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WEATHER ~- Tonight, record, or near record dows, scattered frost; | llow around 30. Saturday, . sunny, high 55 to 65, | FINAL | EDITION va monay m in ~ Tws URGE THAT BURDIS LOOP NOT BE ABANDONED: Twaen'py Packs Prior Eicur q Mayor Says He Will Veto __ Measure; Safety Board Urges Test Be Continued By DON A. METIVIER | H. H. Hilton, owner of a stuall The Common Council voted 3 Manufacturing firm in Maple St., to 2 today to rescind the ordin- Said he believed the economy of ances cleating one way streets, Glens Falls was not based on re- implementing the Burdis traffic tail business as was being said loop. Mayor Hairy G. Helm im- by many persons at the meeting. mediately announced he w.ll not He declared that progress was sign the resolution, thereby in NOt the same to all people and cfiect vetoing the action of the the shortsightedness of several council, and the loop will re- of the downtown merchants had main in effect for the present in driving business out time. of Glens Falls and had created The council's action was taken the Queenshury Shopping Plaza, at an adjourned meeting fol- \OCleng Falls does not exist for : 'owing the regular meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of [ ; the Board of Public Safety at downtown groups.\ he said. which the latter body voted un- , Miss Genevieve Bazinet said it animously to recommend that !$ the responsibility of the coun- the trial period 'be continued. :cil to reject the hitle bit of pres- ~ Grengs FALLS, NY. FRiDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1963, __ >a marami H Integrati l G I JIU t le 0. Renn CI f “WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 (fiP) -- Prqsiden‘t Kennedy says he thinks \we are ; going at about the right t§mpo on rac1’arl integration and that he does not believe f [Americans will makethe \fatal mistake\ of dividing politically along racial lines. ‘He said the recent desegrega-> moan of schools in 150 southern; a citiés \is an impressive story\ re- D j . flecting great credit on southem-' emonStratlonS re iage egs who put respect for the law! & above emotion. oe gave ese veus AM IM PFrOtest gestlm'day in a news conference. - a E iduring which he also put in an- T ; other strong plug for Senate, 0 ntegr a t’on 0 C 00! S ratifliabwn of the linuted nuclear; R \ test ban treaty, announced he: 4 eo ; ; ; would address the United Nations ezpfilvlfigff‘fmgflf’l anlal; S?!” 13 rune ‘a‘lplstol without a peNMl [later this month, and defined cl for y p emen braced to-_and having a concealed weapon. (U.S. policy in South Viet Nam Ewfilem tm5):ensdemonstl'atnous by; Detective Capt. J. M. McDow- 8 ; 22022 .~ e 1T w students protesting inte- ell said Cash' r i Persons favoring a full 90-day test of the Burdis loop gather tms rmorning on City Hall “$351;ng about £ Cfi’faltlg'p, poll in gration. of three schools. in this straight: fazor, fatxlec'gtmfiaid a A two-thirds vote is reqwred sure, some members .of thely steps. They are carrying signs nging that the Board of Public Safety and the Common Coun- C per cent 0 hose repl¥~ . industrial city. buffeted by racial, T-sh whn 't to overnde a veto by the mayor Wards were placing on them and Gd hot abandon the loo g thought he was \pushing - si ¥ pistol-shotgun,. cartridges and re j not change their mind c e loop. gration too fast.\ Kennedy sid urmoil since April. \Mares. The officer said Cash also The council met before a jam» rests . he thoueht the o; nedy Several teen-agers who took 'was caring a Derringer med-packed chamber, filled to! Calles Kanner restated the . e thought the figure was actit- part in noisy motorcades yester-| _ ; ; .;, overflowing with placard carry. Position of the South St. ate. bilge _ | Another man, Clarence Lewis, Pane nants Assomati AH | But n id ., day said a big rally to boost boy- 49, was charged with carrying a L spectators. ichants Association and William, as llxt e said he considered it cotting of schools was PIaNNEd ' concealed weapon \ mE Following a public-hearnng- Donnelly spoke again for the } ‘ , < 412“ her impressing\ that another at downtown Phillips High ~ Several I dred wh type meeting of 77 minutes, the DOWntown Merchants Group. j [40 per cent replied that the prace\ Students at Phillips and sev- gung - some \ adults arove - rom CouNCH (Ofed On & resolution of-! The LtagNe of Women we}; more or less right. eral other still-segregated schools an1 lsome a; U 11.5 Filpve {rom fered by Second Ward Council- Statement, read at the Board of e | . | he said \change always dis- refused yesterday to join in pe Sthool io sehook waving rebel man Thomas Marzola to rescind Public Safety meeting, was re- turbes, and, therefore, I was sur- chanting. yelling and flag.wav1ng,flags and staging pep-rally t¥D8 the ordinances passed on July 24, to the council 'and placed prised Phaf‘, there wasn't greater demonstrations staged -by demonstrations in an effort 10 making Ridge St. one way north in the minutes. i ‘ opggismonu. 'loads of teen-agers who roamedflra‘v followers from Other from Bank Square to Grand St.;, Phillip Sovetts, a Waren St. 2 d , ringing up the school deseg- the city. schools. Grand and Chester Sts, one wayibusmessman and Stephen An- , regation subject in an opening Meanwhile, most of Alabama's °°\ succeeded only at Jon€S west and CHlen St. one way south derson, manager of the Queens- WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 P- ate Armed Services Committee, \We can't turn our back and statement, Kennedy had. high 16.000-man National Guard went Valley High where about 100 from Chester St. to Bankibury Inn, also spoke in favor of Sen. Henry M. Jackson came out jsaid the preamble to the u'eaty’ien 90 nations that have now Eéfiiiilfifié'rs'me vast majority* of 9172 ngeral duty at midught wégi’fifnfanéfiff & £155,155“ llflxlrjlsd Equarei A Foal/I call vote foundithe 90 day trial, today in favor of the limited nu- 'presents as the future aim of itsisigned it that the lid is off, the; ' je ursday, President Kennedy ;,... ' c f ounciimen Marzola, Bernard Losing School Teachers ~ clear test ban treaty, saying its |signatories \the speediest possible'atomic age has come in all its | ; EIE mfg“! that five PF edcral federalized the guard to prevent; tho other segregated schools, the Ketchum and Ernest Vannier in| William Cohn, a member of risks are serious but. acceptable. [achievement of an agreement on 'splendor and that ever one’Ju ges WHO signed a school de- Gov. George Wallace from Usmg,Cl°Wd was unsuccessful. favor of sescinding the one the Board of Education, told th The Washington Democrat, who'égenera] and complete disarma- should fiegin to test in theyat-iifirffiffi°§o grielrbm Alfibnfngthe soldiers to keep Negroes mut ' 'Most of the demonstrators way streets and Cquncilmenlcouncxl that the Glencs‘ 133,115 sys? | abama, all grew of white schools. Tuesday. were about 900 boycotting West Joseph W,. Bloomfield and tem is losing more teachers than serve P a e 'n hi o L Derlzm 3c wage gejégcanrgl Iiigfiigggmsg‘; at.\ he told the Senale \mtg/$3251.21? w‘gllxlllghhavgf tocod‘gsff'iup in Alabama, and I am sure. The Army said last night an- End High. At Woodlawn, they Stewart L. Robinson against. lever before, and many of th during the 1980 presidential cam» About as far-reaching and sweep-'this treaty fails shared the views of the majorlty other 130 guardsmen would told: \Go away. We don't _ Mayor Helm said, \I have ten |are leaving because {he p 61.3 » 'of Alabamans who, I think, rre released at midnight tonight m‘wmt, any trouble here.\ days in which to sign this reso- lean not give them two-year 331. Scuffle Breaks Out lution and I shall not sign it, ! l A sculfle broke out at Wood- and thereby I will veto this mind of man could| 'This would be the green light nop i rep-} 3 for desegregation, but, never- (the Mobile area. tracts, Mr. Cohn said the rapidly paign, had been generally re- iing as the changing assessment rolls in garded as one of the treaty's devise.\ Under the treaty, he saidwfor intensive atmospheric test- theless, met their responsibilities only 545 on dutgfn 1115 will leave principal critics. 'the 91 signers could constitute aling by a number of countries. under the law.\ Birming- 4 C 2 4. | b , | - i lawn between students and! resolution. I, like Mr. Blpom- In his announce , {forum which could \completely|You couldn't possibly stop s a . Iham. Tuskegee and Tuscaloosa. h : 1 C 1 » . Bipom- (Glens Falls made it impossible Jacrllksorll saidnhe Jalgegcknzogfizl Isupplant the United Nations.\ [This would be the end of an ef-| atgglijtesdygmxghgfiiy onethc ; m_ the wake of sprending demogsitlahors before police, field fel ohne ot the to wite “go-year to conclude from the evidence - He saiihis prtoposal wou‘fl not fort 05 15 years. I don't think the' George Wallace to block‘S schgc‘fi f fiudlmt boycolt ts in _ Mobile, Imggnergily the students were3 Effomge crowd cherred the contracts, ; \C require the treaty's renegotiation; Unit ; Euskegee ant Birmi , 4 i © * . yor. ; F ; that the agreement involves d M in ed States would yam: boi desegregation, but noted there | Gov, 2”Wallace pledgrgéngm?t inot unruly, only noisy. R Many Spectators “1131150111223 cammpfii'glrfidxaxégfhg 'but would only spell out ssux'ages by; Sthet PBesident laknd' Another foe of the treaty, Semi Secretary of State Dean Rusk. .Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz, is: Sant infar wa _ Ab about the time Russell was planning to offer a reservation, pg: gigg‘légitggggsxifscrexseh ! sited schools in Alabama, 'offering the amendment, Ken- that would postpone the treaty's through a very gruelling ise - We ve just begun to fight,\: was telling his news con- effectiveness until Russia \C- and with the exception fg few Wallace said on arriving for a' tference that the treaty can not moves all nuclear weapons and : P ol 210W. symposium today at as-, take that responsibility. 1 P 3 In Mohle, about 300 students 'The council meeting was A Arthur Greenberg. The speaker, walked out and demonstrated continuation of the group's Wed- a former member of thepeplan: “Ears? £11?ch ants hour. Police nesday afternoon session and It ning Commission. said when the reste students. 'was called to order. by Mayo commi as t Bonds of $100 each were post- Helm, at 11:38 am. before moregm’gm’ufigi’é 53115156“? sféfim‘éafig aia Gaucher? for most-of the students by.than 100 spectators, many Ofiago, it met violenckopbosflion consent lo' ratification\ __ - 28 cbafiéedfl‘fin IgmYm‘vazi's,”\ with- [troops from Cuba and permits AM ling i},\ College. He talked of legal ac- clfiggégifikea Citizms Conn-22221?“ lfidaf’éhgggid the eal'lieriHe said dropping the Burdis loop h > out ratification e Senate. jinspection to verify the removal.! \als ; {tion to res ' mgs \- -> 1 (0p Ato the 2 | ( \ . f Jackson's removal of himself; Commenting, 915; Russell's 09-5 gm, Goldwater 3201; themség-iseffz also mentioned school de- | suq pe restore segregation and: \The lst man into the council I}??? yang ép9fiticahekpgdle‘pt,» from the doubtful list enhanced position to the treaty, Kennedyiate yesterday, even approval of mggzgatmnd g} South Carolina,, - ' the chances for Yatification of theiacknowledged the Georgian|the reservation would not.make|zgjed up 2. a P prot by a substantial marginiwould have some influente. But'the pact \ore ounce MONE AC~) Q,,,» UP ' -~ the necessary two-thirdsfhe said he thought the Senate/ceptable to me.\ He conceded, oe a 1 qlitically, he said \I don t' where a boycott left only is Né-' had been \some difficultics\ | © ,; night in a Baltimore news con- and obstacles, \even to the ' ference to fight for re-segre- F \serious-perhaps even formid- able-military and technical P disadvantages.\ But he added © that with assured safeguards for the nation's security, \I believe that the Senate may aberrations, I think we are meet-\ putesty sme Selin. U4 \might consider' run- \S00 meager ew) dll o S3. allace pledged Help: an imp-CW‘A in setting up a private school for: Pwhite Students at Tuskegee, room was, Mr.. Expectved gn. ovation from the ispectatqrs, reportedly in support 5 gr hiSMWeitIilnestclllay Istand against discontinuing the loop. A - ; a Councilman-at-Large Williaméjzlf.1 2311322356? gfixlvpubuedness sec J,. Mangine Jr. was absent from} tre urged the Common Council, esl fe was out of town. HelM/ine Board of Public Safety and said he was out of town. the Planning Commission to work a few voters are mad® You must do something, because if' you don't Glens Falls will die and - Racial - H | majority, would approve the treaty, Seid|however, that the Senate would P A Jackson, who spearheaded the Kennedy: ratify the treaty. 5222” $355,119.53in agogfiflfgégl‘oes in the high school yester- , t a « t‘senatg Al-xngdeex-yliceslccinmmfit-l & 6 a & upon racial lines would be Lin-idagil i i f“ l © ce's demand for ironclad sale, e governor also conmgratulat- a r m fortunate . . . h ; $11?ch grcgafiédsbjéhgzg aiozg’lggl nveStlgatlon Into Tr I p | cover the long run we are go- 5d thef Tusk;3gee High football 1iance Mr. Bloomfeld immediatelYigogether and make what hé efs 0 aff 1 \ M te wo 'team for quitting rather than . 'moved for an executive session Frome a 3 the Weapons Subcommittee of j ‘zgg he 11211115 | a mis, This will bE play for a%esegr%gated.school. By The Associated Press - 'and this was denied him by 2 termed progressive changes. the Senate House to UDC y tu enis | sical, socially. ethnically. * uring yesterday's roving de- ,. \\ ~SUNGTON -. President, yote of 3 to 2. [ Receives Applause _ Committee. i a geographically, and that is real-' q crain 'Kennedy praises citizens and! \The first speaker from the floor' Following Mr. Greenberg's re- | * [ly. finally, the best way.\ . monstrations, three white men; e first speaker from the £100\ marks the crowd gave its loudest Jackson's announcement fol- | i M \He eaid in reply to another, Were arrested. One of them, Jack community leaders in the S0UUi|was James E. Wallace, chalrMm@t'and most Sustained applause \or lous by a day President Ken-, ont’ n U e y 0m m If ee questiox; he is no? szzonsiciztlexrxil‘fglefz‘.f Cash, 56, was charged with cm.'5':crklxe::lswxg (ggeespggt‘ et‘igte‘g‘rllezgfgof ghehPlanmnlgtCofimlssion. “fame day. and several persons stood medy's appeal at his news con-, stro@iger executive or § mome smear ~ 11 | Sat e sought the same OD-; Fi d their placards i in of} . . ; S utive order - almed' also tells news conference he iljective action from the council \P ADJ WAVEC {helt Datards gfigf: éggrgiwgeigemgegga' ! waASHINGTON. Sept. 13 UP -fish . .. The American Nazi Party jat eliminating discrimination in, % / ¢ f not going to broaden his order’is had been received train Ine! Councilman Bloomfield asked nat D *. (More - American | students whoiis the only foe of communism. housing. i letnamese forbidding - racial discriminationEBoard of Public Safety that copies of the South St. \Crudging support, the Presgitmvaed to Castro's Cuba were, \Shut ub, you filthy Nazi\ a - On other subjects: ‘ 'in housing financed with Federal| Arthur P. Sutty Jr, executive Merchants Association ballot, tak« dent sud, would Impt US-called before a House Commit- woman screamed over and over, TREATY: The president's voice help. secretary of the Glens Falls (28 4% poll of the citizens about prospects for world leadership. © . [ ithe loop, be inserted.. into the took on an edge when he reject- | ‘ {record, as well as remarks from Chamber of Commerce. said he In a speech prepared for Sen-ped precautions against a recur- me delivery, Jackson laid heavy rence of yesterday's screaming emphasis on the risks he sid near-riots. would be involved in the 'rwice the ornate hearing rool which would prohibit all nuclear of the Committee on un-Ameri- testing except underground. |___ can Activities erupted into a we must understand what iS syeyrming, pushing struggle be- required to protect and maInt2\ tween police and bearded youths, ine free world's ability to dete\ cnrieking girls and college stu- os sarvive a nuclear attack and q to respond effectively against any: agavessor,.\ Jackson declared. \We must be ready to pursue the fe- cessary policies without reserva- uons of mind or. heart.\ Yesterday, Sen,. Richard B. . Russell, D-Ga, an avowed foe PUt- of the pact formally offered ; But the action wasn't finished an amendment to the resolu- :even After the deéfmonstraiors had tion of ratification, It would been nustled out of the House assert the Senate's insistence building and turned loose on the that any charges Russia or any sidewalks to make plans for at- other nation imay offer to the «tending today's session and a treaty must he brought back to 'possible rally near the capitol. :e, Senate or ratification, Third Disturbance Erupts Chairs tumbled over, fists flew} and a shrill voice shouted \Fascist fascist.\ , No one was arrested nor any-, one itee today, and edgy police map-[as the meeting turned into tur- moil. Rockwell of American Nazi Party paced outside the hall collection of his tan-shirted sup- porters. terday's - congressional reported to be - seriously r ip-'horts down the stairs with the Lincoln Meanwhile, George with a The worst outbreak during ves- heanng noon of - testimony by Levi Laub, a 25-year-old New York: College student and one of the leaders of the 59 students who; spent two months in Cuba this: summer in violation of passport: ules. | Laub defended \civil disobedi-| can tradition. He added thawi many other Americans are now | using that tactic to \fight the same kind of racists that are' sitting up here in front of me, right now.\ That brought a sharp | drumfire of applause from some! lin the audience. _ Warns Overflow Crowd I Rep. Edwin - Willis, D-La. chairman of the Committee on| Un-American Activities, repeat-; edly warned the overflow crowd! in the big caucus room against! demonstrations. Earlier he had! police remove half a dozen youths for another long outburst, of applause. Willis was in the chair three years ago when protest tlots broke out at a committee hear- ing in San Francisco, But yesterday Willis said he was through with Laub and ad- journed the hearings until to- Russell, chairman of the Sen-| 'The third disturbance broke lout when an unidentified man ® . tried to speak out at an evening Damag’ng 'meeting set up by the Student \ I 'Committee for Travel fo Cuba 'and billed as a reply to House in- F ro St I S vestigation. - p \I have a few words to say.\ ° - he shouted as he leaped up on. :F OT ecast a platform before a crowd of about 300 at a downtown meet- ALBANY, Sept. 13 UM - Aimismglxghbers of the audience fiifiggigiigglt‘e'fimggg gfsgzeiswtérhggd around, dpolice tsgrgflefl seis €Wiinto the room and escorte e quk tit-late! met Weaihter 1311113311}would—be-spcaker and three co- sed ay as temperatures bed into the 40s and lower Anifour injruders shouting: 1110ng of the state. ht fall to th | \The ffommunist Party is Jew- he mercury might fal e: 20s tonight in some mountain areas, a bureau said, and scatter-] ed frost is expected across thel state in a repeat of the frosty departure of this year's spring. Tomorrow Will be sunny and' warmer, the bureau said!6 | French elevision star tcalamities New York City's 48 ab 6 a.m. was sentenced today today. set a record low for the date. Most cities had readings in the 40s. Massena recorded 35. Strong winds, accompanied by showers and thunderstorms, blew in the chilt from Canada, Nearly mgp - two inches of rain splashed the reme Cthirt ruling banning St.\ Lawrence Valley. recitation 0% the Lord's Prayer and Bible day. midcontinent border, 'Temper- atures dropped to 23 at Tron- wood, Mich, and 25 at Ashland, Wis. in the early morning, ed the arguments of opponents. 90 nations that now signed it 'that the lid is off, the atomic age Has come in all of its splen-} green 'pheric testing by a number of; countries. You cou stop it. This would be the end of mer cabinet minister. an effort of 15 years. I don‘tiforces previously have cent think the United States would their attention - on antigovern- ence\ as being in the best Ameri-Gvant to take on that responsibil-iment - activity - among Buddhist ty. \Attorneys _| 'We can't turn our back and tell} Arrested | every-; four Vietnamese attorneys in a; light for intensive atmos- Ngo Dinh Diem's government. One of the attorneys was iden- bu *t leaders and students. VIET NAM: \We want the war! The informants said hundreds; to be won, the Communists to of students have been picked up, be contained and the Americans by the secret police in post-mid- to go home. That is our policy,\ night operations this week under! To an earlier question. he said ithe martial, law curfew. These‘ \I do nob think it dessirable tolatrests have supplemented those» state all of our views at thisi . : time. I think they will be made SWSLOTS (332215 figmlfllgggS-in more clear as time goes on. t battle gear roa red thro lighgiu'f i ital from one. potential ROCKEFELLER: With a: big, tréilflzpszygtftr: Mime? grin, and tongue obviously in: most of the trouble spots were cheek, Kennedy said he was Pre- 'sehools whore students have been: pared to accépt the blame fO\ ; demonstrating daily. The Army: Gov. Nelson Rockefelier's l'ecgntiis keeping the schools open ab withdrawal of a 1962 CaMpPMED peyonet point, but reports of pledge not to increase taxé in lrowdy | demonstrations crackle New York. A reporter told Ken-lover the police radio several nedy the Republican gOYEMOT times a day. blamed him for failure to! fran Dinh Thao is a former achieve a | certain | economiC'minister of national edutation: growth rate in the nation. Ken- 'and secretary of state for jus- nedy said he recéived thousindsifes, 'The official sources said of letters blaming lum when the he was arrested Tuesday night. Bul stock market dropped last year |together with _ Attorneys 'boycott of newly deserregatedirecord with the council as being] classrooms spread in Alabam2. in favor of continuing the 90-day $11 £19 22g ‘k‘l'mte “MES?“ St.trial. He said the board of di- ; 6 'Tuskegee High stay away, leavin@irectors of the chamber, repre- ' dor, and that everyone 11Q\V,W_S_“ggQNI' V‘etesmgg Srigg-tegm Negroes in the classes. FiftY~ senting 400 members, was in. 'should begin to test in the at=} tofay sgéietszlgigce gave arrested'iglcllg 1321311363055; taken into CUS- animously in favor of continuing came at the end of a long after-lmosnhere which, of course, B ; one would have to do if this drive against opposition among 'treaty fails his would be the' professional men to President Wa imen he is just starting to fight integration in his state and ldn't possibly, tifed as Trinh Dinh Thao. a for- might consider running for presi- Security dent. \It would do the country, ered good to have a president from ithe South,\ he says. 'made among teen-age demon-! letter in the last few days, mbout the Kennedy markets' now that it has broken through the Dow Jones - average. | So Governor Rockefeller is not alone in. his disappointment.\ GOLDWATER: The President also drew laughter when he said but \I Haven't gotten a single !Tuong Chieu, Hoang Quog Tan, He was not yet ready to com-} and Tran Nguyen Bong. Chieu was reported freed after two nights of detention and inter- rogation. Bong is a former employee of US. military and government agencies in Saigon. He worked for the U.S. Aid Mission here from 1955 to 1956, the U.S. Military Advisory Group from 1956 to 1959 ment extensively on attacks by BIRMINGHAM, Als. -A Whitt wanted to put the chamber on! f ithe trial for the full term. BALTIMORE - Gov. George ,.2° said Glens Falls has a past Hace of Alabama tells news-. tried. it will never tbe known if the loop would have been suc- cessful. Charles Garlen appealed to the cally inspired basis because this is an election year, but to take into consideration the lifeblood of the aty, the merchants.\ Lester Erlanger said the city HIGH POINT, N.C. - Negro and while leaders work out truce designed to end mass demonstra- tions against segregation. The 6 | action follows police use of tear has been stymied in growth for gas to disperse a rock-throwing Yeas. and he noted the static crowd during a march Wednes- Population figures of the past day night. [26 years. .*'We can progress with __ . ithis idea of urban renewal, and COLUMBIA, S.C. - Raciallyiwe must give the loop a fair desegrated classes to begin quietlytrial.\ he said. at the University of South Car-, Several other persons, many of colina. But in the city, about 100 ¢ whom had spoken at the Board Negl‘cl) youths parade protesting of Public Saféty meeting, again racia watch but no arrests are Hepoit- . 'traffic plan. 30 of 21 Are Saved as Launch Capsizes in Long Island Sound PORT JEFFERSON. Sept. 13 Northfield, Ohio, the Hazlewood's day in the choppy waters of Long:.Coast guard reported that 21 Island Sound. Twenty of the.were aboard. history of shelving all plans for; the future and if this plan is not; councilto act. \mot on a politi-; discrimination. Police expressed their opinions on the: \ effectitemiess, or lack of it, by the. (AP) -- A Navy launch with 21 executive officer said the launch! imen aboard capsized early to- held a capacity of 22 men. The: an official from the Grand Union Corp. to Mayor Helm that the firm's Glen St. and Ridge St. istores have had a drop in busi- ness since theimplementation of 'the loop. | At 12:32 p.m. Councilman Ketchum asked for an executive session and the councilmen troup, ed into the mayor's office with several of the sign-carrying spec» tators following them. The spec- tators were kept in the hall and 'a uniformed policeman stood guard on the mayor's door. 'The council reconvened at 12.38 p.m. and the resolution of the Board of Public Safety was read tothe countii by Mr. Bloomficld. Councilman Margola proposed a resolution asking that the or- dinances creating the one way streets implementing the loop be rescinded. Mr. Margola said the council never voted in favor of a 'i90&day trial, but only a trial per- iod. Reads Ordinance Marzola read the entire ordin-= ances relating to the one way streets and Councilman Ketchum seconded his motion. Mr. Bloomfield called for a res- olution to table the Marzola res- olution for one week and the mo- tion to table was setonded by Councilman Robinson, Ib was de- feated by a vote of 3 to 2. The vote was then called by Mayor Helm on the ovigirial res- olution and Deputy City Clerk Mrs. Marietta Cronin called each councilman by name. In voting Councilman Ernest Vannier said, \I have been against this before and I am against it now,\ and he voted in favor of rescinding the one way streets, . Safety Board Mecting © men were rescued, and one man' One fian was taken to Mather is reported missing, the CoastMemorial Hospital here. Guard reported. |condition was not know im craft, capsized 1.000 yards from to Setauket firehouse here. shore as it was ferrying the men Hisgcussién ab the meeting of the The launch, a 26-foot fiber mediately. The rest were taken! The Hazlewood carries a crew Mayor Helm opened the dis- ard of Public Safety by speaking of the economic aspects lof the loop plan, saying that {gasoline stations and food stores . CARACUS, Venezuela, Sept. 13 ® - Terrorists attacked a U.S. - owned supermarket to- day, robbed the cash box and set the store afire with 16 un- drefsed women employes lock- «ed on the top floor. Sen. Barry Goldwater, a possible [Republican candidate to oppose him in next year's presidential glection But Kennedy was any \secret\ commitments made to obtain the test ban treaty, as serious in denying there were. and for a Michigan State Uni- (of 250 men and is commandedipaqg reported losses of business. versity team training Viet Nam's police forte from 1960 to 1962. The lawyers were reported try- movement against the govern- ment within the bar association ing to organize a mass protestil. | Luzerne Man Saved - Brodell, 19, Carl St., Lake Lu- zerne was among 20 men Radio Man Seaman Joseph: by Cmdr. Donald J. Hanson of Middletown, RI. The launch, which was washed ashore after it capsized, had been ferrying men 'between the' Alpert F. Trudel, chairman of the Downtown Merchants Group, said these merchants have more mentioned by the mayor and to gain by the plan than those here, iship and shore since yesterday that not one of the 30 in the a questioner said had been hint, h h ~~ 'ed by Goldwater. \Theré are not Hungarian authorities t0d8Y commitments, and I think Sen.. ha , i| saved when a Navy launch More thin 1.000 out of the} saved w ind ty - notes, . capsized this morning jn Long 2000 university students arrest; stand Sound. afternoon. It normally is used din refeue operations, Lf. Cmdr. !Facsstl said. group had reported a drop in ousiness. He urged that the $10 million in downtown assegsments rooms. as ~ - , - ' VIENNA, Sept. (13 (M -> |_ w» . . s i nes fanre exte wie . RICHMOND. Va., Sept, 13 (U-| Def floors extel sively. No in- \The 13 members of the graduat- juries were rep ng class from St. Elizabeth Hos- pital's Sally Tompkins School of Practical Nursing receive their certificates [onight. Friday thel H3th - 18 days before they take state board nursing examinations.; CHICAGO, 1g seasonably . cold southward - over eastern - United brought frost and ' central and Yair pouring . BASILIA, Sept. 13 (M - Presidént Joao Goulart said today vigorous action will be taken against those responsible for a brief revolt of noncom- missioned - officers | in | this - capital of Brazil, & any suggestions for a military PARIS, Sept. 1% M-Mrs. Alice invasion of Cuba. Commenting Adams, of New York today ré- on an American Legion solu- |ported io police that & thief tlon that there has been a lack entered her hotel room during of effective U.S. gction her absence and took $65,000 Fidel Castro's regimg, the Presi- worth of jewelry and silverware. dent said Cuba has been \rela- (She refused to give any further tively isolated,\ details of the theft to reporters. | f 15 Swin Ashore further hampered visibility. Fifteen - of- the men swam f ashore. Others were picked up yards from where the launch'to shore, alded at times by capsized. . - . 'shouted - directions from | the | Lt. Cmdr. Matthew Passel, of rescues. The 15 men clung to the fide f rof the Iaunch, and by kicking, by the destroyet anchored 200/helpeil propél it and themselves pt, 13 bout . . - 'I 15 patients Bre removed from | lifted a 13-day smallpo® 4UAT- goldwater . . , would know that'ed during demonstrations late} stl sat Dla £2 ae , a peo I the 114-364r-81d original Mercy | antine at Budapest's Royal is not true.\ {last month still are in. jail, ze ~~ -- 'The accident occurred in. theibe weighed carefully fgainst the LOF ner 1 Hospital bull&ing today when | Hote! and allowed about 300 ; CUBA: Kenfiedy rejectel as, Loas Itrom shore leave to the destroyer pre-dawn darkness. Biting noflh={others. ~ fire damaged She roof and up- | tourists to leave for home. i\dangerous\ and \incindiary\ REPORTS THEFT [Hazlewood, fier'e for antisub-'east winds whipped the waters! Kenneth Caswell asserted that y ‘ marine tests. of Long Island Sound - andithe loop had reversed a down- ward trend in store Sales, He said he had seen Glens Falls progress on. the educational and cultural level and fegress on the business level, James E. Wallace, chairman of (Continued on Page 11)