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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 1

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Of Has Way WITH THIS ISSUE Ay irr II MM Hand Wolves io Ay ifrlT SPORTS fi A THE WORLD'S Founded June 10. 1847 GREATEST NEWSPAPER Tha American Paper for Americans TEN CENTS VOLUME CXIX THIS PAPER CONSISTS OF FIVE SECTIONS SECTION ONE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1960 1960 BY CHICAGO TRIBUNE SQUARE. CHICAGO rill. ILLINOIS n2 Read Full Text: Page Nixon on Aggressive End in Clashes with Kennedy i THE KINDLY TIGER 1 -I VXMAY I GIVE vS YOU A RIP?" TarvA on Issues I I KJ ill VUOH 1.7 Khrushchev TRIBUNE'S COMMENT See editorial, Round Two on today's editorial Page. BY WALTER TROIIAN (Picture on back page) H'bicdxo Tribune Tress 1 Washington.

Oct. 7 A fighting Vice President Nixon and an adroit Sen. John F. Kennedy argued vigorously tonight in the second round of televised encounters. between Presidential candidates.

i. 11C X. yj 111L11, Will LUll fronted each other in a Wash- ington television studio, covered a wide variety of international issues, from handling the Cuba of Fidel Castro to attitudes on a possible summit meeting with Russian Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, and a range of domestic issues from eco- nomic growth to civil rights. I jKJ' Lfww-1 I Sen.

John K. Kennedy was lost when this administration came into power in 1953. As I look at Cuba today I believe that we are following the right course, a course which is difficult but a course which under the; circumstances is the only proper one wnicn wm see; that the Cuban people get, a chance to realize their! aspirations of progress thru! freedom and that they get i that with our cooperation! with the other states in the Organization of American States Now, Sen. Kennedy has made some very strong critic-1 isms of my part or alleged! part in what has happened in Cuba. He points to the fact i that I visited Cuba while Mr.

Batista was in power there. Takes Right Position I can only point out that if we are going to judge the administrations in terms of our altitude toward dictators we are glad to have a comparison with the previous administra-l tion. There were 11 dictators 1 m. 1 call for Aid Schenectady, N. Oct.

7 Special This city's entire1 police force was called out, a state of emergency was declared and state help was! sought today in efforts to halt violence on a massed picket line whose thousands! of members formed a human Iwall at the strike closed Gen-! jeral Electric company plant here. Fighting, jostling and shouting when workers tried to break thru their lines, the picketing goons defied efforts Schenectady's 150 man po-: lice force to control them at this biggest G. E. plant in the nation. Fearful that more serious i violence might occur at any time, citv officials had the 200 man fire department deputized to augment the! police force and said other! citizens may be sworn in as deputies.

Rockefeller Shies Awav i An appeal for State help was made to Gov. Nelson A Rockefeller but he shied away from involvement in fhp strncrolp In rpiprtinwfhp a plea, a spokesman for the Republican governor said that Office worker -on ground atter battle with pickets. maintaining order histori- rollr Vine Kflnn i rncnnnt-JKI! hv at inrai inw nfnrppmpnt officials." T.n thmisanri fivp VmnrJrpH pickets, massed beUv to back! anH fmir mo solid phalanx in front of the main gate of the big plant fc Interna. tional Union of Electrical Workers local in the country. Fears for His Police About the same number of additional pickets marched at four other G.

E. plants in the Schenectady area. The On Sunday: How patrons of beauty and barber shops will vote for President The results of a Presidential survey conducted by the Tribune" in barber and beauty shops in the Chicago area will be presented in tomorrow's Chicago Sunday Tribune. For news of a trend that could be decisive, see Sunday's Tribune. 1ir i PRICE i i i TRIBUNE x7 Vice President Nixon -y- Jtl ere Is What They Said in 2d Show Washington.

Oct. 7 Here is the text of the televised discussion by Vice President 1 1 iMXOn ana aen- Jonn Ken" of Alvin Spivak, United Press International: Hal Levy, Newsday, Garden City, L. Paul Niven. Columbia Broadcasting system. Frank McGee of the National Broadcasting company news staff was moderator.

The Question Mr. Vice President, Sen. Kennedy said last night that the administration should take responsibility for the loss of Cuba. Would you corn- ment with tbe lidity of 01011 stamt in pre vious compaigns that the Tru- a administration was responsible for the loss of china to the Communists. Ni lxons Reply First of all, I don't agree witn Sen Kennedy that Cuba is lost, and certainly China himself.

His responses to Kennedy's questions and his broad knowledge of the subject matter were so much better than Kennedy's. Nixon Better This Time Mrs. Solomon Katz, 4725 N. Lawndale a housewife: I think Vice President Nixon made a much better presenta- he my man. -But Sen.

Kennedy tells so many things that aren't true, and I don't anybody knocking the United States. But my hus- band likes Sen. Kennedy, I think. Miss Louise Crook, 5964 NO. 242 he Nixon More gressive nedy' Questions were Put to I Hptaio h.h'the,n by 3 panel prised I aa.uvut a a va i.

Lll candidates were deadly serious; not a joke was offered. Both candidates were scruDu- lously polite, but Nixon p- Morgan, American the more aggressive. The Broadcasting company; and B9 1 nikita SEEKS SUMMIT ON GERMANY Urges U. N. Arms Ban Session BY HAROLD HUTCHINGS Chicajto Tribune Press Serried New York, Oct.

7 Premier Khrushchev said today he had Proposed to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan IAP Wirephotol K'hrushchev speaking at luncheon of correspondents is New York City. of Britain a new summit con ference be held in February or March "to solve the ques- tion of including a peace treaty with Germany and turning West Berlin into free This would be after President Eisenhower leaves office. The Russian premier said Macmillan, with whom he met twice here, "assured me a summit conference would take place." Urges U. N. Disarm Parley Khrushchev said he also Jmade two other suggestions.

One was that "it might be better to convene a conference of all competent countries to sign a peace treaty." The other proposal, he SI )H W3C that a crtAMol rnc sion of the Ilnitpd irtn general assembly by convened on disarmampnt in fjpnpva nr elsewhere in Europe. He nftprpH Moscow or Lenin grad as sites. Macmillan did not reject the idea, Khrushchev said. I John Russell, British foreign office spokesman, said tonight Macmillan had given "no such positive assurance" regarding a summit conjerence. Russell said w.yossiouny aj unuuteT summit sometime tn 1961 was indeed implicit in the conversation." Regarding a special assembly session, Russell said it was true that Macmillan did not refect the idea, but "it is also true he did not accept Would Keep Status Khrushchev commented on these and several other international issues in a one and three-quarter hour luncheon press conference sponsored by the United Nations Correspondents association in the U.

N. delegates dining room. If there is willingness on the part of the west to hold a summit soon after the American elections, chev said, the Russians will undertake to assure the status quo in Berlin until the summit is convened. The communist chieftain threatened, however, "if we see there is no desire to reach agreement," then Russia and -u Vice President accused Kennedy of "woolly thinking" on the Chinese nationalist islands of Quemoy and Matsu and of advocating a fiscal policy of using mirrors in his promises to spend more without raising taxes. Several times Nixon opened his answers to Kennedy's statements on questions by saying he disagreed with Kennedy, once saying illAD A PC DCCDO ifiiin nuL rcLno DECADE AHEAD Sea Our Big Frontier Rickenbacker Miami Beach, Oct.

7 IF Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, on the eve of his 70th birthday, predicted today that passengers will be fired around the world in mis- siles and we will have ickenhacker space ships in less than 10 years. Pointing out that he has, been "short in every predic tioir I made the past, the Ma. a uiiu viiau man of the board of Eastern 1 Air line Said atOmiC power win enauie us 10 aisini sea water. This he said, will revolutionize the world.

i Safety in Power The more powerful we are as long as we can control it the less chance we will have for actrnrTriQ SEIZE 2 TEENS IN TERROR RAID Captured in Evanston; Maid Names Them EVANSTON ARRESTS Two partners with exclusive towing agreement with Evanston police department are arrested and their short wave radio is seized. Story in part 3, page 12. Evanston police yesterday captured two teen-agers who were identified by a maid, 28, i on Sept. 26. They fled alter tearing off part of her clothes and stealing $99.

The pair admitted five burgl a ries on Chicago's north side in recent months but. denied attacking the maid. They were seized after a neighbor saw them breaking into the house at 1020 Hull Evanston. Seized at House One of the suspects, 15 uour. he disagreed comDletelv andPore the validity of that state- in South America and in Cen- ias the pair who terrorized herj tral Amprira whpn wp ramp! in Ihp hnmp nf hpr pmnlnvpr, another time saying Kennedy was wrong on three counts.

Surrenders Challenger Role AT d.1 ouii diiouiei nine, ne ac-, cused Kennedy of distortion. I Kennedy expressed agree-; ment with Nixon on a policy of toughness toward Khrush chev, saying that he, too, ould meet with the Russian Continued on page 13, col. 1 in in 1953. Today there are only three left, including the one in Cuba. We think that is pretty good progress.

Sen. Kennedy also indicat- ed with regard to Cuba that he thought I had made a mistake when I was in Cuba in Continued on page 8, col. 1J Think THE WEATHER SATIRDAY, OCTOBER S. 1966 CHICAGO AND VICINITY: Fair and warmer today; partly cloudy at night; hich. in 70s: low, in 50s; southerly winds at 8 to 15 m.

p. h. To cloudy and mo.Zi Mostlv I mud; chance of NORTHERN ILLINOIS: Mostly fair i and warmer today; partly cloudy at nisht. Tomorrow: Mostly! eioudy and miid: showers likely in afternoon or night. WEATHERMAN'S RECORD His forerast for yesterday was: Sunny and pleasant: high, near 70; low, in upper 40s.

TKMPKR TI'RKM IX CHirAKO 7 a. 1 m. ..51 1 P. in 33 a. 4 p.

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..34 10 a. p.m. ..61 ta.m...3.t It a. 7 p.m....-.1 3a.m. at 8 p.

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Ktimaied. THE MOON Om. a a id Oct Oi.t.12 Ott.20 2 Oci 27 Sunrise. Sunsel. Kit.

Mnnnrie. p. m. Morning Man Mars. Kve-ning Mars: Jnniler.

Mrcur5. Salurn. and Venus. for anurs ended 7 p. HI.

7: Mean temperature. -carees: Brnwl. 1 ai. Relatite kumidity. 7 a.

81 per cent p. bi. 7 p. m. 4.

Precipitation, nnpe; month's deficiency. .38 inch; year' deficiency, 2.71 inches. Hishett wind velocity, 14 m. p. h.

at 10: SS a. m. from outheat. Barometer, 7 a.m.. 30.20; 7 p.m.

30.11. I Map and other reports on Pane Mrs. Dodson about cutting the lawn, police reported. Dodson is president of the Oak Park Federal Savings and Loan association. forced their way into the kitchen.

She said one of the youths ripped her blouse, tore off her skirt, and slapped her while the other intruder ransacked the house. Returns to City Braithwaite quoted Collier as saying he and his companion, whose parents live on the north side, have been roaming the north side for several months, sleeping in parked cars, and living on proceeds'oxHheir burglaries. Collier said his parents moved to Kentucky five months ago. He said his address is 170 Western Hoffman Estates, Roselle. Braithwaite said the suspects will be questioned today by Chicago police.

What the Listeners N. Hermitage secretary: years old, was seized by Pa-I think Vice President Nixon trolman William Labbe as came out on top. I also think left the house by the back he saM. Rickenbacker re- lK called that 25 years ago the! a national strike against G. E.

American people were moreiwmch began Sundav- How-interested in automobiles! ever' the Schenectady area than in aviation and that he! Continued on page 4, col. 4 The other suspect, Charles When she said Mrs. Dod-Collier, 17, was captured, son was not home, the two The second of the Nixon-1 extremely well, altho I liked Kennedy television discus- Kennedy better. I think it was sions of campaign issues left a draw. Both presented good many viewers with more posi- arguments, partywise.

I'm tive opinions last night than still for Kennedy, tho. the first telecast of the series, Peter J. i 7527 Many of those questioned Oleander policeman: I in a Tribune survey thought think Nixon appeared to be Vice President Richard M. stronger of the two be-Nixon had handled him-; cause of the way he handled self much better this time and that in some areas he had bested Sen. John F.

Kennedy. Still others expressed the belief that last night's meeting was draw," and that both Nixon and Kennedy had performed admirably. Thinks Both Did Well -tually all of those inter- he did a much better job than in the previous debate. He was more forceful; clearer on the issues; more explicit in what be said. He made a great deal of sense; he didn't just generalize.

Conrad DiCicco, 2709 N. Oak Park factory worker: I didn't watch the program because I was writing a letter. I didn't feel I needed to. I know who I'm going to vote for. John Ryan, 6536 S.

Damen high school student: I don't think it makes any difference what kind of impression either man makes. It depends on whom you favor. I think each candidate made a good showing, but if I could vote, I'd vote for Sen. Ken- Continued on page 10, col. 2 after a three block chase by Policemen Lloyd Hinze and Gerald Murphy, and Holger Hill, Evanston's animal warden.

Hill heard of the case on his car radio and joined in the chase. Lt. Richard Braithwaite, Evanston chief of detectives, said Mrs. Margaret Whitehead, of 2011 Grey Evanston, viewed the pair and identified them as her attackers. Story of Raid Mrs.

Whitehead was alone in the home of Leonard Dodson, of 2515 Marcy with Dodson's two children, Lin-sey, 20' months, and Leslie, 3 months, when the teen-agers came to the back, door and said they wanted to talk to personally selected sites now used as airports in 20 cities. Rickenbacker plans to work as usual on his birthday. He will get up at 6 a. has a breakfast appointment with some department heads an hour later, and will open the staff meeting at 8 o'clock. To his employes that doesn't mean 8:10 or even 8:05.

A Wonderful Life Reminded that he shot down 26 planes in World) War I and once spent 24 days on a life raft in the Pacific, Rickenbacker said: I've had a wonderful life, i I've cheated the Grim Reaper seven times that I know and maybe some I didn't 1 know about. If God is will-' ing, I expect to be around' another 10 to 20 years." viewed said they thought thejtion- Why? Maybe because second meeting was livelier and less formal and stilted than the first. Following are the ments: Mrs. Jean Hinchy, 7529 Oleander a housewife: 1 1 thought both candidates did1.

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Years Available:
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