" RED FEATHER Your $6 contribution will pro- vide physiotherapy for a erippled child at the Cere- bral Palsy centre at Simeoe Hall, FACTS ' treatment Oshawa Times little, WEATHER REPORT A storm from the west will bring cloud and showers, but will raise the temperature a VOL, 89--NO, 258 OSHAWA, O NTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 Authorized os Second Class Mo Post Office Deportment, Ottows TWENTY PAGES BUS, STATIO N WAGON ACCIDENT KILLS NINE Gifford T o Run For Mayor Again Mayor Lyman Gifford 8a: City Hall these past two years nounced today he will stand for and have at all times endeavored re-election for the 1061-62 two- to try and solve the individual | year term, He Issued the follow problems of our citizens in a dem ing statement; ocratic way, My office door has "In view of the fact that De. @lways been open to the general cember 5 is Election Day andipublic in that they have always STATION WAGON SLICED FIVE FEET INTO BUS U-2 Killer Rockets Highlight Red Parade The Soviet MOSCOW (AP) Union today showed off a dozen|the central place of honor in thejof a message of greetings to] next year or two, 1 am prepared "silver needle" rockets and said|reviewing stand on top of the Khrushchev heralding the Soviet|to deal with these problems at a they were the type that brought{tomb, Surprisingly, retired presi-| Union as leader of the Commu- | later date but in no way do down Francis Gary Powers'sld Ameriean U-2 plane May 1, |a vkets were the highlight/to emphasize the i sy nade ht the Communist of an eight-minute military might through Square In cele anniversary of the Revolution. 8 Watching the parade from atop the Lenin-Stalin tomb were Soviet Red |! communism, Including Chinese th President Liu Shao-chi, Before the march past the ja Malinovgky In the chief speech of the day sald the Soviet army and navy, "so far as technical equipment and armamnet Is eon. cerned, are on the most modern level of science and technique, "They have everything at hele y SPRL ATE he a eky declared, © CHEERED BY 10,000 nw His words were cheered by a crowd of about 10,000 in the square, Many millions more watched on television or heard the radio broadcast of the cele. bration, th "We do not want to attack any- body,' Malinovsky declared, "But should our peaceful soll be violated by the imperialists, they will receive a retaliatory blow from which they will never re cover." d bration of the 43rd |dent Ho Chi-minh of North Viet! declared "no power on earth canto be decided by the ratepayers Bolshevik! Nam on his right Tiled Elem ha well « organized civilian demon. Premier Nikita Khrushe hoy and strators started pouring Semon many of the leaders of worldig.i go, are by the hundreds of | Zoviet leaders, tomb, Defence Minister Rodion ing balloons, An ley drizzle fell from leaden om skies during the ceremony, | ™ . tlon for an hour, Kbiusheliy left the stand to greet high officers| * " and guests gathered near the mite bomb exploded with a thun- tomb, The premier had a s greetin economic Guervara, Khrushchev then re-|girl and injuring 18 other people. | homb exploded, Nomination Day will be Novem: ber 24, 1 think it only fair that | the ratepayers of this city should know at this time what my future intentions are, | "Having served for four years as an alderman and three years as Mayor, 1 have pt all times endeavored to do what I thought was in the best interests of this city. "During these seven years and with the support of City Council, we have accomplished a great deal but on the other hand there are many problems of great im Mao Tze-Tung led the signers| portance to be dealt with in the Khrushchev as usual occupled| ent Klement] Y, Voroshilov was! nist world, |take the attitude but what there t Khrushchev's right, As though! The message stressed "the/are other people In the city who importance of| great friendship and cohesion might be as capable of solving blocs Aslan/ existing between the peoples of|these problems as I am, How embers, Voroshilov had presi-| China and the Soviet Union" and|ever, that is a matter of opinion undermine this monolithic friend-|of this city, ; : ship and cohesion." | "I have enjoyed my work al Girl Killed HOW BY CIVILIANS Following the military parade, ortraits of ul banners wousands, carrying colo; nd artificial flowers and releas. | | been welcome to come in and sit down and discuss problems of| mutual interest, I realize that the | ratepayer did not always get| what he asked for but he at least| ! had a hearing and a better un.| } derstanding than existed between| | the ratepayer and my office in| city hall, I am prepared to stand| for re-election as Mayor for the next two-year term." European Free Trade Meet Starts | LONDON (Reuters) --- Repre- Rudy Piegsa enjoys a bit of Jentatives of Sowitibes nations of play with Montreal's first snow Trade Association gathered here {onihy of an inch was recorded today for the opening of a meet:| a4 Dorval's weather station -- ub. beiwoen 'tho EPTA an ip| 19 Dot 1ast lovg. By the time IT'S BACK AGAIN | | | 14 Injured In Head-On Crash TEMPLETON, Que, (CP)wi "The bus motor was Nine persons were killed and ot | ning long after we got least 10 others were injured Sun-| he said, The motor is at {day night when a bus and a sta-| of the bus, "The front of the ition wagon collided head-on, five persons, penetrated five feet! Ope of the first motorists {was a horrible mess. The The station wagon, carrying was a complete wreck," y on E into the front of the bus, police the scene was a |said, The crash occurred neer this town 10 miles east of Ot tawa on a slight curve in a high! way lightly dusted with snow, | All five persons in the station wagon were killed, Bus driver] Paul Foirier, 30, and three of his 17 passengers also died, Driver of the station wagon was Roland Lavigne, a 29-year-| old laborer from nearby Hull,| With him In the car were hisl brother Emile, 21, and two Ot-| tawa men, Patrick G, Mayville, 21, and Paul Sauve, 19. The fifth| occupant was not identified im-| mediately, | Police refused to release the! names of the dead bus passen. | gers, | 'SNOW NOT A FACTOR | The light snow was not be. lieved to be a factor in the head.| on crash, A policeman said it! was falling too lightly to obscure! a driver's vision and that most! of the snow had blown of the highway, leaving it dry, Poirier was driving a Hull | Metropolitan Transport Limited most youngsters got organized with winter suits and snow shovels, all that was left of it was a bit of dampness on the pavement, ~CP Wirephoto rival trade bloc, the European Common Market, The three-day political and eco nomie conference is being at tended by government ministers, After watching the demonstra. The girl was identified as San-| dra Breland, 15, of Brooklyn, Her roar aboard handbag was blown to bits, | Cordell Jones, 18, was just boarding the train when the He was blown wunted the stand, | Police did not believe It was| across the platform and onto an. The three - day anniversary | the work of New York's 'Sunday other set of tracks, He suffered| NEW YORK (AP) ~~ A dyna: clal|derous, s hattering uban|a subway train ag under Har. r the visitin ip o (Che) |lem Sunday night, killing a young chief, Ernesto celebration will lead up to a/Bomber,"" who has been blamed head, neck and back injuries, summit meeting of the Commu-|for four other explosions since| nist leaders Wednesday. "It looked like the seats blew {Oct, 2, {Into the roof," he sald, "Just as Frol R, Kozlov, a secretary ofl mye pomb had been hidden une|I was getting on, I turned around he Soviet Communist party's os siraw-covered seat at the/to look at two boys who wore politicians, parliamentarians, in. dustrialists, bankers and labor| leaders of EFTA nations, 4 Prime Minister Harold 'Mae.' 7 we millan will address a dinner ey AN mesting of the group tonight, UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) The British in the past have|COngo President Joseph Kasavu- expressed a desire for closer ties|PW's aides sought to delay a with the Common Market, but| Congo. debate in the United Na- only if trade with British Com.|tlons General Assembly today monwealth countries does not/Untll he gets here to take part. suffer as a result, Kasavubu was flying to New Member nations in the EFTA|York to take over the leadership In addition to Britain are/of his delegation at the UN but Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Aus-|was not expected to arrive until shortly after the hour for the tria, Portugal and Switzerland, afternoon assembly session, His 'Mobutu Effort bus on a scheduled run from Hull to Buckingham, his home, when the collision pccurred at a point known as Mitchell's Bridge, two miles east of this town of 3,200, One policeman told a reporter he believed the station wagon was travelling at a high rate of heard a crashing, grind. 1, The assembly's rules of pro-|ing noise," sald Marcel Schryer, cedure entitle any chief of state/ Whose home was nearby, "My to issue credentials for assembly|!fe and I dashed out and saw from the Quebec Provincial Police, He was believed to have been travel. ling not far behind the bus, Ambulances and wrec| truck arrived quickly, The dent happened about 11 pm, EST and by midnight the scene was cleared of wreckage, The car engine--what was left of it--caught fire, but was con. trolled by passersby threw dirt on it until the Gatineau Hills fire department arrived, The front part of the bus was crushed the wrecked, Part of en ment painted on the side of the bus was in the wreckage, maining untouched were | words, "there's life," TO SEVERAL HOSPITALS Ambulances sons hospitals in the area, Eight of the victims, none of them injured seriously, were in hospital at Buck m, about 20 miles northeast of Ottawa, They were identified hos. pital authorities as ies, Spencer and her son eX ardine, A 3 a Wentphal, Garaid dard and Arthur A The ¢ hometowns not termined, ee ; that most of the persons were from the Buckingham dis. |trict, They suffered fractures bruises and cuts, a hospital pokesman sald, 0 ether, We could hear people Is to seat a chief of state without| soroaming Poop credentials: Gilbert Fournier of Ottawa was 2, A new UN report on The visiting the Schryer family, hiel rl representatives and the custom two ¢ Extracted from the wreckage |was the bus ger register, showing boardings and destina. | tions, Congo says the only two fixed institutions in the young Nation's politcal life are parliament and the chief of state, WANT HOUSE CONVENED Universities Ask central committee, set the tone for the talks with a keynoe speech Sunday night declaring: "World war can be excluded from the life of human society, Imperiallsm now Is unable to S chief New York representative, rear of the fifth car of a six-car laughing about something, Ex- express train, The train was cept for that, I would have got halted' at the 125th street station/it right in the face," ON TELEVISION? John Cohn, 39, the motorman, out on the plat. . I saw the smoke and| ¢ in the heart of Harlem--Manhat-| tan's main Negro district--when gald: 'I ran form, , , Senator Cyrille Adoula, .sald he would seek a 24- to 48-hour post-| ponement of the meeting. Kasavubu's bid to fill The Con- go's so-far vacant seat in the The pro-Lumumba resolution | circulated by the eight African and Aslan nations also calls on Hammarskhold to take steps to convene the Congolese parla UMMIT TALKS LONDON (Reuters) -- The irculation London Daily For More Money OTTAWA (CP)~The Canadian|facllities, and ased for grants the bomb exploded, there The force of the blast bulged people running out of the train, jetate at will whether assembly may run into opposition from UN members hacking de- Sketch today suggested closed: | : Mig posed Congo Premier Patrice clreuit television be utilized at | ment, which Kasavubu adjourned Universities Foundation today alter army commander Col, Jos- asked the government to increase amounting to $16,000,000 annually to be administered by the Na. Malinovsky charged that the|ghauld be war or not, The Soviet out the steel sides of the car,|The platform was crowded Fast-West Lumumba eph Mobutu seized power in mid. tional Research Council for the Soviet "polley of peace" was meeting with "fierce resistance from the aggressive imperialist forces led by the USA" The marshal paid tribute to Khrushchev as "that untiring fighter for peace" and 1} recent participation in the United Nations General Assembly ses sion In New York was "an im portant contribution to the cause|d of peace, The tough Histin NEW YORK (CP) ost, cos'llest and most ex presidential fight in United States history draws to an end tonigh On Tuesday an esimated 65, 000,000 or more voters make their voice be ween two travel weary candidates determined to maintain their killing grind to the last winule, In the whirlwind finish, Repub liean Richard Niven will concen rate on 'elevision, with a record . Moscow, Toughest In History, Election Battle Ends |: Union docs not fear the beilicose gouged a twofoot hole in the There were several persons ly| tc Juke Hd ie hpity id [floor and shattered every window (ing there moaning and bleeding." 4 {but one, Big chunks of concrete pojias gparching the wreckage HIDE DIFFERENCES {were ripped from the undersideifound a detonating cap, which !! The Chinese Communists, who|of the station platform, they ald confirmed that fhe t have shown a coolness toward About 30 passengers Were .yolosive probably was Khrushehev's policy of peacefullaboard the fatal ear. A girl sits] ue : co-existence with the capitalist|ting directly over the bomb, was| yo qs were skimpy, however world, masked the ideological killed, Two youths sitting across pw, injured youths said they ifferences they might have with{the aisle from the girl were in-|co a man hurriedly leave the jured critically, car seve ral stops before it| reached the station, The train's Mercy Flight | For Eskimos could he aperiting in a year, it Ib relations, =| Khrushchev dyna P p levels to ease Eight African and Asian coun: tries were to introduce a resolu. tion in the assembly this after noon to seat a delegation repre. senting Lumumba, But many diplomats predicted [the assembly would seat Kasa- [vubu, even il it is only provision. The tabloid newspaper pub shed this imaginary conversa- on hetween Soviet Premier in Moscow and Harold Macs rime Minister llan here "Good morning, Mae, what's troubling you this morning?" |ally, "Good morning, Nikita, | FIGHT FOR SEAT there's a flap on About 8 | When The Congo was admitted purge m the Krem a . to the UN Sept. 21 two rival del Nothing to it, Mac. Do TI joa ions from Kasavubu and look Wort led ,. ; | Lumumba---claimed the seat, The 1 h are you are hat | assembly shunted the problem to quashed 'al sources | ra '® lits credentials committee, which Sketch, and the whole thing |i." 0 "hyo to meet until Decem: or, Kasavubu had two advantages TRENTON (CP) flight headed into the ; . Arctic today to bring aid to al Nixon's plan is /en years too| way, Kennedy, in New York and|pemote Eskimo village where An RCAF 'in forcing a showdown now: CONGRESS VOTE late The 76-year-old Truman| New England states, said it was three persons are reported dead sald also he planned a lecture|the kind of tide that would sweep pon sritip is " : IN and three critically ill with an tour next year and wouldn't be (Nixon into the Pacific Ocean, [unidentified respir i ilme! available, Eisenhower is 70 and| Various newspaper and other umcenliied respitatory al ment. Republican Hoover is 86, polls said Kennedy is in the lead | gan hy 3 R a gi fom shel Both sides exuded confidence of | but most pollsters were cautious, [teh i n po ue nse x i o victory, Nixon, campaigning in/Suggesting a last-minute shift Reaol Re oi A AD: ob to] and around Los Angeles and then @mong fickle voters would - give ome Ye BR Lg ane ol in Anchorage, Alaska, said he Nixon a narrow victory, An ex ie Northwest Territories, on the saw a great tide sweeping his ception was the New York Daily [first leg of the mercy mission News, which supports Nixon edi-| Also aboard the Dakota are torially. It predicted a memor. /!Wo employees of Bradley Air Little Hope For GOP Victory WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bar| In the House of Representa- September, The resolution's spon. sors anticipate that parliament would return Lumumba to office, Hammarskjold's 18-nation ad. visory committee, made up of countries with troops in the UN force in The Congo, already has instructed a conciliation commis. sion being sent to The Congo next its grants for higher education sharply. | In a brief presented to Prime Minister Diefenbaker, the founda-| tion asked the government to raise its per capita grant to $2.50 by the 1962-63 academic year, from the $1.50 established for the 1058-50 school year, week fo work for restoration of|" It also asked for additional parliamentary democracy, grants of $500 for each full-time Kasavubu and Mobutu contend| graduate student going on to take The Congo is too shaken by po-|a master of arts, doctor of philos- itical and economic chaos for|ophy, or equivalent degree, Each parliamentary rule to operate, [full-time student in medicine or Kasavubu told Paris reporters|dentristry should also win his he would oppose the visit of|university a similar extra grant, the UN conelliation commission, terming it interference in The Congo's internal affairs, tinu The foundation said more money is needed to assure con. construction of university science faculties, and the Canada Council for the humanities, ASK BUILDING LOANS To meet the rising needs of student residences, the foundae tion asked the government to make building loans available through Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, for terms of 30 years and at interest rates no higher than the government must pay for its longterm borrowings, The foundation estimated that by 1967, the number of students in Canadian universities will rise. to 186,500--70 per cent more than this year, The universities will need 14,600 faculty members, 6,050 more than at present, able landslide for Kennedy across Services in Ottawa, They are to) ina" s "pie political upset, both tives even Democratic partisans four-hour afternoon question-and | answer telethon to be follo ved by| 2 90-minute evening TV perform Chest Total the country In ils final count of 30.000 straw polls gathered over a three-week assemble a two-passenger Cub aircraft and one of them will fly the doe Piper| Houses of Congress are expected generally were willing to cons stores at Resolute|iy retain Democratic majorities| cede some Republican gains, But {in Tuesday's election {only the most optimistic Repub. ance, Democrat John Kennedy, given an edge by pollsters in the presi dential race, will stick to his swift drive through New England states, ending with a 30-minute evening television appeal from Boston, hig home town Both candidates tried to give their campaigns a lift with last minute pledges. Kennedy pro posed a big batch of federal scholarships for needy . and worthy university students Nixon) outlined a plan wherehy Presi | dent Eisenhower would be joine d| by former presidents Truman| and Hoover on a goodwill peace crusade through east Furopean Iron Curtain countries, ! Truman completing his cam-| paign in support of Kennedy, said CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 | FIRE DEPT, RA 35-6374 News gave Kennedy 54.8 per cent lute to Grise Fiord on the south of the popular vote and Nixon'shore of Ellesmere Island 45.2 per cent In American history, only two At A Glanc period in New York state, The tor 225 miles northeast of Reso. | The Democrats are virtually licans would go so far as to pre assured control of the Senate/dict a Republican majority, oven hefore the voting starts, Democratic politicians for the {most part estimated they might | have a net loss of 10 to 18 seals $210,000 $200,000 Republicans, Ulysses Grant in 1872 and Rutherford Hayes in 1876, won the presidency without New York support LATE NEWS FLASHES in the House, Their Republican counterparts insisted their party would have a minimum gain of 25 or 30 seats, RELIGION A PUZZLE $175,000 " : Pollsters say the big mystify Turchin Guilty In CNR $150,000 ing factor is the religious issue. | William Michael Turchin, Kennedy is the first Roman Cath] pamanded for sentence, $125,000 years: The as ane, Democra Al Smith of New York, was t ed badly, T! United $100,000 States hos or had a Cathal | $75,000 president, $50,000 $25,000 Anti « Catholic Your Greater Oshawa COMMUNITY CHEST Needs Your Support Sergeant of Detectives robbery had been planned and 89, was shot in the leg during leg amputated sentiment was ularly in southern states where] Nixon forces say they may break | many Dem o cratic strongholds| that could help put Quaker Nixon over the top Aaska, Snowfall Costly In Soo Nixon's Sunday trip te | completes his pledge to campaign SAULT STE, MARIE, Ont in all 50 states, desite an injured] sent to hospital, a couple of knee that put him into hospital] ands were late for work this m for two weeks early in the fight. TORONTO (CP) Police HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 + 5 today, robbery at the CNR station, Sept, 10 William read to the Oshawa Magistrate's Court voiced in ' rts of the coun: a try during the campaign. partie.| Laundromats Must Close Sundays than 12 coin-operated laundries in the Toronto area to close | Sundays or be prosecuted under the Lord's Day Act, troublesome snowfall of the season. All 437 of the House seats are up for grabs in Tuesday's elec. tion, as they are every two years, but only 3 of the Sen ate's 100 seats are at stake. GOP OUTNUMBERED Democrats now outnumber Re- | publicans in the House 28% to 184, {including vacancies, In the Sen- {ate the Democratic margin is 66-34, Of the 66 senate seats not in volved in the election, 43 are held by Democrats, 23 by Repub. licans, | So even hefore the voting, the Democrats hold all but eight of the /51 seats needed for a ma. { jority. And they count on 10 sure. fire winners in the South The 34 Senate seats involved Robbery 2, of V1 Conant street, was when he pleaded guilty to A statement made to Jordan, by Turchin, was In it he told how the carried out, Percy Thompson, the robbery and later had his have told operators of more cP A truck driver was cars were wrecked and thous orning as the Sault got its first land 11 Republicans, now are held by 23 Demosraty) battled in the student district of RIOT SCENE IN ALGIERS Algiers, The fighting followed a strike of students in sympathy with the leaders:of the Algerian Demonstrators and police . rebellion on trial in Paris, De monstrators favor a French Algeria. (AP Wirephoto)