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i A. }, o 1.8 b! Poo} { 6 H £ pf 4 Ap od Pho > i{ t A g: WEATHER Tonight, partly cloudy, mod» . erate temperatures, low around 50, Friday, few showers likely in north, high around 70. - FI NAL EDITION Yol. LXXXIV, No. 228 Anti-Communist, Rightist: Military Leaders Hold | Dominican Republic Control SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican|freely elected president in more Republic, Sept. 26 (f) - Rightist, than 30 years. ' anti-Communist mihtary chiefs! Even Bosch's friends, some of held power in the Dominican Re- whom called him a dreamer, had, public today after deposing Presi-! wondered whether the post- dent Juan Bosch and accusin@'novelist had the practiedl ability, him of leading his countty after years in exile, to lead a toward | communism, eCONOMIC/notion releas r icta ; ruin and war with neighboring ed from dictatorship. {by the May 30, 1961, assassina- . 28 PagBs - 2 SECTIGNS L4 GLENS FALLS, N. Y., THURSDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 20, 1963 iets Insu Price Eight COznts . Lodge Dut RX 2-3131 t U.S Seek Ways to iNoies Remarks Made About Royall, Blaik Open Talks in Brewery Damaged By Fire Stenge! To C over Ser Haiti ~ p men 1 Bosch, 54-year-old Eberal in[ 490, Of Rafael Trujilfo, Daw. x | x ® a tellectual, was expected to be' The military leaders, headed , e '. e sent mm, exile in Puerto Rico by Armed Forces Minister Elby & © TROY, Sept, 26 P- Fire | . You've a rare treat in store for y , leafs ''Vinas Roman, sid they ousted | raced through an abandoned you, baseball fans. But he apparently still was a prisoner, Puerto Rican Gov. Luis Munoz Marin, & close friend, had expect-. ed Bosch in San Juan last night. An aide to the governor said he had learned Bosch has been taken to the San Ysidro air base: 9 miles from Sante Domingo. Bosch's wife, and young son and daughter already were in San Juan. visiting Munoz family. The Dominican milifary com- ° mand said Bosch was \sur- rounded by all kinds of guar- antees and considerations.\ 'The United States suspended\ diplomatic relations with Santo Domingo and a $50-million aid program. The State Department said \any overthrow of a demo-. cratically elected government is: & loss to the policies of the, countries of this hemisphere, in- cluding our own.\ 1 Ambassador Resigns ; The Domimcan ambassador toi Washington, Enriquillo Del Ros-} |. ario, cabled the junta: \I will not: serve an illegal, unconstitutional. government.\ He told a news: conference: | \Some of the newly rich busi-. nessmen, who were happy at; making a profit under (the Tru-| jmilo) dictatorship, have been! fighting the democratic govern-; ment from the start.\ | The leaders of the bloodless coup summoned Bosch's political opponents to pick a \respectable man\ to lead the nation of 3 million out of what they said was a chaotic state \brought about by administrative indecision.\ | The silver-haired president was: selzed in his palace before dawnl yesterday. 'The bloodless coup! ended his seven-month rule as! the Dominican Republic's first Marin's' additional Bosch primarily because he cod- 7 dled Communists, He had reject- ed a military «demand in July that he crack down on leftists, . 'There also was widespread dis- satisfaction with a recent law confiscating properties of all Do- minicans who prospered under the 31-year Trujillo dictatorship The law affected every Dominican who had money in a bank. American interests, with a $100 million investment in the country already, were reluctant to invest capital in the at- mosphere of uncertainty, Proposal for NATO A-Fleet Also on Agenda ibrewery last night, wrecking the] top two floors of the seven-story. building. i The cause of the fire at the: former Slanton Brewery was not. determined. Unofficial estimates Casey Stengel, dean of major league baseball managers, and Two Are Making Effort to Ease 'Mets, will be covering the World Series for THe Grens Falis 'currently pilot of the New York' practically % I placed damage in the tens of | UNITED NATIONS, Sept. 26 (P) of dollars. '-Ways of extending the East- Earlier, an explosion and fire 'West thaw and the U.S. plan for tore through a three-family a- a NATO nuclear surface fleet'partment house in the city's h were major items discussed'downtown, injuring nine persons, PRESIDENT JUAN p, today by Secretary of State'two of them seriously. BOSCH was deposed by the [Dean Rusk and British Foreign The fire at the brewery, aban- Dominican Republic's armed [Secretary Lord Home,. doned in 1946 when the company forces and police who procaim- ' Rusk and Home met pre- Went out of business, pushed ed they were tuming the coun- paratory to launching taiks Duge clouds of smoke skyward try into & \rightist state.\ .with Soviet Foreign Minister An- 'and tossed sparks over the down- drei A. Gromyko Saturday on OWD section. DOMINIC AN REPUBLIC 'what further agreements are pos_' Police said spectators report- l's _ ed seeing two youths running 53215. ttoesfbo 1113333 $11,383? limited nu | from the vicinity of the build- SAN JUAN ram | PUERTO PLATA l 1 Pam @ BLANCO Informants said both West- . ing shortly before the fire was ' ern leaders believe the most WUSCOYered. wer promising course lies in small ONe fireman was treated for a tension - easing steps which deg injury. might pave the way for broad- ° agreement are to be discussed wo,, ms‘tfifigg zmgkazgelrixneoucside 'with Gromyko. The West also is -- --- - Cen reran S __ considering a wide range of sug- gestions for widening East-West N \Hane Hurricane Home arrived in New York © a $ Co { or “+ f 'yesterday. Last night he and' CARIBBEAN Rusk saw Gromyko for the first I l f SEA time since the test ban signing! a es wai ai & l in Moscow Aug. 5. The occasion! l was a cocktail party Rusk gave! This map shows principal cities of the Domunican Republic, where the armed forces have nullified the constitution, dissolv- ed parliament and set up a provisional government. President | Juan Bosch was arrested at the Presidential Palace in Santo | Domingo, A manifesto, signed by 27 leaders of the Army, Navy and Air Force, declared the new national commitments, especially those against communism. for 27 foreign leaders attending ® the UN. General Assembly ses-: sion. l | Gromyko Cordial Informants said Gromyke was; MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 26 gD cordial and stayed for an hour Huiticane Edith, a dangerous 'and a half but they doubted theland well organized storm with visit was much more than social. top winds of 100 miles an hour. government would honor inler- Record Tax Reduction Is Approved by House _ . . | ay s te + Lf rie Teh w r administration requested. Tt($100,000 pri his head. , IWASHINGTQN, Sept. 26 (AP) -The 301153. passed PreSldeQfi Kennedy’s $nim£an $o e cnn Leno dlie was canimnted to be beea‘x‘je'cxm‘ld result in a major census-Es Police lgefiivznanl; niggber of billion tax cut bill by a 271-155 vote, handing him one of the biggest legislative preg victories of his administration, Macmillan Faces Battle | Over Report | imost taxpaying families - more opposes any tax cut without Off- natives can be discussed LONDON, Sept. 26 P -- Prime: Minister Macmillan dug in today} Labor Party opposition and critics; within his own Conservative Par-: ty over Lord Denning's report on' the Profumo scandal. f In his 55.000-word document,! Denning. Britain's second highest! jugist, held that Macmillan and; {Opposing p publicans and: rabs. . Just before passage, the his ministers failed in their re-! sponsibility by not discovering: and dealing with the romance be- | tween former War Minister John: Profumo and prostitute Christine, Keeler. The Evening News, which supports the Conservative government, said Denning's finding is sure to bring on an- other party crisis over whether Macmillan should continue as K leader. The prime minister plainly in- tended to fight back. He sched- uléd a radio address to the na- tion tonight, Harold Wilson, the Labor Partyi I renew his leader, was expected to ron program. He has made it clear; ithe administration bas placed: demand for a special session of Parliament -now in recess - to discuss the report, Macmillan has turned this request down once. | 'The Evening Standard said the Denning report has turned the polifical maneuvering into a bit- ter battle. \The n atmosphere,\ the Standard said, \could persist into the general election campaign.; which experienced observers now expect to be turbulent and dirty.\ The opposition Labor press de- nounced Macmillan as incompe-|\ tent, Even some normally Con- servative papers said the prime minister must shoulder the blame for the scandal that erupted into the headlines three months ago. \Premier 'Failed in Profumo Affair,\ the Conservative Daily Telegraph said. The - pro-government said that since Macmillan's aides were misled by Profumo's initial denials of an affair with the red- Haired call girl \They must ex- pect to be judged at fault.\ \Nor is it clear,\ the Times added, \that the prime minister's whole reason for leaving the ~© 'The batfleground immediatelyring hard for 1963 passage so thatillictance since. Washington has NO {shifts to the Senate, where ad-!the new reduced withholding can|EP US ahead with talks with other iministration forces already have.take effect Jan. 1. As the House 7. launched an all-out drive for pasage this year, The prospects of the benefits for are highly dubious, would be effective at that time. If the Senate should approve; ; the bill in its present form, ulti- action puts the spotlight s§UZYEY ington next month provided this Putation when sh mate reductions would range be-:on Sen. Harry F. Byrd. D- V2. goes not commit Britain to join- The said Rusk spent about five lashed the southern tip of Puerto minutes alone with the Russian. Rico with gales today, giving What line Home would take Other Caribbean islands a taste lon the U.S. proposal for a NATO of what is to come. multinational force - a fleet of! She took aim at the island of '25 surface ships to be armed with Hispaniola and whole gale warn- Polans nuclear mussiles and op- IDEs were hoisted along the erated by interested NATO na-|Southern coast of the neighbor est to Rusk and his aides.. ___ {Jan Republic. Although Prime Minister Mac- (ber, the British have shown re- \Somebody is in trouble,\ said forecaster Ammold Sugg. \It is not going to dissipate and it cannot get out of the Carib- bean without hitting some- thing.\ Edith, who earned a bad re- allies, mainly West Germany and: two-Lhirds'na‘ly' > indinduals Home was reported empowered to tell Rusk now that Britain will join in the next round of talks on:; for fast Sen the proposal in Paris and Wash-) passed the measure, The dnve tween $100 and $200 a year forifinance committee chairman. Who img the fleet and that alter-;D°rty On the French Island of in the upper brackets. The bill won the votes of 223° for an all-out battle with tD€/penpcrats and 48 Republicans in mittee would begin closed-door the House roll call late yesterday} which capped two days of debate.!gressional staff experts a week ti Democrats turned back, 226- 199, a Reputblican-backel move to cancel the lax eut unless the President cut back spend- ing below the present rate. The outcome was q special triumph for Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., chairman of the [ways and means committee, who led the fight to prevent defec- itions by southern Democrats on- {the showdown votes. * The $11 billion reduction, larg- lest in history, would be shared: by practically all U.S. taxpayers. Both individuals and corpora- ; tions I would benefit. 1 C m Rats ian investement credit provision, Termed Vital Measure Kennedy has called the meas-. ure the keystone of bis economic. | ;its hopes on solving the gnawing 3 the tax cut. | Senate Democratic voiced strong ge were 126 Re-'from today and that they will ( . icontinue at least a week. ._ This probably means that Set- Spain were expected to announce should be ready for quick action,\ , Martinique. has maintained an almost straight course since she was born in the tropical Atlantic setting spending reductions. No Alternatives Ryrd announced that his com- said they knew of no alternatives ward and Leeward Islands. being proposed by London at this, \Hurricane Edith is a definite - 'threat to the southern portion ,_ In another area of Western of Hispaniola and people in the defense, the United States and Dominican Republic and Haiti briefings on the bill with con- retary of the Treasury Dougl@&® ;oday continuation of the Dillon will not get a chance t0 year-old agreement for U.S. bases will begin increasing over south- lead the public hearings untilin Spain. The pact expire At w ing > Oct. 14 or 15. ‘midngght, p P 4 western Dominican Republic and Meanwhile, officials blamed a' natural gas explosion for the fire. . er setilements. , SANTIAGO \ Buch disarmament proposals as 24 the apartment house. , las - whl a Police said the explosion o¢- exchanging observers to guard h . op N curred at the home of Mr. and against surprise attack and aVLrs Robert West at 56 Ninth * EL MACAG| NATO-Communist nonaggression Sira; © ® \ ‘YAMASA If, Street, 5a Adb iglw‘b»; ANTO DOMIKGO ; killed in a church. tions - was of particular inter- nations of Haiti and the Domin-, in his Nassau meeting with She was estimated to be 190 miles * dent Kennedy last Decem- South of San Juan, on the north.sional fight. ‘ ern coast, and heading west- o & m hwest at 15 miles an hour. .SWeeping ban on racial discrim- convicted dope peddler and mur-] Racial Tensions Timks by way of a special As- ( sociated Press series, beginning Lomorrow. In hus own particular style iand what a style» Casey's cov- erage will include an advance look at the two World Series clubs, with the first of his \in- side\ peeks beginning in Friday's edition, on the sports pages. Youll read and hear many words before. during and after the World Series by experts and non-experts, but you'll never read anything to march Casey Stengel in his own \Stengelese.\ Besides the advance looks at the World Series and the two «contenders, Casey will give his version of things following.each World Series game. It's some- ithing you can't afford By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two presidential representa- tives have held exploratory dis- cussions with community leaders at Birmingham., Ala., in an effort to ease tensions in the racially disturbed industrial city. Former Army Secretary Ken- neth Royall and onetime Army football coach Earl Blaik con- ferred with white business leaders 'and Negro groups Wednesday. Arthur D. Shores, a Negro attorney whose home has been bombed twice, said he felt that \out of these discussions some solution to our common prob- lems can be found.\ The meetings came only hours after two explosions damaged eight homes and two cars in South Birmingham. No Lj injuries were reported, L l Police detective Maurice House® & 'described the blasts as an ap-: _. parent attempt to kill or injure y £4 Li x as many Negroes as possible. T He said a small dynamite blast] Inglng ln 'was set off first in an attempt to, attract Negroes out of their' x wa homes where they could be, 'struck by a homemade shrapnel} rime ro e bomb. But the second bomb ex-, 'ploded before anyone arrived. i ! In Washington, Director J. Ed-! wASHINGTON, Sept. 26 M - gar Hoover said the FBI already Joseph Valachi, the talking mob- has been asked to investigatejster, came out of hiding today five bombing cases in AlabaM& and traveled to Capitol Hill for a Including the one on Sept. 15 in private talk with senators inves- 'which four Negro children were tigsting the black hand of the Promises Investigation The star witness's appearance The FBI will conduct \& at this morning's closed session promp', thorough and objective was billed as & rehearsal for his Investigation\ of any law viola- testimony tomorrow when he gets tions in the civil rights field that -his chance publicly to put the come - within | its | jurisdiction, finger on his former bosses in the Hoover said in a letter placed in crime syndicate. the Congressional Record by Sen. And a strong police escort A. Willis Robertson, D-Va. ; was on hand to make certain Elsewhere in Washington. a his debut on Capitol Hill wasn't House Judiciary Subcommittee‘ his swansong. {approved tentatively a civil rights} the syndicate could collect th 'ination in places of public ac-!derer. commodation, creation of a fair; employment practices sion, and additional powers for!speeding sedans, rights field. Meanwhile, seven damaged 90 per cent of the pro- from rocks and bottles thrown abidamage may do to its 11 patrol cars sent to quell a dis-:public image. turbance near Miller Junior High} 'The Senate investigations sub- School on the city's East side. committee arranged today's ses- Investigators said about 300 sion to give its members a chance 53m? a fight broke out between expected to tell of brutal murder, twod Negro girls anéi & YFuth crime for profit and terrorism. tried to prevent officers from} taking them to a patrol car. : _ Has Heard Story \ Aft Selma, Ala., John Lewis, Chairman John L. McClellan. national chairman of the Stu-: D-Ark.. already has heard the Committee was among 35 per- 4C. | sons taken into custody dunng:_ McCléllan said he saw Valachi to miss, . Mafic. iD Reputedly the ruling commis-, . \ - . , as Puerto doco apparently that included: far-more thamisio® of Coss Nésza has put o.\ 'and Cen Among the extras were a more bou L _ litical situation. Lodge p S & i ounty by Iilling the 60-year °Id!ably brought up Mrs.bNhu‘s blast a fa But since the Capone era of commis-; Tommy guns spouting fire from the mobsters «Mrs. Nhu Describes Them as Little -~ Soldiers of Fortune SAIGON, Sept 26 P - US. Ambassador Henry Cabot Loage charged today that Mry Ngo Dinh Nhu's descr.ption of jumor U.S. Army officers here as soldiers of fortune was crucl and insulting. Mrs, Nhu, South Viet Nam's powerful first lady and sister-ins law of bachelor President Ngo Dinh Diem, also accused the of- ficers of \engaging in irrespor- sible behavior.\ She issued the blast last week in Rome during her world tour to explain her ruling family's positon in its feud with Buddhists. 0 \Tt is incomprebensible to me : how anyone can speak «o cruelly,\ Lodge said in his first , public political statement since i his arrival Aug. 22. \It is a shocking statement. These junior officers are risking their lives every day, Some of them have been killed side by side with their Vietnamese com- rades. These men should be thanked and not insulted.\ i Lodge's statement was expect- lsd to have the effect of a diple- {matic bombshell on the strained 'relations between the Kennedy administration | and - President Diem's | authoritarian - govern- ment. A barrage of direct and indirect anti-American comments from Mrs. Nhu and other members of the regime was launched after President Kennedy described iem's crackdown on Buddhist and student opposition as \re- pressive.\ f Making Tour i_ Lodge spoke out after Secretary .of Defense Robert McNamara 'and his aides left Saigon for the 'first of four days of battle area checks on the progress of the U.S.-supported Vietnamese war Communist Viet against, the € 'at the American officers. | Gen. Paul D. Harkins, 'men in South Viet Nam, looked slightly flushed as he emerged 'from the briefing session at the Both U.S. and British soirces.and crashed through the, Wind- Negro youths grinered appraise the story Valachi is NCRGGvarters of the US. military assistance command. > A military aide said the con- isensus among US. military per- 'somnel was that \things are mov- ing our way.\ He said there were \no major 10- the Weather Bureau said. \Winds dent Non-Violent Coordinating: SOY in two interviews with Val- differences between civilian and military agencies of the evalua- tion that things are getting bet- D. Taylor, chairman of the smug; Chiefs of Staff, were briefed yes- terday on the military and po- resum~ McNamara's and Taylor's itin- 'erary was not disclosed for sec- lurity reasons. But it was expected 'the attorney general in the civil have learned a little finesse. their tour would include the |New York police official reports, , Detrol t the gang was thinking of employ- q A e reportedly policemen received cuts or bruises: ing public relations to repair Ip, bed up their offensive. southern Mekong Delta, where Communist guerrillas have step- com- of the 14,000 U.S. service- Express Disappointment Senate Democratic leaders did Rusk and Spanish Foreign Minister Fernando Maria Cas- not at once take issue with Byrd tella discussed the matter yes- unemployment problem through' Hincreased spending resulting from, confidence they up the committee's publicly but privately expressed $1215! nfgr the seggngo time this deep disappointment at this de-, Week and were sai ave re-/ed by shortwave radio to Pan 3 in fr pigeon. P }SOI¥ed, virtually all difficulties American World Airways, There 4 demonstrators in front of the,. PE The Spanish have been seeking was no word on deaths or in- 5 the affai j d m e Tres ; _ c : affairs of a nationwide crime. (' greater political recognition for juries. refusing to move on, creating a The cision. 'They pointed out that last vear. in handling the bis tax re- vision bill, Byrd began public, hearings four days after the House vote, 'That bill chiefly benefited corporations through the leaders emphasized. This time Dillon told Byrd he would be prepared to testify to- day on the tax reduction bill, but the offer was' mot accepted. Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field of Montana told a reporter| he would talk with the Virginian, leadergin an effort to get him to speed work. But thave the votes to pass the bill Mansfield conceded Byrd had ad-| leventually. It will remain him it might well take the, 'this year, But the administration is push- [in 1964 if it fails to get througthinance Committee two months! ° ifo complete its action on the, i measure. LAKE PLACID Sept. 26 UP) -- 'The state's highest-ranking judge says the use of juries in non- criminal cases \leaves much to mond of the State Court of Ap- matte® to his colleagues were |Peal$ told an audience here last good and sufficignt.“k Chuckle Corner NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. yesterday sawing through a stee wall in city jail But when civil cases causes court congestion and délay, results in énormous expense and too often léads to compromises instead of sound decisions. He called for \an objective, non-emotional stiidy\ of the pos- sibility of eliminating juries in gg civil cases. |'favorable reaction from lawyers hole they made was big enough Cireuit Judicial Conference, to peek through, they Straight into the face of jailer stared. Cloyd Laporte of New York,. former president.of the State Bar Buford Hill. He had heard their Association, said: 1 a saving. cam uke aman oh t \Deciding controversies of a op Judge in State Questions - Jse of Juries in Civil Cases be desired,\ and proposes a study| to determine whether the ci¥illjudge of the US. Circuit Courl jury system should be sbolished. lof Appeals, 'Second 'Circult, and Chief Judge Charles S. D°S-|s former dean of the Yale Law inight that the use of juries in' purely civil nature between individuals can be done by a judge without any interférerict with liberties.\ Judge Charles E. Clark, Senior School, said that he was a meme jber of a comfiittee that pro- 'posed a similar plan in 1930; \It's still good stuff,\ he told & reporter, . David Peck of New York City, former presiding judge of the Ap fpellate Division, Staté Supreme (Court, First Department, sal Desmond \couldn't be adore, wight.\ However, four whole principle of law.\ i_ Desmond speafied that he was Inot proposing any coi sideration 'of changes in the traditional George Sullivan, a} -- Two pH rs w hard His proposal drew a generally Syracuse attorney, said he m Two prisoners worked x thought \the idea of doing awiy, the'and jurists at the annual Second with trials is a real invasion on their role in western défense Briefly T a1J 1 GiG LONDON, Sept. 26 (P - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York called on British Chan- celior of the Exchequer Reg- inald Maudiing today and told newsmen he had \an entirely personal discussion in which we reviewed matters of mutual in- terest.\ 'GREAT FALLS, Mont., Sept. 26 (M - President Kennedy, fighting hard for voter en- thusiasm in the Rocky Moun- tain region, argued today his administration has gone all-out for water resource projects NEW YORK, Sept. 26 (P-An arbitrator has ordered the liner America's unlicensed crewmen to Europe on Oct. 6. But the company canceled the sailing, saying the disputé over charges of racial discrimination still has i106 been settled. ALBANY, Sept. 26 {P-This week's untimely killing frost damaged S York State, and farm special- ists made rough estimates to- day of a total loss ranging up to $7 million, PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 26 (M -Construction of a second Delaware Memorial Bridge . linking the New Jersey Turn- piké with Wilmington suburbs his been approved by the Delaware River Basin Commis- ston. ATHENS, Greec¢, Sept. 26 P -King Paul dissolved Parlia- ment today and called for (trial by jury in criminal Cases d general elections Nov. 3. to sail on the ship's next voyage | crops across New | southern Haiti early tonight and continuing demonstrations in the, TUesday and that he appeared to ter.\ reach whole gale force in the central Alabama city. The new be in good spirtis and eager to Lower ranking officers, who re- 'early moming hours Friday\ (protests followed the arrest of testify as a means of revenge a- portedly differ in their evaluation :gainst syndicate leaders for hav- of the war with generally apti= damage at Martinique was relay~ Police at New Orleans arrested ordered him slain as a stool mistic reports by Harkins and his {staff. did not hestiate to speak The subcommittee is exploring out, the aide said. younger officers gave forward - opinions.\ he The report of heavy property jsp persons Tuesday. City Hall and charged them with. mes. . scene and resisting arrest. One Syndicate known to its members.strong, If Edith were to maintaiD BCT pandeuffed himself to a lamp.as La Cosa Nostra, and to others:added. present course, the southern tip post. Negroes in New Orleans as the Mafia or Blank Hand. Re-| The of the Dominican Republic would pave been protesting what they putedly, a paper is burned in the which bé struck by the hurricane force pa; yoter discrimination prac-. hand of a new recruit to the: views R winds whirling 60 miles Out £70M {igeg 'secret criminal society. noted reports of conflicl be- «the center. However, the blow - 200 - nes ne C- ~ tween field officers and Hark- Times of Viet Nam, generally reflects the of the ruling family, 'probably would not completely: soz ~ sx & = a - ins' headquarters staff 23nd disorganize Edith and she might, A d D b ¥ M N j . wondered editorially whether gather her skirts for Cuba ac-, l e 1 escr l es C amar a ' President Kennedy had dis- cording to the Weather Bureau. R R R A a patched McNamara to Saigon no n s © A S t f ' d th F d for a \house-cleaning.\ S a ’ S I e W, I n I n gs 'The newspaper said McNamara ! lII © g * arrived \amidst a smouldering | O » T f V t N F turmoil between pro-coup and R n our 0 le am ron no-=coup elements within the i ° al o American | military aid | civilian | ' TAM KY. Viet Nam. Sept. 26 uP oner. He had been captured after agencies in Saigon *. lg fcouple ROSIer i- Secretary of Defense Robert S.;Marine helicopters lifted 500 in-; It Said one. line of dlieasgéfiég (If) McNamara visited this Commun- fantrymen and Rangers intogfihat Mgmxtimara Wzsd $3313: 211 the DES MOINES, Iowa, Sept. 26 Litfiéf‘riitfini‘é‘gfi‘fimifioi’éd Stféggznearby foothills early Wednes-gogzgggznzce grim by Paul D. iM - Life looked rosier today for A Ons : day morning. Harki y ne ements ithe two young lovers from Piila- Vxefg Nam tom ”fey? coalsit todgyg \Why did you join the 001114525? 32}, gohciiellolff’fifflfimoup {delphia,\ Mary Lee Davis, 15. (0 (M4 OUt 10% EQNRECY munists?\ McNamara asked BM jing\ against the Diem TeZime. year-old niete of Princess Grace HOW the war is going. 'through a Vietnamese Military the Communist 'of Monaco, and John Paul Jones Aides said MCNamar® WaS interpreter. North Vietnamese offical news- iJr., 19, son of an architect. They pleased with what he saw and, \t had no choice.\ PrISOME! paper Nhandan said McNamara® had court permission to marry heard. said, pushing back his conic@l mission is to \intensify and ex- under Towa law. a. i In a 1.000-mile swing on U.S.istraw hat for a closer look At pand the U.S. aggressive war' in i 'Three weeks of living here Air Force transport planes and the defense secretary. 'South Viet Nam. secretly, 1,100 miles away from Army and Marine helicopters.; yoNamara also talked with The Times of Viet Nam also their fashionable homes in the McNamara and Gen. Maxwell_D.§5eVel.a1 Communist deserters who charged that the U.S. Central East while police were looking Taylor talked to American offi-jeft the mountains a few months Intelligence Agency is continuing for them, was past history for the cers, Vietnamese military to join government forces. to plot against the Diem regime. lyoung élopers, who come from'tains and even a Communist Viet! A croup of 100 of them clapped \ ne nen ee wealthy families. |Cong prisoner. group - T . They talked about starting ai ' Hlanét ._ L 6 i 'The trip, which began at dawn ment camp. ane un Ilegl‘f’fie czlzfpfimilfiglf figwgfiétgapd ended after dusk, was the! McNamara asked one of them, hurdle toward becoming man of several McNamiara has who had turned in 11 of hl§ @w || | (w @ 'wife late yesterday when they Stheduled in his announced in-'fellow, guerrillas after hé ol OF - y } as“??? a £00k190kv, linger \even !joined government forces: $1513 C - 1 trict Judge Tom Murrow with CUSD and rock in Wiest Nam.\ _ iqid you leave the Commun * ' 'the Jonesgboy's father, ' ppm}; dazetf'etfilfifiih fx‘gatg’afihfifl The former Communist kWhO: e R fary Lee' she SDec retch F e \said he had lHeutenant's rank re-! & . wo Because of Mary Lee's age she 5 x forced to attack The Coast Guard says debris loudly when McNamara and hlsPI | new life - for the present at| Day-Long Trip party appeared at fheir resettle» walked into the chambets of Di . 'could not marry in Towa without|FADE base of U.S. special f(\fies-aflied': \I was T a a _ says the court's permission, which was 200 miles north of Saigon, to th€ilmy people in strategid hamlets. Sighted in the North Atlantic granted. ' ''' ancient capital of Hue, 400 fulles pup; is why I surrendered.\ __ \ Was hob from the Air Force C133 i \The children have their par. {0 the north, | M {cargo plane that vanished Sun- in | , ! He also looked in on a big; 'ents' ; led.\ t . ; 'day with 10 men aboard. {l f‘rlxgsgec‘zrggeafiga he married, me‘fitask force operation that got un- - ORDER OBTAINED | A sen and air search for the - ° der why in the foothills of Tam| ALBANY, Sept. 25 UA - The plane continued today. C_ Pieces of brown and blue metal OPEN TALKS Ky, 250 miles north of Saigon, state attorney general announc» MOSCOW, Sept. 26 P -- Theland visited a Vietnamese \openled today that his office has Ob- were sighted by planes yesterday United States and the Sovietlarms® camp for Communist tained a court order barting the about 440 miles east of Cape May, Union opened nefotiations today|deserters in Quang Ngai Province,! Bausch & Lomb Co. of Rochester |N.J, . lon proposals to enlarge each na- south of here - fixing prices at which its‘ 'The cargo plane ctxsappeared tion's consular activities on the' McNamara showed special in- dealers must sell microscopes té shortly after it left Dover gm jother's territory. (terest in the Communist pris- public agencies, _ Forte Base, Dol., for the Azores iI . }