{ title: 'Press-Republican. (Plattsburgh, N.Y.) 1966-current, November 22, 1966, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-22/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-22/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-22/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-22/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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t*> rtfc! &&:* J- ••• t^mmm:*m[t- : •..•••*« -y,, ••: .y;.: ^IrTwP^t !C* «i' V i ^ # I* £fe\ tr>i*V <^&*^?*v U a .% if-- * s i C0CNC3L PRESIDENT - U A Anbaacadar AHtar CWdberg, right, ahawa all U> MW aflver gavel to U.N. Seerataiy Geo- aral U Tkaat Maaday. UaJted Nation* Security CtoacB pre*. Heat tor tkia mostk, GaHberf was gtvea the gave! by etats ban hU law firm. A few minotes earlier, Goldberg toM the Geaeral Assembly the US. wotthl sasaert a proposal for a csmfflfflff 4» ttarly tfcr \twaJObm! .»» Strongman Grunitzky puts down Togo coup tat itagM and Cbf pajjtical ; ^ \% y r* % • ;-:, * hoptfwr, Goldberg said tte Usttitf Statts qppofffs and VBBW M lttair ilaWiffiniii tn uynnm I mmm ft* would seat *^ tiftg in tte United Nations and expel tte Chtoeae NattooaUMs. While not aattdprtng the i» raits of tte tfndy, GoUberg said, tte United States will \r* fuse to countenance any sotatfcm to tte problem of Cttoaee repre- sentation which involves tte expulsion of tte Republic of CW- na on Taiwan from tte United Nations.\ But Hafim Bodo of Albania, Red China's mouthpiece in tte United Nations, flatly rejected any two-Chinas solution. • • • 't>B our planet, there Is oaly one China, one and indivisible,\ he told the assembly. \The only government of China is the Peo- ples Republic of China.\ Rudo charged that -the plot of two Chinas\ was aimed at tte perpetuation of tte U.S. 4i occu- pation\ of Formosa, and be added that tte government of Chiang Kai-shek \represents no one and nothing/' Goldberg said tte annual Chi* na debate had \always foun- dered on one rock.\ This, he said, was \Peking's insistence that we repudiate our solemn trraty commitments toi & LOME, Togo (AP) - Backed tiy the army,President Nicolas Grunitzky quickly squelched an uprising Monday after a small band of insurgents seized Lome's radio and proclaimed a revolution in Togo. Elements of Togo's 1,500-man army drove the rebels from tte ratfio station after they had broadcast an announcement saying: \The Togolese revolution has just started. Tte Togolese peo- ple want their rights. The peo- ple want tte imme<fiate dissolu- tion of the unpopular Grunitzky government and of Parlia- ment\ By sundown, a curfew was in force, political demonstrators had been dispersed, and Lome was cairn. Government sources said two opposition fradprs JiadJgCT ag rested. They identified tte lead- er of the uprising as Noe Ku- tucklui, 42, a leader of the op- position. Political unrest began Satur- day with tte resignation of two ministers, Benoit Malou, nation- al education; and Piefre Ados* sama, tabor. Both were repent- ed to be in police custody, but it was not clear whether they were arrested or ted given themselves up. On Sunday, Grunitzky dis- solved the Cabinet, blaming ri- valries among members. He said however, he hoped the min- isters would stay on until be could form a new government. tte Republic of China, and leave Peking afree hand to take over tte people and territory of Tat wan,' • • f Republicans zeroing-in on Presideait's program WASHINGTON (AP) - Re- publican leaders in Congress counted their reinforced troops aad began picking specific tar- gets, aatigrrtng buBseyes to some aspects of President John- •oo's financing, poverty fighting and orbaa renewal plans. \l*dt Mlmally trader Per* aid R Ford of Michigan de- luded repeal of a IMS law, fartfy wed as yet, by which the ailmhilipliataii planned to raise 111 Mffiott outside the regular by aeffiqg ftr- Jig*tsfe reeled, centralized program or by grants-in-aid to tte states.\ Most Republicans, he said, favor giving more responsibility to tte states. He said many of bis colleagues think the idea of demonstration cities is a mis- take. This is Johnson Y proposal to give to a limited number of communities special help for massive attacks on physical and social alum coodittoos. Re said he hoped tte proposed study would provide answers to questions that could only be an- swered by the Chinese Commu- nis - <l 5rilL they nrfraiJL from putting forward clearly unac- ceptable demands, and specifi- cally tte unacceptable demand that the Republic of China be expelled from this organiza- tion?\ But Budo cold-shouldered tte study proposal and asserted that Peking was \not obliged to reply in any manner*' to ques- tions the study might raise. Allied with Italy in calling for the study are Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile and Trinidad and Tobago. Canada had considered cosponsoring the resolution, but a spokesman said Monday that it \doesn't go far enough in the direction in which we would like to see the United Nations move at this stage.\ It was understood that Cana- da was continuing to press for a formula for a study that would stress more specifically the seating of both Chinese govern- ments and give Nationalist Chi- na's Security Council seat to Peking. Tte Italian resolution is not scheduled to come to a vote un- til after tte assembly has voted on tte resolution, sponsored by Albania, Cambodia and nine other Communist and non- aligned countries, to seat Red China and expel tte National- ists. That resolution is similar to one defeated by a 47-47 vote a year ago and is expected to be defeated by a wider margin this year. Date Division gets ient for free texts AfjUNY NY (AP) - Tbeitbe state education commission w& $$*\**^ OTFI Twawpfcf) MOB STYLE — After Tfcefr wedding ia Mod the bride, former Randy-Rossi, l»r wore a Style at Detrdt, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Norris white minigown, eight-inches ova* her knees, descend tte stage at tte Michigan State Fair- and thigh-high white boots. The groom wore a grands Coliseum with tte figures from the gray checked suit, black boots and a green top of their wedding cake. For the wedding, flowered tie. • • • • . . . . i, Highest court dockets Georgia case WASHINGTOirTSPT^- The Within S5 minutes of his ftfnrgi lower court at this stage Supreme Court set a hearing Monday for Dec. 5 on the dead- locked Georgia governor's elec- tion and at the same time moved to head off new legal complications until the tribunal has made a decision. The court agreed to consider afi issues. With its quick action on a state appeal, the high court opened the possibility of an ear- ly December ruling that might the motion, the nation's highest tribunal issued its stay order and set the hearing date. Bolton, who is defending the legislative election method, was pleased with the rare speed of the Supreme Court in the unusu- al tangle. \We are also happy they have acted to prevent any other ac- tion on the election until our appeal has been heard and a resolve the no-majority contest; final judgment entered,\ Bolton The order issued Monday fixed the hearing date of Dec. 5, a setback for the bipartisan vot- er group which won the lower court ruling and had objected to a stay. Attorney Emmet Bondurant, representing the voter group, said an election held after the general assembly convenes Jan. 9 in Atlanta would leave the state with M a holdover governor — a situation which everyone realizes is not desirable/' Gov. Carl E Sanders, who normally would leave office Jan. 10. has said he will retain office until his successor is sworn, as required by state law. The high court win consider t£e Nov. 8 general election be-; day order granted a 10-day stay j not only the limited ruling of the cause of write-ins for former! on its own motion. j lower bench on legislative dec- Gov. Ellis G. Arnall. j The lower court had set a ; tion but also the questions of Atty. Gen. Arthur K. Bolton of I Nov. 25 hearing date to consider | whether the governorship must Georgia requested the suspen- j how the problem of the dead- be decided by a runoff or a spe- sion of the lower court ruling j locked election should be solved, i c*al election, and whether write- unH final Judgment has been j But the Supreme Court stayjin votes will be allowed in a made by the Supreme Court, precludes further action by the i runoff. asked Monday to declare con- ititutional tte state's new law wiring school boards to buy textbooks and tew mm to p* : A tower tribunal, tte Sta^a Supreme Owirt* *** *cta^ &* tte It* statute violates constitutional bans on use off publk money to aid itHgtea* tastttutiowL Tte state argued Monday that tte five judges of the Supreme Court's Appellate Division, Third Department, reverse the decision handed down by Jus- tice T. Paul Kane on Aug. 19. The Appellate Division re- served decision. Tte Board of Education of the Town of East Greenbusb and tte American Civil Liberties Union pressed for an affirma- tive decision. \The language could not be clearer,\ said Mar- vin E. Pollack, Civil Liberties Union attorney, in reference to tte State Constitution's ban on aid to sectarian institutions. Mrs. Jean Coon, an assistant attorney general, arguing for the state, renewed her conten- tions that: —The East Greenbush school board lacks the legal standing and capacity to sue the state. —The textbook-loan law bene- fits pupils of parochial schools —not the institutions. Under the law passed in 1965 and amended this year, school boards are required to buy text- books and loan them to public and private school pupils in grades 7 through 12. The state 1s to provide financial aid oLnpj to $15 a pupil. The law also places a ceiling of $15 a pupil on the amount a school board can be required to pay for books to be loaned. Kane held that tte school board has the power to contest a state law. In Monday's arguments, Pol- lack asserted that the state edu- cation law ,v makes a school board a body corporate.\ As such, he said* it has the power to bring suit against the state. He added that he had found no legal basis for the claim that Discuaring tte pupil-benefit argument advanced by the state, Pottack asked whether it was possible to distinguish be- tween textbooks and teachers or fotfjiflrnj* as elements of eduea Son. * °Jf we don*t draw the line juare/' be asked, \where do *e drawitr joining with the state in de tense of tte law was an attorney tor tte Romio Catholic parem of six East Greenbush children White the law is under court challenge-probably all the wa> up to the U.S. Supreme Court school boards have been aa vised by Gov. Rockefeller ic proceed with purchases of tex books to comply with th. statute. Meanwhile, the Lewistonpn: er school board, in western N agara County, has asked Ec cation Commissioner Jame> \ Allen Jr. to abide by Kane's c: cision. Delayed payment WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - Afv.- an illness confined Lucille Y\\ of Wichita to a hospital >he v- ceived a hospital bill far f ••. cents. Health insurance paid the b ance but Mrs. Flynn dela> her payment. \I hate to use a five tv stamp and a check which o> something to pay it.\ she sa. 4 Til drop it off some da; I'm in the neighborhood V* 0WOA0C Ben Hacht declared that \Any views art unim- portant, if they ar9 held about women by a man past forty.\ See Us For Carpet WOOD'S Floor Covering Rt. 22 North — 561-7100 before the year ends. The court suspended a lower court ruling that barred the leg- islature from choosing Geor- gia's next governor. Neither Republican Howard H. Calla- way nor Democrat Lester G. Maddox got a vote majority in said. Suspension of ihe lower court ruling Wocks any further at- tempts to force an election un-' der the decision until the high j tribunal acts. The three-judge i panel in Atlanta anticipated the; state's appeal and in its Thurs- j 3UK&0 *«W.. 55 »*W 6Sv UA$ U{;T>Jk Serf's % 5Ct£*a? X* J:> V Schenley... always in the center of things ,Av * WHATEVER YOU DO... DONT FORGET THANKSGIVING THERE'S NO IF'S, AND'S or BOOTS ABOUT IT... IF ITS BOOTS YOU WANT- BOOTS WE GOT! Golo BOOTS Cowboy BOOTS J>-»\ •ff. *• #:-^ ^*~ *m ^gr~#r?f-~'S 3*m n^i'C - Y-'^f. :*.?\ #* m i3att.fr mir Sandler ..BOOTS Goodrich .....BOOTS Clark's BOOTS Mr. Golo BOOTS Acme BOOTS Penguin BOOTS Chippewa BOOTS Dingo BOOTS JSimw BOOTS Shoe BOOTS Ski BOOTS Desert ..BOOTS Chukka BOOTS Hunting BOOTS Wellington ...BOOTS Dressy BOOTS Casual BOOTS Warm BOOTS Rubber BOOTS Leather BOOTS Children's ....BOOTS Women's BOOTSOOTS „ ~4 *V'$v.'^ r <^m£. After-Ski BOOTS Mm'i We Didn't Get Our Name B for Nuthin', F Know! Tit ordon's BOOT Shop . ^^Jk *y*m 3-1 \ i \'\ x *• \ 1/ i Namrtilyf It beautifully... withaoda, ke; people, ->m^&!-v5r Fhk •C^tei: r, ^5C-^ -^.- ;^ '-.*>•• House By IRENE Members of 1 wives Expect ] voted Monday nj all stores operate Union Co. and Pacific Tea Co. mediately. The executive ask women's gro the area to join and trade with pendent stores o with the Mooer selected a week the best prices a They justify th contentions that [ er in Plattsburgh cities in New \'< stores set the ger level and are rec profits and that in chain stores o crease those pro spent in local ind< helps the local e The women si chain stores are m answering que ^roup and thus Y boycott. Committee me letter from the president of Grai reiterated the coi that its profit m; cessive and that low as possible * staying m busine reasonable wag< ployes. (The leiler alsi could not be n Plattsburgh >tor \'for competi^ve added there are ables in ar.y or enable comparisr individual store as a whole.) (The housewi> were \not impre letter and that it no answers.) To dramatize particularly uhc specials in chain exception to the cott) the women proclaiming the: in HELP. At their weekl; day in the YM wives expresse with results of tl buyLng. They sai produce they t higher quality t able in chain s they saved ?s mi on their weekly They hope tc number of shopp Mooers to a: lea! mas w-;th the a: Tney are also their supplier t :r. Plattsburrh ume mcrease-. Though their against high ; member? are pr< few cents moc items bought i st:-res between s Mrs. Dorothy is a matter of u e w 'And every not putting into t :r ALP goes ic chant and slayj Mrs. Eugene L; Mrs. LirJc alsc one large bu bulk shipments ables and other dropping LI pne tionwide housew started Prices are be in local stores. agreed, but nc. they sh-uld be. is jr,pr'\\ng :r. ^ni-e bu;-jt? consider gerur. the chain stor- w:i] be ^auch-ni cnaDdise. rr.ci.- sadden price m 196 i By MARn The pubiic iss reasons from h N.:<rs wlio ciose Zcrrjrmmxy Ad rector Hmes, k ' I corapietel; tr?err. that ±e ne sa-d Mor-di? A-e're getting h k Se far. as me >r a^y:« : ^ »ha: they x-r-s.^er a pro *^t A^d see a:cec^a-> cosi tfe-:* made as ne irj^:*u2« QBpc^ry ** «F K7-6