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■ ''A-^'A'i Vi Wr?*-*! .,?'**^.*1 ■ S, *<** ! :*--^i - ^m ' Aoiq . -i •i *"- •' i 1 a-'-.'^A 4 j *rJ .-?'-4 j^g^ 7 q// High From Tidal Wave 'wwwwwwwm •BUICK ^; •* ''l-lPV'^iL THE DAILY NEWS Terra tiiiva Motors Ltd. Vol. 67. No.' 245 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) DOYLE'S NEWFOUNDLAND COD LIVER OIL RICH IN •y;'—T^v;*;. vitamins A and D Green Presents Canada's Disarm Proposal Britain Grants Bases For Subs By TOM OCHILTREE LONDON (AP) - Prime Min- ister Macmillan told the House ef Commohs Tuesday Britain will furnish the United States with a base for roving nuclear submarines armed with Polaris missiles. The site is in Scotland, in the Holy Loch of the River Clyde. February is the planned date for anchoring a submarine tendei there. A floating dock will come later. the base will be on "routine patrol in peacetime" and that their real home ports will still be across the Atlantic in he United States. Of the decision to conclude such an agreement with the United States, he said: "It is in the tradition of Anglo- American co-operation in Joint | defence carried by British governments.' Macmillan withheld details of the arrangements at the Scottish The announcement, heard with I anchorage. But other sources hostility by the opposition Labor said the agreement calls' for U.S. I members', came after the Queen I personnel to be stationed there I opened a ncw session of Parlia- to serve submarine units of the mcnt with thc reading of the American Fleet Ballistic Missile! throne speech. i.FBM. task force, now coming' Macmillan said the submarinc'. into being, agreement w il l "serve and: START PATROL SOON strengthen" the North Atlantic] Two Polaris-firing submarines Treaty Orcanizalion. | of the force will start patrolling ATTACKED BY LABOR ; the northern seas with n the next Labor members in Commons three months. Eventua ly a force Immediately attacked the Mac- of if, nuclear-powered subma- millan plan, saying the people of < rines is planned by the Unitcd Scotland would resent exposure [ States. Each sub carries 16 mis- to destruction. The prime minis- siles. ter replied lhat a Polaris sub' lt is believed here that Wash- base would be less an enemy tar- \ ington is hoping to obtain simi- get than would bomber bases, liar facilities on a global scale. Macmillan emphasized tha t wilh a base in the Mediterranean U.S. submarines operating from I and one in the Pacific Magazine Polls Favor Kennedy i Nixon By DAVID ROWNTREE I Rave these estimates: NEW YORK (CP)-Vice-Pres- Kennedy 306 electoral Went Nixon exuded confidence " Tuesday, one week ahead election day. As he left Pennsylvania to begin a two-day foray into New ♦.York State. Nixon predicted he would win in a majority ot seven of the largest states: California, Texas, Michigan.. Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. "The tide has turned and my opponent is practically running out of gas" the vice-president, said, adding that Senator Ken-' nedy needed to carry six of the seven major states in he Nov. 8 United States presidential election "and he can't do it." Kennedy, meanwhile invaded Nixon's home state of California and received a wild welcome in Los Angeles. The Democratic candidate is concentrating his last week's efforts primarily on the key states that Nixon named. Together these seven account for 205 of the 537 electoral college votes The winner needs 269. MACHINE SURVEYS The Nixon prediction came as three news magazines — Time. Newsweek and U.S. News and World Report — announced that on the basis of surveys they have conducted. Kennedy leads Nixon. In summary, the magazines Proposes Committee To Break Deadlock UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.-CP-Canada called Tuesday for a sharp-pointed United Nations group to prod tlic great powers onto the path of disarmament: negotiations. j External Affairs Minister Green, presenting a formal Canadian resolution on disarm- i ament to thc 99-mcmbcr UN political comm ittcc, proposed thc creation of a small spec- | ial committee on non-nuclear nations to help break the East-West deadlock on dsiarm- 1 ament. Green's proposal envisaged thc appointment of 10 or 12 countries by the 99-mem1)er UN disarmament commission to work toward a renewal of negotiations. I This committee would be sep- j jor powers which established the ! arate from the disarmament ne- j 10-nation East- West committee Satiating body whose work slid and be required to report back into a morass last June because to the UN disarmament com- 6f a walkout on the Communist mission not later than April 1. side. Beforc Green spoke, Cuban Grecn—in his speech and at a delegate Manuel Bisbe lauded press conference later—said he the Soviet Union as the only wanted to stress particularly the major power offering concos- valuc of his proposed UN group sions on disarmament. Bisbe ac- to act negotiations soins again, cused thc United States and its His resolution was submitted allies of merely "playing with in the name ol Canada, Norway, (lie hopes of thc peoples of the Sweden "and others." world" for total disarmament. Green said in liis speech his Bisbe also indicated some ap- special committee would be proval ol Canadian disarmament madc up of a limited number of views—notably the proposal for "Fuehrer" Suspended OTTAWA -CP - Transport Minister Balcer said Tuesday Andre Bellefeuille. '!0. who identified himself, a.s fuehrer of the Nazi party in Canada, has been suspended from his job *as a draughtsman foi llie Transport Dcparlmcnl at tiorel. Que Balcer said the self-styled leader of-a Xazi movement wiln non-nuclear nations, selected hv a neutral chairman to preside branches m five provinces has (*1(, L*\ disarmament commis- over the 10-nation committee. nol reported fnr work Ihis wcek. sion ol, thc *)ins*s of equitable Green's resolution Tuesday but as a qualified civil servant gCo»ranhical distribution, made formal the proposals he hc cannot be dismissed except Thc „rnm wmlld i)c t.|lai.SPH introduced before tbe political by cabinet, order following an in- -with "examining tirsenllv wavs committee OH. 10. and modified vcsligalion by tlic civil service n„d mca„s „f assisting "the re- some of them, commission. _ sumption nf serious negotiations MOre POINTED MISSION | A commission source s;,rl i and raci|iia,ing Ulc attainment. Whe'e Grecn earlier called for 1 "^.T-'n ? 'r vudy,° (,f t,le "o;l1 nf *cncral and com- <i "watc-irtos" UN committee, he Bellefeuille s activities but plc!c disarmament under inter-*now called for an "ad hoc" national control." I committee—not necessarily dif- GUIDING PRINCIPLES ferent in composition but charg- It would give special attention cd with lhe morc pointed mission to questions of principles which of getting negotiations going should guide thc negotiations, again. "I would hope thai in time it ill become a watchdog committee." Green said at the press It would consult with thc ma confeverce. ] that it may not bc an infraction of the Civil Service Act to be the leader of a Nazi party in Canada. The political • partisanship section of the Civil Service Act. ("Which , . . .„,,.,,, „ and specific suggestions made a' being studied by gov- (he ^ ,_,,, ^^ ^^ ■ , LONDON-Sir Winston Churchill smokes onc of his famous c'gnn and warms him- Time- self by thc vestibule -aclintor of his home in Huk' Park gate hcr-.* Oct. 2Glli. Churchill 4-s.xon ,w unDrea.ciaDle tt- ' ,Uld >"** S"itl fnrewe11 ,0 Crown Princt' MoulaJr Hossan- Dcl)ut>' Pri,ne Mi"isltr of Mor- Ncwsweek-Kennedy 278, Nixon I occo» who Ptt,d a visit to tlic el(lcr statesman.-UPI Pholo. 159, unpredictable 100; U.S. News '~ for engaging "in partisan work in connection with any . . . election." or for dealing in political party funds. not at all : thai •Kennedy 282, Nixon 205, predictable 50. In Washington, a poll of members of the American Society of Newspaper Editors-gave Nixon the edge by 314 electoral votes to 209 for Kennedy. Each editor predicted only for his own state, there were no reports from New Hampshire or Montana end Colorado members were equally divided. Nixon said in a prepared statement released at Rpchester. N.Y. Tuesday night that under President Eisenhower "runaway in- flation has been stopped end the cost of living has been brought under control." He declared that the Demo cratic farm program would increase consume: prices and he said Kennedy's cheap money policy, which would encourage low interest rates, 'would be like trying to manufacture pros perity with a printing press." Police estimated that 200,000 turned out in Los Angeles to hail Kennedy as he drove through the city at noon. They gave the same estimate for Nixon's welcome there las* this fellow has done thai he can be called to -account for." the commission source Fear To Close Cape Breton Pits MONTREAL (CP)-The Dom-1 pany president Albert L. Fair Won Coal Company announced ley announced. Tuesday it will close the first of The company also plans to three Cape Breton coai mines | shut down its Florence colliery land No. 16 colliery at New Wa- Algeria Tense on 6th Anniversary of War lynching ALGIERS (Reutersi - Rein-; ing both Europeans and Mos Tunisian President Habib Bour .awSI oPSaLkev) F Jnor forced French patrols through-! lems. The insurgents escaped ; guiba, was the "best way of ob- 2JtaWm™iM^F!S?. out Algeria were ready for ac- In Algiers Tuesday, all office;, taining the independence of all.' 'Ser rial bo moved from tion Tuesday night as the sixth I and businesses were closed to Thc growing international im- l^n-L £t .„ T.rnntn anniversary of the outbreak of | observe All Saint Day-the dav . portance of the Algerian strug p™™' «'„ rJZ Hriif™ the Algerian War-rumored as on which the bloody insurrection! glc was shown bv pro-insurgent J.^Z jf' L ',7 with be a "day of blood" - passed in broke out in 1934. i demonstrations throughout the .[^f" ' J? Cll'UgUl *lth tlK tensc calm. ,„„•„,, ■ „ ,„ • • ., Arab world and as far away -■- ' By early evening, no major : J" neighboring ruiusio Alger- communist China. clashes had been reported eithei ;ian rebel Premier Ferhat Ab between insurgent nationalists l)?s declared at a public med In the and the French or between ci- ■. -;nS that the war ":an still last rian War, long time." sons have been killed, accordin,, union of Algeria ■ lo French figures. The rebels put ; T(>ronto -a* firm. said in a ,onS s suggested by the figure at close to 1,000,000. j distance telephone interview with The News Tuesday that he will ._ ; ask that the trial be shifted be- •I ^**. ^&*m--r £ L» *^M-M* ^.-...1 ^*m-r.' cause feelings in Timmins run so high "almost to reach the lynching stage." RHODESIAN CHIEF JUSTICE RESIGNS vilians and terrorists. But the first machine-gun-gre I Abbas said nade attack in two years was ! and Tunisia. made on Sebdou. 75 miles south- " west of Oran, Monday night. The attackers machine-gunned a restaurant, killing one person and wounding se-stral while an insurgent lobbed a hand grenade into a residential quarter, injui- ' of Timmins and has bcen dered to stand trial at thc winter £ years ol the Alge- assizes of the Supreme Court of ™>*e than 150,000 per I Ontario. Hugh Latimer a member of - SALISBURY — Reuters —The government power in dealing chief justice of the Rhodesian ■ with outbreaks of violence in this Federation, Sir Robert Tredgold, j central African state. Tuesday resigned in protest; The bill was introduced after against a government crackdown!a ncw vagrancy law came into measure proposed last week after force empowering the govern- riots in African townslv'ps. ment to round up "loafers and Tredgold said events had not hooligans" and send them to "re- reached "such a pitch" as to hahilitation centres." The bill justify the proposed bill, which i now is under consideration by would "leave* a legacy of bitter-; parliament, ness that will live for genera ' Tredgold referred to thc bill tions." as "panic action.'' He said that Tlle proposed maintenance of while chief justice it was not Kay ciiouinor law ai,cl ordei' bi--* provides for; possible for him to publicly pro- stiff jail penalties and increased test. Scissors Operation Lady Chatterley' Goes On Trial \sPace Age Challenge Tidal Wave Hits East Pakistan Jan. 14. The first pit to be closed will be No. 4 colliery at Glace Bay which employes .797 people, com- THE COUNTRY PARSON Waling up can be an un- pleasant process,but It's worth tbe effort because it's so pleasant te be awake." terford, N.S., which employ more than 1,750 people "at later date," tlje All three pits ere uneconomical and a serious drain, on the company's limited resources" and were earmarked for- closure a year ago but kept open at the request of the federal and provincial governments, Mr. Fair, ley said. HN^CItt STATEMENT . Ust week the. company an- nounced its losses for* the year ending July 1,. 1960 totalled Sl,- 173,797 and during t> two-year period amounted to nearly S3,- 000,000. "Unless these measures are taken the. whole' industry, will collapse," Mr. Fairley said.' "Because if, operations, are allowed to, contimie/et tip present level the company would go bAnk- wpt" .••........„,-;, I ■■"■■"'■ <". LONDON (Reuters) - D. H. book" and that is contained 13 [ Lawrence's novel Lady Chatter j scenes of copulation in which not I ley's Lover Tuesday was termed : a word was exchanged. ! a beautiful description of life in! The judge, who concludes his : the English Midlands. ! summing up today, told the jury j The statement was made by, to ask itself "as men and women defence counsel Gerald Gardiner of this world, not with a prudish . describe"and inter -'- "-- " ' *t the trial mind but with a libera. nM^^ZmTS^t^ sT/ ^!' !!!C„ Ztt'-mZm* SfSJl': b^an and technological sign? ficance, F. I. Young, of Traits Canada Air Lines, said Tuesday. ,„.„ki j*»„ v. , i ■ ~ ■■ Addressing the annual Aviation ^d2rziffrn-bs:»' *«• .writ- ^.^ BRITANNIA, B.C. .CP) - A young doctor uscd a pair of scis ;ih his closing speech et the trial mind but with a liberal mind, sors Tuesday to amputate the! of Penguin Books, a paper bad* ;'the question*. Is the tendency of left arm of a miner trapped ip . publisher, charged tinder Brit , the book to deprave and corrupt ! a narrow tunnel 4,800 feet below Jain's obscenity laws for publish-j those who are likely to read it?" 1 suriace* I ing a" unedited version of ths i He added* "There is a consid er, Barry Flathcr said later; novel. ierable difference between beine , j ,. „, .. Henry Wenszel, 44 'begged me! The publishers, who have shocked^d d£guS and hai SiP^„Zf ^tTd'Sm to take the arm off.' tpleaded not guilty, deliberately which depraves and corrupts." ! awa^ds .luncn.eon* he ?aid com' '»••—• badly mangled. It took j sought prosecution in an effort DACCA, Pakistan — Reuters—; house;, sunken vessels and mang- Scattered reports reaching here '■ led lines of communication. Tuesday night put the number of: . Tuesday night's sketchy ^reports casualties at 40 after 100-mile-an-. came over partially restored hour winds and a tidal wave j radio networks and from an offi- slammed into the coastal region! cial who flew to Chittagong. of East Pakistan Monday for the! A tidal wave tossed two 10,000- second time in three weeks. ' ton foreign-owned ships and eight QUEBEC — CP — Newspaper But il was feare(I fullcr re- smaller vessels onto the main- m will be challenged in the P0*5 ™&hi re,veal » higher I land, reports said, toll. The reports said a 100- ■ mile-an-hour cyclone roared over \ Abcut six vessels were lost the coastal area and offshore is- in the same area around the Gan- lands Monday night leaving in its I ges P iver delta Oct. 10 by a tidai wake thousands of wrecked'wave me about five or 10 minutes. He only yelled once." The miner was given pain-killing drugs but remained conscious throughout the operation. The doctor, who operated by the dim light of a miners lamp, then helped the miner to crawl through the tunnel. The man was flown to hospital in Vancouver 25 miles to the south. Wenzel was ' trapped eigh' hours in a copper mine after a cave-in. Fellow workmen dug the tunnel through 50 feet of mud. FLYING LAB CRASHES AUCKLJVND, N.Z. (AP) —A $6,000,000 Constellation "flying laboratory" carrying 2 people and valuable scientific .equipment crashed at McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, Monday night. Seven men injured in the crash were flown, to Christ- church Tuesday, to have a 32-year-old ban lifted. Gardiner said that Lawrence] had contrasted "the unsatisfactory and futile nature of promiscuous relations with a normal and healthy relationship between people in love which should bind a man and woman perfectly together." INTEGRITY OF PURPOSE He said witnesses, including writers, teachers and clergymen "stressed Lawrence's integrity of purpose, his reverence physical re ationships between men and women in love permanent relationship, and treating it, in effect, as something sacred." Prosecutor Mervyn Griffith- Jones stressed the need for instilling in youth a sense of restraint and respect for.society's ~?no'ns of behavior. He. said that "there is adul tery the whole way ihrough thei munications between lands and peoples contribute immeasurably to understanding and in turn to trust. "Communication may be physi- LONDON, Ont.- CP-Twenty ! cf\ orai or ™ual* Tbe last in' eight university students who eludes the written word he area .* srs sjuhirsh sjnur minfnhiitsnnc j: Panty Raid staged a "panty raid" at a women's residence Sunday, night will each be fined $50, it was announced Tuesday. The decision was reached fol lowing a 10-minute meeting between University of Western Ontario officials and heads of the University's student government. Two students, caught during the raid and suspended, will be allowed to return to ther classes. The other students'gave themselves up Tuesday. The raid on Spencer Hall took place after most of the girls were in bed.. The boys rang the door bell, dashed to the s cond and third floors and ummaged through dresser drawers. 1 which your contributions as writers will become e*en greater." Man was on the verge of stepping into space and newspaper men had great parts o play in writing tomorrow's history today SHIP GENERATOR MANCHESTER, England (Reuters)—A 155-ton section of a turbine generator left here Tuesday on the first stage of a ponderous 9,500-mile journey fo Vanco'.wer. The massive section is the initial delivery by Associated Electrical Industries of a $30,000,000 order for six -generators for the power development at Burrard Sound. Weather Nfld. Skies Cloudy, with rain this e' ing. High today 53. TEMPERATURES: Toronto 49 Montreal 46 ! Moncton 34 ! Halifax 43 1 Sydney 42 ,! St. John's 33 ' WEDNESDAY, Nov. * Sunset today 4:42 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow 6:48 a.m. Moonrise today ....4:41 p.m. Full Moon tomorrow 8:28 a.m. (This is the Hunter's Moon.) TIDES High, 6:18 : Low 12:15 a WEDNESDAY, November 2 Visible Planets Venus, low in southwest 5:26 p.m.. Jupiter, low in southwest 6:39. p.m. Saturn, low in southwest 7:29 p.m. Mars, rises 9:00 p."ta. all times Newfoundland Standard)
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1960-11-02 |
Date | 1960-11-02 |
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 | (8.09 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19601102.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 31770.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1960-11-02 |
PDF File | (8.09MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19601102.pdf |
Transcript | ■ ''A-^'A'i Vi Wr?*-*! .,?'**^.*1 ■ S, *<** ! :*--^i - ^m ' Aoiq . -i •i *"- •' i 1 a-'-.'^A 4 j *rJ .-?'-4 j^g^ 7 q// High From Tidal Wave 'wwwwwwwm •BUICK ^; •* ''l-lPV'^iL THE DAILY NEWS Terra tiiiva Motors Ltd. Vol. 67. No.' 245 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) DOYLE'S NEWFOUNDLAND COD LIVER OIL RICH IN •y;'—T^v;*;. vitamins A and D Green Presents Canada's Disarm Proposal Britain Grants Bases For Subs By TOM OCHILTREE LONDON (AP) - Prime Min- ister Macmillan told the House ef Commohs Tuesday Britain will furnish the United States with a base for roving nuclear submarines armed with Polaris missiles. The site is in Scotland, in the Holy Loch of the River Clyde. February is the planned date for anchoring a submarine tendei there. A floating dock will come later. the base will be on "routine patrol in peacetime" and that their real home ports will still be across the Atlantic in he United States. Of the decision to conclude such an agreement with the United States, he said: "It is in the tradition of Anglo- American co-operation in Joint | defence carried by British governments.' Macmillan withheld details of the arrangements at the Scottish The announcement, heard with I anchorage. But other sources hostility by the opposition Labor said the agreement calls' for U.S. I members', came after the Queen I personnel to be stationed there I opened a ncw session of Parlia- to serve submarine units of the mcnt with thc reading of the American Fleet Ballistic Missile! throne speech. i.FBM. task force, now coming' Macmillan said the submarinc'. into being, agreement w il l "serve and: START PATROL SOON strengthen" the North Atlantic] Two Polaris-firing submarines Treaty Orcanizalion. | of the force will start patrolling ATTACKED BY LABOR ; the northern seas with n the next Labor members in Commons three months. Eventua ly a force Immediately attacked the Mac- of if, nuclear-powered subma- millan plan, saying the people of < rines is planned by the Unitcd Scotland would resent exposure [ States. Each sub carries 16 mis- to destruction. The prime minis- siles. ter replied lhat a Polaris sub' lt is believed here that Wash- base would be less an enemy tar- \ ington is hoping to obtain simi- get than would bomber bases, liar facilities on a global scale. Macmillan emphasized tha t wilh a base in the Mediterranean U.S. submarines operating from I and one in the Pacific Magazine Polls Favor Kennedy i Nixon By DAVID ROWNTREE I Rave these estimates: NEW YORK (CP)-Vice-Pres- Kennedy 306 electoral Went Nixon exuded confidence " Tuesday, one week ahead election day. As he left Pennsylvania to begin a two-day foray into New ♦.York State. Nixon predicted he would win in a majority ot seven of the largest states: California, Texas, Michigan.. Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. "The tide has turned and my opponent is practically running out of gas" the vice-president, said, adding that Senator Ken-' nedy needed to carry six of the seven major states in he Nov. 8 United States presidential election "and he can't do it." Kennedy, meanwhile invaded Nixon's home state of California and received a wild welcome in Los Angeles. The Democratic candidate is concentrating his last week's efforts primarily on the key states that Nixon named. Together these seven account for 205 of the 537 electoral college votes The winner needs 269. MACHINE SURVEYS The Nixon prediction came as three news magazines — Time. Newsweek and U.S. News and World Report — announced that on the basis of surveys they have conducted. Kennedy leads Nixon. In summary, the magazines Proposes Committee To Break Deadlock UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.-CP-Canada called Tuesday for a sharp-pointed United Nations group to prod tlic great powers onto the path of disarmament: negotiations. j External Affairs Minister Green, presenting a formal Canadian resolution on disarm- i ament to thc 99-mcmbcr UN political comm ittcc, proposed thc creation of a small spec- | ial committee on non-nuclear nations to help break the East-West deadlock on dsiarm- 1 ament. Green's proposal envisaged thc appointment of 10 or 12 countries by the 99-mem1)er UN disarmament commission to work toward a renewal of negotiations. I This committee would be sep- j jor powers which established the ! arate from the disarmament ne- j 10-nation East- West committee Satiating body whose work slid and be required to report back into a morass last June because to the UN disarmament com- 6f a walkout on the Communist mission not later than April 1. side. Beforc Green spoke, Cuban Grecn—in his speech and at a delegate Manuel Bisbe lauded press conference later—said he the Soviet Union as the only wanted to stress particularly the major power offering concos- valuc of his proposed UN group sions on disarmament. Bisbe ac- to act negotiations soins again, cused thc United States and its His resolution was submitted allies of merely "playing with in the name ol Canada, Norway, (lie hopes of thc peoples of the Sweden "and others." world" for total disarmament. Green said in liis speech his Bisbe also indicated some ap- special committee would be proval ol Canadian disarmament madc up of a limited number of views—notably the proposal for "Fuehrer" Suspended OTTAWA -CP - Transport Minister Balcer said Tuesday Andre Bellefeuille. '!0. who identified himself, a.s fuehrer of the Nazi party in Canada, has been suspended from his job *as a draughtsman foi llie Transport Dcparlmcnl at tiorel. Que Balcer said the self-styled leader of-a Xazi movement wiln non-nuclear nations, selected hv a neutral chairman to preside branches m five provinces has (*1(, L*\ disarmament commis- over the 10-nation committee. nol reported fnr work Ihis wcek. sion ol, thc *)ins*s of equitable Green's resolution Tuesday but as a qualified civil servant gCo»ranhical distribution, made formal the proposals he hc cannot be dismissed except Thc „rnm wmlld i)c t.|lai.SPH introduced before tbe political by cabinet, order following an in- -with "examining tirsenllv wavs committee OH. 10. and modified vcsligalion by tlic civil service n„d mca„s „f assisting "the re- some of them, commission. _ sumption nf serious negotiations MOre POINTED MISSION | A commission source s;,rl i and raci|iia,ing Ulc attainment. Whe'e Grecn earlier called for 1 "^.T-'n ? 'r vudy,° (,f t,le "o;l1 nf *cncral and com- "** S"itl fnrewe11 ,0 Crown Princt' MoulaJr Hossan- Dcl)ut>' Pri,ne Mi"isltr of Mor- Ncwsweek-Kennedy 278, Nixon I occo» who Ptt,d a visit to tlic el(lcr statesman.-UPI Pholo. 159, unpredictable 100; U.S. News '~ for engaging "in partisan work in connection with any . . . election." or for dealing in political party funds. not at all : thai •Kennedy 282, Nixon 205, predictable 50. In Washington, a poll of members of the American Society of Newspaper Editors-gave Nixon the edge by 314 electoral votes to 209 for Kennedy. Each editor predicted only for his own state, there were no reports from New Hampshire or Montana end Colorado members were equally divided. Nixon said in a prepared statement released at Rpchester. N.Y. Tuesday night that under President Eisenhower "runaway in- flation has been stopped end the cost of living has been brought under control." He declared that the Demo cratic farm program would increase consume: prices and he said Kennedy's cheap money policy, which would encourage low interest rates, 'would be like trying to manufacture pros perity with a printing press." Police estimated that 200,000 turned out in Los Angeles to hail Kennedy as he drove through the city at noon. They gave the same estimate for Nixon's welcome there las* this fellow has done thai he can be called to -account for." the commission source Fear To Close Cape Breton Pits MONTREAL (CP)-The Dom-1 pany president Albert L. Fair Won Coal Company announced ley announced. Tuesday it will close the first of The company also plans to three Cape Breton coai mines | shut down its Florence colliery land No. 16 colliery at New Wa- Algeria Tense on 6th Anniversary of War lynching ALGIERS (Reutersi - Rein-; ing both Europeans and Mos Tunisian President Habib Bour .awSI oPSaLkev) F Jnor forced French patrols through-! lems. The insurgents escaped ; guiba, was the "best way of ob- 2JtaWm™iM^F!S?. out Algeria were ready for ac- In Algiers Tuesday, all office;, taining the independence of all.' 'Ser rial bo moved from tion Tuesday night as the sixth I and businesses were closed to Thc growing international im- l^n-L £t .„ T.rnntn anniversary of the outbreak of | observe All Saint Day-the dav . portance of the Algerian strug p™™' «'„ rJZ Hriif™ the Algerian War-rumored as on which the bloody insurrection! glc was shown bv pro-insurgent J.^Z jf' L ',7 with be a "day of blood" - passed in broke out in 1934. i demonstrations throughout the .[^f" ' J? Cll'UgUl *lth tlK tensc calm. ,„„•„,, ■ „ ,„ • • ., Arab world and as far away -■- ' By early evening, no major : J" neighboring ruiusio Alger- communist China. clashes had been reported eithei ;ian rebel Premier Ferhat Ab between insurgent nationalists l)?s declared at a public med In the and the French or between ci- ■. -;nS that the war ":an still last rian War, long time." sons have been killed, accordin,, union of Algeria ■ lo French figures. The rebels put ; T(>ronto -a* firm. said in a ,onS s suggested by the figure at close to 1,000,000. j distance telephone interview with The News Tuesday that he will ._ ; ask that the trial be shifted be- •I ^**. ^&*m--r £ L» *^M-M* ^.-...1 ^*m-r.' cause feelings in Timmins run so high "almost to reach the lynching stage." RHODESIAN CHIEF JUSTICE RESIGNS vilians and terrorists. But the first machine-gun-gre I Abbas said nade attack in two years was ! and Tunisia. made on Sebdou. 75 miles south- " west of Oran, Monday night. The attackers machine-gunned a restaurant, killing one person and wounding se-stral while an insurgent lobbed a hand grenade into a residential quarter, injui- ' of Timmins and has bcen dered to stand trial at thc winter £ years ol the Alge- assizes of the Supreme Court of ™>*e than 150,000 per I Ontario. Hugh Latimer a member of - SALISBURY — Reuters —The government power in dealing chief justice of the Rhodesian ■ with outbreaks of violence in this Federation, Sir Robert Tredgold, j central African state. Tuesday resigned in protest; The bill was introduced after against a government crackdown!a ncw vagrancy law came into measure proposed last week after force empowering the govern- riots in African townslv'ps. ment to round up "loafers and Tredgold said events had not hooligans" and send them to "re- reached "such a pitch" as to hahilitation centres." The bill justify the proposed bill, which i now is under consideration by would "leave* a legacy of bitter-; parliament, ness that will live for genera ' Tredgold referred to thc bill tions." as "panic action.'' He said that Tlle proposed maintenance of while chief justice it was not Kay ciiouinor law ai,cl ordei' bi--* provides for; possible for him to publicly pro- stiff jail penalties and increased test. Scissors Operation Lady Chatterley' Goes On Trial \sPace Age Challenge Tidal Wave Hits East Pakistan Jan. 14. The first pit to be closed will be No. 4 colliery at Glace Bay which employes .797 people, com- THE COUNTRY PARSON Waling up can be an un- pleasant process,but It's worth tbe effort because it's so pleasant te be awake." terford, N.S., which employ more than 1,750 people "at later date," tlje All three pits ere uneconomical and a serious drain, on the company's limited resources" and were earmarked for- closure a year ago but kept open at the request of the federal and provincial governments, Mr. Fair, ley said. HN^CItt STATEMENT . Ust week the. company an- nounced its losses for* the year ending July 1,. 1960 totalled Sl,- 173,797 and during t> two-year period amounted to nearly S3,- 000,000. "Unless these measures are taken the. whole' industry, will collapse," Mr. Fairley said.' "Because if, operations, are allowed to, contimie/et tip present level the company would go bAnk- wpt" .••........„,-;, I ■■"■■"'■ <". LONDON (Reuters) - D. H. book" and that is contained 13 [ Lawrence's novel Lady Chatter j scenes of copulation in which not I ley's Lover Tuesday was termed : a word was exchanged. ! a beautiful description of life in! The judge, who concludes his : the English Midlands. ! summing up today, told the jury j The statement was made by, to ask itself "as men and women defence counsel Gerald Gardiner of this world, not with a prudish . describe"and inter -'- "-- " ' *t the trial mind but with a libera. nM^^ZmTS^t^ sT/ ^!' !!!C„ Ztt'-mZm* SfSJl': b^an and technological sign? ficance, F. I. Young, of Traits Canada Air Lines, said Tuesday. ,„.„ki j*»„ v. , i ■ ~ ■■ Addressing the annual Aviation ^d2rziffrn-bs:»' *«• .writ- ^.^ BRITANNIA, B.C. .CP) - A young doctor uscd a pair of scis ;ih his closing speech et the trial mind but with a liberal mind, sors Tuesday to amputate the! of Penguin Books, a paper bad* ;'the question*. Is the tendency of left arm of a miner trapped ip . publisher, charged tinder Brit , the book to deprave and corrupt ! a narrow tunnel 4,800 feet below Jain's obscenity laws for publish-j those who are likely to read it?" 1 suriace* I ing a" unedited version of ths i He added* "There is a consid er, Barry Flathcr said later; novel. ierable difference between beine , j ,. „, .. Henry Wenszel, 44 'begged me! The publishers, who have shocked^d d£guS and hai SiP^„Zf ^tTd'Sm to take the arm off.' tpleaded not guilty, deliberately which depraves and corrupts." ! awa^ds .luncn.eon* he ?aid com' '»••—• badly mangled. It took j sought prosecution in an effort DACCA, Pakistan — Reuters—; house;, sunken vessels and mang- Scattered reports reaching here '■ led lines of communication. Tuesday night put the number of: . Tuesday night's sketchy ^reports casualties at 40 after 100-mile-an-. came over partially restored hour winds and a tidal wave j radio networks and from an offi- slammed into the coastal region! cial who flew to Chittagong. of East Pakistan Monday for the! A tidal wave tossed two 10,000- second time in three weeks. ' ton foreign-owned ships and eight QUEBEC — CP — Newspaper But il was feare(I fullcr re- smaller vessels onto the main- m will be challenged in the P0*5 ™&hi re,veal » higher I land, reports said, toll. The reports said a 100- ■ mile-an-hour cyclone roared over \ Abcut six vessels were lost the coastal area and offshore is- in the same area around the Gan- lands Monday night leaving in its I ges P iver delta Oct. 10 by a tidai wake thousands of wrecked'wave me about five or 10 minutes. He only yelled once." The miner was given pain-killing drugs but remained conscious throughout the operation. The doctor, who operated by the dim light of a miners lamp, then helped the miner to crawl through the tunnel. The man was flown to hospital in Vancouver 25 miles to the south. Wenzel was ' trapped eigh' hours in a copper mine after a cave-in. Fellow workmen dug the tunnel through 50 feet of mud. FLYING LAB CRASHES AUCKLJVND, N.Z. (AP) —A $6,000,000 Constellation "flying laboratory" carrying 2 people and valuable scientific .equipment crashed at McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, Monday night. Seven men injured in the crash were flown, to Christ- church Tuesday, to have a 32-year-old ban lifted. Gardiner said that Lawrence] had contrasted "the unsatisfactory and futile nature of promiscuous relations with a normal and healthy relationship between people in love which should bind a man and woman perfectly together." INTEGRITY OF PURPOSE He said witnesses, including writers, teachers and clergymen "stressed Lawrence's integrity of purpose, his reverence physical re ationships between men and women in love permanent relationship, and treating it, in effect, as something sacred." Prosecutor Mervyn Griffith- Jones stressed the need for instilling in youth a sense of restraint and respect for.society's ~?no'ns of behavior. He. said that "there is adul tery the whole way ihrough thei munications between lands and peoples contribute immeasurably to understanding and in turn to trust. "Communication may be physi- LONDON, Ont.- CP-Twenty ! cf\ orai or ™ual* Tbe last in' eight university students who eludes the written word he area .* srs sjuhirsh sjnur minfnhiitsnnc j: Panty Raid staged a "panty raid" at a women's residence Sunday, night will each be fined $50, it was announced Tuesday. The decision was reached fol lowing a 10-minute meeting between University of Western Ontario officials and heads of the University's student government. Two students, caught during the raid and suspended, will be allowed to return to ther classes. The other students'gave themselves up Tuesday. The raid on Spencer Hall took place after most of the girls were in bed.. The boys rang the door bell, dashed to the s cond and third floors and ummaged through dresser drawers. 1 which your contributions as writers will become e*en greater." Man was on the verge of stepping into space and newspaper men had great parts o play in writing tomorrow's history today SHIP GENERATOR MANCHESTER, England (Reuters)—A 155-ton section of a turbine generator left here Tuesday on the first stage of a ponderous 9,500-mile journey fo Vanco'.wer. The massive section is the initial delivery by Associated Electrical Industries of a $30,000,000 order for six -generators for the power development at Burrard Sound. Weather Nfld. Skies Cloudy, with rain this e' ing. High today 53. TEMPERATURES: Toronto 49 Montreal 46 ! Moncton 34 ! Halifax 43 1 Sydney 42 ,! St. John's 33 ' WEDNESDAY, Nov. * Sunset today 4:42 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow 6:48 a.m. Moonrise today ....4:41 p.m. Full Moon tomorrow 8:28 a.m. (This is the Hunter's Moon.) TIDES High, 6:18 : Low 12:15 a WEDNESDAY, November 2 Visible Planets Venus, low in southwest 5:26 p.m.. Jupiter, low in southwest 6:39. p.m. Saturn, low in southwest 7:29 p.m. Mars, rises 9:00 p."ta. all times Newfoundland Standard) |
CONTENTdm file name | 31754.jp2 |