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THE DAILY NEWS THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD.. FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) SOUTH AFRICA: I.A P\Z. Bolivia—A coffin containing the body of a man killed during the revolt is carried IhrnuK.i the streets of I.a Paz. At least 15 persons were killed and 105 injured in the blooly fighting March 19th. The revolt, sparked U\ an Army regiment, was put down bv government forces. However, on March 21st. armed members of thc "people's militia' roamed through (lie streets, raiding and wrecking the offices of their political foes in a sequel l«i the abortive rc\olt.-t'Pl Photo. WASWN6T0H To Curb Flights To Cuba Pig Hater More Violence Threatens As Govt. Bans Meetings Impartial DETROIT (AP)—Patrolman Paul C. Reddy got an official reprimand for ticketing a police department bus. The bus was double-parked near a court building in thc zone it uses daily to pick up prisoners. " Other cars had taken space next to the curb. The policeman, who also wrote tickets for four private cars, explained he was being impartial. But Police Superintendent Louis J. Berg ruled it was "poor judgment." Gee! Whee! Massive Revolt Planned, Says S. Africa Prime Minister CONVICTS I SURRENDER NASIIVIU.K. Tenn. (Ain - A one-day rebellion of two WASHINGTON (AM) The dangerous convicts ended late trademark trail and appeal Thursday when thcy meekly board Thursday revealed one of v aiked mil of their raptured ils more scholarly decisions: prison office behind 1!) hus- An analysis of lhe difference (ages they had held under ill headed I. between whee! and gee. c out together and rk to a cell. iig up the rear was Albeit Balevrc. a state psychologist who carried thc convicts' lwo pistols. Up had made the final plea to lhc conficts JOIIANM-SBURC.-CP - Prime Minister Ilcndrik Verwoerd moved swiftly Thursday lo meet what he told Parliament was a planned "massive revolt" of South Africa's KUKXMXHI rigidly segregated native people. The government banned for lhc next three months all public meetings, except church services, in major centres. The prohibition was announced aftcr police raided offices and homes of native leaders connected with lhe African National Congress, thc Pan-Africanist Congress, and oilier organi/alioiit frowned upon by lhe government. Document wcrc seized and some leaders taken inlo custody for questioning. Bs JOSEPH MacSWEEN Onadian Press Staff Writer *rt Winston has firmly III AM*I S^N ANTONIO. Tex. (CP-' The Proceedings began when I HcUm --Cantiiiflu is a pig that. Armour and Company. I HV<t|UI th.nks he>j maker of a honseho d cleanser . ! called Gee. tried lo prevent He's causing the sisters of, Texize Chemicals Inc. from the Cordi-Marian order, who ■ getting a trademark for operate the Cordi-Marian villa j liquid laundry detergent called farm near San Antonio, some ! whee! must forward data promptly worries. r , ,s . . r ■ , s. t„ the centre I T . u .. ! Since the appeal board found -Kd as convicts, walked out of, fellow cony It all started when Cantin- (Jlat ,ne |w0 pr0(iuci5 are alike: lllc> dom' oi lhc"' hideaway1 L---- - ■■■ •ince mid-afternoon Wednes- to surrender. day. None of the hostages The final cliapt was hurt. The rebellion ol Robert Ri vera and Raymond Karr* which threatened for man: hours to takc the lives of thei hostages, ended almost in ai anticlimax. Six of the hostages, identi- REWARDS OFFERED ...-.-„ the Cubans that it Anyone with information of'■&£*£& "?™'S '*emicall)', it said "the only v.-uid be far safer for United illegal arms export by plane I ifHplg„5«,« .^ h«v ?^ m.nt i'uestiiw for termination if States-owned planes to bomb should communicate quickly «*• » ~"L«,m«h «.v. iflwncther Whee! so "«™M«" (aba than for Cuban-owned with the centre, and the «»• "K h" 7™""i ™te it|r-" « »» h* c'.zr.c* to bomb the U.S. toms office will pay rewards i wltho,,t ^ecii- nursln*' ln thc eves of most obser , to people giving .information ier*. the U.S. government has that leads to seizures and ar -.lown remarkable softness in rests. office shortly after mid-after- | Soon Cantinflas. named after the Mexican comedian, graduated from the bottle to a friendly nanny goat vmo took a fancy to him. Now he prefers to live with goats. > action to curb illegal—and These measures aren't harsh even warlike-flights by Ameri- in view of recent events. On c sn flyers into Cuban airspace February 18, a light plane with y. a time of acute tension. two Americans aboard crashed The US. Federal Aviation in Cifba while purported y try-, \;cncy. in an announcement ing to bomb a sugar mill. The I _ When he got big enough to Wednesday, said merely that a U.S. apologized to Cuba. ; hold his own, the nuns put ■nc* »!i.ht centre at Miami Cuba has charged many j him back with his ll brother! headquarters will receive vol- other incursions, especially by j and sisters. But he hates them. i;r.".ary information on propos- planes dropping incendiaries m f'.i=htJ by private planes to on sugar cane fields. Last ''>:eign countries. Monday the Cubans forced New regulations also will re- down a plane they say was nmre that all non-scheduled - about to pick up supporters of :.:c!iis off>horr from the Flori- i former dictator Fulgenclo Ba- tin Alabama-Georgia coastline, tisla. ■ | M OF THE SEA; TJ US-and Canada § Make Proposals , A By ED. SIMON . failed to win the necessary , : *:i GENEVA (CP>—A Canadian two-thirds majority at the last . «ul rroposai calling for unquali-j conference two years ago. f.ed acceptance of a six-mile t That proposal was criticized territorial limit and an adja-; Thursday by Arthur H. Dean, cent fishing zone extending 12 i United States delegate, who miles offshore is expected to | said that under its provisions be made today at the 87-coun- \ the fishing rights of other trv United Nations conference countries would be "summarl- on the Law of the Sea. i ly extinguished." George Drew, chief Canadi- Dean's alternative proposal an delegate, on today's list of i would permit a country regul- ronference speakers, is expect- arly using another country's ed in makc a proposal similar, fishing zone for five years to to the Canadian measure that continue to do so. Nikita Praises Russian Prince "He detests getting dirty lages and return to hi Farra would. He told officials to persuade his to do so. sion came after conference with the lawyer. The written agreement, on A few moments passed and which the hostages were re- 10 morp men emerged in a : leased, proxided that the two proup and walked away. Three I convicts will he taken tn the women, two of them prison j Davidson County jail "un- employee? and another caught harmed, unmolested and un- up in the convicts "bid for i harassed" and may remain freedom while visiting fol- there while the convicts file pearance; and while they arc! lowed the men out. ' proceedings to test the legali- both exclamatory slang expres-1 Moments later Rivera and ty of their confinement, sions, they have distinctly dif-, PARLIAMENT: contiiyi. TROUBLE COOKING Police in armored car« pat 1 an town, reported "things arc hod.1 to the' cooking up." latio drama began when Rivera They said some patrols l.ad on o walked out of the confiscated been stoned and thousands of uluti office shortly afler noon and natives thnmgei! the street-, ho n told prison authorities he was Thursday's Government crack- lu'n willing to turn loose the hos- down followed a declaration Th by the ANC that Monday wore should be observed as a day linn of mourning for the dead. A'.'i: In Capetown' about 90 Xe the I groes gathered in front of <-|iiir< the main police headquarters refci and demanded lo he arrested time because they were not carry- Mi ing their passes. (ienn Industries in some re.«!ion« laws reported absenteeism v.f-s a problem, though a back-to-work movement noted. c moment in its H-lory l compelled tn placr en id that until thc whole of discriminatory lesis- n which weighs so heavily eUain sections of the pop- on is withdrawn there can o possibility ol a peaceful e of lie country." r bloody events Monday sct off by a demonstra- organized by the Pan- •anist Congress against u.ted pass \r.v: which re- en?e book with him at all ferent meanings. Whee! being used to express delight and Gee being an expressive of surprise. "It is concluded that the differences between the marks of the parties are such as to obviate any reasonable likelihood! ... . . JL of confusion or mistake and eating with t he other cepUon of purchasers« pigs," laid Sister CelestineJ Tne ^ni denied Armour' "and he just won't get in the; request that it reject the W mud." I trademark. Govt. Adds Month -E To Works Program ■vhile. thc fate of many demonstrators against the pass ■.jonc laws was indicated in Joiian- still oesbuig Thursday when five liaht supporters of the Congress was wcre sentenced to cuts with a light cane. , RESISTANCE IN CABINET The Archbishop of Cape- Political observers wsrr town. Mosl Rev. Joost dc speculating that the prime Blank, champion of the Xe- minister is encountering con- gro people, spoke out Thurs- siderablc resistance in his can- day for the first time on the inet to his ur.rompromisine events of last Monday: stand on harsh apartheid raci- "While summoning all pen- ai segregation legislation. Pic Of goodwill everywhere to . . . .. pray for South Africa at this iContinued on Pace 12> LONDON: DISARM TALKS: Reds Agree To Six Points By JOHN TALBOT GENEVA (Reuters) — East and West Thursday edged toward their first agreement at 10-day-long disarmament talks here. The five Communist nations at the 10-nation conference Indicated acceptance of six general aspects .of international control listed by French delegate Jules Moch. 2. Control from the first stage of disarmament. 3. Control must be maintained after completion of a disarmament measure to prevent secret violations. 4. Participation of all states | in a world disarmament pact j and declarations by them of, the total forces and conventional armaments they have. OTTAWA K.'P)—The govern- man eommitlee of senior civil j mcnt has tacked another month'. servants is at work trying to I onto its winter works program. find a single figure for (."ana- I under which it pays half Ihe I dian unemployment. I payroll costs of approved muni-, The committee will also re- !cipal works projects. 'view the variety of existing Labor Minister Starr announ-!statistics hy the trade and labor red the extension to May 31 in'departments and suggest anj the Commons Thursday. It re- changes. !suited from a request by lhe, The government already has j Canadian Federation of Mayors received authority lo pay up to I and .Municipalities for more | ?15,000,000 on thc winter works time to conclude Iheir program j program for 1960. .Mr. Slarr has |of winter works. , Mr. Starr also said a nine-i Continued on P*a«e 12) London: PROTEST SHOOTINGS IN SOUTH AFRICA ed session said Soviet delegate "Valerian Zorin gave tacit agreement to the six points and urged an immediate study of concrete disarmament measures. The Western powers— the I United States, Britain, France, I Canada and Italy—regard ef- By EDDY GILMORE ! praise to a White Russian ; fective international control PARIS (APt— Nikita Khrush-; prince. as the crux of the complex dis- rhev Thursday gave high The Russian nobleman is armament problem. -"" ! prince Konstantin Andronlkov, Moch listed the six points I «. official Interpreter of the j as follows: French foreign ministry. "He's the only capitalist capable of translating me faith- I fully," the Soviet leader is reported by Paris newspapers as saying. LONDON (Reuters) - 5. Control over reductions government Thursday ,, 4 i of armed forces and arma- submitted to Parliament Western officials at the clos- ments_ I fully-worded statement on South ! 1. Need for an International disarmament organization. Africa's native riots as angry Verification of disarma-1 protests mounted here and within the Commonwealth over the police shootings there. The statement, constaincd in an amendment to an opposition ment measures by international controllers or inspectors. STARTING POINT Zorin told the meeting he was i. , ,. , , . glad Moch had mentioned Uie!L"b?r motion appeared design- six points. He said he thought jeAd, ,to av°'d the klnd ot S(>uth they were sufficient to begin A??n «?v':rnmIcInt., ™»t,|on concrete work on disarma. I-vh'ch greeted a United States ment measures. sta,e Department comment on , the riots two days ago. Moch reiterated that inter- The amendment, signed by national inspectors must veri-i Prime Minister Macmillan, said fy existing totals of arms and the House of Commons, men In each country as well | "While recognizing it has no as the reduced totals. responsibility or • jurisdiction The i over the independent countries night jof the Commonwealth, at the same time wishes to record its j deep sympathy with all the; people of South Africa at the recent tragic events . . ." Thursday night's Conservative! amendment will be debated inl the near future with the Labor] motion "deploring the shoot-, ings" in which more than 701 Negroes were killed. Meanwhile, skirmishes broke ■ again Thursday between P.M. to Visit Eisenhower P,v ARTML'R CAVSIIOX fr*. Broadly. Macmillan t» LONDON (Al')—Prime Min- vor* Ancln-American accept- ister Macmillan will fly to ance of the essential points in Washington Saturday seeking the Soviet proposal. President Eisenhower's appro- Thc Eisenhower administra- val for the main feature of tion. onc the other hand, has a Russia's proposed two-level; number of reservations which ban on nuclear weapon tests, j the president evidently wants A joint Anglo-American an-1 to discuss personally with nouncement of Macmillan's j Macmillan in order to achieve surprise visit followed inten- j a united front when the Gene- sive personal exchanges be-1 va talps are resumed, tween the two leaders since I WHAT PLAN CALLS FOR last Saturday, lt was then | The Soviet plan envisages: that the Russians tossed their i 1. A treaty banning forever latest plan for endins tests in ' nuclear weapon tests on the the Geneva negotiations be-, —. _ _„ tween the three nuclear pow- 'Continued on Pa2e .12) PARIS: • Khrushchev Blasts German Militarism police and demonstrators out-1 Khrushchev Thursday blasted (side South Africa House, that country's government headquarters on Trafalgar Square. The Labor party has organized a protest demonstration Sunday in Trafalgar Square. On- his arrival at Orly Airport Wednesday, Khrushchev pushed aside his own interpreter, Oleg Troyanovsky, and let Prince Andronlkov do the Job. Thursday, however,.as the Russian leader and President de Gaulle huddled in private talks, both 'the prince and Troyanovsky wen working. Troyanovsky, 35 accompanied Khruaehev to tht United Statu last jsjar. The son of a former Soviet ambassador to Washington, the young man LONDON-This is the official entry written into the Buckingham Palace birth registry for the new 1 prince here March 22nd. The royal baby, bom to Queen Elizabeth on February 19th, was named Andrew Albert Christian Edward. Andrew and Albert are the names of the tot's two grandfathers. Christian and Edward are the mmm ml hk grtat-groat-grandfathM.-UPI Photo. German militarism for the cond successive day and for a French-Soviet a liance "as a necessity" to reinforce the security of the two countries. At the same time the Soviet premier disowned any intention of separating France from its Western Allies. French foreign ministry spokesman Thursday nigh disclosed that President de Gaulle and his Kremlin visitor paid "particular attention" lo the German problem Thursday morning in their first rmall talks of Khrushchev's 12-day visit. The private meeting, wilh only two interpreters pr sent, ran 15 minutes over the scheduled1 two hours. MILITARISM ANGLE four separate speeches'! | [since his 'arrival Wednesday,! two world wars German militarism still is a threat to world peace. But diplomatic quarters expressed doubt whether the Soviet leader will make any progress if he hits this idea hard in his private talks with de Gaulle. Weather 4 4 Cloudy with snow this i afternoon and eve ing. ™ High today 33. TEMPERATURES k Toronto 18 32 L Montreal 23 31 f Moncton 28 37 f Halifax 31 41 h Sydney 21 32 k St. John's 21 29 £.--, :'-Jte- ■■•> *_0.1,*W-~. 'k".~».«,- ■-' i- ■$zrP'-&t3.'&v>:is.*K
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1960-03-25 |
Date | 1960-03-25 |
Description | The Daily News was published in St. John's from 15 February 1894 to 4 June 1984, daily except Sunday. |
Subject | Canadian newspapers--Newfoundland and Labrador--St. John's--20th century |
Location | Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--Avalon Peninsula--St. John's |
Time Period | 20th Century |
Language | eng |
Type | Text |
Resource type | Newspaper |
Format | image/tiff; application/pdf |
Collection | Daily News |
Sponsor | Centre for Newfoundland Studies |
Source | Microfilm held in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies. |
Repository | Memorial University of Newfoundland. Libraries. Centre for Newfoundland Studies |
PDF File | (7.81 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19600325.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 27678.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1960-03-25 |
PDF File | (7.81MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19600325.pdf |
Transcript |
THE DAILY NEWS
THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD.. FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1960
(Price. 7 Cents)
SOUTH AFRICA:
I.A P\Z. Bolivia—A coffin containing the body of a man killed during the
revolt is carried IhrnuK.i the streets of I.a Paz. At least 15 persons were
killed and 105 injured in the blooly fighting March 19th. The revolt, sparked U\ an Army regiment, was put down bv government forces. However,
on March 21st. armed members of thc "people's militia' roamed through
(lie streets, raiding and wrecking the offices of their political foes in a sequel
l«i the abortive rc\olt.-t'Pl Photo.
WASWN6T0H
To Curb
Flights To Cuba
Pig Hater
More Violence Threatens
As Govt. Bans Meetings
Impartial
DETROIT (AP)—Patrolman
Paul C. Reddy got an official
reprimand for ticketing a police department bus.
The bus was double-parked
near a court building in thc
zone it uses daily to pick up
prisoners. " Other cars had
taken space next to the curb.
The policeman, who also
wrote tickets for four private
cars, explained he was being
impartial.
But Police Superintendent
Louis J. Berg ruled it was
"poor judgment."
Gee! Whee!
Massive Revolt Planned,
Says S. Africa Prime Minister
CONVICTS I
SURRENDER
NASIIVIU.K. Tenn. (Ain -
A one-day rebellion of two
WASHINGTON (AM) The dangerous convicts ended late
trademark trail and appeal Thursday when thcy meekly
board Thursday revealed one of v aiked mil of their raptured
ils more scholarly decisions: prison office behind 1!) hus-
An analysis of lhe difference (ages they had held under ill
headed I.
between whee! and gee.
c out together and
rk to a cell.
iig up the rear was
Albeit Balevrc. a state psychologist who carried thc convicts' lwo pistols. Up had made
the final plea to lhc conficts
JOIIANM-SBURC.-CP - Prime Minister Ilcndrik
Verwoerd moved swiftly Thursday lo meet what he
told Parliament was a planned "massive revolt" of
South Africa's KUKXMXHI rigidly segregated native people. The government banned for lhc next three months
all public meetings, except church services, in major
centres. The prohibition was announced aftcr police
raided offices and homes of native leaders connected
with lhe African National Congress, thc Pan-Africanist Congress, and oilier organi/alioiit frowned upon by
lhe government. Document wcrc seized and some
leaders taken inlo custody for questioning.
Bs JOSEPH MacSWEEN
Onadian Press Staff Writer
*rt Winston has firmly
III AM*I S^N ANTONIO. Tex. (CP-' The Proceedings began when
I HcUm --Cantiiiflu is a pig that. Armour and Company.
I HV |
CONTENTdm file name | 27658.jp2 |