' THOUGHT FOR TODAY Behind every successful man stands a devoted wife and a surprised mother-in-law. fie Oshawa Ses WEATHER REPORT ™ Cloudy with showers tonight and early Thursday morning. followed by partial clearing and cooler temperatures. VOL. 90--WNo. 235 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1961 Post Office Deporrmen: zed es Second Class Mail Ottowc TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Flee I'rom Volcano On Island CP from Reuters-AP Dutch liner coming to take them frica-- | to Cape Town. i : ne Town, South Altica- Hers, the islanders will wait and children of Tristan dz |Wwhile nature decides the fate of Cunha spent a night of agony on a rocky outcrop in the Sout! Atlantic, eyeing the glow of a he island where they and their orebears have lived in almost complete isolation for 150 years. volcano that threatens to de- KNOW LITTLE OF WORLD stroy their island homes. | Scarcely a dozen of the 260, The refugees fled Tuesday the total population of Tristan, aboard two small fishing boats had ever left the British-ruled from earthquakes and volcanic island before. Their knowledge eruptions that began Sunday on|of the outside world is based on Tristan da Cunha, a 40-square-| hooks, films, radio and hear- mile speck of land halfway be-| say. The populace refused evac- tween South Africa and South|yation during the Second World America and one of the most re-| War, mote islands in the world. Plans were for a small group The refugees fought their way of volunteers to stay behind on through 13 miles of dangerous Nightingale Island when the 9,- seas and waded ashore at Night-|284 - ton Dutch ship Tjisadane ingale Island, a bleak, unin-|picked up the rest of the refu-| habited rock a mile long and|gees this morning. three-fourths of a mile wide, t0| The volunteers were to watch spend the night and await a the course of the eruption--the Raul Roa, Cuba's foreign | Assembly in which he charged | a new attack against the gov- ernment of Fidel Castro. His handful of sheep and cattle and |its tiny fruit and potato crops. | British Vice Admiral Sir Nicholas Copeman, commander- ecutive board meets tonight cracking. Great lumps of rock | with a double mission--to re- and earth have been forced up view the Ford Motor Company about 30 feet." negotiations and to consider AVILY CHARGE PLOT AGAINST CUBA charges were later denied by the United States is organizing | Adlai Stevenson, United States dor P. K. Ponomarenko, who representative at the UN --AP Wirephoto Must Find Peaceful ii press conference by Press At-|™ ftache A. D. Popov in what he in-chief of the South Atlantic-| what to do about the American ERUPTS HE BR rT | first in modern times on the is- land--and return to Tristan if anything is left. They will act fp as caretakers until the others can return, tending the island's 'S A ica station in Cape minister, gestures during | Problem Ton Gib that before flee. speech yesterday before the | ing the islanders radioed:| United Nations Genera DETROIT (AP)--The United "Lava is flowing. The whole ™ Auto Workers' international ex-| eastern end of the island is Motors contract. Top-level Ford and UAW ne- gotiators were to resume ses- sions today on the last two na- tional non - economic the nine- issues standing in the way of ending| The 7,640 - foot high volcano, which occupies most of the is- land, was reported erupting heavily Tuesday night, peril- ously close to the settlement of Edinburgh. The sudden eruption of the )! Solution: Gromyko LONDON (CP) -- Soviet For-!with | eign Minister Andrei Gromyko lan. s he left here for| "There is a definite sign that Prime Minister Macmil-|define it as less or more firm," a condition of "extreme nervous| | he replied. FINDS SIGNS WARNS BERLIN A-WAR THREAT Abduction Charged By Soviet THE HAGUE (Reuters)--The | Soviet embassy today accused] § Dutch authorities of '"'abduct-| ing" 35-yearold Russian bio-| chemist Alexei Golub, who| sought asylum in The Nether-| lands Monday. | The embassy also alleged that x the Dutch police had tried to "abduct" his wife Irena, who flew back to the Soviet Union without her husband. | 1ST add defector-99... husband. | The charges were made at a \! LORD HOME |described as a statement on be- half of the embassy. Popov said Soviet Ambassa- Expect West To Ignore 'Red Warning (was involved in Monday's | airport fight with Dutch police |before Mrs. Golub's departure, {has handed an aide-memoire to |the Dutch foreign ministry ask- ing for an interview with the scientist, CP from AP-Reuters | The press attache, who was; BERLIN--The United States, lalso at the airport, alleged that|Britain and France are expected |when Golub was brought to his|to ignore a sharp Communist wife in the office of the Soviet| warning against plans to send Aeroflot airlines he was without) West German traffic policemen [tie and shoelaces. {into West Berlin to help the | Thinks Gromyko | nuclear war. {convincing Mr. Aware Of This By FRASER WIGHTON BRIGHTON, England (Reut- ers) -- Foreign Secretary Lord Home today said the West has convinced Andrei Gromyko that interference with access to West Berlin would mean fighting that could lead to a nuclear war. Home spoke to the anmual Conservative party conference afte meeting the Soviet Foreign Minister with Prime Minister Macmillan. G r o m yko stopped over in London 24 hours on his way back to Moscow from Washington talks with President Kennedy. If there is interference with Western access to Berlin, Home said, a fight would start and no one could say that it would not end in the ultimate disaster of i! t! "I think that we succeeded in Gromyko that situation must not be allowed to arise." Home said there was one thing which had to be done be- fore the West could talk about| the substance of a negotiated| settlement. The West also had to persuade Gromyko that a negotiated set- tlement must take account of the Western as well as the So- viet position, with some give as well as take on the Russian side, he said. "Now we are in a better posi- tion to talk about the substance of a serious negotiation. But the esson of these preliminary ex- changes is that while we must be relentless in pursuit of peace, we must be implacable in se- ° curing the essential liberties." Home deprecated public state- ments about the Berlin crisis that could jeopardize the West's negotiations with the Commu- He said a hazard of the nego- iator is that "his own people are forever signalling his cards to the other side, not deliber- ately certainly, not maliciously, but as a part of our tradition of free speech. "I must ask everyone to re- member that the technique of negotiation is to pocket each concession and then " try to raise the bid." DECRIES PUBLIC DEBA' Home said he hoped eve: would help to see negoti "It was to convince Mr. Gro- myko' that if the Russian gov ernment persisted in handing He claimed that Golub was in| overworked local police. : East Germany's Communist tension." The Soviet embassy| regime said Tuesday night that wished to speak to him to find|any attempt to bring West Ger- over the questions of access to|are carried on in pri the city of West Berlin and the Istatus of the city to the East German government, they would be courting a head-on lic debate on the worl forms conducted in of 120,400 long - dormant no on Tris-| told reporters a r RIS: oo Stan st that there is "a unders| 5 the is growing" on the Berlin Prob-| very, important," lem. at the airport. tanding is gro wing of" wp oot additional signs here, Tin Dro: Which or. and I got such impressions in rormyk9 SHC he United States as well, that {there is growing understanding "Everything must be done to|that a peaceful solution must be there Is ; ¥ Togists. of an all-night session tonight.| py A. I. Males, director of! The union is trying to get 3|{he Berard Price Jusutuite for} Gromyko left by plane to re- new contract in time to present| Geophysic esearch in -| likita Khrushchev on! oy it to a scheduled ns of its| hannesburg, said that "The cen [o0 10 Nikita Rluusiel with find a peaceful solution. | |found. J dll Ford council Thursday after- tral Atlantic ridge is basaltic] : av last week] He said Russia "is doing its| "That can be said, definitely. noon, The council can recom-|rock in which this kind of ex-/President Kennedy last week pes to facilitate such a peace-| Gromyko refused to comment mend acceptance or rejection of | plosion is unusual." and his meeting here Tuesday ful solution but not everything/on the possibility of an East- depends upon the Soviet govern-| West summit conference scon. * The Lg non-eco- UAW A ] D 1 ment." | This was not discussed during To Help With GM P Second World War reached." |the heat out of it. nomic natisnal problems at {his talks with Macmillan, he Ford are production standards Hellyer Demands Cliff Pilkey, chairman of the|local bargaining committee have) Gromyko said his ialks with| The usually dour Gromyko Oshawa and District Labor|found the company is attempt- Macmillan and Foreign Secre-|flashed smiles, Vs for victory and a union demand for more company-paid union representa- Big Crime Probe | Council and a member of the|ing fo infringe on the seniority tary Lord Home in London had and a new troika sign to news- TORONTO (CP) -- Paul Hell-| Local 222, United Automobile|rights of employees by making been useful. ference of the Teamsters union that the Teamsters are not ask- ing to return to the AFL-CIO. If they ever did so, he added, it would be with the understand- ing that they could run their own affairs and organize work- ers without worrying about ju- risdiction. George Meany, AFL - CIO president, made a counterdrive against the 1,500,000 . member Teamsters look attractive by FIRM ON ONE POINT said, At the same time, Gromyko, The talks here and in the stressed that Russia was firm| United States produced no tang- "on one basic point, that anlible progress toward peaceful East German peace treaty must| settlement of the Berlin crisis be concluded and an end to the|but appeared to take some of to the incident, he said, land or air would be ¢ red| collision." - ¥ aggression and met accordingly. PH 0 I N PUB | The East German official NE handed to diplomats of the West- A ! | IS DEAD DRUNK ern powers in Prague, Czecho- ear nw ge, | slovakia, asked the United It was gin that made the |stop the proposed movement. ] B ttl H ff telephone in the Three Arrows | The allies, who do not recog- (0) a e (0) a pub go dead around closing |nize the East German regime, "wy, : icati in the past. You might say the phone |communications in the | NEW YORK (AP) -- Organ- | got dead drunk," said the | hi ig German rca do ized labor's leadership, having | manager, Stanley Payne. jcidec 'ast wee refused to take back the ex- light every night and came on he, Mrden hi he Hoot Retiin hood of Teamsters, appeared again in the morning. Repair- ol 0S the 25-mile frontier|equally unwilling today to de- men investigated and could |9UlY g ; clare open war on James R. : Ber chai. | ntormed ures in fst Bor Hu' controversial ca 1 The one of them spotted the |: _ i been equipped| After overwhelmingly votin, paper men after his hour and| gin pottle, upended for quick, lin police have hg down a proposal to pox a Te out the circumstances relating| man police into West Beta bt | news agency, ADN, said a note PILSWORTH, England (AP) | States, Britain and France to time each night. have never acknowledged such By NORMAN WALKER The phone went out like a |traffic police to Berlin to ease "o'r gy, ovina) Brother find nothing wrong with the [vith East Berlin. Hoffa's controversial catch - all {40-minute session with Macmil- {with American M-1 rifles "but tives to handle plant grievances. ver, Liberal member of Parlia-| Workers, GM bargaining com-|what it calls "refinements to| "We think there has been a ment for Toronto Trinity, said mittee said Tuesday night the today he would demand a fed- union will apply Thursday to eral royal commission to inves- Ontario Labor Minister Daley tigate Ontario's crime situation, |for conciliation procedures. if Premier Frost doesn't do so| Reporting on negotiations bet- before his retirement. {ween the union and General In an interview, Mr. Hellyer| Motors, Mr. Pilkey told the repeated a statement he made labor council Tuesday night Tuesday night that Premier that by Thursday, negotiations Frost should stay in office to will be 35 days old and nothing fight organized crime because has been accomplished to date. he had a reputation for acting] Locally, he said, union and when he knew of corruption in|company have had nine meet- his government. ings and so far members of the Berlin's Street Anger Seethes By RICHARD O'REGAN the West Berliners here is an- BERLIN (AP)--Berlin's street grier than it ever has been of hate and fear seems to since the Communists started seethe with frustrated anger. | building their wall through Ber- Perhaps nowhere on earth do lin Aug. 13. two worlds -- East and Wesi--| "They are angry with every-| face each other with such pre- body. They are furious with the carious uncertainty, such heated Communist police. They are an-| emotion and human tragedy as/gry with the Western powers on Bernauerstrasse. for doing nothing. They are On the Communist side of the frustrated with their own help- street, green-helmeted Commu-|lessness." ; nist police finger their auto-| Bernauerstrasse is a mile matic rifles. They watch from |long and 40 yards wide. As you the windows and - ledges of enter it on a brisk, sunny Oct- apartment houses. ober morning, it looks at first In the West, a silent crowd|like any other street in Berlin. also watches and waits. Six-storey, stone -faced apart | { | | the local collective agreement." certain contribution in the right | "Right now," the ODLC chair- direction," he said {man said, "We (union and com-| The Soviet \ |pany negotiators) have a battle Was asked whether cach side |going, the same as they were DOW had greater understanding {having in the United States. We © : |are going to retain our in-plant Berlin. {transfer rights and have told the company we are prepared! {to fight them in this area if they stand on their present position" he said. | Mr. Pilkey added the com. | pany has attempted to mini- {mize the transfer rights union! and company have in their | present agreement. 'We walked 149 days on the picket line in | 1955-56 to gain those rights and we intend to keep them," he said. Iwill arrive : He said General Motors has, err fe relay pi made no proposals to the union," | dictyict. economic-wise--or any other-| The 29 visitors will meet three wise. They have not moved at|japanese students who have either the master agreement, Orispent several months on dis- local agreement level," heltrict farms under the Canadian- added. |Japanese farm training pro- However, Mr. Pilkey stated, gram. union negotiators hope in the] The tour is one of six spon- very near future the company|sored by the Japanese prime will make a proposal and bar-|minister's office. The leader is gainers from both parties can|Teisuo Meshizuka, a science sit down and discuss such a|professor at the Tokyo Metro- proposal in a sensible way. politan University. ment's . attitude was less firm than that of the American government. Japanese Youths On Goodwill Visit OTTAWA (CP) -- Japanese youths on a goodwill mission U.S. VOICES DISAPPOINTMENT Nobody really knows why ment houses are on both sides. they are waiting. Another East| Berlin family to try to jump FINALLY CHILLS into Western fire nets and es, But slowly Bernauerstrasse cape from communism? An. Decomes the chilling dead end other exchange of shots between | ©f the Western world. East and West Police? The pavement is empty, up d down as far as you can see MOOD 1S UGLY an eas "Something violent could hap." Sithe r direction. Nobody pen here any moment," a West walks there. No cars are Berlin policeman says as he and "2 ~c0: | scores of others try to keep the, Only a small vase of red car- crowds moving. "The mood of nations is seen, "That's where an East Ber- liner died" you are told. "He CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS | back. He jumped for a net--and | missed." By JOSEPH MacSWEEN |laboration with his deputies in UNITED NATIONS (CP)|his daily work. Possibly a "superman" isn't] The ¢ proposed statement is a needed, but more than three! modification of the Russians' or- weeks after Dag Hammar-|iginal demand that deputies rep- skjold"s death the great POWerS| resenting the world's major po- appear as far apart as ever ONllitical groupings have a virtual a successor for the late United|veto over the secretary-gener- Nations secretary-general. .lal's actions. The Russians want US. Ambassador Adlai the statement promising collab- Stevenson and Soviet Deputyioration delivered before the Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin|nominee's name is proposed to held yet another in a series of the Security Council, which talks Tuesday night without suc- must make the nomination to cess. ; the General Assembly. A U.S. spokesman said: "We| f the other's point of view on Gromyko was asked whether he thought the British govern- toward Berlin lan. Several times he told re- porters that everything must be foreign minister done to avert a military colli- sion over Berlin. Heath Finished Paving Way ar 0s 0 FOr ECM Talks By HAROLD KING PARIS (Reuters) -- Deputy Foreign Minister Edward Heath prepared to fly home today after paving the way for nego- tiations on Britain's entry to the European Common Market in a meeting here with foreign min- isters of the six-country eco- nomic community. | entry will start in Brussels, Bel- gium, Nov. 8. Observers said that many fears regarding Britain's .nten- tions in applying for market membership were set at rest by Heath's speech Tuesday to the foreign ministers of The Six-- France, West Germny, Italy, | measured service and hang- | probably with instructions not to Full negotiations on Britain's year Teamsters exile for al- | ing above the phone. | During the pub's trading | hours, they found, drips from the bottle were falling on the phone. The gin was seeping into the mechanism, putting it out of action. y morning the gin in the {use them before being told to." First Snow Falls 'In Newfoundland ST. 'S (CP)--The first phone had evaporated and the | 57. Jon's. (CP) i snow of the season fell over mechanism worked again. | Newfoundland early today. It Payne has moved the phone | moited on striking the ground. | to a dry spot. [Temperatures were in the mid- 30s. Union Nationale Hearing Goes On By JOHN YORSTON QUEBEC (CP)--Robert Mar- tineau, son of Legislaitve Coun- cillor Gerald (for J. D., Begin, legislature | member and former coloniza- | tion minister, to testify Oct. 24. firm, was to continue testifying| called on so far. today before the Salvas royal] Gerald Martineau, Union Na- commission about his firm's|tionale party treasurer, has business with the former Union been identified by numerous Nationale government. | witnesses before the commis- The commission also issued a|sion as the man to see about Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg. summons for his father to ap-|arranging patronage and getting pear as a witness Oct. 17 and kickbacks from companies sell- [] Still No Dag Successor |said, "they said he should make [it afterward." According to informed sources, the Americans said that due to a typist's error their statement originally contained the clause that the nominee would promise collaboration "if appointed to this post." Inclu- | sion of this clause--which the {Americans said was inadvertent --implied the statement was to be made before the council ac- tion. The informants said the Rus- |sians also had dropped their de- ing goods to the provincial gov- ernment. The three-man royal commis- sion is investigating purchasing practices under the Union Na- tionale government. TELLS OF UN BUSINESS Robert Martineau, in 100 min- | utes of testimony Tuesday, said p his firm did 90 per cent of its t business with the Union Na- European and the Americans a|tionale government and that in West European. Both sides, it| the five-year period under in- said, agreed the other four| vestigation sold some $1,379,000 | : should come from the United| 1 goods and services to the States, Russia, Latin America| 80Vernment. and Africa: The United States and Russia| had agreed previously on nomi- nation of U Thant of Burma tu fill out Hammarskjold's term | oped over the fifth deputy, wit the Russians wanting an Eas Quotes Reason For Martineau and|They are the most importaht| | owner of an office supplies) Witnesses the commission has g leged corruption, the AFL-CIO executive council met to con- sider forming a rival union to try to snatch members away from Hoffa. Hoffa responded to the chal- lenge at Portland, Ore., by say- ing: "We'll meet them any- where, any time, and we'll come out on top." Hoffa told the western con- fi fi fi reporting here that some 100 of the nearly 900 Teamsters locals have applied to quit Hoffa's out- it and come Into the main labor 'ederation. However, Meany's fellow AFL-CIO chiefs seem to have little appetite for an all - out ight against Hoffa's powerful Teamsters. out Hamma term Lot "Passion Pit' expiring in April, 1963, if they | could settle the disputed points) TORONTO (CP)--Lack of a about the deputies. | police foot patrol in suburban Meanwhile, the General As-|New Toronto has led to a teen Mrs. Franklin D. Roose- | t MRS. FDR IS 77 he Eleanor Roosevelt Cancer made no progress. We are dis- REVERSES FIELD appointed." {mand for appointment of only Zorin said the U.S. delegation|three principal advisers to the sembly's 21 - member _steering| #8€ "Passion pit" at a service SO was scheduled to station lot, Councillor Clifford velt smiles on eve of her 77th birthday anniversary yester- Foundation. The money would be used to finance new cancer was on a roof over there. The | Communist police shot at him. The West Berlin police shot POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT; 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 research facilities in this country and support an inter- national training fellowship program here and abroad. (AP Wirephoto) take up today a request for an| Johnson told town council Tues- day at AFL-CIO executive Armed men are virtually the! Zorin claimed the Americans|yonday "handed us a memor.|Secretary-general -- from the|t ; 1 dav Tigi : k international investigation into|"9Y T&L. council headquarters in New only sign of humanity -- except |'took a step backward" in dis-| d Sh h " Western. Communist and neu- | for an old woman, sitting at her cussion of when the new interim @ndum saying the nominee {.ajict blocs--and agreed with{the 'conditions and circum-| The local police inspector will York where she announced a high window, staring at the secretary-general should make| should make a statement before|the United States on five. stances" of Ha m m a rskjold's|be asked to report to council] union campaign 4o raise $1,- West, a bird-cage beside her; |a statement promising close col-|his appointmnt." Tuesday, he! But a second standoff devel-|death, 'odxt Monday on area policing.| 000,000 in dimes by Dec. 7 for