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| 4 Thursday, [ afternoon or evening showers, | | High around 80, WEATHER cloudy,. low in 50s. cloudy, chance of Tor TX XXIV, No. 215 _. 26 2mm ‘—-~_H;2‘ SEc'rmigé a [FINAL EDITION wound ~Drap RX 2-311 e Een Csxts Russell Voices fears Over A-Ban Treaty Expresses Concern Regarding Policy of On-Site Inspections WASHINGTON, Sept. 1M (P. - gen. Richard B. Russell express- gd fear today that the limited nuclear fest ban treaty might point the way toward world dis~ armament | without on-site in- spection, \No one is more in favor 0 disarmament than I am,\ th 'Geongin Democrat the Senate Armed Services Com- mittee told a newsman before the Senate began its third day of formal debate on the pact. \I would be willing to abolish alll nuclear weapons. 'But we are giving up the con- ception of on-site inspection in this treaty and we'll never be able fo revive it.\ Thus, Russell added, he fin- anxbdecitied to oppose ratifi- cation of the ban on all but underground blasts because he fears \we may be trapping our- selves into disarming without ironclad gnarantees that the Russians are doing | likewise.\ He hal announced his decision last Friday. . The United States has insisted on-site inspection is necessary to protec against sneak under- ground blasts. So far as the test- ing environments prohibited by the fieaty are concerned - the outer space and un- derwater - the government con» tends most srieak lests could be detected without on-site inspec- tion. President Kennedy has as- sured the military chiefs, mean- while, that detection systems will be sharpened while the treaty is in effect still, Russell maintained, \I'm afraid that, with world pressure New York Central Railroad on us, we might agree sometimelsought today to determine why in the mtgre to stop undergroundhn Albany-bound passenger i testing without demanding in-'was switched off the main line spection.\ [south of here last night seconds he before it rammed a Halted work Amplifying his concern, said: \Once we have ratified this' treaty, the nonnuclear nations of, the world which have signed it may get together on an amend- ment calling for disarmament! without inspection, They would be willing to trust the Russians for they have nothing to lose. Coyld& Veto Amendment «'Of course, we could veto any, such anrefidment Eut we Hate never the veto in the. Trnilél Nations.\ Meanwhile, Senate Republican truck loaded with stones crashed Leader Everett M. Dirksen of into a mickel plate freight train. THindls prepared a formal speech! .of endorsement of the treaty. It 'was based on the assurances! Tex» t was expected to make, burned during a severe stoIm, in a letter to him and Demmgjm’mg at least half of its 40 pas- cratis Leader Mike Mansfield of AFontang, the American military security will not be permitted to detéricrate under the pact. Sen Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., said in & separate interview that he inlends to press for a vote on a reservation to the resolution implementing the treaty which would delay effectiveness of the agreement until the Soviets with- draw their military forces Cubs. Both Dirksen and Mansfield ger cars, ° frave said this proposal has (loin-0m the who heads', st Tiny Robinson Prieto, one of caibo, Veneztiela, is fed with an e; caibo University Hospital, the quintuplet boys born yg ropper through a por to Efren and Inez Prieto, of Mara- thole of his incubator in the Mara- Quintuplets Are in Good Health MARACAIBO, Venezuela, Sept 11 (M - 'The four-day-old Prieto quintuplet boys were good health today, thtir future brightened by funds for their edumtion ind reported in support. Their mother, come. She received ® letter from President Railroad Seeks to Learn Why Train Was Switched Off Main Line Near Hudson HUDSON, Sept. 11 UP -- The train train, injuring 35 persons and causing the derailment of five cars and two diesel locomotives. A trainman aboard the workia train's caboose suffered neck and throat injuries and was in crit- ical condition after surgery at! C Columbia Memorial Hospital, The. Sidney Olshein, 54, of Castleton, other injured persons were nota hurt seriously. In other rail and.highway. ace) clognts last fight: \Three persons were killed near Findlay, Ohio, 'whei a dump Ab Shamrock, Tex., a Grey- hound bus bound for Amarillo, from Oklahom& City, avg- sengers. 11 Treated at Scene ! In. Hudson, a spokesman at 'Columbia County Hospital said all but five of 24 persons brought there in a small fleet of Ambul- 'ances and taxis were released af- ter treatment for cuts and ibruises. Another man was taken ito Albany Medical Center, i 'The hospital spokesman said 11 lother persons were treated at the 'The crash hurled three passen- a diner and baggage car} track. None of the cars Mrs. Ines Marie Cuervo De Prieto, 34, was also reported improving as Venezuelans responded to her concern over how to support five new sons in & one-bed- room homa on her husband's $10 a day in- son, who was in the work train's caboose, underwent surgery for throat injuries. He was reported in critical condition. Coty - Hospital Amelia Manti, 62, (possible kidney injiwmy); Levis 1C. Dewey, 43, of Poughkeepsie, forshead): St. 53, engineer on the switcher motive (leg rulses). lAlbaziy Medical Center was Jack A Sherman, 36, of Albany, who complained of back injuries 18 Feared Killed in _ India Crash en -route from Nagpur to New Delhi. The all five were in Frank Letzelter, 61, of Hud- Also - admittel to Columbia were _ Mis. of Hudson trainman on the switehér (cut James V. Clifford heed injury and leg cuts); and rainniin an the switch loco- Treated Indian Airlines Viscount Cath ing 13 passengers and a crew 6 trashed and burned today 3Siameste miles south of Agra, the govern-! strators for trespassing. ment owned airline reported. | There is no likelihood of sur-iother group of demon yyors, in airline spokesman said.; The site is about 150 miles south. of New Delhi, offi The four-engine turboprop was ing to mission newspaper El Nac good health. Israel Vows Prosecution Of Rioters Israeli Sector, gillllg efitorts to : lish action on the tax cut this! Levi {abruptly left Rome today and'brother from JERUSALEM,. Sept. 11 (P-Prime Minister Eshkol says his government will prosecute those respons violent demonstrations in cities by Orthodox Jewish youths against Christian missionary: work in Israel. Eshkol condemned the riots in Jerusalem, Haifa, and Jaffa yes- 'terday in which more than 100 Orthodox youths were arrested. \and transfetred to the. »s¢\?§fis¥2§$§1ubmmlfiégifitgggfignub mould «come mmyear ak saulted a policeman and a teachJi Sono and cause cf‘s‘ggféigagg‘e' Committee is only the first [to the veto imposed. upon me hy witnegses reported \ major step in the bill's legis- The demonstrators were said to, be members of the \Hever Hap-; Inositd % ¢ dmt oren m as 'move fairly promptly. Although position doesn't alow me to ex- eilim® if Cir Ci? gfthA‘étMStts ll, 2s there had been rumors of, a slow. press myself, mittee, a round. of conferences: out it would be necessary fOr MS me request would be mme'i‘pamphlet Cms rats. .y. WhonBspay sEPpranork 11, i963 Romulo Betancourt saying he had set up & group insurance policy for educatin Caracas g the boys. ional | established a \foundation for aid of Venezuela's quintuplets.\ Various firms sent gifts including a washing machine, baby car- riages, diapers and shoes. The father, an oll company foreman, re- ceived two weeks' paid vacation, The medical team supervising the care of the Prieto quintuplet boys said yesterday ible for can be reduced Jan. 1, leaving three more spending money in pay en- Invade Court Yard Rioters Invaded the courtyard of the French-directed convent pouse floor durin 'school of St. Joseph Neat J°MU- week of Sept, i NEW DELHI Sept. 11 (P) - An salem's commercial district. RO- jpkely Sept. 26. olic sisters bolted all i d called police, WhO jy; 's or « roversy si : p mittee's report on the complex controversy since he arrived from and objects to lis me thods in to School or nner doors an: Jerusalem police repulsed @AD-|printed for distribution break into the a policeman. d more than 100 demon- pill, expected to be as Finnish school. One demonstrator was arrested on charges of at- tacking Bo) a ir In Jaffa, about 100 qimmer. A full-scale civ ichts w to P tors broke into the Church of full-scale civil rights was EONE a Peacefully Desegre Congréss May ated Auntsville, Tuskegee and Mobile Quiet National Guard Ready to Act I6. “I > ; chools in Bir Other Race Developments | BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS COLUMBIA, $C. - The first Negro studats since 1877 are exported to register al the University of South Caroling. glemson. another state supported college, integiited quietly in anuary, ~ Urge Curbs On Spending Suggestion Made b In Bill Cleared by House Committee , HIGH POINT, N.C. ~- Hundreds of white per- sons face each other dulling two antisegregation marches in this tense, central North Caroling city. Police limit violence to a few Isolated instances of rock throwing. { JACKSON, Miss. - John Frazier, & Creenville Negro. | says he has decided not to seek admission to the white Uni- h versity of Southern Mississippi this fall. HOPEWELL, Ya. - Case of reverse integration fails when five white pupils stay avay from Negro school to which they |, BIRMINGHAM, Ala.. Sept. 11 are assigned by the state pupil placement boud. |M - Hundreds of white pupils {went to class in integrated Birm- RALEIGH, N.C. - Negro leaders call off shool boycofts ingham schools today with no in Williamston and Robersonville after the board of education - reported. warns the schools will be closed if attendance does not re- The same situation existed in turn to normal. desegregated schools at Mobile, Tuskegee and Huntsville. - Three Negroes takm into custody Federalized National CGuards- sit-in protstuing what was men at Birmingham were Oon & standby, ready to go on school r | property only if asked by city iand school officials. No major crowds congregated on the grounds of West End High, where hundreds of white pupils and some adult demon- strators, created disorders yester- !day which brought nine arrests, Negroes Enter The two Negro pupils entered West End a half hour before class time. Police required white boys and girls to enter the build- ing upon arrival or leave the vicinity. . About 200 white pupils massed in a yard near the school. They attempted first to congregate on the football field but police chas- ed them away. Adult pickets who wanted to stage a march near the school were halted by police. WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (P - Congress will be on record as. urging the President to pledge \all reasonable means to restrain! government spending\ - if | it passes the $11 billion tax Cut bill in its present form. , 'The administration also would ibe on notice that Congress ex- pects any increased revenue take to be used first to eliminate bud- get deficits and to reduce the- public debt. , The majority of the House: Ways and Means Committee, wrote this language into the bill, yesterday after the close defeat! - of a Republican move to tle PATE w py a 2 of the tax cut directly to a limi-, B tation on spending. f ie namese | lem rge I Republicans, however, will re- new the effort to force spending: e curbs at every legislative oppor-! | \ tunity, and they count on the. [C is 0 0 support of some fiscally con- - I taf I servative Democrats. 1 In addition to the drive to tie . ® in spending limitations-which! v |re 4 t r President Kennedy said would}. dilute the business stimulating potential of the tax cut-the leg- islation faces delay. * MALVERNE, N.Y. at a junior high school during a described as racial imbalance. JERSEY CITY, NJ. - Almost complete hoycott continues for a second day at a 99 per cent Negro elsmentaly school protesting what Negro leaders describe as an unsatisfactory open enrollment plan. ROME, Sept. 11 GP - Arch« SAIGON, Spt. 10 (Delayed) 'bishop Pierre Martin Ngo Dinh [P - US. - Ambassidor | Henry The administration is redoub- i S Thuc, brother of President Ngo:Cabot Lodge has asked President have Congress fin-! -. ; b 4 S\°®s HD- pinh Diem of South Vit Nam,/Ngo Dinh Diem -to oust his! A caravan of cars bearing states the government righter demonstrators rolled by a high:the school but police refused to the official source said today. let them stop. The cars bore the Lodge told the president ultlusual Confederate flags and year, so that withholding rates: , N 4 said the Vatican had ordered and lift press censorship, him to stop talking about velopes. Isituation in ‘his country, f > AS the bill is written, two-; 'The archbishop left on a Plane would be _ advisable\ for pis anti-Netro signs. 'thirds of the individual tax cuts, Pound for New York 24 hours af- powerful \ buther, Ngo Dinh All was peaceful sat Ramsay 'eventually reaching something p ler cancellation of an wdienceiNhu, to leats the country, the High and Graymont Elementary, the neighborhood of $100 to smathh Pope Paul VI. The Vatican source said. lthe other - desegregated city a year for most wage eaming !} ~ schools. At Ramsay a police reported troubled by the 160 phig was the filst time the] 1 lagd salaried familes, would beffint lgg'alfkdovzn h Bléddhists bY. United States has fol‘mal’lyiskedtcammn urged pupils: \Please go effective Jan. 1. The remainin e Diem government. Tor Nhu chew Ffigfigm pogeding.dais-filemt. no flats wes . dters. figfigfiglfi w amvchopy -ac Md newsmen: I am not formally if would like to see him} e, NG a to make any declarations OWilf! go, growl, demogsgeiuzg rwt Snags!) egroes wen ntegrated. = ithe Holy See. Diem - toll - the Associated (og for the second day. The chant- | I have been told, in effect Press last Thursday Lodge bad ling of \we don't want to inte- Because - my] 2° appromhed him on the |ppate® stopped after Charles 5&2“? edlate - reaction from Willcox, school athleisilc direc’tigr, 1 - mna ' | i he white pupils. g? agaégehtloaéggékéthe Saigon government was re_ich;£f§d 123311216 states prgghm ported, but US. officials believerLmmy continued its campaign of 'ended in an understanding that tg have in hand £1. page-mi? fgmi down by Dim pne diggnbution wging & the bill can be brought to the the Vatican secretariate of Statt! fp, ptesidcn-t has said re school boycoit. , e + . 3 : peat 18 it Oi h nn one mense md Leh he repon tii his Pin ar mh Gare te, or \* * YEP\ \Center of Controversy lagviser, as etremcly helpful. | 'qge, saying they were not £0° . archbishop center 'The United Stats feels NBUing to class but ONIY wanted to * olds too much personal POWeT. watch. Police told them to go go home, All but entered the build- Yesterday's formal approval by the key Ways and Means | ! Intive progress, The House apparently wull‘Basta' (enough) The Ways and Means Com-. The long as a Saigon five days ago, had said cracking dow on Bud dhists and three or four good-size - novel. will not be earlier he had no intention of, datos to before leaving Rome this month. Hesgfigzel?$;$gnm1$:émt °pp°nemslmgg llment at West End: and strators HY-inewt week t - c the re- | gos 60; | Enrollment a! o next week, but the Rules Com said he would stay for Nhu's outpoken wife, aso 2 Graymont resterday | was off E - cum Epowerful figure, left Viet Namsharply but nearly normal at mittee is expected to move with» sumption of 1tlheS Vaticésan it is avail- enical Council Sept. 21. : , afiefmdue delay after it is avail 58 gm ft Rome's gfiumlcmo mb‘Monday night for a world tour. Ramsay. , a In the Senite the outlook is port, he told reporters today he! __ MFS Nhulas been a target off The board of education said ris, then board- official U.S. criticism too, partly 857 enrolled at Ramsay, 575 at the ed a flight for Pans ind New , because of her frequent attacks West fnd and 116 at Graymont, Pan American Airlines said, °\. American policy. (Expected emollmea}: giaén 35013433 . es filibuster is expected to limit Ramsay, 1,498 at lintd classes-youlll be doing me pues Li i c tors 1208 There was & mild relationship to the nuclear treatyjon the 10 car Hendrick Hudson and have said they would oppose' tipped over, 4t. This didn't discourage Gold- J. C. Miles, fireman on the water, passenger train, said a yard hand TJ offer it and try to get & made a desperate effort to turn wote on it if I'm the only one the switch and avert the <who votes for it,\ he said. \I've The unidentified man failed. mever bad such an outpouring \He almost got killed trying,\ nail in my life as I have on this Miles told newsmen at the hos- matter.\\ pital. | Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, \T saw him at the switch. 'We galled the tresy the first stepiwere less than 50 feet away. I pack from a possible nuclear wat guess we'll never know who he offering \the specter of eventual was.\ extermrnation\ for both, the! Fred B. Rogler, 60, of Albany, the erigineer on the Hendrick Tnited States and Russia. |__ | He said the leaders and thel Hudson, gave this account of the accident: 'was one woman in the crew. The government-owned airline dlams and two Ceylonese were! passengers. All were men. There: \The ariine spokesman said the plane left Nagpur, central India t 2:30 a.m. Its last contact was viéh the Bhopal control fower (bout 3:35 am. There was no Indication | that anything was wrong then, the spokesman said. Cause of the crash was un- khmown, The weather was report- ed. clear. 200 Tt was the airline's third fatal people of both countries had an «oppoittonity during the Berlin}. \They threw us off the main confromfation and the Cuban|track into a side. We blasted a missile showdown last October to|yard engine. \smdder at the thought of the} The train 'was slowing for a catastrophic consequences\ of alscheduled T:12 pm. stop here missile exchange. p when the crash occurred. Martinis Mum at Arraignment; Judge Enters Innocent Plea . NEW YORK, Seph 11 P - Gareth Martinis refused to plead today to an indictment for five. . counts of vehicular homicide, so' a judge entered a plea of inno- cont in his behalf. . _ _ 'The attorney for the 23-year- old defendant, whose case has - aroused a storm of criticism, in- sisted that the trial be post- poned until sfter the November elections because it has been made \& political football.\ Brong Supreme Court Justice Joseph A. Sqrafite, - however, refused to délay the proceedings, | sing that the pleading had | Chuckle | . Corner for Oct, 15. car collision last May 18. leagues of his father, lawyers wound up their cases. hicular homicide indictment, \I don't know bow this de- fendant can possibly. get a | fair trial,\ Attorney Maurice | Edelbaum said in arguing to- | aay for delay of the trial, Isidore Dollinger is running fo WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (F -reelection, Fdelbaum continued: Joe L, Evins D-Tenn, is| \Monday morning - quartet Rep. member 'of Congress the latest ly sent a copy of his ideng Kennedy. litical football.\ Back came this reply: kmdhm at the White House.\ | . been - postponed once before. Sarafite also scheduled the cast Martinis, 23-year-old son of Criminal Court Judge Joseph. A. Martinis, is accused in the deaths of five persons in a three- A panel of three judges, eol- sequitted| Martinis of charges of reckles| mgalist & proposed ordifance and drunken driving and leavilg the scene of an accident, The ac- quittal came five minutes after in the ensuing public outburst another grand jury examined the evidence and returned the ve- Noting that Bronx Dist, Atl; ngress|backs have orlticized the dis- to becofmie an author, He recent» ériot attorney on every phase of book-\Un-lthe case. Other candidates are derstanding Congress\-to Pres-|making the Mattinis case a po 1 ] . Martinis listéeged to the pic- «wour book will be required ceedings without display of enio-} trash in five years, Twenty-nine imam-sons. including - Amctican, Australian, Canadian and Irish ivyacationers, died in a crash of tan Indian - Airlines DC3 Dakota last June 8. ° scotland school. School officials sid three Ja , sig ©lsaid the youths slapped several c panest ®189t TM- assaulted a teacher and caused some damage. Police seized placards reading, \End the Disgrace of Missions\ and arrest- ed seven demonstrators. Archbishop George Hakim, leader of the Greek Catholic. Community in Israel, witnessed the Jaffa demonstration. He told newsmen he was \molested. and grossly insulted\ by the youths. The archbishop expressed shock at \this unruly way of expressing religious views\ and said he plan- ned a sharp protest to the Byrd, D-Va., Committee is openly critical of it ' This is the language the and Means Committee, on mo- tion of Chairman Wilbur D Mills, D-Ark. Section 1 of the tax cut bill: that such revenue increases should first be used to elim- | nate the deficits in the ad Israeli government. . in Hallo, witnessos said the demonstrators broke into the Messianic mission children's hos- tel and school shouting \tyrants\ and \hangmen.\ Both Jews and Briefly _ non-Jews attend the school. i TYPHOON KILLS 15 | PATPEI, Formosa, Sept. 11 (® Told... | __ WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (P- ' The AFL-CIO Intemational As- sociation of Machinists will strike United Air Lines on Oct.. 10 and is plaining strike action agalist six other carriers, & union official said todays CHICAGO, Sept 11 M - | FHlundreds of white. property ownses ringed the City Hall today in a massed protest thal would ban discrimination- in real estate deals, COXSACKLE, Sept. 114m - An estimated 100 pupiis picket ed the loca Highschool today to protest the lack. of free cation adopted. an altsterity budget. | Wat Berlin city government today condemned assaulls or '| Communist officials and said \! offenders will be punished if they are tyught. « day the ergine that will power the B70 - 2,000-mile-ai-hour bomber. and the manufacturer called it a significant step to- ward the commercial super« . sonis $ranspork books since the Board of Edu- | BERLIN, Sept 11 (M-The: WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (M -The Ait Force unvelléd to-, Philippines, | raged - across For- American - European Beth-BI} |- Typhoon Gloria, léaving at deast 15 persons dead in the mosa today and struck 'Taipel wvith winds of 100 miles an hourimit ministrative budgets and then i to reduce the public debt. | \To further the objective of ob-; taining balanced budgets in the; near future. Congress by this; action recognizes the importance; lof taking all reasonable means to restrain government spending and urges the President to declare his. accord with this objective.\ Rep. John W. Byrnes of Wis-) consin, seniof Republican mem-; ber of the committee, observed that \the majority of the com- mittee showed a guilty conscience by adopting this that homes, [-A. forest fire ravaged drought families homéless. and timber rich state. relief ffom an drought. \devastation. . _ Many Peasants Killed Most of the victims were then found th Reports | teaching of flecing families of - bodies | left morgués. and scores oon we wow vie boe cps ane neko - 3. - - , Ls olin as devastated thousands of Forest Fire Continuing In Brazil for Fifth Day CURITIBA, Brazil, Sept. 11 T refugees crowding country hospi‘,‘ plagued Parans state for the fifth! straight day today, leaving § miles long and 40 to 50 miles ,;, zn € townships razed, ab leash 180 per«| wide. Flames spread 20 miles &; tives came to claim bodies: sons dead, 2,000 injured and 4,000, day over eight -month ped to disaster are Bub in western and Air Force plane flew in 30 tons gai Nuoe. The Communists also. , pesas-, 1.5 billion & ants who tried to fight the flamés in Fedéral aid. with primitive equipment and‘Poge Paul VI this | state! capital of 500,000 from hundreds reported worried by told of sceofesiof iyph ane Goin wey seantay at og ham mmc denning ien section.\ time available for hearings on York. the bill, and Chairman Harry Fhe had bought a ticket to New, of the Finance York. Ways from the called of the papal audience.! If But Vatican sources pointed out WABC an ac m- bled by, paign for hat government during agreed to make that Pope Paul was trol am her tour. the conflict in South Viet N \It is the sense of Congress between that the tax reduction provided government. by this act through stimulation ! If was noted tha of the economy will, Miter & 'reasons of heaiin brief transitional period, raise, ' unheard of for rather than lower, revenues and |eancel a meeling with a Pops. Viet Nam Reds Open Affack; wishful thinking. 'There was Buddhists and the Diem: between cal word; lng American pressure to get the ) no . offic Nam, however.spot in integration of schools at Vatican on who hag' Nhus out c ot i was expected that she williBtrmmgham, gee. |N t scept for seemed to it would be; iy a prélate to' contrary _ lask week from 'Diem and Nhu. Most obsevers saw no relation of Viet uve propaganda cam- Relations between South Viet am and the United States ie deteriorating rapid the . despite sfafements to | | Fighting Bloodiest in Months CAL NUOC, South Viet Nam, Sept. 11 UP - Massive Commun- | £ ist guerrilla forces launched co- ordinated attacks on government towns widely scattered over Viet set off the bloodiest fighting in the area in many months. This district capital temporar- and Dam Dol. 10 miles away, Was burned and sacked. Air strikes and a pitched battle fought between a Viet- namese Marine battalion and fleeing - guerillas reportedly cost the enemy more than 100 -' tals. Tons of food, cential Parana fires fanned by of supplies yesterday. . strong dry winds added to the, Aid Pledged A A Western Parana was hit hard-. 00. * \ est. Fires there cover an area 100 Doi was converted today into an the weekend but rescue, , h . . _ o_. ivorkers say the advance has \Sup :£.000 emergency kits to survivors Rainclouds [blew - actoss | the sided, southern portion of the coffee} clothing andi promising. medical supplies have been ShiP-. cong threw about §00 well-armed as. One 'US. guerillas E Président Joao Goulart toured the north. iParans yesterday and promised qutposts. ruzeiros ($16 million)} d d F???“fififiiseggfig wounded. by acfildint pledge million while blowing up the wreck of a emselves trapped. ortizelros <€$30,000) to aid victims. Vietnamese Air Force fightef shot Public health authorities were down in several eases His name oid and fear the disease' in - makeshift: may spread, Vaccines are being, were heavy. of injuredprepared for shipment; . killed. About 60 enemy bodics were counted by US, advisers. | District headquarters at Dam improvised morgtie, where rela- The U.S. aid mission rushed | in the towns, including medicine, |. !faod and clothing. || 2 C In predawn attacks, the Viet cach at Dam Dol and ‘cul'. the rokd betweel the prov- inclal capital of Omi Mau and and attacked gbout six A U.S. Air Forge captain was the operations . Tuésday. was withheld.\ Weapons losses on Both sides Nam's southern tip Tuesday &nd recoilless rifle Communist-made rifles. swiftly walls buildings. Machine raked part of the town. rom the guerrillas included a Chinese Communist heavy ma- chine gun an American Yomm and - about 10 Mortar fire opened thé attack i : r o ily was overrun by the Viet Cong 5m this town of about “mot nhabitints. The Commun- ists hors made mortar bombs smashed the concrete of most adunnistratflici'régin Birmingham after two Negro gun Bodies Found fensé fore survived.) or misslig. found, but many are &o bad. charred i was not immediatel and haw many were civilians. headquarters the onslhught, ing the raiders. vistnamote and U.S. officers * ta\ riles wire willth 200 'deadiock both Wallace and the Federal govern- im The bileged district capital established radio communication with the province headquarters, but the line quickly went dead.|PO Survivors said the 100-man de- fense fore fought hard. . (This dispatch filed through the govemnment cable office, did not say how many of the de- The offers all are either dead Bodies have 'been; known how many were soldiers Dam Dol also was defended by about 10) men. Although district was smashed in defenders contin« aed to fight and still were fight- when a baitalion of mariies amived by helicopter to drive off The govemfiaent‘, said 30: aunt-lion ghe first time. There was no her departure and grow- 328 at . Graymont. West End was the only trouble Mobile 'and Tuske- 'The guardsmen, some of them called up three months ago to 'enforce integration at the Un:- versity of Alabama, were not needed as 20 Negroes entered white schools and broke a new Gov. George Betur Between ent. \1 can't fight bayonets with my bare hands,\ said Wallace. He pledged to continue | his segregation fight in the courts, Wallace called up the National Guard to block the Negroes. President Kennedy. quickly placed the soldiers under Federal con- trol and prohibited them from carrying out Wallace's orders. on the scene said arms captured! About 200 guardsmen moved. into a Birmiigham armory for use if requested by city authori« ties in keeping order. | \I'm sure we can handle it- 'If I didn't think so, I wouldn't 'hesitate to call for help.\ suid Chief Jamie Moote. Disturbance Quelled A heavy forte of city police- imen and county officers quelled disturbances by pupils and angry adults at West Fnd High School girls entered the school. Only about 150 white pupils stayed in West End after the Negro girls went inside, Hundreds of white pupils, joined by militant adults, jeered the Negroes and licemen. Scuffles ensued. Po- licemen called in the riot squad, armed with shotguns and care bines. ' Clubs were used to prod the crowds. Nine men were arrested, some for scuffling with officers and some for disobeying orders to: {move. Among those arrested was iBamie M. Carmack JF, who said ¥ /he belonged to the Hegregationist YiNational States Rights Party, He was arrested & week ago in a sim« ilar demonstration at another\ Birmingham school. . An - if=year-old white man, David Stanley, was arrested yes- terday on a charge of sssaulting an officer with intent to murder in an earlier demonstration. in Tuskegte, 14 Negroes at- tended classes at a white school trouble, , \ 1 [4 't x