NO SIGN YET
missing aviator SEARCH FOR NUNGESSER LITTLE hope of safety /'iAPTAIN NUNGESSER and his L navigator, M. Coli, have not yet been found. It is reported that a plane which might have been theirs was heard flying over Newfoundland, but it was not sighted. A number of America's foremost aviators are not over-sanguine regarding the fate of the missing men. By C(ible. —Press Association.—Copyright HARBOUR GRACE (N.F.L.) Thurs. Considerable verisimilitude is given to the reports that there is a possibility of Captain Nungesser' plane having arrived on the American continent and crashed in an inaccessible forest stretch near here. la statements made to a magistrate by four or five responsible persons of this place they say that they heard the whirr of an airplane propellor on Monday morning, but were unable to see the machine because of the dense f °lt is held that since no other plane can be traced as having flown over the region in that time, there is some reason to believe that the machine was Nungesser’s. The wooded lowlands of this region are of such a nature, that only an extensive search could disclose the presence of the fliers. It is believed that the Newfoundland Government will order a party out to scour the area. The following aviation experts and others expressed opinions as to the probable fate of Captain Nungesser and M. Coli. Lieutenant Wade, the American world flier, said: “I prefer to believe they are still alive, but I realise that it is a slender hope. I fear that the floating ice and heavy winds caused the destruction of the plane.” Captain Robert Bartlett, the Polar explorer, said: “Silence for a month or even six weeks does not necessarily mean they have lost their lives.” Captain Depiuemy said: “I believe they are stranded on some small island on this side of the Atlantic waiting for help.” Commander Byrd said: “I believe their failure was due to engine trouble.” Captain Rene Fonck said: “The outlook is depressing but I have not given up hope.”—A. and N.Z.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19270514.2.184
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Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 44, 14 May 1927, Page 15
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344NO SIGN YET Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 44, 14 May 1927, Page 15
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