Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Apr 1962, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT *. Sunny and warm today. Friday mainly cloudy and cooler with a chance of a few showers. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Keeping up with the Joneses is rough, but trying to pass them on a curve is worse. Ohe Oshawa Time 4 Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa ond for payment of ebiads in Cash. THIRTY PAGES | Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1962 VOL. 91--NO. 98 Many Feel Dismay At US. Tests -- LONDON (CP)--The U.S. re-)still might be averted before it sumption of nuclear tests in the|gets out of hand. me | air brought three small demon-| Indian Defence Minister V. : strations in foreign eountries|K. Krishna Menon called the} . | . thousands of expressions of|tests a "tragedy" and added wei 2 dismay . . . indignation... . con-|"one thinks a regular explosion cern .. . tolerant understand-|war will now develop." ing from friends . . . bitter de-) "I still cling to the feeling nunciation from the Commun-|that the powers assembled in| ists Geneva (for the disarmament} | EX-MLA ADMITS | GAMBLER CALLED World Tension Increase Seen WASHINGTON (AP) -- Re- occasion to affirm U.S. readi-|Ont., said today that in 1958 he| (The club was closed during sumption of U.S. nuclear test-/ness to cancel the test series)arranged an appointment for/the summer of 1958.) : i<j ing in the atmosphere and an'which began Wednesday any|gambler Joseph McDermott| After this one meeting with Jolley Arranged Meet For McDermott, Chief TORONTO (CP) -- Arthur C.;said that Chiet Johnston some Jolley, former member of the|time later told him '"we're legislature for Niagara Falls,|closing up the club." }expected new round of Soviet jtests will cause some increase in East - West tensions, Wash- |ington officials predict. High sources here expect that '|Russia will begin a new test : |series fairly soon, now that the time the Soviet government will! with the police chief of Bertie|the gambler, Mr. Jolley said, sign an enforceable treaty pro-|Township but said he had nojhe had no further phone calls hibiting nuclear explosions. /further dealings with him. or meetings with McDermott. A state department spokes-| Before the royal commission} Mr. Jolley said that at the man said Wednesday that the|®" crime, the former Progres-|time of his meeting with Mc- United States would not call off| *v° Conservative MLA said he/Dermott he. did not know the had never been offered any "in-/name of the club although he he Basite : ego ' a ee |ducements' to do anything}had heard rumors that one was about the problem of a gaming|operating. club in the township in which H id he had n |McDermott and Vincent Feeley| oy ke Cag -- --}} ( \ {Had an interest. "Did McDermott make you | {United States is testing over sponse to a declaration of So- , |the central Pacific. viet willingness to negotiate an} Soviet Premier Khrushchev's| enforceable treaty ban. {declared intention to conduct )- ee more experimental nuclear blasts if the United States did ' |so is the principal basis for this * \forecast. But, authorities here) |say it is evident from what is) {known of the results of Soviet] : ; ,, {tests last fall that Russian lead-| | Carl Braun, 18, and his cou- track -- past the children's jers would want to hold further] sins Jimmy Braun, 10, and | backyard and within their | experiments in order to develop Cynthia, 4, was dragged more mother's hearing. |their findings -- particularly in| il. oe eet -- Si all - |spoken to Feeley, and he had|!ems?" Mr. Wilson asked. {from a Port Credit number|don't know anything about the | Mr. Jolley said he had re-|_ M R Tceive only one telephone call|@"Y offer or inducement to do oon 0c e lfrom McDermott and had never|2"Ything about the club's prob- ino recollection of four calls; "No," Mr. Jolley replied. made to his Niagara Falls| "He just asked for an ap- jhome in the summer of 1958|pointment with the chief... I . jused by Feeley to make long|Club and I couldn't take you to n ar 1 6 |distance calls. lit." | Commission counsel Roland} Mr. Jolley said the one call | (AP) -- F. Wilson suggested McDer-|he had received from McDer- to which East- Mixed with fear was the un-jconference) who have strug-) derlying but faint hope that an'ged so patienty will find some all-out nuclear race between way out," Menon added. i was in Tokyo, where 325 leftist! ® s students, Communists, Social- Zorin laims jists and members of the Japan jfore the U.S. Embassy and) World @aYeYLr tried to enter the embassy |:compound. Japanese police Abyss Of War jhave promised to demonstrate jevery day during the test se- sian delegat» Valerian Zorin| Japan deivered a verbal note) | told the i: .aicn disarmament of protest to the United States. conference today that U.S. re-|The note said Japan reserved brought the world nearer to the|tion for any damage as a result abyss of a nuclear war of the Christmas Island tests. | sources, said the United States|Tokyo fish markets to record} 'snew where Wednesday's Paci-|/normal radioactivity so that! fic test would leati--to a Fresh'any abnormality later as a re- A youth and his two young He said the U.S. move was/be detected. was hit by this train at a i yor i # i yr Tr § y 1 | es i i - made despite world opinion) A Soviet commentator) level crossing in the village of than 600 yards along the (CP. Wirephoto) poellitagag of anti missile de petition in nuclear arms. statement last March that he Age ay eens sg : gen ad PASADENA, Calif. The Russian delegate charged|did not want tests had been West tensions build up will de- | : : 7 j the U.S. policy was guided sol-|shown up as "the biggest lie of pend on the violence of the So-|major advance in space today|°oUld have been made from the|these listed in earlier commis- a a. o O] : Tac '@ | S ie propaganda barrage andjwhen the crippled. spacecraft|*@me. number used by Feeley [son evidence as, going to his He said the new test meant/by anyone in the West." related actions which Khrush-|Ranger Four crash - landed on|, Mt. Jolley, now registrar of|home from the Port Credit Russia would be compelled to) "With the explosion at Christ- 'chevy takes in the next few deeds for Welland County, and|number used by Feeley, but he i i bd It was the first U.S. success i ith ' - ; ' Ard to 1959, said McD ' ree. nee ee pong 8 started," tee ve cabiner "or S Alu I I } nu tf ! MAY WALK OUT in seven _attempts to land alhe believed "i phergae Me UNRECALLS DATE great efforts to find a solution 8 s mS For example, there has been Piece of hardware on the moon, icalled him in the spring or Mr Jolley said he could nak' speculation in Geneva that the|20d virtually duplicated thelearly summer of 1958 and liect the dat hice % Zorin declared. GRANTS TAKEN feat of Russia's Lunik II which|asked him for an appointment Paice oe pdecy ghee He added that Wednesday's| aluminum industry, facing new|held steady in prices of her con-|about one-third of the U.S. out-|17-nation disarmament Pam ae Although there was no way of| wage contract talks, seems un-|sumers, luminum companies/put, has talked of a need for/ence. But at the car Gepar | seein: ste aphiat Gatare cient.| GAMBLERS EMBARRASSED |2re listed as for May 19 and 22 Bective Yorn woke, the US llikely to test seriously Presi-|had to drop their ingot prices) boosting prices on selected fab- inate this was considered un- cts cid Wane Fours trajec.|. At the meeting, McDermott/2nd June 5 and 19, 1958. circulated a document saying| NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -- |¢ ennedy's ¢ nic poli-|from 26 to 24 cents a pound ise epee hg a ld, Jr., Al. Recent public statements by|tory before passing behind the|"@4 explained that he had a| They are shown in the evid- i Government loans and grants |..es that were bo. eicd by his|September, putting them bac sAWFENCE - LALCHILCM, eT, i ' it would|club in the Fort Erie area (Thejence as person-to-person. calls, Pe Boyt vines ee ~ not for buying wives, African | Labor negetiations in the in-{| Aluminum production, al-jare hopeful of "restoring" past} with griamnal 1pm gh eo predicted area. a provincial charter and its| Wilson, the-fershes AREA GaN ee leepest reluctance. | businessmen were told today. |dustry are expected to open/though rising markedly in re-|cuts, not raisingprices. - Dre Bron anmeaten « Throne il ad ie - pound. vehicle, members were being embar-|had not communicated with any CAN'T ACCEPT IT Fred Okuma, general secre- {next month. And Commerce|cent months, was estimated by) As to lator 'negotiations,/ Ze loresees launched from Cape Canaveral,|rassed through raids by thelofficial concerning a raid Aug. could not accept "a situation) Champ ircu- |tioned aluminum as an example|per cent of capacity--far below|man, struck what may prove| Prime Minister Macmillan|,,, - mi | At McDermott's request, the|Club at Niagara Falls, which at where it vountarily . refrains) eit enchil e On jof a basic industry that might|the high-profit rates of the late|the key note of management,/and President Kennedy will re- pec Pag Rg a a MLA telephoned Chief Howard/that time was. being operated. from testing and which leaves! | i With the recent steel contract! view the test situation and its) Tip : A |Johnston who said "sure, Art,/by a group in opposition to Mo "You are undermining our |Kennedy administration The Aluminum Company ofjand its 10 cents-an-hour pack-|cold war impact, Ry wong calculated its speed did in September, 1961, when it] ' The big issue in the steel dis------- [age off fringe benefits in mind,|other world problems, when send him over." H id ifi t us | : F % e said specifically, in reply per gel Phas 64 mg ac oe iat cio pn fo pute was a flat across-the-board Magee told reporters a few|they meet at the White House|4our and said this would de Mr. Jolley said he has nojto a question, that he had not ions nkin y - . : : ; . ins be ' aes "It is wrong to think that an-| The two Western leaders are; Electronic failures kept Ran.|nowledge of what may have/talked to anyone in the attorney pared series of nuclear tests." eu Faas aot ist tor buy. back down shortly afterwards jother round of increased labor|likely to state their policy on|ger Four from completing most "We do not propose to gam-| ; 1 ba " |under pressure from the presi-| Ch St jcosts is not inflationary or does | testing in a declaration at the/of its missions. It carried sev-| ble with our security," the docu-) '"& More wives. dent arge arr not retard our industry's com-|conclusion of their talks Sunday|eral scientific instruments, in-| HE ond este would be ended) tetuvied that wives: were AD) ie ror aluninuni produc: D ] : B d -- ------/take closeup pictures of the ( : dal 1ada ( 'oast "with confidence' when an pide posal otal ov gare Md ers, according to the atl e aying Oar moon's surface. But a timer} agreement, with international y P 8 sourees 'here. " : designed to operate these de-| MONTREAL (CP) -- Cana- vices went haywire shortly! ° ada's 110,000 non-operating rail- T qu S e€ after launch. : | n way employees today charged SSRN RENEE a ; | n ]- u 'e | federal Labor Minister Starr | the United States and Russia! The noisiest demonstration |Anti-Bomb Council shouted be- |drove them off, but the leftists GENEVA (Reuters) -- Rus-'ries sumption of nuclear testing|the right to demand compensa- Zorin, quoted by Western) Inspection of fish began at nuclear weapons race sult of the Pacific tests could! cousins died when their car | that demanded an end to com-|charged President Kennedy's| Bright, Ont. The car, carrying ee The extent ' tt id h b ' The United States scored a|mMott's call to the then MLA/Mott could have been one o} ely by a military psychosis all the false assurances made he fz i j : : strengthen its own defences. mas Island, a new round in the | days. ye ah sine of te tnbuD Niagara Falls MLA from 1953/had no recollection of the other to the nuclear tests problem, NEW YORK (AP) -- Theis that whereas stegl allegedly American, which accounts for| Russians would walk out of the| it's. moon Sept. 12, 1959. lin Toronto. to his home from Port CA. test was the Western answer to} TO BUY WIVES ig? . Pe the neutralist efforts. | in | oh ; ; sateatel in his i jew,moon assured that : : that it resumed nuclear testing! 27. for developing businesses, |yictorious battle with big steel.|to 1956 levels. jcoa president, said ps bor aren as in his interview Mem Club) operating under|In reply to a question from Mr. The document said the vs! tary of the Kenya African |Secretary Hodges has men-|Collisson at little more than 75|Frank L. Magee, Alcoa chair-| disarmament talks. |Fla., Monday, comipleted the|Bertie Township police force. |19, 1958, on the old Ramsey | declaring: get special attention from the 1950s. ! iet Uni it! along with i ive hi i as the Soviet Union free to do as it i impact at £663 wiles an I'll. give him an appointment--/Dermott. and Feeley. res eet ab | s days ago: Saturday. stroy the vehicle. . T s T t's hat the |Price increase by U.S. Steel and) R ] E ] 5 ing a massive, secretly - pre-| tion ae hat's wha other steel firms--forced to al m 0 ees happened at the meeting but helgeneral's department. ment added. VUE. Peat DOMDEMER | gh a price isd appears petitive position." afternoon. They may take the|cluding a television. camera to safeguards and the necessary, Who would later bring in the |*" A) attention. could easily rights of inspection, were; Money suitors pay for brides. signed. focus on the other side of the inflation coin, the role of in- ~|creases in wage and fringe ben- jefits. Scientists Check .'sicstriicus Test Blast Data says parallels between steel and jaluminum wage settlements 28 jmonths ago were deceiving. "It is true 'the contracts ran WASHINGTON (AP)--Scient-|ably a B-52 or B-47 bomber. ry eoqut the same period and ists checked preliminary data|/This indicated the explosion three-phase step-ups in wages today from the first blast in the;may have occurred below 30.,- and benefits," he said Z new U.S. nuclear test series to|000 feet--a relatively low level "But the pace we fall apart see if it yielded significant in-| blast Peers ae A ice formation on improving the ef-| Later shots, around Johnston ' ficiency of American atomic|Island, will include some at J weapons. high altitudes ranging from 30 oint Satellite The new series got under way|to several hundred miles above at dawn Wednesday over re-|the Pacific. These probably will Launched Today mote Christmas Island in the|be propelled upward by cAaprR CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)--A Thor Detla rocket Sources said the device de- thundered skyward today in an Pacific with the explosion of a) missiles. research and development de- vice, rather than a finished tonated yesterday was monit- effort to launch the world's first atomic weapon. A similar de-jored by sensitive instruments international satellite -- a joint vice likely will be used for the/geared to absorb a variety of/effort of the United States and second blast--expected in a few) information. Britain. days--as the United States pur-;----H--H--_----_--_________. -- : sues one of the major goals of the new test series: Greater ped mer tga COUNTDOWN COMPLETED Informed sources suggested that the leadoff U.S. device in Operation Dominic, the name given to the first U.S. atmos-} pheric tests in almost four} . ears, probably rocked the Pa- cific waters with the blast equivalent to 100,000 to 500,000 By THE CANADIAN PRESS jentirely to the credit of thisto the cradle of Confederation |wasn't able tc tons of TNT FIRING SUCCESSFUL Its countdown completed, the} present government and campaign for the June 18 fed-|way to assure its continuing is! eral election roared off In a terse announcement, SiM-!jaunching pads Wednesday and/18." = y = to those gaa i out a series of sharply di-' This report wasn't shared by} ec <9 announced under-| vided reports on whether every-|T. C. Douglas, national leader| ground tests, the Atomic En- ; thing is A-Okay in Canada ergy Commission described : ; Soa Liberal Wednesday 8 blast as wa the in- janded in Prince Edward Island|was nominated for that consti-! termediaté yield range."' Other Jt and said, in effect: it's time to|tuency--that the election offers sources said word from Task bai Force 8 in the test area was ch that the firing was successful. The device apparently was five to 25 times more powerful ance to make up '"'for those'economic planning and wasted years," he said nomic dictatorship. He challenged Prime Minister' He went on to say that, ex- 1! Diefenbaker to a radio or tele-\cept in Quebec and Newfound-| than the bomb that levelled Hi-| vision debate cand. ter roshima "I am not interested in pro- tween The opening test device was y iding TV. audiences | for gressive Conservatives dropped from an airplane, prob-|others."" said Mr Diefenbaker, Both Mr. Diefenbaker, who Robert Quebec report came)City, will begin firing their ar-! tonight Mr. Pearson heading up the jcal detour whiie on his way to'cial Credit Leader CITY EMERGENCY | Western hastings, THOMeNO: who is at An enthusiastic PHONE NUMBERS from one of his cabinet minis-/tillery POLICE 725-1133 ters, Labor Minister Starr, whojstarts FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ernment since Confederation| Douglas wil! concentrate on Sas- |has undertaker so massive alkatchewan for the remainder of jProgram as we have in so shortithe week ° with delaying the setting up of a conciliation board to hear their contract dispute \with the country's railways The negotiating committee of the 15 CLC - affiliated unions that represent the employees sent Mr, Starr a telegram ex- pressing concern over the de- lay. The committee 'said it had re- quested Feb. 26 that a board be set up and added it cannot con- strue the Industiral Act permitting "such a lengthy delay as has occurred." The act provides that the la- bor minister shall appoint a third member to a conciliation board "forthwith" pany and union nominees can not agree on one David Lewis of Montreal has been named the union nominee on the board and A. G. Cooper of Halifax the railway choice Vote Campaign Started sate despite the|in Charlottetown to fire off hisl|into the fray at Fort William he initial blast at Conservative itsto return the government June/rule. After five years, he said,|voters at the hand "it is Canada that now needs another chance."' The Liberal party is asking icies and said. "I believe that performances: he the best 1 out. Canada needs another|the choice between democratic|way to have this face-to-face ruin" eco- discussion would be through a tige is slipping and the economy joint debate over radio and tel- evision between Mr. Dief enbaker and myself... ." are no nearer construction of a causeway between P.E.1. and in Fort William on a on-politi- speaks at Moose Jaw, and So-|New Brunswick than they were the five years ago, despite Mr Diefenbaker's statement last week that it would be built." Earlier in the day, he trav- | westielled through rural areas of the|River Treaty said at a Toronto rally "no gov-|coast of Newfoundland, and Mr. province, promising aid for the| TAKES NO SIDES depressed Island potato indus- try and unilateral implementa tion of a 12-mile fishing limit a time. The present boom, is! The Liberal leader went back| Even though Mr. Diefenbaker'ness" of the treaty. Disputes) if the com-} Red Wing Manager For Delinquents: Succeeded By Abel TORONTO (CP)--The senior goes uncared for physically, |judge of Toronto's juvenile andjemotionally or spiritually, we) DETROIT (AP) -- Jack |family courts challenged teach-|are failing in our task." Adams, general manager of the |ers Wednesday to replace ma-| The judge said he is con-| Detroit Red Wings hockey team |tinee idols in the esteem of,cerned about attitudes toward/for the last 35 years, an- their students. jthe delinquent boy. nounced his retirement today. Judge Lorne Stewart was) "A typical delinquent -- if|He will be succeeded by coach speaking to urban school prin-|there is such a thing--has be-|Sid Abel, who will be both cipals attending the ann ual|low-average intelligence and \is|jcoach and general manager in convention of the Ontario Edu-|/retarded by two or three years the 1962-63 season. cational Association. in reading, writing and arithme-| Adams said he will serve in Judge Stewart said profes-|tic- He encounters more criti-an advisory capacity to the De- |cism than praise and more,pain|troit team in. the National sional persons ought to roll up! ; 3 -s 4 : than pleasure. His mind ison Hockey League. our academic and emotional) release from school and* the z = ments of a OTTAWA (CP) -- The rudi-jbuoy will listen for submarines, stationary under-|store up any detection informa- sleeves and go to work on be-jhadges of maturity--money, in-|e half of the children in our) dependence and his own type of | midst. : success. £ i "We in the courts and schools Dr. W. R. Sawyer, director of can't say no to these young) studies at Royal Military Col- people : _ lege, Kingston, predicted math- "As long as a single child in ematics courses in universities lany of our homes or classrooms} will be altered as a result of gaan ~~~ | the need to use computers in jhandling mathematical prob- lems posed by rocketry. The in- {fluences might even be felt in jthe high school curriculum, i: throw himself Landing Gear, jlevel. And there were oth Brake Trouble speaking on his behalf. TORONTO (CP) -- A Trans- In Red Deer, Alta., External) Canada Air Lines Viscount air- did manage to meet a lot of| shaking| ers of the New Democratic Party|the public to compare its poli-|Affairs Minister Green said that|craft with 36 passengers aboard) Leader Pearson|who said in Regina--where hejcies with the Conservative pol-|Canada's world prestige is landed safely today at Toronto Liberals and Social International Airport after b are '"'erying blue/ passing the North Bay stop be- by saying Canada's pres- cause of faulty landing gear. |~ Airline officials said hydrau-|: is in trouble. It was, he said,/lic fluid controlling the landing lun-Canada. gear and brakes of the four- As Mr. Green was talking ofjengined plane failed and an growing. | Creditors mainly a fight be} In a causeway-conscious prov-|Canada's image abroad, a com: auxiliary supply had to be!) the NDP and the Pro-'ince, he said the Conservatives;ment on the election was com-|used. F E Flight 252 -- Timmins, Sud-|} Secretary Udall ofjbury, North Ba United States told a Wash-/Sudbury at 9:05 ington press conference that he touched down at hoped the winner of the elec-/ 10:05 tion would speed ratification of} A Toronto to North Bay flight the Canada U.S. Columbia|was held over to carry five} passengers back to North Bay.| At no time were the passen-| He wasn't taking sides in the gers in danger, a TCA spokes- William H. Pinnock, 83, election;:he just hoped the win-|man said, because the Viscount; and his wife, Cora, 75. are ner "will get on with the busi-|carries emergency hydraulic} spending a traditional honey- | fluid' supplies. @noon at Niagara Falls, Ont. ing in from abroad po i Interior Top6nto, left! § m., and} Malton at} 'a , HONEYMOONERS They were married last Sat- urday in Bur ford, Ont. ford, near Brant- (cp Wirephoto) water submarine alarm system/tion it receives and deliver it will be in place off Canada's/on instruction from an interro- coasts by next year, defence of-/gating aircraft. ficials disclose. The system will be based on|time forces. will be able to cover moored sonobuoys dropped by aircraft far out at sea in the u likely channels of approach for| warships. ja submarine bombardment of North America. |HAVE MISSILES Officials said the RCAF now|Russia now is developing a moored sono- buoy capable of being monitored by patrolling aircraft. The sono- .;would not have to come near _|the North American coast to In this way, Canada's mari- immeasurably more ocean than lthey now do with planes and Intelligence reports say that has some sub- marines capable of launching missiles some 350 to 500 miles. This means a hostile submarine jbombard seaports. And if it did approach close in, it could hit inland cities. The new moored sonobuoy is ntended just as much as a re- '|search tool as an instrument of ubmarine defence. Canada recently has stepped p its program to gather ocean- ; ographic data. As part of this program, the maritime forces have begun a study of general sound condi- ltions in the ocean. These con- ditions have a highly important bearing on anti-submarine op- erations. The study of sound propaga- 'tion in the ocean depths in- |volves ships working various jsea areas throughout the year, |though not specifically for this purpose because of interest to |Canadian defence planners. Gathering of sound data by 'ship is time-consuming. Recent jsound advances in the elec- |tronics field, however, will {make it possible to collect a great deal of the required infor- mation from moored sensor buoys. These buoys thus will serve two purposes at the same time: They will provide data on un- derwater sound waves which are bent like light waves strik- ing a glass prism while they keep an ear out for submarines. What the defence planners are looking for is an underwater sound system to detect and track submarines' in the same way that a gadar system de- tects and tracks aircraft. The moored sonobuoy represents a beginning. -

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