In Winona Daily News by an Authorized Administrator of Openriver

In Winona Daily News by an Authorized Administrator of Openriver

Winona State University OpenRiver Winona Daily News Winona City Newspapers 11-27-1964 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" (1964). Winona Daily News. 533. https://openriver.winona.edu/winonadailynews/533 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]. Snow Diminishing To Flurries Tonight; Much Colder ¦Jpfift U.S. Near New Viet Nam Decision Thanksgiving May Put More Road Deaths Pressure on Up Over 1963 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rebel Lines The nation's Thanksgiving weekend traffic death rate slackened today after Thurs- day's heavy highway mortality. Since 6 p.m. (local time), Wednesday, the traffic toll reached 207. LINER LIMPS BACK ... The Israeli liner Shalom, a With the frequency of fatali- 40-foot long gash, 4 feet wide, running back from her bow ties far less than on Thanksgiv- just above the water line, limps back to New York. The ing Day, the rate of deaths slid liner collided in a pre-dawn Thursday fog off the New Jersey down the scale to less than for coast -with Norwegian tanker Stolt Dagali , cutting the tanker the first nine months of this in two. This photo was taken by AP Staff Photographer John year when it averaged 126 a Rooney. (AP Photofax) day. Traffic experts said that on- pleasant driving weather over much of the North and absence of Thursday's pressure to keep 19 Crewmen of Thanksgiving dinner appoint- ments probably figured in the lull. Also, today had the usual characteristics of workday, oc- Norse Tanker cupation for perhaps a majori- ty of Americans. Confer over Viet Nam With only about half of the Gen. Max well Taylor and Sec. Robert McNamara four-day holiday weekend over, it was too early to tell whether WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State Dean Lost in Crash the final toll for the 102-hour Rusk and Ambassador Maxwell D, Taylor started today NEW YORK iAP) -Nineteen miles off the New Jersey Coast period would exceed last year's an intensive reappraisal of U.S. strategy in anti-Commu- crewmen of a Norwegian tanker shortly after 2 a.m. Thursday in 543, a record since the annual nist war in Viet Nam. The study may lead to a decision are dead or missing from a dense fog. count -was started in 1958. by r i o s . Thanksgiving Day tragedy in The stem quarter of the .tank- P es dent J hn on to broaden the war Wet weather, snow in the Pa- Taylor met with Rusk early this morning, beginning which their vessel was sliced in er sank in the pall of darkness cific Northwest and Midwest two by an Israeli luxury liner a schedule of talks to be climaxed by White House ses- and fog. Water poured into the and rain in the East, created heading out on a carefree liner's bow compartments, sions with President John- hazardous driving conditions in son and other decision makers Caribbean cruise. which were sealed off. many areas. Highway travel , The collision occcurred 18 next week. An air-sea rescue operation although not regarded as heavy The administration appeared IN WAKE OF SEA TRAGEDY . Water liner Shalom in pre-dawn collision. The stern was quickly put in motion. as on other major national holi- to be moving reluctantly to- Top Congo spills across deck of forward section of Nor- of the tanker, sank. This photo was taken by Clad -variously in nightdress days, appeared above normal in ward a cautious expansion of wegian tanker Stolt Dagali as it wallows in AP Staff Photographer John Rooney. (AP or ballroom attire, many of the most of the nation. the conflict beyond South Viet the Atlantic off the coast of ,New Jersey Thurs- Photofax) Storm cruise liner's 616 passengers The latest ol the multiple- Nam in the hope of improving New raced to decks to watch through Rebels Head day. The vessel was cut in two by Israeli death accidents were reported prospects for a peaceful settle- the mist. in Kansas and Iowa. A car ment. Eventually, 24 of the tanker's rammed under a parked truck Johnson and other top admin- Moves Across 43-member crew were snatched on the Kansas Turnpike near from the seas, from swamped istration officials are reported For Sudan Wellington, Kan., Thursday lifeboats and from the barely 24, of to have divided feelings about NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - night, killing Joan Judd, Viet Nam strategy between Black well , Okla., and three of sticking to confining the war Thomas Kanga, Congolese rebel Hundreds of Cong o Middle West her young children. For a story about how ft almost entirely to South Viet foreign minister, claimed today By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two cars loaded with teen- and making some strikes former Canton, Minn., man Iowa, Nam, the key leaders of the rebellion agers from Fort Dodge, to the north. Stormy weather, in the form helped in the rescue turn to returning from a wedding re- are heading for the Sudanese of heavy snow and strong winds, Taylor, who returned to Page 3. ception crashed in separate acci- border. t swept areas from the Rockies to in Washington Thursday, is known «K»^^^»i^l>«WS»'Se«»»Ae^^V»H»*^M> dents. Three boys were killed Kanza, who came to Nairobi Whites Still M issing Minnesota today and more rain to believe that the time for new on accident and in the second the release of white ' decisions is at hand. Further- to negotiate LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo bullet through your head." least 170 foreigners were fell in the Far West and New floating forward section of the mishap one boy was killed. hostages with U.S. Ambassador (AP) — Snipers' bullets still England. vessel, Among them were a more he sees some advantages brought here from Paulis The worst accident during the in authorizing and promptly un- William Attwood, said he had whistled through Stanleyville Since the U.S. • Belgian air- Thursday. Near-blizzard conditions were stewardess — the lone woman received a telegram from Chris- ' holiday thus far reported was dertaking air strikes either today as government troops borne operation began Tuesday, reported in eastern Montana , aboard — and the tanker s cap- tophe Gbenye, rebel president, at least 59 foreigners including Belgian paratroops were North Dakota and northern tain. near Olanta, S.C., where seven against Communist supply lines pushed across the Congo River scouring an 18-mile radius members of one family and the from North Viet Nam to South assuring that he and other lead- after the main rebel force. three Americans have been South Dakota. Gusty winds up Some pf the men saved from ers were safe. around Paulis for other foreign- to 4Q m.p.h. whipped the falling the sea were only partially clad. driver of a second car were Viet Nam through the neighbor- "Stanleyville is under control , slain by the Peking-backed reb- , With Gbenye, according to els , The paratroopers rescued ers. snow, cutting visibility sharply They were oil-smeared, blue killed in a head-on collision ing kingdom of Laos, or against but all resistance has not been No estimate of traffic deaths Kama, were Gastion Soumialot, " about 1,600 white hostages in The U.S. spokesman said the in some areas. Six inches of with cold and in some cases in- Communist concentration points eliminated, said an American for the Thanksgiving weekend for men and supplies in the Pierre Mulele and Nicolas Olen- Embassy spokesman, Stanleyville and Paulis. evacuation of refugees from snow piled up at Minot , N.D., in sensible from shock. ga, his main lieutenants. Stanleyville has been com- a six-hour period. Temperatures was made by the National Safe- north. "The city is virtually desert- In Paulis, which was seized As time wore on through a ty Council. It said there is little Kanza said they were trying pleted. The American planes were near zero in parts of Mon- ed. The Congolese have fled to Thursday by Belgian paratroop- gray dawn, the Atlantic yielded extra long-distance travel for Taylor recently declared that to cross the border into Sudan the bush. But snipers are still ers, about 100 whites awaited brought a total of 1,070 refugees tana. 13 bodies. A massive daylong the outcome of the conflict is north of Stanleyville. Stanleyville and the holiday. active and you can easily get a evacuation on U.S. Cl3«s. At from Paulis. Hazardous driving conditions search cf the area finally was survey now "very much in doubt." Congolese and other aircraft An Associated Press were reported from eastern called off at sundown without of But he said he thought attacks have airlifted hundreds of oth- during a non-holiday weekend Montan a to Minnesota. any trace of six men still miss- on targets in Red-held territory ers from the rebel zone 102 hours from Nov. 11 to Nov. The snow was expected to ing. * 15 showed 468 traffic deaths. would probably make the The embassy said five Ameri- spread into Minnesota, Wiscon- The vessels involved were the The record-low traffic death toll Chinese and North Vietnamese New Quake cans remained in rebel-con- sin, northwestern Iowa and $20-million liner Shalom, pride for a Thanksgiving holiday peri- Communist leadership realize Stanleyville City trolled areas. They are Miss A. northern Michigan , with up to of the Israeli merchant fleet and od was 442 in 1960.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    19 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us