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Show .T1 Explosion Rips Hole In Canadian Freighter Hull CHICAGO (UP I) An exlosion. believed caused by a dynamite bomb, pried a hole in the bull cf the Canadian grain freighter Howard L. Shaw at Calumet Har bor shortly before midnight Fri- day. The ship has been tied up at the Continental Graij Co. elevator since last April because of a lebor dispute between the Seafarers International Union (SIU) and the Canadian Maritime Union (CMU). A bole four feet wide and feet long was ripped In the amidships and Just above waterline on the port (left) ci the ship. The crew readied ship's pumps but the vessel cot taking in water. six hull the side the was TIZZY I 1963 t sr V V V 9 SUNDAY HERALD V " Talks Break Off In N.Y. School Crisis By KATE OSANN Among the crewmen aboard at the time of the" blast, were Capt. Harold Jones, 1st mate Marvin Gilbert and Glenn Smith, a seaman on watch, all of Toronto, Smith said he had made his rounds and found nothing amiss 30 minutes before the blast. When the explosion occurred, Smith said be located it by the smoke rising from the side of the ship. The crewmen were shaken up but none was hurt. Capt. Jones said be knew of no reason for the incident and could make no damage estimate. Windows were blown from the Continental Grain Co- - offices a block away by the blast, which Chicago police said apparently was a dynamite explosion. The Federal Bureau of Investigation was expected to enter jthe case. The freighter, owned by the Upper Lakes Shipping; Co., Que bec, has been tied up: here since last April because members of tbt International Longshoremen's Association (IL.A) have refused to load it. The owners have a con tract with the CMU, which the is a "company claims SIU union." JFK Holds His Ground In Viet Problem said progress had been made in the meeting and that a settlement of the dispute could be reached. Mayor Robert F. Wagner appointed the panel and said its recommendations would be but "most persuasive to all concerned." The UFT, official bargainer for the city's 43,000 school teachers, has threatened to call the walkout to enforce its contract demands. About 8,000 teachers met in an outdoor stadium Friday night and voted overwhelmingly to support a strike. By voice vote, they rejected the board of education's latest contract offer after it was explained to them by UFT president Charles Cogen. Cogen said the offer included a pay boost over a but none of it two-yeperiod Presi- (UPI) dent Kennedy apparently is not conceding defeat in his campaign to force South Viet Nam President Ngo Dinh Diem into a government housecleantng designed to win back grassroot support for his war against the Communists. In the face of reports that the United States dropped its showdown strategy with Diem, the State Department said Friday that '"there is no change in the U.S. position as stated by the President on Monday." In a television interview at that time. Kennedy urged Diem to make both policy and personnel changes in his government. If this were not done, Kennedy said, Diem would not be able to turn back the Communist infiltrators trying to topple his government. Richard I. Phillips, the State Department's spokesman, did not elaborate on the statement, but it in effect denied reports the U.S. was trying to " find new ways to work with the Diem regime. The State Department has not spelled out what it would like to see in the way of reforms in the South Vietnamese government, but the two main changes are believed to be: lifting of martial law in the Asian nation and end to the persecution of Buddhists. Quotes In The Nevs In Malaysia For Trouble r &i,J ' . . . WWW KA. 0 he TJ4. fa. Bi M. ON. io here charged that a United Nations survey to assess the wishes of the people of British Borneo on joining the state was superficial. And in Manila, Philippine Foreign Secretary Salvador P. Lopez said he expects the controversial federation to be discussed at the forthcoming United Nations Gen eral Assembly. He said he may ask the leaders of the Philippine observer team on the survey to accompany him to New York to lay their findings before the U.N. body. Both Indonesia and the Philippines have opposed the formation of Malaysia almost since it was proposed. Both have their eyes on a slice of the rich Borneo territories. The statements from the two foreign secretaries were an indication that neither country has yet given up hope of forestalling the formation of the new state, which is now scheduled for Sept. 16. By United Press International NEW YORK Mayor Robert F. Wagner pleading for a peace ful settlement of the dispute between the board of education and United Fedthe strike-threateni- 200 Dead in Utah Urged To Build Own Road To Lake Powell Brazil Fires CEDAR CITY Mem- (UPI) bers of the Five County organization urged Friday that Utah construct its own access road t o Lake Powell, the reservoir rising above Glen Canyon Dam. The group passed a resolution ' which noted that while 98 per cent of the lake will be in Utah, anyone desiring to use it must first go into Arizona. They also recommended a. delay in signing any Utah - Arizona reciprocal agreement on the lake until further study is made of the fishing situation. The group is made up of civic and business leaders from Garfield, Kane, Iron, Beaver and Washington Counties. Last Concrete To Be Poured $300-a-ye- The CURITIRA, Brazil (UPI) worst fires in Brazil's history, cofraging through the tinder-dr- y fee plantations of Parana State, have taken a toll of at least 200 lives. It was announced Saturday. Official sources said the death toll may run to more than 750. More than 66 communities of varying sizes are threatened by the flames, including the towns cf Rio Negro and Campo do Ten-entbarely 50 miles southwest of here. Firemen and policemen are working around the clock, fighting the blazes or carrying out rescue missions. The U.S. Embassy in Rio de Janeiro is flying in American firefighting experts, along with doctors and nurses to tend the injured and combat the threat of disease. Ching-kuo- of Kai-she- k nese consulate in Honolulu. PLANS BIG BONFIRE INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) The Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission plans a bonfire Monday. The commission will burn $2 million worth of beer stamps left over when the state changed its taxing method. DITTO MACHINES SERVICE Standard Supply Co. Prev PR trade-i- n. New Mlcromatlc 60 Record Player ellml-nate- s distortion; the turntable speed is accurate as an electric clock! Jhe pick-uplays at & mere 110 ounce touch, banishing record and stylus wear. The diamond stylus is guaranteed for 10 years your records can last a lifetime I 1 4 I 1 BUS '.:o. r'nmnfffii I in ,v. y. I' WW - - j it? W 4 ;f 3.11 A ':" y'rUA l " 3 ,;i I i fix I I 1 '' w Mil1 f 1 1 mm m WW ...) , ,, f I ' ft 5 t i f i J. 1 1 The Italian Provincial model In Mahogany or French Walnut! ' i last Manufacturers 32.4 produced million dolls in 1960 and 2.1 million doll carriages to put them in, says the Census Bureau. i.m mm mm i r:.rh a d Here's a bountiful buffet brought your way by Union Pacific . . . the l i. AmerTcan-mo- del In distressed Cherry; YOU'VE HEARD A M AG NAVOX 1 UNLESS ... YOU'VE BEEN MISSING THE TRUE PLEASURE OF MUSIC! From records or Stereo FM radio, only Magnavox can the full beauty of music for you. You'll be thrilled by the spectacular dimensions of stereophonies and tho tonal purity of high fidelity. Just as ifyouhacl the best seat in a concert hall, you're surrounded with the breathtaking realism of glorious music. Yon must hear Magnavox to discover the untold; pleasure you've been missing! r re-cre- ate CHICAGO POCATEUjoV rv ,( J:.;' Vs. ' CHEYENNE r - - O- ji ,,,s,',, f J SALT LAKE CITY ... - OMAHA " "-Czr-"''111 T.tJOOt ( ' "WSASOnr ENJOY th magnlflent r j , better, clctxr er pictures them ydu'vo over seen . . . from Personal TV ?5v "- - . Wonderfully Compact .JT I ' I 51 to Carry Easy ..... Vi Dependable Performance ever so SLIM and TRIM! wuic in Na- D. Felt, commander in U.S. Pacific forces, and of chief consul Raymond Hoo of the Chi- - $29850 to $34850 Friday. Texas' heat wave, which sent the temperature soaring to 102 at Fort Worth Friday, continued. Bureau of Reclamation said the With 10 "a.m. ceremony marks a major PAGE, Ariz. (UPI) pomp and ceremony the step in completion of the dam. bucket of concrete will be dumped Final completion with installation at Glen Canyon Dam next Friday of turbines and generators is set for 1966. morning. L.S. Wylie, chief project conThe dam was begun Oct. 15, struction engineer for the U.S. 1956. LOS ANGELES Harry - y . Gale warnings remained in effect for northern New England Saturday and temperatures dipped near the frost mark from Pennsylvania to Vermont. Mich., picked up Marquette, of rain from a an inch nearly storm line passing through the Lake Superior area. During the night Wichita Falls, Tex., had .66 of an inch of rain hi six hours. Maine's gale warnings came from a North Atlantic storm which had threatened workmen dismantling obsolete Air Force "Texas Tower" radar installations. The workmen were evacuated by a fleet of helicopters iwv na y-u-c 1 the why Magnavox finest and your best buy on any basis. tionalist China, planned to depart for San Francisco Saturday, on his way to Washington where he "hopes" to meet with President Kennedy. Chiang, head of the security forces of the Nationalist China government, arrived in Hawaii Friday for his first visit in 10 years. He was greeted by Adm. N- : eldest son of President Chiang 49 W. 1st j General (UPI) , SALES m By United Press International e, Chiang's Visit Kennedy HONOLULU that p The Early R-Wi- Chiang S398.50 models -f depending on the condition and value of your : Gale Warnings For New England WASHINGTON Son To styles- ph will now cost you only to be effective immediately. At Glen Canyon n SEATTLE radio-phonogra- ar Irresistible state visitor." Police spokesBIRMINGHAM men on the fatal shooting of a Negro during a fight between two rival Negro gangs: "It was not a racial incident, Just a plain case of a Negro shooting a Negro ... If it had not happened now, no one would have paid any attention to it." beautiful ar The newspaper HELSINKI Sanomat welcoming Helsingin Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson to the country on his tour: "The U.S. vice president is an Rep. John W. on efforts of a the Byrnes, businessmen's group to drum up support for President Kennedy's proposed tax cuts: "Many will conclude that this wrr 'March on Washington' could more appropriately be called a 'run on the Treasury.' " If you act now, you may select! from six distinctive and i ng eration of Teachers: "There is neither rhyme, reason nor justice in the test of the issues on the basis of force." Jane and I had to carry soma of her mother's econ omy-siz- e packages home from the supermarket because she couldn't get them in her economy-siz- e car!1 magnificent new STEREO HIGH FIDELITY non-bindi- ng ! JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI) The Southeast Asian state of Malaysia, which has been struggling to be born for months, appeared to be heading for new complications in its formation. Indonesian Foreign Minister J"1' . : WASHINGTON ' of the mediators, 7 or' record player . . . on a radio-phonograp- h, NEW YORK (UPI) Emergency talks broke off temporarily early Saturday In the attempt! to avert a strike by public school teachers "on Monday when classes start for more than one million pupils. The wage discussions between a three-ma- n mediation panel and officials of the city board of education and the United Federation of Teachers (UFT) ended on a note of optimism and were scheduled to resume later m the day. Simon H. 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