Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Post-Standard from Syracuse, New York • Page 3

Publication:
The Post-Standardi
Location:
Syracuse, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE POST- Syracuse, N. Thursday, April 26, 1956 3 special Arms Parley Set Up With Gromyko Worldwide Atomic Code to Put Life In Miiea in trasn ai integration May President's Atoms-for-Peace Plan Of Tanker Plane Cost Bus Line Franchise i ABILENE, Kan ITED NATIONS, N. April i the end of that conference and. broad outlines of the code, a fight) A wnHrtxrirfft afnmio jvufo'will Ho Anoi-fitfnn iV 1OST i i 1- i An AlT OrCC LONDON. April 25 E.

Stassen tonight set up a special meeting on disarmament with So- 25 (ft-to breathe life into President Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace plan i W.UAX** The United States, Russia and on Red China. 10 other countries approved the James J. Wadsworth. U. S.

dele- was made public today. The Unit-j program last Wednesday after gate, told reporters the United of secret ItiStates is opposed to giving Red China a seat and chances of Pei- rkin proval of the program at a huge would create an conference to be convened here; atomic energy agency to see that; ping getting a place are remote. 3 A 1 burned 10 miles northeast of Woodbine today, killing all eight crewmen aboard. Officials of Forbes Air Force in two days. viet Deputy Foreign Minister Sept724.

-peaceful a i around the other' hand, a enhower roac hed bobe share benefits of the atomic! spokesman said Russia. backed atoms for peace- age. It contains provisions barring'by I i a and men purposes in his speech to the-war-like use of atomic demand a place for Reds The special meeting will follow u. N. Assembly on Dec.

8, with the agency and cre-jChina on the board of governors! up Stassen's impromptu talks with He is expected here to make thelates an inspection system to the proposed agency. Communist party leader Nikita opening address at the world con-; this certain. The chief delegate. Henry. Khrushchev and Premier Nikolai ference next fall.

The Americans; Despite the unusual agreement; Cabot Lodge today urged thej Bulganin at a Soviet reception last hope the code will be signed the .12 countries on the'u. N. Economic and Social Coun-' night. jcil to begin immediately a pro- The date will be decided when 1 Base near Topeka, where the KC97 was based, said the seventh bodies were found early; been recovered of victims as from' Yor i Stassen, President Eisenhower's disarmament adviser, gets instruc- Stassen cabled a report of his conversation with Khrushchev and Bulganin. Stassen's and Gromyko's entire delegations to the current private five-power U.N.

talks here will take part. The informants said Britain, France and Canada, the other members of the U.N. Disarmament subcommittee, had agreed House Democrats Map gram of studies on economic as- i H.O1HC pects of atomic energy deveIo P-i rou ti ne ment. He said there should be 1 rarity Vi The KC97, a plane that normally: have for five months. Those who carries a crew of six, was on ride took seats in the rear.

mission. Lines of Chicago which owns the company, said this morning his concern doesn't plan to change its orders for desegregation in Montgomery and other Southern 'cities. That statement came from Vice iPrddent E. W. who April recently renewed It-year busi a i so told reporters the company City Lines today: franchise, Mayor W.

A. Gayle wou id stand behind any Montgom- faced the threat of court action contract can be canceled "if'ery bus driver who is arrested for revoke its fran unless itjone party breaks the law." (permitting integration on his bus. awa from its newly an-! But it would take court has threatened arrests, nounced policy of racial Integra-, the Mayor explained, since the! Franklin's statement was made tion. franchise itself says nothing about a a news conference before the The City Commission declared! segregation. came later in the day the bus company will have to! Said Police Commissioner Clyde that government a i abide by city and state (Washington are in their tion if it continues to do busi-j "If the bus company operates.opinion on what the Supreme Court ness jin Montgomery, it will I ave to actually ruled Monday.

was still under Montgomery and Ala-; They said the court might have I i the buses bama laws." jruled all bus segregation invalid, 's integration The commission contends city the first interpretation given to the still; and state segregation statutes are'decision, or that it may have as they still despite a federal court merely dismissed an appeal on ruling in South Carolina end that the case hadn't been Hinting at a court to break Supreme Court's decision. A spokesman for National City courts finally determined in the lower thinking is centered. Backs Resolution a resolution to the extraordinary U.S. -Soviet meeting. Two Hour Discussion Stassen spent two hours discussing disarmament with Khrushchev at the reception.

Bulganin joined in their conversation for a while. Stassen would give reporters no details. He said only that the mat- WASHINGTON, April 25 Cooley (D-NC) said.Hammarskjold to prepare reports tonight House Democrats will launch a new fight in Con-j the use of atomic ener in i grass to get farmers the equivalent of 90 per cent of fnr i I for their crops this year. House Democratic leaders gave approval to proposals for direct payments to farmers--a variation of the "Fair Deal" Brannan Plan of the Truman President Eisenhower vetoed an omnibus farm bill last week because it provided for rigid government price supports at 90 per cent of parity for major crops. The administration favors a sliding scalei muiiisurauuu iavurs ci auuiug ter was important enough to runnin from to 90 per cent TJ i Eisenhower.

The new development came as i new tatvciuwiiidili aa Highly placed Western sources, Democrats in the House side- said the review of a fl bank proposals and rival U.S. and Russian disarma-j to rf a new version of ir 1 if arm legisiauon wmcn WOUIQ m- r- i i i 'elude the administration's soil Tne leaders asked ques-; bank lus direct rice su port tons about the L.S. plan for, nts to fannerSi glooal disarmament, particularly; the "open skies" inspection idea. But the sources cautioned that expectations should not be raised too much. They reported no outstanding differences on disarmament were settled by the chance Will Consider New Bill Cooley, chairman of the House Agriculture Committee told reports ers the committee will consider a new bill which would authorize "compensatory in cash to farmers equal to the difference i i laimcto equal LU uie unicieuce meeting between Stassen and the tet governraent supp ort levels Rllf Russians The East and West differ on at least five major points in their proposals to reduce the world's armaments.

Control System Big Hurdle One major hurdle is a foolproof control system to insure that any disarmament agreement is religi-j ously carried out. The Americans insist it must include not only ground inspections but Eisenhower's 'open aerial reconnaissance idea and 90 per cent of parity. This is a variation of the plan proposed by former Democratic Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan. It called for payments equal to the difference between market prices and government support levels for farm commodities.

Cooley said he favored a soil bank law, but without the prepayment provision asked by President Eisenhower. The provision would enable the to pay me aUAjll ujt MQjr to guard against surprise attack. farmers year for Iand t(J be The Russians are resisting the retired from cr product i on nex idea of air sentinels at present vear 1 11 a. i tli i.1^ A although they accept it in principle. The Americans also envisage decreasing the nuclear threat by diverting to peaceful purposes the ussiunaoie materials now usea Introduced Tomorrow TEACHER MISSING Patricia Burdick, a 21-year- old Grand Marais, school teacher has been re- ported missing since Sunday in a lonely area 100 miles west of Sault Ste.

Marie. State i and sheriffs deputies were augmented in the search for her by conservation officers and an army helicopter. (AP Wirephoto.) increase price support levels France, and Britain G. F. Saksin, Soviet delegate, suggested the resolution should provide specifically for another atoms-for-p a conference in 1957.

The first was held last August in Geneva. Besides the coming row on Red China, the United States and Russia are likely to differ on financial aspects of the program, Wadsworth said he believed the scale of assessments for operating the agency would be roughly the same as those for the U. N. This would mean the United States would pay one-third of the total cost and the Russians 15.23 per cent. The said the Russians felt a ceiling of 15 per cent should be put on contributions from any one country.

He also said the Russians wanted a definite limit put on the budget so the countries would know what they had to pay. Wadsworth said it is impossible now to say how much the agency will cost. Suspension Power The agency would have the power to suspend any country not carrying out the provisions of the statute. There is no provision for expelling any country but Wadsworth said an indefinite suspension might have the same effect. He said between 84 and 87 countries were expected to take part in the conference.

The code will be effective when ratified by 18 countries, provided that the 18 in-! eludes at least three of the following: Canada, France, Britain, Soviet i and the United XP --i V-: The Democralic" "leaders' nistratively on tte asi 9 cr their decision tonight on what form they believe farm legislation These new support levels are: frheat 84 per cent, rice 83 per cent, rnniPv'TpirtThmTHi'ilcot 11 86 er cent cotton 82 kina introduced Friday He said he anu eanuts per 1 I a A1C OQJLU I i make weapons. The Russian plan, would call the Agriculture Commit-' cent of ant doesn't touch nuclear ee together Monday. i 'is i a price at which the is chnsidered to be getting ment There are other important disagreements about levels to which armies should be reduced and the The decision followed a swift. tills Boy on LATHAM, April 25 Three- year-old Paul Kalinski in- i methods of staging the reductions. Deputy Testifies At Kidnaping Trial ITHACA, April 25 W--A Texas deputy sheriff testified today that a physician on trial on a charge of kidnaping his son once hac' asked the deputy to let the physician "ruffle me up a anr escape with the boy.

F. P. Leath, 60, of Longview. Gregg county deputy, was the first witness in the trial of; Dr. Frank Sainburg, 36, of Big Spring, and two other men on charges of taking Philip Sain- burg, now 5, from the custody of his mother on Jan.

19, 1954. Leath testified in Tompkinsj County Court that he had served six court orders on Sainburg or his former wife. Miss Doris Blanchard of Ithaca, in the three years of the dispute over the boy's custody. by the House Rules Committee. Cooley said the direct payment! provision would apply "at least 1 ito basic crops--corn, wheat, cotton, peanuts and rice--possibly I to feed grains.

ment. By adopting a provision for a direct payment differential, farmers would get the difference between the prevailing support level and 90 per cent. After the soil bank bill ran round of developments that was! a fair return on his crop invest- Jured fatally today when a lum- climaxed by shelving of a ment ber lruck backed over him as hej i 000,000 soil bank appropriation bill i The most important dress in your wardrobe, done in pure silk shantung. A figure-slimming 4 rode his tricycle near his home. State police said the boy apparently had ridden up behind the truck while it was parked in the street in this Albany county community.

The truck driver. around in the Rules J. Gleason, 22, of Green that's slit on one side to uncover a softly draped bow. navy or Dior sizes 10 to 18. Fashion terrace, third floor, also shoppmgtown.

Jtt Vfm viv; 5ft i' A HS xS6 vv fl -y V.VrfS'O'vV.l qsmflm fff.M AS TM Mf iSS The President announced after! earlier. House leaders indicated it Island, told police he backed the vetoing the farm bill that he would would be left stranded there, truck but did not see the boy. -W AV 53S LO" rf. store hours today: downtown 10 to 5.30, shoppingtown 12 noon to 9 1 -f AV A 4 i i 1 1 JSWyWx V- wlv.r-C^-.'.'.-.-.'.vSw^ i i 4 1 1 i i i i ri i M'! fr i i ri 4 I i v.v.v TT 1 V. 1 4 1 i 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 M-.

I i i m-. i 1 1 fc" i 1 i 1 TM 4 1 4 4 I 1 r. 4 ri 4 P' i i 't" 'm'' r' -f-f i 1 1 1.1 I 1 i Ex-Ccngressrnan Free in Fee Case NEW YORK, April 25 i mer Democratic Rep, T. Vincent Quinn was cleared today of charges of violating a 92-year-old federal statute limiting the a lees of a congressman. Federal! Judge Edward Weinfrld directed; a verdict of acquittal one week; after Quinn went to trial.

i The government charged that; Quinn shared $40,000 in tax case' ices with two law partners when he was in Congress from 1949 through 1951. Quinn resigned from Congress in 1951 after he! was el ret district attorney. Acquitted with Quinn were two law Martin Schwae- ticr. forrncr municipal judge, and Jaires I. Saver, one-time assistant U.

S. attorney. The government did not claim! that Quinn handled any tax cases! 3 4 fc A V.fc*^* i tain that the partners handled! such cases and that Quinn got his share of the fees. A I A BY I OF A Mere whisps of power net, satin strips and lavishly embroidered nylon toily, the most beautiful thing next to you! Pink pull-on girdle, in sizes 26 to 29, 10.00. Pink $2.7 Billion Fund, But No Petty Cash WASHINGTON, April 25.

The government's Export-Import Bank with assets of has had trouble lately cause sometimes it had not soj much as dime in cash for of neuspapeis. directors have remedied the Siturtion A bank executive! paid "our petty cash fund was only $50. At timos it ran out. Now the directors, after thorough study, raised the petty cash fund to $200." bra, sizes 32 to 36, in cup, 4.00." Also in a high waist girdle with zipper, 15,00, Girdle and bra also in white with yellow. Corsets, street floor.

A I A Daytime, nighttime, anytime you're a no seam stocking fan, you 1 claim the leg-round good looks of beautiful Bryans seamless. Shades; Sampan, a neutral beige; Bright Beauty, a bright suntone. Short, medium and long. Heel and toe reinforcement, 1.50; Demi-to? with nude heel, 1.65. Hosiery, street floor.

m'm't mm-- 4 i i I "V- 1 -x I I I I I m- fm: 1 I I 1 v. 1 v. i 1 1 f. I -a-joo In all clear vinylite wifh white lustre calf trim and a carved "glass" heei. An enchanting slipper set on a young midway heel, In sizes fo 10, S-N-M widths.

Exclusively ours! 14.95, Women's shoes, fourth floor..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Post-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
222,443
Years Available:
1875-1978