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C'r°M~. I ii-'ITED L is GOODWILL Jp CAR MONTH I^IOTOPHNTIL 10 P.M. ^ Nova Motors Ltd. DAILY NEWS Water St 8-1051 Elizabeth Ave. 9-4171 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1963 ' 16 PAGES SEVEN cents;;- OVIETS DENY DEATH Rap U.S. Press §§S§§| ■ r#- !| -■„ ***•»£:;', '■ tt CITY. I'lalf-—Shock, anguish, and sorrow are reflected In the face of this woman *ia«the hod> of hcr puppy, which had just been killed on pxe highway. J. M. ||iH »a»i»i;«phfr of the Sail Lake City Dcseret News, was on his way to cover a prlsou aWsttiar^tt |A rapture this scene.—(U.P.I. Telephoto). pders Form Embryo pr African Unity ■star: « ■rntiv., t [»W M\Rsn.M.|. CHECK TO NKItUMAH nw statf Writer Assuming signnlors '.wnor the l\« v.vi? ,if state principles "solemnly affirmed ..island declared," thc charter yfl.uc means a victory for the grad- 'volvc vwlists and a chc-'Ji to Ghanaian I Af- President Kwahe ', Nkrumah's - messianic dreams "Ai Instant po- while ''l'cal uni,y '" Africa. u-aii - Thc catch is point six in the ry >.f charter — "absolute dedication 1* the l0 "lc total emancipation of the icnrd' A'ncan territories which are lots still dependent." The declaration, enthusiast!- Il, -■fr- ■n«pircd ■ ■*«r\\kr.i!5;i£ influ- Tjf*» «,, hcr .1.000- '• << Wiia'Prtiatrtico. *f--tf a*«emhly of (7f «.i » ,-sMinril cf £''•"» aicctins twice 2«?«5iwfc«n ,,-in he 1 permanent cally enlarged upon by radical and moderate leader alike, means a program of econom.c and diplomatic sanctions against pockets of while supremacy that one London correspondent calls "the last step short of war." Liberal leaders the world over will agree that the days of white minority government in Mrien are numbered and that most newly independent nations can present a valid case for colonial neglect. For Publishing Tall Stories MOSCOW Reoters-Premler Khrushchev's! son-in-law has published an elaborate point- by-point denial of a New York newspaper report saying several Russian spacemen died in abortive space attempts since 1959. really lost his life, bit not in' Alexei Adzhubei, editor - in- chief of thc Soviet government newspaper Izvestia, wrote Monday in an open letter lo "Mr. Hearst," owner of the New York Journal-American, saymg the newspaper was wasting "thousands of tons of paper trying to prove that Russian . . . cannot, if you please, or.'dis- tance the United States in such »r a n d i o s e undertaking as competition in space." (The New York paper said last week a U.S. report nn Russian space failures lad been prepared but was labelled "top secret" to avoid aiisclosing United States intelligence methods.) The Russian letter said The) Journal-American reported ihe death in space of Pyo r Dolgov, Oct. il, i960. It continued: "Mr Hearst, tell your collaborators that instead of listening to non-existent signals they should , . go through the cuttings of existing newspapers and periodicals to establish that . . Dolgov It was "on Nov. 1, 1962, when ... he carried out a parachute descent from the stratosphere that was unprecedented in history." The letter said five other "cosmonauts" who Th Journal- American claimed lost their lives are in fact technicians. "Not one of them took part in a space flight and they are all safe and sound." The photographs of two of the men mentioned were carried in the same issue of Izvestia as fne letter and Adzhubei promised "Mr. Hearst" would hear from others "as soon as they have read your inventions about their persons in the newspapers," Adzhubei then ' quoted British astronomer Sir Bernard Lovell writing in the London Daily Mail that The Journal-American story "is pure nonsense. The people writing it approached us on two occasions and twice ceived denials." Pope's Condition Improves Further RALEIGH, N.C.—Hundreds of Negro students from Shaw Univ., marched down Raleigh's mata street here in demonstration against thc few remaining merchants, eating places and movlt houses, who refuse them service. Traffic on the broad street in the heart of North Carolina I capital city was blocked the full length of the street.—(U.P.I. Telephoto). Climbers Tell Story Ordeal On Everest VATICAN ..ciTY iRcuters) The Vatican safd Pope Johns condition improved further Monday but p fr c s s reports painted a black picture. The improvement in the condition of thc 81-year-old lead;r of thc Roman Catholic Church following a severe relapse and a hemorrhage last weekend was announced in the Vatican City newspaper l'Osservatorc Romano. However, thc Milan newspaper Corriere Delia Sera ie- ported that a few days ago :he Pope, rumored to have cancer, said: "I.know what I have. And I also know that I have only thrce or four more weeks to live." Corriere Delia Sera, a leading Italian paper, also quoted physician Piero Mazzoni, in almost constant attendance, as saying when he left Pope John Sun- I day: "We are ii IODE Wants Red Ensign To Be Canadian Flag fit tlie Or- !«f^-i:«l|l'ni:y> nj' PATR,C,A RUSAK v.;;:st™ af" VICTORIA (CP - A nun- '..witnri.il div tion asking the federal govern- *£ T\, "''"* imcnl l0 name lhe Red Ensiqn >i iv«~ ' sncnl- tne oWicla' fla8 of Canada was ^wractjflattcrs. (passed Monday by the national ~ ~l I chapter of the Imperial Order I' Daughters ot the Emp re. l^tatures •Vst-ai i,a, Mm ,,,' -■■« 64 Skies »:« un. r^V«dncs. iJ* "rtKht. * ^"H! plan- "Canadian citizens ore ticularly struck by the irony of their country's situation, when newly independent countries their own flags," national president Mrs. Peter L. Robinson of - Toronto said. Several times since 1945, when a n order-in-council permitted tbe Red Ensign to be flown from all federal government buildings, the order has asked for official endorsement of this flag. Cut In Sugar MONTREAL (CP) - Three Montreal sugar refineries rn- nounccd Monday price cuts of 25 cents for each 100-pound bag, bringing the price to $17.40 for two companies and 17.25 for the | (third. This is the first drop in up- ward-spiralling sugar prices since April 10, when, the price' fell five cents to $12.25. there have been 3d price changes so far this year, 35 increases and three decreases. Refinery spokesmen attributed the latest decrease to the drop in raw sugar prices on the world market in London. Dealers in London said profit-taking may have contributed to the decline. rather than I ence." 1 A Vatican source reported the leading surgeon Achillc Mario Dogliotti examined the pontiff last month and said radioactive anti-cancer treatment was impossible in view of the Pope's general condition. DELAY ARRIVAL Meanwhile, it was disclosed that a White House party due here Monday night to work details for President Kennedy's proposed visit June 22 post-1 poned its arrival for days. L'Osservatore Rom statement said thc Pope's doctors "found further progress (Monday) morning following improvement (Sunday) night ' his general condition, above all in his subjective condition." The Pope spent a "good night," a Vatican spokesman added. The Pope's personal physician, Antonio Gasbarrini, 81, examined the pontiff about noon Monday. Pope John, officially described Sunday as again suffering from a "state of nnemia," was reported to have hemorrhaged during the night fnm Saturday to Sunday and a blood trans usion. ESTABLISH FOND The 400 delegates from across Canada attending the five-day meeting voted to estanlish an IODE Canadian Centenary Fund with, a minimum objective • of $50,000 to be raised by 1967. Tne project to be undertaken with this fund will be decided by Temporary welfare assistance to Canada's unemployed will bc continued -for another year, it was .'decided following the report" of Mrs. W. T. A'-kins of Toronto, secretary for national services at home and abroad. Reject Suit WASHINGTON (AP) - ' ,S. Supreme Court rejected Monday a May 18 sui by Governor George C. Wallace ot Ala; bqma to bar use of federal troops in Birmingham The governor asked the court to declare President Kennedy violated the U.S. Constitution by sending troops into the state lor possible riot duty in Birmingham racial troubles. Wallace said neither he nor the Alabama legislaure had asked for federal troops and contended such a first step was necessary under the constitution. The governor asked the court also to declare unconstitutional a post-Civil War statue under which the president actc.l. KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - Painfully frostbitten, two members of the U.S. Mount Everest expedition returned to mandu Monday with a tale of being lost on the "roof of the world" and kicking each othu with spiked boots to keep body circulation going in 18-below- zero cold. There was a time, too, whsn the men who conquered the 29,- 028-foot summit lost their tempers. This was the account of W'l- lian Unsoeld, 36, of Corvallis, Ore., and Barry C. Bishop, 30. of Washington, D.C. They were flown to a hospital in Catmand'i by helicopter for emergency treatment of badly rostbitten toes and frost-blackened fingertips. They looked tired and obviously in pain, but still able to hobble. Dr. Robert Berry of Aiden, Pa., the American surgeon attending them, said after un examination that no surgery is contemplated now for either man. Unsoeld and Bishon were afflicted after the double U.S. assault on the world's highest peak last Wednesday. Unsoeld and Thomas Horn- bein, 32. of San Diego. Calif., made the historic climb by conquering Everest from the rugged, untravelled w e s t e - n ridge. Bishop and Luther Jer- stad, 26. of Eugene, Ore., made it by way of the previously travelled South Col. REACH SUMMIT FIRST The aouth team reached the summit first and star ed down. Unsoeld' and Hornboin reached the peak several hours later after a harrowing 12-hour climb. On the way down Unsoeld said, Hornbcin suggested halting near the summit to await ras- cue. Unsoeld said he wanted to go on. Tempers grew short. "After a long argument, vc did go down," Unsoeld said. "Then we saw a vague black blur." It was Bishop and Jer- stad. The four Joined up for the descent. But they got lost in the dark and were unable to find'their camp. They were ex hausted and out of oxygen. "We just picked out a rocky , patch and lay down on it," Un- | soeld said. I "We kicked with our feet to keep circulation going," Unsoeld said. "Some of us kicked each I other." Bishop cut in at this point: . "And with crampons on, tha'.'s I no fun." ' Crampons are the long spikes on the bottoms of climbing boots. 'Next morning Dr. David Ding- man of Baltimore and a Sherpa guide intercepted them and led them down to the base camp. World Citizen Settles Down STRASBOURG, France (Reuters)—Garry Davis, former "world citizen No. 1" who tore up his American passport and ran into, trouble with border officials throughout the world, is settling down and getting married. City officials said Monday the former United States airman will marry his ex-secretary here Wednesday. He will marry Esther Peter, a native of Strasbourg whom he met in 1949 while camping on a bridge between here and We it Germany, protesting against Fire Damages Hospital Wings CHICOUTIMI, Que. (CP) Nearly 1,000 patients and staff' members were evacuated Monday from Hotel Dieu Hospital where for more than five hours fire raged through two of the three wings. Dr. Gilles Tremblay, associf ate medical director of the hos-1 pital, said the fire was i control in early evening and' that the evacuation had been carried out in perfect order. All ambulances in the district were called out, along with fleets of trailer trucks, taxis Liberals Go Easy On Diefenbaker By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP) - in passing I from prime minister to Opposition leader, John D efenbaker seems to have entered an era of| sweetness and light in the Corn- He was n' favorite arget for] Liberal .Ticcklers, in the snary and short-lived 25th Parliament and claimed that the Liberals prevented him from speaking with - a: shouted demonstration last Dec. 19. When-the- lanky prairie law" f ■ yer now rises to speak, hand on hip and "finger wagging ud- monitioh at government benches his erstwhile tormentors sit m\ well-disciplined ranks" rarelyN in-1 terrupting.- ,'. )«■ • | Conservatives see the firm hand of* State Secretary Pjck- ersglll, government eader i;i I the House, behind : the > relative quiet which .thtjir chie encounters during'his speeches.: "'}■' •And-, they argue, there are1 sound reasons -for the 'Liberals I keeping their heckling i instinct I in check. v The first stems from .the use' Mr, Diefenbaker made of the Dec. 10; incident. Repeatedly lie] talked on election platforms about the Liberals "preventing thc priftie minister, of Canada from speaking." This was intended to • illus" Irate his- contention, that she Liberals were the "same o;d bunch" of, "a r'r o g a n I" MPs who ''trampled on the rights of Parliament" in the 1956 pipeline debate.... ■•'/■■'■■ Conservatives figure Mr. Dief- enbakerfs argument must have worried \ the Liberal brass so! that Liberal MPs were- cautioned against giving Mr Diefenbaker any'peg on -.vhich Jo hang a similar attack during this Parliament, But v they- also see. a. deeper meaning to the tactic, extending beyond the attitude toward .the opposition leader. This \ stems from the feeling that the last Parliament got out of hand in debates to the extend that exasperation and. ill- feeling across the gangway separating government and opposition played a considerable part in the ultimate dissolution of Parliament. . I In effect, they are saying that] a more amenable and co-open*;-j tive attitude,on-the part of the Conservative minority government might ; have prolonged •Parliament's life and delayed1 the April 8 election , vhich re-: turned the Liberals to power. I and private cars, to iransport aged and bed-ridden patients to nearby institutions and schools and to other hospitals in "•- Lake St. John area. Canadian National Railways made a number of sleeping cars available to hospital authorities. Dr. Tfemblay said the evacuation was carried out in less than three hours. Only patients who had been operated on earlier in the day remained in 'he undamaged wing, a section more recently built. He said it will be four or five days before any patients can be re-admitted. OPERATED BY NUNS The hospital, one of the largest in Quebec province, with 900 beds is operated by nuns of the Augustinian Order of the Roman Catholic Church. The fire broke out about 1 p.m. in one of the old wings, a five-storey structure that was used largely as a home for aged persons. The flames spread rapidly. The roof of the' first av'nE collapsed and the fire spread to the second wing. Hundreds of residents of Chi- coutimi. a citv of 33/>%: gathered to watch' the (ire and caused traffic difficult es. I the refusal of West German officials to allow him into the country without a passport. Davis, 41, destroyed his passport in 1048 as part of a campaign for a world without national barriers. Hc has been expelled from almost every nation in Europe and some in Asia. For the last year he has been working in Strasbourg: as a commercial representative. He is quoted in newspaper reports as saying: "Today I am no longer a citizen of the world, but simply a citizen of Strasbourg I keep my ideals, but I leave the task of fighting for them .to others. I have more Immediate concerns." 'ti ti ■;;f! 1 ;i ■■I ll I'tfiljil ti § V\ti\ ■m.i ■ ■ SP Costly Prank SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)'i- Three youths who said they flew a flag of Le Front de Liberation Quebecois as a prank in downtown Sherbrooke were fined $100 each in court Monday. Laval Guilbert, 20, second- year medical student at University of Sherbrooke; Norman Gin- gras, 21, of Chomedy, Que., and Serge Lemoyne, 20, of Acton Vale, Que., all were charged with public mischief. They ale- nied having any connection with the FLQ. ri'-'ii 1 |,l ill ti !'.:■ '■ ;M ;h: B i 1 '■<, ■ "i •, IB ' It'll'B III ii ! Ill 1 trP'B : lj k| ll'iB pB 1* life. !:■ THE COUNTRY PARSON "Men seem to behayu'- ■trees-r-they -grow about-so j and then decidesTthat's^ enough. \ '.-'■'■■'A
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1963-05-28 |
Date | 1963-05-28 |
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 | (10.75 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19630528.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 46445.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1963-05-28 |
PDF File | (10.75MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19630528.pdf |
Transcript | C'r°M~. I ii-'ITED L is GOODWILL Jp CAR MONTH I^IOTOPHNTIL 10 P.M. ^ Nova Motors Ltd. DAILY NEWS Water St 8-1051 Elizabeth Ave. 9-4171 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1963 ' 16 PAGES SEVEN cents;;- OVIETS DENY DEATH Rap U.S. Press §§S§§| ■ r#- !| -■„ ***•»£:;', '■ tt CITY. I'lalf-—Shock, anguish, and sorrow are reflected In the face of this woman *ia«the hod> of hcr puppy, which had just been killed on pxe highway. J. M. ||iH »a»i»i;«phfr of the Sail Lake City Dcseret News, was on his way to cover a prlsou aWsttiar^tt |A rapture this scene.—(U.P.I. Telephoto). pders Form Embryo pr African Unity ■star: « ■rntiv., t [»W M\Rsn.M.|. CHECK TO NKItUMAH nw statf Writer Assuming signnlors '.wnor the l\« v.vi? ,if state principles "solemnly affirmed ..island declared," thc charter yfl.uc means a victory for the grad- 'volvc vwlists and a chc-'Ji to Ghanaian I Af- President Kwahe ', Nkrumah's - messianic dreams "Ai Instant po- while ''l'cal uni,y '" Africa. u-aii - Thc catch is point six in the ry >.f charter — "absolute dedication 1* the l0 "lc total emancipation of the icnrd' A'ncan territories which are lots still dependent." The declaration, enthusiast!- Il, -■fr- ■n«pircd ■ ■*«r\\kr.i!5;i£ influ- Tjf*» «,, hcr .1.000- '• << Wiia'Prtiatrtico. *f--tf a*«emhly of (7f «.i » ,-sMinril cf £''•"» aicctins twice 2«?«5iwfc«n ,,-in he 1 permanent cally enlarged upon by radical and moderate leader alike, means a program of econom.c and diplomatic sanctions against pockets of while supremacy that one London correspondent calls "the last step short of war." Liberal leaders the world over will agree that the days of white minority government in Mrien are numbered and that most newly independent nations can present a valid case for colonial neglect. For Publishing Tall Stories MOSCOW Reoters-Premler Khrushchev's! son-in-law has published an elaborate point- by-point denial of a New York newspaper report saying several Russian spacemen died in abortive space attempts since 1959. really lost his life, bit not in' Alexei Adzhubei, editor - in- chief of thc Soviet government newspaper Izvestia, wrote Monday in an open letter lo "Mr. Hearst," owner of the New York Journal-American, saymg the newspaper was wasting "thousands of tons of paper trying to prove that Russian . . . cannot, if you please, or.'dis- tance the United States in such »r a n d i o s e undertaking as competition in space." (The New York paper said last week a U.S. report nn Russian space failures lad been prepared but was labelled "top secret" to avoid aiisclosing United States intelligence methods.) The Russian letter said The) Journal-American reported ihe death in space of Pyo r Dolgov, Oct. il, i960. It continued: "Mr Hearst, tell your collaborators that instead of listening to non-existent signals they should , . go through the cuttings of existing newspapers and periodicals to establish that . . Dolgov It was "on Nov. 1, 1962, when ... he carried out a parachute descent from the stratosphere that was unprecedented in history." The letter said five other "cosmonauts" who Th Journal- American claimed lost their lives are in fact technicians. "Not one of them took part in a space flight and they are all safe and sound." The photographs of two of the men mentioned were carried in the same issue of Izvestia as fne letter and Adzhubei promised "Mr. Hearst" would hear from others "as soon as they have read your inventions about their persons in the newspapers," Adzhubei then ' quoted British astronomer Sir Bernard Lovell writing in the London Daily Mail that The Journal-American story "is pure nonsense. The people writing it approached us on two occasions and twice ceived denials." Pope's Condition Improves Further RALEIGH, N.C.—Hundreds of Negro students from Shaw Univ., marched down Raleigh's mata street here in demonstration against thc few remaining merchants, eating places and movlt houses, who refuse them service. Traffic on the broad street in the heart of North Carolina I capital city was blocked the full length of the street.—(U.P.I. Telephoto). Climbers Tell Story Ordeal On Everest VATICAN ..ciTY iRcuters) The Vatican safd Pope Johns condition improved further Monday but p fr c s s reports painted a black picture. The improvement in the condition of thc 81-year-old lead;r of thc Roman Catholic Church following a severe relapse and a hemorrhage last weekend was announced in the Vatican City newspaper l'Osservatorc Romano. However, thc Milan newspaper Corriere Delia Sera ie- ported that a few days ago :he Pope, rumored to have cancer, said: "I.know what I have. And I also know that I have only thrce or four more weeks to live." Corriere Delia Sera, a leading Italian paper, also quoted physician Piero Mazzoni, in almost constant attendance, as saying when he left Pope John Sun- I day: "We are ii IODE Wants Red Ensign To Be Canadian Flag fit tlie Or- !«f^-i:«l|l'ni:y> nj' PATR,C,A RUSAK v.;;:st™ af" VICTORIA (CP - A nun- '..witnri.il div tion asking the federal govern- *£ T\, "''"* imcnl l0 name lhe Red Ensiqn >i iv«~ ' sncnl- tne oWicla' fla8 of Canada was ^wractjflattcrs. (passed Monday by the national ~ ~l I chapter of the Imperial Order I' Daughters ot the Emp re. l^tatures •Vst-ai i,a, Mm ,,,' -■■« 64 Skies »:« un. r^V«dncs. iJ* "rtKht. * ^"H! plan- "Canadian citizens ore ticularly struck by the irony of their country's situation, when newly independent countries their own flags," national president Mrs. Peter L. Robinson of - Toronto said. Several times since 1945, when a n order-in-council permitted tbe Red Ensign to be flown from all federal government buildings, the order has asked for official endorsement of this flag. Cut In Sugar MONTREAL (CP) - Three Montreal sugar refineries rn- nounccd Monday price cuts of 25 cents for each 100-pound bag, bringing the price to $17.40 for two companies and 17.25 for the | (third. This is the first drop in up- ward-spiralling sugar prices since April 10, when, the price' fell five cents to $12.25. there have been 3d price changes so far this year, 35 increases and three decreases. Refinery spokesmen attributed the latest decrease to the drop in raw sugar prices on the world market in London. Dealers in London said profit-taking may have contributed to the decline. rather than I ence." 1 A Vatican source reported the leading surgeon Achillc Mario Dogliotti examined the pontiff last month and said radioactive anti-cancer treatment was impossible in view of the Pope's general condition. DELAY ARRIVAL Meanwhile, it was disclosed that a White House party due here Monday night to work details for President Kennedy's proposed visit June 22 post-1 poned its arrival for days. L'Osservatore Rom statement said thc Pope's doctors "found further progress (Monday) morning following improvement (Sunday) night ' his general condition, above all in his subjective condition." The Pope spent a "good night," a Vatican spokesman added. The Pope's personal physician, Antonio Gasbarrini, 81, examined the pontiff about noon Monday. Pope John, officially described Sunday as again suffering from a "state of nnemia," was reported to have hemorrhaged during the night fnm Saturday to Sunday and a blood trans usion. ESTABLISH FOND The 400 delegates from across Canada attending the five-day meeting voted to estanlish an IODE Canadian Centenary Fund with, a minimum objective • of $50,000 to be raised by 1967. Tne project to be undertaken with this fund will be decided by Temporary welfare assistance to Canada's unemployed will bc continued -for another year, it was .'decided following the report" of Mrs. W. T. A'-kins of Toronto, secretary for national services at home and abroad. Reject Suit WASHINGTON (AP) - ' ,S. Supreme Court rejected Monday a May 18 sui by Governor George C. Wallace ot Ala; bqma to bar use of federal troops in Birmingham The governor asked the court to declare President Kennedy violated the U.S. Constitution by sending troops into the state lor possible riot duty in Birmingham racial troubles. Wallace said neither he nor the Alabama legislaure had asked for federal troops and contended such a first step was necessary under the constitution. The governor asked the court also to declare unconstitutional a post-Civil War statue under which the president actc.l. KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) - Painfully frostbitten, two members of the U.S. Mount Everest expedition returned to mandu Monday with a tale of being lost on the "roof of the world" and kicking each othu with spiked boots to keep body circulation going in 18-below- zero cold. There was a time, too, whsn the men who conquered the 29,- 028-foot summit lost their tempers. This was the account of W'l- lian Unsoeld, 36, of Corvallis, Ore., and Barry C. Bishop, 30. of Washington, D.C. They were flown to a hospital in Catmand'i by helicopter for emergency treatment of badly rostbitten toes and frost-blackened fingertips. They looked tired and obviously in pain, but still able to hobble. Dr. Robert Berry of Aiden, Pa., the American surgeon attending them, said after un examination that no surgery is contemplated now for either man. Unsoeld and Bishon were afflicted after the double U.S. assault on the world's highest peak last Wednesday. Unsoeld and Thomas Horn- bein, 32. of San Diego. Calif., made the historic climb by conquering Everest from the rugged, untravelled w e s t e - n ridge. Bishop and Luther Jer- stad, 26. of Eugene, Ore., made it by way of the previously travelled South Col. REACH SUMMIT FIRST The aouth team reached the summit first and star ed down. Unsoeld' and Hornboin reached the peak several hours later after a harrowing 12-hour climb. On the way down Unsoeld said, Hornbcin suggested halting near the summit to await ras- cue. Unsoeld said he wanted to go on. Tempers grew short. "After a long argument, vc did go down," Unsoeld said. "Then we saw a vague black blur." It was Bishop and Jer- stad. The four Joined up for the descent. But they got lost in the dark and were unable to find'their camp. They were ex hausted and out of oxygen. "We just picked out a rocky , patch and lay down on it," Un- | soeld said. I "We kicked with our feet to keep circulation going," Unsoeld said. "Some of us kicked each I other." Bishop cut in at this point: . "And with crampons on, tha'.'s I no fun." ' Crampons are the long spikes on the bottoms of climbing boots. 'Next morning Dr. David Ding- man of Baltimore and a Sherpa guide intercepted them and led them down to the base camp. World Citizen Settles Down STRASBOURG, France (Reuters)—Garry Davis, former "world citizen No. 1" who tore up his American passport and ran into, trouble with border officials throughout the world, is settling down and getting married. City officials said Monday the former United States airman will marry his ex-secretary here Wednesday. He will marry Esther Peter, a native of Strasbourg whom he met in 1949 while camping on a bridge between here and We it Germany, protesting against Fire Damages Hospital Wings CHICOUTIMI, Que. (CP) Nearly 1,000 patients and staff' members were evacuated Monday from Hotel Dieu Hospital where for more than five hours fire raged through two of the three wings. Dr. Gilles Tremblay, associf ate medical director of the hos-1 pital, said the fire was i control in early evening and' that the evacuation had been carried out in perfect order. All ambulances in the district were called out, along with fleets of trailer trucks, taxis Liberals Go Easy On Diefenbaker By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP) - in passing I from prime minister to Opposition leader, John D efenbaker seems to have entered an era of| sweetness and light in the Corn- He was n' favorite arget for] Liberal .Ticcklers, in the snary and short-lived 25th Parliament and claimed that the Liberals prevented him from speaking with - a: shouted demonstration last Dec. 19. When-the- lanky prairie law" f ■ yer now rises to speak, hand on hip and "finger wagging ud- monitioh at government benches his erstwhile tormentors sit m\ well-disciplined ranks" rarelyN in-1 terrupting.- ,'. )«■ • | Conservatives see the firm hand of* State Secretary Pjck- ersglll, government eader i;i I the House, behind : the > relative quiet which .thtjir chie encounters during'his speeches.: "'}■' •And-, they argue, there are1 sound reasons -for the 'Liberals I keeping their heckling i instinct I in check. v The first stems from .the use' Mr, Diefenbaker made of the Dec. 10; incident. Repeatedly lie] talked on election platforms about the Liberals "preventing thc priftie minister, of Canada from speaking." This was intended to • illus" Irate his- contention, that she Liberals were the "same o;d bunch" of, "a r'r o g a n I" MPs who ''trampled on the rights of Parliament" in the 1956 pipeline debate.... ■•'/■■'■■ Conservatives figure Mr. Dief- enbakerfs argument must have worried \ the Liberal brass so! that Liberal MPs were- cautioned against giving Mr Diefenbaker any'peg on -.vhich Jo hang a similar attack during this Parliament, But v they- also see. a. deeper meaning to the tactic, extending beyond the attitude toward .the opposition leader. This \ stems from the feeling that the last Parliament got out of hand in debates to the extend that exasperation and. ill- feeling across the gangway separating government and opposition played a considerable part in the ultimate dissolution of Parliament. . I In effect, they are saying that] a more amenable and co-open*;-j tive attitude,on-the part of the Conservative minority government might ; have prolonged •Parliament's life and delayed1 the April 8 election , vhich re-: turned the Liberals to power. I and private cars, to iransport aged and bed-ridden patients to nearby institutions and schools and to other hospitals in "•- Lake St. John area. Canadian National Railways made a number of sleeping cars available to hospital authorities. Dr. Tfemblay said the evacuation was carried out in less than three hours. Only patients who had been operated on earlier in the day remained in 'he undamaged wing, a section more recently built. He said it will be four or five days before any patients can be re-admitted. OPERATED BY NUNS The hospital, one of the largest in Quebec province, with 900 beds is operated by nuns of the Augustinian Order of the Roman Catholic Church. The fire broke out about 1 p.m. in one of the old wings, a five-storey structure that was used largely as a home for aged persons. The flames spread rapidly. The roof of the' first av'nE collapsed and the fire spread to the second wing. Hundreds of residents of Chi- coutimi. a citv of 33/>%: gathered to watch' the (ire and caused traffic difficult es. I the refusal of West German officials to allow him into the country without a passport. Davis, 41, destroyed his passport in 1048 as part of a campaign for a world without national barriers. Hc has been expelled from almost every nation in Europe and some in Asia. For the last year he has been working in Strasbourg: as a commercial representative. He is quoted in newspaper reports as saying: "Today I am no longer a citizen of the world, but simply a citizen of Strasbourg I keep my ideals, but I leave the task of fighting for them .to others. I have more Immediate concerns." 'ti ti ■;;f! 1 ;i ■■I ll I'tfiljil ti § V\ti\ ■m.i ■ ■ SP Costly Prank SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)'i- Three youths who said they flew a flag of Le Front de Liberation Quebecois as a prank in downtown Sherbrooke were fined $100 each in court Monday. Laval Guilbert, 20, second- year medical student at University of Sherbrooke; Norman Gin- gras, 21, of Chomedy, Que., and Serge Lemoyne, 20, of Acton Vale, Que., all were charged with public mischief. They ale- nied having any connection with the FLQ. ri'-'ii 1 |,l ill ti !'.:■ '■ ;M ;h: B i 1 '■<, ■ "i •, IB ' It'll'B III ii ! Ill 1 trP'B : lj k| ll'iB pB 1* life. !:■ THE COUNTRY PARSON "Men seem to behayu'- ■trees-r-they -grow about-so j and then decidesTthat's^ enough. \ '.-'■'■■'A |
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