Winona Deaths Two-State Deaths King III, a Guid- STRUM, Wi«.-A.3.C
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Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 12-24-1962 Winona Daily News Winona Daily News Follow this and additional works at: https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews Recommended Citation Winona Daily News, "Winona Daily News" (1962). Winona Daily News. 356. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/356 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Winona City Newspapers at OpenRiver. It has been accepted for inclusion in Winona Daily News by an authorized administrator of OpenRiver. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Miami Hails First of Released Prisoners CHRISTMAS HAS MANY FACES ' ¦ ' ' . 7 * ' ' ' •' ' ' . *¦ '' ¦ '¦' ¦ ' . Joyous Reunion Cftarffy, Love Break Of Fathers, Wives, Children BULLETIN ' Through Harcf Shell HAVANA ilfi —: Fidel Castro was quoted today By GEORG E W CORNELL as saying mass mantle of decorations, them back. ¦|» will let mothers Associated Press Staff Writer crowded stores, singing carols, In Providence, of freed R.I., there was Bay of Pigs prisoners join The festival has many faces. holiday time off , bulging traffic the buoyant and benevolent bus -their Some are sad. Some are funny. aiid parties. , sorts in the United States driver who veered off his route —even W they lack visas. Some are loving and generous. There Was the rushing woman in a burst of yuletide chivalry, to Some are cynical. They are Castro went to the docks to the shopper Ln Watervule, Maine, who take passengers directly to their watch the unloading of medi- faces of Christmas. piled armloads of gift purchases destinations. cines and food By deeds and words Most everyone aboard was sent as ran- , people in the back seat of someone som for-the '.' 1,113 prisoners. traced their imprint on the oc- else's parked car, then drove laughing as the bus rolled on its casion. It was a mixed image, home in her own, a similar mod- zig-zag course, the driver grandly By WILLIAM L. RYAN mirrored in little episodes here el. 7 puffing a cigar. , (A.P) and there, . A pair of small boys, , MIAMI Fla. - Operation in attitudes, circum- P^ewee Ransom roared into stances and incidents , A newspaper account of the un- age 7, and Fatty, age 9. got them- action this . They formed a varied tableau , explained cargo of packages en- selves locked in a Cambridge, Christmas Eve to continue an air- breaking through the general abled Mrs. Louis Carey to get Mass., department -store over- lift of 1,313 prisoners.of Cuba's night, in a world of whirring toys communism to freedom and wild - and goodies. ly joyous family reunions on free U.S. soil. Next morning, they were found All the indications were for a laden with treasures filled with full-speed ahead to wind up the Traffic Deaths candy. One was clomping about job begun Sunday . The day's first in a pair of huge new shoes. planeload—109 more survivors of There wasn't only humor in the the unsuccessful April 1961, Bay Christmas countenance There of Pigs invasion—touched down at Over 400*AAark were also the marks of sorrow , Homestea d Air Force Base at By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS for the past year, had estimated the empty chairs at the family 10:24 a.m. The nation' s traffic death toll «50 to 75» deaths on the highways tables, and sometimes the slim passed the 300 mark in the first during the long holiday period. fare. It seemed possible the whole job Wi days of the long Christmas "If the trend holds," Pyle said , In Carmichaels, Pa., where 37 would be completed in the after- weekend, a pace far belo-y pre* "the final toll could be as low men died in*a coal mine explosion noon. holiday estimates by safety ex- as 550." three weeks ago, 65 children are Today 's first , flight brought the perts. The count, which started at 6 without their fathers this Chri st- total on free soil to 535. "IE the present trend continues, p.m. Friday and ends at midnight mas , and 34 wives without their The airlift brought 426 men to this will be the safest Christmas Christmas, showed $04 traffic husbands. Florida from the San Antonio do holiday on record ," said Howard deaths throughout the nation. Many of the families were go- los Banos military airport outside Pyle, president of the National Fires had killed 44 persons and ing on , in their grief , with efforts Havana in the spectacular Sun- Safety Council. 37 others had lost their lives in to observe the day. "Mom said day operation before suspending for the night. The council, based on previous miscellaneous accidents for an dad would lite it that way," said A SMILE FOR DAD ' holidays and the record traffic toll over-all total of 385. Delcic Boyd , 13. 7 . fsidrq Lopez Hernandez , among the Key Stadium. Over 400 prisoners were returned in first part of The halt was sudden and with- prisoners returned to the United States from Sunday night, In Vineland , N-J-. it was a timer Cuba gigantic airlift which will bring more than 1,000 Cuban invasion out explanation after the last of of agony for Mr. and Mrs. 'Wil- hugs his daughter and wife during reunion at Miami's Dinner prisoners to the United States. (AP Photofax ) four fliglits deposited its humams- liam Jones Jr., whose boy, Billy, for-goods cargo on free soil. Tfcie 3, clad in his blue snowsuit, dis- pilots of planes waiting in Cuba appeared Dec. i9. then decided , however, to spend \/FW C/ufc of the night there and resume, rest- His gifts lay in the attic. There ed, in tie morning. will be Christmas for the two oth- Air Force Five Dead in er small children. "But T won't Longshoremen This meant the vigil kepi Mankato Burns bring down Billy's gifts," Mrs. throughout Sunday by many thou- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the walls of the structure were Jones said. Unless, unless— sands of anxious^ weary, prison- Three Minnesota communities standing today. In Philadelphia , a 16-year-old Fears New Minnesota ers' relatives liad to be faced cleaned up today in the wake of boy will spend Christmas, som- again or Christinas Eve. At Granite Falls, rhe Keegan All the pent-up tension of a downtown fires in which damages Hotel building, a landmark since berly aware that on the day aft- Out on Str ike long, prayerful campaign to free totaled more than a quarter of a the 1890s, took fire early today. erward , he will be confined in . a million dollars. youth disciplinary house for an Budget Cuts By BERN IE GOULD for some ports , including Mobile , Car Mishaps the 1,113 invasion survivors ex- Firemen, unahle to control the Ala., and Providence, R.I., ILA ploded in a roaring storm of emo- Damage was estimated at $100,- , ind efinite term. WASHINGTON (AP)-Some key . NEW YORK (AP )-A strike by By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS blaze ui the unoccupied structure longshoremen—the spokesmen said. One said that tion as Cuban exiles got their first 00*0 from a fire that broke out kept' wary eyes on an adjacent A court prescribed the pros- Air Force officers indicated today dock workers , Five persons died in Minnesota Sunday night at Mankato, damag- they are waiting for the other who load and unload ship cargoes Philadelphia Trenton , N.J., and glimpses of wan , tired young men lumberyard. However, there was pect, because the boy had struck "Wilmington , Del., docks will not be traffic accidents during the first brought in by a spectacular Oper- ing a three-story business building a school teacher. Sentence was shoe to drop iii the Anglo-Ameri- and baggage—has tied up ship- no wind, the flames did not can ping operations all along the At- picketed in full force until after two days of the extended Christ- ation Ransom shuttle. owned by the Mankato post of the spread. deferred until after Christmas. agreement to arm Britain Christmas. Veterans of Foreign Wars. Only with Polaris missile-firing subma- lantic and Gulf coasts. mas holiday weekend. DC6's supplied by Pan Ameri- The hotel building, unused for Loading and unJoariing of ships can Worl d Airways flew between rines. President Kennedy's plea to The deaths raised the state's about a month , had been sched- postpone the walkout for 90 days moved at a frenzied pace Sun- Miami and Havana carrying to uled for dismantling. There was They told a reporter they ex- day in an effort to get the ves- traffic tol l for the year to 667, or freedom, pect that went unheeded. planeloads of men -ex- no immediate estimate of the agreement, reached by sels on their way before the 51 behind the pace through this changed by Fidel Castro's regime Eau Claire Youth President Kennedy and British Some 81,000 members of strike deadline. Holla Trial Granite Falls loss. the International Longshoremen' date one year ago. for $53 million fcworth of food and Loss was estimated at $50,000 Prime Minister Harold Macmil- s y lan , to have some impact on the Association (ILA) , by estimate of Qne dockworker remarked that The dead : medicin es sorel needed in Cuba in the destruction by fire Sunday the union's president , are in- the Hudson River "looked like the The first plaoie landed at S: 06 Up of the building of the Barbarossa Dead in Auto, Air Force's Minuteman intercon- Miss Deloris C. Manderfeld , 18, p.m., EST, Sunday, carrying 108 tinental ballistic missile program , volved in the strike , affecting ma- Jersey Turnpike" as a stream of rural Medford .