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Winona Daily News

   Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - July 31, 1962, Winona, Minnesota                               Mostly Little Change In Temperature SUN RISES SETS FULL MOON AUG. DAILY NEWS 107th Year of Publication JULY 31, 1962 TEN CENTS PER COPY IKE INSPECTS OLD CANNON President Eisenhower inspects an old bronze non found aboard a 17th century during visit to the ship museum in The former president later was given a replica of the At right is Mr. Anders Frantzen who discovered the old warship sunk in the Port of The ship was raised in 1961. via cable from First U.S. Death Involving Thalidomide Reported By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York City has reported what may be the nation's first in- fant death involving the drug suspected crippler of And an Arizona television star has been turned down by a judge in her attempt to get a legal tion because she fears her child may be born deformed as a re- suit of her taking the As these developments were re- corded the American Medical Association launched com- prehensive research to try to de- termine what the drug does to unborn A congressional hearing was set for Wednesday to look into what one senator called indications of fo Leave Arizona Ariz. and Mrs. Robert L. mined to prevent the birth of a child they fear will be said today they will leave Arizona to seek an Mrs. 30 year old mother of says that early in her pregnancy she took containing the drug blamed for the births of communication involving information on the drug's suspected crippling thousands of malformed children in Australia and On Judge Yale Fate of State Superior Court re- a plea by the and Good Samaritan Hospital of Phoenix to sanction an This in a statement released by hospital tor Stephen Finkbine medical and atric opinion in the the courts have refused to confirm that the recommended treatment would be within the framework of the have been repeated suggestions of prosecution of this case and since we and our physicians do not wish to un- a solution that might be outside the framework of the law we have concluded to seek help in a more legal Finkbine couldn't be reached for further but Morris said the couple had started ing preparations to He that he understood the had not decided on their All 50 states prohibit and some allow exceptions only if the life of the mother is The in Good Samaritan Hospital 16 Wisconsin Doctors Got Thalidomide WASHINGTON Samples of the drug believed to have caused deformities in unborn children in were to 16 Wisconsin physicians during a test the Food and Drug Administration said The FDA did not identify the their home or the amounts of the drug they re- The the agency j contended an abortion was were distributed to doctors in 39.WLto j r health and save her heels of a report by the Food and Drug Administration that mide pills had been distributed to doctors in 39 states and the Dis- of They were not sold In one of the the New York Health Department said a 37-year-old Queens who reportedly took 90 thalidomide pills before and during gave July 21 to a deformed baby which lived only about 40 In New the city's acting health commissioner said the woman whose deformed baby died had taken thalidomide on the ad- vice of a Park Avenue trist who had ordered the drug from a pharmacy in In the American cal Association said it assigned its council on drugs to do the re- search on The drug has been under clinical evaluation since 1956, the AMA but it hopes the council's study will vide information on congenital malformations and that ate measures will be developed to safeguard our Sen. Hubert H. D. whose Senate Government Operations subcommittee will open hearings on made the comment on communication in- the the subcommittee's said hearing witnesses will include Dr. Frances She is the Food and Drug physician who blocked commercial distribution of mide in this country after being alerted to its potential danger by what the senator called her of a British Medical Journal New Algerian Deputy Seized By MICHAEL GOLDSMITH ALGIERS Mohammed dissident vice premier Ahmed Ben Bella's bitterest was held under ar- rest by Bella somewhere in eastern Algeria jeopardizing moves to cile the nation's quarreling arrest by guerrillas of Wilaya No. i raised the threat of violent retaliation from an estimated 10.000 fierce Berber guerrillas of Wilaya No. 3 stronghold in the Kabylie Mountains east of Other leaders of rival camps converged on Algiers for a new effort to end the dispute which has paralyzed Algeria since French rule ended four weeks ago The peace moves seemed doomed to failure as long as was a vice premier in the government of Premier Ben sef Ben was picked up Monday on a visit to his native about 110 miles southeast of The village on the sun-dried Hodna Plateau between the Aures and Kabylie mountains lies a mile outside the Bella Wilaya No. 3. When escorted by four of his Berber arrived at his home for the first time since the end of the Algerian the house promptly surrounded by a well-armed detachment of Wilaya No. l Local Moslem officials said and his escort put up no They were whisked off to an unknown ably the mountain headquarters of No. 1. The first reaction in Tizi Ouzou Kabylie headquarters 65 miles east of was Col. Quid com- mander of the Berber said he was sending officers to and Ben Bella became bitter political and personal foes during five years they spenc gether in French captivity during the When Ben drive to rake over the government picked up steam last and Vice Premier Belkacem Krim set up ters in Tizi Ouzou and called for all-out resistance to Ben Bella's bid for It was not known whether diaf was on Ben Bella's orders or on the initiative of ihe local guerrilla Men of Wilaya No. 1 arrested another member of Ben cabinet Interior Minister Lakhdar Ben in Constantine last week but released him the next Ben virtually isolated in the former summer palace of French governors in issued an appeal for ciliation to save the nation from and economic He said the dispute among the leaders had caused a new panicky exodus of Europeans and led geria to the brink of He said this was the last moment for and he called on the politicians to meet in Algiers to end their quarrels without UNWELCOME VISITOR Mo. liam Barksdale didn't complain right away to police when a bor's dog tore open a to enter his But two days later he called them when he found a large collie dog asleep in his son's bed and old curled up on the Freighter Sinks in Collision at Detroit FREIGHTER SINKS AFTER COLLISION JN DETROIT RIVER The British freighter Montrose awash and sinking under the Ambassador connecting Detroit and after colliding Monday night a cement Ousted Union Official Denies Asking Bribe By HARRY KELLY WASHINGTON ousted union official denies demanding as the price to use his in- fluence to end a strike holding up on 11 nuclear Arthur deposed president of the Boilermakers local at the submarine voiced the denial Monday in unsworn testimony before a closed meeting of the Senate tions Tht subcommittee's Sen. John L. said the senators heard ing testimony on the matter at an informal meeting said the question Whether Vars or was and other as an settlement of a Or whether Vars demanded the money for his support of a posed strike settlement at the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Corp. Vars insists it was an offer to settle a lawsuit he had filed his union He had been expelled both as dent and as a union member on charges of Vars said they were up and that he is being offered Vars contended fantastic to say that I had anything to do with the They're looking for Senate Moves to Cut Off Debate WASHINGTON Senate leaders plan to point an uncertain of a small squad of filibustered ing to talk to death the communications satellite Sen. George A. D- assistant Democratic floor said a cloture cut off be filed This would force a showdown a scapegoat the men selves voted for a Fate the Maricopa states and the District of bia during an investigation of its i although the drug never was licensed for sale in the ed Thalidomide is ily dangerous during the early months of At Dr. Hall assistant Wisconsin health of- the case were higher education is snarled in a said the slate office had j Mrs. life was in conference not received report from the ger. there would be no ground County attorney the Arizona attorney general as ruling that a legal controversy did not In Quie Say By RICHARD P. POWERS either public or private prohibitions against Associated Press Special Service WASHINGTON He noted that both officials had lo provide federal money for stated in court that if the facts of j colleges and other institutions of federal Brazilian Students Visit White House but there would be million for The thus has more in it for private schools than the ate And the way Rep. Albert H. administration wantt ive aid to to Mrs. Finkbine has been SItua Quie said mt 2I-, 1S that the Kennedy T in the scholarship nant on the The couple's decision to leave rj the state followed a conference of j that it is willing hospital doctors and th go down tne it gets what it Mrs. better here as star of Quie is a member of the House WASHINGTON a Education and the con- Kennedy told a group of Brazilian graduate students today that one who desires war in these days is Kennedy made the comment in reply to a student's statement that while the United States talks it makes preparations for The student said that instead of war the ment should be orienting the con- science of the people for Kennedy replied that he had television did not attend ference ordered her to remain in Monday's Her doctor has Here is what the is The provides billion at the rate of lion a year for five Of 60 per cent or million a year would be in outright grants 40 per cent or million in Both categories of aid would be for construction of demic facilities for all public and The provides DULL JOB Kan. A juror was asked by Judge Thomas C. Raum in Commor sant court why he sought to be ex- from you I am 113 years old and can work hard all it very clear in the past that but can't there would be no winner of the I rel next war if nuclear weapons are replied Levi Groty of S same annual rate of He was all of it would be for 1 There would be no grants for This would be he in this For every student re- a scholarship of any size for or would follow student to be given to the college which he or she student could choose the school he wanted to Quie There would be terrific com- petition for those the scholarships are not at issue in the conference com- because the House has re- fused to consider them except through a separate vote of the en- tire in case the Senate in- sists and demands such a The conferees are hung up on the House provision for grants to private Quie said the Senate provision for loans only would be of no terial help because 45 states have borrowing from the federal Testimony given at hearings showed that most colleges would get little use from the loan Girl 2, Caught In Car Door Dragged 2 Blocks N.J. 2- year-old girl slammed a car door on her dress as she got out of the vehicle Monday night and was dragged two blocks by the The Evelyn was hospitalized with multiple scrapes and bruises and a possible Her condition was ed as Polios gave this The girl had been on an outing with her Mrs. Audrey and a They were driven home by a family Donald 23. Wortman pulled up in front of the Washington house and the mother and the older daughter got out onto the Evelyn got out on the other Celebrezze Takes Oath of Office WASHINGTON J. Celebrezze took the oath of of- fice as secretary of the Education and Welfare ment today in a colorful ceremony in the White House rose I After the was com- he told newsmen ing to work right President Kennedy stood by the on the motion to bring the formally before the it's been 35 years since the Senate last agreed to limit debate and thus force a vote on a Sen. Albert one of the Democratic liberals trying to kill the satellite which would create a private tion to own and operate the space told reporters he was confident the cloture move would be It requires the votes of two- thirds of the senators The filibuster group brushed aside a warning Monday that they may be endangering the ber election chances of their colleagues and pressed on with their Gore held the floor five hours up to recess time Monday night after a session running H hours and 42 Sen. Maurine B. D- spoke for slipping out of her high-heeled shoes and standing in her stocking feet in the final She charged that under the billions of tax dollars spent in re- earch and development would be over to a dominated by American Tele- phone Telegraph Co. The group the satellite corporation to be Mike Mansfield of Senate Democratic ed in an interview he has little hope the filibusters will accept his bring the measure before the ate and then send it to the Foreign Relations Committee with a fixed time for reporting it back Senate The would establish a cor- owned half and half bv communications companies the public through stock and facilities are to be The House conferees say the is worthwhile only if it vides for The Senate con- at the insistence of Sen. Lister say grants are Quie and other House cans favor In Quie led the fight to put them in the House To complicate ihe situation the House prohibits use of any funds for college facilities used for religious would not keep private schools The proposed by ident has been passed by the House and approved by the Senate Space and Commerce Sen. Wayne who advocates government ownership of the space has posed that the Senate postpone action until after the November to become thai But there were indications of Crew of 41 Makes No Injuries DETROIT A British first replacement in Kennedy's Cabinet since the chief executive took office in January last iiy and several Ohio members Congress were among those j the Senate the freighter lay a crippled hulk In the Detroit River after the ship and a barge collided Monday The crash lore a great hole m the port side of the ton rolled that side as boats removed 41 members of the crew without The 442-foot Montrose's foredeck was virtually submerged Her screw and rudder were high above the Water lapped higher and higher up her port finally reaching the big on her She was held two an- chors directly under the sador which links Detroit and Ont. Crew members taken ashore and housed in a downtown hotel The Ralph of and the chief Richard Fowden of and the first Nathaniel Browlee of remained aboard a time to protect the owner's in- Shortly before 3 the three officers were taken off. The crew was mostly Italian with British and Irish David Wheatley of the third mate said he was on the bridge with the captain and the G. D. when collission He said the Montrose had just left a pier where she had discharged general I have no what all happened too There was not much of a The ship lay in about 35 feet of listing nearly 45 degrees to the Loud clattering and ing sounds occasionally could be heard as cargo shifted and gear broke loose and plunged to the low side of the Tugs pushed the crippled ship to within 300 yards of the U.S. side of the There the vessel hung and her left side settled slowly until the deck was almost at a right angle to the The barge and the tug that was pushing it both escaped serious The Montrose is owned by treal Shipping of London and aged by Buries Markes Ltd. of It had left Portugal and sailed up the St. Lawrence bound eventually for Fort For us to leave now where she was to the job done will in load grain for the Mediterranean strong party backing for the belief expressed by Sen. Stuart that such a delay Members of the Celebrezze would damage the Democrats in congressional He told serious criticism hy the American WEATHER FEDERAL FORECAST people of the Democratic Winona and Mostly jits leadership its ir tonight and Wednesday with Any showdown on cloture would temperature Low j be certain to provide some t 50-55, high Wednesday 75-jcally embarrassing Of LOCAL WEATHER Democratic senators publicly trying to kill the five would for facilities Quie said he hopes that the mate in the conference 12 vote against 73; These include some of the 73; AIRPORT WEATHER Central Max. temp. 75 at min. 47 can be of j at 5 sky clear visibility 15 school construction in the colleges I wind 8 M P H from west laboratories and barometer 30.13 and steady kn he 43 who have been most in advocating changes in the rules to make it easier to end They are Mrs. Joseph S. Clark of Ernest Gruening of Alaska and Quentin N. Burdick of North The barge and which from Port to are owned by the Becker Towing Co. William captain of a mail said tug was pushing the barge and the freighter cut diagonally across the river from the terminal We could sense there would be a heard the tug but there was no response from the Then the tug cut loose with the danger five sharp and reversed her en- Then the barge hit the freighter  

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