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l^^^^^£*z._.J - ^^k~,y><: Z ._:._>*. mwmp&M' lImiif.!). Used cars and trucks sold s0 iar this vear. Why not get YOURS fr°musto°' 'crra Nova Mo.ori Ltd. Foi®- THE DAILY NEWS THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 (Price 7 Cents) hreatens Force To Put lo U' 1 en tr al Govt. Army Q, S., Soviets Eager For Resumption Of )isarm. Talks isagree On Makeup [ Negotiating Body IMTEI) NATIONS—CP—Thc Soviet Un on and [United States said Wednesday, tlwy are eager for Lt resumption of disarmament talks but once In thcy tangled on the makeup of a negotiating .Soviet'Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin |l',S. ambasasdor Adlai Stevenson opened disarm- litt debate in the 103-member United Nations poli- committee with bitter exchanges. External Affairs Minister United Nations and The Congo's central government, of which lie | nominally is a vice - premier, was reported three days before a scheduled Nov. IR conference vliich Gizenga has invited all ic nationalists of The ol Canada I old corres p. later hc is hopeful that irtr.ula can be worked out] ihir.li East ami West can re- th* negotiations that col- 1 in Geneva in June, 1960. ut-, which took part in negotiations, was working new proposal in which La- Imrican, African and As- countties would be repre- in the talks. tin proposed a negotiating! divided equally among j n, Communisl ind neu-i countries on a 5-. 5 basis. Sicvenson a resolution he said both ties should sponsor. ' wild lix Juno. l%_ as the lie for the proposed ncgo- " body to report to the UN tal Assembly. A TROIKA i*on charged that the proposal ivllcded the] idea that Die world can1 ted into three political The I'.S. rejected this -t is willin- to add 10 ts to the in.nat nn croup whose work went on the rocks in Geneva. Geographical distribution should provide the basis for selection. Green noted at his press conference that last year Canada proposed adding a neutral chairman, vice-chairman and rapporteur to the 10-nation negotiating body and this found favor with the U.S. The additional members under that plan would not be negotiators. The Canadian foreign minister, returning to Ottawa Wed-| nesday night after a three-day stay at the UN, said his government now is studying thel ;ics of a new formula 17-member negotiating body. Thc chairman of such a group | would be the chairman of the member UN disarmament commission—Luis Padil a Nervo | of Mexico—and it would operate as a subcommittee of the' commission. It would include two members from Latin America, two from Africa and two from Asia. Hc has summoned all lofting leaders to set up a new Lumumbist national part called thc Panalu movement. The mutiny was disclosed one day after a UN investigating commission said that in all probability Lumumba and two of his aides were killed ast 3an^ __k „„.,>,„,. ,„..„... ,„ uary in the presence of Ka-|pose of lhc rebellious troops' langa secessionist leader Moise Tshombe. HOLD ITALIANS Soldiers at Kindu Tuesday refused lo hand over 13 UN Italian airmen they had arrested and beaten last Saturday. 'Severnl of the airmen were apparently unconscious as they were tossed into army trucks,") UN spokesman George Ivan! Smith said. Gen. Victor Lundula, Gi-] zenga's former army chief, hns made a second trip to Kivu to seek the flyers' release after having been forced to flee on a first try. pdy Chatterley Makes Court Appearance controvi Clatterley's L. Nine love and proclaim j ■' "J is it an obscene «Nitiri« sex? [Lt4 Scclt-(lcan of the 11 w% of Montreal's Mc- University, told the Su- wt of Canada Wed- -W the novel is a story treatness and beauty of P love between a man' -man. fctin. -no rnorc unt-ue <-*•* H"1 « sex in the book * in thc nude fig- , -- by Michael Angelo •Jfichapel in Va,ican *. Claude Wagner, .. l0.r the Attorney-Gen- « Quebec, told a full, « nine judges that the (^ only is obscene "but it I L? » moral teaching •■■ It was a "camou-, bscenity under the literature" and was ,.! *'"» Promiscuity and tfH_ and Mr Wagner gj Colore the court as counsel in an appeal Montreal newsstand aanst QUcbcc court JJ the book repre-, - un<k>e explo tation of reserved judg- i__r*t T i _ "**• __U. _ , ineof Mon* __- «l I- _.June- m> «»t ,l"::ZJi*scenejm^r the - \ feather Temi 'peratures Min Ma- Night Dav Criminal Code. He ordered that copies on sale in Montreal bc confiscated and his decision was upheld by the Quebec Appeal Court. The ruling of the Quebec appeal court applies only in the province of Quebec. Howe«er, the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada will apply to the entire country as it will be a judgment in federal criminal Small Increase In Jobless OTTAWA (CP) - Canada's seasonal rise in unemployment began on schedule in October but the increase in the jobless1 ranks was smaller than usual for thc mid-autumn period. A report by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics Wednesday said unemployment grew J>y 10,000 to 318,000 at mid-October | from 308,000 in September. But it was 50,000 below the igure for Oclober, I960. It was the smallest increase I for this period since 1957 when the rise was 9,000. It compared with jumps of 41,000 in the Sep- tember-to-October period of 1960, 26,000 in 1959 and 44,000 in 1958. The new October figure represents 4.9 per cent of he Canadian labor force compared with 5.7 per cent in October of last year. Even more significan, it was the third month in a row In which the percentage of unemployed was tower than'a year earlier. For 17 previous months the jobless percentage ind been rising in' the year-to-year comparisons. Congolese Troops Loot, Rob, Arrest Whites LEOPOLDVILLE-A mutiny of more than 2,000 government troops has broken out in the eastern Congo, the United Nations announced Wednesday. Diplomats said the defiance was under the personal command of leftist leader Antoine Gizenga. The United Nations said the rebellion will be put down by force if necessary. Diplomatic informants said Gizenga. the leftist heir of former Premier Patrice Lumumba, was directing the revolt against central government authority in Kindu, the Kivu provincial town north of the secessionist province of Katanga. Gizcnga's open defiance of thel In New York, Acting Secretary-General U Thant authorized the UN force in Tie Congo to take "evcry measure possible" to restore order in thc eastern Congo. Thc world body said it is awaiting word of Lundila's second attempt to free the prisoners before committing itself to| a definite plan of action. The UN itself was unwilling to state that thc Kivu troops were acting under direct orders of Gi- zenga-or anyone else. Smith said the UN would take 'most energetic actio, to dis- $2,300,000 For Rembrandt Kivu if hy did not re ease the Italians. WILL USE FORCE He also said Indian troops in Albertville, North Katanga, had been instructed to use force to quiet Congolese soldiers who he said were looting, robbing, arresting whites and behaving "like bandits." The threats came as Conor O'Brien, chief UN representative in Katanga, headed for New York to report lo U "bant. Western observers said thc arrcst of thc Italians was a last desperate attempt by Gizenga, now fallen out with thc central government, to establish his control in Kivu. , At present there are about 1,300 to 1.500 troops in Kivu, recently flown down fron thc Oriental province capital of Stanleyville. Gizenga is reported to havc followed the troops to Kindu he- cause h i s political strength rested on their arms and then incited them to rebellion against thc UN and the central government. Smith also said an Indian contingent in Albertville had bcen instructed to use force to maintain order there. Pickersgill Accuses Govt. Of Affront to Lord Amory OTTAWA (CP) - Liberal MP Common Market. J. W. Pickcrsgill said Wednes- j Mr. Pickersgill' suggested that day the government is guilty ofj 'terrible affront" to Lord __„. ,™ir (at>- a «.__ I Amory, British high commis- NEW YORK (AP) -A paint- sioner to Canada ne done by Rembrandt for a! ,, _., .„ ., , . „ Sicilian nobleman in 1633 was I Mr. Pickersgill said he ,nsi.lt sold at auction Wednesday night > was the absence of any official for $2,300,000. A museum, not immediately identified, bought the painting, entitled Aristotle Contemplating the Bust of Homer, at thc Parke - Bcrnet Galleries after spirited bidding which started at $1,000,000. The final bid was believed to e the highest price ever paid for an old master at auction. Believed to be the previous record for auctions was the $770,000 paid in 1959 ln London for Rubens' Adoration of thc Magi. Wrong Message CAMP PETAWAWA, Ont. (CP)-The serious ' note in the Tocsin B survival exercise headquarters here Tuesday was disrupted briefly by a girl teletype operator's editing. She was given a message lor agriculture sta ions which read: "Save semen stocks and bulls." It went out "save seamen, stocks and bulls." MIGHTY PENCIL Despite the onslaughs of thei typewriter, ballpoint pen and other mechanical wriers, thej common lead pencil continues to! I be the workhorse in the writing I1 I field. 'i DR. SIGVARD EKLUND the Swedish atom expert who, in spite of opposition from tlic Soviet Un on, has been elected as president jof th. International Atom- 'energy Union. cabinet representati nadian Club meeting here last week which was addressed by Lord Amory. The former Liberal minister said this was morc serious than thc "snub" administered in London recently by Canadian High Commissioner George Drew, who did not attend a briefing on British negotiations with the1 ACCRA, Ghana—A berobed Gbanian (right) raises his arm in a salute to England's Queen Elizabeth II here November 10th. The Queen, on an 11-day state visit to this West African member of thc British Commonwealth, took part in thc public "Remembrance Day" ojremonies honoring the Commoner. ncKersgm sugges.ro -nat; wealth nations' war dead November 12th. Looking on are Queen Elizabeth's the affront to Lord Amory-who- husband, Prince Philip (rear), and Ghana President Kwamc Nkrumah (bespoke about the Common Mar-' ket—was the government's way of showing its displcasut hind Qim-jn's shoulder.—(UPI Photo). of showing .ts displeasure with; Eai_'a5deiS.ions of joining;UN Calls On France Redress Grievances Of Algerian Prisoners Prime Minister Diefenbaker j was available and co ild have attended, the MP for Bonavista- Twillingate said in a speech to the Liberal Club at Carleton University. Mr. Pickcrsgill said Britain turned to the Common Market after its free trade offer of 1957 was spurned by Mr. Diefenbaker and Finance Minister Fleming. Universities Seek More Govt. Aid By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)-The Universities aren't taking no—even a qualified no—for an answer to their demands for an immediate increase in federal aid to meet a worsening crisi in their University r e p r esentatives breathed new life into a drive for more federal assistance when the National Conference of Canadian Universities and Colleges Wednesday approved basic demands for higher grants and doubled a bid for money to build new science teaching and research facilities. of a speech Tuesday night in. which Prime Minister Diefenbaker suggested the provinces are in better financial ' do more for the universities. He promised "sympathetic' sideration to the demands but made no announcement that) immediate help will be forthcoming. The conference, in approving a scries of resolutions designed to increase revenues, expand facilities and broaden academic horizons for Canadian and foreign students, approved a statement warning that the crisis in education predicted five years To lence by Algerians seeking i iii% _______ vu_ _ dependence of their homeland: been compicteIy abolished UNITED NATIONS <CP) -1 soners. Thcy were rounded up; The Unitcd Nations General As-;aboul two weeks ago by authori-1 sembly Wednesday nig it called j ties in Fiance trying to end on France to recognize tlie " grievances of thousands if im- j prisoned Algerians and thus | bring an end to a hunger strike. | By 62 to 0 with 31 abstentions, ■ the assembly adopted a resolu-1 tion submitted on an emer-i gency basis by 34 Afro-Asian! nations. Canada abstained along) with the United States and Britain. France declared in advance it could not recognize the assembly action and was absent when the vote was taken. The assembly suspended de-! bate, on colonialism to give attention to the plight of the pri-l Rent-A" Beatnik MONTR-AL (CP) - The owner of a Ncw York rent-a- beatnik business is in Montreal to promote an international exchange of beatnik talent. 'The west coast scene hai from France. The exact number of prisoners was not known here. News dispatches have mentioned 4,000. Some UN diplomats used the figure of 14,000. The resolution carried an appeal to France "to redress the legitimate grievances of the Algerian prisoners in recognizing their status as political prisoners, with a view to making possible the immediate termination of the hunger strike." The Soviet bloc jo ned the Afro-Asians in voting yes. Double-Header Rocket Orbits 2 Satellites The action came in the wake, ago was only partly resolved by j apparently succeeded Wednes. government help. day in putting two U.S. satellites Ul Inquiry Committee Raps Fishermen, Loggers By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CP)-Two of Canada's largest seasonal industries—pulp and paper and fish-1 eries — complained Wednesday that many woodsworkers and fishermen prefer drawing seasonal unemployment benefits to working. Thc criticism was aimed at seasonal workers in briefs to the Gill committee of inquiry on unemployment insurance from the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association and thc Fisheries Council of Canada. Many fishermen "simply quit id go home" in the fall, said I the fisheries council. j "There is something odd 'Many of them, we are conH-'about this," commented corn- dent, '. draw benefits although mittee member Dr. J. Deutsch, they are not entitled to them. On the same theme, the pulp and paper association said it is impossible to "find competent woodsworkers after Christmas. "By then," said the association, "they have become entitled to seasonal benefts under the employment insurance and prefer drawing benefits to braving the rigors of thc Canadian winter." SOME STAY HOME Both groups said, in effect, that when there was work to bc done some workers were at home living off unemployment vice-chancellor of Queen's University,' Kingston, Ont., and research chief behind the Senate's recent manpower report. . Payment of seasonal benefits is one of the key issues facing the four-man committee of inquiry headed by insurance man Ernest C. Gill of Toronto. In 1959, the logging and lumbering industry contributed $4,- 000,000 to the insurance kitty— and collected $30,000,000 in benefits. Between 1957 and 1961, tlic fishing industry put in $2,900,- 00 and tbok out $26,70,000. Neither organization attempted to pinpoint bow muph of this money may have becn involved in payments to workers deliberately avoiding work. the time has come to create a Montreal - New York axis," Ronald Von Ehmsen said. Looking around a downtown Stanley Street book store and hangout for Montreal beatniks, he said: "You've got beatniks here. We want to import them. "We'll send you our own beatniks. An international exchange of talent — New York, Montreal, maybe even Toronto." Bearded and wearing shoulder - length curls and dark glasses, Von Ehmsen mad* the Montreal scene in a $7,000 j imported car. He was accompanied by Spanish Flamenco guitarist Juan Mareno. Hie! Before he went into the thei rent-a-bcatnik busincss — $300 navy in Washington'said"'it ap-i a night for a singer, poet and pcared that the two satellites: bongo player trio - .Von Ehm- had gone into orbit and lhat they ! .to orbit simultaneously. About 90 minutes after rocket vaulted skyward. had separated as planned. One was a transit navigation satellite with an atomic generator, the othcr was an untried, self-stretching "dumbell," testing a scheme for concentrating spacc signals earthward. Thc navy said the satellites had passed over tracking stations in Australia and The Philippines. Tlie 50 - ton Thor-Able-Star rocket roared from the launch pad at Cape Canaveral at 5:26 p.m. EST. The satellites, each weighing 200 pounds, wcre aimed for separate circular orbits more than 600 miles above earth. WORKS AS PLANNED Officials here said tlie second stage fired as planned and burned for 285 seconds, then coasted through space for another 30 minutes before restart-, ing for about 15 seconds to bead' the satellite toward proper or-] bit. I said he was a student at Germany's Heidelberg University, a racing driver, artist, writer and poet. He still reads poetry in bis Greenwich Village coffce shop. THE COUNTRY "_ARSON "Sometimes we talk about problem so much, and grow so fond of the talk, that we'd hate to see the problem solved." T! Z I iii ■*■. ..*_l£_-*ks_
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1961-11-16 |
Date | 1961-11-16 |
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 | (9.27 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19611116.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 34411.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1961-11-16 |
PDF File | (9.27MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19611116.pdf |
Transcript |
l^^^^^£*z._.J - ^^k~,y><: Z ._:._>*.
mwmp&M' lImiif.!).
Used cars and trucks sold
s0 iar this vear. Why not get
YOURS fr°musto°'
'crra Nova Mo.ori Ltd.
Foi®-
THE DAILY NEWS
THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961
(Price 7 Cents)
hreatens Force To Put lo
U'
1
en tr al Govt. Army
Q, S., Soviets
Eager For
Resumption Of
)isarm. Talks
isagree On Makeup
[ Negotiating Body
IMTEI) NATIONS—CP—Thc Soviet Un on and
[United States said Wednesday, tlwy are eager for
Lt resumption of disarmament talks but once
In thcy tangled on the makeup of a negotiating
.Soviet'Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin
|l',S. ambasasdor Adlai Stevenson opened disarm-
litt debate in the 103-member United Nations poli-
committee with bitter exchanges.
External Affairs Minister
United Nations and The Congo's
central government, of which lie |
nominally is a vice - premier,
was reported three days before
a scheduled Nov. IR conference
vliich Gizenga has invited all
ic nationalists of The
ol Canada I old corres
p. later hc is hopeful that
irtr.ula can be worked out]
ihir.li East ami West can re-
th* negotiations that col-
1 in Geneva in June, 1960.
ut-, which took part in
negotiations, was working
new proposal in which La-
Imrican, African and As-
countties would be repre-
in the talks.
tin proposed a negotiating!
divided equally among j
n, Communisl ind neu-i
countries on a 5-. 5 basis.
Sicvenson a
resolution he said both
ties should sponsor. '
wild lix Juno. l%_ as the
lie for the proposed ncgo-
" body to report to the UN
tal Assembly.
A TROIKA
i*on charged that the
proposal ivllcded the]
idea that Die world can1
ted into three political
The I'.S. rejected this
-t is willin- to add 10
ts to the in.nat nn croup
whose work went on the rocks in
Geneva. Geographical distribution should provide the basis for
selection.
Green noted at his press conference that last year Canada
proposed adding a neutral chairman, vice-chairman and rapporteur to the 10-nation negotiating body and this found favor with the U.S. The additional
members under that plan would
not be negotiators.
The Canadian foreign minister, returning to Ottawa Wed-|
nesday night after a three-day
stay at the UN, said his government now is studying thel
;ics of a new formula
17-member negotiating
body.
Thc chairman of such a group |
would be the chairman of the
member UN disarmament
commission—Luis Padil a Nervo |
of Mexico—and it would operate as a subcommittee of the'
commission. It would include
two members from Latin America, two from Africa and two
from Asia.
Hc has summoned all lofting leaders to set up a new
Lumumbist national part
called thc Panalu movement.
The mutiny was disclosed one
day after a UN investigating
commission said that in all probability Lumumba and two of
his aides were killed ast 3an^ __k „„.,>,„,. ,„..„... ,„
uary in the presence of Ka-|pose of lhc rebellious troops'
langa secessionist leader Moise
Tshombe.
HOLD ITALIANS
Soldiers at Kindu Tuesday refused lo hand over 13 UN Italian
airmen they had arrested and
beaten last Saturday.
'Severnl of the airmen were
apparently unconscious as they
were tossed into army trucks,")
UN spokesman George Ivan!
Smith said.
Gen. Victor Lundula, Gi-]
zenga's former army chief, hns
made a second trip to Kivu to
seek the flyers' release after
having been forced to flee on a
first try.
pdy Chatterley Makes
Court Appearance
controvi
Clatterley's L.
Nine love and proclaim j
■' "J is it an obscene
«Nitiri« sex?
[Lt4 Scclt-(lcan of the
11 w% of Montreal's Mc-
University, told the Su-
wt of Canada Wed-
-W the novel is a story
treatness and beauty of
P love between a man'
-man.
fctin. -no rnorc unt-ue <-*•*
H"1 « sex in the book
* in thc nude fig-
, -- by Michael Angelo
•Jfichapel in Va,ican
*. Claude Wagner,
.. l0.r the Attorney-Gen-
« Quebec, told a full,
« nine judges that the
(^ only is obscene "but it I
L? » moral teaching
•■■ It was a "camou-,
bscenity under the
literature" and was
,.! *'"» Promiscuity and
tfH_ and Mr Wagner
gj Colore the court as
counsel in an appeal
Montreal newsstand
aanst QUcbcc court
JJ the book repre-,
- un |
CONTENTdm file name | 34395.jp2 |