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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 2

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

St' iv 0 1), 1 ,1 aj 1 ni si in rouhi: Crash t-sliirts inled hi Air to negotiate their entry into a central government. If these representatives fail to arrive, "we will have to proceed without thorn," Bolikanyo declared. The units of Lumumba's troops that tried to invade Katanga from Kivuprovine have agreed to a United Nations-supervised truce and are withdrawing, a U. N. spokesman said.

A demilitarized strip inside the Katanga border is being patrolled exclusively by U. N. soldiers by agreement between Katanga authorities and local commanders of the Lumumba troops. sible reconciliation with sources close to Lumumba but said he refused to sisn any accord and subsequently repudiated the Lumumba announcement. Kasavulm's Premier is Joseph lleo.

Jean Bolikango, Ileo's Information Minister, told a news conference the new Government named by Kasavubu has not taken over effective power in the Congo because it hopes to reach an agreement with Lumumba. Bolikango also said the lleo group was awaiting representatives from secessionist Katanga Province Hip Owo, Sept. 10 i.T lYoMilcnt Joseph Kas.n uhu's pro Western Government sought Mmu'ay to make peace with its bitterest enemy, ralrii't' Lumumba, by offering the deposed Coin-munLst hacked Premier a Cabinet post. There was no immediate reply from Lumumba, whose office earlier had said conciliation had been reached between Lumumba and Kasavubu under which Lumumba would remain Premier. Kasavubu acknowledged he had discussed a pos neckband I-ynii drove Army Sergeant Atul Soldier From Pine Knot Missing In Guam Disaster By Tht Aitoclattd Frtw Agana, Guam, Sept.

20 (Tuesday). While military policemen guarded the scene, experts Tuesday poked through the wreckage of a four-engine transport in which 73 persons died. can a panes Sa tt tit a tt $150 eral violent explosions and a vicious fire. Some military sources said one of the four engines blew apart just before the crash. Others said the explosion came on impact.

The wings were ripped off as the giant plane plowed a path through dense growth on the side of a 640-foot hill named Mount Barri-gada. 13 Filipinos Aboard Most of the dead were Ameri. can military personnel and dependent wives and children of servicemen homeward bound. A delegation of 13 Filipino officers and enlisted men was aboard. Three Chinese were among the survivors.

The plane had stopped at Guam to refuel after taking off from Clark Air Force Base, Manila. It was bound for Travis Air Force Base near San Francisco. it i ft Sixteen survived the plane's wing-shearing crash Monday soon after take-off. One passenger died Tuesday. TSgt.

Ted Cole, son of Tellus Cole, Lynn Grove, Pfc. James K. Cordell, son of Mrs. Sammy K. Kidd, Pine Knot, and 23 others were listed as missing by the Army and Air Force.

No Positive Identification The listing meant there has been no positive identification of their bodies although they are believed to have been on the plane. Two survivors, navigator Edgar W. Schowyer, San Le-andro, and sailor William B. Baxter, Nashville, told newsmen there were indications of trouble just before the crash. 'Felt Several Jolts' "I told my seating companion something appeared wrong with the engine," Baxter said.

"Within a couple of minutes I felt several jolts, and the next thing I knew I was about 10 yards away from the plane with the plane seat still under me." Minutes after the crash, Schowyer said, there were sev 4 l1 BTt I 1 i NYLQN-rembrceci neckband holds Us shape forever! Pull it Stretch it Wash it Wear it Only the Munsingwear T-shirt has this patented neckband that stays flat, trim and handsome. Sizes 36-46. Munsingwear Briefs Princess Michiko Tapes Lullabies For Her Baby Nw York Tlmti Ntws Scrvlci Tokyo, Sept. 19. The wife of Japan's future emperor revealed a new technique in child rearing Monday that could be a boon to all traveling parents.

The royal couple's 7-month-old son, Prince Hiro, will be lulled to sleep nightly during the couple's forthcoming United States tour by his mother's voice emanating from a tape recorder. The crown princess explained Monday afternoon that she has recorded a selection of Japanese lullabies to be played during her absence. Princess Michiko put her voice on tape for the little prince "so that he will not forget me while I am away," she said. She and the crown prince held a 30-minute press conference Monday, the first in history to be held by heirs to the throne. Prince Reveals He Changes The Diapers Questions were submitted in writing in advance.

Although the prince had met with the press before, it was the first time a formal interview in his palace had ever been permitted. Prince Akihito revealed that elusive rumors about his taking a hand in child-rearing chores were true. He does, he said, change diapers "sometimes when no one is around." Since the royal household entourage numbers several hundred persons, it was indicated that the crown prince performs this homely task infrequently. However, the royal couple made it clear in their answers to questions about domestic activities in the royal household that they are rearing their first-born according to their own plans rather than those of the Imperial Household Bureau, an omnipresent institution which has ordered the lives of princes and emperors for thousands of years. House Group Halts Probe Of Defection Is Criticized For Hiring Two Men Washington, Sept.

19 UPtk House subcommittee suspend ed Monday its investigation of the defection to Russia of two United States code specialists. The subcommittee chairman criticized hiring of the men and said the National Security Agency's security procedures need study. Representative Paul J. Kil-day Tex.) said it is his view N.S.A. should not have hired Bernon F.

Mitchell and William II. Martin. He said information the agency had at the time "showed them to be unstable, even though specific acta of culpability were lacking." "In my view the procedures prescribed by N.S.A. for clearance require further study," Kilday told newsmen after his subcommittee ended its third day of closed-door hearings. Testimony To Be Evaluated The armed-services subcommittee suspended the probe pending evaluation of testimony taken so far from Defense Department and N.S.A.

officials. Summing up his impressions so far, Kilday said the Mitchell-Martin defection was a serious detriment to the supersecret N.S.A. but "not of the catas 1 I 'tl 1 mrU I it v. I for the'4-bedroom 2-both r4 home coming toon in Klondike Acres. rr.

A in i fi -11111 BASS WEISBERG CL W666 Ausciitid Prtti Wlrtphoto PICKETS IRK REDS Demonstrations against Russian Premier Nikita Khrushchev's visit to the United Nations, such as this one yesterday in New York, have drawn a protest by ranking Soviet officials. They claim the charges, mostly by anti-Red refugee groups, are false and police are not quelling the pickets. However, police say it's all legal provided the pickets keep their distance and don't endanger Khrushchev. NflllMt Make the Brief Comfort Test stride sit and MUNSING-WEAR'S double fabric s-t-r-e-t-c-h-y seat, nylon reinforced leg openings and no-chafe comfort pouch move right with you no binding, pulling or riding up! Made of premium combed cotton, guaranteed not to shrink out of fit. Sizes 30-44.

From Itoos To Iloohoos Glenmore DISTILLED London Dry GIN Imported Quality at Domestic Price Nikita Cheered, Unintentionally, BIB $125 By Group That Planned To Jeer Glenmore trophic character indicated by some of the speculation prior to our hearing." The chairman's statement repeated what officials have said that Mitchell and Martin are in a position to help the Russians safeguard their codes, but "are not in possession of information which renders our own intelligence insecure." ttmtiam Drf GIN Mail Orders Promptly Filled Italian Floods Claim 36 Lives Rome, Sept. 19 un Floods and landslides caused by torrential rains took a mounting toll of lives and cut almost every major north-south line of travel on the Italian peninsula Monday night. The number of known dead reached 36. The heavy rain began in the Alps four days ago and spread to south of Rome. All three main rail lines north from Rome were cut.

So were coastal highways up both sides of the peninsula. The main highway through Brenner Pass was under water. 43 Quart -SIS $38S $125 Vj Pint Math Seminar Planned 90 PROOF 100 CHAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS sion and burst into cheers instead of jeers. "Hurrah! Hurrah!" they shouted. Suddenly they remembered themselves and after a self-conscious silence they broke into chants of "Khrushchev go home! Khrushchev the killer!" Huddled on the bow in the downpour as they were, however, their shouts were drowned out by two helicopters crossing overhead.

"The fog kept our signs from being seen, and the Harbor Police and Coast Guard stuck their noses in to make it even worse," moaned a longshoreman when the boat returned to Manhattan. The Harbor Police and the Coast Guard had infuriated the longshoremen by ordering them to keep back from the Soviet vessel. A member of an anti-Communist group who went along summarized politely: "This demonstration is a very good thing, but it was not too well organized." New York, Sept, 19 Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khushchev probably would have been more amused than abused by a nautical demonstration staged Monday morning by longshoremen if he heard or saw them at all. "Nothing worked for us," complained one red-eyed longshoreman.

Exactly 114 persons about 50 longshoremen, the rest newsmen and members of anti-Communist groups piled into a chartered boat during the wee hours to sail into the Atlantic to greet Khrushchev's ship, the Baltika, with boos and jeers. It was rainy, cold, and foggy. Not nearly as many longshoremen as expected showed up. After an uncomfortable 2-hour journey into the ocean, the ship's loud-speaker said the Baltika was in sight. The longshoremen were so happy to reach their target finally that they forgot their mis 425 FOURTH AVE.

Locating a Home is EASY Through the Rental Ads. tmrctt ounutHti co. funcnoi of moouct 8 Tttsncr lousyiux. cmtuckt By Nazareth College Nazareth College will offer, beginning next week, a mathematics seminar for gifted high school students who watch "Continental Classroom" on television. Scholarships are available which will reduce the cost of the seminar from $45 to $30.

Further information may be had from Sister Mary Charlotte at JUniper 7-6087. 1 i Chamber Hires State-Highway Man FOURTH AND -JARIVER RD DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT He Will Assist In Development World War II and the Korean War, he taught school in Missouri and New York before coming to Kentucky in 1955. search publication on metropolitan government. At the chamber, LaPage will act as staff secretary to Man Buying Beer For Minor Jailed William S. Hilbert, 24, of 723 Fehr, was fined $50 and given a 25-day jail sentence in Police Court yesterday on a charge of buying beer for a minor.

Hilbert was accused of buying beer for William H. White, 19, of 147 N. Cabel, in the 300 block of South Shelby Sunday. White is charged with asking Hilbert to buy the beer. His case was set for a hearing September 30.

The Louisville Chamber of committees active in civic de- He was an instructor in history 1 Commerce has reached into velopment, traffic, urban re- at tne University of Kentucky's uuest! I Fort Knox Center before jon the State Highway Department for a new area-development Presents hj Popular Re ing the Research Commission staff. Ward's former additional job of chamber general manager is not being filled. OUTDOOR FBI ANOTHER newal, sewers and drainage, planning, air pollution, education, agriculture, fire prevention, and cleanup. Additional Unfilled Kenneth P. Vinsel, chamber executive vice-president, said he (Vinsel) would keep general supervision of the area-development division for the time being.

The chamber did cot previously have an assistant area-development director, LaPage's title. A native of Newburg, N. LaPage attended the Missouri School of Mines And Metallurgy at Rolla, received bach-elor-of-arts and master-of-arts degrees in history from the University of Missouri, and is a candidate for a doctorate in specialist. Its previous area development director, Henry Ward, left September 1 to become State-highway commissioner. Joseph A.

LaPage, 33, has been named assistant area-development director of the chamber, effective October 1. He Is currently on the systems and procedures staff of the Highway Department's Division of Administrative Services. Vinsel Still Supervising Until last year, LaPage was an administrative analyst on the research staff of the Kentucky Legislative Research Commission. During this time ECONOMY OPTICAL for ECONOMY GLASSES FREE PARKING BUDGET TERMS Call ir writs far in litirihiri in CONTACT LENSES Op Dancing Jamboree TONIGHT September 20 ECONOMY OPTKAl CO. (31 S.

4 th 318 W. MARKET iU 3 3338 JU 3-1236 he was secretary to the State THE tVSNT OP RAIN, DANCE I I HEIO ON WIDNEI. I A Advisory Committee on Metro- Kpnh'lrv politan Government, of which An infantry veteran of DAY NIGHT, Ward was chairman. He helped prepare the commission's re-Hankow Suffers Flooding Hong Kong, Sept. 19 WV The Communist newspaper Wen Wei Po reported Monday the Hankow area of central China suffered its worst flood in 25 years early this month.

The newspaper did not mention the extent of the damages. I WORKMAN L' 41 The New PIOLCO GAS DUOMATIC only $349.95, Weekly payments $2,97 Combines oil the best features of separate washers and dryers OUT PERFORMS THEM BOTH! Slaps a Msan loss. y'Yti MARllN nJt i Champion lddlr W' A who hSM USt "At 4 I mon' 'hw- 4 0 You all come to our FREE Square Dance Jamboree. See the popular TV personalities and enjoy the music and dancing. You will enjoy yourself.

Cmlidtio of the focvu, Nov. .22, 1826; The UuuviUe Daily ximl. 1830: The Morning Courier. 1837; The Daily Democrat. 1843.

Kirst issued at The Couner-Journsl Nov 8, 18611. by Henry W.tlenoB and Waller N. Haldeman. Published by Courttr-Joumsl and Louii-wlleTimea Company. Member the AMOCiated Frew: The Auocialed Pret tt enutlrd exclusively to the use for republication of ail the local newa printed in this newspaper, aa at all AP news dupatchea.

Published by The Courier-Journal and tou mills TinKl daily and Sunday at S25 W. Brotdtay. Louiavule 2, Ky. Seeond-tlau postage paid it ille, Kentucky. futactirtK)KiAmTa lYear bjrlos.

3 Men. IMo. Caw-r. 4JJ 1M 211 HO 14 30 7.15 2 4S. Hi tit tor other state quoted on request Mail orders not accepted from local i-tiea served bydelivery agents.

tar Cmntm IMwy-Dslly Courier-Journal. S5e week. Daily and Sun-dav Con rr-Journai, 65c Sunday only. 20c. If A mm TO PROVE THIS WE GIVE A 10 DAY FREE HOME TRIAL Model CG-792 BERNIE SMITH Plays and Picks fine Oultar 3 A FLOYD BOHART fopuisr Louisville AVfTp uar Danca Caller BRING YOUR LAUNDRY IN FOR A LIVE DEMONSTRATION AND COMPARE Yau All Know assaV'taiai-: "CACTUS" TOM BROOKS 834 S.

Preston OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9 TO 9 OPEN SAT. 9 TO 3 JU 4-0785 ti.

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Pages Available:
3,668,208
Years Available:
1830-2024