THOUGHT 3ome drivers never stop to think, while others never think to stop. FOR TODAY dhe Oshawa Time Ee WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with sunny intervals to- day and Thursday, not much change in temperature. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Authorized as Post Office oom ores t, Ottawa THIRTY PAGES VOL. 90--NO. 218 ISLAND EVACUEES LAND ON From babes-in-arms to the aged and infirm, hundreds of the families of "Tangier and | OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1961 DOCK Smith Island watermen land- | ricane Esther, while their ed on the docks, here, seeking | menfolk sought out safe moor- refuge from approaching Hur- ' ing places for their boats in Katanga Chief Wants UN Troop Withdrawal NDOLA -- President Moise Tshombe of Katanga today de-| manded the immediate with- drawal of United Nations troops from his secessionist province This snagged truce talks, for the UN had previously rejected such an idea. Tshombe said he would leave this Northern Rhodesian confer- ence centre tonight to return to Elisabethville, his capital. The Katanga leader, battling UN efforts to force his mineral-| rich land under the rule of the| Congo's central government, placed a wreath of white lilies before the coffin of UN Secre- tary-General Dag Flammarskjold as it lay in state in a Ndola church. Radiation Increase | | Is tanga said today UN troops at| Elisabethville abandoned their| headquarters under attack and regrouped outside 1 lo | Baluba refugees camp at Elisa- bethville Tuesday, the radiojegcorts. Following Hammar. agreement. | 2e|p {number of refugees left theistrictes camp in answer to Tshombe's appeal to place themselves un- der his protection, and were shot at by Swedish soldiers A strong police guard was thrown around the control tower of the airport here, where the two sides were meeting. All ac- cess to the tower and the air- port administration buildings was sealed off . Tshombe met for more than five hours Tuesday with Mah- forces should be withdrawn at'moud Khiari, a Tunisian who once. heads the UN civilian opera- "It is the only way to prevent|tions in The Congo. Khiari, who a massacre." had conferred with Tshombe Meanwhile, Radio Free Ka. before in his capital of Elisa- bethville, took over the peace mission that Secretary - General Dag Hammarskjold died trying| to fulfil. | The scene of the talks was, the closely guarded Ndola air-| port building. The two arrived and left separately with police Then he talked with reporters after a morning session with the UN delegation trying to ar- range a Katanga cease-fire. "We have made counter prop- ositions which the UN side has transmitted to New York," Tshombe said. 'Now we await their reply. 'PREVENT MASSACRE' "We consider that in the in- terests of the United Nations and of the entire world UN capital, Katangan N soldiers clashed near the aid. The b skjold's tradition of quiet di-| )! y, the talks were held in t secrecy. d a large Reported OTTAWA (CP)--'Very sharp increases" in radiation levels were recorded in central and | eastern Canada the weekend of | Sept. 16-17, Health Minister Mon-| teith reported today to the Com- mons. A reading of tions per minute per cubic metre of air was recorded at Toronto, the highest ever re- corded since the health depart- ment began its fallout sampling program in August, 1959 Mr. Monteith said knowledge is incomplete concerning high levels of radiation from short- lived fission products They "might" constitiile a health hazard if continuing for a "sufficient" period of time. The high readings were made last weekend at Fredericton, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto and Windsor The internatiomal commission on radiological protection has set the safe permissible radio- activity level at 6.6 disintegra- tions a minute per cubic metre but this figure ¥s based on con- tinuous explosure throughout a lifetime Jamaicans Vote For Withdrawal | | West Indies federation, created|and rising industrialization by Britain to form a chain of make them the free islands in the Caribbean,|most prosperous lost its largest and wealthiest] SE heh member today after Jamaica| EXPRESSES REGRET In a radio address, Manley ex- voted to withdraw. h The vote in a referendum Pressed regret at the decision Tuesday was 251,776 in favor of "which defeats what I believe withdrawal and 216,371 against.|10 De the only safe road for This weakened the position of |' N ca, Prime Minister Norman Manley| In another radio address, of Jamaica, who campaigned Bustamante said "we are deter- for federation with the other Mined to rule ourselves." Call- British islands stretching down!!"8 charges that Jamaica might to the coast of South America. turn to a Cuban brand of com- The argument against federa- 25 2. fata Sie. he tion, led by Sir Alexander Bus-|o a for Jamaica within -the tamante's opp 0si tion Labor British Commonwealth "» DENY: Nas that 1 would goer Secession will allow Jamaica He also said Jamaica would be] >, J2Ek membership as an in. fnadeguately represented in the dependent nation in the British : vl ar Commonwealth. The West In ew feieterion Syerument ; dian federation is scheduled to Jamaica's 1,700, people become independent and a comprise about 56 per cent of member of the Commonwealth the fed eration's popula- by next May 31 federation's Russians Demanding Three-Man UN Plan UNITED NAXIONS (CP) -- Russia threatened today to kill a stop-gap plan for a temporary secretary - general who would succeed Dag Hammarskjold and keep the United Nations ma- chinery functioning at the top. Andrei Gromyko, Soviet for eign minister, indicated that the Kremlin will settle for nothing less than a thffee-man '"'troika" secretariat to min the world or ganization. The West says such a body would p Under the s"op-gap plan UN assembly would name an interim secretar) neral to fill for the present the position left vacant by. Hammarskjold's death, The West and many neu trals rallied to the support of the proposal External Affairs Minister Green, who headed the Cana- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ge aralyze the UN. |fears that the entire question of the|selecting a new secretary-gen-|Said that P | dian delegation at a brief open-|their Berlin rights or their stake ing of the 16th assembly, met in the United Nations. Tuesday with U.S. State Secre-| The secretary is said to be- tary Dean Rusk and Foreign jieve that the choice of wa Secretary Lord Home of Britain. peace over Berl yar There was no announcement| promier Rha, How ISD on what they discussed, but pre- Sichey and that 8 y ' pre-i soft ap : ( ko. ¢ sumably among the subjects SoM rea umyku. cen a a P " Co-opera Nas the problem of the secre-'tion in working out the world's problems, might do more harm FEAR DEADLOCK than good to hopes for a peace Soviet opposition heightened ful settlement London press reports today : rime Minister Mac- eral would wind up in an East-/millan was ready to fly here West deadlock, leaving the UN|from London for the UN meet- administration without a leader, |Ing if he feels he can save the But the United States served! Situation from disaster notice it will press for adoption! The Daliy Mail reported that of the plan, before the death of Hammar This latest crisis was added|skjold, Macmillan "was exam- to the agenda of talks between|ining the possibility of a British Rusk and Gromyko, who agreed initiative . to break the East to' open conferences Thursday [West deadlock." They originally had planned 10]... coe discuss the Berlin i primar.| CAUSES GLOOM ' ily | News of the Soviet troika Rusk is reported to have de. Stand plunged delegates into cided on a stern approach to the|8/00m as the 99-country assem- talks, including a warning 'te[PlY Bot down to business Tues the Soviet government agains: |92 believing that the United States| The as and its Allies will be luffed or| our minutes in tribute to Ham frightened imte surrendering! marskjold. emb met for only | Blast Shakes 470 disintegra- KINGSTON (CP) -- The new|tion. Tourism, bauxite mining A b Pl las a get-away vehicle by the S estos ant | cigaret bandits. Inspector Lewis # REACH AGREEMENT ON ISSUES AT GM Say Troops Fired At Ambulances | | BRUSSELS (AP)--Prince Al' pert of Belgium has asked the | |urgent intervention of the Inter- national Red Cross for the pro- tection of all Red Cross serv- DETROIT (AP)--General Mo-|approve a new t - . tors and the United Auto Sei If no ag ifs Fh 8 A ers reached agreement today on reached on one by that time a three-year contract coverifig|the council could authorize lo GM's 350,000 hourly rated em-|cal unions to continue their ployees. |strikes or it could call a coun- gue conse) will be submit-| try-wide walkout. «|ted to the union's national Gen-| Th i if i s : oral Motors council for approval| drop. a a. it chose, i ay. | pending and le; ituati . na Semen. Jane after a 27-|as jt . at wii Be pation { | he argaining ses-| worki | |sion on local plant issues. Ne-| orking 3Eresments. ' |gotiators had worked over de-|GM HALTS |tails of the agreement for 64] Local strikes, which erupted "| days. with the passing of a 11 a.m. :| The giant automotive concern deadline a week ago last Mon. {has been made idle by local|day, temporarily took GM com- strikes since Sept. 11. However, [pletely out of auto-making and the small harbors and creeks of the mainland ices in embattled Katanga. --(AP Wirephoto) | In Geneva, an International Arrow indicates approximate | path of hurricane Esther to- ---- |Red Cross committee spokes-| : {man said the committee has|! B.C. Power respect for the Geneva conven-| victims of the events." ; #| partial production began Mon-|at one time made idle more The Belgian independent day following settlement at/than 250,000 of the company's has challenged the province's United Nations troops Four local settlements over-| Monday the corporation pro- take it to court over the transfer <"UN mercenaries are shoot- ' §wimagion .| of GM plants where such agree-| week. They were t of $820,808 to a trust fund for ajing on Katangan ambulances, | pie Beach ments have been reached. That ghey AiG Yt the ys ad p Y parent organization of the re-l. ""@icapathville were trans- warehouse in Los Angeles, Pon-| tric would welcome court action. : § © inl north and northwest direction [and Fisher Body No. 2 at Flint rn while still occupied by sick peo- y r is. : { » Premier W. A. C. Bennett has| 05 50 5 day. Weather Bureau advis at about 12 miles per hour. Mich. I'l d tions and the protection of the Social Credit government to The letter said night brought to 98 the number | duced its first vehicles in a cently expropriated B.C. Elec. C0 0 Fee ive UN bases as, N.C., and moving in a tiac Motors at Pontiac, Mich, | SEOUL (AP)--A South Kor- At 10:30 a.m. Tuesday both|sentenced to death three former sides began their last-lap nego- (top officials of ex - president MONTREAL (CP)--An explo-|Beedham gave the licence num- New York city, in the midst of the "hurricane watch" zone, -------- aip-- rer | Dag Plane Crash Probe Continues NDOLA---Officials today con-| The probe into the crash that tinued to invesctigate the nearby killed 14 others including Miss] plane crash that killed Dag|Alice Lalonde, a UN secretary Hammarskjold as plans were from Joliet, Que.. Monday so made for his body to lie in far has turned up no evidence |state in the small Ndola Free of sabotage or attack, two pos- | Church in this Northern Rho-|Sibilitias raised by UN spokes- desian. centre. | men earlier. Preparations also were being| Veteran pilots completed for officials of the/the crash site 7! ; add United Nations. Katanga and of this city said the pattern was here, and. in a Rome meeting| other governments to place| typical of power failure or bad Sunday with Ricker Grew. in wreaths before the body of the instruments. Col. Bjorn Egge of [Radial ¢ i UN secretary-general. Norway, UN intelligence chief, aly : _ said a British pathologist will| Stiles said in a press inter- be flown from London to de-|view that the Ruhr industrial {termine whether the 15 victims area centred around Dusseldorf, | died in the air or on the ground. 50 miles north of Bonn, has a] The lone survivor, a UN guard, population of 17,000,000 -- one| has been quoted as saying he third of the West German pop-| On Warheads heard a series of explosions be-|ulation--and accounts for half of fore the crash of the DC-6B West 'German industrial produc- OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- ; Ta tion ister Diefenbaker said today na- BODY NOT BURNED sis tional security will be the over- Egge said Hammarskjold's riding consideration in the gov- body was the only one not ernment's decision on whether burned and a broken left leg Ito acquire nuclear warheads for Was his only external injury. Canadian forces in Canada His face wore that same ex- ' wession of determination of a He added in the Commons man who worked himself and that no decision has been tgken| thers hard by the government and that Hammarskjold's body will be decided Tuesday night to investi-| 2 speculation to the contrary is flown to his native Sweden. gate exploitation of Indians based on nothing more than the| ooo (omen Ww Il give Working in Manitoba's wild rice views of those who want the UINIYIEn WI give), iustys Sovernmen} to take a final usually reserved for monarchs. The move was prompted by a s The last non-royal Swede to re- letter from Lloyd Lenton, a This speculation did not take ceive a state funeral was Louis Manitoba welfare official who into full regard the internationallde Geer, a reform premier who!said the Indian harvesters are situation died in 1896 < paid between 15 and 55 cents a Mr. Diefenbaker also said im There has been widespread|pound of rice, which is later re ortant Western disarmament | speculation about the cause of/tailed for up to $4 nronosals will be laid before the|the crash. Rhodesian officials| Whites are supplying food 'at United Nations General Assem- have discounted suggestions outlandish prices' 'and liquor to Ibly by the United States. Ithat the plane was shot down./the Indians, the letter said. | "instructed its delegates at Leo- | poldville and in Rhodesia to proceed to the spot and un- |} Challenges dertake all measures to ensure |! Socreds newspaper Le Soir said I Bad Some individual] locations. 350,000 production workers, received a letter signe y u roduction of GM's 129 VANCOUVER (CP) -- British eight Belgian doctors in Ka- | plants 12 expected by early not] L2CoL, Settlements gradually Columbia Pow er Corporation tanga alleging atrocities by: | week. 4 {got GM back into operation. number of senior executives. injuring male and female nurses * 08 left 31 still to be wrapped u i : h g The corporation's president, Tun a uniform. Further- ¥ey 4 & |The latest agreements came at Pontiac. ick, Diistmobile got A. Bruce Robertson, indicated) ; ore UN ambulances do not |a Chevrolet assembly plant at gf seg ice ag n Tuesday Tuesday night that the former| ec ue civilians. Three hospitals Van Nuys, Calif, a Chevrolet] 2 . 3 Ex-Offici x-Officials called for an investigation into|* ory placed centre of storm the transfer of the money from : : 125 miles southeast of Hatter- --(AP Wirephoto Map) |ISSUES STILL PENDING B.C. Electric funds on the evel Farlier reliable reports from} meee Sitll to be settled also were of the government takeover. |ine Congo Rave said UN Hoops non-economic national - level is- : 3, 1 oon 'io jon at least two occasions fired sues. ean revolutionary court ar taerm d be nln Rene annie. NB States Ready about the transfer is designed| Hay § o to divert attention' from the| - tiations, aimed at settlement of) Syngman Rhee's government for "tshabb th To | B 1 e G . both outstanding local and na-|rigging elections in March, 1060. ee Snort of et elieve ang F Wind Floods tional issues. They re: They Choi inkyoo,4 Ow perv 4 ! OF f : ' |agreement on an economic rome minister under Mr Robertson 'says. there 1s Part Of Lar e v3 ; | package of wage and fringe Lee Kang-hak, 38, former na- ML. n say : } By THE CANADIAN PRESS [send her inland anywhere from| benefits just before a Sept. 6/tional police director, and Han nothing improper about the Jund} 4 | The metropolitan ateds of the the Virginia coast on up. {strike deadline. Hi-suk, 53, vieoehatriaan of the ici it! On R | northeastern nite tates| Regardless of where sh The UAW's General Motors|central committee of Rhee's dis- joid Sovernmen: officials shout, tario ing |girded today for a battering by her yo punch, ing lands council was scheduled to meet credited Liberal party. designed to give officials) SUDBURY (CP) -- Provincial| Winds and floods brought on by densely populated area in the|in Detroit at 3 p.m. today to| The five - man revolutionary greater incentive by gearing police believe the gang who hurpieage ph Thoisan s al-|U.S. appears certain to take a| court also sentenced Park Yong- part of their remuneration and|stole $30,000 worth of cigarettes| "®2%Y ave fled coastal areas in| heating, Hi h Mi . ik, 56, former chairman of the their retiring allowances to the|from the Motorways lot on we path of tie Stop. hur. |. City, civil defence and mili-| 1g way inister Rhee party's finance committee profits of the company. {Highway 69 is part of a large| , Only part of the vic Obit the! taLY officials in the New York- - . to life imprisonment and Lee -- _loperation responsible for simi-|Ticane is expected to hit the nel 7e eu connecticut metro- | Traffic Violator Chon-hwa, 47, chairman of the lar thefts throughout Southern Maritime Provinces, and Cana: |, yiian "aren of some 16,000,000 party's organization committee, |Ontario. dian Weather officials were uot people urged citizens to prepare, VICTORIA (CP) -- Highways|to 15 years. Police forces are on the look- alarmed. a a for a possible emergency. Minister P. A. Gaglardi of Brit-| The court handed down prison out for a truck believed used or Frida New York city's Mayor Rob ish Columbia was fined $25 in terms ranging from 15 to 3% No high Ahh 2Y expected (rt F. Wagner called an emer-| Saanich police court Tuesday years to 23 uther Rhee cabinet in the southeastern Ontario area] ency. meeting of a host of city|after plea ding guilty to a members, party officials and 1 : enc I SCE. may wet the fringe of agencies today. |charge of passing vehicles on bankers on similar election rig- sion which police believe was ber of the truck as 425578A and| HC recipitation, Civil defence officials in the|the right-hand side on the Pa-|ging charges. deliberately set rocked the|descrived it as a three-ton blue 180" P en -... [city had cots, blankets and food | tricia Bay highway July 11. trike-bound Atlas Asbestos|stake job with the number 852| Esther slapped the North Car. "readiness. and 35 schools! The original charge of care- .» Company plant early today. [on the hood. : olina Foast i 2 oy as vhe| were designated as temporary|less driving was withdrawn by Tunisian Elected Six squad cars and two am. Sometime after midnight Sun- and high winds lo BY "could Shelters. * [the Crown when prosecutor Ken : bulances were dispatched to the|day: the thieves entered the plodded on a course that coud Murphy said he was not con- President Of UN scene but there were no injuries| Motorways yard and attempted | vinced there was sufficient proof and damage was confined to a|i. Ret Ini0 He Srailer Which whin had this warning from the °f this infraction. UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- diesel oil filling-pump in the| toe" then 3 oa 5 Jigar ew Id fo weather bureau: Winds up to 40] Mr. Gaglardi did not appear The United Nations General As- yard : Sa Sy un | {miles an hour, and stronger in court. His counsel, T. P. sembly quickly elected Tunisian Vice-President R. B. Todd i € agai s 9 , its cargo . {than that late today--rain today, O'Grady told the court Mr. delegate Mongi Slim as its pres- said guards at the east-end plant Tet or troetur in which| Off 23 becoming heavy tonight--tides Gaglardi had received only one ident today, but no agreement were diverted by a telephone|the key had been left and d 1C S one to three feet above normal|ticket since 1958, that being for|was in sight on the critical prob- call durive the Hine of tie eo tie y gaat il use today, and higher late in the making an illegal right - hand|lem of choosing a successor to 1e time ol ast. |i 0 pu e trai er iree |day with some flooding at high|turn in Vancouver last year. He|the late Secretary-General Dag For Canada tide. |was fined $10. |Hammarskjold. BONN (CP)--Trade Minister] |George Hees said Tuesday he| {hopes to step up Canada's ex-| {port promotion effort through new trade offices in the Ger-| {man and Italian industrial cen- tres of Dusseldorf and Milan. Hees told reporters he will |recommend the opening of the) new offices in order to put Ca-| nadian trade commissioners in| [two of Canada's big markets for industrial raw materials. | The new 'trade offices were] rged on him today by John] who viewed | Yr! : | 4 miles north Stiles, commercial counsellor] PM Comments Investigate Claim Indians Exploited WINNIPEG (CP)~--The Winni- peg and District Labor Council] # him a state funeral, an honor "CANADIAN AT UN Jaja Wachuku of Nigeria af- Canadian delegate Howard €. Green shakes hands with | ter General | ing Tuesday. Man at ce. not identified id smbly meet- } --(AP Wir » Sad NCAT Aa wr