Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Mar 1962, p. 1

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Oshawa THOUGHT FOR TODAY If the world is going to the dog's, it's because everybody has a bone to pick. Big Winner In COSSA Meets--Pages 9, 11 | Che Oshawa Cimes Cloudy with sunny intervals and a few periods of light snow to- Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in day and Tuesday. A little mild- er. Winds easterly 20 to 30. Gromyko Going To Geneva Meet Ks WASHINGTON (AP) -- Soviet ; Premier Khrushchev has reluc- tantly accepted a U.S.-British proposal to open the 18-nation disarmament conference at Ge- neva next week with a foreign |ministers meeting, officials re- |ported today. The Soviet government sent e ithe United States a message, delivered to the state depart- }ment Sunday, advising that For- jeign Minister Andrei Gromyko will go to Geneva. Authorities said the first quick study of the note indicated Gro- myko will also be ready to at- TWENTY PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1962 RUSSIA U.S.-BR VOL. 91 --NO. 54 200 Blasts Last Ditch OAS Move ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Euro-|wounded some of 'their friends pean right-wing extremists ex- in the leading vehicle. ploded more than 200 plastic) Moslem women massed on bombs today as part of a des-| rooftops in bombed areas shriek- perate last-minute bid to fore-|ing the Arab '"'you-you rallying : é : stall a ceasefire in the Algerian|cry while men intermittently é "Almost all the blasts were di-|cars passing below. | Plane Crashes, 111 People Die rected against Moslems in the| By noon police had cordoned DOUALA, Cameroon Repub-; An airport spokesman said hope that possible bloody re-|off Moslem districts and had prisals would delay the immin-| taken into custody 17 Europeans jlic (Reuters)--All 111 persons/the plane burst into flames and jaboard a British DC-7C airliner|the fire guided rescuers, who ent end of the 74-year Moslem/in connection with the bomb }were killed Sunday night when/had to battle their way through effective test ban treaty before that time. The U.S.-British-Soviet meet- ing of foreign ministers in ad- vance of the general arms talks would deal primarily with the nuclear test ban problem. For the last three years negotiations on that particular issue were conducted by the three powers at Geneva until they broke down early this year in the wake of the surprise Soviet test series. Authorities said the note from Moscow put an end to the un- certainty that has troubled U.S. officials over the level at which the. disarmament talks would start. . Khrushchev had insisted since mid-February that the talks must begin with a summit con- ference, bringing together the heads of as many of the 18 countries as could get to Geneva by March 14, Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan said they would be SENATOR MORSE insurrection. attacks, called Operation Rock Tse explosions at Moslem/and Roll by the Europeans. stores, restaurants and other; In the Algiers suburb of points injured at least 10 per+}Kouba Moslem insurgents pre- sons and caused heavy damage.| vented European extre m ists But Moslem reaction to the from exploding plastic charges bomb attacks was on a small| after a violent gun battle. But scale. there were no casualties. hirteen of the arrested Euro-| iC " gee caught when fo bag Seti ger pohflocinn fl set | |the plane crashed into a swamp/the swamp in rubber boats in tried to crash through a police buildings afire, but firemen soon | |seconds after taking off, officials! pitch dark. | baricade in a convoy of three) put them out. No public build- | announced today. : The aircraft, operated by Cal-| cars. Men in the second auto) ing, were damaged but many | |_ Half of the aircraft's fuselage|edonian Airways, crashed dur-| opened fire on police, but only} parked cars were smashed to was found in a swamp accessi-\ing a storm. The spokesman| co : ce a jble only by boat and other|said the heat of the fire had s The blasts all occurred be- jwreckage was strewn over an prevented rescuers from getting Professor Dies tween 4:30 a.m. and 6:30 a.m. larea of one-half square mile. |to the wreckage. Security forces defused about 15 'Sapmagexsis a aoe The plane was on a flight | : a besa bombs before they ex-) | st from Lourenco Marques in ploded. | | S Ch Id Mozambique to Lisbon. It tend a preliminary session with After Stabbing "r'vewlcoeien wx GOOD LUCK HUG FOR POODLE | Seven Children snr' 28% # ga ksi i a record for Algiers, which pre- : ed S : viously has had only 40 o 50° "'Sari", a poodle owned by 1 ence Association. The highest | . -- s Mong sd o ige of Se sage yo jn pt eas In Candy Store | blasts in one night. Mrs. L. R. Curry, Point Plea- | score was attained by "Lady", Die In Blazing ay i. Me ric an " yg ' bed pode la Seoaame" uecueeee ia eet eee, ee ee eee ocean anabens a ge hhad| For Canada HS) | U.S disarmament chief Wil- TORONTO (CP) -- A kindly|at Moslem premises in the! hug of encouragement before | ough, who scored 198 out of a Pa lEnglish add es ses. No ad-| than Wouer said in a television middle-aged professor, who gave;mixed European-Moslem dis-| entering obedience trials at | possible 200 points, "Lady Niagara Home \dresses were available for. the 8 interview Sunday. hight that the up university teaching in the tricts of Saint Eugene in west-| Oshawa airport Sunday. The | is owned by Mrs. David pa tay u an Ya ing -- Moc y nig Sa Ukraine to get away from com-jern Algiers and the Rue Ro-| 19th annual trials, were held | Brooks. NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP)| nas Br 'eli saat cl tier wea pation munism, died of stab wounds|vigo, close to the ancient Cas- hy the Oshawa Dog Obedi- | --Times Photo by Joe Serge Satan children ranging in age Be cag _~ ing omen WASHINGTON (AP) -- The -- : noe a ~ om Sunday night after an apparent}bah Moslem quarter. : Oe oe aeculee "i | fea ata senha io aie vente: sige SSeS, an an Austra | Senate foreign relations commit.|*% ak coe Sees Soe ing attempted robbery in his little, The bomb attacks came in the : |died ioday In an eatlvaiomine ee the crew. ltee is very much concerned |19,.3¢ 0 pst few ines prepared to go to' summit "a in Al sus tx eta 105 permed T Ma fire that swept their second-floor CRASHED IN STORM Peg? trade ene. Preaggone in September after months of|™eeting at a later stage if pro- cos Sumewrcs, %5. WAS" chout tao-thinda of thom Mos rme T10 V [apartment cea the city's old), Wreckage was scattered over and Communist countries and| secret, preparations. gress in the tal warranted et i : usiness district. a wide area after the propel- ; ; . but small hunting knife picked up|!ems -- were -- ae 119 Firemen said tenants of four|ler-driven plane went down du-|@ Committee member said Sat-/DON'T TRUST K level beginning of disarmament from the store counter. Polina) Soe Soren = o lother apartments in the a ing a stom, urday, . He said the West would not negotiations sous (do, more are boiling @ i¢-year-old. grade nica-| T {: d storey brick building escaped! ¢ i i Senator Wayne Morse, (Dem.|be prepared to take rush-|harm good g to " pup faanrceckanst | Come Oo ana a Girmed. area gerry redid iw Ore.) said se has written thé|chev's word that Russia would an national gy ee on soe Turkawycz, partner in the if | Five children were identified) no.7¢¢ ium' bena|U.S. tariff commission, express-|not test again. jwhole range o sarmamen store with Andrew Darmic, had DEFIES ULTIMATUM OTTAWA (CP) -- The RCMP|robbery perpetrated Dec. 5,/as those of Mr. and Mrs. Bar-| ivines -- ca el eye ing concern on the part of for-| The new note from Moscow|issues. been professor of mathematics) Meanwhile, secret army gun- has asked Canadians to be on/1960, at the First Federal Sav-|nard Coleman. The other two,|crashed plane was on charter|eign relations committee mem-|was expected to get personal at- and physics in Lvov University.|men were hunting today for the/the lookout for a heavily-armed|ings and Loan Association of|both girls, were the daughters |to 'Trans-Africa Air Coach Lim-|bers over "the refusal of Can-|tention from President Kennedy | He came here in 1950 with his) only man to defy a secret army|American trio being sought by|Buffalo," the RCMP circular/of Mrs. Coleman's _ brother, ited of London. ada . . . to extend the United/today upon his return from a| Flood Threats wife and two daughters because|ultimatum Sunday to Italian|the FBI in connection with mul-|said. {Sonny Brooks. | The death toll of 111 woula|5t@tes any co-operation with re-| weekend at Middleburg, Va. | he disagreed with Communist| correspondents to leave Algeria|tipie bank robberies, in one of| She is 'attractive, wears| All lived in the same apart- = Rye air orath iu {Sect to Canada's policy of trad-| 'The new note from Moscow| policies and wanted the daugh-/or die. which a bank guard was slain.|heavy makeup, and appears to|ment, firemen said. ase odie Th : t|ing with Communist countries." was expected to get personal at-| P | B B ters to be educated in the free) Nicolas Caraciolo, a Neopoli-| 'The RCMP warns that "'ex-|be 22 to 26--carries herself ex-/The 'Coleman children were) the history - was that of an|, "Canada," he said, "has re-|tention from President Kennedy| 0 y We world. |tan _nobleman-journalist, went|treme caution" be exercised in|tremely erect." Brenda; 6; Ernestine, 4; Audrey,| fi» France Super Constellation fused to co-operate with the free|today upon his return from a| In his neat little store, he was; Underground" Sunday night/the apprehension of the trio) Her hair is described as red-|3- Roxanne, 1, and Nelson, three ' ; nations of the Western -hemis-|weekend at Middleburg, Va. a favorite of the neighborhood) youngsters. When they had no ec for candies, he handed them out free. | He had planned to go into| business alone and was in the) confectionery for his last week.| A neighbor, Osyp Goshulak/| told police he came to the store} to buy a five-cent stamp and} saw Turkawycz with a knife in Goshulak grabbed the boy and/ yeled for help as Turkawycz fell face down on the floor. Mr. Turkawycz was married with two daughters. He had|/Cameroon Republic, Sundayjand anti-tank guns. planned to go into business for! himself. and was working his last week at the confectionery. | No money was taken from the} store. Neighbors said the boy to leave the store. Charges have not yet been | laid. { after being escorted to a press conference by a protective cor-! don of American, French and} British reporters. Victim Of Crash On Way To Canad identified as Bobby Randell Wil- coxson, |Nussbaum, __|Rose, @ | descr a wo 32, 27, 18. "There is man Albert and Jacqueline|blonde and_ black." some Frederick|has been known to have it dyed suggestion|arms from elbow to shoulder ithat these individuals now may/|and from neck to waist. {be in Canada," said an RCMP } jcircular containing pictures andjlaborer, painter, service station iptions of the two men and{attendant and on other similar who is reported to|jobs. He is of medium build, JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) | have with her a six-months-old his back struggling with a boy./A 27-year-old South African|boy. The three were reported to be married was one of the passen-jarmed with a double-barrelled nurse en route to Canada to be gers aboard a British DC-7C air-| sawed-off 12-gauge shotgun, sub-/S™ith and locksmith who can| dish blonde or brown "'but she She has third-degree burn scars on both Wilcoxson works as a farm has dark brown hair, an artifi- cial right eye and a burn scar months. The Brooks children in which 79 were killed in the phere in stopping her trade in were Felicia, 5, and Michelle, 3.5 in a bedroom. Firemen found|civilian single plane crash was another child in a bed nearby. c dled in the kitchen. Snow, Thaw By THE CANADIAN PRES Two snowstorms in three days j}and temperatures rising toward the thawing point are combin- ing to pose a flood threat for communities in southwestern \British Columbia. Rain and the rising tempera- tures--in the 30 to 35 region-- ahara on May 10, 1961. The infant was found in a crib| The highest death toll in any Kennedy announced Friday night that the United States wil resume nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere in late April un- \less the Soviet Union signed an Mac Reveals K Agreement Strategic goods with Conmu- nist Cuba. . . We also have the serious problem with Can- ada with regard to trade with Communist China. "Some of us on the foregn re- lations committee," Morse said, "have served notice on the ad- ministration that we think the time has come for direct nego- tiations with Canada wth re- \last Thursday when -a Boeing The bodies of the other five|707 crashed after take-off from hildren were discovered hud-|Idlewild airport in New York, 'killing all 95 aboard. QUESTIONS RAISED on the left wrist. Nussbaum, an expert gun- : | liner that crashed near Douala,!machine-guns, hand grenades Pilot and repair aircraft, has a night. | plane were killed. The woman, Margaret Blake, tattoo of a snake entwined| Wilcoxson is on the FBI's list 2°und a dagger on his upper they|had returned to South Africal]DROVE GETAWAY CAR thought the stabbing might have|three months ago to gather her| The woman, a slender fair-|separate hotels and motels, "fa- occurred when Turkawycz told/trousseau and visit her family|complexioned girl who changes voring the better class accom- before returning to Canada to/the color of her hair often, "is modation." marry I. Cameron of Picton,/known to have driven the get- Ont. da Carried Off car following the armed is aoa eee se, Education In Cana Rapped By UBC Dean MONTREAL (CP)--There is It had to be based on the fact|passive absorption of verbal in- overwhelming evidence that Ca-jthat there are two races and |formation." | All 111 persons aboard the! of 10 most wanted fugitives, All!eft arm. He wears glasses, jthree use aliases. Police said the two men use rented cars and aircraft while travelling and generally stay at is Demonstrators tt) While Singing NEW YORK (AP) -- Demon- strators today staged another public sitdown in protest against the United States' decision to re- sume nuclear testing in the at- |ported his studies indicate. it is| continued. lot _|possible to produce a serum for}whether human cancers may treating cancer. raised questions about his lab-|method did lof the immunological research/man cancers he tested, all tu- section of the state bacteriolog-|mors were shown to have the ical laboratory of Korlinska In-|same antigens. He said his re- stitute in Stockholm, spoke Sa-|Search group has presented the turday night at an annual sym- first evidence that tissues ta- posium on fundamental cancer|ken from cancers in several research sponsored by the M.|hundred patients contain a na- D. Anderson Hospital and Tu-|tural cytolytic substance, mor Institute here. followed on a near record 15 inches of snow Friday and an- other three inches Sunday, More rain is expected today and concentration of rain in any one area will make flood dan- ger high. The only other region where there appears to be some flood danger is in the Maritimes, which had their fifth successive weekend of stormy weather. Eastern New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island bore most of the brunt. Twenty inches of snow fell in Moncton while Sum- merside, P.E.I. got 10. Ontario and Quebec were both cloudy with snow flurries ex- pected, but temperatures were a little lower than in the Mari- times, ranging between about 20 and 30. Further west, skies were clearer and temperatures pro- gressively lower across the prairies, gard to her trade policies that assist Communist nations and thereby do great injury to the/ taxpayers of the United States." Morse said also that a contro- versy is brewing in Congress over Canadian trade policies which, he said, are "'doing ir- reparable injury to various seg- ments of American agricul- ture,'"' including lumber and ag- ricultural products such as fes- cue seed, LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime minister Macmillan announced today that Russia now agreed that the Geneva disarmament conference March 14 should start at the foreign ministers' level rather than at the summit. Macmillan announced this in a statement to the Commons which covered latest develop- ments regarding the forthcom- ing 18-nation Geneva parley. He said he had just received a note from Soviet Premier Khrushchev saying he now "broadly agreed" with the view of President Kennedy and Mac- millan that the conference start at foreign ministers level. Khrushchev twice proposed to the 'United States and Britain last month--and was twice re- jected--that the meeting start at heads-of-government level. Possible Cancer Serum Reported HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -- A,cancer has a different antigen wedish researcher has_ re-\to produce antibodies," Sabin The issue ts not have a distinct antigen. The have|only question is whether this and can dem- Prime Minister Diefenbaker said a week ago in Edmonton that Canada's trade policies are dictated by a desire for multi- lateral trade to the widest ex- tent. "We are not concerned with the ideological views of the countries with which we trade,"' he said in a reference to trade with Cuba. But other scientists ratory methods. jonstrate it." Dr. Bertil Bjorklund, 41, head| Bjorklund said that of 60 hu- It is normally in an inhibited work with the| State but can be activated hy Bjorklund's nadian children are not being; educated as effectively as they! should be, Dr. Neville Scarfe/There hd to be true toleration|ing process, on creativity, on told the Canadian Conference on Education today. The dean of education at the University of British Columbia, delivering the keynote address in English on "the aims of edu- cation in a free society," said) there is nothing wrong with Canadian education that better- quality' teachers will not put straight. Rev. Henri F. Legare, rector of the University of Ottawa, de- livered the keynote address in French, He said religion is an indis- pensable part of education and that there cannot be a common Canadian philosophy of educa- tion, a common aim and pur- pose until there is a_ state- recognized plurality in educa- tion. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | cultures in Canada with real] differences between them.| --the toleration of men who be-| lieved they were all seeking th/ truth, but in diffrent ways. URGES CREATIVE THINKING Dr. Scarfe said one of the ma- jor faults was that children are often being taught to memorize and regurgitate facts when the emphasis should be on teaching them to think creatively. Another problem was that the teachers' freedom was re- stricted, that they were not ade- quately trusted and not given| sufficient scope to teach in ways they knew to be better than the orthodox. Dr. Scarfe said one reason for this restricted freedom lies in "the inadequate professional ed- ucation they have received." They needed as long and rig- orous a preparation as doctors, | architects, engineers and law- yers and this was just. as' true for those teaching in kindergar- ten as grade XIII. Dean Scarfe said the chief faults in 'the educational system are "'caused by the obsolete aims and procedures of the tra- ditional, authoritarian and ex- cessively academic school of thought with its emphasis pn jbe kept alive. Fact-finding and mosphere. Many of them were promptly hauled off to jail. They sang heartily as were carried away. vaccine was not discussed dur- ing the question period _ but there were sharp _ inquiries self-directed inquiry, on prob-| tt was the second display betel aioe, ue ee lem-solving techniques. that led 'o mass arrests oul op. hag hgge er of "Far more effort and energy| president Kennedy disclosell| ng 1 i mane 2 must be devoted to education! friday night the plan to resume| on Lpeabbhe send , rather than instruction. Curios: tects , | Bjorklund said he had simi- ity, initiative and interest must) 'The new demonstration came|!4?_.exPeriences in previous phee in front of the U.S. Atomic En-| meetings. fact regurgitation must no ergy Commission's headquar-| He said he 'has proved there longer be the primary purpose ters in lower Manhattan, where|is a common substance in all of schooling or examinations. "The future must put far greater emphasis on the think- they about 30 persons had assembled waar rage ogres 2° poor WOULD TRUST TEACHERS Md sat down on her tas, be tart, Erp ony And it was essential that v = _ Inormal tissue. nips a eke ing but not squatting on the side- Se OE teachers be given a far greater walk, had set up wooden bar-| Sabin and others maintained measure of freedom and trust riers in an effort to keep pedes- there is no evidence to show tiu- "so that they can set an exam- trian pathways clear. At 9 a im, mans produce _ antibodies ple of enthusiastic inquiry, in-neioht of the work-bound rusk{against their own cancers. dependent initiative and cour- hour, a police officer warned| This has been demonstrated ageous Creativity." over a loudspeaker: jin strictly-controlled laboratory Father Legard said the whole' "I am giving you an opportun-|experiments with animals, Sa- purpose of education is to make jty to change your mind. Sitting|bin said. a student a man, to give him!on the sidewalk is disorderly} 'These show each. particular an insight into the meaning of conduct." ee his life in the world and after it. After a five-minute wait, with Religion provided a meaning, the demonstrators still seated, | Pop Ivy To Coach el ag AP were : rsp this announcement came: "You| e ents ake relig - j ac p Seating, igion out of e el eal be placed under ar- Houston Oilers Teachers today had lost track) Patrolmen moved in on the! HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)--Frank of the purpose of education SO group, carrying 13 men. and six|(Pop) Ivy, former head coach much that they reduced it to a/women to a police van. The dem-lof the National Football League sort of animal training, having! onstrators broke into song dur-|St. Louis Cardinals, was named to do with "psychological hab-|ing the interval, but amid the|\coach today of the champion its, conditioned reflexes and street sounds, the words could|Houston Oilers of ihe American sensorial memorization." inot be made out. (Football League. jimmunication of. specific anti- |bodies, he said. | Dr, David Marrack, an M. D.! member, |Anderson staff the group: | | "He has used the crudest,} blunderbuss method for creat-! jing his serum." U.S. Offering Allies New Atomic Weapon WASHINGTON (AP) -- The| United States apparently has al-| tered its approach to making {NATO a nuclear power and now s ready to push the step and leven to supply its allies with a} | special new atomic weapon. | For a long period, the official | |U.S, position was that the initia-| jtive would have to come from) |NATO. Now, authoritative |sources say, it is prepared to participate actively for a posi- tive decision. | Simultaneously, research work jis reported to have reached an| j advanced stage on a new, mo-| bile, middle range nuclear jrocket. specifically designed to \fit NATO's needs in defence of Western Europe. told! | E South Viet Nam last week, seeking to retaliate against band of Viet Cong guerillas who had practically wiped out defenses of their MARINES SEEK ENEMY Marines Teady weapons on deck as they ride small river craft in Sungle area in South Viet Nam garrison town of AP Tan Long. They did not find their Communist enemy. , (AP Wirephoto)

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