THOUGHT FOR TODAY Money can still be heard talking proving that its speed is still less than that of sound. Osha Tones WEATHER Mainly sunny the rest of today and Wednesday, light winds. VOL. 90--NO. 200 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST. 29, 1961 x Authorized os Second Cless Mail Post Office Department, Ottawo THIRTY-SIX PAGES act SUDBURY (CP)--Local 598 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter workers claimed a victory over its na- tional officers Monday night as Judge J. M. Cooper issued a new injunction barring both from entering the union's hall here. | | Judge Cooper imposed the court order after complaints that the national executive of] the independent union removed records from the local's head-| quarters in a weekend takeover of the iocal by the central body. All books or records taken from the hall must be handed aver to the sheriff, the judge said, and neither party may in- {terfere with the '"'real and per- |sonal property, funds, bank ac- counts and other assets" of the ; local. "The halls are to be closed," |Judge Cooper said. "Neither i party is to have access until the court decides whether they be- {long to the national office or ine local executive." Just before the latest injunc- tion was announced, Mine-Mill's national body said #t has signed a mutual agreement pact with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (Ind.). The pact requires both organ- | izations to co-operate in defend |ing their contracts and welfare {against outside threats. ORDER "MISUSED" Sidney Robins, counsel for the Sudbury local's executive, com- plained Monday night that a court order issued Saturday had Nine Die : In Cable i TROWEL FOR COL. McLAUGHLIN Col. R. S. McLaughlin (left) | son Rd. N. The school will | man of the board of educa- is given the silver trowell by | be completed by September, | tion, and Ald. Gordon B. At- George Drynan QC, member | 1962, and will accommodate | tersley. John Robarts, min- of the Oshawa board of educa- | 1200 students. Speaking at the | : education for. Ontario tion. Col. McLaughlin was | ceremony Monday were | IS er o » present to lay the cornerstone | Michael Starr, federal minister | was unable to attend. (See at the new R. S. McLaughlin | of labor and MP for Ontario | story page nine) a Composite School on Steven- | Riding, S. G. Saywell, chair- --Oshawa Times Photo. Early Career Choice In New School Plan TORONTO (CP) -- A change leading to employment at the "startling and dramatic that a in Ontario's secondary school end of Grade 12, or a one- or choice of careers would have to system, expected to increase by two-year program of occupa- be made in Grade 9. 50 per cent the number of stu- tional subjects leading to tech-| Aside from that aspect, he dents graduating from Grade 12, nical trades and occupations for said, the proposal seems to fol- was announced Monday by Ed- students admitted to secondary low a practice common in Tor- ucation Minister John Robarts. school without regular promo- onto for 30 years. Mr. Robarts said the new pro- tion from primary grades. I feel that 14 is per offa Has ine-Maill With been "misused and abused" by the national officers. Don Gillis, president of Local 322 who complained that "tools were used to open desks and vaults" after the Saturday in- junction, termed the new order a 'victory for our local." The Saturday order declared the union hall off limits to both sides and ordered them to stay clear of it until a Supreme Court hearing Sept. 5- The order also § restrained anyone from interfer- ing with the legal rights of the national executive. The order did not define the rights, but William Kennedy, appointed by the national office as trustee of 598, moved into the hall Saturday. At this. point, Mr. Robins complained, records were being removed. A near-riot was triggered Sat- jurday when national executive {members took over the hall. Fire hoses, bricks, boards and fists came into play before a crowd of about 1,500 was quieted and sent home. The national body moved in to thwart what it claimed would be a sellout of 598 to the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) by Gillis executives. Mine-Mill is barred from af- filiation with the Canadian La- bor Congress because of what the CLC has termed left-leaning of Mine-Mill executive mem- | ADMINISTRATOR KENNEDY, PRESIDENT SMITH FUNDS AT ISSUE GM Con DETROIT (AP)--The United " |Auto Workers union today picks which of the Big Three auto- makers it may strike at 12:01) a.m. Friday in support of new contract demands. Speculation has increased that there will be a strike when jcurrent three - year contracts run out at midnight Thursday unless General Motors, Ford and Chrysler agree to improve the wage package they offered a week ago. General Motors, the giant of the industry, ranks No. 1 in speculation on which of the three would .be affected. The sidered Best Of Three have been extended in the past when there was last-minute ad- vancement toward new ones. The UAW and American Mo- tors Corporation, fourth largest auto builder, reached agree. ment Saturday on the first profit-sharing plan in the indus- try. The UAW now is demanding that the Big Three meet or bet- ter the AMC agreement eco- nomically, via profit-sharing or otherwise. The Big Three has said it has no intention of writ. ing profit-sharing into a wage contract. Detroit Free Press said today "GM is certain to be the tar- get." In 1955 and 1958 Ford was the target. The UAW's international ex- ecutive board meets in special session today (7 p.m. EDT) and is expected to authorize strikes against all but also tell workers at two to withhold action. The | In May the local, under the leadership of Gillis, began with- {holding from the national body {some $25,000 a month in dues. { This withholding, and the ac- cumulated balance, is consid- ered by some observers to be as much the cause for the na- tional union's move as the threat of a move to the steel- workers. Rusk-Gromyko Meet Likely {third would be strikebound in hopes of winning a pattern-set- ting contract for all of the Big Three. MEET IN ADVANCE National councils of the un- ion's GM, Ford and Chrysler departments meet (at 3 p.m.) lin advance of the executive Ten Weeks In Wilds FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)-- "I prepared to die," tourist William Waters said today as he described the harrowing 10 weeks he spent lost in the Alaska wilds. Then rescue came just as he thought the last hope had gone. Waters, 42, virtually given up for dead, was recovering in hospital where he told of walk- ing until he fell and being board session and are expected gram will start at Grade 9 in' pr § J. Rendall, superinten- babs : k i 5 aps a little young to make an 1962 and Be Implemented Fou dent of secondary education, irrevocable choice in what your ay ages during' the aid that under the existing pro-life career is going to be," he Si dents admitted to Grade 9 gra-| provide Cross UNS on the lad- duate with a Grade 12 diploma. |der" fo allow a chance in course t the miversity level. " °F" *® 1° He' said it hoped that this will without a loss of a year of The system will not be com-|increase to 60 per cent shortly|schooling. gram ahout 40 per cent of stu-| said, urging the government to! WASHINGTON (AP) -- State|an "if" depending, among other to submit formal requests for Car Plunge { CHAMONIX, France (Reut-| ers)--A plane sliced through the! cable on the world's highest cable line on Mont Blanc in the Alps today, sending several cars LUCKY BURGLAR LIGHT FOOTED BARRIE, Ont. (CP)--Em- ployees at the Universal Cooler Limited Company Secretary Dean Rusk may meet|things, on whether Gromyko strike authority. Department with Soviet Foreign Minister An-| shows up for the UN fall meet- chiefs have said they would \drei Gromyko 'in about Shree ing. - U.S. inquiry at Mascow recommend this. {weeks to sound out the Russian|/has drawn no response yet on position on Berlin negotiations, | whether Gromyko is coming to! ibis in plans of aH tures informed sources said today. |New York. {whelmingly to walk out, if nec- The meeting would take place | pulsory, said Mr. Robarts, but|after the five-year development The new program will throw plunging into the Valle Blanche here recently complained |at the United Nations as the| If Gromyko does attend thelossary, to back up demands for UN opening--as are the West- improvements school boards will be encour. Phase is over. |special emphasis on counselling aged to introduce the system.| In one of the first reactions students who enter Grade 9. The standard general course to the plan J. R. H. Morgan, [There will be a core of subjects will still be available. superintendent of Toronto's sec-|required in all three branches The system replaces the old ondary schools, said it was|during Grade 9 training. categories, of general technical ---- - and commercial courses with new categories of arts and sci- ence, business and commerce, and engineering, technology and trades. Each branch will offer a five- year course leading to higher education and training in that branch; a four - year program Revolution Advised Chases, Captures 3 Armed Robbers MONTREAL (CP) -- The po- cruiser and using it as a shield, lice chief of suburban Boucher-|drew his revolver and forced the ville Monday captured three/ men to leave the cab. men armed with a sub-machine; The men made an unsuccess- gun and two revolvers after a|ful attempt to use the cab-driver branch of the Banque Provinci-|as a hostage. ale du Canada was robbed off *I told them I'd pick them off $9.000. The loot was recovered. one by one, hostage or no hos- HAVANA (AP)--Fidel Castro NO shots were fired tage," said Chief Crevier. "They today urged Brazilians on to a| The three, names withheld, dropped their weapons. popular uprising in the style of surrendered to Chief Real Cre- "I handcuffed them and drove his own revolution to prevent|vier without a fight following a them back to the Boucherville "from! four-mile auto chase police station ,and phoned pro- installing an "illegal Fascist re- Crevier, re sponding to anjvincial police. gime" following the resignation|alarm signal, arrived at the Taxi - driver Horace Bernat- of Janio Quadros as Brazil's bank shortly after the holdup) chez, 65, was released after he president. and was told: "Four men in a'told police the men had forced The Cuban prime minister taxi went that way." him to drive them spoke on television as military] "I wheeled my cruiser around| Police said t he bandits leaders in Brazi! sought to block|and went after the taxi," he ered. the bank and forced the Vice Oresident. Joao Goulart. ansaid. "I forced them to stop manager, Adrien Grenier, four even more outspoken admirer|about four miles down the high-| other employees and 10 custom- of Castro than Quadros, from|way." ers to stand aside while they taking the presidency He said he got out of thel!looted the till and the vault "reactionary militarists" ent Military Chiefs Defy | Goulart Succession Braga of Parana broadcast an below. At least nine persons were {killed and 80 others were dangling in space over the dam- aged cable system with no im- mediate way of pulling them to | safety. | Mountain helicopter crews |were called into attempt to res- |cue the panic - stricken passen- | gers as they hung high over the { frozen snowfields and glaciers of| the valley, Traffic on the line was at its heaviest' when the plane sliced through the traction cable. At least 100 persons were on var- ious parts of the line when thel accident occurred. Several were reported injure The plane, a French air force jet, landed safely at its base: Two persons died in a cabin which crashed against a pylon or a rock face, and seven in the cabin which crashed on to the glacier far below the cable span, reports said. General Assembly session gets ern big power foreign ministers under way Sept. 19. --an aim of a Rusk meeting Rusk reports to President/would be to quietly gauge) |Kennedy at the White House to-| whether more formal negotia- day following his New York|tions on the Berlin crisis would meeting Monday with UN Sec-|be worthwhile. retnry-General Dag Hammarsk-| Rusk said Monday night the jold and UN Ambassador Adlai Western foreign ministers may E. Stevenson. meet in Washington or New The possibility of an informal Tork Shontly before the fan o | Rusk-G y ins the session. He indicate Rusk-Gromyko parley remains that 'a' pUbAShod TePat that they may meet here next week would be moving the timetable ahead too much. Proponents of an the plant burglar alarm was so sensitive it went off when you walked through a room. The company ad- justed it. Last weekend a thief forced a window and es- caped with goods and cash valued at $250. The alarm didn't go off. LIVE FOR TODAY Plastic Bombs Create Tension ALGIERS (AP) -- Counting, The hours of tension, fear and Would find all the negotiating one day's plastic bomb explo- expectation begins at dusk. sions, Algiers tried not to think| «This js the hour of plastic," of tomorrow. says a French settler in a side- For many Europeans and yak cafe. Moslems there may be no to- ria morrow. Today life has to take Army patrols appear. informal age of keeping open the path to| a peaceful settlement of the ex] The state department far to negotiate only on fringe benefits. Strike authorization and the picking of a target would not mean necessarily there would be a strike. Current contracts in wages and| pawed by a bear cub as he lay half conscious. The story of survival that amazed even Alaskans used to wilderness. hardships was told {as Waters slowly bagan to re- cover strength after the ordeal that cut his 190-pound weight almost by half. Waters, a Cincinnati postal employee, 'was on a long- planned Alaska vacation trip alone when he left his automo- bile and hiked to Big Lake, 120 miles northeast of here, to fish. Last Of Refugees Go Home In Nfld. GANDER: Nfld. (CP) -- The| | Rusk-Gromyko get-together con-| last of the refugees from New- {tend it would have the advant-|foundland's fires were set to head back to|returned to their homes in 25 their homes from here today communities. The number of | plosive dispute while avoiding a|with assurances the fires willlhomes destroyed has been |too-eager rush to an East-West|never be as conference where the West! year. rampaging forest bad again this! The last of about 200 evacu- focused on Western concessions. ees from the Bonavists North noted community of Carmanville, eva- anew Monday that Soviet Pre- cuated about three weeks ago. mier Khrushchev has offered so Flamesdestroy ed 10 homes| the there. As rain fell on the east and Flames Spread Over Cariboo KAMLOOPS, B.C. (CP) Flames today spread slowly over the Cariboo country, one of the province's prime hunting areas, just a few days before. the hunting season opens. More than 100 blazes are re- ported in the interior area, mainly in the game-rich Horse- fly region, mid-way between] Kamloops and Prince George I The deer, caribou, and moose season opens Friday. The duck and goose season begins Sept. ; 16. The area also contains some its normal course. Cranes are in action on gov- ernment - financed construction projects and new ships dock in the harbor. A dog race takes place in the Maison Caree su- burb and the El Biar Bowling Club has a social dinner. The radio says 50 rebels were put out of action somewhere in the south and a Moslem who some time ago deserted the re- bels was killed by an assas- sin's bullet. But the housewife still com- plains to the sullen, turbaned Moslem vendor about the size ui the melons. Policemen wear- ing tropical cork helmets care- RIO de JANEIRO (AP)--Bra zil's Congress was locked in a bitter struggle today with the country's three military chiefs who defied the constitution in an attempt to block leftist Vice- President Joao Goulart from succeeding to the presidency Angry congressmen named a multi-party commission of eight senators and eight deputies to study the service chiefs' at- tempt to flout the constitution They gave the commission 48 hours to come up with recom- mendations Meanwhile, Congress sched- uled another meeting today to consider the situation Goulart still was in Europe waiting for a congressional dele tian to join him to advise him of his prospects. He and his wife went to Barcelona Monday to visit their 'children, who have been holidaying on the Spanish Mediterranean coast CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 1 {ad Support of the vice-president mounted in his home state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil's southernmost. Governor Leonel Brizola broadcast a proclama- tion that his state will stand be- hind the vice-president, who is his brother-in-law. He ordered the state militia to back him up and warned that he would not accept any move to block Goul- art's inauguration. Brizola took over a privately- owned radio station to broadcast his proclamation. It remained on the air all night calling on the people to resist any move to prevent the '"'constitutional ident" from taking office Authorities in the capital of Porto barricades nor's palace Brizzola said Goutart might fly to neighboring Uruguay if barred from Rio. He indicated the vice-president would then go to Porto Alegre, presumably to sel up a government there. A radio broadcast from south ern Brazil claimed that army and air force commanders the ate of Rio Gra Santa Catarina and Parana had announced support for the vice- re provincial Alegre set up around the gover in st de do Sul ipresident. But Governor Nek appeal to Congress to prevent bloodshed by finding legal means to return Janio Quadros to the presidential post he quit last week WON'T DESERT Braga said Quadros was de- feated by reactionary forces but that his friends should not desert him in ('this dramatic hour." Quadros left the port of Santos Monday aboard a ship, appar- ently bound for London. Friends quoted him as sayin, "They are sending me away, but I shall return." The military's attempt to pre- vent Goulart from taking over sent Congress into a joint emer gency session in the inland cap ital of Brazilia Congressmen - normally op- posed to the 42-year-old Labor party leader demanded that he he permitted to succeed to the presidency in orde# to preserve constitutional democracy Labor Deputy Ruy called Interim Raniere Mazzilli t Ramos resident the ar on P 0 order rest of Marshal Odylio Denvs of the province's most valuable commercial fir and spruce. fully check the time on park- ling tickets. Injured Climber Still On Ledge KANANASKIS, Alta. .(CP)--|of 2,000 feet--before darkness Injured climber Gordon Crocker forced a halt spent his third consecutive night! The injured man and Ed on a treeless ledge of rock highiCarlton, warden of Banff Na- up in the Canadian Rockies|tional Parks, huddled in sleep- Monday night as men prepared/ing bags on the narrow ledge a fresh attack to rescue him while other members of an Crocker, 29-year-old alpinist eight mun rescue party re- from Calgary, suffered leg ir 'urned to a camp almost 2.000 juries in. a fall Saturday night! fest below a and a companion neared The weather good t top of 9.600 - foot Mount though the overnig tempera- > in Aiberta's Kananaskis'ture dropped te 'nedr freezing-- about normal for this time of Slowly and painfully, he year. moved down the almost-verticall The rescue team was headed mountainside Monday, anchored. by mountain guide Hans by ropes to two veteran moun- Gmoser and Chief Warden Wal- tain climbers from Banff, Alta. ter Perren of Banff whe suffered a sus Crocker anchored ture of the 'eft ankle tween the men for the rained right ankle Five he dangerous ated them for the s he he was Crocker was nected fra and a down t of rope separ covered most treacherous y to have An explosion shatters the si- lence. "The first plastic," says the settler. Someone at the next table passes a mimeographed sheet, It announces simply that the cards of collectors of funds of the secret European under- ground organization have been suspended and new special cou- pons will take their place. The sheet is signed "OAS." the secret army organization | which has vowed to keep Al- geria French. Since April the OAS had ex- ploded more than 1,000 plastic] bombs in Algeria, according to official figures. They were aimed against the homes of Euopeans and Moslems whom the organization accuses of lib-| eralism or of favoring Algeria's independence. About 100 persons -- mostly neighbors or passersby -- have been injured by the blasts and a dozen have been killed. As they said four years ago, officials say the nationalist re bels are losing support of the Moslem masses and that few Europeans support the extrem- ist groups. Berlin Note Plan Dronned By West LONDON - (Reuters) The Western powers have dropped the idea of sending a formal note on Berlin to Russia on re- ply to one received from the So-| viet Union Aug. 3, a well-in-| formed diplomatic source said today Instead, they are more likely verbal contacts with the government--nresumably their embassies 'in Mos- Q through the war minister leading the part of the'trip -- where one journey. Loose and falling rock cow--which are expected to lead military opposition to Goulart, false move cogid mean a plunge! hampered the men, Ito East-West talks on the erisis.! 0f this group of biochemists West's rights in West Berlin ntral part of the province, Chief Forester Ed Ralph said| now is the most promising time, E. Germans Shoot | Refugee Swimmer Since the fires broke out last "These fires will never reach BERLIN (Reuters) -- East the same proportions again," he| German guards shot one refu-|said. "If wet weather continues, | ee and arrested another as|they should be out in 10 days." they attempted to swim the Tet-| A persistent drizzle brought low Canal into West Berlin,|almost an inch of rain in a 24-| police here said. 'hour period Monday and it was| expected to continue off and on today. About 20,000 evacuees have placed at about 35. Premier J o s e p h Smallwood said he feels the province can make up most of the loss to private citizens. He estimated the loss at about $250,000. A fund - raising campaign was launched in the province by the |premier in June and totals $5,- 278. However, the St. John's Citi- zens and Home Improvement Association appealed to those in the building trades across Can- ada. They were requested to say what building materials they would provide should they be asked later. Plans are under way to re- store lost natural resources through salvaging of dead tim- ber and reforestation. CANADIAN IN MOSCOW chatting at the recent Fifth International Bichemical Con- gress held in Moscow. Others in the group are identified in the Tass Agency photo as, J University the extreme Professor Gill Quastel of Me- Montreal right in stands at left to right, Dr. K. Florken of Belgium, Dr. E. Stots of the U.S. and Dr. A. I. Oparin, Russia, e=((CP Wire*ot0). ints