Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 9 May 1961, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THOUGHT FOR TODAY A girdle is a modern contrivance that keeps figures from become ing facts. lye Osha Sones More rain and cloud has covered the area, and is expected to re- main for 24 hours. Price Not Over VOL. 90--NO. 108 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1961 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-FOUR PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy Over VIENTIANE (AP)--Rebel of- ficials refused to deal with {members of the International {Control Commission for Laos at - . > ante an initial meeting at Hin Heup, today, a Laotian military autho- rity said. This further confused the outlook for the M - power conference on Laos due to open in Geneva Friday. "The other side said they could not recognize the ICC," said Lt.-Col. Udon Sananikone, spokesman of the royal govern- ment's military delegation to the cease-fire talks. 'They said they had no instructions." Indian, Canadian and Polish military officers of the three- power ' commission, which is seeking to certify the cease-fire proclaimed last Wednesday, de- clined comment on their return by helicopter from Hin Heup, the negotiating site north of here. They said they would re- port to the commission's Indian chairman, Samar Sen MAY POSTPONE MEETING The possibility that the Gen- 4 eva conference might be post- J poned was raised by rebel ob- SPRING ARRIVES AT NIAGARA jections to the arrival of the : truce commission Monday. The Pretty Elaine Grandmaison of | the daffodils in Queen Victoria ynited States, Britain and St. Catharines, Ont., admires ' Park. --(CP Wirephoto) France have said they will not fake part in the conference un- til the commission guarantees the armistice is in effect. Sananikone said representa- tives of the Communist Pathet Lao and neutralist Prince Sou vanna Phouma even refused a ' letter from the ICC group in BALTIMORE (AP)--An East- vientiane to its ICC counterpart ern Airlines plane--its instru- ;» repel-held Xieng Khouang. at 5 Spring is in the air in Niag- ara Falls, Ont., with the first blooms of 1961 in full "bud. i z rt | Plane Makes Forced Landing Shepard Plan irra ibis di landing gear had not locked in one'von ested another meeting WASHINGTON (AP) -- Astro-jcolades Monday were for a place--made a safe landing on : paut Alan Shepard, the first|"spectacular success" -- Navy a foam-coated runway early to- lop ¥etttesiay and expected an American in space, promised Cmdr. Shepard's 115 - mile voy- day after circling the field for The initial refusal of the Pat- Monday "we plan to press age into space. ; about 80 minutes. het Lao-neutralist group to deal ahead with the best possible It was a day of pride and None of the 40 passengers or with ICC was ny seen as. a speed." sentiment, tribute and humor five >rew members was hurt crisis. But it did add f th = The next major mission: for the calm man who--as one Capt. Joseph Franek, 49, pilot 5. a ont > urther de- Rocketing one of the seven as- of his bosses put it -- "really of the Lockheed Electra turbo- '8Y and confusion to the situa- tronauts into orbit around the broke the ice for all of us." [prop plane, brought the craft tion. earth, | He was decorated by the down safely at Ballimore's Although no major | battles The orbit flight is scheduled presid lauded Congress| Friendship International airport have been reported to indicate for sometime this year. Butiand cheered by thousands as he after the flight had been di-|any all-out rebel offensive, there space agency chief James Webb was driven trough the capital. lygrted from Washington be- have been serious incidents. cautioned: Also, in a televised press cause of the emergency. "If we are to have-our spec- conference, he gave a capsule] Franke said the landing gear FIRE ON TRAINING POST Confusion Peace Talk 'Middle West |eight states left hundreds home-| paris (Reuterf)--France to-|government, so that in spite of tacular successes with view of his ride through space. even larger and ever more [Last Friday morning, Shep- complex rockets, the early test ard sat. for more than four, flights, unmanned of course, hours in his capsule hefore the will involve some spectacular rocket blasted off from Cape failures." Canaveral for his 15 - minute locked in place when the plane touched down Martin Borma Hitler Deputy In Argentine TEL AVIV (AP)--Argentina's former ambassador to Israel said today Martin Hitler's deputy whose been a mystery since was in Argentina when Adolf Eichmann was captured last year. Dr. Gregorio Topolevsky, now Bormann, fate has the war, Th most serious was a Pat- het Lao attack, with artillery, on Padong, key centre for train- ing and supply of fierce Meo mountain tribesmen who are the best fighters the government has. Padong is a major guer- rilla base located just 20 miles southwest of Xieng Khouang. The commission had asked to sit in on the lagging peace talks between Prémier Prince Boun Oum's regime and the pro-Com- AIDED EICHMANN retired from the Argentine for-| eign service, said at a press con ference that Bormann had been Laval Suggested FIVE CHILDREN KILLED IN FIRE Fr oe Father, Mother Leap To Safety as soon as possible. Laos Premier Bouff Oum agreed at once and sent a del-| % ezation north to the village on & the Nam Like River to await HALIFAX (CP) -- Five chil- hear me. She went back and a response from the rebels. | ' ' | dren, all under 10 years of age, then returned to the window." Royal government negotiators | . died early today when fire swept. Mrs. Parsons said the woman and representatives of the h om- their second - storey tenement then jumped. Her fall was par- munist Patel Lao EM Phince home in a rundown district of tially broken by some electric aay Ag roy aye northend Halifax. wires running into the front of H A 'ta ; Vion, Their parents, John Wager-i/the house. eup, 55 miles north of Vien : hn ; pi ' . man, 32, a Halifax native, and) "I took her to my house and tiane, but have made no prog- hi i : i . fg : ros toward either a harmianent is wife Isobel, 29, are in hos- tried to tell her 'maybe the chil- armistice or political negotia- pital. Mr. Wagerman, a petty dren were all right but all she tions. officer on the destroyer Iro-\would say was 'No, they're all They cannot agree on where quois, suffered third degree gone.' " the talks should be held, in gov- burns and his wife suffered mul-| Detective Ed Wilson, who crnment or rebel territory. tiple burns and cuts. turned in the alarm, said he at- Sen, accompanied by the Ca- Hospital authorities said tempted to enter the home from nadian and Polish representa- neither was in critical condition. the rear but was turned back. tives on his commission, met Dead are Terry, 9, Maxine, 7./In the alley he found Wager- for 75 minutes today with Boun Kirk, 4, Lynn; 5, and Charlene, man draped over a car where Oum and Gen. Phoumi Nosavan 3. They are believed to have'he had apparently stumbled of the Vientiane regime A died within minutes after the after jumping from the window. spokesman said Sen told them fire broke out in their frame Police, who described the fire the first task of his truce com- : home. as "a holocaust," said they mission was to certify the cease- The parents were injured have been unable to determine : when they jumped from the|where in the building or how the | second-storey windows. fire started. The building, one of several They said the building went in a long tenement row, was a up like a matchbox. blazing inferno when firemen| fire and then supervise it. arrived after an alarm had been » turned in by a passing police- Bombin S Several police and firemen| g Worry B.C. heard was a scream. "1 rushed outside and could| ve Bs a major topic at a convention jto jump but she didn't seem 10) Kootenay : municipalities at man about 1:45 a.m. and neighbors attempted to en-| Council | ouncils {see Mrs. Wagerman hanging out| the fown of Marysvale next Laos munist rebels in an effort speed up a formal armistice. But there appeared virtually no prospect that a coalition gov- ernment could be formed to rep- resent Laos at the opening of the Geneva conference Friday. Samar Sen of India, chair-|{ man of the truce commission,| proposed getting together with| ® to f k : Thunder Hits CHICAGO (AP) -- Damaging { thunderstorms which for four) : days have drenched broad areas| of the mid-continent, causing| widespread flooding, tapered off in most sections today. As the wet belt moved east ward into the eastern third of the United States, floods in the Missouri, Mississippi and Ohio River basins posed a major problem. The overflows frou rain-fed rivers and streams ih at least SCENE OF BLAZE WHERE FIVE DIED | ter but were turned back by the| flames. A neighbor, Mrs. John Par- the second-storey window over! TRAIL. BL (CP) = Viviane the front door. She seemed toa: vig nr ne ie [have broken the window With Rom the British 'Colymbig France Prepares For Terror Wave sons, said the first thing she her hands and knees. I told her" Lenays or 50 years, Wil! ha less, spilled over scores of ma-|qay braced for a possible new everything a new Algeria is to- S H ] |weekend. jor highways and secondary|wave of right-wing terrorism in|built,"" he said. uspect e d { Trail and Nelson delegates roads and across thousands of the wake of a firm statement : |are expected to haye much to acres of farm lands. Rainfall in by President de Gaulle that a REVOLT WAS 'STUPID' i In Sh . Ry the evel hous nes, some parts of the spring storm|new Algeria will be built "in| De Gaulle said he was sure ooting Po Eh dea mu belt since last Friday was more spite of everything." the "stupid" revolt of the right-| khobor, than a foot. Terrorist leaflets were circu. ng junta of former generals WALPOLE ISLAND (CP) -- RCMP activity has been The floods, which have caused jated in Paris as de Gaulle|282inst his government would in Ontario Provincial Police and|stepped up and the area's de. at least nine deaths, menaced went on television Monday night uo way Jelay French progress. RCMP officers armed with ye|lachumelts 'have been bolstered areas in Ohio, Kentucky, Illi-'to make his first major speech , hcanvhile there were new|volvers and tear gas surrounded bY special inves ti gators and nois, Missouri. Arkansas, Okla-|since a right-wing military re- outbrea : 9 terrorism in Al-'a home deep in the bush area|constables. Civic leaders have homa, Indiana and Kansas. volt collapsed in Algeria last gers, and -Uran, ; here today and arrested a sus- called for an end to the bomb- The storm-related death month. 'Two bombs exploded in Al- pect in the early-morning shoot. Ings. : : talled 33 The president spoke of «com. | Biers, one in the downtown of-|ing of a 69-year-old man. A fifth bombing in several oe. iii ing Abe with Mos. | fice door of a European lawyer Police said Sampson Sands|days was reported Monday. It lem Algerian insurgents at the and the other close to the was apparently shot after a|damaged Canadian Pacific Rail | French alpine resort town of| Church of a pro-Gaullist priest| quarrel. He is in hospital in crit-\way track at a siding 30 miles Evian. but set no date. lin the working class suburb of|ical condition with bullet/north of Nelson. on he Bab-el-Oued. wounds in the stomach and left] A bomb at the Grand Forks He said if no agreement| y, un a homb exploded out- leg. [CPR marshalling yards Sunday proved possible with the Tunis- i430 5 "Mosiem-owned grocery| Police said charges are pend-|ripped up sections of track. The based insurgents, then France! store. |ing against the suspect, whose/same day an explosion rocked would go ahead alone in the" merioiict pamphlets similar to/name was not released. |a Trail department store, caus- North African territory. [those distributed in Paris also] Walpole Island is an Indian|ing slight damage. Another "We must speed up and de- were circulated. They pro- reservation about 30 miles south|blast shattered power poles out- velop on the spot the accession| claimed "death to-all Gaullists." lof Sarnia. a oa ier of Algerians to all responsibili-|------ ties, including those of their living under an alias and dis- appeared into Brazil when he Purge Of Kiddies A But the applause and ac- flight reeset | iapKed by 'his fellow astre- inauts and the leaders of the space program, Shepard told his ay- u [story with composure and wit. to what "we" had done -- that is. his six fellow astronauts and the scientists and other work- ers who contributed to the man- in-space program. Gets Plug clined to comment on was TORONTO (CP) -- The Bell whether he found 'any dis- Telephone Company circulated crepancies" in what Russia's its yellow pages in a separate space man Maj. Yuri Gagarin hook Monday, and under the reported he saw in his orbit other foreign government repre- Shepard said the American sentatives" listed the Bohemian astronauts were so involved in Embassy. their own flight plans that they The "embassy" is a beatnik hadn't time to study data on coffee house, located on the Gagarin's flight. of stairs leading from a down- he recommended as a result of town street. his flight "were minor and Its "'diplomatic corps" cont very few in number" and he is sists of bearded writers, poets completely satisfied with the and off-beat musicians way the capsule behaved. He made repeated references Embassy About the only thing he de- heading of "consulates and around the earth third floor end of a dimly-lit set Shepard also said the changes Kennedy Picture three said, their to the boat drifted onto rocks and broke up. The trio took refuge in an abandoned lighthouse. Boatwright and his mate, Kent Hokanson, 20, happened along several days later in their 38-foot charter boat, Muriel III, | with four passengers aboard. Sees signalled the boat swam out and boarded it. Testimony showed he pulled a .38-calibre revolver and ordered Boat-| wright and the others into the| stern. When Boatwright rifle, Sees shot wounded him. Table and Sees forced the, mate and passengers ashore and sped away. A Cuban gunboat overhauled | Table and Sees the following day when the Muriel III ran| aground Cuban territorial waters A construction company Cuba turned the two men| truck teeters on the edge of a over to Bahamian authorities| huge chasm on Wilshire Boule- They ran out of gasoline and for trial. vard in Beverly Hills, Calif. at grabbed a and fatally Q FREE PARKING --FOUR FLOORS DOWN heard of Eichmann's capture by| , JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- A Eichmann is accused: of head- Israeli agents in May, 1960. French professor told the court ing . Topolevsky also said that if trying Adolf Eichmann today of] The assistant prosecutor. Ga Wife Found Dead Ol JE oud lave deportation to Auschwitz of 4,006 for a. roundup of 40,000 French Farmer Charged Eiclurann 'was. spirited. out of children, some of them too Jews in the summer of 1942 un lecturer at the Sorbonne in Lieut. Theodor Dannecker. Eastern Townships farmer, to- Paris, recalled the pathetic. In one of them Dannecker re- day was charged with murder sight of the ragged children ported to Eichmann's Jewish af- jn the death of his wife, whose portation to the Auschwitz gas Posed the inclusion of children chambers. under 16 in future transports of farm, 90 miles east of Montreal. Many were two, Jews from unoccupied France.| Mrs. Bernadette Robitaille, ; : : OWN suni ? "di OSLO -- North Atlantic pact/with Russia in getting a man think Canada should pull out. names." cupied France "did not interes ras found foreign ministers today got into space Observers said France got th : him. was found. y 8 S : Ss 8a : got the NAR re down to discussing NATO's| The only foreign minister at! point They were brought the long-term plans amid growing the 15 country session who Gtikker today presented the Shoes missin, bodes Covered T W Oo H an ed Wation is, Presenving its 2llies gelos Averoff. ing the fields of political con-| He recalled the case of a little g his ? 300 EB oomy a picture of the 4, pg CHEERFUL SIDE sultation and economic aid.|boy of seven or eight, who asked Op Sli uakion tetha] Ata Even new NATO Secretary-Stikker's feeling was that the him when he would be reunited y Li al allars Dirk Stikker of The|' 'new look" on NATO's long-|with his father and mother. and Belgian Foreign Minister ceeded Spaak as NATO admin. cussion long enough : rator, li vi ly a ' orp : er : Paul-Henri Spaak ail were re- an lined up with the op EXPECT TREATY SIGNING he told the boy: "Do not worry, iwo' Americans were hanged in ported to have taken a much "[ conirast to Kennedy's The four big NATO powersiin two or three days you willNassau prison today for the more optimistic view than U.S ice! Were reported convinced thatlfind your mother." murder of a Florida charter Alvin Table and array, Stikker told a press con- . ' opened here Monday array 4 treaty wit ( Tas ries ver g ol Wasa ony in confer ference that it 'was "complete weaty Sik! omits} Jas nalf-eaten army ration biscuit. Americans ever executed in the a e nonsense' to say the organiza. 3° 4% 2 TR1S1Ng tne Thi 8 f the scuit 1/Bahamas ence circles that the Unifed A threat of an East Germs t This half of the biscui é 25 od th scaf ; Bagi ia a tion was suffering a malaise . ua rerman a {shall keep for mother." the boy Table, 25, mounted the scaf- States was placing too much tempt to interfere wilh allied|* F ' "7 fold at Nassau prison at 7 a.m. deriving streneth of the West [conference Monday to both the | underiying strength of the Wesl-ly; ¢ "and France for their Cu- French and Americans are de- among 4,000 children deportedideath for the slaying of the oy, Alliance. felt the U.S 'wa ban and Congo policies re- termined to maintain their oc-/to Auschwitz. charter boat captain. on the se w *it ihe S. was setively cupation rights in West Berl feller: n n after , high seas' more than a year ago. being too pessimistic about the spectively . 5 est Beriin| Wellers testified after the a. bt) ere con. in Cuba. He did not refer di- {rectly to France s aay and disarmament at the 0pPen-|tq the Germans in 1942 that chil- at Elbow Key in the Bahamas. CITY EMERGENCY help pay the costs of the UNling session. He said Russia|gqren should be included in the Testimony at the trial showed PHONE NUMBERS Congo operation, but he calledimay propose an international|. roundup of French/that Table and Sees stole a 42. POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 Israel had re quested Eich-lthe German roundup of French|briel Bach, submitted docu- : ir ow! DIALED a , SWEETSBURG, Que. (CP)-- the country by Israeli agents. young to know their own names. der pressure from Eichmann's being assembled at Drancy| fairs department of the Gestapo body was found .under straw and 2 ; o : tour. gears oid. Te He said Laval had added that| .,oiner of seven, had been miss- opinion in this Norwegian capi-|seemed to share the American NATO ministers with a volum. °1°¢S Missing, bodies covered Bods . General Minister Howard Green, British! ; ici] In Bahamas ' term aims has been under dis- . oA NOT LONG TO WAIT Aa nrat ALY . "statement after taking office An Eh rales : al ae stE State Secretary Dean Rusk Soviet Premier Khrushchev in- Then the boy pulled from the boat captain " Gree i Q " 3 emphasis on the crisis facing feen himself talked. bluntly supply traffic to West Berlin said and an hour later, his partner : : He said in effect the U.S. regardless of what Khrushchev so! ate 'that Pierre world situation attributed the prosecution state that Pierre ° he vy . Laval, head of the collaboration: Victed of slaying Capt. Angus on NATO to support UN peace- conference on Berlin and that 2erman foot cabin cruiser in Key West 4 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 mann's extradition through offi- yews during the war and the ments describing preparations . 4 J i - - old Professor Georges Wellers, a representative in Paris, SS Ubald Robitaille, 44 - year camp in France to await trans. in Berlin that Laval had DIO: |\fay 1 at their South Stukely Called 'Too Gloom : Y ant jowish children in Nazi-oc- "didn't even know o 'interest | ing for six days when her body tal that the Kennedy adminis pessimism was Greece's Evan-|inous pile of documents cover- with sores," Wellers testified. Foreign Secretary Lord Home Netherlands, who recently suc- To console him, Wellers said,;] NASSAU, Bahamas (AP)-- : that NATO was in some dis- : 'hen the three - day meeting ends 5 a separate peac {Billy Wayne Sees were 's when the three ay meeting tends to sign a separate peace pocket of his tattered jacket a Billy Wayne Sees were the first the opening session of the i the West and not enough on the| Informants said the British,! A short time later the boy was in crime, Sees, 23, was put to hould take no unilateral action) does. an attitude to annoyance,' . y American attitude to annoyance Green also dealt with Berlin|ist Vichy government, proposed Boatwright, 55, April 24, 1960, keeping operations the three major Western powers Jews. and headed out to sea with Green said Canada, the only should prepare their position] The prosecution turned to the jpapie's bride of a month. Bar- NATO country in the force in'now. There were indications{gate of French Jewry as it built bara. 18 The Congo, would continue; to|Russia would fike to avoid ajup its file of evidence on the contribute to the UN opersion|crisis on Berlin if it could save|German pragram to extermi- RAN OUT OF FUEL although some of its friends'face. nate the Jewish race, which' mn The gaping hole was created by the collapse, last night, of a four-floor undérground park- ing lot under construction. 'Ne one was injured. | jy ~(AP Wirephoto)

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy