THOUGHT FOR The isolationist of TODAY the future will oppose earth's entering into any entangling alli other planets, ance with VOL. 89--NO. 232 WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny Friday, with little change in temperature, winds light tonight and Friday. he Oshawa Times Price Mot Over 10 Certs Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1960 Post Authorized os Second Class Moll Department, Office a Oftowe THIRTY-FOUR PAGES POINT OF ORDER K. Krishna Menon of India hand make point of ardor ae ia United Nations General Assembly last fo t Minister Jawa India | Manon AP Wirephoio ni Prime harlal Nehru of next 0 Krishes h sitting Rail Union Meet Ends In Catcalls A meeting 1 WINNIPEG (CP) of non-operating rallwaymen hear their chief negotiator Hall, closed abruptly Wednesday night as many and their wives and shouting, Somebody in the audience had asked permission to read a three minute prepared: speech bul as meeting chairman George Pat terson began to speak another member of the audience told him to it down "You've got nothing Patterson, sit down," tified member sald shouting and catcalls began to say the uniden There Mr va il Frank of the 1,300 men of booing can't Brotherhood of Carmen stood y and sald We came here to put our views and we want a say. 1 have prepared three minute have our say?" Mr.. Patterson Hall and told the meeting was called to i wage matters and was not debate," Mr. Hall told the meeting: "We have to fight for what we get. We don't get it given to us "We must convince everyone vill fight because, If don't get the raise, then our wages will be below that of other to have a speech about Why we consulted Mr delegate the hear of "for ve A | Afri their British NNESBURG (AP) - anti-republican South cut the JOH diminishing indicated today that cans have voted to country loose from Crown, The forces opposing nationalist Prime Minister Hendrik Ver woerd's plan to turn the British Vote Trend Favoring Republic Verwoerd says he hopes fo keep South "Africa in the Com- monwealth as a republic, But this will require the unanimous consent of the other 10 member governments, and Asian and African members have shown strong signs of wanting to expel - 4 Commonwealth nation into a re- South Africa in retaliation for the, public still clung to a lead of 102, 000 votes with 86 of the 156 districts reported, But many heavily nationalist rural districts were yet to be heard from United party Sir de Vil liers Graaff, led the anti republicar had not yet con ceded defeat and Verwoerd had not yet claimed victory, Dutch-born Verwoerd has de- clared that he consider majority of only one vole a man date to submit to the natior st controlled Parliament legislation to turn South Africa into a re public, substituting an elected president for Queen Elizabeth 11 as chief of state and recognizing the British only a head of the Commonw Pace Begins 'To Weary Khrushchev Soviet finally after propa West ecader whi who a a sovereign ealth NEW Premier beginning ) waging a day ganda offensive for the last 17 da The 66-year-old Soviet premier eems to have lost some of the bouncy pep that has made him communism's No. 1 salesman He is grimly pressing ahead with his one-man crusade, But the pace is beginning to tell on even his robust physique Wednesday night for the first time since arriving here he showed definite signs of being tired, He cracked fewer Jokes, {shook fewer hands and bragged less about the virtues of com- munism as he moved--just a bit slower than usual--through three diplomatie receptions His normally pink complexion seemed less ruddy. Security and other aides hovered around him (AP) hehe sl YORK Khru t down tht the erson ordered the meeting closed employees In comparable Indus. coiinitously as he limited himself about 130 than expected Mr. Hall was speaking at the first of a series of mass meeting in Canada In which issues of the non-operators' dispute will outlined to union members The union issued a strike after Canada's two major ways rejected a board recommendation for cent-an-hour wage Increase non « operating employee union, which had asked cents an hour, had accepted board After speech minutes sooner be ballot rall conciliatior | for The for 2 recommendation Mr Hall's hou a delegate from ) long the the will be or third. tries. Our pushed into rate category "It is not our affair where the railways get the money for this But if they don't, then we strike. If government won't let us strike, then it's up to them to make sure get a 1 square deal. If you want the 14 cents vou can get but you'll have to strike There were loud cheers as Mr y Hall finished his speech Union members must their strike ballots by About 118,000 men are in the dispute occupation a second. » raise 1] the 1 l 1 t ve i return Nov, 8 involved Quebec Liberal Killed In DRUMMONDVILLE (CP)--Jean-Marle Nadeau of the most prominent member of the Quebec Liberal party killed Wednesday night in a car collision His death alter Premier one only hours Jean Lesage hac named him one of the tw legal consultants for a roya commission investigating the ad ministration of the former Uni Nationale government Mr. Nadeau was a lawyer writer teacher, newspaperman and fellow of the Royal of Canada He and Georges leader considered came as Wa Society Attorney Lapalme the ty, were the Quebec Libera Genera a was former Crash eticians He was killed in the collision between his car and one driven to 20-minute stops at an Indian and Cambodian reception He wound up with a 45-minute stay at a Communist Romanian get-together, But instead of cir culating through the crowd, he spent most of the time in a side room conferring privately with his European satellite chiefs Khrushchev and his aides are guarding his departure date like the secret to Russia's success in rocketry are which hint he the middle clues about There might of next week Train Derailment Bumps Travellers PORQUIS JUNCTION, Ont (CP)~Several persons Including Alvin Jardine, g ral manager of the railw suffered 'bumps and bru Wednesday 08 nationalist government's apar- theid policy of strict racial segre- gation A record outpouring of nearly 1,500,000 votes apparently was cast Wednesday from an all- white electorate of about 1,800, 000, South Africa's 12,000,000 non-whites could only stand by and watch the plebiscite, Verwoerd and his white - su premacist followers campaigned on the claim that a republic would finally unite the Afrikaans and English-speaking white fac tions. His Dutch descended Afrikaners outnumber the whites of English descent by a ratio of about 55 to.45 English speaking whites bit terly attacked the plan for a republic, They charged it would pave the way for Verwoerd to create "nationalist dictatorship and might lead to the country being expelled from the Com- monwealth SEEKS RELEASE Mrs. Alice Koyer was visibly grief stricken when she told re- porters in Montreal of her ef- forts to obtain release of her husband from a jail"in Poland, A naturalized Canadian, Tadeuz Koyer, 38 was arrested when he returned to Poland on a visit, He was charged with the mur- der of nine left-wing partisans while serving with the Polish Home army in 1943. Mrs, Koyer shuttled between her Montreal home and the United Nations in New York in an effort to raise support for her husband CP Wirephoto Neutrals End Summit Drive UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, (CP) The drive in the United Nations assembly to bring President Eis- enhower and against, five for, with 44 absten- tions, The voting deleting the specific Old Casey | Shakes Up His Lineup PITTSBURGH (AP) Stengel shook up his New York Yankees lineup today for the sec- ond game of the world series against Pittsburgh Pirates, Irked by the 6-4 loss in Wed- nesday's opener, Stengel shifted catcher Yogi Berra to left field in place of Hector Lopez and in- stalled Eiston Howard as catcher, Gil McDougald replaced Clete Boyer at third base Manager Danny Murtaugh also changed his lineup, putting Rocky Nelson at first base in place of| Dick Stuart and Gino Cimoli in left field in place of Bob Skinner Clouds hung low over Forbes Field when the teams took bat ting prachice. However, fine weather was predicted for the "game Intermittent rain through the night dampened the outfield and the spaces between the foul lines| {and the stands. The infield, pro- |tected overnight by a tarpaulin Commissioner Ford Frick said was in good condition, even if it rain again, every ef | fort would be made to play the game today even if it meant a delay until late afternoon, FIRST INNING Yankees Kubek singled. Ku- Premier Khrush- reference in the neutralist reso- bek was out trying to steal sec-| chev to the conference table|lution to the U.S, president and ond, McDougald struck out. Maris failed early today, and five neu. tralist nations withdrew their resolution urging a U.8.-Soviet summit meeting. Both Eisenhower and Khrush- chev had made clear they did not want to meet. The neutralists gave up after the assembly voted both voted. Canada voted in favor Fors. to delete specific reference to the of the Australian amendment and | gp eOND INNING two government heads from the resolution and call merely for hte United States and Russia to re: new diplomatic contacts, Indian Prime Minister Nehru, one of the resolution's prime movers, said that diplomatic con- tacts between the United States and Russia had not been broken off and the resolution as amended was thus meaningless. In sombre tones, as he an: nounced " withdrawal of the pro- posal, Nehru said: "That resolution was drafted under great stress of feeling. All over the world, people will be looking to this august assembly to give them a lead Indicating some steps to prepare the way for easing world tensions. Grave responsibility rests on the United Nations to initiate these helpful efforts." But the resolution as amended, he said, "now lacks the dynam- {ism we thought this situation re. | quired." The five sponsors were India, ndonesia, Ghana, the United rab Republic anc Yugoslavia American observers were re- lieved by the action, Eisenhower had indicated strongly that he did not want to see Khrushchev, How- {Ir A night ever; diplomats felt that it would (CP) the Soviet premier was 41 in favor of the reference and 37 against, with 17 abstentions. The 'yeas' thus were less than the {ivo-thirds necessary for adop- tion The Soviet bloc abstained on against retention of the reference to Khrushchev and Eisenhower, Khrushchev had also shown his opposition to talking with Eisen. hower by setting conditions he {knew the president would not meet, Apparently unconcerned about the putcome of either the neutralist resolution or the Aus- tralian amendment, the Soviet leader did not aitend the long, wrangling night session of the assembly Instead he busied himself play- ing hail-fellow-well-met at recep- tions given by Cambodia, India and Romania, He Invited Prince Norodom Sihanouk, head of the Cambodian government, to visit him in Moscow. The prince did not immediately accept. SURPRISE VICTO RY | singled to right, Mantle struck No runs, two hits, no errors. Pittsburgh Virdon flied to left centre. Groat lined out to second base, Clemente singled to| right centre. Nelson grounded to! second, No runs, one hit, no er-| | out to second base. Skowron struck ouf, Howard struck out. No runs,|lo the upper Great Lakes, it was no hits, no errors. | Pittsburgh Cimoli walked. | Burgess flied out to second base. Hoak flied to centre. Mazeroski doubled to left field. Friend popped to first. No runs, one hit, no errors, THIRD INNING Yankees Richardson walked. Turley sacrificed, Richardson took second. Kubek singled to) centre scoring Richardson, 3 Dougal doubled, scoring Kubek Maris grounded out to first. Mc- Dougal moving to third, Mantle| walked. Berra flied to centre Two runs, two hits, no errors. | Socialists Drop Nationalization SCARBOROUGH, England The Labor party today when an Ontario Northland Rail: have been difficult for the presi. cast aside its backing for nation- short the station here The diesel locomotive gage car, two coaches of bag Mr a and Quebec party's "brain trust" and theor way passenger train derailed just dent to refuse a UN request especially if a large group of nations had voted for it Earliér, the assembly also alization of Industry in favor of broader socialist concepts, The decision represented a sur- prising victory for Hugh Gait by Claude Desrosiers of St. Ma« Jardine's private railway car left voted down an Australian amend. skell, the party leader who suf jorique, Que., on a highway Drummondville, Montreal Also killed was Henri-Georges Champagne, 23, of St. Leonard de Nicolet, Que In Quebec ald his death the party 1 province." For many ) City, Mr. Lesage Is a great loss to direct and to the yeams, Mr. Nadeau was writer and later editorin hief of the defunct Le Canada, the Montreal morning newspaper that was the official organ of the | Liberal party but the other units remained up- right Mr. Jardine said the impact tossed him against one end of the car. He is at his home in North Bay today with bruised ribs An unidentified hospital matron from Moose Factory tended the injured until a doctor arrived. There were no serious hurts. The engine crew was from Timmins, The train was on a regular run from Cochrane to this junction point 40 miles to the east Small Invasion Force Reaches Cuban Hills | Police Hunting TOO MUCH FAT HAVANA (AP An invasion force from the United Sta landed in east Cuba into the mountains atter sulter three casualties in militiamen, the ministry announced toc A ministry commu the landing was made by including 1 Ame dawn yesterday" on Way tween Ih acoa Moa nations Amer company CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5.1133 FIRE DEPT, RA 5-65374 HQSPITAL RA 3.2211 tes a brus! med said i men hree « mid Bar \ be and red has and headed i men The ince \ area the grounds of is In Oriente revolutionary prov stamping Prime Minister Fidel Castro. The communique and it was not specified whether the reported landing was Tues day or Wednesday. The battle {apparently occurred a few hours after the force touched shore The commander of the Was and two of wounded red minist The comma wa Armentino Feria, a than former senator Rolando rrer feposed Batista d State \ n was undated invasion nee Killed the one vere cap the identified as follower of ( \ a wealthy Cuban ading farmers ried ed to have d Neuvo ea Wn {Mundo with Castro forces, includ-/nountains, ing militiamen and local support ers, in pursuit The invaders landed the communique said. It reported they carried with them a large American flag, three pack mules, one US. Army uniform and vari ous documents, all of which were seized by the militiamen For months predicting an dent appears to be the nation that r ready to move at dawn Castro invasion heen mel rst con forces nto Cuba al cady fighting Moun tains in-the centre of this island nation Rumors that former Fulgenc planned a lar here has This opposition men 0 assist the insurgent in the Escambray supporters io Balista ave of the regime circu ated One version said ceeded in landin and joined the estimated up to 1,000 men Ww men Suc Cuba nis in the United States, Russia, Britain and France, The roll call was 45 Two Men Injured In Knife Struggle TORONTO (CP) men are in critical condition in hospital today following a strug: gle for a knife in the basement of a restaurant Wednesday night Wounded are Angelos Periovo- laris, 47, a cleaner, and Peter Papastavro, 27, a former restau- rant employee. Police sald charges are pend. ing Two Toronto i near the rails, The engine fell on its ment calling for a summit con- fored a setback Wednesday when 60 miles east of side at right angles to the track ference of the leaders of the (he conference voted against the nuclear deterrent and Britain's continued participation in the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion, The 261 delegates at the party's annual conference, voting {the strength of the organizations they represented, took their de- cision this way: 1. By a vote of 4153000 to 2,310,000 they supported a state. ment of aims by the executive committee. This defined party goals as something broader than the old demand for full public ownership of the means of pro- duction, distribution and ex: change, Shotgun Bandit MARDEN (CP) An armed bandit who made an unsuccessful attempt to rob a service station operator at midnight was the object of a police hunt today Marden is three miles north of Guelph The station, owner thug, who drove into the pulled a shotgun on Alvin Mcintosh with the jwarning "I'll let her: go." Mr, Meintosh grabbed the bar rel of the gun as it was pressed to his ribs and held it in the air as he wrestled the bandit "He had his finger on the trig-| ger and 1 thought would discharge." intosh During the struggle a motorist drove into the station and the gunman jumped into his car and the weapon said Mr. Me illed in the dirégtion of Fergus. STALLS TRAIN LONDON (AP) fat men in one coach sank the 7:13 train from Reading to London this morning There were coach Too many commuter 40 men in the and more than half of them were sedentary Their types with paunches weight the fouling the mechanism caused coach to sag, automatic brake train wheezed before giving just outside Paddington Station, time hit off, isn't said thin _ passenger The nine-car to a halt twice | up the ghost London's About weight irate chubby occu trudged you gol a of it an the coach tracks as the the ants of along 2. By 4,304,000 to 2,226,000 the v delegates backing up ment Following Labor's election de- feat by Prime Minister Macmil- lan's Conservatives a year ago, Gaitskell sought to have the party constitution rewritten to lessen) the emphasis on nationalization | of industry This produced an explosive party battle and in the end, Gait- skell was forced to give up his attempt to tinker with the consti tution, which was drafted in 1918. But by today's conference deci- sion, he has achieved his point by a roundabout route, In a speech to the conference, he said a Labor government would not merely limit itself to! nationalizing industry but buy shares in private enterprises to finance welfare measures, extend the conception of the co-operative | movement and seek by various] approved a motion the executive state- Constitutional Change Urged ' Two Provinces State Support OTTAWA (CP) -- Ontario and| New Brunswick del to al among the provinces should be Dominion « provineial constitu-| Mr. Roberts declined direct ; tional conference said today Can- comment on reports that the #4 CHARGED Dr. M. C. Shumiatcher, well- known Regina civil rights law- yer, faces seven charges of subornation of perjury and four other charges In connec- tion with evidence before the Saskatchewan securities com- mission. He is scheduled to ap- pear in court Oct, 11 ~CP Wirephoto ada should have a Canadian. made constitution, Premier Robichaud of New Brunswick said the Canadian constitution, now based on the British North America Act of 1867, should be brought up to date| and in line with the realities of the 1960s, Attorney « General Kelso. Ro- berts of Ontario sald Canada should have full power to make and amend its own constitution. | Mr. Roberts expressed optim- ism that the two-day conference of 10 provinces and the federal |government will "get pretty well on the way" this week and ul- {timately reach agreement, | "We're here to co-operate, in the view the country should have complete power to make and amend the constitution," However, the provisions of the original constitutional pact Welland Canal Pr BUFFALO, N.Y, (AP) -- The president of the Great Lakes-St Lawrence Association, supported by a procession of business, la- bor and political leaders, Wed- nesday urged construction of an all American canal between Lakes Erie and Ontario as an alternative to improvements in Canada's Welland Canal. The proposed new canal, by- passing Niagara Falls as does (the Welland, could amost double] Yankees -- Berra grounded out/the capacity of the St. Lawrence| Seaway route from the Atlantic claimed. N. R. Danielian of Washington, head of the Great Lakes-St. Law- rence group, said the same end could he achieved by doubling capacity of the locks of the Wel- land, But without one or other, he said, the Welland will reach its traffic saturation point within 10 years, STUDYING CANAL Danielian and more than 20 others testified at a public hear- ing of the joint legislative com- mittee on commerce and eco- nomic development. The com- mittee is studying the proposed 26-mile American canal, which would run from the Olcott area on Lake Ontario to Tonawanda {on the Niagara River above the/ing that the cabinet reorganiza- falls, Danielian, whose association represents the interests of sev- eral American Great Lakes port cities, compared the lakes to an hourglass, with the Welland Ca- nal as the bottleneck in the mid- ile "Some shipping companies were experiencing as much as 48 hour delays in 1959," Danielian said, "As the cost of operating some of these ships is as much as $6,000 a day , . . such delays, if persistent, would certainly # Shuffling Bypass oposed lead ship operators to reconsider the economic desirability of us-| ing this new (St, Lawrence) sea-|® way" | HAVE CUTDOWN Canadian authorities have cut down the congestion at the Wel- land this year, Danielian said, {but at the present rate of in- |crease in traffic, the eanal will reach its annual traffic satura- tion point of 46,000,000 tons of cargo in about 10 years, He said plans' for an canal, or an all-American canal, should be started immediately because would take several years to complete either project. | Of Cabinet On Tuesday OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min. ister Diefenbaker said today |""the reorganization of the cab- inet will take place on Tuesday." He also told reporters as he entered a morning cabinet meet- tion will be coupled with the ap- pointment of a new lieutenant. governor of British Columbia, Three cabinet portfolios are | vacant--secretary of state, for- estry and veterans affairs. The prime minister said there will be no announcements re- garding a date for the next ses- sion of Parliament. He remarked that Opposition Leader Pearson earlier this year had described talk of a fall session as a bluff but in a TV broadcast Wednes- day night *'decided now there | } a two-stage approach, federal government may propose first an agreement that the federal Pare liament should be given the amending power now held by the United Kingdom Parliament and, later, agreement as to how amendments should be carried out, He told reporters he would pre. fer to hear Justice Minister Fuls ton's proposals first, BETTER OUTLOOK Mr. Roberts said he feels the climate is more favorable for agreement than in the past, The last constitutional conference in 1950 failed to reach agreement on the central issue. Premier Robichaud, New Brunswick attorney-general, said "I think the whole thing (the con. stitition) should be moderni and streamlined for the 1960 he said. He expressed confidence the conference can be a success when "men of goodwill get to« gether, and all the attorneys general are men of goodwill." Paul Gerin-Lajoie, Quebec mine ister of youth heading his prove ince's delegation, expressed hope the conference will result im agreement, but declined to state Quebec's views in detail before presenting them to the confer nce. Fallout Shelters Advocated ARNPRIOR (CPW o missile with an atomic warhead were fired at Canada the country would have only a 15 « minute warning of the attack--perhaps less, Maj.-Gen, A, E. Wrinch, head of the army's emergency survival section, told a group of Atlantic provinces mayors and civic officials, Wednesday. Gen, Wrinch told the 60 munici- pal officials on the second day of a four-day civil defence course that work will start within the "next year or so" on sprinkling Canada with more than 2,000 "nuclear detonation and fallout reporting centres." Gen. Wrinch, whose primary concern is the saving of civilian lives in a nuclear attack, said preparedness is the answer, Mil. lions of lives could be saved he said, by the use of fallout shelt- ers. Hundreds of thousands of more lives could be saved by an all-level government civil defence plan and the existence in emer« gency of a disciplined rescue force, Gen, Wrinch said that three of the reporting posts will be lo- cated in each of Canada's 16 "likely target areas." A chain of some 2,200 fallout reporting posts will be installed throughout popu lated areas to measure radioace tive fallout as it spreads from should be one." explosions, means to ensure that the '"'com-| | manding heights of the economy" were under public control, The approved executive com- mittee statement rejects racial discrimination, colonialism, eco- nomic exploitation of one country by another and inequality of op- portunity for the individuals of Society WINNER UNCERTAIN From early reactions to Wed. nesday's leftist victory over Gait- skell's defence policy, it was dif- ficult to tell which side of the badly-split party had finished on top Supporters of unilateral dis- armament, which Gaitskill unsue. cessfully fought in Wednesday's defence debate at the party's an- nual conference here, appeared subdued. They constantly re- minded one another that they still have many more battles tol fight | The party's right-wingers, on the other hand, walked out of the conference hall feeling they had a omral victory and spoke confidently of reversing the de won NY 8 Pa 8 = NN Ra = _-- FR = DECKED OUT FOR REGATTA Uniformed Nigerian, plumed hat and all, stands at prow of decorated canoe which took water regatta in Lagos. Craft is festooned with bunting and Nigeria's new green and white national flag. Princess Alex. cision at the earliest opportunity.| Patt in traditional Nigerian | andra' of Kent, fJieen Eliza. beth's representative at Niger ian independence celebrations, watched the regatta from a Royal Navy craft, ~(AP Wirephotod