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Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Aug 1962, p. 1

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Oshawa Youths Charged In Att THOUGHT FOR TODAY Men never really learn anything about women, but they have a lot of fun trying. She Oshawa Times . ack On Girl---P..9 WEATHER REPORT Clear tonight and Wednesday. Cool with a warming trend Wed- nesday. Price Not Over 10. Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES Moscow's Kremlin as a back- ground in photo published to- day in Red Star, military newspaper. Their THE SOVIET COSMONAUT | team of Lt. Col. Pavel Popo- vich, left, and Maj. Andrian Nikolayev are shown with Seafarers Ask Russian | i ae is jconcern over the health of the dual adventure in space con- tinued today. --AP Wirephoto via radio from Moscow Norris To Mediate Dispute | RUSSIAN SPACE SHIPS STILL ORBITING EARTH JFK Pledges Tax Cuts For America In 1963 WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-, which would close existing loop-|raised deep concern in congres- 'dent Kennedy has pledged '"'bil-| holes. sional financial quarters as to |lions of dollars" in top-to-bottom; But he vaid that if the unex-|whether the U.S. can afford jincome tax cuts for Americans|pected happens--if the U.S.jany immediate tax cut and still jin 1963 but dashed all hope for|slides toward recession Jater|be able to maintain world con- jany immediate pre-election tax' this year--he will call Congress fidence in the American dollar. | relief. into special session to lighten} Kennedy used charts to show, In the "far too heavy" tax burden.|among other things, that under He described the present tax|his administration, the. gross |U.S. economy, Kennedy main-|system as "a drag on economic/national product has increased |tained in a national broadecast|recovery and economic growth,|10 per cent, wages and salaries |Monday night that July figures| biting heavily into the pur-|10 per cent and corporate prof- indicate the country is still set-|chasing power of evrey tax-|its before taxes 26 per cent; and ting economic records which/payer and every consumer." | that the unemployment rate has |'do not warant the conclusion| Lightening the U.S. tax bur-|decreased 23 per cent: that we are entering a new re-|den, he suggested, would lead} cession:" |to economic expansion, eventu-| But he pledged a_personal|@ly making up the treasury's| jand corporation income tax cut|Tevenue loss a tax cut would for 1963 as an important step|C@use. Lower rates would make} |'to prevent another recession."|American goods more competi- | While defending the strength] tive with those in the European Threat |of the economy, Kennedy indi-/COmmon Market where, he) een S jcated one of the main reasons| ded, taxes pdt pnd been |why he won't propose an im.|reduced with marked success. | ae ae i s mediate cut is that he doubis Kennedy made only indirect} WASHINGTON (AP) --Rus- they may Ko a Congress would support him) "ference to the size of the U,S./sian precision in ---- er oe can ol scene re- now. national debt--now a mammoth | ellites --plunking a pair of | or purposes | | | $300,000,000,000 -- by comparing) manned spacecraft into match- search. : 5 aul SUPPORT IN 1963 lit with U.S, national production|ing orbits--could spell trouble| "Soviet attainment of this the face of widespread JOHN F. KENNEDY Russian Orbits. | smiling. TORONTO (CP) -- The Sea-; The motion--which did not,attitude by ending boycotts, vio- farers's International Union of specify the nature of the dis-|lence, and picketing against Up- Canada (Ind.) today called on}pute between the SIU and Up-|per Lakes vessels. Mr, Justice T. G. Norris to try|per Lakes Shipping--asked Mr.| He ences between the SIU and Up-jafter each daily sitting of the)bargaining relationship with the perv-dakes Shipping Limited/commission during which the/SIU since it holds agreements while pressing his inquiry into|honorable commissioner would/wjth the Canadian Maritime Un- said- the Toronto-based|elections--and couples with his informally to mediate differ-|Justice Norris to "fix a time|shipping firm has no collective|fequest tax reform measures He said congressional leaders|which had outpaced the rise in|for the U.S. "spy in the sky" have promised to support him if|debt, thereby reducing the ratio | systems. : 2 he times his cut for 1963--after|of debt to production. | These warning and_surveil- the November congressional] But it is this debt and the|lance systems are still in the continued development of large| development stage. ici However, a number of ve- federal budget deficits that has} , fom 'abe beens Gor inke ucbll jduring the past months, some of them presumably equipped PLANE CRASH-LANDS capability would pose a grave threat to our national security," jhe said. Nehru Warns Great Lakes shipping disrup-|assist, at informal meetings be- tions and labor unrest. tween the disputants, in the me- A formal motion seeking the\diation and settlement of their mediation talks was placed be-| dispute." fore the Vancouver jurist at the . vs opening of his one-man inquiry -- oT lawoar for into a tangled web of interna-|) O° o ta Tabor GC : tional intrigue, waterfront vio-\{Me Canadian Labor Congress lence and shipping disruptions|4%4 four affiliated gr rhnca sad' woven around the militant tested that informal discussions struggle of two rival trade un- outside the public hearing would ions for the loyalty of Great ® improper procedure. Lakes seamen. "You are going to have two Sana es aia types of hearings continuing concurrently,"' said Mr. Wright. 4 Cubans Defect, He said Labor Minister Starr Refugee Reports KINGSTON erence of the inquiry commis- sion Jamaica (AP)--|. J. A. Geller, lawyer for Up- A Cuban refugee. spokesman|Per Lakes Shipping, challenged said four Cuban weightlifters|the SIU to prove its conciliatory and their coach defected Mon-|-- : y Q yent into h g They were attending 'the Cox] Court Remands - Abortion Suspects tral American Caribbean Games here. Frank Diaz-Silveira, a mem ber of the Anti-Castro Cuban Revolutionary Council, said/g¢ pickering, Adeline Churchill, coach Julio Cespedes went into of T t id enw. hiding before the opening of the": a oronta, 80 enry weightlifting events Monday Simpson, 74, of Toronto, appear- night. After he failed to show ed in Whitby Court this morn- up, weightlifters Sergio Oliva./ing and were remanded to S2p- Juan Torres, Geraldo Diaz and Ignacio Herrera followed him Mrs. Thelma Blackburn, 57, Teamsters Part Of Perjury Probe WASHINGTON (AP) A;when Samuel Barron, 59, field group of Teamsters union em-) director of the Teamsters' ware- ployees were ordered Monday|housemen's division, charged to appear before a grand jury in a perjury inves- ing him down twice, and shoved to procure abortions. tigation based on their accoun's|him over a chair in an alter- 4 of an alleged slugging of an- cation in Hoffa's office. other Teamsters' aide by the : union's president, James R, WELL-KNOWN IN CANADA Hoffa. Barron, as a textile union or- U.S. District Judge Charles F.|8401Zer, was well-known in Ca- McLaughlin refused to. quash subpoenas for the witnesses de- i heir lawyer that 0 ty" choy. ph dl tbadgered" .., the assaalt charge in municipal to see if they can't possibly cor. cone ™ hiring pagent ser a st " § 4 0 tradict .what they said b fore. Teamster employees had turn- Assistant U.S. Attorney Ed-| ished affidavits maintaining that 1945 and 1953. Hoffa pleaded not guilty to mond T. Daly said affidavits)Barron instigated the fight. not by the witnesses revealed "'such) porta. a conflict in testimony that the) The federal grand jury inves- government feels this investiga tigation into the accuracy. of the tion should be undertaken." | affidavits furnishe d by the! The began May Teamsters' employees contrac- dicting sethye charge was re- vealed over t kend. CITY EMERGENCY = "Judge Mclaughlin granted PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 jdelays in the grand jury ap-| pearances of two of the employ-| FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 } case last ees, Mrs. Yuki Kato Keithley, Hoffa's secretary, and Richard C, Bell, an employee, of the Eastern Conference of Teams- ters. Mrs. Keithley is expecting ja child and Bell is ill. i RESERVES DECISION wide had set out the terms of ref- ~ tember 18. The trio is charged §& Diaz said the five hoped to With procuring and attempting federal| that Hoffa slugged him, knock: § nadian labor circles between ion (CLL), with instruments for reporting Mr. Justice Norris decision on the SIU motion. The industrial inquiry has} terms of reference and} strong powers to investigate the! tough, turbulent world of lakc! shipping and the unions that represent the men who sail lake ships, man lake docks and run the seaway locks. LONDON (Reuters)--A Ger- man Boeing 707 airliner was skilfully crash-landéd at London airport today, saving its 42 pas- 4g | Ssengers from injury. *\ The pilot brought down the _ Cabinet Crisis Facing Regime BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Pres- ident Jose Maria Guido's shaky regime wrestled with a new ca- /binet crisis today. It also was leonfronted with a U.S, warning that Argentina will lose Amer- lican aid and recognition if it falls into outright military rule. | Interior Minister Carlos A. Adrogue twice submitted his resignation Monday and De- fence Minister Jose Luis Can- tilo asked to quit for the second time in three days. Foreign Minister Bonifacio del Carril and Economie Minister Alvaro Alsogaray also were reported) |ready to quit, | Guido rejected Adrogue's res- ignations but said he had not ; decided whether to accept Can- a | tilo's. | | Cantilo has been under fire jfor his handling of the army jcrisis last week which brought rival army factions to the verge) of shooting in Buenos Aires and forced two war secretaries to quit in three days. He offered to resign then, but the rival] army leaders established a| truce with the selection of Brig.-Gen. Cornejo Saravia as war secretary. Adrogue has 4 been severely| Pe 4 i criticized for his part in the re-| "44 d : J j cent decree banning Peronists,| j i d Communists and others consid-| 7 ered extremists from running} lfor political office. Argentina's numerous political parties con- sider the measure too sweeping, but Adrogue said he would quit ,if it was watered down. Alsogaray has publicly ex- |Pressed dismay at the effect of |Argentina's continuing arm y jcrisis on his economic auster-| jity program and efforts to win} \foreign aid. to bolster the stag-| jnant economy. Carril has had| |the difficult task of trying to} |maintain friendly relations with) hemispheric nations which bicycle frame turned over. It |have shown an increasing hos- is six feet high tility toward military govern-| (CP Wirephoto) | ments, RIDING HIGH Thirteen - year - old George Brazier. of Winnipeg has a long way to fall if this bicycle tips. Built by George and his father, the bicycle consists of an ordinary se Skilful Handling Saves 42 People Of Possible World War NEW DELHI--Prime Minister data back to U.S. receiving sta- tions. But the systems are still a year or more away from be- ling completely operational. } Over the weekend, Russia |showed that ~ has Te a long step leading eventually) |toward ability to intercept sat-|Nehru warned today that ellites--either for purposes of| Clashes between Indian and Red peaceful space exploration or|Chinese troops could drift into for inspection and. destruction.,Wat, and said a war between The Soviet scientists suc-/India and China "may become ceeded, on the basis of their) world war. . : own reports and on data from! Nehru told Parliament it is other sources, in putting Vos-|Necessary to talk with the Chi- tok IV on the same plane and|nese Communists to try to avoid virtually within sight of Vostok|further trouble along the dis- Il. puted Himalayar frontier. To do Answering contentions that) acy in timing, rocket-engine there should be no talks unless burning control and computa-|the Chinese withdrew from 12,- tion had to be attained 000 square miles of the Ladakh Sd ' .,/area of Kashmir which India Scientists figure the Soviet claims, he declared: "I refuse launchers had an interval of sh : less than 14 seconds to fire Vos-|? aces He sate cyt: | tok IV, during the 18th orbit of|, He called it a childish and) don on an airline 'light from|the first satellite, in order to|iMfantile attitude. Frankfurt. He requested emer-|put them both into the same| But once again he drew a dis- gency landing facilities and jet-|/track and in proximity. tisoned fuel over the sea. MAY EVEN BE BETTER TURNS FOR LANDING Dofel made a pass over thejington that the precision WaS!the Chinese to reduce border airport control tower for offici-|even better than announced in-| a als to view the undercarriagejitially by Russia, being virtu- with high - powered binoculars, | ally a perfect matching o: then turned the four - engine/plante, heights and time. | liner around for the landing. | What this could mean to U.S. Airline and airport officials; military officials is that the So- watched anxiously from the roof|Viets may be able to convert of the airport terminal build-|this demonstration into the ing as it landed, braking amid/practical application for knock- a shower of sparks, jing down American spy-in-the- .,.|Sky_ satellites. Dofel held the plane on its | This possibility has been con- centre wheeis for as long as he|sidered for some time by top- if . New Difficulty l . could, then put it into reverse | Feaking eieiate. + In A gerian --with fire engines and crash|, \@St May, Gen. Bernard A.) " tenders: ehhean altar: & along|Schtiever, chief of the air force| Election Plans systems command, said in em-) the runway. |phasizing need for greater U.S.| The plane ground to a halt/€ffort in space development that |; with its nose tilted into tHe run-|if the Russians should achieve | 4 way, the engines clear of the|a really significant break- tarmac by only two feet. through in space technology, LATE NEWS FLASHES Soblen Wins Week Reprieve LONDON (Reuters) -- Dr. Robert Soblen today won a week's reprieve from deportation to the United States to serve his life prison sentence for spying for the Soviet Unicn. The British high court adjourned his case to Aug. 22 after hearing his' lawyer challenge the validity of the deportation order issued Saturday by Home Secretary Brooke. Red Pilot Studies In Space LONDON (Reuters) ---Lt.-Col. Pavel Popovich, pilot of Russia's Vostok IV spaceship is studying English and physics in his spare time in space, the Soviet news agency Tass said today. giant jetliner without benefit of a nose wheel, teetering it along on its centre wheels be- fore coming to a halt with the tail pointing at the sky, "He did a brillant job," said one witness. The only casualty was a ste- wardess who fell as the pas- sengers and nine crew members quickly got out of the airliner amid encircling ambulances and fire engines. The pilot, Capt. Walter Dofel, radioed that his nose wheel was jammed 'as he approached. Lon- this, fantastic accur- the rival territorial claims. He climate for negotiations. Chinese withdrawing from the |territory India considers its own he said. hmed Ben Bella's political bu- }reau and the commander of Al jgeria's guerrilla army over the |nomination of candidates the Sept. 2 elections. 'the political bureau postponed \for at least 48 hours the sched- juled publication of its list of 196 election candidates because of a difference of viéws with the wilaya (military zone) com- manders of the guerrilla army. The virtually independent wi- jlaya commands put |their own lists of candidates. |The political bureau refused to accept them, asserting that the elections were the exclusive concern of the new nation's ci- vilian leaders. The political bureau, which is jcontrolling the government un- til the elections, must announce the candidates for the one-party jelection by Thursday, the offi- cial opening day of the two-week election campaign. If the list is: not ready by| Thursday, the election date may| have to be postponed again, for the fifth time in as many weeks. Cell Hanging Inquest Planned BROCKVILLE, Ont. (CP) -- Police said today an in- quest will be held into the death of a man who hanged himself in a jail cell here Monday. Don Fowler, 44, was arrested early last evening on a charge of creating a dis- turbance in a restaurant, jlater some of the usually reli- |tinction between 'talking with! ; ithe Chinese and negotiations on): There were reports in Wash-|saiq India is willing to talk with|. jtensions and create a proper|: But}: negotiations will depend on the}: ALGIERS (AP)--New difficul-|_ es came to light today between| : for! © | Algiers radio announced that); forward| # Nikolayev Ends Third Orbit Day MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union's two newest astrohauts completed another day of cir- cling the earth today and ap- peared to be still in orbit in mid-afternoon, the time consid- ered best for a landing attempt. Moscow's central television station broadcast at 4:10 p.m. (9:10 am. EDT) what it claimed was a direct transmis- sion from Vostok III, piloted by Maj. Andrian Nikolayev. Nikolayev could: be seen rais- ing his log book, looking from left to right and, at one time, The announcer pointed to a porthole of the Vostok III and said that, through it, it was pos- sible to see Vostok IV, carry- ing Lt-Col. Pavel Popovich. This would indicate the two space ships, launched a day apart on almost identical orbits, were still close together. West- ern tracking stations. have said the two ships now are several| hundred miles apart after be-| ing as close as 75 mile» | A good time for the landing! supposedly would have been about 2:30 p.m., when Vostok Ill would have been over the central Volga valley where other globe-circling Soviet ships haye gone down. COMPLETES THIRD DAY came out with opposing predic- tions. "They will be down today," said one- "They are going to finish out a week," said another. The day's first communique contained a variation that might signal something special was planned today -- a landing, a close approach or even a linkup of the spaceships. "Omitting the usual signoff of "the flight continues," the com- munique said: "At present, the cosmonauts have started carry- ing out their numerous difficult duties envisaged by the pro- gram of space research planned for Aug. 14. The group flight of spaceships Vostok III and Vos- tok IV continues according to the planned program." Sir Bernard Lovell, director of Britain's Jodrell Bank radio telescope, told reporters Mon- day night: "I would not be sure prised 'if both men came down in one craft and left the other craft in orbit. . . . We believe either the spacemen now are both together or are extremely close to each other." The Sohio research centre in Cleveland, Ohio, reported, how- ever, that the two sk were moving farther apart. cen- tre calculaetd that Vostok IIT was 970 miles in front of its sis- Nikolayev completed ns third} tery ship when it passed over day in orbit at 11:30 a.m (4:30 a.m. EDT) and Popovich fin- ished his second day aloft at 11:02 a.m. Tass news agency said that by noon Nikolayev had com- pleted 49 orbits and travelled more than 2,000,000 kilometres while Popovich had finished 33 orbits for a total of 1,400,000 kilometres. "The flight continues," said the announcement in what ap- peared to be an indication that the two space men would not land today. The Soviet government con- tinued to maintain absolute se- crecy about tHe future schedule of the flight. Earlier a Soviet informant had said something interesting would happen in the afternoon, when both astronauts would be in a position to descend. But able Soviet scientific sources. Cleveland at 9:36. pm, EDT Monday. The centre's fitst measure- ment of distance between the two ships Sunday indicated they were 75 miles apart, but Dr. A. L. Jones, supervisor of basic research at the centre, said a mathematical projection of the centre's figures indicated the two space ships could have touched one another. in orbit earlier. The Russian astronauts had long since outstripped the best previous Soviet and American space efforts and had covered distances far beyond those be- tween the earth and the moon, which vary from 221,463 to 252,- 710 miles. By 8 am. Moscow time (1 a.m. EDT) Vostok Ill was completing its 47th orbit, or about 1,195,000 miles, and Vos- tok IV, its 31st orbit, or 776,000 miles. eM 'IMPOSSIBLE' TRIP Kenichi Horie, 23-year-old Japanese who sailed his 19- foot sailboat Mermaid alone from Osaka to San Francisco in three months, arrived with- out a passport. However, the U.S. Immigration service, in | view. of Horie's- feat has granted him a 30-day stay. Yesterday he was given the key to the city by Mayor George Christopher and then took a short- ride on a San Francisco cable car. Officials in Osaka refused Horie a passport because they viewed his trip as impossible. (AP Wirephoto)

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