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The Ithaca Journal from Ithaca, New York • Page 1

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Phone Your Want Ad to The Ithaca Journal (or quirk service. Dial AR 2-2321 before 4 p.m. and your Want Ad will be In the next day' Journal. Ithaca Journai The Weather Forecast Clearing and becoming fair tonight. 148th YEAR No.

194 Published daily except Sunday by Ithaca Journal-New 123 W. State Ithaca. N.Y., second class postage paid at Ithaca ITHACA, N.Y., TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 20, 19G3 Served by The Associated Press and Gannett News Service PRICE SEVEN CENTS THE wwA Butts Awarded Teller Says is 1 News Views $3,060,000 A-Treaty Suit from around the "world In Libel ATLANTA () A federal Butts a $3,060,000 judgment tep to ar suit against the Saturday Evening Tost. The Post will appeal. The Post had charged he was involved in a football saws? it 'W WASHINGTON I.P1 Dr.

Edward Teller told senators today he believes the limited nuclear test ban treaty is "not a step for peace but rather a step away from safety, possibly a step toward war." The University of California that the last quarter century tremely rapid development, atomic field. game fix. Former State Police Chief Dead at 76 SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) -John A. Warner, former superin tendent of the New York State Po- "At no time have we known what the next step will lice and son-in-law of the latethrough bailiffs and others Gov.

Alfred E. Smith, died of tha 11C1H veirheA Associated Press Wirephoto THE EAR AT RIGHT belongs to Premier Khrushchev of Soviet Russia clutched in the warm embrace of Yugoslavia's President Tito. Tito's wife, Jovanka, watches at left. The hugging took place at Belgrade airport today as Khrushchev arrived for a two-week visit to Yugoslavia. bring," he said.

"What we tially, is to predict the future. Late Sport AKROV flhin IW Arnold Palmer soundly defeated Jacky Cupit and Phil Rodgers today to qualify for the World Series of Golf with a one-under-par 69. Palmer's victory of five strokes over Rodgers and seven over Cupit enables him to join Julius Boros, Jack Nicklaus and Bob Charles for the $75,000 World Series Sept. 7-8. (Earlier Story on Page 10) Troopers Alert For Trouble In Louisiana PLAQUEMINE, La.

(AP) State troopers, armed with tear are jand the the mmmammm Inside The Journal MUSIC BUILDING construe tion begun on Ithaca College campus Page 2. CITY WATER SYSTEM to be taxed to capacity serving present area by 1S80, planner predicts in report to Planning Board on city services Page 3. URBAN RENEWAL plans ordered for West End under Title so as to save time, continuing Project I study of downtown at the same time Page 3. REMOVE DISTRACTIONS during study periods; second in a series, "30 Days to Better Grades" Page 5. LEADERSHIP LACKING In current Congress; little progress made Page 6.

CARDINALS face a showdown with Los Angeles Dodgers Page 9. Ann Landers 12 Sports Comics 8 TV Scout 9,10 Crosswords Editorials Medical Obituaries 8 Want Ads 6 Weather 4 Women's Page 4 Bill ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) It will cost about $800,000 to resume operation of flood-damaged government facilities in Buffalo but much more than that to restore them to their original condition, the State Civil Defense Office says. While no estimate has been made of the total repair bill, a spokesman said Monday, the $800,000 estimate is the key figure for federal aid purposes. Such aid, he said, is designed not to achieve full restoration but to make public facilities usable again after they are damaged by natural disasters.

Home-owners and businessmen already have been declared eligi ble for federal loans to make re pairs to private property dam aged by the Aug. 7 flood. The original estimate of damage in this category was $23 million. There has been no decision, however, on whether Buffalo will qualify for aid in repairing public! mm 7 is cer Monday at Southampton Hospital after a long illness. He was 76.

Warner, the fourth man to join the State Police after the force was established in 1917, was appointed superintendent in 1923 by Smith, a Democrat. He served until 1943 when he resigned to enter the army as a lieutenant colonel. Warner was a public service officer in Europe, and was decorat ed by the Italian Government for assistance to distressed civilians during the eruption of Mt. Vesu- .1 Drill Dims 3 Miners could be as slow as 20 feet an hour. Early this morning, David Felling, 58, of Sheppton, one of the trapped miners, suggested worker drill the large escape hole five feet west of the original But instead, the drilling began eight feet west of the original hole.

Chambury said officials made the decision to drill eight feet we.st ot the original hole aft- er talking to Fellin Engineers explained that if they drilled too close to the original noie it coma diock me smaller er of the mine, and Henr Throne, 9 ui( rH VrrZZA hi I6 and are reported to be in good 1 The twin six-inch hole was be- ofiSUti Monday nignt out shortly De- fore midnieht drilling to Bova was Rescuers As Hope in 1944. He received the Or court jury awarded Wally today in his $10 million libel The jury an- nounced at 10:34 a.m. held in effect that the former University of Georgia coach and athletic director was libeled by a March 23 story written for the Post by Frank Graham Jr. The verdict came after about 8 hours of deliberations. The courtroom was filled when word circulated an agreement The 4-part verdict first found in favor of Butts.

Jur ors next ruled that he was entitled to $60,000 in general damage. The third part of the decision was that he was entitled to recover on punitive grounds involving malice in the publication of the article. The fourth decision was that the Curtis Publishing Co. should pay Butts $3 million in punitive damages. See Earlier Story Page 9 The 58-year-old Butts and his three married daughters, who had sat with him throughout the two-week trial, burst into tears.

In an article last spring, the Post said an insurance salesman had overheard a telephone conversation between Butts and Ala bama coach Paul (Bear) Bryant shortly before the 1962 Alabama-Georgia football game. The Post quoted the salesman as saying Butts was giving away team secrets to Bryant. Even before the magazine's issue went on sale, Butts and Bryant issued public denials. Both filed libel suits. Reverberations from the article swept athletic circles around the country.

During the trial, Butts went on the witness stand and again denied he had given away secrets. The Post brought out in testi- mnnv llial RutU hart marie telp- phone calls to Frank Scoby of blcr whom the called a friend. former coach 13 Killed In Military Air Crashes By The Associated Press gas, today stood watch over the a c.Jo,. thlc tnwn'P'b't the Umted States from der of Malta and the Order of the Crown of Italy. After leaving the trmy in 1945, Warner was appointed deputy re gional director of the War Production Board in New Y'ork City.

He later was promoted to regional director. The board ceased to function in 1946. Warner worked in the 1948 presidential campaign for Thomas E. Dewey, the Republican nominee. Warner, a native of Rochester, was an accomplished musician.

At the age of 16 he was organ ist at Rochester's largest Episcopal church. He later studied piano under leading instructors in this country and Europe, Warner, son of J. Foster War ner, a Rochester architect, grad-udated from Harvard in 1909. Warner's first assignment in the State Police was as a lieutenant with Troop A in Batavia. He was promoted to captain in 1918 and was assigned to Troop K.

at Hawthorne. He later became the second superintends of the force. In 1926, Warner married Emily Smith. In recent years the couple; Hugs, Kisses From Tito ToKhrushcliev BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) Soviet Pr 1 Khrushchev flew into Belgrade today and rushed into the outstretched arms of Yugoslav President Tito. Wives of the two leaders stood by as Khrushchev ran five or six steps from his plane and flung himself into Tito's arms.

Khrushchev and Tito greeted one another like long lost broth ers with a cordial bear hug and kisses on the cheeks. There was no sign of the past animosities that had frequently scarred relations between them since Khrushchev's last visit here in 1956. In his welcoming speech, Tito hailed Khrushchev's role in achieving a limit nuclear test ban agreement with the United States and Britain. "We hail your efforts for calming the world situation to make it impossible for world reactionary forces which desire to throw the world into a new catastrophe," Tito said. Khrushchev, in reply, thanked Tito for inviting him to Yugoslav tr ia and said he was looking forward to continuing talks begun during Tito's visit to Moscow last December.

Tn an nnpn nffrnnf in iha TttA For 1 of HAZLETON, Pa. (AP) As res- cue workers drilled cautiously but determinedly toward three miners trapped 400 feet underground since last Tuesday, one of the entombed men and his tearful wife talked today through the six-inch surface to the mine communica- tions hole. "I'm all right, but cold," David Fellin, 58, told his wife. During the first four hours of drilling, starting about 2:45 a.m. the workers bored about 100 to 120 feet with a 12-inch diameter drill.

The escape hatch hole eventually will be 24 inches in diameter so the men can be lifted to the surface. The operation began under glar ing spotlights in the middle of the night with a 40-ton electrically op- erated drilling rig capable boring a 48-inch diameter hole. A second drilling operation de- m'lin line nua lvuij uvva, -ia, where blistering tear gas volleys drove back some 400 chanting Negroes. Police arrested 17 marching demonstrators Monday night. Then, they hauled all but one in a school bus to jail in nearby Donaldsonville.

A local doctor was released on $300 bond Officers said the group which included James Farmer, national director of the Congress of Racial Equality would have overburdened the crowded jail in Plaque- mine where Negro leaders are a voter registration drive. Three tear gas forays broke the Negroes' march to the City Hall this Mississippi River town of 8,000 some 20 miles southwest of the capital at Baton Rouge. Police Chief Dennis Songy said he ordered officers to fire after near a smal1 iegro Doy, wppiing him. He staggered away. Police did not wear gas masks.

The fumes sent tears streaming: down their faces. Gordon Carey, CORE national demand release of the prisoners, 'e scnedu'et' a meeting today in brought back here Thursday for Miii'aiiiEiiianiia Reliefers to Appeal CANTON, N.Y. (AP) Five men sentenced to jail for refusing to cut brush on a work-relief project were free today pending appeal of their convictions for obstructing the local welfare program. County Judge Roger W. Daniels imposed Jail terms ranging from four to eight months Monday then released the men in their own recognizance until their appeals are decided.

"You deliberately sabotaged this project," Daniels told them. The men claimed that, when they were assigned to the project last January, the snow was too deep in this Northern New York area to carry out the work. The Weather Bureau in Albany said there was about a foot of snow on the ground in the area at the time. $250,000 Burglary MADISON, N.Y. (AP) -Burglars who broke into the silver-haired widow's safe in this tiny Upstate village really hit the iarknot a Quarter of a million dollars in cash.

Mrs. Grove Hinman, reporting the loss Monday, said she "gen erally keeps some money and papers at home" because there is no bank in Madison, a community of about 325 inhabitants. State Police said burglars broke the hinges off the 5-foot-high safe in her basement and made off with an estimated $250,000, plus what Mrs. Hinman described as some "valuable papers." The cash was in about five naoer bags, police said. Mrs.

Hinman's husband, who died in 1961, was an automobile dealer and also had substantial holdings in real estate. It was believed that the burglars struck Sunday afternoon or evening while Mrs. Hinman and a sister who lives with her were out with a woman friend. Another Raid MIAMI, Fla. (AP) Shelling of an industrial plant on the north coast of Cuba was reported today by the Cuban radio.

It was the third report of major hostile action against the Fidel Castro government since Friday. The broadcast heard here said two boats Monday morning shelled a metal processing plant in Pinar Del Rio Province. The plant is 100 miles southwest of Havana. The report said the shelling damaged tanks and pipes used to carry oil and sulphuric acid. "We make the United States government directly responsible for this cowardly attack," the broadcast said in quoting a government communique.

"This is the third pirate attack against our country in the last 72 hours," Havana Radio said quoting the government's note, "which proves once more that the beginning of a new plan of aggressions against Cuba is under way, as announced by the American press." Tear It Down! NEW YORK (AP) A nearly completed city school was ordered torn down Monday after tests showed it was being built with concrete 40 per cent below the required strength. The Board of Education ordered the demolition. Two floors and part of a third had been completed for P.S. 98 in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Eugene E.

Hult, a deputy school superintendent, said demolition and rebuilding of the three-story school would probably cost between $300,000 and $400,000. He said the cost would have to be absorbed by the general contractors, Mars Associates. and Normel Construction Co. The board has paid the contractor $447,837 towards the $2.1 million project. But the board is protected against loss by a $1.5 million performance bond posted by the contractor, currently at work on nine other city schools.

Valachi Interview NEW YORK (AP) The New York Daily News said today that Sen. John L. McClellan, chairman of the Senate Investigation Committee, interviewed gangland informer Joseph Valachi at Ft. Monmouth, N.J., Sunday. uu lunula pan in a tuui-iiuui Tr wiiii r.

tinni ley, chief of the Justice Depart-! ment section on organized crime and racketeering, and an uniden- tified aide, the News said. The interview was said to he uicuudu.eu inline in cuuu.mnpiuiiijpag,, a businessman and gam- halted at 90 feet because the noisejthe marchers broke their agree-of the drill was interfering with1 ment not to sine. 0ne bomb bu.rst nuclear physicist testified has been a time of "ex full of surprises, the now trying to do, essen Tell was the first outright oppo- nent of the treaty to testify at hearings by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, at which members of the Armed Services Atom'c Energy Committees bulln Gen. Thomas S. Power, chief of Strategic Air Command, testified against ratification of the treaty Monday at closed hearings being conducted simultaneously by Senate Preparedness subcommittee, a unit of the Armed Serv ices Committee.

Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, the Air Force chief of staff, expressed misgivings about the treaty at the Foreign Relations Committee's hearings Monday, although he went along with the other service chiefs in supporting ratification provided specified security safeguards are carried out. Teller, one of the creators of the hydrogen bomb, said the treaty banning teste in the atmosphere, acquiring knowledge about the effects of nuclear weapons that he termed vital to the development of a missile defense. Teller said that one of the many surprises in the nuclear field was the announcement by the Russians after their moratorium-breaking test series in 1961 that they had made "great strides toward a missile defense." He said their test series gave the Russians every chance to make observations in the atmosphere for the development of an effective, or even a half effective, missile defense system.

Teller said he had thought in the past that development of an antiballistic missile system was hopeless but is now convinced that "we can put up a missile defense that will stop a weaker power like China" for the next two decades. "I also believe our defense can be partially effective against Russia," he said. "We may not be able to save our cities, but we may be able to save our retaliatory capacity." Teller said the development of a defense against incoming mis- siles may "make the difference between our survival of a nation and it may make the difference between peace and war." Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and other witnesses iiiavc bt-Sllllcrii Lliai. U1C Kill I LCU have testified that the United antiballistic missile, that the dif- f- i i i mil inirrvl vtoJrit loitnsiti u.

glove Lutiscijucui.ca iui luc security of the United States and for the free world." Power's censored testimony is to be made public later, but Chair man John Stennis, reported his position. Sen. Strom Thurmond, quoted Power as saying, "It would be a great mistake to ratify this treaty," and said he agreed. The heads of the Air Force, Army, Navy and Marine Corps testified publicly Monday in sup- I Chiefs of Staff, that they would MUM, 111 HUX1I BCSOBMI, AX- fnrwtm Md' "aS reported Uy Hie lurrn f- committee chairman, Fulbright, to have r.Hf It! oe I communications to Fellin and rrt, of the three men, also went onr uulc in the fog and dampness. Food.

aspirin, water, a flash- Bova, of Pattersonville, is cheing Smih fmm ti, electric cord were lowered to Fel- property. The original estimate ofjiT TT.ififul overall damage to state, citv andi'lUlC lldllllllll debris and has been he trapped along a canewav wIiim-p thev fiPd'Pram director, said he would; Chinese, Khrushchev again paidifrom since Monday morning. Con-i thela6jn ft j. tribute to Yugoslavia as a socialist i for hls welfarfr. aHmine collapsed.

county facilities was $7 million. This includes roads, bridges, buildings, hospitals and sewer systems. The Civil Defense spokesman said that, in order to qualify for disaster aid, state and local gov- uiuuiii une siaie oiuciai sam, (1, itne ymoum kock rsapusi "We still have hope. After all itlmeCn3unenrsa Church, where demonstrators be- was a miracle the other guys Jgm their march after listening to still alive. We think Suva's I speake 1R Mrs.

Anna Fellin talked with tk, (mj Officers said the 16 will be ernments must show that it the majority of Republican! At least 11 U.S. servicemen andijaijsm wno has sabotaged social- two civilians were killed in a rashjism jn Yugoslavia. anu ifw iuik iuy. Radical Attacks Than Radicals WASHINGTON (AP) Anyone who lumps all conservatives in "a kind of a dangerous group" such as the radical right is in- Party workers, says Sen. Barry Goldwater.

The Arizona Republican gave this reply to New York Gov. Rockefeller's attack on the "radical right" in telling a Republican student seminar Monday that ne doesn't go along with John Birch Society aims to impeach Chief Justice Earl Warren or to abolish the income tax. Goldwater said that "of this moment I have no intention" of national ticket next year. Then he added, with a grin, "but we'll of military aircraft accidents this week and last. Two other fliers are missing, her husband this morning.

Her conversation could be heard, but 'some of Fellin's was muffled i umtij aucauj iiaa uuncrat. nai 'City court hearing. They, and B1ertranJd ut I'lldlKeu WII1 mulling a IIUI OIIU! Meve Horan, a miner whomine country The Chinese denounce Tito as a deviationist and agent of imper The Red Chinese snuhbed Khru- shchev bv sending a second secre- narv to the airDort instead of a BERLIN (AP) West Berlin's 1 it hides and other parU of the sys- Also jailed were Ronnie Moore, Lm tern for which atmospheric nuclear iCORE state field secretary: and: tpstin one believed lost at sea. top embassy official. Thev merelv The crashes also injured 17 per-Ug the Chinese charge d'af-sons and destroyed at least 15 air- faires, who is in Belgrade, was craft- I unable to come.

Five of the accidents occurred Thfv'ictims included: jPraCticC Alert A pilot killed when his F100 jet! i crashed on a ranch near Clayton, CSt lCrJlll N.M. Rev. J.W. Davis, at whose churchj the rally was held. Teller- an adviser to Air Farmer, who arrived Monday ballistic systems and to map strategy for voter regis- misslle Lsites- Prepared-tration drives in parishes (coun- ness subcommittee last week that ties) surrounding the capital, I aPProval of the treaty would have manned the telephone to Fellin and the third miner, Henry Throne, 28, through the night, reported the men slept most of the time, worked a little shoring up their area.

Hora said he asked them if they looked for Bova and was told they did but couldn't find him. He said he asked what they thought hap- A road about a quarter of a mile long had to be made by a ouiKiozer so the an iing appara tus could be moved to the scene. iiium niv luvnim 1011CU. Twprc mniHn't "vwhivio vvuu hit wiij iiiiui matinn tn ti m0n a speaker was lowered into the 'Gradualism' Another Term or Too Slow NEW YORK fAP) Complain- m0Vm? slowly in integrating its schools. several representatives of civil groups walked out of a 'meeting with School Supt.

Calvin IIIUU. u.uw-man Allied garrison to Bova but received see iuiii ucck ui me supti tan itrj (Constellation, critically injuring He said Birch Society members' three members of the deck myi.u iu wii5 their views as have members hen a let drore ane Army spoman sa.a the Americans for Democratic! iiL Lt SSthe tes ordcred to evaluate called for economic boycotts Monday night. 11c 1 luvjuciiiuic ciijr ui- ficials with gerrymandering the city to deprive Negroes of their vote. Racial Crisis: Summary Action (ADA). He consigned the! Force Base Fla an crashed latter grotra to the "radical left" their ability to react to van-iduer group 10 me radical leit.

a busy street as it was being ous situations Complaining that some Republi-i landed by remote control. cans talked too much about ele-j Two airmen killed and a 1 ments in their own party and not missing in the collision of two Arretted 1 11 in civi Mans Ki oo and a tnira Force B47 iet bombers on a train France. Two pilots ejected and parachuted safely. H.B. Charmbury, state secre- Gross Monday, tary of mines, said he was quite Representatives of a Harlem concerned about Bova.

group said they were tired of The large drill began talk about "gradualism tions at 3:45 a.m. with a 12-i-jaInd tokenism. A spokesman said inch bit. Plans were to enlarge he meeting was 'a waste of enough about those in the ODDosi-! cost at least $3 million to make facilities usable. After Labor Day WASHINGTON (AP) Demo cratic congressional leaders said .1 41.

l. 1 1 today they hope to get the lim ited test ban treaty before the Senate and the tax bill before the House in the week after Labor Day. They made this report to newsmen after their weekly breakfast conference with President Kennedy. House Speaker John McCor-mack, said they told the President they believed that the tax bill will be reported out of the Ways and Means Committee next week and every effort will be made to get it before the House for debate the following week. Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield, said he expects the treaty to go before the Senate for debate right after Labor.

Day. Just giving a guess, he said, he thought the debate would take a week. Western Tour? WASHINGTON (AP) President Kennedy is considering a swing into the West that would give him a chance to look over efforts to preserve natural resources, natural wonders and wilderness areas and to get some political exposure in advance of the 1964 campaign. Under present planning, he would venture into Arizona, the i Barry Goldwater, regarded as the top contender fori nomination. Nothing has ben settled, but, the talk has reached the point that! into oefense positions throughout the Western half of the divided city today on a practice alert.

1 BRAZZAVILLE. Congo Renub missing from the nation's treas- ury. tion, Goldwater said that ADA has ing flight over Irwin, Iowa. (AP) Two former cabinetjthe opening to I' incnes ana Pianuemine La Tear eas Prt cf 'he treaty provided mini-penetrated the White House but! other airmen were injured (minister, are under arrest and finally 24 inches. said Siewouul urge a boycott of hurled' at some Negroes sing mum safeguards are guaranteed.

Birchites have made no headway! Also Monday, three U.S. Navy: deposed President Fulbert You- Charmbury estimated that segregated schools next ing "freedom songs" while All four agreed with previous he GOP. Rockefeller had sug- jets crashed after becoming lost ou is being questioned in a hunt, der the best conditions the 40-ton month fu inlegration is at. marching toward downtown area; 'testimony by Gen. Maxwell D.

gested they were infiltrating the in fog near the northwest coast of for millions of francs reported drill could dig 40 feet an hour. tainj arrpsiert inrinriino rfiRF' na.iTavlor chairman of the Joint This means it would take a littlej Gross ca tl meetinB to director James Famrer. GOP and might make Goldwater. their captive. I more than eight Hours to go JJl niit proposas for ending racial! Danville, Va.

City officials re- not have approved the treaty if feet where the men are trapped. imbalanee in city scnools He was fuse use of city-owned property they had not been assured safe-But one engineer estimated it siatp for a snrprh hv C.pm-pp Lincoln' guards would be provided. Herbert S. Walters Fills Kefauver Seat Rockwell, leader in the American! Gen. Curtis E.

LeMay, the Ail Nazi Party. iForce chief, said under question- Mobile, Ala. Justice Depart-'ing, however, that if the treaty ment begins checking still in the proposal stage, County voter registration think I would recommend but says it is part of a routine! against it." LeMay qualified this inspection. jby saying he would have to give San Francisco Maritime Cooks, the question, from Thurmond, a and Stewards Union refuses to re- lot of thought, veal how many Negroes are in its Education Commissioner James E. Allen A spokesman for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People said some of Gross' proposals had substance and would be considered before another meeting Thursday.

Gross declined to give details of over-all plans for ending racial i iiuoaiaiice. nans musi oe sua tl, iu niv iiiuic irviuiutiuu vuui- iiiiMsiuuti uy oeuu i. i-i, 111c l.ll UlUldlll IU ltlTUll, No Fights For Rights WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. V'a. (API Southern governors adopted today a unanimity rule wnicn ioresiaueo a possiuiu uri oihi i 11 i.s"1 iviiwuij, uov.

owre naiicn.tr ui i Uailld, HI a SU1 ll lc IIUI 1 (.: ine-inut-i mi me riTsiueui a nn Pnnal Pmnlnvmonl upjjuiiuuu.v. I iltlA l.bVHrD -inie im.n, i n. iinnvi aoja NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Democratic Gov. Frank Clement named Herbert S.

Walters, wealthy East Tennessee contractor, today to succeed the late Sen. Estes Kefauver. Walters, VI, Democratic national committeeman, will hold office until a successor is named in the Nov. 3, 1964, election to serve the remaining two years of Kefauv- ar rnrm Kofa a aM. Walters, a figure in state Demo- cratic DoIitics for more than II) jwas Kefauver.

Walters is not expected to run tion, leaving the way clear for Clement to make the race if he chooses. Clement interrupted his attendance at the Southern Governor's Conference in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., to return here the announcement. He plans the White House is reported js more conservative than in preparation for public hearings on syndicated crime before Mc-jthe reliable authority to have asked Interior Department several Clellan's committee. Valachi is''ccKs ago to outline a possiDiefor tne 0ffice jn next year-s elec only agreed to the rule change Negroes and Puerto Ricans for it will ask Aug. for a speedup' rZ ha, but also seconded the move at the construction jobs again Monday, in integration of Little Rock about the Southern Governors Conference, but there was no coordination schools.

treaty over-all Fulbright said Eleven governors voted for the with a group of Negro ministers': Lexington, Ky. Nearly 70, g. power j' change, which means that any trying to do the same thing. jchanting, singing Negroes Paradeconfidence tnan others that the resolution will need a unanimous Observers said the ministers' to protest alleged hiring discrim-L. gtates or woui vote for adoption.

group did a better business than ination by downtown merchants. I iu undisnuted Wallace's anti-civil rights reso-jthe city agents. Some applicants! Columbia. S.C. University of," nuXr tTwer 11 it lutions had threatened to divide! registered with both the city and South Carolina says it is appeal-j Latv the conference.

jthe private group. ling a federal court order that it: The rule change was recom- The ministers are working with admit a Negro girl this fall. Gen- Power believed Uus Is the mended by Gov. Donald Russell two State Labor Department of-1 Birmingham. Ala.

School on'' present deterrent to war, of South Carolina. finals supplied by Gov. Rockefel- boards of state's two largest added. Gov. Orval E.

Fai'bus of Ar- ler. The Republican governor met, terns Birmingham and Mobile Fulbright said his subcommittee kansas. chairman, appointed four with the ministers two weeks ago present desegregation plans to received the opinions of eight moderates and one segregationist, land promised to have existing federal courts; Birmingham may-other heads of unified commands Gov. Ross Barnett of laws against racial discrimination or promises law and order will be and the "overwhelming majority" to the resolutions committee. strictly enforced.

maintained as racial barriers falL'support the treaty. expected to testify i journey. Ana some aavance worK McClellan and the Department jon a trip may be Undertaken of Justice declined in Washington shortly. to comment on the story. The trip may be undertaken in Valachi, 60 reportedly marked October and might take Kennedy for death by the underworld.

plane, train and auto, from $100,000 for the killer as still at Ft. Monmouth under maximum 'Grand Coulee Dam in the North- west to Glen Canyon Dam in Ari-'for security guard Monday night, the zona. Ceremonies are on tap at(to return to the meeting later to-Kews said. 'each place in October. iday..

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