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i&sMaLi^ t^'tiL^iA^ALiJ^il^^ L- ± ri Jl3 ,*^£^Lji^._._: l- • i. 1 ~ m n ds r m. m us d :d i ^PROTECTION POLICY l" l „t the Goodwill Warranty VlS Cars We Sell - It will 1 You Satisfaction After Sale. tsra Nova Motors Ltd. |P|U lSl:p CAR LOT THE DAILY NEWS \o iss ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1963 20 PAGES SEVEN CENTS 'ic [riant defends \)Hcy 'ftinsmese g=v- ,, 0{ President .i, Diem appeared Thursday 1 Jitfct diplomatic »ith «lie United ;.} military ally uncial angel. the l-shtnins .yvn on its Bud- .jcenents. Buddhist; luu'c denied f>ny w i t li communism lhrmiuhout their anti - govern- meni c » m p a i R n, avowedly aimed im« md religions tire dom find social justice. But amrthei imniiMMiiiiiK ci Ud the aliened plotters '•yellow-robed Reds." SAYS MONKS inn Aims Diem's younger brother. Ngo Dinh Mm. charged in i broad- oast statement th.it thc Buddhists had "plotted to abot.age national security >>' bringing weapons into pagodas and setting up recruiting offices to organize a coup d'etat. Ile is in charge of security police. I There still were no precise figures on thc number of monks , and nuns irrcstcd nd ihr i! number of casualties in 'he pagoda raids. A government spokesman told U.S. authorities I i more than 1,000 persons , j held. howev said. : Eyewitnesses, i one monk was shot dcai nt the ! Xa Loi pagoda in Saigon and i estimates of thc dead at that i Buddhist centre ranged up to i five or . About 30 were '.",',..„■ Civilians of thc ancient Vict- '"Am.A namesc capital of Hue rose in ', , - i , hen troops stormed two , \ , ' , pagodas there. AP photographer llorsc Fans said enraged men, , ,, women, boys and girls fought it. vt-t'the troops *'Un sticks' stones 1 il' land fists. Temple bcls and , '', I clashing cymbals called them "u ' I into action. One pagoda held out I for two hours nnd the other for ■ eight before thc soldiers tvm's i smashed their way in with rifle ...anding ! butts. NIKITA WARNS CHINA \v~ •*-»*• HAZLKTON; Pa.—Rescue workers shown al entrance to slop? In which thrce men have hern trapped since last Tuesday, prepare lo enter the slope to check on amount of gas. Mine is located at Shcpptiin, about eight miles southwest of here.— CUM Telephoto). Rescuers Have Setback By James V. Lamli War Will Omit No Races A third try at drilling an | operation, escape hole for the three Gordon Smith, deputy state secretary of mining, iol th word to Fcllin and Throne by the microphone in thc existing six-inch life line nnlc. is about 25 feet away them, separated by a mass of debris. None of thc fond and supplies sent to the others through thc lifeline hole has Nehru Wins Confidence Express Concern TORONTO (CP) — Far- East delegates at the An- gllcan Congress have expressed concern at the campaign by the government of South Vict Nam against Buddhists. In interviews at the congress here, Christians from countries neighboring Vict Nam said Thursday thc struggle between Vietnamese Buddhists and the government of Ngo Dinh Diem will have repercussions elsewhere in the East. clapped her hands tn lie mouth iiA£LJUUi\,ia. t.vi; ,llul lunied hcl. t)lu,k on lhc " 1 try " hole trapped miners was ordered Thursday, after lhc iccond onc failed just as it seemed certain to succeed. Undaunted, rescue crews heeled the giant drilling rig- as tall as a 10-storcy building —into position for anohcr attempt to drivc a 12-inch hit toward an underground pocket about 14 feet long and nine feet wide. No one admitted thc possibility of failure. "I just know he will come out of this alive," said Mrs. Anna Fellin, whose husband, David. 5B, ls trapped more than 300 feet underground with Henry Throne, 28, and Louis Bova, 42 A moment came, however, when morale all but cracked. That was..when, the, dr'I working on the second hole began bringing up white dust on its •rotating bit. To the experts, this they had gone past the chamber holding Throne and Felin. COULDN'T BELIEVE IT Workers stored in disbelief. Thcy had becn co through the night that they were going in thc right direction and would reach the men about the 331-foot level. One for the confidence, as they approached that depth, the drill was bringing up black dust-coal dust-and the men wcre in a pocket of coal. On a nearby hill, overlooking the tense scene, Mrs Fellin **to. » ""Wr here, Augiut W. It H *i!*™*> WnWagtom'to''Chicago*! 0»H«re •v^-fcSL"1'* *•■*»• '*•** wa» *,vcn *° Syster SAGE m For RCAF OTTAWA (CP - Automation comes to RCAF Air Defence Command Oct. 1. Authorities said Thursday the underground SAGE (Semi-Auto- matic Ground Environment) electronic control system near North Bay, Ont., will then become fully operational. SAGE is an octopus-like robot which collects radar and other data, displays information, works out interception courses tor jet fighters parrying bombers and even transmits orders to interceptors and launches defensive missiles. Sunny with cloudy periods. Brief Showers. High today 63. Temperatures Vancouver ... Winnipag . . Ottawa Montreal „ . Halifax St. John's FRIDAY, AUGUST 20 Sunset today ...8:00 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow 6:07 a.m. Moonset tonight 10:11 p.m. First Quarter Aug. 27 Prominent Star Altair, due south at 10:40 p.m., is 51 degrees above tne horizon here. In Panama and Venezuela this star is seen directly overhead., High 11:08 a.m., 11:22 p.m Low 4:50 a.m., 5:21 p.m. reached him, and thcy last' reported contact with hiin on Tuesday night. "We've got a little problem," said Smith. "It looks like we've hit bottom rock. White stuff is coming up the 12-inch mic." 'White stuff is comng up, heh>" Fellin replied. There seemed to be not the slightest change in his -oic TOOK 2.". nouns The first escape hole drilling failed Tuesday night when. Throne and Fcllin reported thc. j ceiling over them was cracking and they feared another civc-. in. That one took 22 hours. Thc sccond was stopped aflcr 25 hours, not counting thc six-hour delay caused by a broken drivc shaft Wednesday. H. B. Charmbury, state mines secretary, estimated the third hole would take 19 hours, because of lessons learned, and that another 30 hours would be needed lo ream the 12-inch hole out to 17 inches which may be enough for an escape hole. Under such a timetable, it ould be late Saturday night or early Sunday morning, at the earliest, that the men could be rescued. At one point Fellin said: 'You needn't hurry. We've been here By Peter Jackson NEW DELHI (Reuters) •Prime Minister Nehru of India has won the first hon-confklenc... vole moved against him in his Ifi ycars of office by a massive 346, votes to 61. The victory Thursday followed four days of bitter debate and attacks by opposition members against Nehru persona ly and against his ruling Congress party, "ie 73-year-old leade- made jlashing counter-attack Wednesday. But after the vote it was learned Nehru mght announce a cabinet reshuffle today which would give the party " new look. Nehru's chief critic. .T. Kipilani, turner Congre s iart. president and now an independent who presented thc censure motion, said Nehru "treats the country with contempt because he has supreme power with a steam - roller majority behind him." Hc was supported by non - Communist opposition members. Nehru told the packed House COLLEGE CLOSED GUAYAQUIL (Reutcis)-The government closed the university of Loja in southern Ecuador for reorganization Wednesday after a murder and suicide. University Treasurer Jorge Pie- dra killed auditor .lose Espinoza and himself after Espinoza found more than 3,000,000 sucres (about $140,000) missing in university accounts. that Communist Ch gloating" over the non-confi dence motion. He defended the country's econflSiTe progress, but said hc igreed the government had not gone fast cnough on tie road to socialism. WANTS LIBERTY But China's prog added, had been at terms ot personal liberty which c did not want. He said India's foreign policy has succeeded in putting it "in far morc advantageo is oosi- on than China." India, hc said, had been aided by the United States and Russia, which also had been India's supporter" on the Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan. Hc reiterated India's policy of seeking a settlement with Paid removes all mutual bitterness" and rejected as opposition demands that India should break of diplomatic relations and declare war ii Chin: Twenty-four members of thc 19-seat lower House abstained on voting on the censure including all Communist members present. The Congress party holds 371 seats House. EXPEL ISRAELI MOSCOW (Reuters) - So- \.a p lice have expelled an Israeli tourist for attempting to "brainwash" Soviet Jevs, thc trade union newspaper Trud reports. Trud says a man identified only as Shur visited the Soviet Union in April with a group of Israeli tourists and "cham- pkwed the position of lews in Israel" when talking to Russian Jews. Election For B.C. VICTORIA (CP) - Premier W. A. C. Bennett of British Co- 1 u m b i a announced Thursday that a provincial general election will be held Monday, Sept. 30. The premier, who has headed the B.C. government for 11 years, said his. Social Credit government will campaign for a renewed mandate on the slogan; "Forward to a greater British Columbia." Mr. Bennett told a special press conference that wanted his mandate before provincial-federal conference in November. He.called this conference the most important since Confcdcr- FOUGHT IN SPAIN TORONTO (CP)-Edward Cecil-Smith, 60, former Toronto Montreal newspaper man fought with the loyalists in the Spanish civil war, was buried here Tuesday. He died ast Saturday. Mr. Cecil - Smith had been a reporter with the Toronto Star and The Mail and Empire and was with the Montreal Star when the civil war started " 1936. TOURISTS ABOUND OTTAWA (CP) - RCMP re- ported Wednesday that an estimated record 8,000 people rimmed the lawns of Parliament Hill to see the changing of the guard ceremony and then swarmed into the Parliament buildings. Tuesday night accommodation was so scarce in the capital that police on Parliament Hill reported that some tourists slept in thcir cars. panicd Khrushchev on a visit to the earthquake-shattered Macedonian city of Skopje, Thursday appealed to the great powers, particularly Russia and the United States, to destroy their nuclear weapons and ban their production. DENIES RUMORS Tito also denied Western speculation that Yugoslavia may join thc Soviet bloc or that Russia may make concessions to his country. "There can be no question of any concessions and there will bc no talks on these matters," In what was seen as an obvious allusion to attacks bji Communist China on Yugoslav "revisionist" ideas. Tito said Yugoslav Communists will not yield to those who "wish lo Yugoslavia on a two - week j break ■ the international work- "working vacation," said a mi- >. ar movement." clear war "would not distin-l During their visit to Skopje, devastated by an earthquake July 26. Tito and Khrushchev saw steel-hclmeted workers and youth volunteers clearing tht city's debris. They were cheered by thousands of survivors as thev drove slowly between ruined buildings. By Branislav Petrovic I BELGRADE (Reuters)- Visiting Premier Nikita Khrushchev has ssued a thinly-veiled warning to Communist China that a world thermonuclear war would not spare "the white, black or yellow races." In a dinner speech Wednesday night that was made public Thursday by thc Yugoslav news agency T a n j u g, Khuishchev said r nuclear war woul I be Ihe end of those who caused it. The Russian premier, visitinj Hc added: "Wc shall not tremble if thc most aggressive circles of imperialism cause the ge ^ , ,. _ .,_.., MONTREAL 'CP' 'few'days'and caii wait i bridge across the St. little longer." Insist On Malaysia SINGAPORE <R Government leaden wak. Singapore and North Bor- insist on formation" of the Malaysian federation by Aug. 31 despite Indonesian objections. Heads of government Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore and Stephen Kalong Ningkan of Sarawak and chief minister designate of North Borneo spoke Thursday night at a press conference on their way to Kuala Lumpur to place their views before Premier Tunku Abdul Rattan of Malaya. All denounced Indonesian insistence that Indonesian and Philippine observers must be present while a United Nations j j,"aV - A CPR | Lawrence River. Lawrence Eighteen suspected members jed by a of the FLQ werc arrested for I bomb Thursday after a warning terrorist activities last spring from a man who described j and U arc free on bail, himself as a member of lc I The bomb Thursday damaged Front de Liberation Quebecois, I the hoist mechanism of the I the fanatical movement seeking i southern section of the bridge Ito tear Quebec from Ccnfeder- and a CPR official said it lation. I appears it will take two to I No one was hurt .ind rail j three months to repair. sl-1 traffic over tbe bridge was l However, thc northern section unaffected with one section of I was left undamaged anti trains the double - span bridge un-1 crossed as usual after the touched. I bombing. The letters FLQ were also As a precaution, shipping painted on the bridge but in along the waterway was haded Quebec city, Charles K. Cantin, for four hours. deputy attorney-general, said it "does not mean necessarily :hat ■ I1Avs; ()>j xOL'R it was the FLQ." OTTAWA 'CP' - Agricul'.ire "It could be people who vvnnt I Minister Hays leaves Ottawa to copy the methods used i>y Frklav <m a ID-day trip that will the FLQ. It could bc some take him to six European coun- youna people who want to draw tries, including Russia. Mr. attention to themselves." ni:,vs <raict Wednesday he and POLICE EXPECTED IT |,js officials want to familiarize Provincial police herc mean-1 themselves with the agri<:i'""ral while said thcy had been ex- policies and thinking of other pecting "something like this" j countries. for something. They said there i heen recent indications j team surveys political feeling in militant separatists were pre-; WILL AID STUDY Sarawak and North Borneo pa,-illg tm' "something his*' ' ''I ' INA 'CP'-A committer about the proposed federation of Last weekend six youths werc : tn study biculturalism in bas the two countries with Malaya I arrested for painting anti-Con-j katchewan will bc aoDointed by and Singapore. CZECH SHOP ON STRIKE VIENNA (CP) - Thc Slovak trade union newspaper Praca received here Wednesday car- an unprecedent report of a strike in a state-owned shop in Communist Czechoslovakia. The newspaper says carpenters, painters and upholsterers of a maintenance shop in Bratislava complained their wages were getting smaller. federation slogans on buildi suburban Westmount and two nthers werc picked up earlier iimilarly defacing the approaches to the Jacques Cartier :.'.".„.. linking Montreal Island with' the south shore of thc St. PROTEST TREATMENT •PARIS (Reuters — Mohammed Boudiaf, former deputy premier in the Algerian provisional government, said in a letter published here Wednesday that hc and thrce companions have been on hunger strikes since July 5 in protest against their forced residence in southern Algeria. In another message, Boudiaf said he was in hospital, had lost about 40 pounds and had been twice In a coma. FORCES ON ALERT CAIRO (Reuters)—The E«yp-| tion armed forces were put on on emergency alert Wednesday to face "Israeli aggression against Syria," the Middle d_ast news agency reported. SETTLES TAX DEBT NEW DELHI (Reuters)- The Aga Khan, who is living in the south of France, has paid 1,000,- 000 rupees (about $230,000) in tax arrears to the Indian government under a "compromise" arrangement, Finance Minister Morarji Desai told Parliament Wednesday. He said the Aga's l-annual income herc is difficult : as it derived only from gifts from his followers. BUS DRIVER JAILED STUTTGART (Reuter ) - A Belgian bus driver was sentenced to one ycar in prison in this West German city Wednesday for negligently killing nine persons and causing bodily harm to 35 others in a highway crash July 7. THE COUNTRY PARSON .r the prov'm •nment. Pre Lloyd sa'id Wed ncsday. Tlie premier suggested such a committee several week? ago .as a possible method o. helping the federal royal com mission on biculturalism. ll . "Too many folks seem ' think you have to break son: commandment to sin." • •:•"" ll WASHINGTON — Dr. Edward Teller, the father of the H-bdmb. is shown during his testimony before the Senate Foreign {tela- tions Committee, August 20. Opposing the nuclear test:#an treaty, Teller said it is not a 'step toward peace"-but' a vjtep "away from safety and possibly step toward war." Mcinbeji of the Senate Armed Services and Atomic Energy .Committee* | were also in attendance.—(UPI Telephoto). '"-'.'• £
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1963-08-23 |
Date | 1963-08-23 |
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 | (12.10 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19630823.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 45581.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1963-08-23 |
PDF File | (12.10MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19630823.pdf |
Transcript |
i&sMaLi^ t^'tiL^iA^ALiJ^il^^ L- ± ri Jl3 ,*^£^Lji^._._: l- • i. 1 ~
m
n
ds
r
m.
m
us
d
:d
i
^PROTECTION POLICY
l" l „t the Goodwill Warranty
VlS Cars We Sell - It will
1 You Satisfaction After Sale.
tsra Nova Motors Ltd.
|P|U lSl:p CAR LOT
THE DAILY NEWS
\o iss
ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1963
20 PAGES
SEVEN CENTS
'ic [riant
defends
\)Hcy
'ftinsmese g=v-
,, 0{ President
.i, Diem appeared Thursday
1 Jitfct diplomatic
»ith «lie United
;.} military ally
uncial angel.
the l-shtnins
.yvn on its Bud-
.jcenents.
Buddhist;
luu'c denied f>ny
w i t li communism
lhrmiuhout their anti - govern-
meni c » m p a i R n, avowedly
aimed im« md religions tire
dom find social justice. But
amrthei imniiMMiiiiiK ci Ud the
aliened plotters '•yellow-robed
Reds."
SAYS MONKS inn Aims
Diem's younger brother. Ngo
Dinh Mm. charged in i broad-
oast statement th.it thc Buddhists had "plotted to abot.age
national security >>' bringing
weapons into pagodas and setting up recruiting offices to
organize a coup d'etat. Ile is
in charge of security police.
I There still were no precise
figures on thc number of monks
, and nuns irrcstcd nd ihr
i! number of casualties in 'he
pagoda raids. A government
spokesman told U.S. authorities
I i more than 1,000 persons
, j held.
howev
said.
: Eyewitnesses,
i one monk was shot dcai nt the
! Xa Loi pagoda in Saigon and
i estimates of thc dead at that
i Buddhist centre ranged up to
i five or .
About 30 were
'.",',..„■ Civilians of thc ancient Vict-
'"Am.A namesc capital of Hue rose in
', , - i , hen troops stormed two
, \ , ' , pagodas there. AP photographer
llorsc Fans said enraged men,
, ,, women, boys and girls fought
it. vt-t'the troops *'Un sticks' stones
1 il' land fists. Temple bcls and
, '', I clashing cymbals called them
"u ' I into action. One pagoda held out
I for two hours nnd the other for
■ eight before thc soldiers
tvm's i smashed their way in with rifle
...anding ! butts.
NIKITA WARNS CHINA
\v~ •*-»*•
HAZLKTON; Pa.—Rescue workers shown al entrance to slop? In which thrce men have hern trapped since last Tuesday,
prepare lo enter the slope to check on amount of gas. Mine is located at Shcpptiin, about eight miles southwest of here.—
CUM Telephoto).
Rescuers Have Setback
By James V. Lamli
War Will
Omit No
Races
A third try at drilling an | operation,
escape hole for the three
Gordon Smith, deputy state
secretary of mining, iol th
word to Fcllin and Throne by
the microphone in thc
existing six-inch life line nnlc.
is about 25 feet away
them, separated by a
mass of debris. None of thc fond
and supplies sent to the others
through thc lifeline hole has
Nehru Wins
Confidence
Express
Concern
TORONTO (CP) — Far-
East delegates at the An-
gllcan Congress have expressed concern at the campaign by the government of
South Vict Nam against
Buddhists.
In interviews at the congress here, Christians from
countries neighboring Vict
Nam said Thursday thc struggle between Vietnamese
Buddhists and the government of Ngo Dinh Diem will
have repercussions elsewhere in the East.
clapped her hands tn lie mouth
iiA£LJUUi\,ia. t.vi; ,llul lunied hcl. t)lu,k on lhc
" 1 try "
hole
trapped miners was ordered Thursday, after lhc
iccond onc failed just as
it seemed certain to succeed.
Undaunted, rescue crews
heeled the giant drilling rig-
as tall as a 10-storcy building
—into position for anohcr attempt to drivc a 12-inch hit
toward an underground pocket
about 14 feet long and nine feet
wide.
No one admitted thc possibility of failure.
"I just know he will come out
of this alive," said Mrs. Anna
Fellin, whose husband, David.
5B, ls trapped more than 300
feet underground with Henry
Throne, 28, and Louis Bova, 42
A moment came, however,
when morale all but cracked.
That was..when, the, dr'I working on the second hole began
bringing up white dust on its
•rotating bit.
To the experts, this
they had gone past the chamber
holding Throne and Felin.
COULDN'T BELIEVE IT
Workers stored in disbelief.
Thcy had becn co
through the night that they
were going in thc right direction
and would reach the men about
the 331-foot level. One
for the confidence, as they
approached that depth,
the drill was bringing up black
dust-coal dust-and the men
wcre in a pocket of coal.
On a nearby hill, overlooking
the tense scene, Mrs Fellin
**to. » ""Wr here, Augiut W. It
H *i!*™*> WnWagtom'to''Chicago*! 0»H«re
•v^-fcSL"1'* *•■*»• '*•** wa» *,vcn *°
Syster
SAGE
m
For RCAF
OTTAWA (CP - Automation
comes to RCAF Air Defence
Command Oct. 1.
Authorities said Thursday the
underground SAGE (Semi-Auto-
matic Ground Environment)
electronic control system near
North Bay, Ont., will then become fully operational.
SAGE is an octopus-like robot
which collects radar and other
data, displays information,
works out interception courses
tor jet fighters parrying bombers and even transmits orders
to interceptors and launches defensive missiles.
Sunny with cloudy periods. Brief Showers. High
today 63.
Temperatures
Vancouver ...
Winnipag . .
Ottawa
Montreal „ .
Halifax
St. John's
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20
Sunset today ...8:00 p.m.
Sunrise
tomorrow 6:07 a.m.
Moonset tonight 10:11 p.m.
First Quarter Aug. 27
Prominent Star
Altair, due
south at 10:40 p.m.,
is 51 degrees above tne
horizon here. In Panama
and Venezuela this star is
seen directly overhead.,
High 11:08 a.m., 11:22 p.m
Low 4:50 a.m., 5:21 p.m.
reached him, and thcy last'
reported contact with hiin on
Tuesday night.
"We've got a little problem,"
said Smith. "It looks like we've
hit bottom rock. White stuff is
coming up the 12-inch mic."
'White stuff is comng up,
heh>" Fellin replied.
There seemed to be not the
slightest change in his -oic
TOOK 2.". nouns
The first escape hole drilling
failed Tuesday night when.
Throne and Fcllin reported thc. j
ceiling over them was cracking
and they feared another civc-.
in. That one took 22 hours. Thc
sccond was stopped aflcr 25
hours, not counting thc six-hour
delay caused by a broken drivc
shaft Wednesday.
H. B. Charmbury, state mines
secretary, estimated the third
hole would take 19 hours, because of lessons learned, and
that another 30 hours would be
needed lo ream the 12-inch hole
out to 17 inches which may be
enough for an escape hole.
Under such a timetable, it
ould be late Saturday night or
early Sunday morning, at the
earliest, that the men could be
rescued.
At one point Fellin said:
'You needn't hurry. We've been
here
By Peter Jackson
NEW DELHI (Reuters)
•Prime Minister Nehru
of India has won the first
hon-confklenc... vole moved against him in his Ifi
ycars of office by a massive 346, votes to 61.
The victory Thursday followed
four days of bitter debate and
attacks by opposition members
against Nehru persona ly and
against his ruling Congress
party,
"ie 73-year-old leade- made
jlashing counter-attack Wednesday. But after the vote it
was learned Nehru mght announce a cabinet reshuffle today
which would give the party "
new look.
Nehru's chief critic. .T.
Kipilani, turner Congre s iart.
president and now an independent who presented thc censure
motion, said Nehru "treats the
country with contempt because
he has supreme power with a
steam - roller majority behind
him." Hc was supported by
non - Communist opposition
members.
Nehru told the packed House
COLLEGE CLOSED
GUAYAQUIL (Reutcis)-The
government closed the university of Loja in southern Ecuador for reorganization Wednesday after a murder and suicide.
University Treasurer Jorge Pie-
dra killed auditor .lose Espinoza
and himself after Espinoza
found more than 3,000,000 sucres
(about $140,000) missing in
university accounts.
that Communist Ch
gloating" over the non-confi
dence motion.
He defended the country's
econflSiTe progress, but said hc
igreed the government had not
gone fast cnough on tie road
to socialism.
WANTS LIBERTY
But China's prog
added, had been at
terms ot personal liberty which
c did not want.
He said India's foreign policy
has succeeded in putting it "in
far morc advantageo is oosi-
on than China."
India, hc said, had been aided
by the United States and Russia, which also had been India's
supporter" on the Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan.
Hc reiterated India's policy of
seeking a settlement with Paid
removes all mutual
bitterness" and rejected as
opposition demands that
India should break of diplomatic relations and declare war
ii Chin:
Twenty-four members of thc
19-seat lower House abstained
on voting on the censure
including all Communist
members present. The Congress
party holds 371 seats
House.
EXPEL ISRAELI
MOSCOW (Reuters) - So-
\.a p lice have expelled an Israeli tourist for attempting to
"brainwash" Soviet Jevs, thc
trade union newspaper Trud reports. Trud says a man identified only as Shur visited the Soviet Union in April with a group
of Israeli tourists and "cham-
pkwed the position of lews in
Israel" when talking to Russian
Jews.
Election
For B.C.
VICTORIA (CP) - Premier
W. A. C. Bennett of British Co-
1 u m b i a announced Thursday
that a provincial general election will be held Monday, Sept.
30.
The premier, who has headed
the B.C. government for 11
years, said his. Social Credit
government will campaign for
a renewed mandate on the slogan; "Forward to a greater
British Columbia."
Mr. Bennett told a special
press conference that
wanted his mandate before
provincial-federal conference in
November.
He.called this conference the
most important since Confcdcr-
FOUGHT IN SPAIN
TORONTO (CP)-Edward Cecil-Smith, 60, former Toronto
Montreal newspaper man
fought with the loyalists in the
Spanish civil war, was buried
here Tuesday. He died ast Saturday. Mr. Cecil - Smith had
been a reporter with the Toronto Star and The Mail and Empire and was with the Montreal
Star when the civil war started
" 1936.
TOURISTS ABOUND
OTTAWA (CP) - RCMP re-
ported Wednesday that an estimated record 8,000 people
rimmed the lawns of Parliament Hill to see the changing
of the guard ceremony and then
swarmed into the Parliament
buildings. Tuesday night accommodation was so scarce in the
capital that police on Parliament Hill reported that some
tourists slept in thcir cars.
panicd Khrushchev on a visit to
the earthquake-shattered Macedonian city of Skopje, Thursday
appealed to the great powers,
particularly Russia and the
United States, to destroy their
nuclear weapons and ban their
production.
DENIES RUMORS
Tito also denied Western speculation that Yugoslavia may
join thc Soviet bloc or that
Russia may make concessions
to his country.
"There can be no question of
any concessions and there will
bc no talks on these matters,"
In what was seen as an
obvious allusion to attacks bji
Communist China on Yugoslav
"revisionist" ideas. Tito said
Yugoslav Communists will not
yield to those who "wish lo
Yugoslavia on a two - week j break ■ the international work-
"working vacation," said a mi- >. ar movement."
clear war "would not distin-l During their visit to Skopje,
devastated by an earthquake
July 26. Tito and Khrushchev
saw steel-hclmeted workers and
youth volunteers clearing tht
city's debris. They were
cheered by thousands of survivors as thev drove slowly between ruined buildings.
By Branislav Petrovic I
BELGRADE (Reuters)-
Visiting Premier Nikita
Khrushchev has ssued
a thinly-veiled warning
to Communist China
that a world thermonuclear war would not
spare "the white, black
or yellow races."
In a dinner speech Wednesday
night that was made public
Thursday by thc Yugoslav news
agency T a n j u g, Khuishchev
said r nuclear war woul I be Ihe
end of those who caused it.
The Russian premier, visitinj
Hc added: "Wc shall not
tremble if thc most aggressive
circles of imperialism cause the
ge
^ , ,. _ .,_.., MONTREAL 'CP'
'few'days'and caii wait i bridge across the St.
little longer."
Insist On
Malaysia
SINGAPORE |
CONTENTdm file name | 45561.jp2 |