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Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Jan 1962, p. 1

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Leadership Sought For Oshawa A Oshawa Cimes. THOUGHT FOR TODAY One of the most inefficient jobs man does in the category is that himself, do-it-yourself of governing ' \ k Or ee rena Plan--P.13 WEATHER REPORT Sunny. and colder today. Cloudy with occasional snow late to- , hight and Friday. Continuing cold Friday. VOL. 91--NO. 3 Price 10 Cents Per Copy aye OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for TWENTY-TWO PAGES | Indonesia PSST ARRESTS MADE IN MEAT PROBE Builds Up Arms Fund JAKARTA (AP) -- Indonesia steppeo up its arms buildup to- day off the shores of Dutch-held pritnitive area and to offer the 700,000 Papuan tribesmen there the right of eventual self-deter- Boot-wearing man trudges through snow and past aban- doned autos on main road England on New Year's Day. Picture was same over most of Britain as year-end blizzard blocked roads Ss RITISH ROADS many towns and _ villages. Thaw is not expected until the latter part of this week. --AP Wirephoto BLOCKS B and isolated Only Two Contentious Issues, Tshombe Says ELISABETH VILLE, The Congo (Reuters) -- President Moise Tshombe told the Ka- tanga assembly today there were only two contentious points in the eight-point agreement he} signed with Central Congo Pre-|ment, which call on secession- mier Cyrille Adoula last month. |is' Tshombe opened the session of the assembly called to ratify the agreement with a mildly- worded speech that reminded) the delegates "'the best agree-|K; ments are those stemming from/no difficulty at all,"' he said. mutual concessions."' Only two points in the agree-/your hands," he told the dele- present any diffieulty,|/gates. "Remember absolute lib- jerty does not exist in this world These were the points calling|and. the best agreements are} on secessionist Katanga to ac-jthose' stemming from mutual cept the fundamental law of the|concession. ment Tshombe said. Congo and accept the United authority of.the Central govern-| ment, the recognition of Presi- dent Joseph Kasavubu as head of state and commander of the} law, he said, unless the Central|gans, but that the Congolese are|naional mobilization last month government, the UN and "'the/your brothers foreign powers who direct the|must work for construction of|New G Leopoldville central govern-|a united, great and prosperous|); ment" also accepted it. i and that you Africa,' The other points in the agree-| ---- si Paper Charges sate and commander of te Cuba Posing st... Threat To West WASHINGTON. (AP) A United States white paper » ' he said, t Katanga to recognize the} "The state of Katanga is in come a "bridgehead of Sino- Soviet imperialism' posing a threat to the security of the American republics and to non- } | "Remember you are Katan- Nations control in the province. "We have always declared) that the fundamental law was bad and must be modified in certain points before we submit to it," Tshombe said. 4CCUSES CENTRAL BODY "I leave to you the task ofjchildren to safety in 10-below|human - rights "<ssohagreey tala determining how far our con-|weather early today when fire|Subveisive activities by Fidel|Pelice said they had the house jd cessions can go and which ar- ticles .should be modified," he said and accused the Central government of breaking the law/h itself several times. Katang: U.K. Mail Threatens Pools LONDON (AP) -- A go-slow,, work-by-the-rule strike by 200,- 000 postal workers for better! pay delayed the mails today-- and threatened chaos in Brit- ain's soccer football pools. The betting business involves the equivalent. of $7,000,000 a week. The rules require that the en- tries be posted with the pool] promoters not later than 4 p.m. Saturday, the. day the matches are played. A substantial delay in arrival of the entry coupons could play ( havoc with the pools, where prizes range up to | ($435,000). u ti c e e c Five Children Led 'Safely From Blaze centre just north of Kingston. when could not accept the/out. Cc. the question because of the gov- must be held stable to curb flation. Communist nations everywhere. The indictment depicting |Cuba as a Communist-bloc ap- |pendage was set forth in a new. |page booklet presented Dec. 6 WESTPORT, Ont. (CP)--Tom |to the Inter-American Peace Handy, a widower, led his five |\Committee investigating alleged} i" violations and estroyed their home in this|Castro's Havana regime, tn making the document pub- y jlic, che state department hoped the blaze under control|to enlist support for action their water supply ranjagainst Castro at the foreign |ministers meetings of the Or- ganization of American States opening at Punta del Este, Uruguay, Jan. 22. Tre Inter-American Peace Committee is to report to' the foreign ministers meeting on the results of its inquiry, The State department plans large |scale distribution of the white Papcr throughout Latin Amer- jica | It listed among Castro activ- ities throughout the hemisphere : is ; the bringing of students to Cuba Bevins said a raise was out of|for mdoctrination and fostering t e Ov-lof. 'committees of solidarity rnment's policy that salaries|with the Cuban revolution" in in-|other countries, | The document said be- Westport firemen said the ad Delay nion its demand for a substan- al but unspecified pay in- rease. ' AN'T RAISE PAY _|@ication of an ifivasion date. aid Wednesday. that Cuba has be-! West New Guinea despite re- ports that President Sukarno's regime was ready to offer The Nethexlands a compromise on the future of the disputed terri- tory. I'he army announced that 10,- 000 veterans of the fight for in- dependence against the Dutch aie being rearmed on Amboina and other islands of the Mo- luvca Chain some 150 miles off the western tip of New. Guinea. fhe announcement closely fol- lowed a report from a high gov- errment source that Indonesia is wiiling to promise West New Guinea eventual self-determina- ticn if the Dutch agree to let Jakarta take over the terri- jtory's administration in the meantime. Col. Busjiri, military com- mander of the Molucca area, said the issuance of arms to the |veterans and their assignment} into combat units are prelimi- jnary steps to "the march for- jward to stop the Dutch-created Papuan State from operating and to hoist Indonesia's red-and- white flag in the territory." | FAND IT OVER | President Sukarno ordered jand said he would invade West uinea unless the Dutch anded it over. He gave no in- Wednesday he anticipated the! "liberation" by proclaiming |West New Guinea an indonesian |province with the name "Irian |Barat" (West Irian). But the high government source reported Wednesday night that Indonesia was pre- pareo to drop its demand for immediate sovereignty over the Bogus Bills Seized In Raid By Police VANCOUVER (CP) -- Police seized an estimated $1,000,000 in |parily finished counterfeit Ca- nadian $20 bills in a raid on a \doxntown house Wednesday jnight. | One man was being held for vestigation. he bills were in uncut sheets. } junder surveillance for three weeks. 'COUPLE PLANS \NUDE WEDDING VICTORIA (CP)--A cou- ple will be married in the nude at a nudist colony near here this summer if they can find a minister to per- form the wedding vows. They are Albert Young, 47, and Julia Todd Woods, 42, both of Victoria, two of the "very few single mem- bers" of the Sol Sante Club. Announcement of the wed- ding was made by Walter Hannam, president of the club. He said the couple plan to hold their wedding 'in the nude in July at the time of the international conven- | } ' n*sia administration of the ter-|-- government could take. donesian ard Australia. Australia admin-| | | priests, bishop Dina Staffa, said it was} mi"iation. He said The Netherlands in iurn would have to give Indo- % ritory He called the proposal § 'the most liberal i oposa J ALASKA stand" his i. Beciog The source said that the In- shift resulted from| i» . pressure from the United States| *. | ¢ |} | * A E * isters the eastern half of the| island, the world's second largest. | Cuba Names Ambassador | To Vatican VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The! Roman Catholic Church's dis-| closure that Fidel Castro and his senior officials have been| excommunicated will not keep} the Vatican from accepting a new Cuban ambassador. Nor! will it keep the Cuban govern-| ment from sending him. | Vatican sources said today}; <7 ey Monde ee ee i i i i $ ' { * t { ' f i i ' we (pee) ae - Pacific Ocean TORONTO (CP) -- Nine per- sons have been arrested in Southern Ontario and charged under the Food and Drug Act for selling meat unfit for hu- man consumption, the RCMP +] announced today. RCMP said no further arrests are planned '"'at this time," but said it was pessible that further +\investigation would lead to oth- Luis Amado Blanco y Fernan- dez, named by Castro to the ambassadorial post vacant more than a year, would be re- ceived in line with diplomatic Map points out Christmas Island in the Pacific which has been discussed as a possible test site for nuclear weapons if such tests are re- sumed by the U.S. British Prime Minister Macmillan's cabinet met Wednesday to | discuss whether to offer the | U.S. use of Christmas Island ~ POSSIBLE TEST SITE for nuclear testing. Question of using the island for a widely expected round of atmospheric tests was raised when Macmillan met Presi- dent Kennedy in Bermuda last month. Island lies about 3,000 miles off the U.S. west coast. 'Jers. The meat, fit only for pet food found its way to human con- +|sumption through meat markets and chain stores, RCMP said. It comes mostly from dead and fallen animals. RCMP started their investiga- tion in August of this year and estimate 75 tons of such meat 4|a month has been sold for hu- man consumption since that time. Police said that while the meat was sold through legiti- mate outlets it could have been purchased by those outlets with- out knowledge that it was unfit. FACE CHARGE Charged under the Food and Drug Act were: Edward Peconi, arrested in Argyle, bail set at $1,000, re- manded to Jan. 11; Robert C, Hooten, Robert Allen Carey, Or- --AP Wirephoto Map The Vatican expert, UK. Alliance Facing Danger route delivery men and many other classes--is around £11 £150,000! fo Average pay of postal work- rs -- they include cleaners, lerks, telephone operators, $31.90) a week. The go-slow is taking the rm of a strict adherence to orking rules, including pain- tion of the American Sun- bathing Association." Press, radio and television reporters will be welcome to attend but the public will be admitted "by invitation only," said.Mr. Hannam. Mr. Young is a_ nudist photographer and caretaker tween $60,000,000 and $100,000,- 000 worth of Soviet-bloc arms heve poured into Cuba, enabling Castro to support guerrilla op- erations in other American} countries, Tt said Cuba has been turned! info an armed camp with a| military establishment totalling} wi Both the General Post Office) ct and the Union of Post Office Workers predicted a segious aking check on stamp sales, jrefusal by postmen to carry bags heavier than normal and 250,000-to-400,000 men, 10 times| the pre-Castro size and larger! than that of any other Latin bottleneck would develop in 4 refusal to work overtime. American nation, day or two. Letter and parcel} deliveries now are delayed up to 12 hours. SEES MANY DELAYS Said a post office man: "Bad weather, sickness and work-to-rule conditions are ac- counting for a good deal of de- lay. At some offices as many as 30 per cent of postmen have! not reported for duty." In London and some other cities where there normally are three mai! deliveries a day, the postmen's second round was cancelled. Some late evening collections also were called off. In industrial Birmingham, 358! of 2,500 postmen reported ill. spokes- I The dispute began when Post-! hours master-General Reginald Bevins; wards a smiling Finance Min- declined to discuss with the post! i Fleming told ~ reporters jt je lv. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Sd c la | appears to have thawed chilly area of An ; es : relations invoived in the British|'T@St With relations during' the r move to enter the European early stages of British negotia-;nor Mr. Fleming would drop a Common Market. dian cabinet ministers for 2% for Common Market |ship, was to meet today with!' P Heath, Cabinet Ta Called 'Uninhi OTTAWA (GP) -- Britain's|the four ord Privy Seal Edward Heath | tee. oie The atmosphere of Wednes- tions with the Common Market last fall, when the Canadian He conferred with four Cana- government complained Wednesday, and after- mation on the negotiations. Last November Mr. Fleming pressed for and obtained pub- lication of the previously secret xchange of statement by Mr. Heath setting ews. out the British position at the The talks couldn't have been|start of the Common Market ere had been an "uninhibited"| information and! |more cordiai. Mr, Fleming said.| negotiations. Mr. Heath, the minister in| Mr. Heath, smiling and affa- harge of British negotiations|ble, told reporters after the member- talks that the meeting had been 'very valuable." rime Minister Diefenbake:| 'We've had nd then resume his talks wifh|talk," he -saia. a very good "I have given -man cabinet commit- glo - Canadian| 98 s talks was in apparent con-! views. it) minister: "brought us informa- wasn't getting adequate infor- of the 178-acre nudist club. Miss Woods is club secre- tary and a free-lance writer. Ik bited' | up-to-date progress report on| jall we've done in the negotia- tions . . . and we've exchanged However, neither Mr, Heath |hint of the details discussed. Mr. Fleming said the British |tion which will be very help- |ful."* ried them to Ucluelet. "This is the first hot food we've had in two days," said his request to use British - con- trolled air bases to fly out rein- forcements to Goa. He said Portugal would have to reconsider its pact with Brit- ain to see what "positive con- tent" remained. In the Portuguese parliament there were cries of "Down with the alliance!" BRITISH ECHO CRY | In the British press today, the cries were echoed. "The alliance, says The Daily Herald, was 'an historic relic which has no relevance to the world today, It should have been annulled long ago." The Daily Sketch says: "It has been obvious for years that the phrase 'Britain's oldest ally' has negligible application to a regime whose colonial pol- icies we detest." The British government meanwhile crisply rejected the Portuguese leader's charges Britain had used delaying tac- tics. A foreign office spokesman said Britain was not in a posi- mond C. Raymond and Charles Thompson, arrested in Brant- ford, all with bail set at $1,000 and all remanded to Jan. 11; Larry Fritz, arrested at Han- Nine Charged In S. Ontario RCMP said the arrests followed undercover work by two offi- cers who found that cows and horses, some of them dead for days and in a bloated condition, had been carved up and sold .s good beef to medium-sized pack- inghouses. The meat was used as rolled roasts, baloney, saus- ages, hot dogs, stewing meat and hamburger. The packers were duped into believing the meat was good be- cause the hampers in which it was delivered bore the stamp of approval of the Brant county health department. The chain stores and others which retailed the meat were equally unaware that some of the products were potentially poisonous. Profits on the tainted and dis- eased meat that RCMP know was sold for human consump- tion could amount to about $60,- 000 a month. The most ever paid for a dead animal was $5. The carcasses were sold to wholesale butchers for 15 cents a pound instead of to pet food manufacturers for six to eight cents a pound. After butchering it was sold in hamper lots to packinghouses for 33 cents a pound--the same price commanded by good, healthy meat. 7 over, arraigned in Walkerton, remanded to Jan. 11 on $1,000 bail; Gordon Cecil Johnston, ar- rested at Orton, arraigned in Orangeville, remanded to Jan. 5 on $1,000 bail; George Ellis Gib- son, arrested at Fergus, ar- raigned at Orangeville and re- manded to Jan. 5 on $1,000 bail; Nick Peconi, arrested in Peter- borough, remanded to Jan. 19 on $2,000 bail. Raymond was the only profes- sional n:an among those ar- rested, police said. He is a vet- erinary surgeon with the Brant county health department. Gibson and Johnston have /been charged jointly, RCMP said, as have Thompson and Raymond, and Hooten and Carey and Raymond. Sgt. Dan Webster of Khrushchev Hit By Influenza Attack MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet Premier Khrushchev is in bed with influenza and has_post- poned a planned hunting trip to Byelo-Russia, a reliable source here said tonight. The 68 - year - old premier looked tired and pale at the new year's reception in the Kremlin. He had a similar at- tack of influenza in December, the tion to grant the use of the} 1960. bases Portugal had asked for without permission from the host government. one clew as r fed them in the warmth of the local hotel. "Tonight I will slecp like I am dead." | 4 grizzled old sailor who said| he'a been in many storms] called the experience his worst at ea. | . But he sidestepped one ques-| jtion as to whehter the meeting/ jhad produced any reassurance} |that Canadian exports to Brit-| ain will expand. | The Canadian government has| expressed concern that British entry into the six-nation Europ- ean trade bloc would seriously affect a majority of Canadian exports to Britain, which now! total more than $900,000,000 a/ lyear. * Verdi's Music Copyrights Are Extended ROME (AP) -- The Italian par t extended the copyrights on as Giuseppe Verdi's music for another year -- and caused great rejoicing among 100 oid musicians in Milan. 'They are the residents of the home for aged, indigent musi- cians founded in accordance with a bequest in the opera composer's will and built after his death in 1901. Verdi is buried on the grounds of the in- stitution. Each performance of a Verdi opera anywhere in the world means more money for the Giuseppe Verdi Rest House tor Mus!cians--four per cent of the ticaet sales. Italy's opera houses alone contributed $36,- 285.66 in 1961. When the copyrights finally expire, the works will enter the public domain and royalties. no lenger will be paid. Verd's operas are even more popular today than at his death which might have surprised the protocol. sure of the excommunication that Blanco y Fernandez, a See Jan. 9. Blanco y Fernandez' name lomatic representatives accred-| ited to the Vatican. Sources said| included if there were plans to reject him. Vatican secretariat of state dis-| closed that Castro and ton offi- gime had been excommunicated ithinte ; . LONDON (AP) -- Britain's| The action against the Cuban oldest foreign alliance today man Catholic, apparently was ; ' . "jafter a war - scarred history) Leen some Montls. 20, prob ldating back almost 600 years. Cuba in September of Bishop). ; ge 7 ' first forged in 1373, was shaken Eduardo Boaz Masvidal and 135| Wednesday as Portuguese Pre- for failing to come to its old automatic under two sections of|@lly's aid when India attacked) ops in their work and for using} Salazar accused Britain of| violence against clergymen. 'waiting a week before refusing VICTORIA (CP) -- The ex-) cluding the captain, E. Petra- freighter Glafkos slumbered in|as she was towed to Esquimalt. : Fit. Lt, D. M. Campbell ana their vessel, which escaped a Pacific graveyard, was being|4bove the Glafkos in a danger- ous wind, took the others off water. The 10,000-ton freighter, freed Graveyard of the Pacific on Vancouver Island's west coast, Esquimalt Harbor later today. Towing the Glafkos along the the tugs Sudbury and Island) Challenger, which pulled her Reef, 100 miles northwest of : PROT | here, where she went aground| "Ji was terrible," said George| night jrock the water poured in. and The Glafkos, in ballast when/within five minutes the engine porteu riding high despite a gap- ing hole in her bottom and en- Fl id ! Thi d tive holds flooded. orl a $s If TELL OF ORDEAL C Id W Hi ee VOld Wave Hits members plucked from the|,,? See : 4 heli third cold wave--all within the ship by an RCAF helicopter told last two weeks--began' moving : sy.| peratures to record lows as far Five of the crew of 27, -/ south as Miami and frosting the in the 70s in south Florida dur- =s ¢ . . s § By Chaplin S Wife ing the day and in the 60s in | VEVEY, Switzerland (AP)-- jall sections of the state. ple's eighth child next summer, | it was announced Wednesday. "g refreshing nip' -- scattered |frost as far south as the Ever- Manor said the birth was ex- pected some time in July. Miami International airport,| The Cuban foreign ministry said Wednesday after disclo- Spanish-born dentist and jour- nalist, would leave for the Holy appears on the 1962 list of dip. is name would not have been| A canon law expert in the cials of his pro-Communist re- dictator, who was raised a R0-| oked in danger of foundering ably after the expulsion from) The. alliance with Portugal, Arch-|mier Salazar rebuked Britain canon law: for impeding bish-|@0a. ighter Saved Freighter Saved, hausted crew of the Freek/tos, stayed aboard the freighter a hospitable village today while) Fit. Lt. Vic Hodge, hovering towed to the safety of calm five and six at a time and fer- from a maze of reefs called the was expected to reach nearby Straight of Juan de Fuca were frem the sharp rocks of Jenny in a howling storm Monday|Galanis, 29. "When we hit the| she struck the rocks, was re-|room was full." give compartment and two of! At Ucluelet, a remote villa two miles from the reef, crew) MIAMI, Fla (AP)--Florida's oi their ordeal in the wild sea, rapa s then collapsed into sleep. jout today after dropping tem- |state's winter vegetable crop. 8th Child Expected! Forecasters predicted highs north Florida, with partly Comedian Charlie Chaplin's| oUgy and warmer weather in wité Oona. is expecting the cou- The latest cold wave--which} Governor Farris Bryant called A member of Chaplin's house- hold at the Hillside du Ban) piades and 'sent the tempera- ture down to 38 degrees at At that time Chaplin will be/lowest. of the season and a rec-| 73 years old. lord for the date. ithe house for a few years." compcser. | Verdi said just before he died: 'The copyrights on my operas will be enough to run Fresh Blood In Battle For Algeria ALGIERS (AP)--Fresh blood flowed today in the battle of ter- rorist groups over the issue of whether Algeria is to' rema'n French. The new year's toll of clashes between Moslems and Europeans soared to at least 63 dead and more than 140 wounded. Two Moslems and a Eurupean were killed and eight Moslems were wounded in Oran. In Al- giers, three Moslems and a European were injured. The underground French rightist Secret Army Organiza- tion called Wednesday night for a general mobilization of Euro- pean settlers for a last-ditch fight to keep the North African territory under France's flag. Handbills calling on the set- tlers to prepare to fight were posted by the secret army as the belief spread that the way was at last open for an agree- ment between the de Gaulle government and the Algerian rebels to end the war in- Al- geria. . Joe Lee Saye, '22, plumb- er's helper wanted for stab- bing a preity, ice skating in- structor, is shown in the Auto of Probation} Officer Ted SUSPECT SURRENDERS Williams before he surrender- ed to police last night. Stab- bed was Miss Penelope Moore, 19, Saye's next-door- neighbor. --AP WirePhoto

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