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■ •P-jJ'.'-jP X-:.-i:'.yy;X..:-_-j::'; a.J;P: -.'■' '- RAS IIG USED CAR SALE CONTINUES AT IrrA NOVA MOTORS (1962) LTD. 3TFIT outfit u>! "New ; for blur* ie "aulo- nd you'r« tent . ., .50 FD. cr of THE BAIL AU forms ol Insurance Water St. 8-7051 Elizabeth Av. 9-4171 Vol. ' THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,1962 (Price: 7 Cents) Hurricane Hits N.S. Mainland .rl shits of los'nj is'ay nisht after bat nt the Nova Scoti; .■;iit.!0iii1i and would ; . i-.-stern Ncw Bruns- :, y ni-.ht iincl then noad :; iv.\;»i il Newfoundland. " ■ie forecast to drop !o i l-o-.'i- with Kiists to f>0 r.'pic:il storm renched ■I-1 1,-iie Monday. Leauers Confer Heavy seas Sunday afternoon plucked low people off thc rocks at Peggy's Cove, about lf> miles -nut Invest nf here, Hubert Ralph Swindell, 51, of suburban Rocs- ingiiam and his son, Ernest .lames, it, were drowned when breakers swept them off the i' !*s ns Ihey stood watching the surf. Their bodies have not been ered. :i other members of thc same family reach shore safely. Thcy wcre not immediately identified. In the southern Nova S.-otia lir-.hing port of Shelburnc, three Cape Maud boats and a Slfi.tKIO Honting breakwater were lost. Thc boats wcrc smashed on lhc shore and thc breakwater its moorings and was ilves ational By DAVID REID 'ARIS. (Reuters)—President de Gaulle dissolved the French National Assembly Saturday aftcr accepting the resignation of Premier Pompidou, whose government fell under massed opposition assault Friday. The president thus cleared the decks for an all- out struggle with the opposition parties to decide whether he remains in office or retires from political life. But thc issue was much great-; he is not satisfied by thi refer- cr than onc of mere constitution-' endum results. al reform. Botli the referendum j Forecasts werc that he will jet and lhc elections will bo fought a majority. But some political on a straight for-or-against Dc j commentators already wcre spec- Gaulle ticket, and the results will ulating gloomily on the dilcmn.a be vital for the future of his four-, which would face the natiun- ycar-old Fifth Republic. and De Gaulle—if the majorit*- De Gadllc has given clear emerging from thc election- was warning that he will withdraw it hostile In thc president's policies. swept ;i . The deck Ill-foot g mdy Point, near ripped off by 15- d a 20-foot-long :es ards Welcome New Law I U.S. Proposal Is I Termed 'Absurd' C.I.A ;;o\v. Al'i Scot IV.Ilil I" There probably would with (iromyko again lint no meeting hV.il been sct. ivko would not comment. .1; w;k Gromyko's guest for . Afterward, they began talks which a U.S. spokes- said concerned only Berlin. i drank deeply Sunday lo a newly won freedom—the right to get a drink on Sunday without jodging the law. In crowded hotels all ovcr thc land thcy toasted thc end of a quaint Scottish custom which hnd ruled that only a bona fide traveller could buy a shot on the Sabbath. That law, hundreds of years old, stipulated that a bona fide tra vellcr was onc who had travelled nt least three miles from his home. I LONDON iCl■ > - Thc United Slates proposals for restricting I Irnrie wilh Cuba arc generally considered in Europe to be cither ill-concc \ -d m .ibsuid i In Britain, thc NATO ally I likely tu bc hardest hit by any j shipping ban. newspapers arc : commenting that thc Cuban problem has illustrated low wide apart Britons and Ame -icans are I on the basic thinking a >out communism and co-cxistencc. British officials, although sympathetic to the Kenendy administration's fears about Russian fluence in Cuba, are seriously disturbed by the "do something nnd damn the consequences" mood of thc American public. "" ' not simply thnt there urr undertones of snapping nerves which make onc wonder how American public opinion is go ing lo stand up tn ihc inevitably prolonged strain of a Fast-West contest,' says Thc Economist. "There is also the more im mediate danger that thc president may bc pushed against his will into doing the wrong thing about Cuba." ACTION IRRITATING British opinion agrees with the U.S. that Russian activity in the .Western Hemisphere can be irritating — esepcially thc prospect of a Russian fishing base on Cuban soil. But the British approach is pragmatic, London newspapers note that the U.S. has troops and bases all over the Eastern Hemisphere, many of them close to Russian territory. They see it as illogical for Americans to flourish one .half of the Monroe Doctrine and forget that thcy promised to renounces American interest in Europe as well. In the eyes of the rest of thc world an American attack on Cuba would no more bc justified Russia's action in Hun- " says The Observer. Dc Gaulle asked Pompidou's i government to continue as a ] caretaker regime until after a , new assembly has been elected. . The government wns toppled [ when thc assembly .passed a i censure move over Dc Gaulle's I 1 plans for ensuring that bis sue- ' cessors arc elected by popular i No date has so far- been an- ] ' nounerd for new assembly elections, but political quarters men-'' tioncd Nov. 11 and 13 or Nov. is and 20 as possible dates. French deputies arc elected in two nal- lots. FACE THREE VOTES De Gaulle's decision Saturday mean that the 2Ci,o0O,00o French voters will bc called to the polls three times in thc next two months—first of all to say "yes" or "no" on Oct. 28 to his presidential plan. Ex-Cabinet Minister Accuses Nkrumah Justice Dept. Makes Plea For Meredith 1 OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — The justice department is quietly appealing to student leaders at I thc University of Mississippi lo help make life tolerable as Negro James H. Meredith remains jn campus with a shrinking federal guard. "We're not asking them to like it," said Deputy Attorney- General Nicholas Katzenbach. "But we are hoping there will be some generally respected students who will stand up and say, 'all right, let's knock it off,' when the jeering and cat calls break out." s Katzenbach. Attorney - General Kennedy's first assistant is in over-all charge here of the effort to enforce federal court LOME. Togo iAPi - Ghana's exiled former finance minister, Komla Gbedcmah. Sunday accused President Nkrumah nf a terror regime of wholesale arrests, pillage and rape and warn- J ed him: "Thc end is approach- I ing to your intrigues and deccp- ] He voiced suspicions that two , former head' of Nkrumah's Contention People's-Parly—Ako Vi- ] jei, Tawia Adamafio and H. II. i Cofic-Crabbc—may havc Dcen done away with in a dungeon. Hc said thc latest news reaching him from Ghana "leave one almost stupificd." Referring tn the August 1 bomb attempt on Nkruzmah's life al KiiluiiguKu, 500 miles north of Accra. Gbedcmah deplored what he called the "razhij of Kulun- gugu. looling and pillaging of homes. 2.000 or more arrested ;cnt lo He discussed his plan Saturday in an interview con a cleaned - up campus, peaceful and more than half deserted. Students had poured out to their homecoming football game, transferred fo safety's sake to Jackson. Meredith had left for the weekend also. Federal officers j declined to say where hc had gone but a Negro lawyer, A. W, Willis, said Meredith was in Memphis, Tenn., with his wife. RETURNS TODAY Willis said Meredith plans to return to the Ole Miss campus Britain Has Proposals For EC Market Bid 11 / Q ,,>>,;■ fed, N on-C; photo apl-e[$ ,1 court use »° charges i c0* i lo Ru i». pIEWHERE IN -THE PACIFIC: U.S. Navy sailors line the decks of the waft carrier. Kearsarge, late October 3rd, as the Sigma-7 space capsule is 'Wed aboard the recovery vessel with astronaut Walter Schirra. Schirra, •year-old Navy Commander, was rocketed into space early October 3rd. Temperatures » , Niaht Dav ijj**« 43 63 ""J* 49 - SUol-ns 49 53 [Nfld. Skies - MONDAY, OCT. 8 |unset today ..6:28p.m. funrise I'omorr<w 7:10 a.m. I'oonsct Lfr**** 1:43 a.m. ful Moon (Hunter's C01-- Oct. 13 (JM. setting earlier *h evening, has now ffd.lts 8rca,est ■>*-' ™<* i nee March, 1961. Lh Stancfi fron* the lion j! now on*y 39 mi' F" miles. A« times Nfld. Daylight) lli l Ti»-M Ph 2*6 a.m., 3-13 nm Schirra Calls Space Trip Text Book Flight LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Macmillan disclosed I Sunday that Britain has "some proposals" in its bid to join the European Common Market, i Macmillan in an unusual move | submitted his arguments on the | controversial market issue in a I 10-pagc pamphlet pub ished on the even of resumed negotiations with the six market members and three days before his Con- ii-yative party's annum confer- The prime minislcd said: "We re putting forward some new proposals to deal wilh he points raised al the Commonwealth conference- Commonwealth prime minis- irs last month criticized the !i-ms available thus far in Britain's bid to join lhe trading bloc -France, West Germany Italy, Luxembourg, Belgium and The He saw Britain as the Commonwealth spokesman in Europe and thc interpreter of Europe to the Commonwealth. The prime minister also warned that the Anglo-American alliance would wane if Britain did not join Europe. HOUSTON AP - Astronaut Walter Schirra said Friday his six-orbit journey through space last Wednesday was a "textbook flight" and that he saw a moonset-sundown on the moon. He also told his 12-year-old son, Marty, "Im sorry, son, I did not see any green cheese." At press conference, the first since his flight, he laid to rest all fears about lhe effects of prolonged weightlessness on man. He said: "I, hnd no problems ... no uneasiness ... no qucasincss," Later, hc added, "I had no fatigue ... I was ready to continue through onc day." Schirra's adventure began at 8:15 a.m. Wednesday and .ended at 5:28 p.m., 275 miles northeast of Midway Island in the Pacific Ocean. His flight lasted nine' hours and 13 minutes at altitudes ranging from 100 to 176 miles. 1 Schirra reported he had only onc real problem on thc flight. Hc said his fellow aslronautn Lcroy Gordon Cooper, had. slowed n sleak sandwich aboard—"and hc put it oul of reach.' Hc told (hc 300 assembled reporters the dosimeter hc carried aboard showed less radiation exposure than his radium dial wrist watch and he fell radiation thus was no danger. Walker Released SPRINGFIELD, Mo., (API Former Maj-Gcn. Edwin A. Walker was released from thc U.S medical centre here on $50,000 bond Saturday night. He left Sunday by private plane for his home in Dallas, Tex. Aboard the two - engined plane with Walker were his mother, Mrs. Charlotte Walker, the pilot, and three aides. Walker, who was committed to the medical centre following his arrest at Oxford, Miss., last Monday, was smiling and jovial as he. boarded the plane. (Ie talked freely with reporters. "I started out for Mississippi, but thc trip was extended to Missouri," he said with a grin. Non Available MOSCOW (Reuters) — A Soviet newspaper complained Sunday Russia will reach the moon before it produces enough pacifiers for the country's babies. .The Soviet trade union paper Trud said there wcre no pacifiers available in many large cities, Netherlands. SUMMARIZE VIEWS Summarizing his views, Macmillan said policies of the powerful European community "will have a decisive effect on the fur ure history of the world and on our own fortunes hcre in Bri tain." Macmillan saw the Commonwealth and Common Market as two different types of organizations, rejecting the view that Britain was faced with a choice between the two. He said the Commonwealth was not a single economic unit. "Nor, to be honest, is there any practical possibility of making it i Macmillan said Britain by lom- ! ing Europe, would "not only »ain | a new stature in Europe, but al- I so increase its standing and in- I fluence in the councils of the ORTE, Italy: Pope John XX111 tat train wntduv.i greets hundreds of cheering citizens October 4th. during a stop at Orte Station." The 81-year-old Pontill is making a 450-mile journey in the Marian Shrine of Loreto and the Basilica of St. Francis of Aibisi. On October llth. the Pope will inaugurate the world's ,21st Ecumenical Council in St. Peter's Basilica in |Rome.—(UPI Photo). JFK Winds Up Week Of Democrat Campaigning Dynamite Explodes In Cardinal's Home NEW YORK iAPI _ Francis man detail lo the residence of Cardinal Spellman was placed : Albert Cardinal Meyer and in- mult ii uoiiiKl-thi clod polio crea > d the patrol in the area. guard Sunday in the wake of ,i The cardinal is in Rome, mysterious dynamite blast set ! off early Saturday in the hasc-' •> exll'-< precautions were ment of his residence adjacent : lak(:" --1 ll-e residences of other to St. Patrick's Cathedral. I American cardinals in Boston Police commissioner Michael alld L°s Angeles. .1. Murphy ordered eight detcc- M1NNEAPOIJS (AP) - President Kennedy wound up a weekend of heavy-duty campaigning for Democrats with a "ud due lo weather. A final political rally. Sunday thc heart of Minnesota, whose votes tipped the tight I960 presidential election his way, was cancelled because of rain, lt had been sct for a baseball park at St. Cloud 60 miles north of the Twin Cit es. But Kennedy is going to have plenty more times to thump away on the basic theme he carried to Minnesota and the Middle West during the last three days: "Republicans vote no', Democrats vide 'yes', and in their own best interests nnd those' of the country, the people should put more Democrats in Congress to help him get his program through and mo\c the nation forward. This is the key, central point and president has been trying to pound home in Pcnnsylvani and West Virginia c-irlicr; i Kentucky. Ohio, Mich gan and Minnesota this weekeid. TO HEAR IT AGAIN Most ol these stales and others besides are going to hear it ovcr and ovcr Kennedy will invade Pitls. burgh and western Pennsylvania next weekend along wilh New York City, northern New Jersey, Indianapolis, Louisville, Ky„ and perhaps Buffalo and Niagara Falls. N.Y. And, with a renewed zest for political battle, Kennedy has committed himself to the Democratic cause for all the other weekends until the Nov. 6 election. ■ In putting on this tremendous effort, lhc president is bucking heavy odds bccnuscn.as he him self has pointed out from time to time, only once in this century has, the party in power ever gained congressional scats in an off-year election. That was accomplished in 1934 . ' President Franklin D. Roosevelt was in office. VARNA, Bulgaria(AP)—Don- aid Byrne of New York defeated Trocgcr of West Germany in an adjourned seventh round gamc Friday to give.the United Slates a Vk to% victory ovcr thc West Germans in the 15th chess Olympics. After seven rounds, the United States and Yugoslavia were tied for second place with 18 points, 1% points behind pace-setting Soviet Union. A professor advises pulling heart and soul into your work Head and hands help, too. assigned to thc rntati 24-hour-a-day guard until the cardinal leaves for Rome Tuesday night to attend thc ecumenical conference. Neither the cardinal for anyone in the cathedral building was injured hy thc .last and damage was slight. 1 Tin? cardinal was asleep the second floor of the building when thc explosion came. Hc dressed and came down to survey the damage. BOMB HOME MADE Police laboratory experts said lhe bomb definitely wa a homemade affair, apparently consisting of two or three sticks of dynamite wrapped in plastic and newspaper nnd set off by a detonator. The motive for the bombing was unknown, but it recalled two similar incidents against the church in Rome in recent months. An explosion chipped a statue and damaged an organ in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome July 14. Two incendiary bombs wcrc discovered in St. Peters Sept. c scnl a oncd In Buenos A ires, police launched an investigation into tlie bombing of a Roman Catho lie Church in the Argentina cap ital Saturday night. A priest anC a passerby wcre injured. Prays For Council Success ROME (AP) — Pope Johr prayed before 300,000 faithful Sunday and asked divine bless ings on the 20th century's great est gathering of Roman Cathol icism, thc second Vatican coun cil opening in four days. ■ Addressing the huge throng massed about the hilltop cathedral oE St. John Lateran, th. Pope said the forthcoming ecumenical council, a rare genera1 council of the church, will b« "a meeting in which botl heaven and earth take part.'' Thc council must be a pa's sage of. God ,to Rome and from Rome, lo the world," the pon- .sfevff*- Z " 14%
Object Description
Title | Daily News, 1962-10-08 |
Place of Publication | St. John's (N.L.) |
Date | 1962-10-08 |
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 |
Type | Text |
Resource type | Newspaper |
Format | image/jpeg; application/pdf |
Language | eng |
Relation | Unrelated to the St. John's Daily News, 1860-1870. |
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 |
Rights | Creative Commons |
PDF File | (9.28 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19621008.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 42679.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Place of Publication | St. John's (N.L.) |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1962-10-08 |
PDF File | (9.28MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19621008.pdf |
Transcript |
■ •P-jJ'.'-jP X-:.-i:'.yy;X..:-_-j::'; a.J;P: -.'■' '-
RAS
IIG USED CAR
SALE
CONTINUES AT
IrrA NOVA MOTORS (1962) LTD.
3TFIT
outfit
u>! "New
; for blur*
ie "aulo-
nd you'r«
tent . .,
.50
FD.
cr of
THE BAIL
AU forms ol
Insurance
Water St. 8-7051
Elizabeth Av. 9-4171
Vol. '
THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 8,1962
(Price: 7 Cents)
Hurricane Hits
N.S. Mainland
.rl shits of los'nj
is'ay nisht after bat
nt the Nova Scoti;
.■;iit.!0iii1i and would ;
. i-.-stern Ncw Bruns- :,
y ni-.ht iincl then noad :;
iv.\;»i il Newfoundland. "
■ie forecast to drop !o
i l-o-.'i- with Kiists to f>0
r.'pic:il storm renched
■I-1 1,-iie Monday.
Leauers
Confer
Heavy seas Sunday afternoon
plucked low people off thc rocks
at Peggy's Cove, about lf> miles
-nut Invest nf here, Hubert Ralph
Swindell, 51, of suburban Rocs-
ingiiam and his son, Ernest
.lames, it, were drowned when
breakers swept them off the
i' !*s ns Ihey stood watching the
surf. Their bodies have not been
ered.
:i other members of thc
same family reach shore safely. Thcy wcre not immediately
identified.
In the southern Nova S.-otia
lir-.hing port of Shelburnc, three
Cape Maud boats and a Slfi.tKIO
Honting breakwater were lost.
Thc boats wcrc smashed on
lhc shore and thc breakwater
its moorings and was
ilves
ational
By DAVID REID
'ARIS. (Reuters)—President de Gaulle dissolved the French National Assembly Saturday aftcr accepting the resignation of Premier Pompidou, whose
government fell under massed opposition assault
Friday.
The president thus cleared the decks for an all-
out struggle with the opposition parties to decide
whether he remains in office or retires from political
life.
But thc issue was much great-; he is not satisfied by thi refer-
cr than onc of mere constitution-' endum results.
al reform. Botli the referendum j Forecasts werc that he will jet
and lhc elections will bo fought a majority. But some political
on a straight for-or-against Dc j commentators already wcre spec-
Gaulle ticket, and the results will ulating gloomily on the dilcmn.a
be vital for the future of his four-, which would face the natiun-
ycar-old Fifth Republic. and De Gaulle—if the majorit*-
De Gadllc has given clear emerging from thc election- was
warning that he will withdraw it hostile In thc president's policies.
swept ;i .
The deck
Ill-foot g
mdy Point, near
ripped off by 15-
d a 20-foot-long
:es
ards
Welcome
New Law
I U.S. Proposal Is
I Termed 'Absurd'
C.I.A
;;o\v.
Al'i
Scot
IV.Ilil I"
There
probably would
with (iromyko again lint
no meeting hV.il been sct.
ivko would not comment.
.1; w;k Gromyko's guest for
. Afterward, they began
talks which a U.S. spokes-
said concerned only Berlin.
i drank deeply Sunday lo a
newly won freedom—the right
to get a drink on Sunday without jodging the law.
In crowded hotels all ovcr
thc land thcy toasted thc end
of a quaint Scottish custom
which hnd ruled that only a
bona fide traveller could buy
a shot on the Sabbath. That
law, hundreds of years old,
stipulated that a bona fide tra
vellcr was onc who had travelled nt least three miles from
his home.
I LONDON iCl■ > - Thc United
Slates proposals for restricting
I Irnrie wilh Cuba arc generally
considered in Europe to be
cither ill-concc \ -d m .ibsuid
i In Britain, thc NATO ally
I likely tu bc hardest hit by any
j shipping ban. newspapers arc
: commenting that thc Cuban problem has illustrated low wide
apart Britons and Ame -icans are
I on the basic thinking a >out communism and co-cxistencc.
British officials, although sympathetic to the Kenendy administration's fears about Russian
fluence in Cuba, are seriously
disturbed by the "do something
nnd damn the consequences"
mood of thc American public.
"" ' not simply thnt there
urr undertones of snapping nerves which make onc wonder how
American public opinion is go
ing lo stand up tn ihc inevitably
prolonged strain of a Fast-West
contest,' says Thc Economist.
"There is also the more im
mediate danger that thc president may bc pushed against his
will into doing the wrong thing
about Cuba."
ACTION IRRITATING
British opinion agrees with
the U.S. that Russian activity in
the .Western Hemisphere can be
irritating — esepcially thc prospect of a Russian fishing base on
Cuban soil.
But the British approach is
pragmatic, London newspapers
note that the U.S. has troops
and bases all over the Eastern
Hemisphere, many of them close
to Russian territory. They see
it as illogical for Americans to
flourish one .half of the Monroe
Doctrine and forget that thcy
promised to renounces American
interest in Europe as well.
In the eyes of the rest of thc
world an American attack on
Cuba would no more bc justified
Russia's action in Hun-
" says The Observer.
Dc Gaulle asked Pompidou's
i government to continue as a
] caretaker regime until after a
, new assembly has been elected.
. The government wns toppled
[ when thc assembly .passed a
i censure move over Dc Gaulle's I
1 plans for ensuring that bis sue-
' cessors arc elected by popular
i No date has so far- been an- ]
' nounerd for new assembly elections, but political quarters men-''
tioncd Nov. 11 and 13 or Nov. is
and 20 as possible dates. French
deputies arc elected in two nal-
lots.
FACE THREE VOTES
De Gaulle's decision Saturday
mean that the 2Ci,o0O,00o French
voters will bc called to the polls
three times in thc next two
months—first of all to say "yes"
or "no" on Oct. 28 to his presidential plan.
Ex-Cabinet Minister
Accuses Nkrumah
Justice Dept. Makes
Plea For Meredith
1 OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — The
justice department is quietly
appealing to student leaders at
I thc University of Mississippi lo
help make life tolerable as Negro James H. Meredith remains
jn campus with a shrinking
federal guard.
"We're not asking them to
like it," said Deputy Attorney-
General Nicholas Katzenbach.
"But we are hoping there will
be some generally respected
students who will stand up and
say, 'all right, let's knock it
off,' when the jeering and cat
calls break out." s
Katzenbach. Attorney - General Kennedy's first assistant
is in over-all charge here of the
effort to enforce federal court
LOME. Togo iAPi - Ghana's
exiled former finance minister,
Komla Gbedcmah. Sunday accused President Nkrumah nf a
terror regime of wholesale arrests, pillage and rape and warn-
J ed him: "Thc end is approach-
I ing to your intrigues and deccp-
] He voiced suspicions that two
, former head' of Nkrumah's Contention People's-Parly—Ako Vi-
] jei, Tawia Adamafio and H. II.
i Cofic-Crabbc—may havc Dcen
done away with in a dungeon.
Hc said thc latest news reaching him from Ghana "leave one
almost stupificd."
Referring tn the August 1 bomb
attempt on Nkruzmah's life al
KiiluiiguKu, 500 miles north of
Accra. Gbedcmah deplored what
he called the "razhij of Kulun-
gugu. looling and pillaging of
homes. 2.000 or more arrested
;cnt lo
He discussed his plan Saturday in an interview con a
cleaned - up campus, peaceful
and more than half deserted.
Students had poured out to
their homecoming football
game, transferred fo safety's
sake to Jackson.
Meredith had left for the
weekend also. Federal officers j
declined to say where hc had
gone but a Negro lawyer, A. W,
Willis, said Meredith was in
Memphis, Tenn., with his wife.
RETURNS TODAY
Willis said Meredith plans to
return to the Ole Miss campus
Britain Has Proposals
For EC Market Bid 11 / Q
,,>>,;■
fed, N on-C;
photo apl-e[$
,1 court use »°
charges i c0*
i lo Ru i».
pIEWHERE IN -THE PACIFIC: U.S. Navy sailors line the decks of the
waft carrier. Kearsarge, late October 3rd, as the Sigma-7 space capsule is
'Wed aboard the recovery vessel with astronaut Walter Schirra. Schirra,
•year-old Navy Commander, was rocketed into space early October 3rd.
Temperatures
» , Niaht Dav
ijj**« 43 63
""J* 49 -
SUol-ns 49 53
[Nfld. Skies
- MONDAY, OCT. 8
|unset today ..6:28p.m.
funrise
I'omorr |
CONTENTdm file name | 42663.jp2 |