THOUGHT FOR TODAY An optimist may be wrong as often as a pessimist, but he has a lot more fun. The Osharoa Sie WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warm today and Friday, with a few cloudy in- tervals, winds southwest 10 to 15. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90--No. 236 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1961 Authorized as Second Post Office Department, Class Mail Otrawe PAGES Prove Point On Way | Back Down EDWARDS AIR BASE, Calif (AP)--In the most dangerous X-15 flight yet, a piloi set a world's record for going up--to prove this important point about ¢oming down: That an astronaut doesn't have to ride back to earth as a prisoner in a falling capsule-- earth's atmosphere in a winged craft and land where he wisl.2s. Air Force Maj. Bob White Wednesday set a world's alli- tude record for winged flight, | 40 miles, and then made a belly-flopping re-entry into the atmosphere which cracked the windshield of the rocket plane. The stress and friction heat would have torn a conventional plane apart. | The method spreads the heat of re-entry over a large area of | the plane. Wednesday's success- ful flight proved techniques which may be used in re-entrics on future manned orbital flights in winged rocket craft, scien- oo - tists said. ll " PANEL CRACKS b White said the windshield cracked as the plane hit the {thickening atmosphere at 60,000 or 70,000 feet. He said the crack didn't interfere with his control. White plunged down 16 miles in a. screaming dive before pulling back on the stick White regained control as the | plane hurtled into thicker air. Expecting Exodu From Teamsters Li Big OR By NORMAN WALKER Ix Hota gan be lelied upon Io 300 degrees under Pini Tas Te RK (AP)--AFL-CIO fig it back. He has said he willl mum the X-15 was designed (0 as a substan- | meet head - on any AFL-CIO withstand. : 3e andins ial membership exodus from [threat to his union and is con-| - White 'made a glide anding hal = R. Hoffa's Teamsters fident that "'we'll come out on at this big air base and told re- union now that the federation toP- ; potters PiHis tight. take has hung out a welcome sign. Meany declined to speculate ° eg reaciec. an ai e > George Meany, AFL-CIO pres-| whether the open bid for a 215,000 feet = hoe I! an eight ident, said he was already busy | Teamsters rebellion will result miles higher : i) ie Srovious processing affiliation appli-/in a bloody labor war. Xi» recor 0 5 51 oat, i catjons from about 100 of the] "We don't go in for headbust- fop Speed Tas bil dion, nearly 900 Teamsters locals. ing," Meany said. 'You'll have our, un Bg X-15's previous The AFL-CIO executive coun-|to ask Mr. Hoffa about that." vile Pi altitude -- well cil voted 24 to 2 Wednesday to| Hoffa said in Detroit Wednes- : Me li al "me authorize Meany to issue char-/day night that he will sue| B10 Space ue Sal i ) ters to locals defecting from Meany for $1,000,000 on grounds|S y tes OD ie son ed Hoffa's rule. Federation offici- of slander and libel. The Team-| "0.2 & A a Tain | on." He 200, 40 MILES INTO SPACE id they have no idea how|sters chief said the suit will be| } : : : Als SH he on may thus de-|filed in U.S. district court in De-|t0 300 miles in all directions. cide to switch allegiance, but|troit next Monday. | expect a sizable number. | Hoffa said he plans the court|Cancel Manoeuvres --|action because he wants to force| . Meany to try to prove his Qyer Sick Seamen charges of corruption in the | Teamsters union. VICTORIA (CP)--About 35 of| The AFL - CIO council ses-some 200 seamen on board the| sions this week have brought|destroyer escort Ottawa were | bad news to Hoffa. He's hoped | stricken Wednesday with gastro| to be invited to bring his ex-|enteritis. | pelled 1,500,000 - member union| The outbreak forced the Ot-| {back into the federation. In-|{tawa to withdraw from joint stead, AFL-CIO leaders voted|Canadian-United States manoeu-| overwhelmingly to continue the|vres and return with her sick Teamsters exile and to encour- bay full to base at nearby age bolts of Hoffa's members. Esquimalt. Strike End DETROIT (AP) -- Individual problems at 25 local bargaining| units held the key today to re-| . sumption of production by Ford Motor Company following hd ~ sen Seeds wk Notice Of Appeal with the United Auto Workers union on a new three-year na- | tional labor contract. ° | UAW President Walter| For Dr Lacro cuther said he would recom- - 1X mend to the union's Ford na- tional council this afternoon that HAMILTON (CP) -- Notice of, That the jury's finding that the settlement be approved and | appeal was filed Wednesday on the plaintiff had lost his wife's 2 nation-wide strike which be-/ behalf of Dr. John R. Lacroix, | affection, and that she had re- gan 10 days ago be ended. The Hamilton surgeon ordered last/fused him sexual relations international executive board of week to pay $18,000 damages in| "prior to the commencement of the union endorsed such actionja suit for alienation of affec- the alleged wrongful conduct of Wednesday night. tions. the defendant disentitles the However, strikes will con-| The award was made by Mr. plaintiff to any award for dam- tinue at the 25 local units which |Justice J. F. Donnelly after a ages against the defendant for have unresolved problems, hearing before a six - member alienation of affections or for pending a review of all issues| Supreme Court of Ontario jury.|criminal conversation." bv the international executive|Steelworker Otto Langer had! That the judge had twice di- board tonight. charged Dr. Lacroix withirected the jury and allowed Reuther said locals with "le-| alienating the affections of his|Langer's lawyer to suggest to gitimate specific problems" will) Wife, Helen, alleging criminal|the jury, "that the failure of the be authorized by the board to conversation and loss of consor-' defendant to either deny author- continue to strike. But he ex. tum. ship of the letters purported to pressed hepe such problems, The notice of appeal contains be written by the defendant . . . would be resolved in time to|12 points. Among them: was corroborative of the fact permit the company to return] That the damages werelthat the defendant had written! to production by Monday. |"'grossly excessive." the letters: KENNEDY WARNS WEST | LJ | President Lyndon Johnson. And| "As a nation we are stronger | {his good fortune has aroused and richer because of these ex- changes," Rusk said. "Even on By HAROLD MORRISON | "I see no evidence, as yet,|their Allies had to look to their WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pres- that there is zny clear solution|defences and to consider means dant Kennedy has warned the/to Berlin." {of protection including fallout estern world 1t 1s moving AV DIR | shelters during a lon io through a period of "maximum WIDELY DIFFER ors Tying 3 HO hazard" and so far East-West] While Russia had expressed a|ous nuclear weapons "will be exploratory talks have providd Willingness to discuss the issue, proliferatd." | no immediate hope that the Ber- Kennedy said the talks he and lin crisis can be settled easily. State Secretary Dean Rusk had SENDS GENERAL The East-West collisions have | With Soviet Foreign Minister An- Other areas of conflict exist pushed mankind to, as he drei Gromyko in the last three/ outside Germany, he said, and viewed it, the gravest danger | Weeks indicated the wide differ-| announced that he is sending point in all history. ences in East-West viewpoints, |Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor for an| "There still are very major Gromyko had defined what{on - scene survey of one such differences," he said, between| Russia means by a free Ber- area the Western powers and Russia." and guaranteed access) Taylor, the president's mili-| Emphasizing he will conti-| routes. There had been no nego- tary adviser, will go to South] nue to seek a peaceful solution| tiations. Although Soviet pro-|Viet Nam Sunday to meet Viet-| no matter how much he may | Posals were completely unac- namese President Ngo Dinh be criticized by the opposition | ceptable to" the west, the. ex-/Diem and U.S. officials. They, Republicans at home, Kennedy | Ploration will continue through|will discuss ways of helping told a televised press conference American Ambassador Llewel-|South Viet Nam cope with ex- Wednesday: lyn Thompson in Moscow. panding Communist attacks on "Our ambition is to protect|that Southeast Asian country. our vital intrests without a Taylor also may visit Laos CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS war, which destroys and doesn't| and Cambodia. really represent a victory, for | policy," Kennedy said POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Kennedy, addressing his 16th press conference in Washington, fand the first in nearly 1%! months, for the most part was solemn Americans are rightfully con- cerned in this age of annihilat- ing weapons because "we hap- pen to live in the most danger- ous time in the history of the NEW TALKS TO COME human race." 3 Meanwhile, an import West: Meantime, Americans andiern conference is scheduled! {KEEP BELOW May Kick Out South Africa voted 67 to 1 with 20 absten- tions in favor of a motion of censure calling Louw's speech "offensive and erroneous." MAY LEAVE UN There was speculation follow- ing the censure vote that South Africa, which withdrew from the Commonwealth earlier this year, might pull out of the UN. Louw angrily charged that the censure of his policy speech was part of a prearranged cam- paign by the nations of black Africa to smear his govern- ment. "We had been forwarned this| would happen," Louw declared] after a parade of African dele: | gates denounced his speech. | Souht Africa cast the lone| vote against the censure pro | posed by Liberian Ambassador Henry Ford Cooper. Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ire- land, some Latin American countries, Italy and Portugal were among the abstainers. | Britain, France and the United States were among nine countries not participating in the vote. Three countries were absent. State Secretary Dean Rusk|for-item tariff negotiations and| | Wednesday night called elimination of peril points and| bushel of items at one time in American trade agreements. d {from other countries. The government's new trade ¥ |program, to be submitted to MISS RAYBURN the minimum | necessary authority to enable plicated by the fact his most | effective lieutenant in Congress, | House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 1 lis dying of cancer. Camel Driver | Though Democrats control UNITED NATIONS (CP)-- Possible expulsion proceedings prime topic of bchind the scenes i discussions at the UN today but gis imminent. Checks indicated that the non- vided among themselves, some Hl feeling they had gone far Wednesday's motion of censure following a speech by South Af- Re ; Ambassador Seyni Loum of NIGERIAN J0)3 WACHURY [Svuegel had said Wednesday his = og Sion 'tomorrow' but it still was ew emocratic not clear whether he meant a | | The UN charter provides that Rule In ur ey a member who consistently fl ISTANBUL _(Reuters)--Some |pelled by the General Assembly Sunday in a general electitnjurity council. Well informed marking the country's return to| sources said it is highly unlikely| being ruled for 17 months by a|on such procedural grounds. military administration. The suggestion of expulsion members of a new national as-| Wednesday in the 100-member sembly and 150 members of the| assembly. Four main parties are taking South African Foreign Minister Explaining the Canadian vote, part in the oe -- the Re. Eric Louw made a speech de-|Senator A. J. Brooks (PC -- ustice party, the Republican, Policy. _ |delegation, said he considered i Justice vary, 3 Rat ond the| In an unprecedented action, a dangerous-precedent 10 cen- Both the Justice party and|by the 47 Afro-Asian members, General Assembly debate. the New Turkey party have| tion which overthrew the re-| M Mo @ gime of Premier Adnan Men-| May ean T Most members of Menderes' | old Democratic party have Justice party led by retired | Gen. Ragip Gumuspala. By HAROLD MORRISON (our negotiators to bargain as , representatives of the greatest pect the Republican People's WASHINGTON. (CP) The rep party to emerge With Lhe fired the opening shot in a bat-iomy in the world," Rusk added the Election. icy that could bring major| Southern advocates in Con: changes in American trade with| gress are expected to put up a ALSO PATIENT States where the administration| learned, likely will include pro- VANCOUVER (CP) ialist and surgery consultant said Wednesday some cancer cer but kill the patient. Sir Peter Dixon described a British Columbia doctors ta- king a post-graduate course Last - resort treatment of hopeless advance cases failed Post mortem examination showed no traces of cancer | { By JOSEPH MacSWEEN against South Africa were a the consensus was that nothing white African countries were di- enough for the present with 1 ~ #3 rica's foreign minister. {country would move for expul- | precise day or some time soon. outs UN principles can be ex- 12,000,000 Turkish voters vote/on recommendation of the sec- democratic government a f te r South Africa could be expelled The voters will elect 450 followed a hot-tempered debate senate. It grew up after a speech by CONSIDERS DANGEROUS publican People's party, the | fending South Africa's apartheid Royal), vice - chairman of the New Turkey party. {the General Assembly, spurred sure a nation for a speech in been formed since the revolu-| deres. . . wanes inet: Liberal Trading But political experts here ex- Kennedy administration ha s|trading nation and richest econ- largest number of seats tle for a more liberal trade pol-|at a Miami assembly. KILLS CANCER Canada and Western Europe. [stiff battle against Kennedy's ' | Moving into the southern new program, which, it is Royal Air Force cancer spec- treatments may cure the can- series of cases to about 10 at the B.C. Cancer Institute fo nrevent degth, he. said. Vi iti U S both the House and Senate, 1s1ang v.». but showed fatal marrow g Kennedy has found that on ma- jor politically-sensitive domestic asphasia and liver damage | KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) -- issues, he cannot count on com- due to the nature of the {Bashir Ahmad has sworn on the Plete support of his own party chemical and radiation treaf- |Xoran before his wife and four|in Congress. The foreign trade ment. children that he will not look at/Program thus may encounter another woman during his visit|Stiffened barriers when Con-| Ito the United States. gress reconvenes Jan. 10. | But the 44-year-old camel cart| The U.S. last year sold about ldriver is having trouble con-|$20,000,000,000 worth of goods |vincing other jealous members| abroad, with more than $3,000,- of his clan that he won't go 000,000 going to Canada. Ameri ag i i ing | Can imports from all countries astray on the trip he is making), lied $15,000,000,000. at the invitation of U.S. Vice- | | considerable jealousy among his associates. © |the most narrow grounds of here next week: Kennedy £aVe Armed police have been material self-interest, we need po detalls, but ® was Jearned posted outside Bashir's hut this trade." € meeling may be on a depuly|qince he reported receiving foreign minister's level with the| qo 1 threats . us. Kealice sug rian = Bashir is all set to leave by See Continued lewing their positions in the)... saturday, but his relatives | light of Gromyko's clarification gc he will come home with] . of Soviet proposals. the big head. They fear that in| Sales To China Kennedy said he hoped thatthe foreign land he will eat pork| West Gemans will have settled |ang ham and drink intoxicating] OTTAWA (CP)--Prospect of on a new government by then|jjquor--al forbidden to Mos-|cOntinued Canadian wheat. Sales and that it also will be repre-|jems, They threaten to ostracize|to Communist China following sented so that it could partici- him on his return. the current 2! -year wheat | pate with '"'more vigor" in Al-|--m-- ----lagreement was seen today by| lied policy - making on the Ber-| | . Chen Ming, leader of the first lin issue. Discloses Russia [Red Chinese trade mission ver | France and West Germany, pee to come to Canada. | are believed less inelined than Fired 20 A-Tests "If conditions are suitable, | Britain and the U.S. to pursue _ (this trade can be continued for| WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-|a Jong time to come," Mr. Chen dent Kennedy disclosed Wed-| said in an early-morning press Hesda' that Russia has fired ,nference following the mis- e than 20 nuclear tests in|_ TR a the atmosphere--more than the 5°" $ arrival in Ottawa. | 19 which the United States an.| He pooh-poohed a published nounced Russia fired. suggestion that his country may| He spoke of "over 20 tests' |be unable to meet payments on at his press conference, {its credit purchases of Canadian | In response to questions about wheat and barley. | {the number the president used,| But he declined to say the atmosphere, Is consistent{the White House said the whether China will buy more] with its security interests. He United Sattes had announced/than the $362,000,000 in wheat did not, however, rule out the tests only when the information|/and barley provided for under possibility of some day firing|would not give the Soviets a tip the present grain agreement test shots in"the atmosphere. ion U.S, detection methods. twhich runs until the end of 1963. talks with the Russians at this time. In other fields, Kennedy took these positions Nuclear tests--The U.S pat- tern of keeping its tests below ground, without spreading dan-| gerous radioactive particles in may face its greatest opposition, | posals to discard old-style item-|™ for| offer wholesale cuts on a whole| |escape clauses which clutter up|return for similar concessions ERIC LOUW More Allied Troops To W. Germany WASHINGTON (AP) -- An additional U.S. 10,000 air and ground troops have been or- dered to Europe to bolster the Allied garrison manning the line between West Germany and the Communist East. They are in addition to the 40,000 army troops beginning to deploy abroad in the first phase of a program to increase con- | ventional war capability against possible Communist aggression. By year's end, U.S. forces in Europe will total about 300,900, About half the 10,000 are army men, the other half Air National Guardsmen. | | [since the war. {when Sir Derek Walker-Smith, |a former cabinet minister under | Macmillan, charged that joining | BRIGHTON (CP) -- Prime Minister ment today won pproval from to seek membership for Britain in the European Common Mar- ket. overwhelming show of hands after long and spirited debate among the 5,000 delegates at the party's annual convention. It was the most controversial is- sue to come before the party The opposition Labor party|] has already gone on record in|; favor of Britain joining the Eu- ropean trading group unless the price demanded by the existing members is too high. The smaller Liberal party is unqualifiedly in favor of the move into Europe. A row broke out on the floor of the Conservative meeting here Show Of Hands After Debate "What is more likely is that Macmillan's govern-| through Britain's entry into the Common Market, Europe and a hesitant Conservative ' party (the Commonwealth will {end to develop closer trade relations with one another. That could only be to the advantage of The approval came by an|all" NO POPERY RULE There have been undefined objections in Britain that Com- mon Market membership would diminish the status of the Queen and also place British policy un- der the control of countries with arge Roman Catholic popula- ions. Sandys referred to these when he said: "I have even read that we should lose our Queen, and that we Popery. should be swamped by "These fears, however exag- gerated, are I know held with deep sincerity. They can be dis- pelled only by thought and dis- cussion." the Common Market would de- stroy Britain's Commonwealth ties. "We shall have to treat our old C o m m o n wealth partners worse than our new E"-opean associates," he declarer amid loud applause. Walker-Smith put forth a reso- lution stipulating that no Com- mon Market proposals should be approved which involved a surrender of British sovereignty or were inconsistent with pledges to Britain's Common- wealth partners or British far- mers. But Commonwealth Secretary Duncan Sandys silenced the pos- sibility of a revolt against the government by declaring Brit- The Pentagon announced Wed- nesday that the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, with strength of about 3,000 men, would go overseas at an early date. Another 2,000 soldiers also will be sent to handle and guard weapons. Eleven fighter squadrons of Air National Guard units, with a total manpower of about 5,000 will start heading overseas Nov. 1. Armed Police Cross Border - Congress early in 1962, "must| Kennedy's fight against pro-| F E B ] 0 lat include the tectionists likely will be com-| rom ol er in CP from Reuters-AP BERLIN -- Ten armed East Berlin policemen crossed into West Berlin early today and tried to search a house for a fleeing East Berlin policeman, West Berlin police said. Two West Berlin radio cars hurried to the scene and stopped the East Berlin policemen after an elderly couple in the house had been heard shouting for help. West Berlin police said the in- cident happened before dawn when an East German police- man ran across railroad tracks to the West in a portion of the border not clearly marked. He was chased to the house on West Berlin territory. The East German police said they were still in East Berlin, but withdrew when the West Berlin police insisted the house was in the French sector. West Berlin police said that 12 refugees crossed into West Ber- lin from noon Wednesday, in- cluding five during the night. Four were policemen in uni- form. Find Radioactive Iodine In Foods WASHINGTON (AP)--Fallout from Soviet nuclear tests has in- troduced radioactive iodine 131 into fresh food supplies in many areas in the southeastern United States and probably throughout the eastern half of the country, the public health service an- nounced today. "However, present fallout does not warrant undue public concern, nor initiation of public action designed to limit the in- take of radioactive substances," Surgeon-General ' Luther Terry said. Todine is a source of potential concern because physicians say| extensive overdoses might re-| spit in cancer or other .injury| te the thyroid. | cat ain's entry into the market would tend to strengthen-- ing position of Commonwealth countries. delegates by declaring: political will in Europe to have from the Commonwealth. He clearly swayed wavering Demand France Quit Bizerte TUNIS (AP)--President Habib Bourguiba demanded today that France agree to the principle of quitting its giant Bizerte base. He laid this down as a condition before Tunisia will sign any political or economic agreement with the French. In a major policy address, Bourguiba announced a note to that effect has been sent to the French government. The president did not specify any date for the eventual with- drawal. Apparently for the time eing, Bourguiba wanted an rather than weaken--the trad-|agreement of principle. Bourguiba told the National Assembly: "Nothing will be un- ertaken with France without a ior agreement on the total "I believe that, if there is the|evacuation of Bizerte." "Either this evacuation takes us in, ways will be found to en-(place or there will be war and able Britain to draw closer to|a total banishment of France Europe without drawing away fom Tunisia" Bourguiba added. RR MISS TIGER-CAT 19-year-old Ingrid Osmolow- | Dresden, Germany, she came sky was selecte Miss Tiger- Wednesday" i Born in to Canada in 1954. --CP Wirephote APPROVE : i