1963-09-06/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Adirondack Museum
mci hy te nines tome uite na nove rtnt 0 cmpeme a WEATHER Partly cloudy late tonight \ and Saturday. Low tonight around 50, High Saturday about 70. ' FINAL EDITION le L vol. LXXXIV, No. #11._ Twenty Paces ~abENs FALLS, N.Y. FRIDAY SEPrENBER 6, ioGs etermined Mothers De J; Carlton Liddie Wins Smashing V ict Mangine in Primary Voting: J. Carlton Liddle won the Democratic nomination for coun- .cilman-at-large in the principal contest in yesterday's Primary Election in Glens Falis, swamp- ing his opponent, mcumbent Willlam J. Mangine Jt. under a 1,008 to 433 vote. Liddle was en- dorsed by the Democratic city organization, which had refused its support to the incumbent, and the latter ran independently, In the principal Republican contests in the city, Councilman Thomas Mariola Jr. of the Sec- ond Ward won over LeRoy B. Fosbrook by a mere 21 votes, 265 to 244, while Robert T. Van Dyke was nominated for Third Ward supervisor over 'William J. Straub by a vote of 412 to 163. Mr. Van Dyke will be the Re- publican candidate to succeed Supervisor John J. Goetz, pres- ént chairman of the Board of|' Supervisors, who is retiring this year. On the Democratic side, vic- tories were scored generally by candidates backed by James E. allac ; r 4 the - Veteran's w e, the party's candidate was the only member of his. arty to survive a Republican! Aldrich defeated John J. Ta- Ewe? of top city offices when mula, deputy clerk of the State elected two years ago. - When'Assembly, in a contest that was for mayor. Other - successful | candidates supported by Mr. Wallace were Supervisors Robert J. Cronin of Comeback Try: By DeSapio Is Thwarted Once Powerful Chicf Of Tammany Hall Is Loser by 41 Votes By JAMES DEVLIN NEW YORK, Sept. 6 UP - A political comeback try by Car- mine G. DeSapio, once powerful chief of Tammany Hall, fell short by 41 votes. DeSapio, a Democratic national committeeman, lost to Edward I. Koch. a reformed Democrat, in an election yesterday for the party's Greenwich Village district leadership. The unofficial vote count was 4,656 for Koch; 4,615 for DeSapio. 'I In another close contest, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller's cousin Richard S. Aldrich, won by 342 $ |votes among miore than 20.200 ARI y cast in a Republican primary for! J. C TON LIDDLE the Manhattan counciiman-at-' Administration, large nomination, Popularity Indicator ory Over Negro attorney Arthur Shores amd a police officer view damage to a window of the Shores home after a bomb eiploded in theiym‘d in. liegroggcimon of Birmingham, Ala. Mahoney Men | M L f tched as an indicator of b ® , opi. passed over by party leaders WA a ato VI rl lng of the Eourth, end Comsnon| meeting in. July to select candi- Rockefellers popuarity here. ,_; Council candidates James L. dates for the fall election, Mr.! If the margin was too close for, 'Rockefeller's comfort, he could: ichols, Lewis L, Varney Sr. and| Mangine decided to enter the 4 a C ® gésvard M. Scannell of s{he First, primarles as an independentgéaé‘fmxfmvififi’gfig The t‘ggvefiéié n rle aunt Fourth and Fifth Wards, respec. candidate, 'failed to carry the upstate county! tively. All were victors by over- whelming margins. Ridge Book Shop, will face R. Mr. Liddle, proprietor Of th€ in winning reelection last year. Voting in the Koch-DeSapio Mr. Mangine, a career Prime, local RED‘I‘PHC,“ at-i and Aldrich-Lamula races was servant, cofngratulated his rivalltorney, for Mr. Mangine's seat so close that the police de- on a \tremendous victory\ and|on the council in November. urged all Democrats to get behind coming campaign, artment ordered all Manhat. (Majority Leader Walter J. Ma- Robert Havens, who had pre-i Em voting machines guarded [Pony, firmly backed bg Gov. the Wallace-Liddle ticket in the viously announced his candidacy] pending an offitial count mext reigned as the vic- for the Democratic nomIDN&MION! week, tor today in his home-town poli- In a statement following his'for councilman-at-large and lat-l Paul O'Dwyer, a brother of tical fight with Chairman Rob» defeat, Mr. Mangine said: withdrew, received eight Write- former Mayor William O'Dwyer, t W. Grimm of the Erie Coun- accept this decision of the people. in votes for the nomination. very objectively. Apparently they| In other contests, the incum- {will oppose Aldrich in the Nov. tY Republican Committee, 5 election. By MARVIN R. PIKE | BUFFALO, Sept. 6 (M-Senate Candidates endorsed by Ma- Race Picture at a Glance BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HUNTSVILLE, Als. - Group of determined mothers defy powers of Gov. Wallace and hig state troopers today. march children into grammar school the chief executive had ordered closed for day. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Negro attomeys ask Federal court to force the Board of Education to reopen three schools closed in the wake of racial violence. They also seek an injunction againlst Wallace to prevent interference with operation of the sehools. WASHINGTON - The Justice Department says the FBI is investigating the dynamiting of the home of Arthur Shores, a Nero attomey in Birmingham. The blast sparked Wednes- gay lnight’s racial violence during which & Negro was shot to eath. TRENTON, NJ. - Gov. Richard J. Hughes appeals for an end to school demonstrations at glewood after the arrest of 'up the steps and marched their {broods into the building through limes of troopers who yielded. system at the scene. hurst. Sclosed.“ the mother said, \but I About 25 women turned a deaf ear to an advisory by a trooper that Kast Clinton - Grammar School was closed. They walked \Don't hurt them; don't burt; them! Let them go in,\ came a booming message over the state highway patrol _ loudspeaker They went in. They were not: A call for reinforcements went] out and in a few minutes a double line of troopers again barted entry to the school. Two of _ the men stood against the door. At Fifth Avenue School, an- other of the four ordered de- segregated by Federal courts, thel! first Negro lad trying to enter a} Huntsville public elementary school was tumed back by troopers, He was S. W. HereforU, IV. His father was one of the plaintiffs in the Federal court case. The temporary breach of the Wallace line at East Clinton was not repeated at the other schools. An aide to Wallace telephoned Joe Payne, attorney for the Huntsville Board of Education, and said the closure would be for one day only. The governor's office said Wallace is a strong supporter of education and that allac Into School Past Troopers By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HUNTSVILLE, ALA., Sept. 6 (AP) - A group ' of determined mothers defied the powers of Gov. George C. Wallace and his marchgd their children into a grammar school the chief § executive had ordered closed for the day. did not approve of the various bent First Ward super¥is0r/ 'mpers are two counclimen-at- DOPeY and rejected by Grimm positions I have taken on the Robert J. Cronin, crushed LOUIS jrge places to be filled, with rode to smashing victories yes- council I admit my positions Hoffis who was supported bY mon party allowed to nominate terday in the Republican pri- have not been politically popular, the Democratic County Commit= puy one candidate. That would Mary election. e hu . high school lunchroom protesting the dismissal of an em- At the other schools, the but I am convinced that theretee. The vote was 399-89. Super- tot ake election of 'The triumphs of County Judge . y wanted to go to school and \§. are no politically popular solu-! visor Cron'mbwnl be opposeg hyggggigm. aad Aldrich mitomatic. Charles vg'laaughan and s?“ ploye arrested during recent demonstrations. fifi’mt’fiff p33]: fltflmifimtmfié reccived thle stock reply, \the - tons to the problems of the City the Republican candidate,' ; rogate illlam J. Regan also er ; iain , , rac school is closed.\ . of Glens Fall]; I feel my positions Thomas Murphy, on Election galg'dlggfe L125? i cffiéfimggs-atfi ifnfireased “19°F” egeigegchROCk? of eggdgg 121133322geeznopxgbiigt1§6132°ll§1£§i§1rllsl§miv{3&1 $13,311; $3311le in???) taunts: 33-3121: th'Y‘?“ fidWauace are mad,\ - ere right. Time is the only judge Day. t in nat r feller, a possible presi- ‘ I b h e boy . Eff miss: y jJudg Towth Ward Supervisor 00111358 gnaaggsoéoigg fgsyoxgghsg dential candidate, who falled to accepting Negroes. This is an infiease of six. over last year. Amol‘xlzffiumfrroopm ignored At East Clinton, State In- a Mr. Mangine, an adviser for. (Continued on Page 7) [~ O'Dwyer Is figrgrfiefigéwjn last Nov-], NEW - Four civil righ rights demonstrators chain Wallace contends he can close foalsgigatffmglg‘gfz 52212113?” w O'Dwyer won the Democratic, y themselves to construction cranes high above the ground. [Public schools by an executive PA R biz 4 Mahoney blamed Grimm for J C vae. : primary for nomination as MAND- ins governor's loss and called fof six women and a classroom sit-in by Negro pupils. PLAQUEMINE, La,. -- About his action was caused by un- usual circlimstances which he: i 500 Negro pupils boycott their {said existed in Alabama. .. _ Prick Ereur Cents . state troopers today and Wallace last night to keep hands off. State troopers turned the children away while city po- lice directed heavy traffic in the area of the four schools slated for desegregation, There were no clashes. One mother came to the gate at Rison Junior High with her daughter and three other girls. A trooper raised his hand to stop the group. \I know the school is just came to show you that we want them open. \If the people at Birmingham had gone wich their children to the schools to show that they wanted the schools open, there would have been & lot less trouble. \I am a native of Huntsville; I am not an integrationist. But I believe that we and the peo- ple of the south have to accept it, LI have brought my children up without prejudice.\ An elderly man with a thick accent, employed in the space age industry here, said, \L never thought I would see this in America; this reminds me-of East Berlin.\ Scene Is Repeated 'The scene at Rison was re- peated at three grammar schools - Fifth Avenue, Terry Heights and East Clinton. Each of the four schools has been directed by Federal courts to admit one Negro this term. A \th grade lad at Rison, aged 12, told the troopers hs Polic lower them to earth and take them into custody on jorder such as that he issued carly today affecting Huntsville keeping you out --- I'm asking your cooperation.\ Market Vaults EGO’dwafEf'S hattan counciliman-at-large, de- feating Robert B. Blaikie, an in- ton Powell Jr. Harlem Negro Democrat. Grimm's resignation. Grimm trespassing charges. ignored the request. Indirectly Challenged Shortly after the count of un- official votes last night showed| Would Shut Off All _ |Another Crosby Son under broad public powers writ- ten into state law. The statutes, however,. do not clearly outline But while he asked coopera- tlon, the state troopers stood shoulder to shoulder barringthe entrance Chambers permitted his authority in such matters. Take Up Stations one woman and child to go into 'Plan Doomed , (nts: #65 aa chs To Best Le¥@! |Ajken Feels isoulh Viet Nam Aid gSued for Divorce 'The blue-shirted troopers sta-|the building when she said she been beaten Mahoney indirect SANTA MONICA, Calif. S®Liuoned themselves in front of, W2Dted to look sround. But he The vote wis O'Dwyer, 33.199; Blaikie, 22.840, and Young, 11, [Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt., predicted today that the Senate] In History _ 526. O'Dwyer had regular and Reform Democratic backing. f P hateriea ehe? Uniess Reforms Come cate. \The election results prove . . 6 GP! - Mrs. Dennis Crosby has the schools early in the day. 'S@id. \there will be no school filed for divorce in Santa Monica./pp, today.\ , a . y advised children. and par- Y WASHINGTON. Sept 6 wip _| Calif, from one of the twin s0M5/ents that their walks from; \I think it's ridiculous,\ an- other woman told Chambers. Richard M, Flymn, son of th® ing; tne majori | .of crooner Bing Crosby. Mrs.: t £ Barry t i jority of the mem-Sem. Frank Church said today he 'home had been useless. C R NEW YORK,. Sept. 6 (P - The Wgéa.EEji%B safflifluban “£1932? late - Edward hug“) £13712\ {bers of our party recognize the may offer a resolution to shutECfOSbY- the forfner Pair-1 Shsehflr‘li-g \There's no school foday, !'Whare are you going to send stock market has vaulted to its? -» topmposiimited nuclear test! failed to win five ronx T1: {need for a rejuvenation of theoff all American aid to South;% Lash Vegas s] lowhglg, g argehg honey,\ a trooper told an 11- phage to school? Is this Amer- highest level in history. morefbmut t ° , cratic nomination for cgu Ed i(Erie County) organization as Viet Nam winless drastic reformsiher 28-year-old husband with' year-old girl lca? m“ wiping out the steep losses an weaty, . d th t‘ man-at-large. He lost to Fi- soon as possible,\ Mahoney saidare undertaken by the Ngo Dinh mental and physical cruelty. \Why?\ she asked. An agent of the Federal 0s of 1962. Phe “Fm Arizonan's id?“ f g i mund C. Farmel, an assistant 'in a statement. Diem Government. |_ The couple married May 4, 1958, «There's just no school to- Bureau of Investigation walked © Last of the major averages to at, effetiimwenasis lgu tile $120“? district attorney, - who - WaS |_ Grimm, shaken but still smfl-l Church, an idaho Democrat, sela'axat?lcidrlast Aug. i16- Th?\ day,\ was the only answer she |UD and down the streets, taking go over the top - the DoWay its forces from Cuba) N (he ord Finn O\ jing, predicted the county's Re-said demands for stern US. mea- have two children, Dennis, 4, and) received. - pictures of parents trying to get Jones industrial its at? £1.51? the treat ganization, headed for the p?!“ [publicans would rally behind the'sures - including some for a PAtrick, 2. |_ Wallace made his move in the; eir 135283 to gsssrooms.‘ e ed to a new high yesterday. is an attemp e treaty.] 10 years by U.S, Rep. Charles {primary winners, including Re-\vithdawal of American military 71V early morning hours, much as At Mobile, where another The long-awaited breakthrough Aiken said. * | A. Buckley, The vote was 31,- {gan and Gaughan. advisers - were voiced at what SPORTS AUTHORITY DIES the had done elsewhere earlier, heavy force of state troopers had by this average of 30 industria) A Supporter of the ban on all; 19g to 18,144. The executive committee desmbed as a stormy briefs DETROIT. Sept. 6 M - Sam|through issuance of an deployed yesterday, there lesues was welcomed calmly on|PUb underground tests, Aiken Saidi yoting was watched for what the county committees made its ing. Greene. 68, sports editor of the tive order closing until Monday|Was a minor demonstration by the floor of the New York Overwhelming majority Wil sect it might have on the choices, but the people have, The two-hour closed briefing Detroit News and one of theithe four schools scheduled foriWhlte pupils But two Negroes Exchange. But within moments) Y9€ for ratification and ‘less thanépyestige of prominent politicians spoken,\ he said. \We'll always,“ the far eastern affeirs sub-'nation's best known sports integration. , {ordered admitted to _I\f£urphy the market perked into. brisk of the Senate's 33 Re-jung supported various candi- CCEDt the will of the people.\ lcomamittee of the Senate Foreign chroniclers, died Thursday.! Wallace issued his order after High School did not arrive, buying. The ticker tape was aq publican Senators will SUPPONE: furag, | The executive committee, in- Relations Committee was con- Greene, noted as a baseball and the school board, backed by the; A smallugroup of white plipils minutes late in cleaning up a Coldwater, & potential RePubU-, muje county Judge Charles J. Cluding Grimm, had chosen J.ducted yesterday by Roger Hils- boxing writer, had been with the City Council, rejected his ap- chanted: \We hate Negroes.\ It final deluge of transactions. can Presidential nominee. 'Gaughan and Swrogate William Douglas Trost, a Colden super- man, assistant secretary of state News since 1924 and was sports peal for a second postponement. lasted, only a few seconds and The Dow Average, followed by| In announcing to the hyn appointed by Rocke, \O\ to oppose Gaughan andfor fair eastern affairs. | Sen. editor since 1958. He was born in| There had been one Monday. Theithe group filed into the binld- milhons as a market barometer, |Vesterday he intends to ncr 'o; recommendation of COUNSY Judge Jacob A, LatonaFramk:Carison, R-Kan. said he Stuart, Va. council, in special session, wired ing. advanced 5.06 to 737.98, exceed- [such a reservation GoldWAte\}cofo Majority “adenmNngligseclgggfié retur v lalso served notice onlmlsmfarég - 23 6 rid—TE,“ It u ing the previous high of 78491 may have tossed the treaty infO orer g. mmhoney. WOR 46.721 voles to 'win being \Hed up aqihea'N H I t O d d |Trat n Bridge - | established Dec. 13. 1961. . the Republican Presidential ©\ nominations over the ge wd grows fepiy up with being \tied up with a avy e Icon er S [ ere lTraffic on Bridge Another Peak Reached paign. or Trost, and Regan 45618 todictator' in the southcast Asian M b . |Fraitic on Prigge To Montreal Isle MONTREAL, Sept. 6 M - C ; baat. Ol { GOP County . C The Associated Press 60-stock| There were immediate critxcm'gffiigiggg Robert W. Grimm. i33v20§a§>r fictiomg aughan were country. =_ ‘To E vacu at e 3] M en f rom a Traffic across one of the main Texa § Towers Off ca pe COd erteries to Montreal Island, average, another widely followed|responses from Senate Demo-, In New York City, Rockeféelle\ named to their posts by Rocke. , . yardstick, yesterday attained an-|eratic Leader Mike Mansfield Of’was regarded as in Aldrich's feller this year,pgn the}; recom. Sections in East and Honore Mercier Bridge, was cut off for almost three hours last A + P F l p other in a series of historic Montana, his chief deputy, Sen~‘ comer although he denied OP-: mendation of Mahoney. TH e 20Y- Ports of Far West night while police checked out highs it has been racking Up Hubert H. Humphrey of Minne-; . he had O e gov- ; = 'position changes that he had ernor disregarded Grimm's - . since last May. sota. and Undersecretary of State. % his cousin to Tun. choites to fll ble county court fF by More Rains wall Street brokers believed w. Averell Harriman, who help-, Mayor Robert F. Wagner OP- and surrogate vacancies. ‘ CHATHAM, Mass., Sept. 8 (M\-.brought ashore from the sway- the Dow's gction might bring small investors back into the market in sizable numbers. These investors have been selling more stocks than they have been buy- ing since \Black Monday,\ May 28, 1992, when the market suf- fered its worst setback. since 1929. Brokefs cautioned that the sig- nificance of the industrial aver- 'age's breakthrough probably will be mainly psychological because \you can't buy an averige, you buy a stock.\ The assault on the Dow's old high was accompanied by heavy volume. with 6.06 million shares changing hands Wednesday and B3 million | yesterday. | Wall Streeters say a sharp advance on strong volume is a favorable sign. Lifetime Whim Costs Mother 'Pane,' Fine AURORA, Colo., Sept. 6 (P- Mrs. Evelyn D. Gordon, 26, was, fingd $100 in Municipal Court on the yesterday and ordered to pay the cost of replacing & 30x36 inch window she broke at the Aurora police station. . Mrs Gordon, mother of four, was quoted by officers as saying she threw a brick through the: window because \I just always wanted to.\ CANCER EXPERT DIES Leonid S. Snegireff. 55. associate professor of chronic diseases at the Harvard School of Public Health,. died Thursday. Snegireff was a pioneer in the study of & possible link between cancer and! smoking He was born in Russia ed negotiate the treaty. posed DeSapio and endorsed i - t .S. ODwyer and Flynn & ne TAIPr'fatI) gfiéllogsifisgpt, 6 ip score of two successes and one hiang Ching Kuo, eldest son of f . gresidgnt Chgiang Kai-Shek left| How the voting ngfld T5560? for a visit to the United States| Congressman Powell's politica today. fortunes also was watched. House Is Not Expected to Vote Until About Sept. 26 On Tax Bill of President LEBRETON - does, the Senate is committed to vgisg’ggggm Sept. 6 UP -Jong debate on the limited c1111111 With the backlog of législation clear test ban treaty flalnd (1m 'sl¥a. 1 still building up. the House is not \8hts before any qt jfl‘e iesgldls- expected to vote on President figsrledolo gnajor importanc Kennedy's tax hill until about Tn addition to the mandatory Sept. 26. . ._ appropriations bills, leaders ex- The date represents anotheT peo; the House to act this year slight postponement for actiOn oy eivil rights, another taise in he proposed $11 billion taX the debt limit, a program for the cut. The tix reduction and Ye-mentally retarded, Securities vision measure and civil rights and Exchange Commission legis- legislation have been given top lation, probably the | \quality priority rating by Kennedy. 'stabilization\ _ bill _ legalizing The House calendar is choked agreements. on retail prices of fand there is no sign of any drive'trade-marked articles, and per- to clear it. © haps a pay raise for Federal em- About a dozen other impoiftantjglllg'génd a program for fallout legislative items are lined UDP K fOrCeS+ MAY hind the tax bill. In DMVAtE pore anpther attempt to Provide seem resigned to a session l4st- geyvelopment program. This AU- ing almost to the end of the thorization for loans and grants yéar. They say there is no bointig help businesses get started in trying to set the kind of pace At highly-unemployment areas has which the House would be oper> met one rebuff in the House. The ating if it hoped to adjourn ingrategy for passing it may in- the next few weeks. volve consideration of a cotton - | Children\Carried From Bunk Beds by Wayward Vehicle MISSOULA, Mont., Sept. 6 (M - As she tucked her two chil- dren into beds on the sleeping porch last night, Mrs. Alvin Pelayo looked up to see auto- mobile headlights approaching, A second later the automobile ripped through the porch amd the bunk beds, carrying,. ont child off on its hood and the other on the roof of the car. Mrs. Pelayo was knocked aside. She ard her children, 2 1/2 and 5 1/2 years old, suffered minor injuries, The matresses apparently helped save the children, officers said. They were hospitalized for observation. , Only the roof of the porch was still attached to the house when the car driven by Jerry M Woodworth, 18, of Missoula, was halted after crashing against the Pelayo family car at the end of a driveway. \I thought the porch was a car port,\ Woodworth told au» thorities who cited him for reck» less driving. EDUCATOR SUCUMBS BOSTON. Sept. 6 iM - pr conversation key House member$ new financing for the area re-| GILSON, Tll., Sept. 6 4M - Drs. Harry C. MoKown, 71, educator and author of numerous text- books and 'books on education, died Thursday. He at one time was a member of the faculty of the University of Pittsbuigh and had served as le|(30s were reported in parts of! The coast guard at Boston CHICAGO. Sept. 6 (P-More' & squadron of five Navy helicop-, rain splashed across the damp..ters was ordered today to eva-. ened fections in the east and tuate 31 menAfrom Texas Towers; in parts of the far west today|H and III being dismantled gaff! but generally fair weather pre- Cape Cod. The towers were re- vailed in the major part of the Ported being buffeted by strong ratio ain 'm'?‘gi mgngtflfi, iii-56m were It was codl again this morn-, , ee 's ing is most of the northeast re-|dispatched to Tower II and two r ' 8 5 3 ' r . The copters gion. Temperatures dropped into Others to, Tower ITL. - the 40s from the Great assigned to Anti-Submarine i i , Wart t Quonset region eastward into the North Warfare Squadf‘on 9 at Qi Atlantic states Readings in the Point, RI.. naval air station. Michigan, with near freezing im SAld it asked Navy help upon sogelggia; ith ® {receipt of a request from Lipset, A small disturbance centered Inc., to remove the men. Lipsstt In southern Georgia set off lig dismantling the two towers, rain in scatfered freas from Once part of the air defense early; Pennsylvania southward through warning system. a the Carolinas. Earlier heavy| Texas Tower II is 110 miles raim doused sections of the east Southeast of Cape Cod and Tow- coast and in parts of the south-, 8\ IH 60 miles southeast of I d ro i ; Chatham. fifgé‘gfitgfilyngf’ 523116151012! ugemwhile 1three Coast 02.1933 3 i reveport. Surface vessels were en route flan two inches in thevep01t.!the_ Towers: The 327-fo04 cutter ~ Ingham out of Norfolk, Va. to the 18 men aboard Tower IL, the |125-foot Legare out of Fair- . 4 a a haven, Mass, to the 13 mien Pakistan to Remain {aboard Tower TI, and the 313- Fi Western All foot Acushnet out of Portland, Firm Wesiern Ally Maine to stand by to render aid where needed. FRAWALPINDI, Pakistan,. Sept! 'The Coast Guard sald an all- Sale State It. wil remain a sane Bt. ant » € : uonse , RL, n ran Westem ally ssainst Com- Istation would depaton chopper, glmugtl}. box-5:11? and. cultural pacgéggdsatizifofigsg?3§%fi¥ 523,32 3210613632 flc‘ihibggé 31,1181! PakistaMiifized-wing coverage i% a pre- (tes Sad * caution. - They said the asstrance was Four-Hour Deadline given to TEnder Secretary of State! 'The Coast Guard said the Nivy U.S. Is Assured gfiafigmfiéfi giayeséofioggémm anonoymous telephone calls through the night and decided ‘toégifief 130ml) had beer placed Deared to Moderate today. \\ 0 A search by 20 policemen and a ¥+ a dynamite expert uncovered a However, forecasters said they hammer box and a five-gallon exgectgld winds to pécglieugbgaflémriirugfgfice slaéifd 13th agparent- an e wamings ' ed. een left there 1- A ghelicopter, sent last nightfient. te by sect to remove the workmen, failed) 'The two calls to the police Bue cum, i Sees ® Ste gs 1 her.'treal were by English-speaking couldn't find the tower and just'men. This was the first reported made it back to Chatham Air- threat in English. port on outer Cape Cod with One man said simply: \There olnly entough fuel for 15 minutes is a gong) in the middle of Mer- {lying time. jcler Bridge.\ Meanwhile, the tower buffeted| Traffic was diverted to other by 40-mile-an-hour winds, seem- {bridges \crossing the gt, Law- ed to sway precariously. Experi- rence River. Mercier Bridge is & enced hands said swaying is provincially - owned structure normal in high winds. orossing the river and St. Law- But agar-presenter is: trial?irextllce‘{Sfeghaxw'aiyI a?! the southwest memory' & win rm end 0 e island. 1961 in which a Texas tower off! anis $9318 fig): collapsed with losslU'N, DGIGQQtGS Will Hemy Hoffman, project en-|T our Power Project gineér for Lipsett Inc., a subsid- lary of Luria Bros. of New York, which i¢ dismantling Towers EI and BH. said he would go out to inspect the towers today. * There were mo reports of any] of the men aboard Texas Tower TH, located 60 miles Southeast; 'of Chatham, asking to be evacu«, ated. | | 'The Const Guard said the cut-] ter Acushnet wus sent to Tower EL NEW YORK, Sept. 6 () - A group of United Nations dele» gates will tour the Niagar® power project, the largest hydo- electric development in the Western Hemisphere, tomorrow, the State Power Authofity has annountééd. The group includés ambas- |sadors from Algeria,. Belgium, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cyprus, the Dominican Republic, Ghana, . {Jamaica, Liberia, Luxembourg, 'The towers were once part ofl Sierrs Leong, Sudan, Trinidad the air defense early warningiand Tobago, Gans, granting, system, but were declared obso-|Dénmark, Greece, India, Indo- Georg Ball, who will reportiexpected to complete the jobtn Monday to President Kennedy on four hours from the time the results of his three-day mission'choppers left Quonset. 'tete and abandoned. Inspections nesia, Tran, Mauritania, Nether» of the structures nad shown a'lands, Pakistan, Paraguay, Switz- and came to the United States as 'The feeling is also prevalent subsidy bill sought especially by|a specialist in education for the to determing the drify of Pak- a child. thas no matter what the House some southesn legislators, U.S, State Department istan's foreign policy, Four of the workmen aboard weakening of the supports for'erland, the Cameroons And Vene- ITrower II asked yesterday to beithe towers. __ calld t \aa %K {| => <1; | Elli ffl11|‘|’ 1}1