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Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Dec 1961, p. 1

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Prt eamster Faction Seeks New Strike Vote -- Page 9 [| THOUGHT FOR TODAY Hiding behind a woman's skirts may be cowardly, but a man that small can't afford to be brave. ¢ Oshawa Simes WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and cooler today. Snow Tuesday, likely changing to. freezing rain, VOL. 90--NO. 288 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES ETINGS STRIKE UNDER WAY GM TALKS RESUME \- Canada Ousts Soviet Attache OTTAWA (CP) -- A military|ment said Loginov was declared in attache at the Russian embassy} % sis 'es WHILE PICKETS SURROUND PROPERTY --Times Photo by Bruce Jones | persona non grata because "he incompatible with his matic status." CAUGHT IN ACT : | It said Loginov was arrested| by the RCMP in the act of re-| ceiving secret documents from| a government employee. | The employee, not identified, was said to have reported to the RCMP Loginov's attempts to obtain secret data. Loginov, the statement re-| ported, "attempted to obtain| secret information from a Cana-| dian government employee after carefully cultivating his friendship over a period of 18 months," "Initially, Lt. - Col. Loginov! sought to obtain only informa- tion of an innocent nature. Later, however, Lt.-Col. Log- inov made it clear that he was prepared to pay for information on matters which could not law- diplo-| | | | | |has been expelled from Canadajhad been engaged in activities ' MRS. EILEEN MARSHALL Charge Youths In Kidnapping Of Secretary TORONTO (CP)--Two youths --one the sgg of a kidnap sus- By RAE HOPKINS Despite a weekend marathon collective bargaining session, United. Automobile Workers, CLC, and General Motors of Canada Ltd. negotiators failed to reach an agreement before a 12.01 a.m. strike deadline today and avoid a strike affecting more than 16,000 workers in GM plants in Oshawa, St. Catha- rines, Toronto, London and Windsor. A high-ranking UAW official in Toronto said talks between the union and company halted at 4 a.m. today with little pro- gress being made on economic jissues. The union spokesman said union negotiators were expect- jing to meet in committee later this morning and he expected contract talks would resume at 1.30 p.m. Members of master bargain- ing teams of the union and company spent part of Sunday j\dealing with such issues as grievance procedures and pro- |duction standards. Agreement fully be communicated to him." pect found Shot to death in a|was reached on grievance pro- Laos Conference Nearer To Finish GENEVA Reuters)--The 14-| power.-Laos conference today} it close to the end of its work of drawing up an agreement for| making and keeping the Indo-| china kingdom neutral. Delegates agreed that: 1, All foreign military forces should be withdrawn from Laos/ within 75 days of the Laotian government outlining the points of withdrawal. Inspection teams| from the International Control} been charged with kidnapping a blonde secretary. Inspt. Jim Morgan of Toronto investigating the kidnapping of Mrs. Eileen Marshall of subur- ban Scarborough, said today: "I am satisfied that-she shot |solved two vital issues, bringing|Nash."' Earl Nash, 40, a part - time car salesman, was shot to death Saturday. Police .said no charges have {been laid in connection with his} death. His son Bruce, 20, of Toronto and Gary Edward Carmichael, |19, of Barrie were charged with} kidnapping in the abduction of Mrs. Marshall. Commission--Canada, India and|« |Poland--would be stationed at! \the points. 2 | votes th | PARIS (Reuters) -- The for-; eign ministers of the United|a U.S. spokesman disclosed that States, Britain and France!both Rusk and Home will attend agreed here today on the "'broad|the talks in Bermuda Dec. 21-22 | objective of atlempitng to main-| between President Kennedy and jtain' a united and peaceful/British Prime Minister Mat- Congo," an American spokes-| millan. : man announced. They will be able to report to The announcement was made|the president and Macmillan as the foreign ministers began|both on the foreign ministers' important talks ranging over|talks here and on the annual the entire field of East-West! ministerial meeting of the North| trouble spots. | As the foreign ministers met, State Secretary Dean Rusk, Mur. Atlantic Treaty Organization|and firemen) are permitted to até we | which follows, British: Foreign Minister Lord| Home and French Foreign Min-| ister Maurice Couve de ville confined the first 214-hour | | The main problem the foreign} ministers have on their agenda|the main office building and not lis the possibility of negotiations | permitting office workers to re- over Berlin. The United States|port for work. GM _ operations {Georgian Bay farmhouse--have| cedures. JUMPED GUN An estimated 8,000 workers at the GM south plant here jump- ed the gun Friday morning and walked off their jobs and sur- rounded the plant property with picket lines. By the end of Friday's day shift, workers in the north and west plants were off their jobs and picketing GM buildings. Friday's walk-off was not sanctioned by the 13,000-mem- ber Local 222 executive and, despite pleas by Jack Meagher, the local's first vice-president, jworkers refused to return to |the plants. STRIKE CENTRE JAMMED As it became apparent Sun- \day night that a_ settlement would not be reached before |the International UAW author- jized strike deadline, workers jammed strike headquarters adjacent to the Bond street union hall to sign up for picket duty. Steve Nimigon, chairman of the Local 222 strike committee, said Sunday night, even if a settlement is reached today, workers will not return to their jobs until the union - company agreement has been presented to and approved by a general membership meeting of the local. PICKET DEMONSTRATIONS At midnight last night, picket |lines at all GM gates here were jreinforced and mass _ picket |demonstrations were staged to- day. Only 38 American Federation of Labor power house workers and General Motors plant pro- tection department (plant police | | | } | | | enter General Motors property. Picket lines are surrounding : Economic Issue Progress Slow that some foremen are still in- side the GM south plant and have been there since Friday morning. The salaried people, strikers said, are completing maintenanc: work before leav- ing the plant. PLANT LINES PLUGGED Picket police estimated ap- proximately 2,800 cars are in GM lots ready to be shipped to dealers across Canada. Reject department workers said thy lines inside the plant are jam- med and.have never been plug- ged to their present extent before. One of the reasons given for picketing the GM main office is that. a tunnel leads from the William street office building into the north plant and a bridge leads from this building to the west plant, therefore office workers could enter the plants. As salaried employees pulled up beside their place of em- ploymert today, they were ine formed they would not be per- mitted to enter. Only one attrac- tive young girl attempted to enter the building but did not insist on getting in after being told she could not cross the picket lines. Seven picket captains were assigned to work four - hour shifts at each of the 32 gates when the shifts were draught- ed Sunday night. REJECTED PROPOSAL Union officials rejected a General Motors proposal for a new three-year contract Thurs- day afternoon. General Motors has offered a three-year agreement patterned on the recent auto industry settlements in the United States and included a minimum- wage increase of six cents an hour each year as well as im- provements in pensions and the supplementary unemploy- ment benefit plan. George Burt, the UAW's Ca- jnadian regional director, said | Thursday afternoon, after study- jing the GM's proposal it was | 'patterned after the U.S. settle- ment -- with considerable chisel- ing on the side." He said the company's offer was totally inadequate to meet the needs of the Canadian worker. The UAW is making a strong bid to improve GM's pension offer to narrow the gap be tween pensions paid GM em- ployees in Canada and the United States. This bid loomed as one of the major hurdles to a settle- ment although there were other narrow areas of dispute, includ- ing fully paid medical and hos- pital coverage for the em- ployees. The union has demanded pen- sions of $200 a month in Canada for 30-year employees retiring at 65. The present company offer would provide pensions of $127 a month. This includes'a $10 supplementary pension as token recognition of the differ- |e | | } | | | | of | At least four persons were ar-| rested and one policeman was} The A . sient in the melee. | © american spokesman said) Meanwhile another 1,500. de-| .|the U.S, position in The Cong0,|monstrators marched through| jclearly outlined last week bY! Brussels shouting "Kennedy to Rusk, consisted of support forthe pallows." TS A: paenexine | |the current United Nations PTO-| «IN-Gestapo a ees penny to| pore |"UN-Ges ' y to} gram of restoring freedom Of lhe UN," and "We want jus-| | the The external affairs depart- military attache. m 1m. 'iH U Area, SO e a S fly combat 'missions against! ome rges tanga's economy as his govern-. Tshombe said UN jets already Sunday by Swedish SAAB jet tived:in Saigon today, swas-car- was acting on behalf of U.S.|raids against installations of the|a metallurgy plant at nearby|CPters will be stationed in Sai-| Vy ofighting continued ij i ; Home spoke to reporters at > ee ee 1 Rl 'Elisa- motives #nd rolling stock, and/including the high plateau area Pe fa sn i OIL DEPOT EXPLODES ~ ®| than 250,000 gallons of fuel at a and Cambodian frontiers. "There must be more discus- sky. Fires also were reported in Street bankers. 'puerrilla offensive there.) severed diplomatic ties with Al-| lese government) to get a set- considerable part of Britain's }white 1952 Pontiac. rana and confirmed by the Al-| The Katangan spokesman said More than 50 Conservative|of French military bases injeight - page. statement dealing Soviet party congress, de-| over-all war effort. tion in Australia within 18|party 2,319,233 votes: | unity. clear victories. But Katanga| portional representation voting the Labor party, 404,801. Home stressed that use of the bania supported only by Com-| mij< ; oR . e |Elisabethville after a 26 hour) had just scrambled back into! sured, has not spoken so far, Found Guilt \ spokesman for the Albanian|Moise Tshombe today declared|!@ve lost ocntrol of the Senate, Sertainst6: marie comiment. oun ul y of the diplomatic _ staff lations came several days ago. told reporters that the aim of'ian Labor party polled consid- vere bump" by the voters. _|found guilty Sunday night of de- an estimated $385,000 for his| ain and at the end of a four-day| jbia Supreme Court trial, involv-| yation in The Congo and South-|0"S With Russia but France is| Strike officials said Sunday nd ¢ v ac s iaglll ea ' Fy ry } ' ~ -- rae | J a = oe | ¢ t M | found guilty of masterminding|the verdict in the tense silence/have arisen and call for clari-\the Nuernberg rules in a Jer- charge of defrauding investors| talks on Berlin, |with the UN action in Katanga, | baie nok Gs is eyes Gown after the verdict was an- . i? C1 P colonel stood erect with his eyes that caused all this? Could it ood, the torrent of Jewishiand Mount. Baker Investments| ir The Coen and alae rociseea 12 of which carry the death pen- Shoulders. done to! tegality. manded Caldough and the two|STILL NOT IN STEP BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Po- crimes and membership: in a ¢™mblem) above their heads. question and establish our com-/34-year-old financier, who first) meaning that disagreement per-|shouts of "Kennedy killer." serious than. the crimes with|!® expected Friday. Benjamin Halevi to wasilengthy judgment on the four-|1950, which he said was a law death. : I At the post - war Nuernberg |the basis of jurisdiction of the "This. element t th : against b at the centre of a trial. people constituted crimes) Halevi said the court found|the 24 half-ton bombs it prom-| ministers found themselves in|sbip to Katanga' Association in| \for attempting to buy secret |documents from a government | employee. ment said today it asked the! GM EXTENDS SEASON'S GREETINGS lembassy last Thursday to ar- range the departure of Lt.-Col. PERSONS AS RE RENEE ORES SSE RC oa Ta aE SEES nahi pate _/Anaton F. Loginov, assistant . saae An embassy spokesman said om at 1ssion today that the attache left Sun- ' day by plane for Moscow. The government announce- ForU.S. Pilots = SAIGON (Reuters) Uni- formed United States pilots will a 4 a ' P ' ao Communist guerrillas in South ELISABETHVILLE Ka-|bethville in the seventh day of;the UN in Katanga was to crip- Vietnam, authoritative sources . tanga President Moise Tshombe| the fierce struggle for control of ple the province's economy by! -i4 today. PaASE- 1re today accused the United Na-|the capital between the UN and/air attacks. : The sources said the US. air- tions of trying to destroy Ka-\defiant Katangan army forces.| He said attacks on Kolwezi craft carrier Core, which ar ment announced new UN straf-j/had "annihilated" Ko1lwezi's/fighter planes had "annihilated rying 36 helicopters which would In Kataga ing of the important industrial;economic potential for several/for several months the eco- he flows by uniformed US. per- centre of Kolwezi. {months with strafing raids, nomic complex which was our i aa ' . LONDON CP) -- Foreign The leader of the secessionist; But after he spoke, his gov-| pride." Indications were that 16 heli-|\Secretary Lord Home Tuesday} Congo province charged the UN|ernment announced new strafing} A vital processing factory and ' : lealled for an immediate cease- tk pene . 2 "le + Tecnanolaeanc jfire in Katanga. bankers in its attempted de-|Union Miniere Mining Company|Luilu also were destroyed, he|S0n to fly Bho rg a Rom | agin ce to. reporters at struction of Katanga's industrial|in Kolwezi, 150 miles northwest said. : : supply missions he t ie tl be London Airport before he took interests. of here, as well as attacks on} Tshombe said UN jets also\delta and the other 16 will be off for Prris and the Big Four He made the statement asthe ecntre of the town and its/had attacked Kolwezi railroad split into two sections for de- foreign'-ministers. meeting. i to) Negro quarter, es oer destroying several loco-|ployment in central Vietnam, , " s ir 'took --- -- -- attack de: ' bordering the strategic Laos|London Airport before he? t | 'The announcement. said tw another attack destroyed more) g | off for Paris andthe Big Four Russia Breaks |Swedish Saab fighters made| supply depot. (Washington officials 'said re, foreign ministers scetine. ete raids ie pia town = The attacks were undertaken, cently the United States has told) "| ais ee pat he cat é . . blew up an oil depot, sen iNg| ne said, because Katanga's cop.|Britain and France of new|War in. The Congo, said, Diplomatic Tie. giant flames" shooting into the! ner production was embarras-|plans to help South Vietnam} . Nilkes dint tn. A ceaee i faillicrush the mounting Communist}Sions i a : other parts of Kolwezi. sing to the interests of Wall/crush the unting lfire and a meetiig arranged With Albanians eee een ae between Mr. Tshombe (Katan- | said there were no casualty fig- ga's president) and Mr. Adoula MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia has|Ures yet but added: "We fear ° ] (Premier of the Central Congo- amet a ustralia s bania in the biggest Communist) The statement said one gp tlement." Police said the youths-- bloc split since Stalin expelled| of i Figg soe Tage Same's sisleient cane amid weaned uae dandatone™" = 408 Yugoslavia from the Comin-|Worlds most modern tte crowing uneasiness among a believed heading west in form in 1948. processing piants -- at Luilu, u ers et ac | The break, disclosed in Ti-/ Mat Kolwezi Conservative party at the meth- The French and Laotian} Mrs, Marshall was home ads and objectives of the United|s0vernments should agree asjagain today in suburban Scar- banian embassy here Sunday,|none of 'the targest attacked at) CANBERRA, Australia (Reut-jerably more 1an_ @NY\ Nations operation in Katanga. |€a¥ly as possible on the transfer|/borough after giving police an had been expected since Prem-|Kolwezi was military, but they ers)--Politica! observers today/other party ier Khrushchev, at the October| Were vital for the country's! predicted another federal elec-| Totals so far gave the Labor/MPs are expected to sign two|Laos to the Laotian government.'with Nash's death. i MO! ) Liberal| motions critical of the eee ee . ee nounced Albanian leaders as months. and Country. parties coalition, ment's decision to supply 24) ¢ e ; Stalinist and. accused them of cL am PUSH BACK UN As results of Saturday's poll|1,955,911; and the Democratic); 999 - pound bombs to be used trying to disrupt Communist' "The fighting has brought few|continue to come in in the pro- Labor party, a splinter group of against Katanga airfields. : Other Eastern bloc nations "lai : 5 ies. f , P j stricted. are expetted to follow the forces claimed today they had it appeared that the Liberal- shpcouiaier cielo his vsunll pombe will be restricted eee - Kremlin's lead, leaving tiny Al jpushed UN forces 1,000 yards! Country party coalition of| Practice of not issuing comment t siborkak a Com.| 2ack from a vital road tunnel in) prime Minister Robert Menzies| until the election result Is as- B P t f or ni e ongo munist China and _ perhaps pattie. ffic Oy romo or | Nerth Viet Nam and North Despite the growing strength |" : t aired 4 apart from a brief statement Korea of the UN, Katanga's President e government appeared '0\inat the outcome was too un- inbeeey Mes said ihe Alban-|the confidence of his break-|@ ag egeaca ie at tak GENS 4 BUMP lan ambassador went home sev-|/away rovince '"'is stronger|#!€S to seek dissolution of both|GETS | Hh I F d C eral weeks ago. He gave no in-| than core jhouses of Parliament and new But Deputy Prime : Minister n raul ase dication when he and the rest! "We will conquer because we| elections after he was returned) John McEwen said in a state- VANCOUVER (CP) -- George! will|have faith," he declared. to power in 1949. ment that the government had Galas. British Pic leave. He said the rupture in re-| The secessionist leader alse} The main opposition Austral--undoubtedly been given a "'s: "| self-styled "boy promoter," wasl iii frauding investors in @btaining| EICHMANN SHOWS NO EMOTION companies. | The verdict came 13 months) : after Caldough's arrest in Brit-| 8 e e at the jury deliberation, longest ever li itish C id possibly) rarer : jin British Columbia and possibly! part of their two days of dis- ge , eth Te ul Vy I Ing ews: Canada. The British Colum-| cussions to a review of the sit-\2%¢ Britain favor such negota-|here are completely cut off. ing a total of 48 counts against] east Asi opposed and West Germany is : ; " F six accused, had taken two oy rae Wovelan ailinis somewhere in between. JERUSALEM (Reuters) Eichmann showed no sign ofjpartisan fighters," he said. | "It is-hardly necessary to go! sities est German Foreign Minis- esihite"s hinta Hava Adolf Eichmann today wasjemotion as Landau announced| "Questions of great importjinto the details of the basis for) months. : ter Gerard Schroeder joined) | Both France and Britain have| poo . . da} a : , ; : r ; Found guilty on the same|them for lunch and for later|@isagreed in varying degrees] the assembly - line murder of of the courtroom. |fieation. usalem court, even 15 years!fas ; "ype eee ee milions of Jews during the Sec- : "Wow could all this have hap- after the convention. oF Peg falsehood an pong An American delegation| Which has potting support of onl World War SHRUGS SHOULDERS pened in the light of day? Why fraudulent means" were two of/spokesman said the Big Three} ' S. ty lax. ile Eichmann was ordered to sit it j : | WRITTEN IN BLOOD' jCaldough's companies, Eagle|foreign ministers reached gaa sere -- the former Nazi lieutenant- x in SI"was it just the German people} "7, Pee beste 4 imi 5 petro ben | it|,, These rules were written in|/Plains Developments Limited) agreement on broad objectives! U s E b Hi riveted on the three judges as;Rounced. He sank back in the/naye been averted had the Al- pied rH Limited tha Vane etine Siuih Viel m assy it the historic verdict was. passed) chair oe os i i ing Hass llies shown the will to assist the PC uneer ink dcop Grain ' . Nam a the Genenk pase lie 5c ag: im. cage with a sli shrug of his} Jews?" tichma } ep brea he decades tiie _ I ui : : Tul dhich cary tence Gace é Ala dak ter cuyses of anti-/a"d adjusted his earphones as ng justice 3. tutte ge[on Tee neutrality, of 1a. By Demonstrators 'ity He swallowed hard and his semitism? Wha can be Halevi explained the court's| * a4 bt Mag He was convicted of crimes ae often twitched but his 'gaze prevent _, recurrence these' "Halevi said "even if the de-Companies for sentencing at al But diplomatic observers lice Sunday clashed with hun- gainst. the Jewish people, og left the three jules way tOrrors? : fence had riot raised the ques.\4ate to be set later. noted the spokesman claimedjdreds of pro - Katanga demon- es against humanity, war,the menora (the State of Israe Ly page a 2 ig Meh by tion of the court's competence,|_ -The Crown wa there Wet ye agreement ols on fipires ob-|strators who tried to attack the a beyon e- scope o iS COUPE es: se elves ask , previous conviction agains €|jectives."" This was taken as)American Embassy here with} hosiile organization, The accused was expected to which "is bound to restrict it-|° would ourselves ask the | Justice Moshe Landau, in'aj!®™ain in the cage for at least self to hearing the criminal' petence," came into the public eye three|sisted among the Western pow- voice heavy with emotion, de-|{¥9 days while the 100,000-word|charges" against the accused."|" He made extensive reference|/years ago as host at his Northlers on issues such as The| clared: 'There is nothing more judgement is read. The sentence! Yandau then asked Judge \to Israel's Nazis and Nazi col-| Vancouver home to actor Errol|/Congo, ' 4 , read the/jaborators punishment law of|Flynn at the time of Flynn's which you have been charged--! ,, KL ogresngll said the trial =e ' r the worst crimes of the Hitler- "a ogg icon oe > wa trial which ended Aug.|"different from any other kind ite period. . . ." "ig ok S'14. : of jurisdiction" in that it was Li of law dalevi began by explaining) retro-active and sulyatacriioray Usthé Won t Send A J in its ajpplicaton, | and subsequent trials, he said) Israeli court over Eichmann, an it necessarily) i C EMER C ps ; : 7 . a , scesgarily| movement for the UN force in|..." ,, ITY GEN Y the issue of crimes against thelissue strongly contested by the derives from its very object: Bombs To UN Force The Congo and implemtning the tice | rare raised but this) defence. That of punishing Nazis and) LONDON (AP)--Britain an-|UN mission there. The demonstrations were or-| was the first time it had stood) Crimes Jewish their collaborators." nounced today it will not deliver; A British spokesman said»the|ganized by the Belgain "Friend-| POLICE 725-1133 : . | . i ii We have heard here in de-/against humanity, Halevi said.|that the Israeli law in question|ised to United Nations forces in|agreement on the broad objec-(protest against American policy| FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 tail of the sufferings of the Jew-| Hence they came under the pro- did not come into conflict. with\the Congo's Katanga province /tives of their discussions which|toward The Congo and the us HOSPITAL 723-2211 ish people, the heroism of the) visions laid down in the Nuern- rules of natural justice or with|until the UN explains its Congo| were entirely about Africa andlof U.S. American planes by the| sa 'camp. inmates and ghetto and'berg convention. He said: 'principles of equity, ipolicies more clearly. | Southeast "Asia, United Nations in Katanga. : > a i STRIKE OFFICIALS DISTRIB ence in social security legisla- tion in the two countries. UTED PLACARDS Times Photo by Bruce Jones

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