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   Palladium-Times (Newspaper) - November 30, 1960, Oswego, New York                                LOCAL HIGHLIGHTS Oswego Escapes Brunt of Winter's First Storm Pg 3 Possible Contest Looms for Democratic Election Post Pg 4 THE WEATHER Snow and continued cold tonight and At noon 36 VOL 282 WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 30 nm At DAILY PRICE SEVER Waves Batter Freighter Stuck On Lake Michigan TRAVERSE CITY Mich AP A Liberian freighter lay grounded and leaking on a Lake gan island today battered by gale winds and waves which hampered Coast Guard rescue efforts The Francisco Morazan ran aground off the shore of South Manitou Island during a gale Tuesday night At that time the captain Eduardo told the Coast Guard there were 15 men and a woman aboard Later he told a reporter on ship-to-shore telephone there were only 14 persons aboard first said there is leakage in the double but later in the morning re- ported his condition worsening with water in all holds three and half feet deep in some places Visibility improved as the day fore on but the wind and sea remained high The Coast Guard flew a plane over the scene and sent two helicopters to the island to stand by The Coast Guard cutter quite set out from Sturgeon Bay Wis Tuesday night She arrived in the area early day but was unable to render immediate assistance Two other cutters the inaw out of Cheboygan Mich and the Sundew out of Mich headed for the area The captain of the ocean-going freighter blamed the mishap on a storm which cut visibility to zero and high winds He said the two combined to drift him onto the rocks Commander W E Chapline of the Coast Guard Air tion at Traverse City said the vessel was aground some 300 to 500 feet off the island's corner Iving almost parallel to the shoreline in 14 feet of water He said she was pounding slightly South Manitou Island is eight miles northwest of Glen Haven Mich the of the Leelanau sula in northwest Lower gan Report Lumumba Safely Out Of Mobutu's Reach LEOPOLDVILLE the Congo trice Lumumba today ported to have reached ly territory some 400 miles east of the capital well out ot Col Joseph Mobutu's reach Some sources said he abandoned his plan to so to Stanleyville and ing instead toward another of nil political strongholds Dourg capital ot Kasai vince Countless swept through the capital Lumumba's flight one that he had been arrested after an automobile accident near Kikwit and was under a military guard This report was not ed by any responsible source Friends of the leaning former premier said he was last definitely reported at Idiofa a village in the Kwilu area of eastern Province by the continuing his overland nev toward Luluabourg Idiofa is 50 miles beyond Kikwit in the heart of the Bambala tribal area of Provincial President Cleophas one of Lumumba's supporters It is more than from to Luluabourg Schoolteacher Eyewitness To Train Bus Crash LAMONT Alta teacher Lois Stefura was ing her car behind the Lamont school bus Tuesday as it ed off a highway and headed for a grade crossing I If he doesn't stop the tram will hit the she said But I saw he stopped and I thought everything was all right When I looked again the bus was pulling out onto the tiacks The train horn was blowing so loudly I thought must hear it The next instant everything seemed to fly up Books and bodies I thought everyone must be dead Then I saw a boy move What Mrs Stefura had watched was a Canadian tional freight train tearing into the packed cle killing 16 teen-age pupils and injuring 25 others and the bus driver Fourteen of the 16 dead were girls Many of Mrs Stefura s own pupils were on the bus The youngest of the dead was 15 the oldest 18 The bus usually carried 44 missed it Tuesday its daily trip trom man 10 miles southeast of this central Alberta town oi 600 residents Lamont is 45 miles northeast ot Edmonton the provincial capital It was a lew degrees below zero and bus windows were but the air was crisp and clear as driver Frank nev 31 took his bus up the short snow-covered grade to the tracks The view is un- obstructed in each Some believe Budney may have been blinded by the sun The sun and the tram to his right Hospital authorities would not allow an interview uith Budnev Blizzard Blankets Buffalo With Snow Drifts 3 Feet Deep Argentina Rightists Revolt RIOTING IN CARACAS Bonfires set by rioters against Venezuelan ment burn in streets of Caracas during weekend fighting which moved dent Romulo Betancourt to call out army Nov 28 to put down the tions AP Wirephoto Court Ignores Demonstrators Sweeps Aside Louisana Integration Barriers NEW ORLEANS between state and federal the State Legislature to federal j had been j vent them from T i Another bv the state asked j calling demonstrations for n These individuals had been pre- m- today swept aside every barrier to school integration and enjoined nearly all Louisiana officials from interfering The read the opinion is clear that inter- position is not a constitutional doctrine Interposition is a theory by which a state puts its between the federal and the people of the state And tion permanently The judges Though we be persuaded of the school good faith there can be no question of delating still further the enjoyment of a con- right which uas solemnly pronounced by the Supreme Court of the United States more than six years ago Sitting on the tribunal were Chief Judge Richard T Rives later Without WANTS POISON LABEL ON CIGARETTES ALBANY A legislator suggests that every pack of cigarettes be labeled with a skull and crossbones and a warning that persons smoke at their own risk Assemblyman Sidney A Asch said Tuesday that warnings should be issued pending the outcome of tests to determine whether cigarette smoking had a bearing on cer He submitted a measure to that effect for the 1961 lature A similar proposal failed last year JAPAN ROMANIA SIGN TRADE PACT TOKYO Japan and Ro- mania today signed a trade and payments agreement aimed at lifting their almost ent commerce to million in Hie first year Japan already has trade agreements with the Soviet Union Poland and Czechoslovakia What's Inside 1 Bridge 6 FuMon 14 Editorial 0 Obituary 20 Comics 19 II Market 4 Soviets Ready UN Assault At Hammarskjold UNITED NATIONS UP The Soviet Union whetted its ax today for a full-scale sault on Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold and his role m the Congo The Soviets made clear they will try to make jold the scapegoat for the U financial plight as debate on the cost of the U N Congo operation went into its second day before the budgetary com- The Soviet Union has called for an end to the vast tion in the Congo declaring that Hammarskjold brought the United Nations to the brink of bankruptcy in order to pay for it Hammarskjold has warned that the whole Congo tion may have to be scrapped unless the General gets the member states to foot the quickly The Soviets insist that the payments are not mandatory because the cost of the Congo operation is not included in the regular U N budget support of the interposition act the rest of the segregation package passed by the lature falls of its own weight Further the tribunal ed out what it called a series of measures which purport to abolish the Orleans Parish School Board State Rep John Garrett of Claiborne Parish in the ana Delta country in northeast Louisiana where segregation sentiment runs high said the Legislature would continue to fight despite the decision Gov Jimmie H Davis de- immediate comment State Sen French Jordan of Gretna across the Mississippi River from New Orleans ob- I don't know what we are fixing to do but we are fixing to do something of the Fifth U S Circuit Court of Appeals Dist Judge Herbert W Chris ten berry and U.S Dist Judge J Skelly Wright Judge Wright issued the integration order and set Nov 14 as the final tive date to comply with it In its sleeping decision the judges issued temporary in- junctions against Gov Davis a number of state officials and under a similar temporary re- straining order The women demonstrators in front of Foreman's home crowded into an adjoining yard under police pressure and soon dispersed A bit later they went to the home of Airs James Gabrielle a white er whose daughter also ed William Frantz School day Mrs Gabrielle became in- censed under the shouting and insults and banged one strator over the head with her pocketbook The continuing boycott of William Frantz and McDonogh No 19 schools held firm at Tuesday level news observers believed Four white girls and one Negro girl attended liam Frantz Tuesday gro girls and no white students attended McDonogh BUENOS AIRES Argentina rightist revolt broke out in them Argentina day shortly atter a similar rising was reported crushed by the near Buenos Aires fiom Salta in the north a 01 aimed civilians oil tions m two towns of Salta These accounts said lans also took over the state oil monopoly in the two towns Tartagal and Salta is a sugar and oil producing vince adjoining the Bolivian and Chilean Earlier in the day civilian follower b ot ousted Dictator an D tried to seize the banacks in Rosano near tins capital but were routed by atter four hours ot fighting the inent announced Unofficial reports said 10 persons were killed and 50 wounded at Romano ad- vices said about 25 civilians were arrested There were no estimates of casualties in the outbreak to the north The government said the rising in the north was similar to the one put down at Rosano This indicated that also were involved there In both cases the uprising was staged by armed civilians Insurgents in the north cut railway tracks and telephone lines first reports from Salta said The army declared the rising at Rosano had been Gen Carlos commander in chief baid m a communique that 40 well-armed men at- tacked an infantry barracks at Rosario Earlier re poi ts put the number ot at- at about 150 Among the was Julio Barredo a colonel who was an aide to Gen Humberto Sosa Molina Peron b minister of wai the communique The army chiei said the Ro- revolt was earned out by a totalitarian subversive called Peronismo The newspaper Diario de la Manana in Rosano tied the theie directly with the in the north The newspaper said an gent boasted to one ol its re- porters by telephone that the rebels had connections in a number of Argentine cities in- Tartagal one ot the northern cities m the uprising Unofficial accounts said some noncommissioned ed the insurgents at Rosario DAIRY EXPORTS DROP WASHINGTON m U S dairy product exports dropped sharply during 1959 due ly to the removal of cheese from the surplus food ments sent overseas On a butterfat equivalent basis dairy exports totaled 1.2 billion pounds in 1959 compared with 2.9 billion pounds in 1958 Total value of 1959 dairy exports was at million down 33 per cent from the year Face Hostile Crowd Walk To School Longest In World For Minister Child NEW ORLEANS La AP The block and a half the Rev Lloyd Foreman has to go with his I'm going to be for Our old daughter Pamela to integrated William Frantz World News at a Glance NAGOYA Japan AP U.S Ambassador Douglas MacArthur II said today ties between Japan and the United States are stronger than ever He told the American Society many Japanese feel the need of ties with the United until the United tions can assure the security of Its Kennedy Holds Lead WASHINGTON UP though Republicans were the Nov 8 election results in some areas John F Kennedy held a margin of votes today over vice President Richard M Nixon Only 181 precincts ed among six states ed unreported in those ures based on official returns Irom 31 states and unofficial tabulations in the other 19 The totals at this point gave Kennedy votes and Nixon The tal for the two already passed 68 million votes to a new record Republicans were charging that in some precincts in as and Illinois more votes were tabulated than the number of registered work is cut out for us Gen Jack Gremillion left the state capital hurriedly for New Orleans While the court made public around his daughter its decision angry housewives and mothers thronged outside the home of a white Methodist minister whose daughter continues to attend one of the two integrated school is for them the longest walk in the world For seven days women have hurled abuse at Fore- man as he walked past screaming crowds with his arm Schools William Frantz mentary The women jeered and ed but the Rev Llojd Foreman had spirited his ter into her kindergarten class by the back door Foreman was target of lar demonstrations Tuesday when he took his daughter to school by the tront door The three judges had been asked to rule on two One by the Orleans Parish School Board asking suspension of integration until differences The demonstrators made their toughest show of strength Tuesday After a dozen women ed a human chain to block them and one grabbed Fore- man's jacket the minister We'll to re-evaluate the situation It's never been like this before Police wedged a path for Foreman and his daughter At noon he drove to the school's rear to escape the incensed crowd Pamela was one of four white children who attended Frantz Tuesday with one Negro grader Inside Foreman's modest one- story frame house his wife wept as she saw him re- Sir Winston 86 Today Gets Huge Brandy Cake LONDON AP The seemingly indestructible Sir Winston Churchill celebrated his birthday today with a cake soaked in his favorite brandy Habitually a late sleeper he had the lights on early in his bedroom There was good reason for a parade of postmen messengers and de- livery boys began ringing his doorbell as early as a m First to pull up before his London home was a uniformed messenger carrying a heavy load of birthday tele- grams many from the United States A member of his household said a greeting from President Eisenhower was among the thousands pouring m from all over the world First indications that this would be a for Sir Winston is still tors may hope for a quiet day he'll probably do something outrageously be- fore the day is over Said one of his Now take that cake for instance it's been soaked with a bottle of brandy and he'll not only cut it but eat some of it Brandy is one of Sir favorite beverages and at his age he drinks it along smoking good cigars Around the huge and cake the mail and presents piled up They included greetings Irom crating from a broken bono in Queen Elizabeth II Prime his back suffered in a fall 15 days ago But people who know him best said that while his ister Macmillan the heads of foreign states and from the humblest in this and other lands turn with yelling women de- trailing him She had received crank calls all morning They sat in the small living room talking it over Think of what the child has to go Mrs Foreman said Mrs Foreman is a slender pretty brunette born in andria La Her two jounger children played at her feet I don't think it's disturbed Foreman said She wants to go to school Foreman a dark-haired featured man who is pastor of two Methodist churches here was born m La When Pamela started Foreman said I thought we could do this quietly Now I don't know I don't know what to think Except that I'm convinced this segment is not representative of the city of New Orleans My congregation has been wonderful about Fore- man said They are not in cord But they have accepted my decision as a personal one PARIS AP President Charles de Gaulle will go to Algeria to explain his plans for the rebellious on Dec 9 it as announced today after a Cabinet meeting The Cabinet did not set a firm date for the national referendum on De Gaulle's policy of giving Algeria self- government but agreed to do so at next week's ing Information Minister Louis Terrenoire said ever that Jan 8 was the most likely date LONDON AP Handley Page Britain's oldest aircraft building firm issued a statement today denying it has received a million offer from an American corporation for enough stock to control the British com- pany The statement issued at Handley Page's London headquarters said that it has been engaging in tions with an American company on many matters but these do not include the sale of the company to can interests 230 LOSE LIVES IN ACCIDENTS ALBANY Traffic in state claimed 230 lives in October the worst ord for the month since when the toll was 275 the State Motor Vehicle Bureau said today The increase was ed in Upstate urban areas the bureau said Compared with October 1959 when 185 persons uere killed in traffic accidents fatalities in October 1960 increased 12 per cent in Upstate urban areas decreased 15 per cent in York City and decreased 6 per cent in rural areas of the state Highway accidents in the first 10 months of this year counted for deaths com- pared with in the 1959 period March on Muscular Dystrophy Thursday Night SUPPORT IN A woman pedestrian finds it necessary to ding to a traffic signal post for port against winds that reached 72 miles an hour in the season's first snowstorm Nov 28 in Duluth Minn The snow stalled traffic while winds knocked down And BUFFALO blustery storm that dumped up to 18 inches of snow and drifts three and one-half feet deep in Buffalo and its suburbs blew into other sections of western New York The said another 12 inches or more expected in some areas The storm which blanketed and of northern Ene County and southern 1 tions oi Oilcans and night spread today into qua Cattaraugus and Allegany counties The storm a mile strip along Lake Erie in a direction ing the night then shifted to a southwesterly course today Snow plows were slowed by cais and trucks which spun to a stop across the wet clogged streets Most ot the imam arteries in Buffalo weie open by but many side streets were still blocked Speed Limit Cut The speed limit on the wav was cut to 35 miles an hour from the Pennsylvania state line to Rochester State Police said visibility was ed and the superhighway was slippery in most of that tion The Thruway's Niagara section was limited to one-way traffic No snow was reported in Rochester or other parts of Monroe County Only a trace of snow fell in Buffalo's south and west sides before and the usually spots of the area Orchard Park and other suburbs escaped the storm's full force Police in the town of herst north of Buffalo re- ported 18 inches of snow on Route 5 and said that drifting was piling snow to three and one-half ft depths State way 324 in the town was closed along a two-mile stretch because of the stalled vehicles Police in other towns and villages in the path of storm said was near a standstill Secondary roads were closed The magara sheriff department said northern tions of the county were ting only a trace of snow But we're getting it a deputy sheriff said In fact we just had to send out a tow truck for one of our trol cars Air traffic was not ately affected since few flights were scheduled during early morning hours Runways at the airport were under con- stant plowing Bus schedules were delayed out of Buffalo by as much as 90 minutes but rail service was running on time Cars Stalled In northern Buffalo several hundred cars were stalled Cabs stopped taking calls for service Buffalo and its environs had the snows all to itself much of night as winds of gale velocity rocketed the storm m from Lake Ontario Skidding temperatures were scheduled to precede the storm over much of the Upstate area The high winds that the area be- to have caused the col- lapse ol a brick wall at a con- struction site m downtown One person was killed and four were injured when an estimated 27 tons of debris cascaded through the roof of an adjacent building The U S Coast Guard tion here measured winds up to 55 miles an hour during the Temperatures plummeted over 30 decrees in Buffalo Tuesday A high of 62 degrees lor ne date was re- m the By tne mercury had gelow the mark The high for the date uas bO set in 1927 New Yoik City had its weather problems Tuesday too but of a milder nature The city was blanketed in a heavy fog highway and air travel A State Island feiry ed with a Norwegian tanker but to return to terminal One poison waj m- storm was exported to alleviate a low water level in rural sections of Western and Central New York Yesterday Prof Harry Kerr of the State College of culture at said the western half of the state wai drier than u was was last year lout were   

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