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WEATHER Fair to partly cloudy though: Wednesday, Low tormight a- round 60. High Wednesdiy in 70s if avy n r \ Bipartisan ~- ATreaty Drive - _ Developing President Kennedy To Help with Letter to Senate TWENTY Pages Miss AMERICA StES THE TOWN arms Fates. nv. avyanmo, SEprEilBinn 10, 1963 [FINAL EDITION oll. Price Hrgut CENTS DIAL RX 22-3131 . Seizes Control | ama Guard WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 P - A bipartisan drive in the Senate to ratify the limited mucler test ban treaty has gathered mo- mentum. And - President Kennely | is planning to try to help it along with a letter to the Senat, per- haps tomorrow. The letter is intended, mcord- ing to Republican Minority Lead- er Everett M. Dirksen, to \dispe doubt and resolve some of the apprehensions and misgivings.\ Dirksen added his weight to the ratification drive yeiterday After a meeting with Kemedy and Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, Dirksen stid h will use Kennedy's letter as the basis for a Senate speech urging ratification without reservations. The President, Dirksen said,) i promises to give \unequivocal as-] - surance\ that U.S. security mea U sures will not be relaxed as a result of the treaty. | Meanwhile, - an - Assicated i$ . Press survey showed that 73 of liming EHRA| Wichita, L i the Senate's 100 memobers are Donna Axum, the new Miss America, waves for photo- On Aug. 28 police arr : either committed to or ae in- | graphers in New York after she held her first news con- Army was notified and a clined now to vote for ralifica~ | ference, The 21-year-old El Dorado, Ark., girl has a full week tion. A two-thirds majority is | of posing for advertisements before she returns home, needed, or 67 yes votes if all * - 100 vote. The vote is due next WICHITA, Kan., Sept. days in the stockade convi lith birthday. \When he was ready to and he turned me in.\ Lamy received six mon was charged with being Troop, 15th Cavaliy, Ft. He Argues He' complaint. The Army still believe veg tamase'he oer rect manet mate te rus cur imn nner cw company. Tommy walked away Ft. Riley and put me back said He's Not Going to Enlist 10 (P - Sorry, Uncle Sam. Tommy Poles doesn't want to be in your Army any more, His eight nced him. Tommy had planned to enlist Sept. +23, two days after his \A buddy and I were in Kansas City, Kan., he related. The buddy, Larry Avis, was AWOL from the Army. turn himself in, I walked him down to the police station. Larry figured he'd play & practical joke Larry and Tommy were taken to Ft. Leavenworth, then transferred to the stockade at Ft. Riley, Kan. ths at two-thirds pay. Tommy also AWOL from the same outfit, C ood, Tex. s Not in the Army Tommy argued be wasn't in the Army. After eight days in the stockade, officers said Ft. Hood reported no AWOL d Tommy was AWOL and trans- ferred him to a special department for servicemen without a July 26 and hitchhiked home to ested him on traffic charges. The sergeant came for Tommy. \t told him I wasn't in the service, that I never had been in the service and that I was 16 years old. But he took me to in SPD (the special unit),\ Tommy 2\I‘hey kept telling me I was in the service. Then Wednes- { © # fog k. a 5 “1.53me debate on the treaty S C” 90“ StUden ts Ab an don 1 day last week I left again and hitchhiked home, Wichita police got under way yesterday. stopped me Thursday. 'They thought I was in the service again. Sen. J. W, Fulbright, D-Ark, P I a n S to D e m‘o n St r ate Afte r i Sewg‘f‘efgally they all got together and decided I wasn't in the . chairman of. the Foreim Re- lations Committee, appealed for o he eax s » (Government Show of Force cycle of fear and armaments Says Tommy: Tommy went to see a lawyer and leamed he can't sue the government for false arrest charges. ~ \t know one thing, boy. I'm not gonna enlist this month.\\ | o keep Negroes out of white and greater fear and firally| SAIGON, Viet Nam, Sept. 10; On the other hand, a highly sed from the start of debate squelched plans of 54800 mage officers and noncommis- & w 1‘1\ . F ‘d i vfl t a >o a The bipertisan note was stres- (-A government show of ffxrcejgiufgélésdosrmgiceinsgjneges 5213115535, PrESIdent Urges Patience when Sen. Leverett Saltonstall school students for theirsioned officers have defected to # * * R-Mass., a member of prepared-|piggest demonstration | against neutral Cambodia in recent weeks. I n Dea l I ng w lth V let N a m; Race Picture at a Glance BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - By Presidential order, Federal government takes control of Alabama National Guard to en- Directi ls |Ssued force public school desegregation at { gat ngham. Tuskegee and x fizlgég. 8on George fC Wallace ordered earlier by fiveegf‘edeml | stop interfering with court ' ;By Pr es' d ent judges g orders to integrate the | i Pleszi‘égziTIgeOMeIggY' film H???“ declines comment on & - r Cennedy's order, whic warted his apparent pl Troops WI\ Enforce - to replace state troopers with guardsmen in thep Iéhree cage? School I ntegrqtion Wallace orders Federal marshals waiting to serve court papers ye chased from capital grounds. Despite Gov. Wallace e 20, WASHINGTON -in addition to the guard order, Kennedy By DON McKEE issues proclamation directing that Wallace and other state of- BIRMINGHAM, Ala.. Sept. 10 ficials cease what Kennedy termed conspiracies \willfully iP - The Federal government: and obstructing the execution of the laws of the took over control of the Ala-| United States.\ 1 ~ bama National Guard by presi- dential order today to enforce NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Three students from Ghana and public school integration despite! two white men complained to the FBI that they were beaten {defiance of Gov. George C. Wal... near Tuscaloosa, Ala., Sunday might by a band of white men; | FBI investigation. ' lace. Ai l'lf—year-olcli Negro boy and a' i x girl of 16 walked into Murphy GH POINT, N.C. - Police wearing gas masks and back- ‘ngthbScéhool $2 éMobfle forbclasses fnd ”0th water hoses held ready arrest moregtfign 300 Negroes dur- just before 7:30 am. to become g the city's third anti-segregation demonstra the first high school pupils of night. gree stration Monday men- race to desegregate the 'Alabama public school system. RICHMOND, Va. - A pupil placement board swept aside National Guardsmen who had. tradition and assigned five white children to a Negro high been drawn up around the school, - school Monday. marking the first time in Virgima that white 'at Wallace's order departed a. pupiis had been assigned to a Negro school. - jfew minutes before the Negroes ie 'entered. MEMPHIS, Tenn, - Negro demonstrators, marching b Wallace called the guard into | the hundreds through and around the city Board of gldug service shortly after midnight cation building, call for complete desegregation by 1964. schools at Birmingham, Mobile BALTIMORE, Md. - More than 200 white parents stage and Tuskegee. President Ken- | & noisy protest against the city's transfer of Negro pupils to nedy prompfly federalized the |_ &n all-white elementary school, guard to remove control from the stroman ERockefeller Renounces 'The governor, who early in the day used guardsmen and state P- $ ness subcommittee - a @MteY Oflprocijen; Ngo Dinh Diem's Official confirmation was lack- \hoes to cams «. Opposes Get- Tough Aid Cut sxs. feass sss N opposition to the treaty - fol-) lowed Fulbright to voice his own strong support. regime. Teen-agers at three schools again banged on their desks and shouted insults at Marines, {n . Navy personnel have fied to Cam- LU C T fant d combat police ut in Taxes sme, oct doy - iwhen authorities indicated the set to C, ear isecurity forces would move in. ; ® : House Group | More than 1,000 students were: 'arrested Saturday and Monday.. 'Today mo arrests were seen by, {newsmen at any of the three; WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 i&)- schools, the Gia Long girls' high dent Kennedy's $11 billio tax cut bill today.: f The committee voted on strict! party lines, 15-10, to direct Chair- man Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., to! introduce the bill fimally agreed! on after more than halls year's} | wunder | military gurveillance Pupils at both the boys' , schools Tater left their classes and went home for the remain- - der of the day. i Military authorities had occu- work. ipied at least three other schools Formal committee approval has before dawn. to await introduction: of the bill, | Pupils carrying satchels found and this vote is to be takei.a company of infantrymen in later in the day. {their Hung Dao High School near, Before the final vole om in- Saigon market. Most of these; troducing the bill the committeegstudencs were seen to | furn narrowly defeated & Republican around and go home. motion that would Rave written] a mandatory spending limit into: the cut. 1 Two minor amendments were! adopted, but they left the bill exsentially in the same form as the committes drafted it | last month. f It centers on an across-the-, board cut in both personal and corporate income taxes. The ad- ministration is pushing for en- ! battalions and hundreds | of | There was an unconfirmed report the government has re- Inforced the Marine contingent ; in Saigon, increasing the force to nearly 1,000 men. In addition there are at least one para» . troop battalion, some infantry | special forces, combat police | and regular policemen fo en- force martial law. Accounts of a big victory over. ports also that some Vietnamese bodia by taking river craft across the border along the Bassac River. A number of the Mekong River Delta units of the Vietnamese; armed forces are made Up almost | origin. I The informant said at least, {with South Viet Nam &w0 WeekS/open all of Southenst Asis to the [New York. | ~- ago. . , I The only defection the Saigon) government has confirmed was.wide television interview, con-|j wll i f r H . fan Isimifiar | television | Interview on 'Mobile under orders of Wallace!Y that of a civil guard unit in theiceded there was no efsy solutlon;L abor Day. At that time, he sai dfb efore issuance of the presi den-, United States must entirely of men of cambodian |Bolicy of P gomery, declined immediate com-| 'ment on the White House moves o Tax Increase Pledge; t By FRANK CORMIER 1 t litically into Negroes PCN} Assogiawd Press Staff Writer I??? finim.“’lcla<e¥1x1edy? saggwfizibnnmng the Alabama school; P I aCe S B I a me o n K e n n e d y e this will happenécrisls to a showdown. _: doesn't believ | WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 UM -, oesn't Pel. Before directing that the guard! res} > y 'and he expects the North \will: President | Kennedy says the, P H 'be federalized, Kennedy issued an'. ; { Gov., calling upon Wallace m‘gofémtffiller stcatnépaixgfil glgfze xwéoué'n borrowing or tax increases, i - 'meet this fall with President Tito \cease and desist\ from - his hold the state tax lins throughs} e developments raised anew Nam and avoid a get-tough slash\. - Pederal:OUt his second term was a dead the possibility that the states 1 ss . A ursue alcontinue to support\ civil rights.. C atience in sgut; Viet! -Kennedy doesn't know if hey: order in aid. f Communist Yugoslavia. But maneuvers | to An aid cut, Kennedy said last: Df said meetings will attend the unpacked. desegregation. .of the Um.‘ ment of Ngo Dink ‘Wauacsg‘tggposi timam- , t 3 ke- \|_ Kennedy's remarks on - Viet ithdrawn ckly “$55 fairs; 51021121 fifiif faggiiNam represented an elaboration Guardsmen had moved on to ' lof statements he made in aithe grounds of a high school at, 'Cl news conference yesterday his ibe no state tax Increases for four were re-elected. ALBANY, Sept 10 P .- Gov. quired by the Constitution, with= are planned Court directives for school in- iSSue today and the Republican! serious financial problems could 1 overnor blamed the administra-;prove troublesome to. Rockefel~ F 21 . : j rho, [ tegration. A simu s -.2 some of the defections are D°-inight, might bring about & eol. ; with most foreign presidents who, similar move pre fon of Democratic President| on 'tB6 -nationet. pouylcest The House Ways and Means Com»'sehool and the Van Lang and lieved to be related to Cambodia's the ° _llike Tito, mittee in effect approved Eresi-|®hany Lan High Schools forbreals _ in diplomatic / Vespers apse of the Viemamesfiéfigvegfiakemeral ASsemsly - meeting in vetsity of Alsbama in June over boys. Kennedy. scene. Rockefeller renounced & &) t; an apparent effort to re- assure Republican conservatives, | the governor frequently has pic- ears - through 1966 - if hegtured his | administration | in {terms of financial conservatism Rockefeller said the promise! that keeps within its in- ampaign statements there would delta last week. The the Vietnamese problem mark-; . F A h : 'the Diem regime had to changeitial directive | which remmleclEha a been based on economic; COM, staying - solvent without ment said ring leaders of Cam-] r iti ' ent said rng S led by internal opposition to thejpohcies and. perhaps personnel;WaUa-ce as their commander. _ | bodian descent forced 64 civil'Diem regime and the govern- guards to desert, but 37 later re- turned to their base. There was a sidelight at Castel! (iagdolfoi: thle VsIummg‘1 rigsilgencegistration viewpoint in these; of Pope Pau south of Rome.iwords: r is \Tig 'ments - indicated - the - United Imen to duty, to the political-religious crisis{ set off four months ago by persuade the government there: Buddhist calls on the govern- to take those steps which will} ment of Diem, a Roman Catholic.'win back support, That takes; for greater religious freedom'some time and we must be pa-§South Viet Nam. and social justice. Vatican sources said a papalg audience for Archbishop Pierre! Martin Ngo Dinh Thuc, a broth-! er of Diem, was canceled. The prelate, who is in Italy for re-! sumption of the Vatican Ecu-} memical Council, did not show: up. | actment in time to make the cut, Communist guerrillas in the field, There was no expiananion. But felt with January withholding|were all but lost in this uneasy; from pay envelopes. The cut|eapital. g would come in two annual stages. A Vietnamese armored unit Vietnamese Buddhists and Diem's: Pope Paul is known to be dis-, turbed by the strife between, When fully effective the cut swept through rice paddies in regime. would average about 20 per cent the Mekong Delta yesterday and! High school students planned a for individuals and 8 per cent for killed 80 , American mass - demonstration despite a Insurance Against Recession _- WASHINGTON, Sept, 10 A- President Kennedy described his $11 billion tax reduction proposal today as recession insurance, and gaid \the prudent man does not tempt fate by unmecessarily de- laying his acquisition of | insur- ance.\ _, Speaking to the National Con- ference of the Business Com- mittee for Tax Reduction in 1963, a group formed to sup- port the tax cut, Kennedy noted that excluding war years, \this nation has had a recession on the average of every 42 months fince the second world wwar-or every 44 mionths since the first World War. \By January, it will have been 44 months since the last. reces- sion began.\ he said In Iiis pre- pared text. » . Kennedy said he would not predict that a recession will come if there is no tax cut, or éven Chuckle Corner say that it would be impossible to have a recession if a tax citb were enacted. He added: pective tax reductions, will prove business conditions, | in- crease consumer and investment incentives, and make the most of the antirecession thrust that this tax cut can provide.\ Delay, he said, would \court uncertainty, inadequacy and per- haps total failure.\ Replies to Critics Replying to critics who Insist that the budget be balanced be- fore taxes are cut, Kennedy noted that estimates of revenues are necessarily only estimates and often wrong. But he added that, assuming 'the tax bill is enacted, \I ex- pect . . . to be able to submit mext January a budget for fiscal 1965 envisioning an estimated deficit below that most recently fore- cast for fiscal 1964. 'eral debt resulting from these transitional budget deficits will 'be kept proportionately lower than the increase in our gross Charles Grube. a city employe, was helping track down a bear which was shot this morning in the Glens Falls business district, The animal ainbling forth national product - so that the real burden of the Fedéral debt will be steadily reduced.\ : Kennedy said the present tax rates \'were originally designed ito meet wartime and post-war in Glen St. The Burdis has‘ conditions,\ and \are now impos- made the street one-way south. \Bear. bear, YOUTC going the wrong way in the lop,\ Grube yelled. [The bear halted, tuned around, and strolled. off into in alls by the Ridge Book Shop. ling 's restrictive brake on na- gtio'nal growth and income.\ | assurance of a tax out now,. he said. \Is necessary to give the {private sector of our economy the 'extra strength our present tax structure now drains away.\ i! | \And any increase in the Fed-| corporations. __ advisers said this was the most/warning from Saigon's military feed A typical family might | save significant victory over the Redsggovernor that - demonstrators, I $100 to $200 a year. 'in months. iwould be severely punished. nuclear test ban treaty \after thei { -isovernment has committed itse ion Re and at : . Kenned Terms Tax Reduction *e an Son _ po. | S a | Ree A Sentenced in | Stock Fraud _| NEW YORK, Sept. 10 (M - A ‘Federal judge sentenced Gerardo A. Re and his son, Gerard, to six \But I do know that the pro-; re fit enactment of this bill, making'mtz§£hsfrm%ns°agfi‘ef¥mgd5%h$§ certain both immediate and 131333: $15,000 each. 1 Judge Dudley B. Bonsal, in} imposing - sentence, continued them free in bail pending appeal, 'The father and son were con- victed July 11 with three other defendants. They were charged with con- spiring to violate Federal secur- ities laws in connection with the sale of more than a million un- registered shares of the common stock of the Swan-Finch Oil Corp. between 1954 and 1957. The prosecution | contended that the public was defrauded of more than $5 million. \Technically Bonsal sentenced each of the Res-to a three-year term, but ordered each commit- ted to prison for six months, with execution of the remainder of the sentences suspended. Placed on Probation. , He also ordered each to be placed on probation for three years, to begin upon expiration of the six-month confinement. The prosecution said the con- spiracy was the most extensive %Wall Street rigging since the 1920s. j 10, Asst. US. Afty, Peter H. Mor- rison said before the sentencing ‘that. shortly after the stock sales, ithe corporation went into bank- ruptey and \5 share holders were denuded of all assets.\ ._ | \This is the case which led Congress to appropriate m ore {than $900,000 for a two-year 'special study of the securities imarket,\ Morrison said. {quarrel, Red Flag took a long 'to win popular support: other-: They wore withdrawn quickly] {communist guerrillas. {nounced. | M Go-Slow Approach State Adj. Gen. Alfred Harri- The President's latest Kennedy expressed the admin- \We are using our influence to: Troopers who turned away 20)2 States would take a go-slow ap-, h a © f r *..\Negro pupils at white schools in {4 proach toward trying to brmgimree Gities yesterday. ; c ta ha in- 6 P H about governmental changes !I . _- Harrison said the Guardsmen H tient, we must persist.\ \If you reduce byour aid.\ I}; Expresses Concern \it is possible you could! He expressed concem that have some effect upon the gov-, gfiggg‘figngiggg‘g,$gffm i Americans might \get infpatient\ ernment structure there. On the' puo and Tuskegee. ate. son had called about 300 guar \ipublican nomination to oppose state replmmgguséswfliennedy next year and has beenlibalance only by such steps as goals outlined by the Kennedyiborrowing or tax increases. -ment's widespread | arrests of wise it would lose its war withgafter the Kennedy order was amgadminismtion but not achieved | Democratic critlies at home {Buddhists and students, 'The governor is considered an charge that state spending has iundeclared candidate for the Re.! been running ahead of incomes land the budget has been kept in frequent critic of the nationalitirawing against future taxes and ministration's economici postponing the time when ac- d policies. fcounts must be settled. Rockefeller said the conditions! Rockefeller, whose views on activated by Wallace and de- 'on which | his mo-tex-increase social legislation and foreign po- - . Elbe GOP's liberal wing, could 'Do you still feel yourself ifind the job of winning conser» activated as a state unit by 2piledge was based no longer exist- licy have made him a leader of ibound by it?\ a newsman asked.} vative support far more difficult | y t « par nl and urge a U.S. withdrawal from Other hand, you might bave 2; \o\ said other guard units! LMG the cireumstances, 19,\ with home-front fiscal problems,. South Viet Nam. [ . 4 ; \Phat only makes it easy for 'about & collapse. We don't WANt and remain on their civilian jobs! the Communists,\ Kennedy said., that.\ lunless ordered into action. I {situation - which _ could | be on a Federal alert basis Rockefeller replied. I . Other Statements No Hike This Year ! 'These were Rockefeller's news- He said he saw mo possibilty Of conference statements in othe; -~ - \! think we should stay. We: Kennedy said he subscribes 10} armson refused last night ip'tax increases in the next SME pregs: should use our influence in as the theory that a Communist'say if he had been directed to b effective a way as we can, but/victory in South Viet Nam would carry out the governor's execu-\ we should not withdraw.\ open the way to Communist vic- tive orders barring integration in .D Other topics broached in the tory throughout Southeast Asla-'the three cities. i interview, Kennedy said: -The United State would! \China is so large, looms so'to Wallace said earlier that was Statement arose when the governor wasi udget, due by Feb. 1. but said| —I~fe rejects the view that the he could make no pureome of local election ©On- eyond then. The discussion! ests can be interpreted as pis} gauges of his popularity with 'He gave this reason: { i 'aske e nt s of his! , He gave easo (\ 'ffowever. official sources close asked the eurment status 0 (Voters in various parts of the to \Ti last Oct. 11 tha I'state. \Anytime anyone sneezes, sound a very uncertain trumpet high just beyond the frontiets,the purpose of calling up the'can say to you categoncaliy;ws interpreted as a reflection on around the globe should the Sen- that if South Viet Nam went, ib. guardsmen. 'there will be no increased taxes, imy popularity.\ he said. ate refuse to ratify the limi a| woul ive th im-«| as r 'in the next four years.\ 2 ¥ ted | would not only give them an im«} There was no word on whether, will re-appoint Frank S. proved geographic position for a{four Negroes would again be per-! -The Federal budget will be'that the wave of the future in showed up. He told newsmen yes-: \ ; R i Y°S- than $300 million in additional Wieided great influence in af- balanced quicker than otherwiseiSoutheast Asia was Ching and.terday that Huntsville had not! if Congress passes an $11 billion the Communists.\ ibeen ignored and he was going'l' tax cut his year to stimulate the! In discussing attempts to use by a timetable. He didn't explain. economy. Without a tax cut, American influence in that part, Kennedy said, “196? is going to of the world, Kennedy said. \we: Guardsmen befan arriving in be an pncertam time from an'can't expect these countries to doimeingham within hours after: economic standpoint.\ A x !~ For more than eight hours, he am. after ordering guardsnien and State Police to clear the' areas of US. marshals. serve Wallace with a restraining | order by the state's five Feder Reinstatement of Capitalism TOKYO, Sept. uM - . aa © to ., ,. ___, (district judges prohibiting furth-| KYO, Sept. 10 (® Reda while.\ Red Flag said. “tier interference by the governor. . 6C. C I China asserted today that Sovietithey are fated to fail This iS, - Coupled with the judges' ac- ‘ leaders have joined the Uniteditr: law of history.\ ba . Stag‘eshs,11ndllsi. and Yugoslavia in' 'The jofirnal said that since 32211535 tfifi'fifiztfig\ fig? gevoluziy alliance totsstrtciingle World War II, China and & necessary would be taken Instate ogfiylmovemen and re-|number of other countries \have! enforce the desegregation de- captalisnl. embarked on the road Of crees. There was no doubt this theoretical journal Red Flag said|the social p of- 3 - Premier Ehrushchey \has for|tries, fidéséngamczbgf' 13 coun-| irqops. | strings for the new holy alliance.\ 2! ' t \ : Broadcast by Radio Peking, the gigsnfimfimfi a reaction 2 tol steps surrounded by troopers article predicted that \the MeW| alliance declare its purpose to and guardsmen, uniformed, hel-‘i- holy alliance\ will be destroyed saered and foble, Pelszllx):0 said, | mete, and wearing pistols, { as were its predecessors. and to maintain péace 35d or: \I have given instructions toj Notes Previous Alliances der, rectify social chaos and build}?e Federal -gw'.11:r5ha’ls~ {1° leave _ The United States represents| freedom. f hirirfiféngm \Notinmgbuoveéflz; imperialism in the alliance, said| \Translated fnto plan 1808-5 {If the grounds fand clear} Peking, Prime Minister Nebru's uage,\ Red Flag said, grep 00000 clear; represents reaction, and holy statements should read: to'\ Wallac hese of President 'Pito's Communist YUSO- strangle the revolutionary move» w. Wallace gave these or: slavia revisionism., violation Of{ ments of the oppressed peopie| CS and I will carry them out. Marxist-Leninist principles. . and the liberation movements of! The marshals stood within} \What dirty and despicable 'the oppressed nations: to pre_ghe8~\ln8 distance. _ 1 deals they are going to MSKO gepye the order of imperialism They stood {heir ground mo-, calls for close attention by the and reactionary domination, and mentarily. | 'Then as | the 25 people-gt §he world,\ Peking said. i f guardsmen began forming lines. In the latest Peking contribu» is . the » t _ tion to the running China-Soviet the Socialist CWHM’IES; 'back of the capitol. STRIKE ENDS \wo of theimn got into a car Hook at the holy alliances of the| - MANILA, Sept. 10 (P-A week.| and drove off. The third hid in 18th and early 19th céenturiesold Philippine Air Lines strike|some bushes before he was and said their \halcyon days\jthat had paralyzed the islands' flushed and chased away. did not last fong. t 'They may storm and rage fori ternational flights ended today. [on duty around the capitol. Start Arriving could reach $3 billion. everything the way we want to'the grim-faced Wallace stalked SUSE with enough force to pro- lea -It would be \a fatal mistake\'do them\ or to adopt the Amer- from his capitol office in Mont- Vide the $300 million, to let civil rights \divide this ican image. {gomery under heavy guard. Ibudget would be balanced, as re-'more dangerous. . An article in the Red Chineselism .. . bringing into existence] included the use of Federal iterday: domestic services and many in- By then here were 40 'troopers| - Goldwater wiso appeare C ‘ {television | interviews broadcast:spoke. In saying the pledge still ap-, RR _ ed to next year the governor Moore to a new term as chair- lef ferrilia assault on Malaya but mitted to attend schools at Pi Iwould also give the impression Huntsvilie where ho troopers left unanswered questions as to, MSN of the Board of \Trustees of 'here the state would get more|State University. Moore has evenue that will be needed toi fairs of the institution.: balance the new budget, which: -The far left and the far right are equally dangerous to He said it was unlikely theref the nation and he did not agree would be & suddon - business with Sen. Barry Goldwater. the ding GOP presidential pros- but the pect, that the far leff was the Red China Says Russia Seeks - (======@%> Sen. Goldwater Will Decid sss >_. -By End of Year on Candidacy CLEVELAND, Sept. 10 P -from New York yesterday. In one Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz.,. he said that Republicans he says he will decide before the end could wholeheartedly support for jof the year whether bo run for the GOP candidacy if it were not the Republican présidential nom- mimself are William Knowland of ination. iCalifornia and Reps. Gerald R. Goldwater told newsmen yes- Ford, Michigan; John W. Byrnes, Wisconsin, and William E. Miller, a F _'New York. No man can ignore the pres-, Tre also said that a major fac- years been agitating and pulling! Now, it said, a new Milanceififiggl igfiafiedafi'tigygalggfiigffiggoileméfieb;§$1g51g)é§;fgdurtgj{ tor in his decision on whether to q y . itry for the presidency would be 21031303“ e forward toward “£11155“th effect would a defeat have n+ : . 'on the conservative movement.\ Early in January, when tht m the other TV interview, New Hampshire primary COMSS Goldwater said that ho would I'm going to have to fish 0\ Sutifeet perfectly comfortable run= bait. If I enter one State DFIMABTY: ning on Franklin D. Roosevelt's Til probably enter them all.\ - of 1932, which he called He named as good Republicans \the most conservative platform he could support: lof this century.\ Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michi- In his speech to more Chan gan, former T.S, Sen. William 3,000 pefsons at a s5-a-plate of California and New finance committee luncheon in York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. {Cleveland, | Goldwater attacked \Rockefeller is more conserve the \far left,\ which he said_h.a.s ative than the conservatives made inroads into the adminis- then to reinstate capitalism in, ins marshals moved toward the! like 10 admit,\ Goldwater said. itraxion. \Rockefeller is very conserva- | \We have been hearing tod tive on domestic issues: On [much in this country about the fiscal responsibility and taxa» [far right and not nearly enough tion. 14 support him if he were (about the far left,\ he said. | _ nominated.\ | Six Negro pickets paraded out« d in two;side the hotel where Goldwater 3 x e s