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The Oshawa Times, 24 Sep 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Flirting with a woman in her forties is as unsportsmanlike as shooting birds on the ground, dhe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Warm, cloudy today, fog te night, Chance of showers Sune day. Winds light. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1960 Po ace Danco, ment, Closs Mail Ottawa TWENTY-TWO PAGES VOL. 89--NO, 222 ildd "FLOWERS AND TEARS GREET NASSER Abdel Nas- | cry on her father's shoulder | United Nations General Assem nited Arab | after she presented a bouquet | p\o Anal pecame shy he watch- lowe Nasser on his ar- | "7' ' a fateh of Rowers Ju Ne ; | started to cry after the pre rival at Idlewild Airport to at- | N.Y. | tend the special session of the | sentation. (AP Wirephoto Gamal ( a old Elmont, President ser, left, of the Republic, smiles es four - year Ghannam of Pia du Mom Whit Going To Argentina? Mrs. Bertha (Mom) Whyte moving on US. Candidates Start Slugging The|triotism and loyalty of Senator is| Kennedy and other Democrats," At Sioux Falls, S.D., where Kennedy had spoken the day be- fore, Nixon described his farm program as one "'with a heart,' He said it would give farmers a real chance Among other things expansion of the sol Nixon has been|long-term system of price sup- dy nalve| ports and a stepped-up rural de- sn affairs. And Repub- velopment program. : about forelgh B airman Thurst nl Kennedy touched on religion in Morton has said that Kennedy the Mormon stronghold of Salt and other Democrats, by criticiz Lake City, : ing American defence, give aid _ Speaking in the great Mormon and comfort to the arci-suemy | Tabtrnacle, Hennedy paid Sits states and the en- to the late Sen: p § 3 the United Blatt onto. |of Utah, whose right to a Senate|the aged at this Ok "Kennedy in a speech at Den-iseat was challenged once in re- ley Somumlty, ty ver, plekea on the same word|ligious grounds, Smoot was aw ich she can't g Nixon has been using: Naive, |Mormon apostle, eC on "gt 1s not naive to call for in| The forces of reason and foler-| iopes ish to lead our -own life ereased strength," Kennedy sald, ance enabled Smoot to take his | a ee ' "It is naive to think that frree- seat, Kennedy said, and the Mor-| said Mrs. yte, dom can prevail without it." mon people proved "to the nation kicked aroun Nixon said in Kansas City Fri-lin this century - that a public press. day night that "This continual servant devout in his church faith hs harping to the effect that thei was still capable of undiminished wil fo, Ut We Jee United States is losing prestige' national interest. much to offer to HITS AT MORTON K Brings Gloom To United Nations WASHINGTON (AP U.S. presidential campaign perking up with both candidates aiming whacks at each other Senator Kennedy, the Demo eratic candidate, joined the per- sonal slugging Friday by criticiz ing Vice-President Nixon, the Re publican candidate, for his cam paign tactics All week long, saying that Kenn he stressed bank, a has been unable to operate leial authorities refuse her cences to operate an old person or children's home, is closed at Ontario authorities home for children ville, Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, chairman of the Senate foreign relations: commitiee, ac- cused Morton of launching an "outrageous attack upon the pa- Son Killed | |Nations, Nikita Khrushchev cre|tions, Hurt |ated it. Khrushchev just about told the 14 S | His General Assembly speech|UN in so many words that h Friday seemed to dash any hope| he will not tolerate any action on that this session might produce|its part that interferes with So- a real contribution to lessening viet plans and policies. world tensions. SAYS REPLACE DAG v I : p 'hey ; set back| The Soviet Union was upset by v . (AP) -- A| Khrushchev not only set ba pset ANN ARBOR ie, (Al on althe cause of peace, but did him-|events in the Congo, where Sec- 2-year-old = ie! te oa a pair self a disservice if his primary retary - Genéral Dag Hammars- rampage with & ife ar al » tn mate of Re Friday night that left her only son dead and her two daughters in critical condition kjold won the support of most . L UN members in his handling of with multiple stab wounds, police Housing oan said ' t Interest Cu a crisis that the Russians, ap- Mrs. Imogene C 29. wife OTTAWA (CP)--Works of a staff psychiatrist at Univer: " Tichizar yspital and her- ih & # . . sity of Michi n hospital 2 wig Walker Friday night an. eral and set up an executive in "tried t «own life nounced 'a cut in the interest rate board where Communist rep sd te He 1 nerve charged by the government on ony pees micas the UN. might o nildrer | for low-rental housing any peace miss : "1 know I hurt my children but its loans ar 3 ' - know 1 why." Mrs. Craig projects. try to undertake, Gon Nee. The minister, responsible for| Some delegates suggested that told police "i jperations of Central Mortgage Khrushchev. might not have been Dead was Thomas nd Housing Corporation, said] wholly serious in his proposals to 2%: Police said he w a. ie interest rate for such loans move the UN headquarters to repeatedly as he nm Ng would be trimmed to 5'% per cen! another country. If he was not In critical co mn a x 5 from 5% effective Oct, 1 serious, then he did an even sisters, Fllen, 6, and b not ge Al the same time Mr. Walker greater disservice to the cause of Both had puujtite sta De ouac left no hope for a reduction in|peace, Peace-making in a nu- and underwent surger) aC 1 6 ars i%4-per-cent I tured skulls Housing Act loans. airy clowning. FOUND ON LAWN He said in an interview the! Khrushchev also aroused dis- government doesn't want to rock| appointment with his other pro- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) idea in coming to the United Na- There is an oppressive air of un-| tions has been to impress the easiness settling over the United world of his truly peaceful inten- | chaos e aig Let's get rid of Hammarskjold, Minis. abolish the post of secretary-gen- ost her ost h Craig IV stabbed crib hi 5 r on speaks hea J who her sub Mes vn Wy Vi, er, sibs the house-building boat now that posals, On disarmament, he of- urban oh sit- mor se funds are flowing fered just some new, glittering after the outburst, was found mortgasg ting on a lawn two blocks irom again, ribbons wrapped about a tattered her home. She had cut herself in 5 old package. the chest with a knife in an A TRANSPARENCY apparent Juiend » atte mpt and was Asks eat And a for his proposal to end igh 0 pita ere re F y i t " a was hooked as a police pris . anim ase inde: ong on an.ohen charge. DF For apists | pendence mam be expected to er § She : etect the patent transparency. Thomas Craig 111, 29, told police! NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C A de bal of ily he had gone to a laundromat and (0p)--An assize court judge said might be judged from his own returned home to find his wife priday Canada may have to con words, Areas like, for example, covered with blood and leading: sider reimposing the death pen: puerto Rico, a territory of the "T hurt the children and myse'l."" alty in rape cases if they con- United States, are colonial. Then she fled into the night, bare- tinue to increase, : But nothing dominated by So- foot and clad in shorts and| Mr Justice Harry J. Sullivan viet military might is colonial: blouse made the observation as he sen-| Not the satellite nations of Eu- Dr. Craig, a graduate of the tenced five youths to penitentiary rope nor the non-Russian peoples University of Montreal, interned terms and whippings for the rape of central Asia at Flint, Mich., before joining the more than a year ago of a 22-| Khrushchev explained this sim- University of Michigan Medical year.old woman crippled by polio. ply: The areas under Russian Centre stafi last July. He told" Four of the five men--Pretium |domination do not have colonial police he and his wife had dis- Singh, 23, Robert Singh, 19, Har-! status because the Russians and cussed a separation about four pudgy Singh and Herbert Older- the non-Russian peoples months ago but taken no action. ghaw, 23--were given three years their control love each other and five strokes of the paddle very much CITY EMERGENCY leach while Jacob Anatooshkin,| When Khrushchev |five strokes. total and complete disarmament, PHONE NUMBERS | Mr. Justice Sullivan, describing | knowing there is no possibility of the crime as "foul" and "cow-|it in a world Hie this one today. ~ po ardly," said he gave Anatooshkin| With Khrushchev it's usuall POLICE RA 5-1 133 8 ie i nb because he!all or noting And tHe 0 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 had been the boy friend of the is that what Khrushchev really . victim and had driven her to the wants in the long run is: NOTH- HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | endesv sh, rendezvous. % and | (CP)=--|and the very structure of the sec-| attending the session continued to The woman who has dedicated her life to looking after the needy in British Columbia because provi i. 1 Tel y Ve a » came here la sear after push his United Nations revamp- Western She came here last yea her ing proposals to a showdown, it Khrushchev, President Nasser of Bowman-|was learned interview at her home fo In ai ln anagan Val-|does a home for licence she would not say where she "We've been| d enough by the "We have no idea where we but we feel we have too : ve it wasted." | marskjold should be fired and he [went much farther by stating debate on the Hungarian oppres-| Hammariskjold was resented by agency gave more attention to PRIVATE "PEAC KHRUSHGHEV, CASTRO E' TALK Mr. K. Tried To Sabotage UN UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) as new, although they are re- --~Western diplomats speculated garded here as a rehash of a today on whether Soviet Premier year-old formula Khrushchev's appetite for power! Diplomats saw deep signifi- in Africa will cause him to tear cance in that Khrushchev de- {out the heart of the United Na- voted one-third of his ponderous | tions organization 8,000-word addre to a denun- | United States, British and ciation of . colonialism, causing |Canadian leaders all struck the Western spokesmen to retort that |same note: - It appeared that Russia is the greatest imperialist Khrushehev was trying to destroy power in the world today--per- the UN when he ripped into it haps in history. {Friday in a speech keyed for the His call for a quick burial of ears of emerging and underde- all things colonial was regarded veloped countries as clear notice of his hopes of | Khrushchev spoke at the UN's winning Africa which has [15th General Assembly before placed 13 new members in the _ lone of history's largest gather- 96-member UN -- to Communist [ings of statesmen--attending the| influence |session significantly enough at On disarmament, Khrushchev |the urging of the Soviet leader. apparently sought to discard the Khrushchev brought deep|10-nation committee made up of | to the UN when he said five Communist and five Western that UN Secretary-General Dag members, claiming that the West Hammarskjold had been the tool!in that commission tried only to of Western countr bv his ac- hinder progress, Canada was a tions in the Congo crisis, member of the committee which! U.S. Ambassador James Wads- fell apart in Geneva because of [worth said "the crisis consists ofa Communist walkout in June, an attempt to destroy the office] The Galaxy of world leaders ) |] 'BRITONS BATTLE BOBBIES i8 | petary-general and the secretar- grow, giving it the aspect of a iat and through it, to destroy the Super - Summit meeting despite United Nations." 17.8 Sec- the gulf between Fast and West. retary Christian Herter called it ng nk MORE LEADERS ARRIVE " ng Jaratic ar on the "3 al declaration of war on the Prime' Minister Diclepbaker is hd {scheduled to arrive late today termined front against evicted | riot tenants and sympathizers in the St, Pancras section of the Brit. ish capital last night after the demonstrators attempted fo march on the town hall, The | throughout the day follow ite were protesting real increases (AP London police present a de | clash culminated a series of ing the eviction of tenants in two apartments in public hous. ing developments, The crowds Wirephoto) Cuba Recognizes Communist China | NEW YORK (AP) Soviet want to go back. But apparently Premier Khrushchev and Cuban'l will not be granted citizen Prime Minister Fidel Castro ship." dined together for five hours Fri-| nally Castro and his entour- {day night, Castro sald they dis- age arrived, The two men shook cussed "peace." hands, then embraced--custom- | Early today the Cuban govern- ary in all their meetings here, {ment announced that it had| Castro gave his new friend sev. {recognized the government of |eral gifts, but aides declined to {Communist China, say what they were. | President Nasser of the United | When the dinner party broke {Arab Republic flew in Friday up, Khrushchev walked Casiro {night to join the world leaders|from the Soviet mansion to his {attending the 15th United Nations|car. He declined to say what was |General Assembly, discussed, but listened silently as About 400 diplomats from Arab Castro said: land Asian states welcomed him.| "We have received a lot of | Another 1,000 persons stood out-|hospitality here," side the immediate arrival area.| Asked what they had talked Among the greeters were 50 about at the dinner, Castro re- {members of an American Negro|plied: "Don't worry about that." nationalist movement, Their|Later, he sald they had dis. signs read: eussed "'peace." "Allah is the greatest," Before his UN speech, Khrush- Khrushchev seemed jovial Fri- chev had paced briefly on the |day following the block-busting|now-familiar balcony at the So. |speech he dropped at the United|viet headquarters on Park Nations, Avenue, | He smoked an Indian peace| Later, he made a sidewalk ap- pipe and topped off his schedule pearance, during which he was with his dinner date with Castro. presented a 2%-foot Indian peace Through it all he dropped pung- pipe by an antique dealer, Wat» ent and often biting remarks on|son Pierce, a wide varlety of subjects. [ Khrushchev clowned for the Castro was nearly 40 minutes photographers, pretending to late for his date with Khrush-|smoke the pipe, He thanked chev, while the Soviet chief Pierce, calling the pipe a "'sym- waited impatiently for him on bolie gift , , , a symbol of the the sidewalk outside the Soviet|fact that the American people s" SEEKS SHOWDOWN and address the Assembly Mon. | Herter hopes Khrushchev will|day, making him one of the first leaders to reply to New Cold War Freeze Predicted is con-/the United Arab Republic ar will{rived Friday. Britain's Prime Minister Macmillan and India's Prime Minister Nehru are ex- private dinner pected Sunday. | Friday night for British Foreign In other developments Friday: Secretary Tord Wome and The Assembly's steering LONDON (AP) | French Foreign Minister Maurice commitiee voted for a new de: Kucope feared today that | Couve de Murville, {bate by the assembly on the U.S. kita Khrushchev's speech at the Peking radio broadcasts "The fears we felt concerning U-2 spy plane and RB-47 plane United Nations General As: nothing, another {the shape that the debate would | incidents, The U.S, did not op-. because he fident the Soviet premier r|meet with a stinging defeat if he Herter gave a sa |firmed," said a French diplomat. said the Soviet allegations were| (ions into an even deeper freeze. Peking, Khrushchev implied that Ham. false, The Soviet premler's attack on/A PEACEMAKER The committee also voted for yy tary General Dag The official new Secr that the secretary-general's post sion of 1956. Twelve countries,|, - Western at the United Notions, © dom» anid jokingly Ni pletely blacked out the speee possible indica sembly heralds a fresh cold wave tion of the depth of the ideologi- [take at this session are con-ipose the discussion although it/that will plunge East-West rela- cal split between Moscow and China news was sentenced to five years and about disarmament, he demands| should be abolished altogeher It should be replaced, he sal by a three-man executive drawn from the three sectors into which he divided the world--the West the Communist bloc and neutral ist states, {WOULD MOVE UN | New guarters be moved from and, York - perhaps to Switzer Austria or the Soviet Union- he pjresented di Four Rescued 'From Island VANCOUVER (CP)--The gov- lernment survey ship William J Stewart headed for Victoria to- on a tiny island off the northern So. Khrushchev tells the UN: | British Columbia coast for nearly Montreal's first doc i was|pute in 20 years, a dispute that harbor. two days, A fifth man {drowned : | A B.C. government official identified the drowning victim as | Identities of the rescued {were not immediately known, | {Two of them were injured. Details were sketchy because of {poor communications from the |scene, 410 miles north of here near the southern tip of the |Queen Charlotte Islands. It was learned the men had tional harbors board and Mont.| foreman Maurice Lelievre of his |set out from the William J, Stew- interest on National| clear age does not lend itself to|art Thursday in a small boat| group of 70 severe | {which capsized in | weather, lincluding Canada, were for the munist capital, debate, four against and there were four abstentions 2. Premier Kwame Nrumah of Ghana made a major speech to the Assembly, demanding that the UN turn over its functions In He proposed that the UN head- the Congo to African forces un-|ing: der a "unified African command" .and | responsible to the Security Coun.| Communist rmament plans cil He also blasted colonialism. along on Khrushchev's presence wspapers in every non . Com- President Eisenhower for offe a countries into the assistance," replace Hammarskjold with three-man executive was seen a a bid to kill any rapid UN emer |gency action in the future, economic munist party newspaper Pravda a ran a huge headline "The world listens, |plands, approves." tried unsuccessfully last ap- in Paris collapsed China, silent all\flying to New York Sunday. Govt. Aid Asked In Dock Dispute MONTREAL (CP) - Federal parently, wanted to convert into|day, carrying four men stranded government conciliation was ap- within minutes and the men pealed today to regulate workers dis for rl parked a brief scuffle Friday night, The International Longshore- meetings" Friday--in effect a tions of a stevedore foreman, All 3,000 men working on deep- sea ships left their jobs, leaving 31 freighters unattended, Friday night, a squad of 50 na. real city police scuffled with a longshoremen trying to prevent the docking of the Norwegian freighter Suncliff, LATE NEWS FLASHES NEW YORK (AP) today that a former Hungaria ian Communist leader Janos Kai The report said the former Hun to come here from Philadelphi BRANTFORD (CP) Thr with $500. Mr. Marsh ordered the players to empty the gunmen carried revolvers The man with the shotgun stru with the barrel of the weapon under | Freedom Fighter To Slay Khrushchev? - Police received a roundabout report n freedom fighter is planning to 'ry to assassinate Soviet Premier Khrushchev and Hungar- dar. Police said an unidentified woman had telephoned Philadeplhia police with the report. garian freedom fighter planned a Sunday. Gunmen Raid Poker Game ee masked gunmen held up a poker game at Ted Marsh's home early today and got away told police the men walked in and their pockets. He said two of and the third had a shotgun, ck Mr. Marsh across the face before leaving. Admiral Says Reds Will Win CHICAGO (AP) -- In any prolonged cold-war stalemate be- tween the free world and the Soviet Union the Communists will win, Admiral Arthur Radford said today. Radford, former chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and now retired, said in a prepared speech the free world "must ajm for total victory over the Communist system---not stalemate." He said ** the greatest threat posed by the economic and political field. Communists will never use armed forces if there is reasonable ch means." Communists today is in the { ance of victory through other paper Figaro also looked to two together, "Crisis at the UN" in he | speech, Svenska Daghladet, tive 'newspaper in td: "The Russian plan infallible way of making the o (of for unwieldy Police quelled the disorder ee ing the freighter dock without 8 3 hore aid, moved off down the 5. The Canada ocean Shipping of tice which hippin Federation negotiates firms, called fo OF jessnes entatives can raise hob with!Olav Watne, a native of Norway.|men's Association (CLC) called a federal conciliation to see if the . men rapid-fire succession of "general men can be persuaded to come back to work today pending set-!| | work stoppage--to protest the ac-|tlement of their greivance, {WANTS FOREMAN ' DEMOTED The Ila's Local 375 is demand. ing that the Brown and Ryan Stevedoring Company relieve {authority, It called Mr, Lelievre a trou- |ble-maker and said that two | | months ago, after he made un- acceptable demands on a crew working under him, the crew, walked off the ship. | William J, Brown, president of | the firm said the union's accusa- tions are unjust and that the un« fon is trying to take away the company's right to select its! supervisors. | Mr, Lelievre is a member of| the union but his duties are as-| signed by the company. | Montreal's longshoremen have been among the most peaceful of| | unionized workers, The last dem. | {onstration was in 1940, when they protested huge shipments of Ca- nadian meat to Britain when,| they claimed, little enough was| available in Canada. | "Thomson Plans. Bowling Alle EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- Ca. Inadian publisher Roy Thor n,| | {chairman of Scottish Television {Limited and Thomson Allied {Newspapers Limited, is planning to build a combined bowling al- ley and dance hall in East Ri sen, above, brought the X15 bride New Town, Lanarkshire.| out plane in for a successful The dance hall will accommodate forced landing on a dry lake 1,000 people. bed pear Edwards Air Force Lt. Cmdr. Forrest S. Peter. His proposal to ing a plan "to lure the African lapsed Friday night when seamen 9" pit of U.S./in five major ports decided to The London Daily Express saw| hope that British Prime Minister| ers voted fo e In contrast, the Russian Com- Macmillan might be able to act| walkout and seamen peacemaker between Khrush:|ter, Cardiff, Glasgow and Sun- proclaim. chev and Eisenhower--a role he|derland followed suit, May Just before the summit meeting|angry an Macmillan is| return," I'he independent French news| 'but mediator, unnamed, to bring the| | was used several London newspaper dlines about the Soviet asm fell as only a hard-core of| Conserva Stockholm, UN secretary-general) to the point of power. UN headquarters, understood the essentiality of As time went on, and no Cas-|peace." tro, reporters asked Khrushchev| Reporters wanted to know what it he felt like a bride left wait- he thought about President Eis. ing at the church, enhower's UN speech the day bes "1 was never in the condition|fore and Khrushchev said: of a bride," laughed Kolushetov. "Slt sie without content." Asked bow he plann senhower abandoned the snp. Naw 3 Mneushehoy spotlight. so. Khrushene Friay, H getting a thunderous sendoff - stay here. I do not{from thousands of New Yorkers, - Police estimated 500,000 persons saw the president make the trip from his hotel to the airport, where he boarded a plane to re turn to Washington, Yugoslav President Tito met with India's Khrishna Menon and Ghana President Kwame Nkrue {mah at his country's UN head. jarters, When Nkrumah left the Yugos. lav mission, about 30 demonstra. os 4 tors appeared a block away More than 1.000 Liverpool work, snouting "Tito murderer" and in Manches. Carrying signs which read *'Tito |is bloody-handed, tyrant," | All three major U.S, television "Most of the men were very networks stopped televising d bitterly opposed to the Khrushchev's speech before' he sald the chairman of the had finished Friday. The net- [Manchester strike committee, works, exercising their editorial in the circumstances we perogative, said the two-hour- {and 20-minute speech contained {nothing new or startling and that The unofficial strike started inthe public Interest would not | Liverpool. In its early stages last/ have been served by putting the |month it prevented dozens of entire speech on the air, sailings of transatlantic liners|- - SS land cargo vessels, but enthusi-| Ww eath "I want to British Sea Strike Ended LIVERPOOL (AP) -- Britain's r-| six-week dockworkers strike col- h, | id | return to work Monday. a|realize there is nothing else we 'can do." of Delays U.S. Moon Shot CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, (AP) Bad weather today forced poste f-{for a 44-hour week and pay in. ponement of a United States ate strikers held on, The agreement reached by the] breakaway union members and | the National Seamen's Union said | nothing about the original claims n crease of £4 a month, {tempt to send a space craft to These will be raised at later the moon, Another attempt may union meetings, the strike lead-|be made Sunday. The space craft ers sald, is designed to orbit the moon. LANDS ROCKET PLANE SAFELY | Base, Calif, today after its en- | gine failed in mid-flight. The black space craft is pictured | after it came down undamaged. | It was Petersen's first flight in | HY | the ship. He achieved an alth tude of 50,000 feet and speed of 1056 mph before the engine quit, ar Wirepboto)

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