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h63 PONTIAC I IHE MOST POPULAR CAR IN CANADA. NOW ON DISPLAY |erra Nova Motors Ltd. THE DAILY NEWS All form* ot insurants |. ft). No. 284 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18,1962 (Price: 7 Cents) 30.1 FIRST COUPLE ADMIRE TREE KENNEDY: Sees No Hope For Cuban Missile Base Inspection WASHINGTON (AP) — President Kennedy said Monday night it will be some time before the United States can "come to any real understanding" with Soviet Premier Khrushchev. But he added "we are better off with the Khrushchev view than we are with the Chinese Communist view." In an unprecedented filmed television-radio interview 23 months after taking office, Kennedy stressed international problems. The chief executive based his pessimistic view on the pros- missile and bomber bases would be opened to effective inspec- pects for fruitful talks with Khrushchev on the fact that Ihe Soviet Union, only two months I ago, tried secretly to "change,. ,■_,.■ the balance of power" bv shin-! ^cceP' 'he kind of inspection AS1HNGTON—President and Mrs. Kennedy admire the White House ipinR miciear mjssncs into Cuba. wnich reallv is desirable," he ■ui.'« tree in the Main Lobby during a picture taking session today. Lat- I Kennedy said the Soviets were ;*»<'• and a^f that l° °p?» .proximately 1.200 men and women employed in the Executive offices '?X._U_r" 5 \ the First Couple to receive their annual gift and enjoy some Christ- the determined stand taken bv the Soviet Union. ,._.T ... . vv !._.. .tc :- ._.....:_... i _f "Thev are not Macmillan Heads For Nassau Talks ; :._:•_.hments. (UPI Photo)) ITD. Intensify Hunt For Police Killers ATP!.U.. fCPl — Police: launched an appeal for funds forj lice in their search. i aim.. Montreal Island: the policemen's families. Each! Among witnesses are a motel ■..cd their determined hunt; had three children. receptionist, who said she saw i; (or the men who killed; The Canadian Banker's Asso- j a man believed to bc one of the xuc constables Friday: ciation offered $10,000 and the robbers come to the motel ■ and $126,500 bank robbery. Canadian Imperial Bank of \ call for a taxi; a truck driver h. suburb of St. Laurent', Commerce, whose branch was 1 who gave the same man a lift Ihc robbery occurred, po-' robbed, offered $15,000 for In- j to Dorval, west of Montreal, and Chief (_mille Hetu an- formation leading to the arrest j a taxi-driver who drove the that detectives are , of the robbers. [ man back to Montreal directly •vo men and said hc ; St. Laurent police brought j past the murder scene. detectives will get, eyewitnesses to their station information" from early Monday to give their im- NASSAU, Bahamas (Reuters), missile, which packs a big po- Prime Minister Macmillan was! litical punch for Britain as the flying here Monday night for key to its status as an independ- talks with President Kennedy j ent nuclear power in the late WON'T ACCEPT PLAN I amid, a Srowin£ Anglo-Amcri-, '60s. "A totalitarian system cannot I c.nn furorc over the Skybolt mis" I The skybolt issuc h"s over- stle program. shadowed other questions that Macmillan, accompanied by j aie (iue to be discussed at the his foreign secretary, the Earl j talks which open Wednesday of Home, told reporters at Lon-1 morning at the plush Lyford j don airport his two-day talks! Cay resort. with Kennedy should produce al Macmillan will stay on after solution to thc thorny Skybolt ■ meeting Kennedy for a separ- 'alc session of talks with Prime Minister Diefenbaker who is duc here from Ottawa Thursday. RE-ASSESS SITUATION ACTOR THOMAS MITCHELL DIES BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.— AP — Actor Thomas Mitchell, whose career spanned more than a half century between the Broadway era of David Belasco and present day Hollywood, died Monday of cancer. He was 70. Mitchell's distinctions Includ ed a motion picture academy award for his portrayal of Doc Boone in Stageoach in 1938, and an Emmy award in 1952 as the best television actor. His performance in the Broadway production of Hazel Flagg won him the Antoinette Ferry Award in 1953. Mitchell had been ill a long time. The actor's wife, Susan, and dacghtcr, Mrs. Anne M. Lange of Hollywood, survive. the U.S. in forcing removal of. , the offensive weapons. j "• he declared. | issue. Discussing one of the still un-i With on-site inspection a dim! Kennedy, due to arrive here resolved offshoots of October's, prospect, Kennedy said, "theI today, is expected to receive a Cuban crisis, Kennedy virtually i camera, 1 think, is actually to j last-minute appeal from Mac- abandoned hope thnt "the Cuban I be our best inspector." ' millan to save the air-to-ground RECOVER BONDS • pressions of the men's appear-j A total of $64,000 worth of! of under-: ance to a police artist, who was j *«2Tl*"fif* '"J"* * than [inure* wcre picked up in making' drawings to guide po- i_o\i'_KHit the metropoli- a anil quizzed about thc ; , committed by a man j »« Santa Clans and ' ™___ii_ril U.S. Army; lie rifle was dropped in j l-liinil the bank, in the ! end Montreal suburb. Brabant. 31. -Cl_ni]_• Vhrinnau. 34, were Overthrow Government CP from Reuters Ar DAKAR, Senegal — Premier Miimadou Dia's government , , reported overthrown by a -. hy bullets from auto- motion ot censure Monday when' "rapi.ii- av they drove National Assembly members the bank in response to met in special session at the 1 house of its president, Lamine that killed them Gneye. Mined to havc come' Constitutional authority to > Bcteian FW rifle, the! bold the National Assembly '* 'hat is standard issue \ meeting in Fueye's house was !*AT0 forces S'ven »_ Senegal's president, :Santa Claus" i Le°P°ld Sen«hor: . lt . _____ clo«c and rid-i Reuters reP°rted tnere we« ■*« two policemen as they', ?B ,v*es f?!" the c,E,,sure mot.io.n' __.._, , ' , ' I inHnrlinc tVinsp nf cpvpi. minis. the ground be- Gilded their bullet-punctured ve- 20,00(1 people v sited the [went city hall Monday. ^ the bodies of Brabant »>rineau lav. A civic fun- hod"'- "•-• today. .. g« APPEAL suburb including those of seven ministers who resigned to be able to take part in the voting. There are 80 deputies in the assembly. taken in the robbery has been recovered. Still missing is $6,500 j in cash and $56,000 worth of U.S. and Canadian traveller's cheques. Originally, the loot had been announced as $2,000 cash and $10,000 in bonds. Six Die In Atlantic Provinces Snow Storms By TIIE CANADIAN PRESS 1 both of St. Mary's Indian Res-|A coroner said thc man crvation, and Jack Solomon, 35, i exposure. Thrce snow - covered bodies; o{ Kjngscical- Indian Rcserva-! _ __ found near a ditched car in cen-; tjon \ In Nova Scotia s Annapolis tral New Brunswick Monday J ' i Valley separate highway .-.cci- boosted to five the highway < FIND BODY j dents Sunday claimed the lives death tolls in the Atlantic prov-1 At River Denys in central', of 20-year-old school teachcr inces since a series of snow Cape Breton, the body of G3- j Pamela Shaw and 19-year-old storms struck the area late last year-old woodsman Donald Nor-[airman Lome Thomas Sewell. wcek, , man MacKinnon was found on Both were employed at thc roadside covered with snow. I Greenwood RCAF base. Postpone Walkout ROME fAP> - Italian journal-, ,„..„ Vl„, isls' unions Monday night post- i Breton which poned until Thursday a second countrywide walkout. Newspaper men, who returned to work Sunday after a three-day walkout that closed almost all news papers in Italy, had been scheduled to begin a new five-day strike today. But union leaders for 11,000 newspaper men said that "as a sign of responsibility" the walkout would be postponed until the next bargaining session begins Thursday. Pearson Calls For Bilingualism Probe . mixed with : **■? I" scattered ? flurries late this l*«oon. High today 38. Temperature. Min Mai v , Nwht Da* £*ta ••■•.... 22 32 Kr*»l 9 19 NBA Skies NSDAY, DEC. 18th p. today" ;;..5:iTp__. hrise w H>raotro. ....7:43 a.m. H Moon, at ^t Quarter 7:13 p.m. fNEIT STAR I"', rises. 9:4flp.m. ■« PLANETS ' fight above regu- . ">. low in south L? 6:06 p,m. ;"w. in south- L? h:06 p.m, in south- 7:36 p.m. In central Cape Breton Island a snow slorm claimed another life, and off the western coast of Newfoundland an extensive search started for two teenagers missing since Saturday in an open boat. More snow was forecast for some parts of the Atlantic provinces Monday night and today. Cape Breton Island and western Newfoundland gol the most „,„.„.,„, r.n _ , , , , , snow from the series of week-1 OITAW'A "CF'-In an emo-:federal Government ali.au; end disturbances. In son. e!,iollnl lllpa fo<" national unity.' taken steps in this regai places more than a foot of snow j Opposition Leader Pearson ; dominion - provincial fell. There was a total nmmui-! Mmldny <^lle(1 "» tl,c fe(loral lation of nearly two feet in Cape \ government and the provinces ' aggravated the lo re-establish the principles of Confederation wilh a full inquiry into Canada's bilingual problems. Canada now is going through "another serious crisis of national unity," he told the Commons. The time had come, "not for extremists and their passions, but for a deep, responsible and understanding examination of the basic situations." While there was much the federal government could do, many of the problems were outside its jurisdiction Therefore, the provinces must be asked to take part. "What better way could we prepare for our centenary than by taking effective steps now to deepen and strengthen the reality and thc hope of Confedera- Macmillan said in a four-minute statement at London Airport lhat he and Kennedy would at- tempt a new assessment of East-West relations in light of thp Cuban crisis. The assessment will cover Hie possibility of a "wider dctcnlc broader agreement between the Iwo grc:it blocs of powers." Macmillan said he also hoped lo discuss in detail the Sino-In- :lird of dian border conflict, thc Sino- Sovict ideological feud, nuclear tests and disarmament as well as other international issues. "As far as Skybolt is concerned." Macmillan said, "l am in no doubt wc shall find a way through our difficulties in Ihe spirit of agreement we shall always have with the American people and administration." WORLD NEWS BRIEFS problem of keeping traffic moving; At Little River Bridge, about eight miles from the central Ncw Brunswick coal town of Minto, the snow-covered bodies of three men were found early Monday. The dead are Eugene Paul, 35, Donald Paul, 34, no relation, ha- Mr. ['carson I raced the tiicli- I. A lichts of the Iwo cultures from nfer- Confederation — "our deelant- would he called early in lion of faith in the destiny of a year lo discuss national united Canada "-up lo the pre symbols. "As long a< nation has not these symbols . Untie to He said tlimlisli-spcakin: the Canadian! Canadians need a shock trcal- i-allied around I ment to appreciate Quebec's . we shall con- j current social revolution, demonstrations! -That si,ock Was civen in such as the ones recently in- i recent ycars bv 'separatism, volving the president of the i the agitation in sonic quarters, CNR (Donald Gordon)." ! which got so much publicity for TRACES HIGHLIGHTS -what was called 'political 'liber- Speaking entirely in English,! ation.' " (HAKE HITS CHILE SANTIAGO. Chile — AP— An earlh tremor jolted central Chile .Monday morning. There was considerable alarm among inhabitants but no casualties werc reported and damage appeared slight. NOMINATED IOR PRIZE MOSCOW—AP _ The Soviet press disclosed Monday night lhat two opponents of modernism in art and music havc been nominated for the Sovict Union's highest award, thc Lenin Prize. They are V. A.. Scrov. head of the" Soviet Academy of Art. and composer Vano Mura- delli, who had printed in the party newspaper Pravda Monday an article denouncing jazz. NATIONALISTS BUY BOND UNITED NATIONS — AP — Nationalist China bought a S500,000 UN bond Monday. A statement from its UN mission said the purchase, made despite China's own pressing needs, reflects "confidence and support for the United Nations." WINS TRAVEL BET ADELAIDE. Australia — Pc«- tors-Bill En .linton. 20. who bet his lather £1.000 Australian that lie could go around the world by air in eight days, won his bet "Monday with 14 hours to spare. Hc said that during his "fantastic" trip he passed through Sydney. Honolulu, Los Angeles, New York, London, Paris, Moscow, New Delhi, Bangkok, Singapore and Perth. Lighter Side will don his Tudor-style uniform in the Tower of London Jan. 1. "It's a very great honor to be chosen," said Toronto - born Bruce Knapp in an interview Monday. "This is one of the most sought-after posts in the British army." Knapp, 44, joined the British army when he was 18 and fought throughout the Sccond World War. He retired in 1960 lo become a salesman but now is returning to uniform. "I'm taking a huge pay cut." he said, "bui it's well worth NINA II AT SEA The Yeomen Warders who OFF PUERTO RICO—The Nina II a replica of one of the ships in lhe guard the Tower of London and Columbus' exploration, stops to pick up cylinder (not in picture! filled with j IJ^'^ienrT'viiiTs royal supplies after it was dropped by a Navy plane Dec. 12. Nina II was sighted; bodyguards. Now the 38 men Dee. 12 some 280 miles northeast of San Juan. The Nina II is attempting to jjjjpadded u^idaMuty- _uplicate the Columbus voyage of sailing from Spam to San Salvador. cient slone col.rldors o[ thc - (.UPI Telephoto) I tower. NOT AGAIN! SINGEN, West Germany (Reuters)—Two motorists an- Associate Defence Minister grily argued about damage after their cars collided near hcre, Sevigny, who spoke in French ; exchanged credentials, and drove off—to collide again an later in the debate, said the. hour later. Police said thcy wcrc neither drunk nor enemies. {The motorists estimated damage in the first crash at about 1 S300, thc second time at about S30. PICTURE LESSON ALGONQUIN, I"- (AP)—Jacog Stob was fined S-OD Mi in- 1 day for shooting a hen pheasant but he can get the penalty ! trimmed to $100. All he has to do is appear before Magistrate erry Doyle on Dec. 26 with 100 pictures of cock pheas- LONDON (CP) — Thc first" i ants Thcy can bc clippings from magazines, books, newspaper. Canadian to be appointed to the j or actual photographs "I want to bc sure that in the future historic Yeomen of the Guards i you'll know the difference between a hen and a cock pheas- Canadian Yeoman ant,' Doyle said ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN PEKIN, III. (AP)—You don't have to believe it, but Ralph Jones does: Somebody stole the men's room door from bis service station Sunday. FINE FOR 'SANTA' HULL, Que. (CP)—Cecil Ryan, 21, alias Santa Claus, was fined $10 and costs Monday for loitering in a tavern while dressed in a Santa Claus suit and beard and soliciting donations "for the poor." PARKING PROBLEM DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—A Covington, Ky., pilot is finding it more difficult to get lis single-engine airplane oul of a a shopping centre parking lot than he did getting it in. Wil- liam L. Whilchouse Jr., 37, was flying from New Philadelphia, Ohio, to Cincinnati when his Piper Super Cub ran out of gasoline ovcr North Dayton Saturday night. Whilchouse spotted the shopping centre and dead-stick landed his craft between cars without scratching a fender. Today Whilchouse will have his plane dismantled, trucked to Cox Municipal airport, reassembled and then—weather pennitting-he'll continue on to Cincinnati. All-White Cabinet By HENDERSON GALL SALISBURY (Reuters) - Premier - designate Winston Field named an all-white Southern Rhodesian cabinet Monday and observers described it as 'strongly right wing. But Field himself is said to be on the "left wing" of his Rhodesian Front party, which won power in elections Friday. Five of the eight members of thc new cabinet, including Field, are farmers. 1 Field made his selections shortly after Sir Roy Welensky, prime minister of the Rhodesian Federation, declared the Rhodesian Front victory "surprised and shocked" him. THE COUNTRY PARSON 0 ,'You can't live Christianity alone any more than a great violinist can play a symphony alone." if m y
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1962-12-18 |
Date | 1962-12-18 |
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 | (7.56 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19621218.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 40920.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1962-12-18 |
PDF File | (7.56MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19621218.pdf |
Transcript | h63 PONTIAC I IHE MOST POPULAR CAR IN CANADA. NOW ON DISPLAY |erra Nova Motors Ltd. THE DAILY NEWS All form* ot insurants |. ft). No. 284 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18,1962 (Price: 7 Cents) 30.1 FIRST COUPLE ADMIRE TREE KENNEDY: Sees No Hope For Cuban Missile Base Inspection WASHINGTON (AP) — President Kennedy said Monday night it will be some time before the United States can "come to any real understanding" with Soviet Premier Khrushchev. But he added "we are better off with the Khrushchev view than we are with the Chinese Communist view." In an unprecedented filmed television-radio interview 23 months after taking office, Kennedy stressed international problems. The chief executive based his pessimistic view on the pros- missile and bomber bases would be opened to effective inspec- pects for fruitful talks with Khrushchev on the fact that Ihe Soviet Union, only two months I ago, tried secretly to "change,. ,■_,.■ the balance of power" bv shin-! ^cceP' 'he kind of inspection AS1HNGTON—President and Mrs. Kennedy admire the White House ipinR miciear mjssncs into Cuba. wnich reallv is desirable," he ■ui.'« tree in the Main Lobby during a picture taking session today. Lat- I Kennedy said the Soviets were ;*»<'• and a^f that l° °p?» .proximately 1.200 men and women employed in the Executive offices '?X._U_r" 5 \ the First Couple to receive their annual gift and enjoy some Christ- the determined stand taken bv the Soviet Union. ,._.T ... . vv !._.. .tc :- ._.....:_... i _f "Thev are not Macmillan Heads For Nassau Talks ; :._:•_.hments. (UPI Photo)) ITD. Intensify Hunt For Police Killers ATP!.U.. fCPl — Police: launched an appeal for funds forj lice in their search. i aim.. Montreal Island: the policemen's families. Each! Among witnesses are a motel ■..cd their determined hunt; had three children. receptionist, who said she saw i; (or the men who killed; The Canadian Banker's Asso- j a man believed to bc one of the xuc constables Friday: ciation offered $10,000 and the robbers come to the motel ■ and $126,500 bank robbery. Canadian Imperial Bank of \ call for a taxi; a truck driver h. suburb of St. Laurent', Commerce, whose branch was 1 who gave the same man a lift Ihc robbery occurred, po-' robbed, offered $15,000 for In- j to Dorval, west of Montreal, and Chief (_mille Hetu an- formation leading to the arrest j a taxi-driver who drove the that detectives are , of the robbers. [ man back to Montreal directly •vo men and said hc ; St. Laurent police brought j past the murder scene. detectives will get, eyewitnesses to their station information" from early Monday to give their im- NASSAU, Bahamas (Reuters), missile, which packs a big po- Prime Minister Macmillan was! litical punch for Britain as the flying here Monday night for key to its status as an independ- talks with President Kennedy j ent nuclear power in the late WON'T ACCEPT PLAN I amid, a Srowin£ Anglo-Amcri-, '60s. "A totalitarian system cannot I c.nn furorc over the Skybolt mis" I The skybolt issuc h"s over- stle program. shadowed other questions that Macmillan, accompanied by j aie (iue to be discussed at the his foreign secretary, the Earl j talks which open Wednesday of Home, told reporters at Lon-1 morning at the plush Lyford j don airport his two-day talks! Cay resort. with Kennedy should produce al Macmillan will stay on after solution to thc thorny Skybolt ■ meeting Kennedy for a separ- 'alc session of talks with Prime Minister Diefenbaker who is duc here from Ottawa Thursday. RE-ASSESS SITUATION ACTOR THOMAS MITCHELL DIES BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.— AP — Actor Thomas Mitchell, whose career spanned more than a half century between the Broadway era of David Belasco and present day Hollywood, died Monday of cancer. He was 70. Mitchell's distinctions Includ ed a motion picture academy award for his portrayal of Doc Boone in Stageoach in 1938, and an Emmy award in 1952 as the best television actor. His performance in the Broadway production of Hazel Flagg won him the Antoinette Ferry Award in 1953. Mitchell had been ill a long time. The actor's wife, Susan, and dacghtcr, Mrs. Anne M. Lange of Hollywood, survive. the U.S. in forcing removal of. , the offensive weapons. j "• he declared. | issue. Discussing one of the still un-i With on-site inspection a dim! Kennedy, due to arrive here resolved offshoots of October's, prospect, Kennedy said, "theI today, is expected to receive a Cuban crisis, Kennedy virtually i camera, 1 think, is actually to j last-minute appeal from Mac- abandoned hope thnt "the Cuban I be our best inspector." ' millan to save the air-to-ground RECOVER BONDS • pressions of the men's appear-j A total of $64,000 worth of! of under-: ance to a police artist, who was j *«2Tl*"fif* '"J"* * than [inure* wcre picked up in making' drawings to guide po- i_o\i'_KHit the metropoli- a anil quizzed about thc ; , committed by a man j »« Santa Clans and ' ™___ii_ril U.S. Army; lie rifle was dropped in j l-liinil the bank, in the ! end Montreal suburb. Brabant. 31. -Cl_ni]_• Vhrinnau. 34, were Overthrow Government CP from Reuters Ar DAKAR, Senegal — Premier Miimadou Dia's government , , reported overthrown by a -. hy bullets from auto- motion ot censure Monday when' "rapi.ii- av they drove National Assembly members the bank in response to met in special session at the 1 house of its president, Lamine that killed them Gneye. Mined to havc come' Constitutional authority to > Bcteian FW rifle, the! bold the National Assembly '* 'hat is standard issue \ meeting in Fueye's house was !*AT0 forces S'ven »_ Senegal's president, :Santa Claus" i Le°P°ld Sen«hor: . lt . _____ clo«c and rid-i Reuters reP°rted tnere we« ■*« two policemen as they', ?B ,v*es f?!" the c,E,,sure mot.io.n' __.._, , ' , ' I inHnrlinc tVinsp nf cpvpi. minis. the ground be- Gilded their bullet-punctured ve- 20,00(1 people v sited the [went city hall Monday. ^ the bodies of Brabant »>rineau lav. A civic fun- hod"'- "•-• today. .. g« APPEAL suburb including those of seven ministers who resigned to be able to take part in the voting. There are 80 deputies in the assembly. taken in the robbery has been recovered. Still missing is $6,500 j in cash and $56,000 worth of U.S. and Canadian traveller's cheques. Originally, the loot had been announced as $2,000 cash and $10,000 in bonds. Six Die In Atlantic Provinces Snow Storms By TIIE CANADIAN PRESS 1 both of St. Mary's Indian Res-|A coroner said thc man crvation, and Jack Solomon, 35, i exposure. Thrce snow - covered bodies; o{ Kjngscical- Indian Rcserva-! _ __ found near a ditched car in cen-; tjon \ In Nova Scotia s Annapolis tral New Brunswick Monday J ' i Valley separate highway .-.cci- boosted to five the highway < FIND BODY j dents Sunday claimed the lives death tolls in the Atlantic prov-1 At River Denys in central', of 20-year-old school teachcr inces since a series of snow Cape Breton, the body of G3- j Pamela Shaw and 19-year-old storms struck the area late last year-old woodsman Donald Nor-[airman Lome Thomas Sewell. wcek, , man MacKinnon was found on Both were employed at thc roadside covered with snow. I Greenwood RCAF base. Postpone Walkout ROME fAP> - Italian journal-, ,„..„ Vl„, isls' unions Monday night post- i Breton which poned until Thursday a second countrywide walkout. Newspaper men, who returned to work Sunday after a three-day walkout that closed almost all news papers in Italy, had been scheduled to begin a new five-day strike today. But union leaders for 11,000 newspaper men said that "as a sign of responsibility" the walkout would be postponed until the next bargaining session begins Thursday. Pearson Calls For Bilingualism Probe . mixed with : **■? I" scattered ? flurries late this l*«oon. High today 38. Temperature. Min Mai v , Nwht Da* £*ta ••■•.... 22 32 Kr*»l 9 19 NBA Skies NSDAY, DEC. 18th p. today" ;;..5:iTp__. hrise w H>raotro. ....7:43 a.m. H Moon, at ^t Quarter 7:13 p.m. fNEIT STAR I"', rises. 9:4flp.m. ■« PLANETS ' fight above regu- . ">. low in south L? 6:06 p,m. ;"w. in south- L? h:06 p.m, in south- 7:36 p.m. In central Cape Breton Island a snow slorm claimed another life, and off the western coast of Newfoundland an extensive search started for two teenagers missing since Saturday in an open boat. More snow was forecast for some parts of the Atlantic provinces Monday night and today. Cape Breton Island and western Newfoundland gol the most „,„.„.,„, r.n _ , , , , , snow from the series of week-1 OITAW'A "CF'-In an emo-:federal Government ali.au; end disturbances. In son. e!,iollnl lllpa fo<" national unity.' taken steps in this regai places more than a foot of snow j Opposition Leader Pearson ; dominion - provincial fell. There was a total nmmui-! Mmldny <^lle(1 "» tl,c fe(loral lation of nearly two feet in Cape \ government and the provinces ' aggravated the lo re-establish the principles of Confederation wilh a full inquiry into Canada's bilingual problems. Canada now is going through "another serious crisis of national unity," he told the Commons. The time had come, "not for extremists and their passions, but for a deep, responsible and understanding examination of the basic situations." While there was much the federal government could do, many of the problems were outside its jurisdiction Therefore, the provinces must be asked to take part. "What better way could we prepare for our centenary than by taking effective steps now to deepen and strengthen the reality and thc hope of Confedera- Macmillan said in a four-minute statement at London Airport lhat he and Kennedy would at- tempt a new assessment of East-West relations in light of thp Cuban crisis. The assessment will cover Hie possibility of a "wider dctcnlc broader agreement between the Iwo grc:it blocs of powers." Macmillan said he also hoped lo discuss in detail the Sino-In- :lird of dian border conflict, thc Sino- Sovict ideological feud, nuclear tests and disarmament as well as other international issues. "As far as Skybolt is concerned." Macmillan said, "l am in no doubt wc shall find a way through our difficulties in Ihe spirit of agreement we shall always have with the American people and administration." WORLD NEWS BRIEFS problem of keeping traffic moving; At Little River Bridge, about eight miles from the central Ncw Brunswick coal town of Minto, the snow-covered bodies of three men were found early Monday. The dead are Eugene Paul, 35, Donald Paul, 34, no relation, ha- Mr. ['carson I raced the tiicli- I. A lichts of the Iwo cultures from nfer- Confederation — "our deelant- would he called early in lion of faith in the destiny of a year lo discuss national united Canada "-up lo the pre symbols. "As long a< nation has not these symbols . Untie to He said tlimlisli-spcakin: the Canadian! Canadians need a shock trcal- i-allied around I ment to appreciate Quebec's . we shall con- j current social revolution, demonstrations! -That si,ock Was civen in such as the ones recently in- i recent ycars bv 'separatism, volving the president of the i the agitation in sonic quarters, CNR (Donald Gordon)." ! which got so much publicity for TRACES HIGHLIGHTS -what was called 'political 'liber- Speaking entirely in English,! ation.' " (HAKE HITS CHILE SANTIAGO. Chile — AP— An earlh tremor jolted central Chile .Monday morning. There was considerable alarm among inhabitants but no casualties werc reported and damage appeared slight. NOMINATED IOR PRIZE MOSCOW—AP _ The Soviet press disclosed Monday night lhat two opponents of modernism in art and music havc been nominated for the Sovict Union's highest award, thc Lenin Prize. They are V. A.. Scrov. head of the" Soviet Academy of Art. and composer Vano Mura- delli, who had printed in the party newspaper Pravda Monday an article denouncing jazz. NATIONALISTS BUY BOND UNITED NATIONS — AP — Nationalist China bought a S500,000 UN bond Monday. A statement from its UN mission said the purchase, made despite China's own pressing needs, reflects "confidence and support for the United Nations." WINS TRAVEL BET ADELAIDE. Australia — Pc«- tors-Bill En .linton. 20. who bet his lather £1.000 Australian that lie could go around the world by air in eight days, won his bet "Monday with 14 hours to spare. Hc said that during his "fantastic" trip he passed through Sydney. Honolulu, Los Angeles, New York, London, Paris, Moscow, New Delhi, Bangkok, Singapore and Perth. Lighter Side will don his Tudor-style uniform in the Tower of London Jan. 1. "It's a very great honor to be chosen," said Toronto - born Bruce Knapp in an interview Monday. "This is one of the most sought-after posts in the British army." Knapp, 44, joined the British army when he was 18 and fought throughout the Sccond World War. He retired in 1960 lo become a salesman but now is returning to uniform. "I'm taking a huge pay cut." he said, "bui it's well worth NINA II AT SEA The Yeomen Warders who OFF PUERTO RICO—The Nina II a replica of one of the ships in lhe guard the Tower of London and Columbus' exploration, stops to pick up cylinder (not in picture! filled with j IJ^'^ienrT'viiiTs royal supplies after it was dropped by a Navy plane Dec. 12. Nina II was sighted; bodyguards. Now the 38 men Dee. 12 some 280 miles northeast of San Juan. The Nina II is attempting to jjjjpadded u^idaMuty- _uplicate the Columbus voyage of sailing from Spam to San Salvador. cient slone col.rldors o[ thc - (.UPI Telephoto) I tower. NOT AGAIN! SINGEN, West Germany (Reuters)—Two motorists an- Associate Defence Minister grily argued about damage after their cars collided near hcre, Sevigny, who spoke in French ; exchanged credentials, and drove off—to collide again an later in the debate, said the. hour later. Police said thcy wcrc neither drunk nor enemies. {The motorists estimated damage in the first crash at about 1 S300, thc second time at about S30. PICTURE LESSON ALGONQUIN, I"- (AP)—Jacog Stob was fined S-OD Mi in- 1 day for shooting a hen pheasant but he can get the penalty ! trimmed to $100. All he has to do is appear before Magistrate erry Doyle on Dec. 26 with 100 pictures of cock pheas- LONDON (CP) — Thc first" i ants Thcy can bc clippings from magazines, books, newspaper. Canadian to be appointed to the j or actual photographs "I want to bc sure that in the future historic Yeomen of the Guards i you'll know the difference between a hen and a cock pheas- Canadian Yeoman ant,' Doyle said ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN PEKIN, III. (AP)—You don't have to believe it, but Ralph Jones does: Somebody stole the men's room door from bis service station Sunday. FINE FOR 'SANTA' HULL, Que. (CP)—Cecil Ryan, 21, alias Santa Claus, was fined $10 and costs Monday for loitering in a tavern while dressed in a Santa Claus suit and beard and soliciting donations "for the poor." PARKING PROBLEM DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—A Covington, Ky., pilot is finding it more difficult to get lis single-engine airplane oul of a a shopping centre parking lot than he did getting it in. Wil- liam L. Whilchouse Jr., 37, was flying from New Philadelphia, Ohio, to Cincinnati when his Piper Super Cub ran out of gasoline ovcr North Dayton Saturday night. Whilchouse spotted the shopping centre and dead-stick landed his craft between cars without scratching a fender. Today Whilchouse will have his plane dismantled, trucked to Cox Municipal airport, reassembled and then—weather pennitting-he'll continue on to Cincinnati. All-White Cabinet By HENDERSON GALL SALISBURY (Reuters) - Premier - designate Winston Field named an all-white Southern Rhodesian cabinet Monday and observers described it as 'strongly right wing. But Field himself is said to be on the "left wing" of his Rhodesian Front party, which won power in elections Friday. Five of the eight members of thc new cabinet, including Field, are farmers. 1 Field made his selections shortly after Sir Roy Welensky, prime minister of the Rhodesian Federation, declared the Rhodesian Front victory "surprised and shocked" him. THE COUNTRY PARSON 0 ,'You can't live Christianity alone any more than a great violinist can play a symphony alone." if m y |
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