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Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 11-27-1962 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. 333. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/333 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]. 707 Carrying 97 Crashes in Peru Plane Flying Kennedy Is CafTvassers Sencf Governor Heartened by From Rio to Inspection Trip Decision to Supreme Court Los Angeles ST. PAUL (AP) — The Minne- J. Neil Morton, attorney for Gov. cratic Lt. Gov, Karl Rolvaag. the 87 counties. By DIEGO GONZALES By FRED S. HOFFMAN sota Supreme Court today set a Elmer L. Andersen. The order The chief issue, as it has been Today's action followed a three- LIMA, Peru (AP)-A Brazilian WASHINGTON (AP)-President hearing for 2 p.m. Wednesday on for hearing was signed by Chief for three weeks, is acceptance or way split by the canvassing board jet airliner, flying toward Los An- Kennedy and the nation's mili- a legal action; aimed at forcing Justice Oscar R. Knutson. rejection of amended vote totals Monday which set the stage ior geles with 97 persons aboard, was tary chiefs returned "heartened the state canvassing board to cer- Morton asks the canvassing irom 10 counties. The altered re- the close governor race to go into found wrecked 75 miles south tify a winner in the governor elec- board to show cause of and encouraged" after seeing the ¦ ¦ why Ander- turns put Andersen in the lead. court. tion. : • . sen should not be certified the Rolvaag would lead by 58 votes Morton's petition as a vehicle to Lima today with no sign of sur- fighting men and awesome fire- The action was initiated by winner by 142 votes over Demo- on the original tabulations from get the matter into court where vivors, Peruvian officials report- power massed in the Southeast the status of the 10 local recounts ed. facing Cuba. will be determined. This, course The Varig Air Lines 707 had The White House said this 5n was apparently agreed upon by disappeared eight hours earlier as a statement Monday night follow- the five - member canvassing it headed for a landing at Lima on ing Kennedy'srl2-hoiir flying tour board.¦ a flight that originated at Porto of three key bases—the Army's When the court rules—probably Alegre and Rio de Janeiro. Brazil. Ft. Stewart, Ga., Homestead AJr ,this week—it apparently will di- A search plane said the Boeing , and the Navy' rect the board to reject plane seemed to be Force Base Fla., ¦¦ s accept or completely .^air^and sea base at Key . 'West; the amended returns and, in ef- destroyed. It was sighted near the 7 Fla. fect , pick the winner for the Pan-Amercian Highway. board. For-the first time since the Cu- The plane was! bound from Bra- ban crisis developed five weeks Court action to start a recount can be started within 10 days after zil to Los Angeles, with inter- ago, reporters had a chance to mediate stops scheduled in Peru, see the extent to which U.S. the canvassing board finally , de- clares a winner. Colombia, Panama arid Mexico. armed might had been mobilized Varig said it carried 80 passen- inside these bases. The 10 counties where local can- vassing boards opened ballot liox- gers, with 9 of them ticketed for Among other things, they saw r es to check apparent errors after SMILES ON BOTH SIDES . U; .;S. Ambassador Adlai Stev- Los Angeles and the remainder . for Latin American paints. About 250 powerful rocket- the Nov. 6 election are Blue Earth, enson , left, and Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan smile armed jet fighters on alert at Douglas, Grant , Koochiching, Le- The $5-nullion plane carried a as they shake hands .at United Nations headquarters. Both at- crew of 17. Homestead, advance command Sueur, Morrison , Otter: Tail , tended dinner given by U Thant, acting U. N", ' ¦ • ¦ post for the Cuban operation. Stearns, Steven and Watonwan. secretary general, on • The plane was due to set down Another 200 jet interceptors, Mikoyan's return from talks with Cuban Premier Fidel Castro at Lima's International Airport fighters and fighter-bombers in Original totals from these and in Havana. Between them is Jobn J. McCloy, special U. S. nego- about 3:30 a.m. EST. only 90 the other 76 counties gave Rol- tiator in the Cuban crisis. (AP Photofax) position at Key West, . Authorities said it radioed a miles from Cuba. vaag 619,704 votes, Andersen _ .19,- 646. The amended returns shifted normal position report five to Elements of the 15,561-man 1st seven minutes before the sched- Armored Division, the Army's the count to 619,7^2 for Andersen , 619,580 for Rolvaag. uled landing and gave no indica- newest, which had moved swiftly tion of difficulties. However, Var- by air and rail from Ft. Hood , Two board members voted Non- ig offices Ln Rio de Janeiro and Tex., to Ft. Stewart last month HKJH LEVEL INSPECTION . President joint chiefs of staff; Gen. Earle Wheeler, Army day to accept original county can- New York said an emergency call United States seemed Kennedy walks by Honest John rocket launch- chief of staff and Gen. vassing board returns; two fav- Parley when the Herbert , Arms . Powell com- had been heard. headed for possible use of force ers on.; a tour of Ft. Stewart, Ga. Left to right (AP ored the amended returns the mander of the Continental Army Command.¦¦ ¦ Lima airport said the plane ap- against Cuba. In background; Gen. Maxwell Taylor, chairman, Photofax) v • fifth favored Supreme Court ac- parently was flying at 12,000 feet tion. near the Pacific Coast. This was only part of th* bu ild- Voting to accept the original re- up which extended to many other Peruvian air force planes and turns were Secretary of State In Deadlock two helicopters were dispatched bases in the Southeast. Joseph L. Donovan , a DFLer,. and GENEVA (AP)-The 17-nation statements on nuclear testing put to the area. Two Peruvian sub- In brief talks at Ft. Stewart, Supreme Court Justice Thomas disarmament conference was them once again on a dead-end Homestead and Key West, Ken- marines also were ordered to join Gallagher, the DFL candidate : for back in its familiar deadlocked course. the search. nedy stressed , his "great appre- rut today after resuming with ex- governor in 1938. Those favoring Soviet Delegate Semyon K. ciation" and the nation's indebt- Berl^ acceptance of the amended returns pressions of hope that' nuclear Among passenger* reported by Tsarapkin expressed his edness for the contribution made were Supreme Court Justice Mar- weapons tests would soon be willing- Varig to be aboard were Raid by the combat-ready forces in the banned. Neither the Western pow- ness to sign a test-ban agreement, Cepero Bonilla, econo-mic adviser tin Nelson, GOP gubernatorial but only on Soviet ternis, without period of crisis. candidate in 1934 and 1936, and ers nor the Communists showed to Fidel Castro and president o£ At the Boca Chica Naval Air signs of giving ground on the in- any kind of international inspec- the Cuban National Bank ; and District Judge Albin S. Pearson, tion and supervision demanded by Station at Key West, the Presi- St. Paul. spection issue. the Peruvian minister of agricul- dent said : aRed Ta keover Threat After both sides indicated at the United States arid Britain. (AP)—Four ture, Jesus Melgar, with his wife. "The reconnaissance fughts BERLIN years ago is enjoying one of its most peace- But they breathe more easily in District Judge Luther Sl«rten, the reopening o£ negotiations Tsarapkin contended existing They had been attending a region- which enabled us " to determine today Nikita Khrushchev gave ful periods in years, the belief that Khrushchev now Minneapolis, the fifth board mem- Monday that the Cuban crisis had national detection systems are al meeting of the Food and Agri- with precision the offensive biuid- the Western Allies six months to Beriiners are feeling more per- really understands that the ber, took the position some of the created a new sense of urgency adequate to enforce a test ban. get out of West Berlin. culture Organization in Rio da up in Cuba contributed directly ky than they have in a long time. United States and Us allies will amended returns corrected "obvi- for progress in Geneva, their He also rejected an American- Janeiro. to the security of the United The United States, Britain and Presiden t Kennedy's firm hand- fight if necessary to preserve ious errors" but that the hoard British proposal for a ban on sur- France are still here, exercising West Berlin Varig said the passengers States in the most important and ling of the Cuban crisis gave their 's freedom . had no power to decide the legal face and atmospheric tests—po- scheduled to disembark at Los significant way." their war-won ri ghts of occupa- morale a terrific boost. On Nov. 27, 1961, the atmos- questions involved. liced only by national detection He said that "the days that we tion. phere in Berlin was very differ- Justices Gallagher and Nelson systems—while experts try to get have recently passed through Their presence is supported by They know the threat of a Red ent.
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