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Serving the Niagara Frontier for 109 Years
Niagara Falls, N.Y., 14302 Monday, March 30, 1964 20 Pages—Seven Cents
RESCUERS PUIL BOY UP STEEP NIAGARA RIVER GORGE
Gorge Tree Saved Boy ge From 100-Ft. Plummet
HOME EDITION SKond Clan P W U M P*\<t »f Ni»s*r» F*!lw N.Y.
100; Alaska Toll Damage Is $350 Million
By BILL NELSON Gazette Staff Writer
NIAGARA FALLS, Ont.—A five-year-old boy is alive and well today, after a small tree, growing out of the rocky wall of the gorge "caught him" at the edge of a 100-foot almost sheer drop to rocks below,
Wayne Stadnyk, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stadnyk, 314 Ferguson Aye., received only- bruises : and*H^chipped tooth at about 2:30 p.m^ Sunday, when he fell and rolled" 150 feet down the rocky gorge bank until his fall was arrested by the. tree.
He was rescued from his perilous perch at about 4:45 p.m. by the city's volunteer Reseue Squad. One volunteer narrowly escaped death during the two-liour search for the boy.
Peter Fadum, who lives near the intersection of Ferguson and River R o a d , saw the youngster and his sister, Ava-lon, 3, playing near the wall which rims the'gorge along River Road between Rainbow Bridge and Whirlpool Rapids Bridge. • Suddenly, he noticed that the boy had disappeared at abbut 2:30 p.m.
He called SgL Fred Boutil-ler at headquarters, who notified Richard Gorham, president of the r e s c u e squad. Within minutes, ' volunteers of the squad were searching the gorge near where the boy had been playing..'.--.
Mr. Gorham went over the gorge rim on a life line. While he was descending, ,a huge boulder loosened by his pas-
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.:• & m *.
Egg Roll Snowed Out WASHINGTON'UV-The an
nual White House Easter egg roll was snowed out today.
On the Inside • » *
Cold Weather Mars Easter Observance
. . . . P a g e 9 ,
EDUCATION—-Ntw w r i t * on reading skills i tar t i . Pas* 3.
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100 YEARS AGO—Women of Niagara Fallt conducted various programs at noma to help soldiers. Civil War ••He*, Page 11.
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CIVIL B I G H T S - Y a l e University chaplain is arrested In Florida civil rights demonstration. Pag* t .
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SPORTS—Rookie Goalie sparks Detroit to 5-4 Stanley Cup victory ov*r Chicago. Pag* 12.
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Ann L a n d e r s - . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Bridge Column 8 Classified Ads „ . . .« . . . . 17-19 Comics • •. *. 14 Death* J7 Dr. Molncf • «•».••• • 7 Editorials 6 financial News '. 16 Local and Suburban ...ft-10 Sports. ., V. . . 12.13 Sylvia Porter ^ .» . <««.««..16* Theaters . . . . ! . . . . . . . » ; . . 7. TV and Radio 15 Women's News 4-5 Weather Data and Map . .16
WAYNE STADNYK Manages Smile in Bed
sage, dislodged ;.' .-e him and hurtled past, pust brushing his shoulder.
Four other volunteers descended the treacherous- Old Indian Trail. They were Chief Rescue Officer Harry Golubinski, S t Catharines; George WilliahiS, J e s s e Hinchcliffe and Daniel Boileau, this city, who searched both sides of the trail.
At about 4:30 p.m., Mr. Golu-binski spotted the boy "holding onto a tree for dear life" about 100 feet above him. Shouting to the others he climbed up the steep cliff to the youngster who was straddling the tree.
"He was shivering violently frorri the cold as well as fright, but he was not crying," Mr. Golumbski said. He coaxed Wayne loose from the tree and wrapped him i.» his parka and fastened him in with safety pins.
Deciding that he could not climb b a c k ' down with the youth the rescuer called up for a rescue line from above It was lowered. Mr. Golubin-ski tied the end into a sling
HARRY GOLUBINSKI Brought Boy Up from Gorge
and hold' _ the child in his lap, signalled to be pulled up.
The more than 500 spectators who had gathered held their breath as police and Rescue Squad volunteers pulled the pair up slowly. There was dead silence until both had been safely pulled over the e d g e and t h e n wild cheers. The ascent t o o k 15 minutes.
As the heads of the two appeared over the edge, Sgt. Harris, although wearing a new suit, flung himself prostrate in the mud to lift Wayne from Golubinski's arms. He then helped the exhausted volunteer over the edge.
"I'll take my hat off to Mr. Golubinski," the police sergeant s a i d afterward. "That took guts." He said that the rocks h a d scraped both of Mr. Golubinski's hands as he clung to the rope and the youth on the way up.
Mr. Golubinski, a carpenter at Interlake Tissue, St. Catharines, made the rescue, even though sufferingJrom cracked rhbs received in a fall last week at work.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska W —As Alaskans toiled to dig out from the rubble of Friday's great ear thquake , civil defense officials listed new casualty figures today of 21 known dead and 83 missing and presumed dead.
Fifty-five were reported injured.
This means if those pre sumed dead — m o s t w e r e washed to sea by giant seismic waves following- the quake— are indeed dead the toll will be more than 100. Damage $350 Million
Gov. William A. E g a n revised his estimate of property damage upward to a conservative $350 million, and other un« official estimates were higher.
The governor raised his estimate after visiting his home town of Valdez, which had 32 dead and suffered heavy destruction.
Edward A. M c D e r m o 11. President Johnson's personal representative on the scene, flew back to Washington today and immediately set in motion-a relief effort that ultimately could reach several hundred million dollars in federal funds.
The President already has declared the 49th s t a t e a major disaster area. McDer-mott said it was obvious the full disaster relief program permitted under present law would not be enough.
At best, he said, it would take two to four months to get Alaskan economy into any workable shape.
Typically, Seward, 60 miles south of Anchorage, had only two known dead, but its business was 95 per cent destroyed and few of its able bodied men still had jobs.
The Alaskan Railroad, vital route from Seward to the in: terior, w a s a j u m b l e of "wrecked cars and twisted,rails. A mile-long waterfront area collapsed into the sea.
All along the ring of the Gulf of Alaska where the great quake struck in fury, it was a similar story of low casualties but mighty ruin. Anchorage Heap of Wreckage
Anchorage, the metropolis of the state with an area population of 100,000, . c o u n t e d 12 dead, but its business district and its best residential sections were tottering heaps of awesome wreckage.
Kodiak Island enumerated 12 dead but it's fishing fleet and canning plants w e r e wrecked.
One h u n d r e d and fifty miles southeast of Anchorage, reports from the small town of V a l d e z (pronounced "Val
AP Wlraphoto
BEYOND DEBRIS-LADEN WATERS OF HARBOR, SHIPS LIE BEACHED AT KODIAK
deez,") said many ot the 32 dead were on a dock that collapsed when hit by a huge sea wave.
The sea waves also worked terrible and deadly destruction thousands of miles away," killing at least 16,-persons in California and Oregon. Worst of these sufferers was Crescent City, Calif., more than 2,000 miles from the quake's epicenter. There 1 person died and 15 were still missing.
Anchorage, center of the Alaskan recovery effort, went soberly about its b u s i n e s s , flinching at successive aftershocks.
One shake, felt strongly in Anchorage Easter evening, was rated at 7.3 on the Richter scale of energy by the University of Washington at Seattle, 1,500 miles away. U n iv e rsity scientists said it was a separate quake, in the Aleutian trench 600 miles northwest of Friday's .epicenter, b u t Anchorage felt it with jittery apprehension.
An earlier mid-after no o n shock led to a civil defense warning of a new tidal wave headed for Seward. It w a s called off quickly, but people who had lived through Friday evening's terror fled to high ground.
The Friday evening quake was rated by experts at 8.2 to
AP Wirephoto
ROAD TO NOWHERE: WATERFRONT AT SEWARD IS SCENE OF HAVOC
8.7 on the Richter scale. This scale, measuring the release of energy, has never before rated a quake higher than 8.6
and then only rarely and in!a 30-day stock of essential unpopulated places. [foods on hand — mostly in
Anchorage wholesale gro- wrecked warehouses, but still cers estimated they had about!usably
MacArthur Fighting for Life
Reds Back Sihanouk PHNOM PENH, Cambo d i a
0f»—The shadow government of South Viet Nam's Red guerrillas has sent a message of support to Prince - Norodom Sihanouk, Cambodia's chief of state. Sihanouk, in. a friendly reply, denounced "Amer i c a n imperialism."
WASHINGTON Cfl — G e n. Douglas MacArthur, fighting for hi? life, developed a kidney condition of "grave concern" during the night, doctors at Walter Reed Hospital reported today." They said his condition remained critical.
The doctors also rep o r t e d that the 84-year-old gen e r a 1 had "unfortunately" developed a recurrence of intermittent bleeding from his esophagus, the condition that prompted his second operation more
than a week ago. The hospital reported: "Gen. MacArthur's condi
tion remains critical. His heart action remains s t r o n g . His blood pressure is stabilized around 120/55 and his pulse at 80.
"There has been decre .sed kidney action since last evening.
"This Is a matter of grave concern and appropriate measures to correct it are being pursued."
MacArthur is attempting to
weather the i m p a c t , of his|be removed after a portion of third major operation in 24 it became trapped in an old days. He has been receiving bedside aid of -an arsenal of-life-supporting equipment.
The hero of two world wars presumably still was in the recovery room of the hospital
terday morning following a six-hour major operation—his third in 24 days and his second emergency operation within a week.
In yesterday's surgery some of his small intestine had to
hernia. MacArthur's -blood pressure
was still within the range of much younger men.
The average for young male adUlts. is 120/80 whereas the
where he had been taken yes-lpressurc for the general, even with the development of the decreased kidney a c t i o n wai 120/55.
Blood pressure tends to increase with increasing age, being about 135/90 at age 60 for the average male.
Famous Columnist Added by Gazette
Another famous columnist has joined the ranks of the Niagara Falls Gazette's editorial page correspondents .
She is Doris Fleeson, w h o * : — has more than 30 years experience in reporting and analyzing t h e Washin gt o n political scene. Long rated the t o p " n e w s hen" In the ration's capital, she writes arti-cles so clear, c o n c i s e and p a c k * d with fa.cts that oth-e r correspondent* h a v e called her "the column i s t s ' columnist,"
Miss Fleeson Is an expert fn getting t h e "inside" story. Tkne niagaiine reported that "She frequently know* what the Administration is up to
(before many of it* bras* hats."
FLCtSON
III Health Forces Glenn Out of Race
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. CSV-Former astronaut John H. Glenn Jr., wi thdrew today from the Ohio U.S. Senate campaign because of injuries from a bathroom fall last month. <r- :
"No man has a right to ask; "After that I don't know," he for a seat in either branch of said.
Her first column appears on the editorial page today.
She is the wife of Dan A. Kimball, former Secretary of the Navy u n d e r President Truman and now president of Aerojet-General Corp. '
Miss Fleeson'g column will add variety to the Gazette's presentation of I n f o r m e d opinion on the meaning of the news. Her associates Include R o s c o e Drummond, Marquis C h i Ids , Henry J. Taylor, E r i c Sevareid, Ray Cromley, Bruce Biossat, Richard Spong, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, t h e Rev. Harold E. Kohn, Albany correspondent David H. B e e t l e and the corps of Gannett News Service men in Washington, headed by Paul Martin and Jack Germond.
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the Congress merely because of a specific event such its orbiting the earth in a , space craft," Glenn told newsmen after one of his physicians said participation in the campaign would be' detrimental to his health and recovery.
His statement was made at the Air Force hospital where he was brought March 6 to recover from inner ear damage.
The car injury i m p a i r e d Glenn's sense of balance and curtailed his plans to retire from the Marine Corps March 1.
As to his future plan*, Glenn said:
"Perhaps" t h e r e will . be other opportunities for service to our country or be A later lime when I can conduct the type of campaign I think every candidate could conduct.".
Glenn said he will definitely stay in the corps until he Is fully recovered.
"I have no idea whether I would accept a job with the space program," he said.
Although Glenn had asked that his name be removed from theMay 5 primary ballot, his action came too late to have this done. Thus the pes- C 0 L J 0 H N H G L E N N J R sibility remained that he could^ . . , be nominated despite his with-, drawal announcement. i -i | i> i • r
this possibility Glenn1 A l a S K a i l K e l i e l
'Torch Is Passed' Again Available
"The Torch Is Passed" is available again for a limited t ime to Niagara Falls Gazette readers . Persistent demand since orders were cut off at the end of February has caused the Gazette to make arrangements to obtain additional copies of the popular Kennedy book. Copies of "The Torch" may
Orders received through be obtained by filling in the Saturday, April 4, will be coupon and returning it at
Of said:
"It looks to me that when you withdraw, you withdraw. That terminates it."
Asked if he would endorse Sen. Stephen Y o u n g , the Democratic incumbent, Glenn said that since he is still In the Marines, he could not endorse anyone.
Chile Fcela Tremor SANTIAGO, Chile I* — A
strong but brief earth tremor wa* felt In Santiago today.
filled as quickly as the books become available. This is an accommodation to those who have s e e n the Associated Press publication of articles and pictures of the events of the four days beginning with the assassination of President Kennedy the afternoon of Nov. 22, 1863. and now want a copy of their own.
once to the Gazette office with $2 for each copy ordered. The price Includes the city sales tax. Orders mailed through Saturday, April 4, will be accepted, but there will he a delay In delivery. This is the last opportunity to obtain this historic hard-covered book which I* not available in book stores.
Assured by LBJ JOHNSON CITY, Tex. UR-
President Johnson pored over
new reports on A l a s k a n
earthquake damage today and
the White House s a i d his
view h t h a t "everything
necessary must be done" for
current and long-term relief.
This almost^;certainly will require new legislation.
$
"THE TORCH IS PASSED' ORDER COUPON
Moll coupon ond $2 remittance t o -NIAGARA FALLS GAZFJTE-DEPT. "T" NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. U302
S«n«* m * coplei of "The Torch It Poised." Encloied It $ • • • • f t « - « * *
N A M !
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' n t t « M M n . M i n . M i n i , , , M » M M , »
CITY • • ( . . « , . . . . . . ST ATI
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