WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warm today and Tuesday, winds light, increasing to southerly 15. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Fonetic speling has a continuing appeel to peepul who never did lern to spel. Dshavwn Sines Authorized Post Office he t as_ Second Sloss Mail 10 Cents Per Copy Department, awa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1961 TWENTY UN SECRETARY KILLE AS AIRLINER CRASHE ing United Body Located Fas g | In Plane Wreck ] | Nations Crisis | ANDOLA, Northern Rhodesia, The bodies were discovered | (Reuters)--United Nations Sec Sifter . Royal Riiodesian Al 1 $)--. b that Hammarskjold would retary - General dag Hammar-| Force plane spotted the wreck- I gg United| be able to ride out the Commu-| skjold died today in the crash of| age following the disappearance | Nations organization today in|nist campaign until his term of his DC-6 airliner 7% miles from of the UN secretary-general and [the wake of the death of Secre-| office expired in April, 1963. | here. his Jany on a flight here from { | Ri found the body of|Leopoldville, the central Congo- [tary - General Dag Hammarsk-| orp n PROBEMS escuers foun e y 0 po! ng |jold. The United Nations already | the United Nations chief execu-|lese capital. "Hammarskjold's death in an| ® Co tC GoM eticits. In| tive in the wreckage of the A spokesman for the Rhode- air crash in northern Rhodesia|,, - eyes of many uncommitted | plane along with those of five sian government confirmed that ! ] companions, the crashed plane was the one Tost oy I a i countries it is being weakened| | , (Canadian diplomats in New taken by Hammarskjold and bo Sl {not only by the Soviet bloc but York said their information|that his body was among those or the Goneral Asem. d the|also by France's attitude ger from the UN was that the crash|found in the wreckage. ni J [Tunisia and Algeria and by al-| § UN into the problem of select, ed British cbstructionism in| was accidental; there was no ing a successor, with the pros- 3 ; early indication of sabotage.) HIGH SPEED CRASH @ bitter disagreement be-|the Congo operation. ' One man was found alive at e wreckage of the plane pect of bi for Sisagree Commu-| Recent assessments of Soviet the crash scene critically in-/Was Sill shoakjering when % ) : 3 icies indicate that Moscow is jured. was reac y a rescue party. nist blocs. policies indic Bw : : 38 ya y kate ha ofused | unlikely to give up its insistence Six bodies were recovered and| Rescuers said the plane ap- Bobi i i the three-member of Yhrce Moke Were believed lying| peared to have mt the ground i »am-|"troika'" formula for the secre- under the wreckage. at high sp after plowing od en ing i hio ot Th Hammarskjold was headed) through treetops, three-member body, with one In fact, Moscow has extended representative from the Com- demands for this formula to here for talks with Katanga| It disintegrated on impact. munist bloc, one from the West, other bodies, such as an inter- president Moise Tshombe on non-com-/national control organization to GM Layoff VOL. 90--NO. 216 r i : ob DAG'S ARRIVAL IN CONGO 7 See Production Threatens Full By Weekend To Shoot - tors is counting on getting 'its{the union's 280 - member GM Violators strikebound plants back in full{council meet here Wednesday) MOSCOW (AP)--Russia says production by the end of this afternoon to review the pro-itw, west German fighter-bom-| week if all goes well in contract gress of negotiations and decide pars (hat strayed across East negotiations with the United what action to take. The coun- Garman territory to Berlin were/and one from the Auto Workers Union today and cil can approve or reject con-| deliberately. It threatened|mitted nations. tomorrow. |tract proposals. to shoot down "any violating] However, the indications had The union has set Wednesday| 1t jt approves, a back-to-work| military fighting aircraft" in the| = as a new deadline for ending/movement among GM's 350,000 future. DAG HAMMARSKIJOLD DETROIT (AP)--General Mo-|voted Saturday night to have Meeting Gromyko For Berlin Talk ways of ending the fighting be- {tween UN and Katangan troops |supervise a nuclear test ban. In the neighboring Congo prov- | The West categorically rejects g = E Ithe troika formula, saying it , UN officials said Hammarsk- |would give the Communist bloc | jold's top adviser on African af- 2 (fairs, Henrick Wieschhoff; his strikes which started at most of hourly workers could get under GM's 129 U.S. plants a week ago way Thursday. At the peak of gj today and halted production of the strike last week more than|i¢ did not make clear whether A protest note Sunday was rected at the West Germans. 1962 model cars. 250,000 were idle. the threat The UAW executive booard Report New | local unions and plant manag- | to reach agreements on| working conditions. AGREE ON ESSENTIALS National level bargaining, teams here already have agreed on the essentials of a wage and benefit package described as| UN-Katanga Fighting [iv icc USUMBURA, Ruanda-Urundi| , Reuther and GM Vice Presi. | (AP)--Private radio messages said fighting broke out today between United Nations and Ka- tanga forces in Albertville, on|settlements. Lake Tanganyika northeast off By late Sunday, Elisabethville. |had been made at 75 plants This would expand a five-day(where workers are represented war previously waged at three by the UAW and at four plants cities along a line through the|represented by the International heart of the rebellious provinces Unjon of Electrical Workers. --Elisabethville, Jadotville and|This left 50 plants to go, but settlements | der off course from the three air corridors linking West Ger- Imany with Berlin, 110 miles in- side Communist East Germany. the three allied occupying pow- ers and West Germany, said: obey the demand to land in the dent Louis Seaton and their|indicated place will bargaining temas spent the|stroyed by the use of all means, weekend trying to hasten local!including rockets. applied to United | The main stumbling block to|States, British and French mil-| |a settlement has been failure of i itary planes which might wan- The Soviet note, delivered to "In similar cases in the fu- ure any violating military fight- ng aircraft which refused to be de- Montreal Man Is Recaptured MONTREAL (CP) Real Chartrand, a 20-year-old convict who slipped out of Montreal's Bordeaux Jail Tuesday with a group of prisoners being re- leased on bail, wag captured early today by a police consia- ble in pis: A 4 Montreal North, Meanwhile, a province-wide search was started for George Starnino, 27, a convicted bank robber and election thug, who walked out of Bordeaux Satur- day by using a visitor's pass to bluff his way past guards. Influence Of Church Chartrand was captured fol- lowing a 'wild chase through Montreal North streets. No shots were fired. Police Constable Gilles Gam- elin spotted him riding a motor- cycle and gave chase for several blocks before capturing the con- crashed. a veto on all executive action. | The uncommitted countries; UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- have not in general backed the|State Secretary Dean Rusk will Soviet demand for the troika|iry to find out from Foreign formula. However, many uncommitted leaders in their speeches at Bel-| grade earlier this month ex- pressed dissatisfaction with the way the United Nations was beingrun, and the conference declaration said it was "abso- lutely necessary to evolve a more appropriate structure for the secretariat of the United Na- tions, bearing in mind equitable regional distribution." Hurricane Esther Continues On Path MIAMI (AP) -- Severe hurri- cane Esther continued west- northwest in the Atlantic today and forecasters said the Atlantic seaboard should keep a close vict when his cycle skidded and|watch on future advisories. | d | Churning along at 12 miles an {Minister Andrei Gromyko here [this week whether Russia is ready to negotiate on a com- {promise settlement of the Ber- |lin crisis or intends to press its demands at increasing risk of war. \ High Western diplomats said the fateful issue of war o e has seldom been more starkly presented in modern diplomacy than it will be in the impending United States-Soviet talks. Rusk came to New York from Washington Sunday night, fol- lowing a three-day policy con- ference with the foreign minis- ters of Britain, France and West Germany. He said he wants to Ireland's know from Gromyko whether there is "a basis for serious ne- gotiations on the questions raised by the Soviet Union in the past months." On leaving Washington he had expressed cautious optimism about the outcome of his mis- sion, saying "I think it is im- portant to be optimistic until things prove otherwise." GROMY" ILL 'TALK' American aide, Capt. William Ranallo and another U.S. offi- cial, Vladimir Fabri, were on the ill-fated plane, piloted by a Swede. Hammarskjold's death faced the whole United Nations organ- ization with a major crisis, A bitter battle is expected between East and West over any poten- tial successor to the shy, de- tached Swede who had been the chief executive of the world or- On Tuesday OSHAWA --General Mo. tors plants here will lay off 6,- 000 workers Tuesday because of strikes in U.S. plants which sup. ply parts, officials said today. They said the layoffs would be necessary even if the strikes were settled today and that most of the remaining 2,500 Osh awa workers will be laid off by the end of the week if the strikes continue, Gromyko, who reached New York by plane Saturday night, would not say whether he was ganization since 1953. optimistic or pessimistic. He commented: "We'll see each other, we'll meet, and we'll talk." | Both men are here to attend] the UN General Assembly ses- sion opening Tuesday. Rusk said they would "probably be seeing each other" at that time. He told reporters the time and place of their first Berlin talk |had yet to be fixed. Rusk is expected to tell Gro- Kamina. {negotiators hoped to have most| Starnino, sentenc 10 15 pour the tremendous storm had News Of Death | Shocks Commons OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker said today the death of Dag Hammarskjold is a '"'tragic day" in the history of efforts to maintain world peace. There was a gasp on the Com- He said he would not give her name because her next - of - kin might not have been notified yet. Opposition L e a d e r Pearson said Mr. Hammarskjold was myko that the United States and |its allies will not tolerate inter- |ference with aircraft flying in |the corridors to West Berlin * Anxiety Increases {across East German territory. |There were several instances DUBLIN (AP)--Ireland was|last week of Soviet fighter craft plunged anew into anxious fore-|buzzing civilian airliners. poding today at reports that | French Won't wise, selfless, sure, resolute, skilful, objective and supremely dedicated. The world could ill afford to lose such a great man, espe- cially at this time. H. W. Herridge (CCF--Koote- nay West) speaking for the CCF - New Democratic Party group, said the death of Mr. _ . _ Hammarskjold is "shocking and dl mons floor and in the galleries when Mr. Diefenbaker said the United Nations secretary - gen- eral is dead. The prime minister said Mr. Hammarskjold had given his "selfless best" in the preserva- tion of peace. Mr. Diefenbaker said a Mont- real woman who worked for Mr. Hammarskjold was also killed in the plane crash in Rhodesia. Katanga sources reported the of them lined up by Wednes- action erupted near the Albert- day. ani memes of 3 inion ON GOAT ON ROOF 'UP FOR SALE' and members of an Indian UN| p CHATHAM (CP) -- Pro- years in penitentiary last year|wings up to 150 miles an hour for participation in a lover a small area near the bank holdup in suburban Outre-| i.e mont in 1959, escaped while ~~ 3 | iti . iten-| Early today Esther was cen-| Sua transfer fo, peniten |{tred about 725 miles east of Suffers HAVANA (AP)--In a blow to {Roman Catholic Church influ- ence in Cuba, the government I Sunday deported Bishop Ed- " i iately known|Boca Raton, Fla.; 460 miles uardo Boza Masvidal and 135, Yas tot Smmekaely which southwest of Bermuda and 375 priests aboard the Spanish ship| anabied him to walk through tie miles north-northeast of Turks Covadonga. Five unidentified]. tes i [Island in the Bahamas. 4 : ; prison gates. {Canadian priests were reported =" - - rere to be in the group. 37 KILL | | Irish troops had been over- whelmed at Jadotville in Ka- tanga. The report dashed the rejoic- garrison which totals about 1,400 vincial police are seeking men. pranksters who left a goat belonging to Roger Jacques of nearby Dover Township Crows Patching U After Huge Storm ED A crowd of several tragic news." LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)--| Emergency crews from three states patched up damage today done by the city's most destruc- tive thunderstorm. It was ac- companied by high winds that| ripped along the plush gambling hotel strip. One person was killed. Thirty- ene were injured. Damage was estimated between $1,500,000 to $2,000,000. Police Arrest 1600 hundred cheered and applauded the bishop as he arrived at the dock |in a police car. He was arrested last week after a bloody anti- Soviet demonstration by Catho- lics in front of his church, the Church of Charity in downtown Havana. Bishop Masvidal blessed the crowd. He stood on the deck with other priests as the ship steamed out of the harbor. perched atop a farmhouse roof Sunday When Mr. Jacques came home he found a sign on his mailbox: 'See goat on roof. For sale." The pet goat, described as exceptionally tame, was tied to the chimney. She came down after loosening several shingles. |for Checking Reason For Plane Crash CHICAGO (AP) -- "No con-| Chicago area this month. Sept. 1, a Trans World Airlines con- ing that set in Sunday after a government announcement said it had been informed that a truce had been arranged in Jad- otville and that Irish casualties were light. Radio Eireann pumped out {the message every hour to con- |sole worrying relatives. News- {papers rushed out with head- iines saying 'Victory for the These frantic last words from |stellation crashed near suburban Irish." a plunging Northwest Airlines| Hinsdale minutes after depar- Then just before midnight Electra provided a major clue ture from Midway Airport. Sev-|came word to Dublin from Gen. investigators seeking the | cause of a crash Sunday that killed 37 persons including twe Canadians. Thirty-two passengers and the enty-eight persons died. HEAR FINAL WORDS 'he final words from the |Electra--"no control" -- as it| Sean McKeown, Irish com- | mander of the UN Congo force, saying the Jadotville garrison | had been overwhelmed by Participate In Conference NEW YORK (AP) -- The French government has told the United States that it will not participate in any allied confer- ence with the Soviet Union or |ent circumstances, the New |York Times says today. It is understood, a Washington dispatch to The Times adds, that this message was conveyed to President Kennedy personally in the presence of the British and West German foreign min- |erlin and Germany under pres-|]| {spun to earth from a height es. | vastly superior forces. {timated variously at 200 to 300 hound Plane It ino. a. muddy Nate recorded at the con- Diefenbaker Celebrates | He said it could be stopped : : . : \d ter- LONDON (CP) -- Police car-|Shelagh Delaney and actress| The 89 - year - old peer was field southwest of O'Hare Inter-| ot ; t i ried the last, limp sitdowner Vanessa Redgrave, daughter of given a seven-day sentence last|hational Airport within a minute or 'of the uomed piano] Birthd ay {from doing so--not by proposing OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|2 four-power conference with from Trafalgar Square in the prominent actor Sir Michael week for refusing to drop plans|after takeoff, disintegrated a et Plane heart of London early today, Redgrave [for the Trafalgar Square dem. burned. There were no SUIVIY: age of another pilot calling the bringing to more than 1,600 the| Police also arrested Labor onstration Sunday. ONE the" dead. were altower. : id re ale oe ans ry he 2 ssuns STATEMENT mother and her four young| Federal investigators said the ig hg hd | Pha is in) i . Their war veteran|two words indicated the pilot vil disobedience in Britain. the demonstration, but wanted) From his jail cell, Russell is.|Children. T p ter John Diefenbaker, the Prai.|the Soviet Union on Germany-- rie lawyer who first entered the|Put by warning Moscow that Commons 21 years ago, ob-|aNY attempt to interfere with serves his 66th birthday teday|the West's rights and obliga- with his usual 16-hour day and|tions to supply the military and perhaps an evening walk. civilian population of erlin ___|isters by French Foreign Minis- {ter Maurice Couve de Murville {in the White House Friday. | The story also says in part: | Couve de Murville told thel |Allied leaders that his govern- ment believed that the Soviet {Union was trying to impose its |own solution of the German {problem on the West, crew of five died as the Florida- UK. Demonstrators e are going to have the {tape examined by the finest {analysts in the country," said Najeeb Halaby, federal aviation agency administrator, who flew from Washington to direct the investigation. Allan Boyd, chairman of the Civil said resistance and simply sat down| cineration of human beings be- cause governments are occupied with stuck to their policy of passive! tige." idiotic matters of pres- The London demonstrators ganizing all moving van compa- nies in eastern Ontario, Banks said today. His instructions followed suc- cessful settlement of a week- Aeronautics Board, that "so far as we know, there Electra before it crashed. Halaby said: ago. | Mr. Diefenbaker, who has rep- were no malfunctions" in the resented the Saskatchewan rid-|Sunday when he toppled from {ing of Prince Albert since 1953 {and held the office of prime |minister for four years, has St. Catharines youth was killed |a boat as it prepared to dock at this Georgian Bay community. Police identified the victim as jon the pavement and awaited had planned to start their rally arrest. (in Trafalgar Square and march - Campaigners against nuclear to be on hand to watch for pos-|sued a statement calling for an|father watched in horror as the had lost control of the big air- : i dhe digs : i ati ie plane blew apart, spewing bo-|craft. They said the tape record- weapons staged demonstrations |sible violation of civil liberties. |international resistance move- dies over a wide area. |ing could be of considerable use here and at Dunoon, Scotland,| Another arrest was that of Ca- (Ment against nuclear weapons.| oy "otra crash was thelin solving the cause of the ac. vite Ametiegs Zolatis-cary- non John Collins, precentor of| "We call upon people every- second major air disaster in the cident. ing at C submarines are §{, Paul's Cathedral and chair-|where to rise against this mon- TTT Attempts will be made to sep- based in Holy Loch. {man of Britain's campaign for|strous tyranny," his statement arate a on the hi 1 In London, police aregsied nuclear disarmament, who had|said. "We call upon scientists to Hoffa Orders ling. : rsons, including two y y { : ; 3 154 i a rolalso announced he would be on refijse work on nuclear weap- . | ow The greying prime minister, Would lead to war. Parliament, during the eight-| p . ; ; -- Or anization supremely confident and vigor-| BE hour sitdown in Trafalgar etween 10,000 and 15,000 per- We call upon workers to| g ously healthy as when he first| . Sauare {sons packed the huge square at|black (hoycott) all work con-| KINGSTON (CP) James took his seat in the Commons in Youth Killed oq . " the height of the demonstration, (nected with them and to use Hoffa Teamsters union interna- 1940 as the Conservative mem- At Dunoon, police arrested 351 organized by the committee of|their industrial strength in the tional president. has instructed ber for Lake Centre, says: | persons Who tried to block oft|100, an offshoot of the CND. [struggle for life. Foal presue a, ie "I never felt better. I'm as| In Boat Fall access fo the submarine anchor pist fights broke out between| "We will not tolerate the in- Canadian local 938, to begin or- fit now as I was 20 or 30 years ; age, London arrests includeq/ccklers and sympathizers of g | JIONEY HARBOE. (CP) = A a ne a Fo i uced|the committee in the crowd, but playwrig 3 the demonstrators themselves POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 demonstrators to paddy wagons|mile along White hall lleased from jail here. Police carted away the last{to Parliament Square, about a { When about 1 am., a few hours be-|heavily reinforced patrols of po fore philosopher Earl Russell, |lice barred their way they sat leader of the committee, was re- down in the square on the roads land sidewalks. i "There is no reason to believe there was any explosion within the aircraft that would be the long strike her against Mac- Cosham Van Lines Limited, the first in eastern Ontario. only one problem to which he|Robert Gordon Clark, 19. will confess--his weight. Reports said Clark was boat- | | He 'teeps a calorie count and|ing with a cousin, Charles Nick- Settlement was reached at midnight Saturday just as pick ets were to be reformed follow ing a court injunction ednesday night. result of a bomb or sabotage." The Canadians ord, B.C. takes after-work and weekend killed were walks to geep his weight in the [the dock the controls jammed |George Peck, native of Kitche- neighborhood of 170 pounds--a and Clark served ner, Ont., and Stanley Schnare good weight, he feels, for his|board and crushed between the lof Abbotaf ifive-foot, 11-inch height. |erson. As the boat approached was hurled aver- boat and the pier. GAINS IN Berlin Mayor Willy ponders election re- West Brandt sults in his Socialist party | headquarters at Bonn last night. Brandt's party gained some parliamentary power in the polling as Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's Christian Democrats lost absolute con. trol of the West German par- liament. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Bonn)