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.ia SAVINGS ON J ACADIAN I ^TACT OUR SALESMEN THE DAILY Ilia Motors Ltd. xx "-* ■L'-"J~L' A lSvn c\\\ LOT Mil1" ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, .1963 20 PACES SEVEN CENTS T.OAT RIDE , , .„...: Viv:osla. President Josip Broi Tito (second from rillit) shows Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev . while Mr-. Nhu Khrushchev (left) and .Mrs. Jovanka Tito watch scenery from boat near Titos off- ,( :;. ..unrdins, ... tin- official Conmiii .list source which supplied this photo.' Aids said Tito and khrusll- wilh their talks here so far.—(I'PI Radiotelephoto from Official Communist Source). Found Alive In Mine m unrkid at the Interna- '..il Minerals and Chemicals :i>h m ine at F.stcrha/y, !<.. when it w ns being opened. It wns n o t known whether Truemnn, 33. is ,i Canadiim, hut his home town lias been listed as Toronto. World Briefs (ection N.S. ■ W»W Thursday T^» SwtU provin- J**i lor Turvdav, f *»h»n»«ivi> Con- , intramrnt has i&niures SOLDIERS Kl.EE ", K.SCHWEGE. (iermany (Al*> ^. Two East German soldiers, ,.. acid __•» and :_•., walked across ,. the hovder while on pa'rol Thursdny and reported as ref- U',ees to West German customs ',' men. The pair said they j InnneJ '.. to flee four weeks ago but at .', the last minute werc prevented ' l mm doing so. TO DISCUSS BUDDHISTS ,., NEW DELHI tReuters) - 'y India has agreed to attend a ' proposed conference of heads ol Ruddhisl countries lo liscuss J, Buddhist problems in Smith \'iet Nam. authoritative sources s.iid I here Thursday. The sources ,v said the government had conveyed its acceptance to Cey- \ loncse Premier Mrs. Banda- \\ naike. who originally proposed ''"' it. CYCLONE KILLS TWO SYNEY, Australia (Reuters' « ; Two youths lost thcir lives dur-1 •>' | ine a cyclonic storm which i | smashed its way across thc "I;Sydney area Thursday, leaving! i widespread damage and flood- >■' ing in its wake. KIND EARLY WARRIOR FAENZA. Italy (AP) - The tomh and skeleton of a six- foot - seven - inch • tall Gaulis. warrior wcre found by workmen excavating for a new street in San Martino di GatUrr. near thi.- town southeast ot Bologna. Buried with the warrior were three bronze-tipped j spears. The zone herc is a known battleground of thc early Gallic wars. WANT NO HELP A.MIHUS, Denmark (RcuUrs: The 21.200-ton Soviet tanker Yarshnva, aground in Danish waters off Funcn Island, has refused offers of aid from tw Danish salvage, vessels, naval command reported herc Thurs day. The tanker wns in nn apparent danger and was availing a tug from East Germany. STRIKE STOPS BATHS TOKYO 'API— The Japanese capital's 2,570 public bath houses went on strike Thursday and about 2,000,000 went without a hath. The bath house operators threatened to stay closed for three days—protesting a. government ban on raising thel five-cent fee to seven cents. Thc two earlier survivors .vii.l these live threw tin a barricade ; behind debris after the explosion, then strung a cheesecio h curtain to Ilie roof of the tunnel | lu keep out deadly gas. The five hadn't been hoard ; from since a n d hadn't -c- isponded tu sound signals on a Ipipe from rescuers. But there ! was hope that a stcol-encr.«o.i air line had carried oxygen io them. Apparently it did. CP from Reuters-AP SAIGON-U.S. Ambassador Hanry Cabot Lodce has refused to hand over to the South Viet Nam government two Buddhist monks sheltered in the United States operations mission here, diplomatic sources reported Thursday. The request came from Acting Foreign Minislcr Truoig Cong C'llll in a meeting Tluirsd day wilh Lodge, whn ton!; up his appointment this week in the midst of growing tensinn over the Roman ■ Calholic-'.c.i government's anti-Buddhist policies. The sources said Lodge -r jeeted lhe suggestion that lhc monks, who fled from mass government arrests Aug. 20. should he turned over. lie made no comment wiien Ctiu told him many of thc hundreds of monks and nuns arrested nt that timc had becn released, the sources said. Meanwhile, informed sour-es said President Ngn Dinh Diem's government planned massive rallies throughout the counlry In suppnrl nf il? nolieics, Iui.-Iu.l- ing its anti-Buddhist drive. MAY ELEVATE BROTHER The rallies, preceded by a program nf "disintoxication" of criticism among the popul ice. might also publicly recognize Diem's controversial younger brother Xgo Dinh Nhu ns a j partner in his political power. | thc sources s.iid. military governar. Ton That Dinh. predicted demonstration" . He said there is ion over g..vernment I force i the ; ana udents an during recent days would released almost immediate!; Dinh said martial law. elared en thc eve on the r on Buddhist pagodas Aug. and press censorship would lifted as soon as there Break MIIII, CP from Reiiters-A P - Mor SURVIVORS CRITICAL Earlier, tlie first two .nen saved had criticized rescue efforts and also said therc lud been lack of adequate state inspectinn at the mine. *W o.m. Plan To Keep Trains Running HAVANA. (AP) — Cuban militia forces have been on a state of alert for the last 48 hours. They cannot leave their posts. All leaves in the army forces. . . . The above incomplete dispatch was telephoned from the Havana bureau of Thc Associated Press. The telephone then went dead and the Havana operator said it was out of order. WASHINGTON (API — The j railroads moved quickly Thursday to set up their side of a three • cornered arbitration board that will keep thc trains running for the next six months at least. Named to represent management on the new board, created by an act of Congress to head off a strike due to start Wednesday mid-night, arc J. E. Wolfe of Chicago, chairman of the National Railway Labor Conference, and Guy W. Knight of Philadelphia, chairman of the Eastern Carriers' Conference on labor matters. Wolfe was chief negotia or for the railroads at a long and futile scries of peace-seeking meetings with five on-train un- Spokesmen for the unions said they will announce their Iwo appointments to thc board today. Thc four mahagcment-labi representatives then will try to J agree on three neutral mem- j bers to round out the seven-; member board which will make j binding decisions on two big is. i sues in the four-year-old contro- j versey. i These issues involve thc railroads' insistence on abolishing the jobs of some 32,000 firemen whose serviccs thcy say are no longer needed, and the question of how many men should be assigned to train crews. I TIIE COUNTRY PARSON BOMB NURSING SCHOOL BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - Terrorists exploded a homemade bomb in a classroom ot a school of nursing early Thursday. No onc was in the building I at the time. Tlie bomb blew out one wall of the room, t was the seventh night in a ow »f terrorist bombing attacks which authorities claim are leftist inspired. 300 young Chinese demunstra,"d . here Tliursdav against the fed- . oration of Malaysia, now sched , uled tn come into being Scpt. ili. j Two of tlie rioters werc sliol j anil wounded, neither seriously.! and at least eight others wow: slightly injured as police used I firearms and teargas against The demonstrators wcre p.'n-1 testing the arrival of a United' Nations survey team to sampV opmion on whether British administered Sarawak should i<iin Malaya. Singapore, and North Borneo in the new federation. Onc policeman was serinn<!y injured and six others siigh.lv injured in the clash with the Chinese, who form a large part of the population of the count res involve.', and who generally arc reported to be opposed to Die federation. RIOTERS DISPERSED The rioters dispersed af. clash, but grouos of sullen n' resentful Chinese gir s a.id youths gathered in strce s coffee shops .as police anl tary units maintained a s guard al key points throu. the town. The crowd's anger appeared lo bc turned against thc pnti: most of whom were Malays, and ill feeling between the pre-dir, inently - Chinese demonstr.ro and the nolice seemed to tri ge- the violence. Meanwhile, Indonesian F i eign Minster Subandrio said Jakarta the possibility of h country sending representativ to observe the UN survey no In Manila, a Philippine fi eign ministry source said iheir observers also might not participate. It was due to pressure by Indonesia and The Philippines ihat Malaya and Britain agreed to postpone the original Aig. ate set for the federation and ii let the UN assess opinion in Sarawak nnd British North .tor ii t" ignalion as foreign _**- ,• ister in protest against Hie t i wholesale raids on pagodas and : the roundup of Buddhist munis L^and nuns Aug. 21, departed _>;. ' plane with his wifc and three ■- daughters nn a Buddhist p;i s grimagc to India. i.1 Diem rejected Mail's resigna e tion and gave him a three' s month leave, so lie still is lech '-•; nically foreign minister. DISCOUNT RUMORS The Associated Press said th* best available information hir-i is that reports which build io thc idea "f palace power struggles, clashes between miliar.' and civil leaders and so forth do not accurately reflect the Diem and his adviser-brother Ngo Dinh Nhu. head of thc secret police, seem tn be to each other what they have always been. Military generals .tc j hand-picked and have always i followed orders. There is no sign or the organization nf anv movement nr groun in Viet Nam which •* capable of overthrowing the government - except possibly ithe Communist Vict Cong. Test Treaty Is Approved UNLOADING CONTINUES AALBORG, Denmark (Reuters)—Longshoremen started unloading South African manganese ore Thursday from a Swe- "Today's youngsters aren't' dish freighter after police, sen! worse—we're just doing to I to protect them from anti - them in the courts what we j apartheid pickets, were wi.n- used to do in the woodshed," I drawn from the port area. WASHINGTON 'AP' - The Senate foreign relations committee voted Hi to t Thursday to urge that the Senate ratify without reservation the treaty ito han all nuclear tcstiig ex- I cept underground. Two moves to delay ac ion or, the pact were rejected 1 to 5. A Kl-to-7 vote defeated an effort lo demand from the Kon 'nedy administration all co..j- spondence between Washington and Moscow leading up <> and during negotiation of the treaty. Tho senators, acting swiftly. I weighed more than two weeks | of conflicting testimony b- military and scientific cxper s and political leaders and agreed .o | take the treaty to the Senate floor on Monday. Sept. it. It was agreed that the committee would include in its re- I port to the Senate the U.S. -'understandings" and "interpretations" ol the meaning >f the treaty's terms. Former president Dwight D. Eisenhower was | among those whn had urged reservations to clarify what they consider dangerously amb.gu- lOiis language. WOULD NEED NEW TALKS Strong proponents of t .1 c treaty havc protested that reservations would have to be renegotiated with Russia and other parties to thc agreement and that this might entangle Ihe pact in international wrangling. The course the commit- , tee proposed would not. -eq lire renegotiation, the sen<ator were | told. ,ne dissenter ag.rnst committee approval of the treaty was Senator Rus ell B. .Long (Dem. La.) He issued a I statement later saying th s does not necessarily mean (lint 'it will vote against ratification when the pact reaches the floor. Long said the committee should have taken more time to studv the treaty. Senator .1. W. FulbrUht iDem. Ark.', chairman of the committee, said Senate debate should be completed by Sept. He expressed belief that there will bc no difficulty in getting the necessary two-thirds majority for approval of ratification - w'hich wouid bc 67 if all 100 members vote. Shot Poor Housewife NEW YORE, (AP) - A man killed his wife with 11 pistol shots Thursday in thc climax of a long-standing argument about thc quality of her housekeeping, police reported. James O'Connell, 57-year- oil guard for a detective agency, told police that lie had complained many times to bis wife that shc was nol a good housekeeper. Hc allegedly killed his wife, Agnes, 50, as she lay in bed in thcir apartment. He fired six shots from the pistol, then reloaded and fired five more, police said. Hc reloaded again before telephoning police, officers said. Continue Search For Bova HAZLETON, Pa. (AP-Rescuers, driving without letup to determine the fate of trapped Louis Bova, ran into another of! nature's snags Thursday—a wa-1 ter deposit—but they said it vas not a serious setback to their efforts. Thc water was encountered in Ihe 12-inch hole and a companion six-inch shaft, but the experts could not quickly ascsr- tain its depth. A light rain rcll intermittently during the day the first that could be measured since Aug. 17, four days after the 54 - year - old Bova wi trapped in a nearby Sheppic coal mine along with, but separated from, David Fell n, 5*. and Henry Throne, 28. In all the Intervening time—| the 17th day from the cave-in at 9 a.m. on Aug. 13-Bova has been without food, and is presumed to have subsisted on brackish water alone; He was last heard from, by report ofl the other'two, on Aug.' 9. FEARED DROWNING Fellin and Throne, now recovering in a hospital irom -ordeal, both "■--•-■■ lhat the chance of 'drowning was the greatest hazard of ther entombment. More than anything else thcy dreaded an encroachment of water. Thc water was detee'ed Thursdny by dropping pebbL's down th» shafts, the sounds nf their splashing then being picked up by ultra-sensitive microphones. Authorities said the water | would in no way deter rescue attempts, being ntensi-j fied by way of four holes, the onc 12 inches in diameter, another 6'f. inches across, and the other two three inches wide The two larger holes have been bored into the burrow where it| is believed Bova was trapped. Early Thursday a microphone I on an intercom system was1 lowered the more than 300 .eet into the chamber, and for tours rescuers shouted down: "Lou Lou! Hello there, Lou!" They met only a holow s.- MOMENT OF HOPE Then, amidst the monotony of frustration and emptiness, flared a moment, of excitement and reborn hope. »m. One of Bova's brothers, Dan- '"». lei, and two other men who monitored thc ra.'cr ophonc, thought they heard through their headsets sounds that appeared to be "hello." "Maybe this is it," someone yelled. But it wasn't. For a half hour Gordon Smith, deputy slate secretary of mines and his band of communications and electronics 3x- perts, crouched over a tape recorder in the headquarters tent, playing and replaying thc recording of what the microphone had picked un below. They agreed'in the end that the hoped-for "hellos" were no more than the sound of sand slipping in the hole. Crews started enlarging the 12-inch escape hole early in the day. Supervisors said this work may take two days to com- SHENANDOAH, Pa.: Mrs. Eva Bova, 32, whose husband is still trapped in coal mine cave-in at Shepplon, Pa., was admitted to hospital here late August 26 in a state of shock. Louis Pova, 42 (L), her husband, has been trapped for two weeks in mine cavein from which David Fcllin and Henry Throne were rescued August 27.' Last word came from him on August 20.-(UPI Telephoto). !
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1963-08-30 |
Date | 1963-08-30 |
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 | (10.61 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19630830.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 46878.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1963-08-30 |
PDF File | (10.61MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19630830.pdf |
Transcript |
.ia SAVINGS ON
J ACADIAN
I ^TACT OUR SALESMEN
THE DAILY
Ilia Motors Ltd. xx "-* ■L'-"J~L' A
lSvn c\\\ LOT
Mil1"
ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, .1963
20 PACES
SEVEN CENTS
T.OAT RIDE , ,
.„...: Viv:osla. President Josip Broi Tito (second from rillit) shows Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev
. while Mr-. Nhu Khrushchev (left) and .Mrs. Jovanka Tito watch scenery from boat near Titos off-
,( :;. ..unrdins, ... tin- official Conmiii .list source which supplied this photo.' Aids said Tito and khrusll-
wilh their talks here so far.—(I'PI Radiotelephoto from Official Communist Source).
Found Alive In Mine
m unrkid at the Interna-
'..il Minerals and Chemicals
:i>h m ine at F.stcrha/y,
!<.. when it w ns being
opened. It wns n o t known
whether Truemnn, 33. is ,i
Canadiim, hut his home town
lias been listed as Toronto.
World Briefs
(ection
N.S.
■ W»W Thursday
T^» SwtU provin-
J**i lor Turvdav,
f *»h»n»«ivi> Con-
, intramrnt has
i&niures
SOLDIERS Kl.EE
", K.SCHWEGE. (iermany (Al*>
^. Two East German soldiers,
,.. acid __•» and :_•., walked across
,. the hovder while on pa'rol
Thursdny and reported as ref-
U',ees to West German customs
',' men. The pair said they j InnneJ
'.. to flee four weeks ago but at
.', the last minute werc prevented
' l mm doing so.
TO DISCUSS BUDDHISTS
,., NEW DELHI tReuters) -
'y India has agreed to attend a
' proposed conference of heads
ol Ruddhisl countries lo liscuss
J, Buddhist problems in Smith \'iet
Nam. authoritative sources s.iid
I here Thursday. The sources
,v said the government had conveyed its acceptance to Cey-
\ loncse Premier Mrs. Banda-
\\ naike. who originally proposed
''"' it.
CYCLONE KILLS TWO
SYNEY, Australia (Reuters'
« ; Two youths lost thcir lives dur-1
•>' | ine a cyclonic storm which
i | smashed its way across thc
"I;Sydney area Thursday, leaving!
i widespread damage and flood-
>■' ing in its wake.
KIND EARLY WARRIOR
FAENZA. Italy (AP) - The
tomh and skeleton of a six-
foot - seven - inch • tall Gaulis.
warrior wcre found by workmen excavating for a new
street in San Martino di GatUrr.
near thi.- town southeast ot
Bologna. Buried with the warrior were three bronze-tipped j
spears. The zone herc is a
known battleground of thc early
Gallic wars.
WANT NO HELP
A.MIHUS, Denmark (RcuUrs:
The 21.200-ton Soviet tanker
Yarshnva, aground in Danish
waters off Funcn Island, has
refused offers of aid from tw
Danish salvage, vessels, naval
command reported herc Thurs
day. The tanker wns in nn apparent danger and was availing a tug from East Germany.
STRIKE STOPS BATHS
TOKYO 'API— The Japanese
capital's 2,570 public bath
houses went on strike Thursday
and about 2,000,000 went without a hath. The bath house operators threatened to stay closed
for three days—protesting a.
government ban on raising thel
five-cent fee to seven cents.
Thc two earlier survivors .vii.l
these live threw tin a barricade
; behind debris after the explosion, then strung a cheesecio h
curtain to Ilie roof of the tunnel
| lu keep out deadly gas.
The five hadn't been hoard
; from since a n d hadn't -c-
isponded tu sound signals on a
Ipipe from rescuers. But there
! was hope that a stcol-encr.«o.i
air line had carried oxygen io
them. Apparently it did.
CP from Reuters-AP
SAIGON-U.S. Ambassador Hanry Cabot
Lodce has refused to
hand over to the South
Viet Nam government
two Buddhist monks
sheltered in the United
States operations mission here, diplomatic
sources reported Thursday.
The request came from Acting Foreign Minislcr Truoig
Cong C'llll in a meeting Tluirsd
day wilh Lodge, whn ton!; up
his appointment this week in
the midst of growing tensinn
over the Roman ■ Calholic-'.c.i
government's anti-Buddhist policies.
The sources said Lodge -r
jeeted lhe suggestion that lhc
monks, who fled from mass
government arrests Aug. 20.
should he turned over.
lie made no comment wiien
Ctiu told him many of thc hundreds of monks and nuns arrested nt that timc had becn
released, the sources said.
Meanwhile, informed sour-es
said President Ngn Dinh Diem's
government planned massive
rallies throughout the counlry
In suppnrl nf il? nolieics, Iui.-Iu.l-
ing its anti-Buddhist drive.
MAY ELEVATE BROTHER
The rallies, preceded by a
program nf "disintoxication" of
criticism among the popul ice.
might also publicly recognize
Diem's controversial younger
brother Xgo Dinh Nhu ns a
j partner in his political power.
| thc sources s.iid.
military governar.
Ton That Dinh. predicted
demonstration"
. He said there is
ion over g..vernment
I force
i the ;
ana
udents an
during recent days would
released almost immediate!;
Dinh said martial law.
elared en thc eve on the r
on Buddhist pagodas Aug.
and press censorship would
lifted as soon as there
Break
MIIII,
CP from Reiiters-A P
- Mor
SURVIVORS CRITICAL
Earlier, tlie first two .nen
saved had criticized rescue efforts and also said therc lud
been lack of adequate state
inspectinn at the mine.
*W o.m.
Plan To Keep
Trains Running
HAVANA. (AP) — Cuban
militia forces have been on
a state of alert for the last
48 hours. They cannot leave
their posts. All leaves in the
army forces. . . .
The above incomplete dispatch was telephoned from
the Havana bureau of Thc
Associated Press. The telephone then went dead and
the Havana operator said it
was out of order.
WASHINGTON (API — The j
railroads moved quickly Thursday to set up their side of a
three • cornered arbitration
board that will keep thc trains
running for the next six months
at least.
Named to represent management on the new board, created
by an act of Congress to head
off a strike due to start Wednesday mid-night, arc J. E.
Wolfe of Chicago, chairman of
the National Railway Labor
Conference, and Guy W. Knight
of Philadelphia, chairman of
the Eastern Carriers' Conference on labor matters.
Wolfe was chief negotia or for
the railroads at a long and
futile scries of peace-seeking
meetings with five on-train un-
Spokesmen for the unions
said they will announce their
Iwo appointments to thc board
today.
Thc four mahagcment-labi
representatives then will try to J
agree on three neutral mem- j
bers to round out the seven-;
member board which will make j
binding decisions on two big is. i
sues in the four-year-old contro- j
versey. i
These issues involve thc railroads' insistence on abolishing
the jobs of some 32,000 firemen
whose serviccs thcy say are no
longer needed, and the question of how many men should
be assigned to train crews.
I TIIE COUNTRY PARSON
BOMB NURSING SCHOOL
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -
Terrorists exploded a homemade bomb in a classroom ot
a school of nursing early Thursday. No onc was in the building I
at the time. Tlie bomb blew out
one wall of the room, t was
the seventh night in a ow »f
terrorist bombing attacks which
authorities claim are leftist
inspired.
300 young Chinese demunstra,"d .
here Tliursdav against the fed- .
oration of Malaysia, now sched ,
uled tn come into being Scpt. ili. j
Two of tlie rioters werc sliol j
anil wounded, neither seriously.!
and at least eight others wow:
slightly injured as police used I
firearms and teargas against
The demonstrators wcre p.'n-1
testing the arrival of a United'
Nations survey team to sampV
opmion on whether British administered Sarawak should i |
CONTENTdm file name | 46858.jp2 |