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%yyy'-- • v I./' •'- -'•:• . ; .,-. ' ..*., . •' ' , r' . |big used car SALE CONTINUES AT |ERRA NOVA MOTORS f1962V LTD. ROE!,'-; A-t THE DAILY NEWS sh 71 Out- • assures pops up colly for oke film loading. !j.50 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1962 (Price: 7 Cents) PARLIAMENT of the LB. 3WS urn on Friday on Saturday . very import- hers bc there. 5ses iction Here manager of tht oard of Trade he work of (.he supply dealers io construction ituliiy lhat the liout intending >nc of the most ocular monthly ng of the sub the Newfound- mn Scnecal of Company • was Mr. Spencer ilar of he var- i produ s, such ght be ut and es potc tial. , were y Sim- nf the council of the tourist Laurie lack of cy Lurn r Com- ind, cha rman of inilding supply tion, w assist- mn, hos for the Bchirra Goes Into Orbit [This Morning kPE CANAVERAL America's next spaceman, Aswan Walter "Waily" M. Shirra, watches his space- ;it't "Sigma 7" as it is remated to the Atlas booster lor repairs. The MA-8 flight is now scheduled for s morning. Oct. 3rd. CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. Astronaut Walter M. Ir. entered the final ises of preparation for a six- journey around the earth Explorer in Orbit |APE CANAVERAL, F1 a. - An Explorer satellite rocketed aloft here Tues- and scientists hoped it ild go into a long, looping for the most extensive radiation study yet made, everything work cd as id, the satellite would ****";: 53,000 miles into space then loop thc earth at a it only 185 miles high, uceesslul. the experiment •idd the most extensive inflation yet on how radiation naming from the sun affects ither, communications and" events on earth. <D - taff)- of the E st End aturday o seel' Toront Jim son Av ue left tor Ca 1 Lake secured employ- Iron O e Com- |PMNGFIELD, Mo. (AP) - Maj.-Gcn. Edwin A, a key figure in week- IE W GON STESS . . at you Dr*-" and G eting* idly B siness ; and Your Social roups rasion r to th City. h ol a B bv.. -4G64. 481» today and there was a possibility that much of Europe might witness the launching on television. Improving weather conditions in the Atlantic and Pacific areas where thc Mercury capsule might come down increased the chances that the spacecraft might be fired into orbit some time after 8 a.m. If the launching occurs be- tween 8:45 and 9:15 a.m., thc Telstar communications satellite will be within range so that live coverage of the lif off could be sent almost instantaneously to TV. viewers in 17 countries of the Eurovision network Europe. NASA emphasized that there would be no juggling of launch times to fit into the Telstar schedule. PILOTS SET The space agency said the astronaut, his backup pilot, Leroy Gordon Cooper, his spacecraft and his Atlas rocket all appear to bc In good condition for flight, and have completed the first part of a split countdown without a hitch. Diefenbaker Makes Appeal For Defeat Of Liberal lotion Order Rail Strike LONDON (CP)-The final go- ahead wns given Tuesday night' for a one-day national rail strike today that is threatening the worst traffic licup in Britain's history. The green light was given by railroad union leaders following the collapse ot last - chance peace talks called to avert the strike set for midnight Tuesday night. Hardest hit by thc strike will bc London, with its i,250,uoo commuters, three • quarters of whom regularly flock into the city at rush-hour by suburban and underground railroad. The abortive pence talks wcre called by Transport Minister Marples in a final bid to reach a solution to the complex dispute. But union leaders the talks as a "waste of time" and said the "strike was still on." PROVIDE BEDS Some firms provided camp beds for key staff to stay at offices" overnight while other employees moved into London's hotels, filling them to capacity. Still other firms chartered fleets of buses to pick up their employees and bring them. into the city. -. -;^„ .... X< A-rl- _'-. "h f *y|r * W ; • Walker Detained for Examination <m US Sunny, clouding ovcr this ■afternoon. High today 55. Temperature* Min Mai Night Day ■f,l'ron-0 50 87 Moncton 43 63 Sydney 49 _ "-••John's 49 53 Nfld. Skies [WEDNESDAY, OCT. 3. 'unset ,oday 6:37 p.m. ..7:03 a.m. . tomorrow.. Moonset \ff& -. -.8:16 P.m. [tat Quarter: Saturday. ""tares, the bright red- sh star below the »n tonight, is 520 —JM years from the ■ ■? lts natne> Grefek TjMigln, means "Rival |f Mars". ll* TIDES ' f ■* \ Low |*:"0 a.m. . 4-27 am f1:25ftm. 5-10 pim'. end battling ovcr admission of a Negro to the University of Mississippi, was ordered " psychiatric examination i federal prison Tuesday His lawyers announced immediately they would fight the order today in U.S. district couH "here. They nstructed Walker to refuse to co-operate with prison physicians. Walker was locked in the; U.S. medical centre here. He was brought here from Oxford, Miss,, in a border patrol plane Monday night after hs .arrest and arraignment on charges of inciting insurrection and seditious conspiracy. Divorce Issue OTTAWA (CP) - Documents relating to 327 divorce bills which were passed by the Senate but blocked in the Commons at the last session of Parlla- were returned to thc Senate Tuesday. The bills to grant divorces to applicants from Quebec and Newfoundland — where there are no provincial divorce courts ■^-died in the Commons last April 18 -vhen New Democratic Pa>ty members Frank Howard (Skeena1 and *- Arnold Peters (Timiskaming), refused to drop their objections to them. The.327 divorces were approved by the Senate after the cases were heard by 1 s divorce There were said to bc 7,000 I tobacco ships in London early in the 17th century. MEMPHIS, Tenn.: Troops of the 503rd Military Police Battalion from Ft. Bragg, N.C., unload equipment from transport planes at the Naval Air Station near Memphis, early Sept. 30th. The troops were sent to Tennessee by order of President Kennedy for possible use at Oxford, Miss., where attempts by Negro James Meredith to enroll at the University of Mississippi have been met with resistance.—(UPI Photo). MISSISSIPPI U. Barnett Wins Ten-Day Reprieve From Court NEW ORLEANS (API-Mississippi Governorr Ross Barnett Tuesday won a 10-day reprieve from federal punishment for his | vain opposition to Negro James H. Meredith's enrolment at thei University of Mississippi. The justice department suggested the delay. Instead of sending Barnett to prison or fining him on the spot, a federal appeals court gave him a. form of probation until Oct. 12-apparently a test of his willingness to accept fully Meredith's integration into previ ously all-while student ranks. As the courtroom drama ended without a showdo Meredith quietly completed second day's round of classes at the university campus in northern Mississippi. Twice last week, Barnett personally. blocked Meredith's admission to the university. But in the face of federal troop intervention, the governor made no intrusion Monday when Meredith finally was registered. The governor's legal aides argued that this non-interven tion at the climax amounted to compliance with the court tegralion order; that therefore Barnett had purged himself of contempt and any punishment attached to his earlier defiance. The same argument was advanced on behalf of Lieutenant- Governor Paul B. Johnson, who stood in for Barnett on one occasion last week to bar Meredith from enrolling. However, Johnson was made liable only to a fine, rather than imprisonment in the contempt citation | the court levelled against him. 'More for America" Bv ItELMAN MORIN' OXFORD, Miss. IAP> - James 11. Meredith, sitting on an iron col in a bare dormitory room, said Tuesday hc considers his enrolment in the University of Mississippi to be "more for America than it is for me." Meredith is the first Negro knowingly admitted as a student in the university's 114- year history. In an interview, he showed no visible signs of nervousness or apprehension after the explosive riot that swept the university campus after his arrival Sunday night. ByDAVEMclNTOSH OTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minister Diefenbaker made a Commons appeal Tuesday for defeat of the Liberal motion of no-confidence in his government and won quick—and affirmative—response from Social Credit Leader Robert Thomp> son. Mr. Thompson himself pre-- ' sented a no-confidence mnt'oir : but it was so worded that pat-1 ently none of the other parties | could support il in a vote sched-! tiled far the night sitting. This became doubly evident when thc Conservatives. Liberals a nd New Democratic Party MPs greeted thc Soral Credit motion with howls of laughter. The motion said thc government doesn't deserve thc confidence of Parliament because it hasn't pursued policies based on Social Credit principles. WON'T RACK LIBERALS After its derisive reception, Mr. Thompson made clear hc won't support the no-confidencc motion introduced Monday by Liberal Leader Pearson. Tlie 100 Liberals need the support of the 30 Social Credit MPs and 11 NDP members if they are to topple the 116-member government group from office. Mr. Thompson said his group is determined to foi ow rolfe of statesmanship' rather than bring on a "national cri- ! Social Credit had resolved to 'rise above mere political oppor- | tunisin. | "Let us for a few months at j least forget our partisan considerations." Mr. Thompson said. I This echoed Mr, Diefen- j baker's plea: "Let us work together." I The prime minister said Par- j liament had been elected to 1 meet current problems. He ! asked that the government lie allowed to present its proposed legislation nnd a budget "and keep Canada moving as it is moving now." "Let the national interest be thc guide of conscience of those who vote on this 'Liberal mo tion^," he said. Mr. Diefenbaker asserted that the economy was on the "up and up" during the election campaign and is still "on the upsurge." In a three-hour and 15-minute speech, he denied the Liberal chieftain's charge that the government deceitfully concealed the foreign exchange crisis from the Canadian public during the campaign leading to the June 18 election. It was an "unprincipled suggestion" of^Ir. Pearson that he had withheld facts regarding Canadian problems. But this had also happened in 1947 when thc Liberals were in power. Many countries had experienced foreign exchange problems in recent years. The government's action of June 24 was "not abnormal." It had done "legally in 19ii2 what they 'lhc Liberals' did illegally in M47." Michigan was the birthplace of the school safety patrol sys- , committee. The Senate bills were sent to the Commons for concurrence, along wth transcripts of the comm tee testimony and other evidence tor the convenience of the House of Commons private bills committee. The divorce' bills, however, never got to the Commons committee. NEW YORK: Nelson Cornelius (Bulldog) Drummond, 33(C),.a 16-year veteran of the Navy, was arranged in Federal Court September 29th, on charges of conspiring to peddle U.S. defense secrets to Russia. . Drummond was picked up by FBI agents outside a suburban diner late September 28th. The FBI said two members of the Russian mission to the United. Nations—Evgeni M. Prokhorov (R) 31, a Second Secretary, and Ivan Y. Vyrodov, 38 (L), a third Secretary, "closely followed" Drummond to the diner. The two Russians, protected by diplomatic immunity, were xeleased by the FBI in \he custody of the Soviet mission.—(UPI Photo). Let's Get Behind Alex Newfoundland's Alex Faulkner will we his first National Hockey League action with Detroit, Thursday, October 11, against the Rangers in Ncw York. For Akx this game against New York will likely be the big one. He'll be starting his first NHL season. Because many- thousands of his fans in Newfoundland are pulling for the "blond: bomber" from Bishop's Falls and Harbor Grar.-* to make good.: they would all like to offer thcir encouragement to Alex in person. It is impossible for trw fans to be in New York for his opening gamc, but there is one way Alex can bc told that hockey fans in Newfoundland are pulling for him: THE DAILY NEWS Sports Department will sponsor a giant lebgram to be sent to Alex before the big game October 11. Names for this telegram are now being taken and will havc to ha in before midnight Monday, October 8th. Names are being taken in several different business firms around St. John's and other Newfoundland centres. And they can also be sent direct to the Daily News Sports Department. Just send or leave a dime with your name. W.-j are looking for 5,000—and we're pretty sure Alex has 5,000 fans in Newfoundland! \
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1962-10-03 |
Date | 1962-10-03 |
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 | (9.63 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19621003.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 40529.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1962-10-03 |
PDF File | (9.63MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19621003.pdf |
Transcript |
%yyy'-- • v I./' •'- -'•:• . ; .,-. ' ..*., . •' ' , r' .
|big used car
SALE
CONTINUES AT
|ERRA NOVA MOTORS f1962V LTD.
ROE!,'-;
A-t
THE DAILY NEWS
sh
71 Out-
• assures
pops up
colly for
oke film
loading.
!j.50
THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1962
(Price: 7 Cents)
PARLIAMENT
of the
LB.
3WS
urn on Friday
on Saturday
. very import-
hers bc there.
5ses
iction
Here
manager of tht
oard of Trade
he work of (.he
supply dealers
io construction
ituliiy lhat the
liout intending
>nc of the most
ocular monthly
ng of the sub
the Newfound-
mn Scnecal of
Company • was
Mr. Spencer
ilar of he var-
i produ s, such
ght be ut and
es potc tial.
, were y Sim-
nf the council
of the tourist
Laurie lack of
cy Lurn r Com-
ind, cha rman of
inilding supply
tion, w assist-
mn, hos for the
Bchirra Goes
Into Orbit
[This Morning
kPE CANAVERAL America's next spaceman, Aswan Walter "Waily" M. Shirra, watches his space-
;it't "Sigma 7" as it is remated to the Atlas booster
lor repairs. The MA-8 flight is now scheduled for
s morning. Oct. 3rd.
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
Astronaut Walter M.
Ir. entered the final
ises of preparation for a six-
journey around the earth
Explorer
in Orbit
|APE CANAVERAL, F1 a.
- An Explorer satellite
rocketed aloft here Tues-
and scientists hoped it
ild go into a long, looping
for the most extensive
radiation study yet made,
everything work cd as
id, the satellite would
****";: 53,000 miles into space
then loop thc earth at a
it only 185 miles high,
uceesslul. the experiment
•idd the most extensive inflation yet on how radiation
naming from the sun affects
ither, communications and"
events on earth.
|
CONTENTdm file name | 40513.jp2 |