New Times-Union Series Hearst Panel Interviews T-U Special Section Wit and Wisdom of Good Pope John John Bailey Dean Burch U$lHMNi><&4*- Starts Today on Page A-4 See Page A 9 FINAL ~y NIDN EDITION Complete Week's Stock Transactions THE WEATHER m Cool, Mostly Cloudy (Map, Details on Page 2) Latest Sports 109TH YEAR—VOL 153—202 PACES^-V3 SECTIONS ALBANY, N. Y., S EPTEMBER 20. 1964 FR 25 CENTS Thousands Scream: W e Want Bobby Kennedy Jabs Hard At Goldwater Here Kennedy Quits Rights Fight, By BILL O'BRIEN Times-Union Staff Writer Says Keating Mobbed by hysterical, trampling crowds that numbered in the thousands at every turn, Robert F. Kennedy yesterday jabbed hard at Barry Goldwater and returned to the scene of one his late brother's political campaign triumphs. Standing on the steps of the Capitol before 3,000 persons who screamed "we want Bobby" so often it became a chant, Mr. Kennedy recalled his brother stood in the same place four years ago. He told the crowd, dominated by screaming teenage girls, that Senator Goldwater's statements have been "irresponsible By VIC OSTROWIDZKI . Times-Union Staff Writer Helicopter hopping Republican Senator Kenneth Keating yesterday charged Robert F. Kennedy has deserted the fight tor civil rights. Senator Keating, touring Schenectady, Rensselaer, Saratoga and Washington Counties, said he has "played a leading role in the effect to advance racial justice and harmony not for John Maguire describes potential death in Kennedy crowds on Page C-l. Other Kennedy photos on Pages C-l, C-ll. . . . and we can't have someone as President who doesn't know the awesome dangers of nuclear power." See Pictures of Senator HeatHe didn't mention his opponent, Republican Senator Kening's Schenectady visit on neth Keating by name, but at every opportunity along the tour, Page C-7. Mr. Kennedy said: "I'm for Lyndon Johnson and against Barry Goldwater. No other candidate for the Senate in Ne„w York just two or three years, but for has said that." Senator Keating has refused to endorse SenIS years— a struggle the former ator Goldwater, but said he wouldn't vote for President John' attorney general has deserted." son. Surging Crowd Follows The senator was met by a meager 25 persons at SchenectaThe surging crowds pursued the entire tour, from the time dy County Airport yesterday he arrived at Albany County Airport in his plane, "Caroline" afternoon. An aide to the counto Westgate Shopping Center and at the Capitol. ty GOP organization explained -Sitting up on the back of a convertible in the motorc "we weren't trying for a big Mr. Kennedy was greeted by thousands of persons who lined crowd here." Central Avenue in Colonie and Albany. He flew in a helicopter to the They would dart into the street in front of cars to shake Tirrm-Union Photo CAPITOL PARK AS ROBERT KENNEDY CAMPAIGNS IN ALBANY MOB SCENE See KEATING, Page A-5 his hand. They held babies in their arms as they dashed alongside the motorcade. The persistent teenage girls at Albany County Airport' squealed: 'I touched him, I touched him. Oh, Bobby, I love you." Airport Fence Broken The wire fence at the airport was broken through three times as Mr. Kennedy went down the line shaking hands and signing his autograph to books,, papers, magazines and even one confirmation picture. Washington, Sept. t% (UPI)—[torpedo boat bases on the] further on the fray appeared to ly opened fire and the appnehIt was the same at Westgate. Standing up in the convertiTHE SUPREME COURT has had ten stormy years since Defense Secretary Robert S.'North Vietnamese coast last have been caused by difficulty ing craft disappeared without ble, Mr. Kennedy had to be held by his belt by two security the famous school desegregation decision, but Earl Warren in determining exactly what closing sufficiently to open fire men. Arms flailed upward, grabbing for him like hungry fish still presides over it, in silence and serenity. And the storm McNamara confirmed today!Aug. 5. happened. The incident ocPresident Satisfied on the destroyers. The destroy- leaping above water. signals are still flying as the court, recently concluding a mo- that two U.S. destroyers fired curred in bad weather at night, The President, who received Jle lost two cufflinks, hands pulled at his pants and tie and mentous session, opens a new term Oct. S and prepares to on four threatening but unidentwith visibility near zero. Reli- ers are continuing their patrols a full report of the latest inhe cut his right hand on airport fence. grapple with civil rights issues. Page B-3 ified vessels Friday in the Gulf able sources said, however, in the international waters in His aides tried to discourage Mr. Kennedy from going into that communications was no ;he Gulf of Tompkin and U.S. GREAT SEA BATTLE of World War I was fought at Jut- of Tonkin. the crowd in Capitol Park. He first walked" down the line of Communist China Accuses problem. air and sea forces remain prP barricades in front of the crowd and it took the heft of several land. Why didn't the British navy wipe the German high seas The fog-shrouded nighttime U.S. of Acts of War. Received Reports' , . fleet right off the map? An editor of American Heritage's His- incident 42 miles off the Compared to respond immediately policemen to keep the heavy stanchions from toppling. ' , Page A-2 tory of World I explores the human elements that led to the munist North Vietnamese coast Secretary McNamara's state- to any attack." 'We Want Bobby' disputed outcome, Page B-l ended when the approaching cident this morning, was de- ment said: Shuns Speculation As Mr. Kennedy turned to climb the stone steps and ride HILLSDALE, in Columbia County, is like many quiet vessels disappeared from the scribed as satisfied with the "Yesterday we received reL o the DeWitt Clinton Hotel, {he high pitched screams of "We towns; it is experiencing growing pains. The community seems destroyers' radar screens, he destroyers' action. It was said ports from the commander-in- The Pentagon r e f u s e d to want Bobby" began. chief of the Pacific Fleet that speculate w h e t h e r the apto be of two minds on how to deal with the unexpected change. said. The marauders never got He turned back, then went into the crowd. He was enthat future U. S. patrols in the a nighttime incident was ocAlien Fasoldt reports on both sides of the question. Page C-l proaching vessels were Sovietgulfed so quickly his security guards and police had to battle close enough to attack the gulf will continue under his curring in international waters built North Vietnamese PT to get through and provide protection. ALBANY'S FACE is rapidly changing. The South Mail pro- American warships, he added. earlier orders to fire on ap- in the Gulf of Tonkin. boats. These were the type that It was a milling, wild crowd in Capitol Park. Women of ject, the new State University campus and new highways are McNamara's announcement proaching vessels with appar- "Cincpac reports that two attacked U.S. destroyers on all ages elbowed, shoved and rammed their way through. Ma% United States destroyers on a quickly taking shape. Bemie Kolenberg's aerial photos provide came 22 hours after he made ent hostile intent. Aug. 2 and 4. Officials said only tried to kiss him, touch his arm or grab hi* hand. Diane a bird's-eye view of what's going on. Page H-l his first formal announcement Mr. Johnson,"the sources said, routine patrol 42 miles from that they were "unidentified." Cowan, 15, grabbpd Mr. Kennedy, put both arms around his of the affair. He read a brief is determined to maintain the land in the Gulf of Tonkin were The investigation that Mr. SEE THOUSANDS, Page A-3 statement at the Pentagon dur- right of American vessels to menaced by four unidentified McNamara promised at midafing a one-minute news confer- sail the high seas. At the same vessels which, because of their ence. He refused to answer any time, he is determined to avoid dispositions, courses and speed, ternoon Friday presumably involved an air-sea reconnaisindicated hostile intent. questions. any reckless action that could "The destroyers, after chang- sance search of- the area at Sections His statement indicated that lead to a major war. dawn. the U.S. government, at least, It was added that he does not Lg course to minimize danger The search disclosed that the to themselves and after the unPuck, the Comic Weekly considered the incident closed. want to provoke an incident identified vessels continued to attacking vessels had disapAnd it appeared highly unlike- with the Communists. But he F—Classified close, fired warning rounds. In peared as the destroyers' radar A—Newt. Feature* ly that President Johnson would has ordered U.S. air and sea G—Builder* spite of these warning rounds, indicated. There was no word B—New*. Features order retaliatory action similar forces to shoot to kiU if, atH—Upstate Living the unidentified vessels con- here whether any wreckage or Washington, Sept. 19 (UPI)— and interrogations that served C—Metropolitan to naval air strikes against Red tacked. Whitney Section other evidence of the vessels The Warren Commission invest-'as the basis for the report. Mr. tinued to close. D—Sports, Shows, Historic Capitaland igating the assassination of Ford said these • would cornThe delay in reporting "The destroyers then proper- was found. Gardens, Financial Ward Section President John F; Kennedy will pris? a set of about 24 volumes E—Women submit its report to President; uf about 500 pages each. Columnists Johnson Monday, it was dis- The commission is composed H-10 Cathryn McCun* E- 1 closed today. of Justice Warren, Mr. Ford, Dr. Csrlyle Adams E- 7 Ralph McGill Deer Abby Representative Gerald Ford, House Democratic whip Hale H- 4 H- 4 Louells Parsons Charles Bartlett R-Miali., a member of the Boggs of Louisiana, Senators D-8 H- 5 Hsydn Sr Pearton William Buckley seven-man panel, said it would Richard Russell, D-Ga., and H- 5 H- 6 Sylvia Porter Dsn Button be up to Mr. Johnson to decidej John .Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., D-10 H- 4 Bob Conaidine Presidential adviser John J. when it will be made public. By WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST, JR. Eric Sevareid H-5 H- 2 Barnett Fowler McClo). and Allen W. Dulles White House sources have , Editor-in-Chief, The Hearst Newspapers Cairo, U. A. R., Sept. 1» (UPI) D-10 H-5 Sam Shulaky Pierre Hues former director of the Central indicated the date will be Sept. When the Hearst Newspapers came out this past Friday for Lyndon B. Johnson H- 4 —Cairo, which hasn't had a drop H - 5 Henry J. Taylor Kirtland I. King Intelligence Agency. 28 or Oct. 5. and,Hubert H. Humphrey, it was only after a great deal of thought and deliberation. E- 7 of rain for five months, fought C- 1 Dr. Van Dellen John Maguire Their major finding is exHeaded by Chief Justice Earl To paraphrase the time-honored cliche of convention orators, we were seeking a flood today pected to be that Ix>e Harvey Warren, the bi-partisan comto settle on The Men Who—that is, the candidates for the nation's Features In scattered areas around the OswaW. the accused assassin, mission has been conducting an two highest offices who, hr our opinion, are better fitted to lead E- 5 city, cari pfowed through streets H-9 Horoscope exhaustive study of the Nov. 22, acted as an individual and not Albany I Remember our country, and the free world, in this era of challenge and crisis. brimming with water, pedesH4 F1 Hy Rosen's Cartoon 1963, Dallas. Texas, assassina- as part of a conspiracy. It also Alone. Atrto*Row Our choice, for the most part, was based on the factors trians took off their shoes to go H6 is understood the commission D7 Letters Forum tion since December, 1983. Art of experience and performance, and we. think that in these artas wading and rats deserted base D8 M-7 Movie Clock f*4!^J0aUas nij2hu_ Books ^^.Vrt? • self will run to 700 pages. In club owner r; JarfT'TtiW^cW" Those factors, as a matter of fact, decided our endorsement E- 4 ground. CaoitaUnd Woftbeek D - n Pattern addition, the commission is alone when he shot and killed in 1980 of the team of Niroh-Lodge orer that of Kennedy-Johnson, E-6 H- 3 People in Particular The rain that caused the publishing all of the hearing Oswald at the Dallas jail. We .neither expressed animosity toward, ,nor deprecated JFK H- 4 People, Places, Things B- 4 floods fell last spring, more than Editorials or LB J. We regarded them as good and able Americans. I feel H- 2 3,000 miles from Cairo, in the E- 4 Philatelic Almanac Fashion exactly the same now about Barry M. Goldwater and William E. Playbill D-7 great forests of East Central Food and Frolic Miller. D- 6 Record Review D- 9 Africa. From swollen lakes and Gardens Another thing we gave more thought to this year was succession to the presiE- 7 Social Calendar E- 8 streams, the waters cascaded Golden Years dency, a contingency that all of us must consider however much we would prefer E4 into the fiver Nile, there to beTravel H-8 Gourmet Recipe Coupon on Page 2 not to. We decided, and again with no animus, that Senator Humphrey was better H- 3 gin their long surge north to the Home Hodernisatioa O !-• TV, Radio qualified. See EDITOR'S, Pag* All A- 2 sea. Horoscope R* * Westher Map This Sunday's McNamara Confirms U. S. Destroyers Special Features fired on 4 Vessels in Gulf of Tonkin Where to Find It Johnson to Receive Assassination Report Cairo Fights Flood After Drought Editor's Report Why We're for Johnson Sg Play Grid Gold Untitled Document Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com 1^*4- Rensselaer County Engulfs Late Franklin Square was mobbed. Estimates of the crowd ran By ANNE MONAHAN Many people had their day in the sun with Mr. Kerovedy. Times-Union Staff Writer Fred C. Casey, 85, a Rensselaer County -Democratic leader for between three and five thousand persons, the number of police The trip from Albany to Rensselaer County took the beam- 50 years, was helped out to the curb to greet Mr. Kennedv as along the route were hardly enough to contain the crowd. Mem ing candidate on a nerve-wracking ride down State Street hill bers of Mr. Kennedy's staff were thrown into the bread] to he passed. in Albany. keep the pushing, grabbing crowds back. Joseph Mangione, a locksmith, made a large gold KeV to Babies in strollers were pushed at breakneck speeds Mr. Kennedy lost his third set of cufflinks pi the day at alongside the candidates's car and overenthusiastic admirers the city which he presented to the candidate during a brief stop. The Rev. Thomas DeLuca OFM, pastor of Saint Anthony's Franklin Square. An aide was sent dashing into a nearby mi threatened to bog the motorcade down in a mob of people*. On Broadway in Rensselaer, nuns were pleased as school Church in Troy, talked briefly with Mr. Kennedy and showed shop to purchase replacements. 'in 1960 1 was here with my brother," Mr. Kennedy said girls with a handshake from the candidate tossed off as hehim a sketch of a new altar for the church which will be* dediin his Franklin Square speech. This is just one of a score of rode slowly by the curbside crowds. Some children went back cated to the late President Kennedy. for seconds and thirds of the candidate's handshake. ^ The whole Rensselaer County route was marked by homemade confetti and flowers tossed at Mr. Kennedy. Dozens of American flags hung in 'front of homes and were waved bv spectators. Homemade signs welcoming the candidate sprung up all along the route. Two bridal couples were greeted by the candidate when his motorcade passed their wedding party. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Duncan Schultz of Rensselaer, who were married in St. Joseph's Church Saturday morning, greeted the candidate by the Franciscan Mission House on Washington Avenue in Rensselaer. One spectator watching the candidate greet the bride said. 'It's a lot better than kissing babies.'' A pleased but flustered bride called the candidate Mr. President. The second wedding party was that of Pfc. and Mrs. Lawrence Winchester. They greeted the candidate on the outskirts of Troy. * Crowds were scattered but enthusiastic from Rensselaer to Defreestville and into Troy. As the motorcade approached downtown Troy crowds were so massed that there was barely room for the motorcade to pass through the city. The crowds pressed forward here as elsewhere for handshakes and just a chance to touch the candidate. • I'm never going to* wash my hand,'' one young admirer who had shook the candidates hand said. You never did anvwav," his cynical fnend replied. references he made to the late President, throughout the jourThe name of President Kennedy drew the loudest cheers ot ail tromjthe crowds. \s he has throughout his campaign, Mr. Kennedy said. bluntly, -] am against Barry Goldwatar for President of the United States." He used this tack several times to needle his RepuhliejB opponent, Senator Kenneth V. Keating, who has not •ed Ittpport Or opposition to Barry Goldwater. At the Rensselaer County Democratic Party clambake at Brookside Park in West Sand Lake, the candidate repeated his basic speech of the day with few variation*. J2 -%• Here's iousands Scream: W e Want Bobby' Continued from Page A-) neck and kissed him. i just had to do something to remember nira," she said, sobbing. Albany police pleaded with mothers to get their children out of the milling mob. Several small children were rounded up by police and returned to their parents. Police Clear Wedge About 15 policemen finally cleared a wedge to the side into State Street, where Mr. Kennedy was able to hop on the roof of a New York Telephone Co. truck. He pointed in vain at the hotel just down the street as the crowd refused to move . Riding with Albany's Mayor Corning and Representative Leo W. O'Brien during the motorcade to the Capitol. Mr Kennedy stopped to visit the home for the aged run by the Little Sisters of the Poor on Central Avenue. Inside the home, Laura MeGeenev. 79. asked him what office he was running for. The U. S. Senate." he said. -How would yoa like to be my campaign manager"'" Miss McGeeney said she would and the candidate told her, • 111 be back fo check on how we did here." Mr. Kennedy earlier touched lightly on the issue raised bv Republicans that he is a "carpetbagger" from Massachusetts. Kids About Population "When I was in Washington, I was thinking about what I could do for New York State since I was brought up and went to school here. Then my wife and I read that New ^ork is falling behind California in population. Well, in one dav. bv movmg here, we have increased the population of New 'York by ten and a half people." he said. The inevitable comparison to President Kennedv were made by many as Robert Kennedy spoke, besprinkled his talks with quotations from H. G. Wells, G. B. Shaw, Dante. Jefferson and Archimedes in the same Kennedy fashion. As he rode ahead atop the convertible m the motorcade, a man saw Mr. Kennedy's disheveled mop of hair and face in profile "It's eerie " the man said. Mr. Kennedy constantly said he is running on the three and a half years' record of the administration started by his brother. "That is what this election is about, whether we go back to the days of the four-masted schooner and covered wagon or keep moving ahead." New York Mayor Robert Wagner, traveling with Mr. Kennedy sai dhe sees the same kind of enthusiasm building as H did for President Kennedy in 1960. Mayor Describes Crowds Mayor Coming said the crowds that turned out for Mr. Kennedy were made up of "people who had to come some distances to see him. The office buildings were closed and not as many people were downtown as on a weekday." Mavor Corning said there was a larger percentage of adults jn the crowds than he had expected. Mayor Wagner, asked if he had to persuade Albanv Countv Democratic Chairman Daniel P. O'Connell to endorse Mr Kennedy said: "Dan O'Connell makes up his own mind." Local candidates and area Democrats seated with Mr Kennedy at the Capitol included State Senator Julian B Erway Assemblymen Harvey Lifset and F. P. Cox, County Clerk John Bartlett. Mrs. Mary Marcy. Rensselaer County Democratic Chairman John Purcell and Donald Lynch. Crowds Greet Kennedy In Hudson, Catskill BY ANDY OVERSTRFET Times-Union Staff Writer Robert F. Kennedv today blazed a campaign trail through predominately Republiran and Oreene counties a n d asked Peering crowds to help him become the Democratic Sen? tor from New York, Although an hour behind -chcdule as the result of tumulreceptions in Albany and NIDN tuous Rensselaer counties. Mr. KenALBANY NEW YORK nedy took time to take unsched0EMC <*0«». Publithar ''ed stons at Simmons Hudson DANIEL f BUTTON. Bttctrtiv* editor PuMithad Morningi and Sunday* at U Plaza Shopping Center and at IMridan A»t.. by Htt Maarat Caraora Hon, * . I . B«rtMl, PrttkNrtrt; OarM seversl of the citv's firehouses ftokb Vict erwJdnits • ' • « * ****•'• on his way to Courthouse Park. Tra»>t»rar; « . «\ MrtauHv, Weratary Cntora* • * * • * • * « CtoM Miliar. Pl» An estimated 3,500 to 4,000 OMIt*. Albany N Y fOll ALL DIFAHTMBNTS - *«**«¥ people in the communities on MO J-Jlll '4 a. rn. » * •• <*• MO J-MM> both sides of the Hudson River U n M t t t mffliMri ' r a n Tray and heard him say if elected "I Uhanaclady a r t * * aha. Pram Mikraa* Af»a Call TA l-t«ft» pledge to you my future." Pram Saratoga Call Saratoga SM SI40 In Hudson, he associated his luscftirrioN HATES BY CARRIINt—Wadk day*. S* MftttJ Cape Ccd ancesUy to the fact Sunday*. « etufii cawibjnld. 7J tanti. BY MAIL OUTSIDB ALBANY - WEEK that Hudson was founded by S A Y ! to Naw Yor* Stoto *• R ALBANY, N. Y.. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1964 See Page 10 C-l Those Kennedy Crowds: Potential Killers? B t964 OBBY KENNEDY is going to get himself killed before he get himself elected-unless he changes his campaign methods. Or, if he survives, someone else—most likely a teenage girl but perhaps even an infant in a r m s will be trampled to death in some city of the state before Election Day, unless Mr. Kennedy takes the advice of his staff and security officers. It is hard to write this. No reporter wants to write about violent death in connnection with a Kennedy. It is a frightening thing to sit down and type such a prediction. But I mean it. Unless Bobby Kennedy changes his campaign tactics, there will be someone stomped to death in the wild-eyed screaming crowds he attracts—crowds that he himself, perhaps unthinkingly, provokes and incites to greater frenzy. Yesterday, when an almost unbelievably neurotic mob scene in Capitol Park had ended, police found several small children lying on the grass, torn from their mothers by the crazed mob. Several other women with babies in their arms were helped from the crowd by police, one elderly woman who fainted was seated in a police car weeping, a teen-age boy was led off bleeding heavily from the nose, and a policeman had suffered an injured right arm. Anyone who fell while Bobby Kennedy was try- attorney general and senatorial candidate, there was adulation almost to the point of hysteria. Some older women cried, "God bless yon," and some cried, "Oh, my God," as he went by. One man said, "The White House next," and some Women just wept. Others held up babies for him to touch. Young girls screamed and squealed, and fought deputy sheriffs to get close enough to touch him. One girl succeeded, and then screamed in a. transport of ing to make his way through some 3,000 people from joy, "Oh, I touched him, I touched him," and was the Capitol steps to the DeWitt Clinton Hotel—against swept away in the crowd. the advice of police and his own staff—could never Three times the wire fence and the metal posts have regained his feet, and might well h ve died buckled and fell inward, and Mr. Kennedy and his right there. personal staff and* deputy sheriffs held it up against I followed Mr. Kennedy yesterday through the the weight of the people who would have fallen forAlbany part.of his swing through the area. At the ward on the ground. airport, I got next to him, literally rubbing elbows, Once he cut his right hand grabbing at the fence, as he walked to the open car he was to occupy in and a call was made from the airport to the hotel the motorcade. to have a physician ready when he arrived. Dr. AnI heard his staff try to persuade him* to follow thony T. Cappello, police surgeon, treated him at the the planned schedule, and I heard him over-rule hotel. them. As he left, the car and walked down the wire * In Capitol Park, barricades held the crowd at the fence that held the crowd of some 1,500 back, I walk- foot of the steps as Mayor Erastus Corning, Congressed at his side again. He clasped hands thrust at him, man Leo O'Brien and other party officials took their and muttered, polite phrases, and patted a child on the cheek, and once autographed a copy of "The Mr. Kennedy made his appearance, and imEnemy Within." mediately strode down the steps and moved along To be bluntly honest, the crowd reaction disturb- the barricades, clasping people's hands. Perhaps half See KENNEDY, Page C-ll ed me. There was not just admiration for the former &ft$'4nArft Catholics... and lower case commies Dutchess County Home Of Unique Community By BILL KENNEDY two Catholic leftists who originated the movement in 1933 nt Times-Union Staff Writer the height of the Depression. Tivoli Manor used to be a vacation spot. A brochure put The movement has its base in a complex ideology which out by the former owners advertised a pool, cook-outs, dancing, is a combinataion of anarchism and pacifism—a Christian comspeed-boating on the Hudson River. "Country lovers" were munism far removed from that of Marx, Lenin and Stalin. welcomed to the rustic atmosphere and rates were $10 a day, Staff workers are all Catholic and most are daily communicants. 12 on weekends. This week on the front lawn of the 33-room main building One writer described the movement as "motivated by a # i dozen residents were enjoying the sun and the view across love of fellow-man—by belief in the brotherhood of men under the river to the Catskills. Children were at play in the swings the Fatherhood of God. Racism in any form—anti-semitism, and sliding board on the lawn and a plain-faced young girl white supremacy, segregation—is an impossibility for Catholic was helping her crying baby retrieve the bottle which had Workers . . . the Catholic Worker believes in religious fradisaooeared into the folds of a blanket. ternity and has very cordial relations with Jews, Methodists, Quakers. Baptists and even atheists* tolerating and respec+irr* The people on the lawn were paying nothing for their room Hands Reach Out for Robert Kennedy in A l b a n y . . . the views of all. cr meals at the old hotel. One way or another they were all TlmM-uman St«H Ptwt* by Oppose Soviet System victims of trouble. Several of the elderly men were alcoholics. AsChristian communists, the writer added; " t h e y oppose A yowng girl was pregnant. The baby ta the playpen was" an out-of-wedlock child. An elderly man on the stairs shook vio- all organized, coercive government as incompatible with the lently with palsy. A woman, separated from her husband, was spirit of Christianity and the moral responsibility of the indirecovering from tuberculosis. Apart from being ill she was vidual. Russian communism is nothing but monopoly capitalism Martin Corbin, managing emotionally distraught, trying to get back her two children carried to the logical conclusion of concentration in the to- editor of the Catholic who were taken from her during her illness and placed in in- talitarian state." Worker. stitutions. ;. See MEMBERS, Page C-3 Timas-Union Staff Photo by Wildor There were more—a blind girl, a young man who could not fit into normal society—about 40 altogether who had become oarf of the Catholic Worker family. They would stay at the old summer resort—which the Worker community purchased earlier this year and occupied in May—until they found reason to move on. Some would stay only days, some, like Hans Tunnesen. an ex-seaman from Norway who joined the Worker community 25 years ago and is now its cook would never leave On River Bank The community is on the riverbank in Tivoli, Dutchess County, across the river from Saugerties, having moved there from its farm on Staten Island. Tivoli is where the Catholic By SHIRLEY ARMSTRONG figure they'll be anxious enough Abraham Lincoln attended WT^er. a monthly newspaper of 79,000 circulation, is now Times-Union Staff Writer lo get back into regular shoes." school with no shoes at all. ""bashed. It is headouarters for the movement, an extension Area school administrators Martin Cornman. principal of th» ideas of two neoDle—Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin. waded gingerly into the sudden- Columbia High School, East Edgar S. Pitkin, supervising ly controversial subject of shoe- Gpeenbush. said, "I haven't principal of the school district, boots last week, on the heels of seen these particular boots, but told The Times-Union that in a fuss kicked up over footwear I would consider boots objec- aoministratibn of any regulaat Shaker Junior High School tionable if they were heavy or tions, '"you have to draw the had projecting buttons. I'm line somewhere, and you can't All chief administrators of will address various sessions. in North Colonic public schools in the state will Dr. James E. Allen, the state Most agreed there should be mostly concerned about Whether make exceptions for people who get together for the first time education commissioner, will some understanding — whether apparel is. dangerous or is the are just over the line." in history at Grossingers for speak Sunday night and take a written or otherwise — on ap- 'uniform' of disrespect or re- Mr. Pitkin said Richard's boots wouldn't have been ofa four-day meeting starting part in a Monday program on parel and general appearance bellious attitude." fensive a few years back, but next Sunday.• "Desegregating the P u b l i c of pupils. But there were varied Dress, Deportment Linked they are when worn with toviewpoints on whether specifics The joint conference of the Schools." Samuel B. Gould, the day's snug trousers. Asked should be spelled out or wheth"It depends more on the conCouncil of School Superintend- new president of State Univerwhether the latter might be notation than on the . item \U er shoe-boots, such as the pair 4 ents ?nd the State Association sity, will speak at the dinner ruled out instead of the boots, self," declared Harold Smith, in question, should occasion adof School District Administrat- Tuesday night. Mr. Pitkin said, "it's easier to principal of Bethlehem Senior ministrative action. ors— who always met separate- Among the speakers- Monday ban boots than tight pants beHigh School. "There's a defin"I'd say it's a matter for ly—is expected to draw 600. will be Max Lerner, the author cause the question arises, "how ite relationship between dress parents, rather than schools, to The theme is "Education for a and professor of sociology at tight is tight'?" and deportment." decide," said Albany's superinChanging Society." Brandeis University, and Dr. sehools. Dr. supertn- Junior and senior Mgb And fsr the first time in at Daniel E. Griffiths, associate John Park. He added. 'If the tendent of Schenectady Schools, students in the district, he dean of the school of education least two years, the two chief . a s they did four years ago for bis late brother. [boys wear them Tshoe-boots), Tjsaid "dTscretion in dress is said, are given handbooks cov H'lration ^ffi^ers in the state q* VPU- V-irk University. Ttnm-Utii«n »Ta*f Ph-Mo by B»rni» Kol«ntv»rg something everybody should ering three categories for boys achieve, but it can't be done and three for girls. The classifications are "recommended." by dictum." It all began Tuesday, when "not recommended," and "not 16-year old Richard McQuade acceptable." ankled into Shaker Junior High Some Don'ts" for Pupils in Italian - made, side - buckle Another pointed out that the Bv ALLEN FASOLDT only alternative to an adequate- footgear and stubbed his toe on These. Mr. Pitkin explained, Times-Union Staff Writer ly manned volunteer outfit a rule. The rule says boots do not rule that the student Down Route 23 in Columbia mcy not be worn. Richard said must wear exactly what is recwould be a paid force. Two Schenectady men were County, about 50 miles from 'where the valleys meet." It were supplemented with addi- and as agricultural as the what he was wearing were high ommended, or may not wear Cites Cost stranded on an island in the Albany, past a weathered "Wel- grew up around the junction of tional comments. shoes. Principal Thomas P what is not recommended. As chamber's plans are k carried Mohawk River yesterday for come" on an old redwood sign, Routes 22 and 23. The only "This would cast us $100,000 O'Brien said they were low an example of the latter, he out, the town will indeed be First Question about an hour after their 18- a Hillsdale businessman ex- symbol of unrest ijj a lifeless. a year. We had eight fires last pointed out that nylon stockboots. quiet and rural—and also dead. foot boat struck a rock and plained why he thought the splotchy Civil War* memorial The first question in the suryear, so if we had eight fires Richard was shoed out of ings are not recommended for Merchant Speaks vey—the one that has elicited sank. with a paid force it would cost school Tuesday and booted out junior high school girls. "It town's welcome mat was being statue erected in 1913. the most response from the "The chamber," said a mer- $12,500 for each fire. I tell the Rescued from a small island withdrawn by the Chamber of un t because we disapprove of Since that time, Hillsdale has chamber's critics—asked wheth- chant who was once active in people here it would be cheap Wednesday, when he returned them at all," he said. "It's ju%'t about a quarter of a mile west Commerce. in the same pair of whatever of the Rexford Bridge were "You get people who are only been stretching slowly through er the boxholder agreed with the organization, "needs a re- er to let the buildings burn they are. He was told he'd best that we^lon't want these young Edmond Pieniazek, 32, of RD interested in keeping the town a prolonged adolescence. But "many people, both old resi- shuffling of the deck. It's run down." they must wear buckle down without the girls to feci 5, Schenectady, and Stanley the way it is, and what have now growing pains have made dents and newcomers, who have by retired persons who want the These opinions represent the buckles. stockings.-' the town conscious of its chang- said they would like our town town to remain the way it is." town's other mind, which favKorkosz, 23, of 2112 Pinelawn you got.?" Richard's irate parents, ^vlr. Among taboos, in addition to ing character, and, like an adAvenue. He ground a cigaret into the olescent youth,/the town seems to stay the way it is (or was) He thought the retired per- ors an expanded trade with out and Mrs. Joseph McQuade of boots, said Mr. Pitkin, are exThe men, yrin had been do- hardwood floor. He had lived —a quiet, rural, agricultural sons interpreted "the way it siders, particularly tourists and Forts Ferry Road complained cessively sheer blouses and exing repair work on the craft, in the town all his life^ he to be of two minds on how to area." is" to mean a mecca for others skiers. This was summed up vigorously that a special cessively short skirts. Nor will owned by Steven Reutter of said, but now "the place is d e a l with the unexpected According to the chamber, 70 who wanted to move from large by the remark of one store so meeting of the Board of Educa- the schools tolerate heavy 1317 Wing Avenue, Schenectady, going to pot. They've taken the change. per cent of those answering cities and retire in the country owner when asked if he resent- tion was held Thursday night make-up and extreme "teased" told Schenectady County sher- chamber away from us." One mind is represented by agreed, with 23 percent dis- atmosphere, at the expense of ed the tourists. The board backed the principal. hair-dos. iff's deputies they were heading the Chamber of Commerce, agreeing and seven per cent the town's wage-earners. "Resent them? Hell, no! I The McQuadcs sajd they'd carry Of seven other schools In another part of town a down the river when they beard the n&Q&tiv TO&Hlif«90^fflnaR '.'Mt ar\s' get n o t a i f against reHlswe off them." hy care fo fffe Sfate Krfnra- farted fn the tri-cflies area, jW1IIIIMHIlH questionnaires to 647 boxhold- Therefore, the chamber said, tired people," he said. "I'm The tourist trade is one of tion Department, frain. "Like the old farmers two have written codes for at^ T i e inboard motor boat stopers. The three-page question- the majority "expressed a de- going to be one myself some- four conditions listed by chan> tire, four do not, and one has who'll lei stones be thrown at ped end water began rushing Recall Shoeless Lincoln naires asked, "What is the sire to retain as much as pos day. But the town's got to be mer critics as areas in which none at present but contentfhem until they fall down, we in through a hole at the rear township of Hillsdale and what sible of the present quiet, rural open to everybody — tourists, Hillsdale has been changing " I agree schools have to have plates such a program. will go along with this—up to of the craft. They managed to do you want it to be?" agricultural environment which new industry, more farmers. "and the chamber has not rules on wearing of clothing," paddle to an island whete*. the a point. But then one side or East Greenbush Cede has been instrumental in at- We need younger people, to The other three are the skiing said Mr. McQuade, "but a child boat sank in three foot of wa- the other's going to come out on This week the chamber published a survey of the replies, tracting many new residents to man the fire company, for in- boom, decrease in farmers and shouldn't be told whafe type of In East Greenbush, a code top." ter. shoes he can wear. When I was adopted in 1959 when Junstance. Now there's only a influx of retired persons.. based on the receipt of 185 the town of Hillsdale." Quiet Town The men finally managed to bought these last year, they ior and senior high schools Merchants noted that the ski handful of volunteers, if you attract the attention of a man Hillsdale is a quiet town, one answers by the cut-off date of Not so, the critics have insistwere tagged shoes, not boots. were in the same building, and season has become one of the don't count the guys who're at on shore, who notified &e sher- ol the oldest in the county, ad- Aug. 21. Over half the replies ed. They've pointed out that the Mrsf McQuade remarked that See THE BATTUE, Page 0 4 See HAS HILLSDALE. p C-2 aRf vertised by the chamber aslwere signed and at least half town Is not as quiet, as rural school during the day." iff* office. BATTLE OF THE BOOTS Area Educators Speak Well for Leather And Other Garb-lf It's in Good Taste Too Schoolmen to Meet Boat Sinks, 2 Stranded In Mohawk A Small Town Asks: Is Status Quo Enough? Hillsdale Stirred by Controversy Untitled Document Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com I • » • • > ' • ' 1 • r ll TIMES-UNION * Sunday. Sept. 2 0 , 1 9 6 4 C - 1 1 III! I In the Thick of the Madding Crowd, a Kennedy Campaigns Bernie Kolenberg, by the way. For perhaps 15 minutes of that time, he was completely hemOne older woman grabbed med in, unable to move. him about the neck and head with both arms in a bear hug, Throughout it all, he remainunperturbed, with his and pulled him forward to hered strange, fixed half-smile. Once until only the familiar Kennedy he stooped and picked up a shock of hair was visible. It shoe a woman had lost, and took four men to drag him handed it over the heads of away. guards to her. By now, the crowd was badly Eventually, he made his way Women grabbed at him, and keyed up, and several police to the hotel, and lunch, and a held on to him, and several officials sought to dissuade Mr. rest. staff from letting times his staff and some of theKennedy's him walk immediately to the Later, in the hotel, a high large police detail had to grab hotel. city official sighed wearily, Along the campaign trail. Robert F. Kennedy a woman's fingers and force and said, "He's on his way to gestures his damaged thumb in one of his brief In Rensselaer, Mr. Kennedy reaches out to shake hands with people gathered p them open to make her let go But he pressed into the crowd Troy now, and that's a relief. speeches. along his motorcade route. > T i m » * - U M M SUM PfcMM by Sm.th of him. One girl with a scis at the south side of the steps, Somebody's going to get killed with three staff men and about sooner or later with those a dozen policemen trying to crowds, and I don't want H to shield him from the mob. happen in Albany." I moved along just behind him, and it was frightening and disgusting and depressing. Ex-State Aide The crowd was like a senseless animal, pushing and maul Is Forestry Prof ing in an attempt to touch him % Women tore at the police of- Edward W. Littlefield, who ficers clothes and at each other, retired as assistant commistrying to squeeze past to get tosioner of conservation for lands Mr. Kennedy. People kicked and forests, has moved back and punched others, and the into New York State as a facprotective detail could not ulty member in the State Uniforce open a path to the hotel. versity College of Forestry at It took 25 minutes of pulling Syracuse University. and hauling before a flying Mr. Littlefield, who was wedge of police was able to named to the silviculture deshove Mr. Kennedy, not toward partment, has been teaching at the hotel, but to one side to- the University of Michigan, VIPS on the speakers' stand at Capitol Park included, from left, M r . crat; John J. Purcell, Rensselaer County Democratic chairman, and JohrvX,ward State Street, where he where he obtained his bachelor was boosted to the top of a and master degrees before Kennedy, Representative Leo W . O'Brien. N e w York Mayor Robert Wagner, Carry, Albany County district attorney. truck—along with photographer starting his professional career. Binghamton Mayor ]ohn J. 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