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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 1

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Dayton Daily Newsi
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Dayton, Ohio
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1
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TON DAILY HOME EDITION 38 Vases VOL. 81, NO. 86 DAYTON, OHIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1960 coal CUM Foun Pild Diytsa, OM Price 7 Cents Keep (Meatis THE WEATHER Cloudy, continued mild today, tonight, tomorrow. High today 66. Low tonight 50.

High tomorrow 63. fftatirar Ha mm rca Ywtaty-toTca DAY EwS Schools Stall kT 1 mexko I State Told to Keep Hands Off Integration NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 14 CP) A caravan of state police officers was massed on the fringes of New Orleans at dawn today just a few hours before five Negro girls were due to enter the first graie of two white public schools here today. At Baton Rouge. Lt.

This was described as tlie long-Thomad D. Burbank, assistant! awaited states rights challenge director of public safety, said to federal authority, based on the there were 40 officers at New 10th Amendment which reserved 'k' powers to the state not given to Burbank said they were in; federal government. It is the New Orleans under orders from hpart of the DavM gationist the Louisiana Legislature to en-i showdown over school Diem Foes Nabbed In Cambodia Vietnam President To Ask Custody Of Revolt Leaders SAIGON, Vietnam. Nov. 14 (UPD A group of paratroop officers who led an abortive revolt against President Ngo Dinh Diem's regime was reported today to have been arrested in neighboring Cambodia.

The Vietnam news agency said the officers landed in Phnom Penh, capital of Cambodia, after a flight from Saigon Saturday. Informed sources said the Diem government would demand extradition to Vietnam. REPORTS RECEIVED here I integra- tion. PRESIDENT-ELECT KENNEDY (CIRCLED) SURROUNDED BY ADMIRERS IN FLORIDA Leaves St. Edwards Church at Palm Beach Where He Attended Sunday Morning Mass.

UPI NEWS-REEL Two-toned "purplish" car on Perry St, with rear fenders from two different makes of expensive autos. Kennedy-Nixon Conference Takes Political Spotlight Guatemala Revolt Reported Crushed State of Seige Proclaimed Following Attempted Coup of military Garrisons foixe closing of the city's public schools. Newsmen reported that at least 75 troopers were in the caravan. All were in plain clothes and appeared to be unarmed. Burbank said the 40 officers were sergeants-at-arms authorized to act on behalf of the Legislature.

BURBANK SAD3 the sergeants-at-arjns were under orders to see that schools "were closed without using force of any kind. The names of the girls the first Negroes accepted for white schools here since the Recon structionand the closely guarded secrets The Legislature in Baton Rouge last night completed action on three sweeping concurrent res olutions designed to block the Schools were.tha GUATEMALA, Nov. 14 UT) Paratroops andi5J Zd ViX rocket planes struck at rebel strongholds in northeast Lamcse army gp-ai, Who ap-Guatemala today as President Miffuel Ydigoras claimed1 hurl hnnn taknn fllnnf Job Offer Held Unlikely; Jack Leads by 271,317 Votes PALM BEACH, Nov. 14 (IP) John F. Kennedy travels to Miami today for a dramatic conference with the man he defeated for the presidency, Vice Presi rpvolt ncrainst hi a rnn.QprvnHvA cnvVTimpnf has hpnn THE PASTOR, Msgr.

J. P. O'Mahoney, welcomed Kennedy at the door. Kennedy slipped into pew No. 91 and sat beside a small girl.

Li his sermon Msgr. O'Mahoney drew a parallel between the 43-year-old Kennedy and Biblical King Solomon, storied as one of the wisest of monarchs. HONDUIAS tram is. WAIIMALA' HONDURAS NtCAIAGUA, ion tot' COSTA CAM Pacific Ocmmi aoo M.Ut CENTERS OF UNREST Guatemala, Nicaragua Hit Nicaraguan Troops Rout Guerrillas MANAGUA. Nov.

14 (UPD Tank-supported Nicaraguan troops thrast toward the Costa Rican bolder today on the heels of guerrillas wearing the green fatigue uniforms of Fidel Castro's Cuba who invaded souUiwestern Nicaragua Friday. The rebels already had been driven out of the pan-American highway cities of Diiiamba and Jicotepe, initial targets of their attack. They were reported fleeing in small groups toward the border, where they faced the prospect of death or capture at the hands of aroused Costa Rican OXE BAND of about 14 rebels had seized the Christian Broth- ers' school outside Dirlamba. where they were holding 200 schoolchildren and two army officers as hostages in an attempt to force the government to grant them free passage to safety. Managua's Roman Catholic Archbishop a or Carlos I I WATCHMAN DIES integration but Federal District and press cen-Judge J.

Skelly Wright qujcklyjs hip im-enjoined the entire -Legislature posed, from interfering with the eight-1 YdjKOras year-old battle to tiesegregate blamed the New Orleans schools. a 1 1 ted THE LEGISLATURE, wlthcoup lovv-leaders of Gov. Jimmie H. Davis) a in cnmnlptA rnnfm! hart ramnnwl arniy Officers. Janitor Saved By Air in Spare NEW YORK, Nov.

14 (iP) How many persons would have Ferdinand Stoj's presence of mind if they were locked up as he was in an airless auto trunk for six through resolutions which seized the New Orleans achool system, authorized sergeants-at-a rnti hired to put at schools to prevent integration, dismissed the New Orleans school superintendent and school board attorney, and declared today a school holiday. TWh h. set 9:30 a.m. to reconvene, either to await developments or recess until noon tomorrow when the cun-ent 12-special session ends. DAVIS HAS called a 30-day special session to convene to morrow.

It is expected to recess immediately and be ready on a standby basis for whatever happens. Demonstrators packed the Lee Man asking directions, startling answerer by another question, "What do you mean, NEW court-house?" Early riser, complaining I to wife about hair cream he had been using for weeks, learning with a shock it't hand lotion. hours The quick-thinking Stoj sur vived the ordeal by taking advantage of a ready supply of air: he simply opened the valve of a spare tire from time to time. A night watchman locked up inside another auto trunk at the same time as Stoj wasn't as lucky. He suffocated.

6TOJ, 38, a janitor In the Argonaut building in midtown Manhat tan, told police that a trio of gunmen forced him into the trunk of a new car parked In a showroom in the building. Then they threw the night 'watchman, Patrick Holland, 50. of Lindenhurst. N. into another car trunk.

The thieves then made of with J10 from an office afe tire air. A relief night watchman heard him when he arrived early yesterday. He released Stoj. But it was too late for Holland. Today's Chuckle An employer Interviewing an applicant remarked: "You ask high wages for a man with no experience." "Well," the man replied, "Iff so much harder to work when you don't know anything about it." dent Richard M.

Nixon. The session may deal with possible appointment of some Republicans to key positions in the new administration. The youthful President-elect holding only a 271.817 popular vote margin, took the initiative in arranging Uie meeting with Nixon at Key Biscayne in the Miami outskirts, where the vice president is vacationing. Nixon promptly agreed. (WITH 1,163 voting units still out, counting of absentee ballots under way and recounts contem plated in some areas, Kennedy had 33.698,794 votes and Nixon 33,426,977.

(This gave Kennedy 50.2 per cent of the popular and Nixon 49.8. (In the electoral vote count, Kennedy was assured of 300 votes and Nixon 185. In addition, Kennedy sUll led in the race for California's 32 electoral votes. With absentee ballots being counted, he had a margin of 37,140. (Nixon led in Alaska by 514 votes with 50 precincts still out and in Hawaii by 91 votes with another recount likely.

Each state has three electoral votes.) PLANS FOR THE Kennedy-Nixon session were disclosed yesterday as Kennedy lined up a busy, week of conferences with possible appointees to his cabinetand amid reports that he already has decided at least tentatively to pick up Democratic Gov. LuUier Hodges of North Carolina as secretary of commerce. Hodges was a staunch Kennedy supporter during the campaign. Salinger said one of the purposes of today's late morning meeting was to provide Kennedy with an opportunity "to congratulate the vice president on the campaign he conducted." The President-elect also wants "to resume the cordial relations Ohio Girl, 14, Kidnaped, Found Slain PAULDING, Nov. 14 A 14-year-old girl, walking home with her 4-year-old sister, was abducted last night by a man who pulled her into his car and sped off.

The teenager's body was found about 2:30 a. m. today by two hunters in a woods 8 miles norm- east of here. THE PAULDING county islature yesterday. The segrega- Zacnpa, 70 miles northeast.

Mili-tionists waved Confederate flags 'tary garrisons at these two cities Borge was trying to arrange the nol tnwesf of Vientiane, the coun-release of the children. jtr'g administrative capital. Loyal troops were mopping up' The military garrison at Luang similar small bands in theiPrabanS tro Sou van-coffee-belt area of Carazo. government to the government said two rebels were right-wing rebelsideof Gen. sheriffs office and the Ohio mgn- DURING his long siege in the way patrol said it appeared the stifling, compartment Stoj tried girl had been raped and thenjto force open the trunk lid with murdered.

ja tire Jack, and every now and Drnuiv Sheriff Frank he would take a whiff of I ii. iM-: wtA nn thd nhna Leaders of the revolt, which lasted about 30 hours before it was crushed by troops loyal to Diem, were Col. Nguyen Chanh Thi and Col. Vuong Van Dong, commanders of a paratroop brigade. THEY LAUNCHED their in-surrection Friday morning and for a time it appeared they would take over the capital but Diem's troops moved quickly and it was all over by Saturday afternoon.

Far from weakening Diem's control over South Vietnam, the quick failure of the revolt appeared to strengthen his posit ion and served notice on other units not to try it. Premier Orders Capital Kclakcn VIENTIANE. Laos. Nov. li premier Prince Souvanna Phouma said today he' has or dered the recapture of the royal capital of Luang Prabang.

"I cannot tell you what military leaders are planning, but the situation in the north is well in hand. We are taking steps to retake Luan Prabang," Souvanna told newsmen. The royal capital is 130 miles Phoumi Nosavan Friday. Souvanna said the defection posed "no direct threat" to Vientiane. "In any event we have taken all necessary measures for the defense of Vientiane," he said.

Souvanna said he has received no reply so far from Phoumi to a letter dispatched Saturday su. gesting a negotiated settlement of the Luang Prabang and other differences. The National a em 1 appointed a committee to negotiate with Phoumi and asked him tj set a place and time for the nc gotiations. Illness were taken and an accessed tooth discovered. A dentist pulled it and her fever went down.

Miss Ta yior's studio, 20th Century-Fox, Is far behind schedule on the epic "Cleopatra" in which the ac tress plays the vamp of the Nile for a million dollars and a percentage of profits. RO FAR, however, not a sin gle foot of the film contains Uie shapely image of Eliabetti Taylor and she arrived here on Sept. 8. In the actress' absence the studio has been doing what it could without the leading lady. As the ambulance sped the hospital, a doctor gave Miss Taylor an injection.

Fisher sat at her side holding her hand and stroking her forehead. Out they arrived, he took a nwtrt next to hit wife. crushed. A state of siege modified martial law was proclaimed in 1 the mountainous Central Amcri can republic i IIe V1 uprising with unrest in Nicaragua and Costa Rica within the last 24 hours and indicated he felt Cuba was behind the plot. In Havana Fidel Castro's gov ernment denied it had middled in the affairs of the Central niiRi iwaii tuuiiu it's.

THE 61 YEAR OLD Ydigoras predicted the last of the rebels would be wiped out today. An army force of 3,000 and bombers carrying paratroopers were attacking the rebel concentrations at Puerto Barrios, on the Atlantic coast 130 miles northeast of the capital, and reportedly were taken over yes- terday by 'rebels pretending to be reinforcements loyal to the government. AT PUERTO BARRIOS the commander. Col. Rodolfo Gonzales Centeno, and two other officers were killed.

The commander of the Zacapa garrison, Col. Ramon Gonzalez, escaped and fled to the capital to spread the alarm. A government communique said bombers of the air force, which remained loyal, destroyed the runways at Puerto Barrios to prevent any attempt at "reinforcements for the rebel move ment that might be flown in from Cuba," a haven for many Guatemalan exiles. Within a few hours after the revolt broke out yesterday claimed that all but 300 of the rebels, including most of the Instigators, had been captured. He imposed a 30-day state of seige.

ELIZABETH TAYLOR Us Awful' Ydigoras I with the vice president which existed between them during their 14 years together, in Congress," Salinger added. Kennedy has left open the possibility of his asking Nixon to take a position in the new administration. But aides said they felt sure there would be no such offer. They expressed doubt that Nixon would accept anyway. KENNEDY WILL LUNCH tomorrow with Gov, Abraham Ribicoff of Connscticut, a principal campaign adviser.

Wednes day the President-elect flies to the ranch of Lyndon B. Jolinson for conferences through Thursday and Saturday morning. Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, former secretary of the Air Force, will report to Kennedy on proposals for reorganizing the Defense department. A long-time associate of Adlai Stevenson.

Washington attorney John Sharon, last night delivered to Kenedy a Stevenson report on what Salinger called probable trouble areas in the International field. Stevenson started the study more than two months ago at Kennedy's request. YESTERDAY Kennedy motored with a Secret Service escort to St. Edward's church for 10 a.m. mass one added to the regular Sunday schedule just for him.

Between 300 and 400 other parish-oners also attended. Word of the special arrangement apparently leaked out and a crowd was on hand in front of the church, which the Kennedys have attended for years when vis iting Palm Beach. Kennedy was nearly mobbed as he left after church. Salingpr announced that Kennedy would continue to follow a policy of making no advance pub lic disclgsure of where and when he will go to mass on Sundays. He regards hjs worship as a pri vate affair, Salinger added.

Manners and Morals 19 Obituary Notices 29 Tenple 27 Radio 37 Ralph McGill 16 Roz Young 22 Sports 12-15 Star Gazer 37 Television 37 Women's Paces 22-26 Itione News Tips to City Editor EA-'11. I IN VNIlELlEVAttLE PAIN and waved signs: "Nix on mix ing." Their opponents carried i banners reading: "Don't call; time out for education" and "Pleased-keep our schools open." ADMINISTRATION and segregation leaders said an interposition suit would be filed in New Orleans, placing the sovereignty of Louisiana between the federal courts and the New Orleaas school system. 3,500 Nurses, Aides Strike Day in Tokyo TOKYO. Nov. 14UPi-Som 3,500 Tokyo nurses and medical attendants launched the third of a series of one-day strikes today for a minimum monthly wage of 10,000 yen The strike by the Tokyo Federation of Medical Workers hit 20 hospitals and threatened to cur tail treatment of 12,000 in-and out-patients.

gitis could be behind her new troubles." The upokesman added that there was nothing official to back up that speculation. He said "a terrible headache causing almost unbelievable pain" led to her return to the hospital. Eddie Fisher summoned a physician from the United States today to consult with Bntih doctors on his wife's sudden new attack. FISHER SUD telephoned her own physician. Dr.

Rex Kenemer of Los Angeles, who will' fly In "It hit her a little before 9 o'clock last night." said the movleman," and the headsch wan so awful that it alarmed everyone Includinz her doctors." Weeping and clutching her head, tlm Tsylor was earned Elizabeth Taylor Felled known to have been killed and it least two others captured. PRESIDENTIAL press secre tary Guillermo Lang said an un i i si-ini-n numoer oi loyai soldiers and civilians in Diriamba were brutally murdered" by th? rebels, and that government troops suffered "heavy losses" In their counterattack on what he called Castro mercenaries." Lang described the government's suspension of civil liberties and proclamation of martial law as "precautionary measures," saying they did not indicate any serious doubt of popular support against the rebels. by New from her hotel on a slretcher and rushed to the hospital In an ambulance. The spokesman said her personal physician, Dr. Carl Goldman and one of Queen Elizabeth IPs doctors, Lord Evans, were "worried and puzzled." FOR WEEKS the actress had been reported suffering from a mystery vims that brought on high temperatures In Uie afternoon.

Unable to diagnose the caue of the fever at her penthouse apartment in a London hotel, the doctors ordered her into the London clinic on Oct. 30, They made several tcts on her and she was allowed to leave the clinic three days after being admitted. The fever still persisted, however. Then l-it week complained of a seveie tooOi aihe. Red China Greatest Threat To Peace, Bowles' View Kep.

Chester F.owles, who may be the next secretary of state, says Red China may be greatest threat to world peace in 60s. Page 7. CHICAGO REPUBLICAN leader charges Democratic machine stole Illinois' 27 electoral votes. Count of absentee votes starts today in California. Page 3.

PRESIDENT ELECT KENNEDY to push forward with ideas imparted during campaign, Ralph McGill, Page 16. MISSISSIPPI CONGRESSMAN faces purge from House Rules committee to break legislative bottleneck for President-elect Kennedy. Page 20. THOSE VOTERS who went against President-elect Kennedy are unenlightened, Eleanor Roosevelt says on Page 23. UT AS A FIDDLE President Eisenhower to be host at 61th birthday party for Mamie tonight.

Page 16. BALTIMORE COLTS' season-long drill pays off In last minute come-frora-behind victory over Chicago Bears, Si Eurick reports. Page 12. OTHER FEATURES LV TODAY'S NEHSt said the girl was identified as Nancy Eagleson of Paulding. Kir! The identity of the man was not known.

Shipman said the teenager's sister ran into the home of a neighbor there and told about the kidnap. The neighbor telephoned for police. THE VAN WERT office of the state patrol said that four of Its cars were sent to the scene by request from Paulding county. The patrol said that two hunters. Joseph C.

AvFrarice. 38. RR 1, Paulding, and Kenneth W. Nel son. 43, Paulding, found the body while hunting for racoons.

The body was found Just off county road 176. The sheriff's office said that no official report on the cause of death had been made by the coroner nor Was it positively determined if the girl had been criminally assaulted. Paulding county is located In northwestern Ohio on the Ohio- Indiana line. Red Flannels Take Holiday It's "Indian Summerish" type weather, and the forecaster promises that mild temperatures will stay with us at least through Wednesday. Warm, southerly winds are blowing across the Dayton srea.

bringing temperatuies up to an expected high of today and 61 tomorrow. To-nitfit's low is forecast at 30. That'f 15 degrees or more above the sverasre for this time oi the year, Skies wilJ continue partly cloudy. LONDON. Nov.

14 t.Tl -Elizabeth Taylor's new illness which ambulance attendants said had the characteristics of meningitis east doubts today over the future of the star and the picture she's In London to make. "We sre expecting something from the doctors before the end of the day." said a studio spokesman, "and until then it's reckless to speculate on what has sent her to the hospital again." Asked about the report that the beautiful 2S-year-old actress may be suffering from meningitis, the spokesman said: "THIS IS A VERY round-ahmit rumor. We have been told that a couple of attendants on the ambulance that tk her to the hospital said that from the way she wsa writhmj and moaning menin Amusements 27 Ask and Answer 26 Business News 23 Camera News 16 Classified 29-33 Comics 3G. 37 CroMword Puzlc 27 Dear Abby 25 PeaUiK, Funeral 11 Dr. Alvarez Says 34 Drew Pearon r.dilm-ials Eleanor Roosevelt 21 .0.

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