The Oshawa Times, 30 Jan 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY A woman's mind is cleaner than & man's because she changes it oftener, dhe Oshawa Times There is still little hope of the weather becoming milder. Snow and cloud should envelope the area by late Tuesday. VOL. 90--No. 24 Price Mot Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 196} Authorized Post Office as Second Cless Mail Department, Ottows TWENTY PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy SCIENGE. TRADE LINKS KENNEDY PEAGE PLAN U.S. Stand To Be Friendly, Firm WASHINGTON (Reuters) President Kennedy said today energies.' his administration will explore! The president outlined a new promptly "all possible areas of alliance for progress in Latin co-operation with the Soviet Un- America, "Our goal is a free fon and other nations." | and prosperous Latin America," He made this statement in he said, Laos: No Proof Of Red Invasion VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -- A. lle said Laos informed the Laotian government official United Nations of its situation said Sunday there is no formal because the UN charter con- proof of an open Communist in- tains provisions that when a vasion in Laos. But he said Laos member nation feels it is in) recently informed the United dznger it must notify the UN ~ overlap, conflict or diffuse our _-- Nations and the Southeast Asia He said the same action was Brazil's president tomorrow, Treaty Organization of the situ-' followed with SEATO a0. Oitered a haven 10 the ation here "because we are In. The government spokesman 5 ips xe DE. ymmander, Hen- real danger said government forces can rigue Galvao PW ; Nhouy Abhay, education min- deal with the situation as it ex- ~A Iephoto er in Prince Boun Oum's ists now without foreign military pro-Western regime, declared: help in personnel "We fear that we could be in- Laos, an Indochinese kingdom Filno, left, yesterday when he announced he would not seize the Santa Maria if the hijack- ed vessel sails into a Brazilian port. Quadros, who becomes | Passenger Lift Set For Liner In Brazil RECIFE, Brazil (AP) Aiturn the Santa Maria back tothe Portuguese and U.S. admiral agreed today to a her Portuguese owners, the col- armed followers sneaked aboard meeting at daybreak Tuesday onial Navigation Company the luxury ship at stopovers in with the rebel captain of the The United States had pro- Venezuela and the Dutch West liner Santa Maria to arrange posed that Kubitschek permit|/Indies. They proclaimed the for the release of her 588 cap-the Santa Maria te enter a Bra-|liner "liberated" as their first tive passengers. zilian port to discharge her pas- blow in a campaign to over- Rear - Admiral Allen Smith, sengers without threat of seiz- throw Portugal's dictator An- U.S, Navy commander in the jure, tionio de Oliveira Salazar Caribbean, said he received al pojgado, who hailed the in-| A representative of Salazar, Message Jom t an Henrique coming president's stand, has- Ridongo Yoplaza, is flying to Wri U geindi Duet tened to Rio de Janeiro from Brazil to try to get the ship accepted did his exile home in Sao Paulo and back for Portugal, In Trinidad . said he would go to help Gal- he said the Salazar regime The Portuguese luxury liner, ! whose 42 pyle and other Va0 if the Santa Marie enters feared many lives would be lost before the Santa Maria case is passengers have been v ir tual Port. : hostages since Jan. 22, was re- Galvao, a former captain in|settled, ported lying about 60 miles east =" ig m-------- of Recife, Smith will sail in the de- stroyer Gearing for the rendez vous. He flew to. Recile.{rom Belem Sunday night to take charge of arrangements for re- lease of the passengers. Smith said he planned a ren. BRAZIL'S President - elect Janio Quadros, right, dines at Sao Paulo home of an old per- sonal friend, Jose Lourenco | army nessman; Frederick Houghton, 55; book-/ threatening to block navigation| seller Peter John Kroger, 50, FREIGHTER CRUNCHES Ice Jam Stalls River Traffic | personally delivering to a joint! Kennedy also declared; *, , , | session of Congress his first We must never forget our hopes DOWN HUDSON The last such stretch of sub- {nold Lonsdale, 37, London busi- son River ice up to 18 inches zero weather occurred in 1917, | yielded its ambitions for world civil servant Harry thick in parts of the channel-|the weather bureau said, On the Mississippi River, atized today the longest great jam of ice formed near state of the union message, "Specifically," he said, *I| now invite all nations--including| the Soviet Union--to join with! us in developing a weather pre-| diction program, in a new com- munications satellite program and in preparing for probing the distant planets of Mars and Venus, probes which may some day unlock the deepest secrets of the universe." | The president told the con- gressmen: "I speak today in an hour of national peril and national op-|; portunity. 'Before my term has ended we shall have to test anew| whether a nation organized and| governed such as ours can en-| dure. The outcome is by no means certain, The answers are by no means clear, All of us together -- this administration, this Congress, this nation--must forge those answers," CITES MAIN CHALLENGE Kennedy said the United | States' greatest challenge is still the world that lay beyond the cold war, and the first great olstacle is "still our relations) with the Soviet Union and Com- munist China," | "We must never be lulled into . "has | believing that-either power domination -- ambitions which for the ultimate freedom and welfare of the Eastern Europe peoples, "In order to be prepared to help re-establish historic ties of friendship, I am asking the Con- gress for increased discretion to use economic tools in this area whenever this is found to be clearly in the national interest, MENTIONS POLAND "Meanwhile I hope to explore with the Polish government the possibility of using our frozen Polish funds on projects of peace that will demonstrate our abid- dship for the ple of Kennedy said ' steps to co-ordina: the United Nations' ment effort, "The deadly arms race, and the huge resources it absorbs, have too long overshadowed all else we do, We must prevent that arms race from spreading to new nations, to new nuclear powers and to the reaches of outer space, "We must increase our sup- port of the United Nations as an instrument to end the cold war instead of an arena in which to fight it, "And I would address a spe- sia plea to the smaller nations 1 taken 1 expand disarma- Us. strengthening this organization which is far more essential to their security than ours, , , , they forcefully re-stated only a short time ago." To meet the challenges, the | "Finally, this administration {intends to explore promptly all on and nis wile He i ", a bell of zero weather eastern| Cajro, 111, five miles above the of Portlane on the south coast, York has experienced iniriver's confluence with the The civil servants worked af, more than 40 years, Ohio, It was about 10 miles Porland's anti-submarine war. A Spanish freighter (finally long and eight to 12 feet thick fare research base battered her way into the port/in places, Powerful, blunt-nosed| other. On the presidential coat | rors'," of Albany Sunday. She had left towboats rammed at the big ice|of arms, the American eagle| The president said the United New York City eight days ago. mass, | holds in his right talon the olive| States is ahead in the science and technology of space while U.8, must re-examine and revise| possible areas of co-operation its "whole arsenal of tools; Mil-| with the Soviet Union and other itary, economic and political," [nations 'to invoke the wonders "One must not overshadow the of science instead of its ter. dezvous about 35 miles off Re- " IR cife. Three other U.S. destroy sifting carefully through the Af- rican remnants of the old mu- |tinous force plique, began form- ing a new army, Their work was speeded, first by the threat of invasion by the 'Flu Epidemic 'Sweeps England | takes 12 hours. Meanwhile, despite two cutters, a small convoy of vessels had fought its way| downstream only about 40 miles LONDON (AP)~--An influenza epidemic is creeping down from| the north of England after| : Lg claiming 754 lives since the be since it left Albany Friday, ginning of January, Arrival here of the freighter Thousands of people had been|Rivadeluna came on the ninth laid low by the outbreak. It has consecutive day that overnight caused staff shortages in factor. temperatures had dropped to ies and offices and disrupted zero or below in the Albany mail deliveries, area, Trade Deficit Goes Down of | +1960, ,..1959, 3,036.4 $3,181.9 9249 7043 N33 205.8 1,1006 884.4 5,305.3 5,140.3 3,606.9 3,700.1 588.8 588.6 2776 239.2 9326 972.0 5405.8 5,508.9 Man Held In Presbytery Thett QUEBEC (CP)~--Quebec Pro- vincial Police investigating the theft of $1,001 from St, Joseph's | presbytery are holding a man who was detained as he was about to board a Toronto-bound plane at Quebec's Ancienne | Lorette Airport. { Police said they were called to the airport when an airline employee became suspicious of| the man, who gave two differ | LONDON (Reuters)--A Royal|dropped from the 2,200 - lavy decision to leave behind|crew before arrival there, ine colored (mixed race) sail He said those colored sailors Ars when the aircraft carrier] yo UBINE 1 South Africa are lictorious visits South Africa DONE taken so they could visit as kicked up a storm in Lon: would not say man their families. The spokesman how many col ored sailors would sail in the Victorious n Two Labor party members of} rliament said they plan top, han ¢ questions in Parliament| go cqiq the decision to leave he | andny 38 w SPAPETSithe nine behind is "in the in : y terest of en," vas take h admiralty spokesman said] oo bl the mem Bode Tog day some colored sailors, h A uld visit South Africa, where their being treated badly in d racial segregation is en South Africa." fea. although nine would be|§ A. NOT CONSULTED ) "The South African govern ITY EMERGENCY ment has never been consulted HONE NUMBERS vasion by up to seven Commun- Viet Nam, and four neutral or logical to deduce there is a con- S C Le has only about 30: soldiers than 3,000 troops pating but it's hard to prove," with conspiring to commit The magistrate said at the READING, England (AP) 1 H | 4he accused ard Gordon Are ALBANY, N.Y. (AR) ~Hud-| Bi U 1 A 1G, g Trim Y window. two electric motors each | ' icans aboard, : only the 42 Americans aboard bethville airport turned and pro - Lumumba Congo national| {no air force technician Sat- SIGHTED BY PLA! from Europe, They were the group was organized without part of a large miscellane- tie coast, venturers. Lured by high pay, . é + y national liberation movement, rica, Rhodesia and, of course, Belgian Legion Tuesday a group known as 'Les Af BARR Ta gy iso itown with revolvers slung low, the passengers, he will not seizc charged the Belgian government |The Congo scheduled for Wed. : hair, and sport bushy mous. Quadros, 43, an independent premier Patrice Lumumba and|mumba, Congolese Pre s ident Salvador about Wednesday army stationed in Katanga with- said go hy 3 \ of India as the chief country's trade deficit to $100,-|the last quarter of the year ex. schek decided Saturday to offer pelgian . officers and men vol- Congolese towns controlled by governments to withdraw their day. Here are comparative export of ™ \ \ Reports from The Congo have one. quarter of the 1959 deficit of } {of the northern part of the prov. (#94 hg is cs lince by pro-Lumumba troops | Export sales to overse as mar-| | who established a headquarters|kets rose 20.5 per cent to $2,008, | United States their charge that the govern: . Total crew member as saying, an arsenal of new and improved nuclear weapons that it has Navy." men have fought and died for the help! of a coast guard icebreaker and| "|dispatched to Batiscan to break 'The 150-mile passage normally] Most of the Mississippi was|branch, while in his left is held chocked with ice, At least three|a bunch of arrows, We intend to towboats were trapped during|give equal attention to both, the weekend but no boats were He said he had instructed De- reported in trouble, {fence Seqretary Tower MecNa. In Maryland, the ice jam a oon app strategy; had ming coastal waterways threat: givected prompt action to in- ened to starve the state's flock| crease the country's airlift ca- of waterfowls, pacity; had directed prompt TRE. Pp |action to step up the Polaris ADA TREAL (OB) - 3 co submarine program, and had federal government's ice-break. also directed prompt action to ers back to work on: the St accelerate the entire missile Lawrence River channel, down- program, stream from Montreal, TO AID OTHERS They broke into The U.S, must also improve harbor Jan. 13, its economic tools, Kennedy said There were reports Sunday|he intended to ask Congress for that the channel was freezing authority to establish a new and over again below Sorel, Que. |More effective program for as 40 miles downstream, sisting the ip p fce » ; canna wael HiONAL and soc The ice - breaker Saurel was other countries and continents. "That program must stimu. late and take more effectively into account the contributions of our allies, and provide central policy direction for all our own programs that now so often Montreal up fresh jams while the D'Ib- erville and Ernest Lapointe worked at opening a cross-river ferry service from Sorel to Ber: thierville on the north shore. the Soviet Union is ahead in the capacity to lift large vehicles into orbit, "Both nations would help themselves as well as other na- tions by removing these endeav- ors from the bitter and wasteful competition of the cold war, The United States would be willing to join with the Soviet Union and the scientists of all nations in a greater effort to make the fruits of this nkowledge available fo all and, beyond that, in an ei- fort to extend farm technology to hungry nations--~to wipe out disease--to increase exchanges of scientists and their knowl. edge, and to make our own laboratories available to techni. cians of other lands who lack the facilities to pursue their own work," The president said he had found the execuitve branch of the government full of honest and useful public servants but said their capacity to act de- cisively had too often been muf- fled, PLANNING JOBLESS TRAINING Three men who set up voca- | are taking classes in welding, ent names when enquiring about flights The sum of $1,081 in bills was found in the luggage, police said. vaded one day in force "about 93,000 square miles in Nhouy admitted that previous size, borders on two Communist ist battalions from North Viet Pro - Western nations, Burma, Nam were partly propaganda, C2mbodia, South Viet Nam and siderable force of Vietminh troops fighting government forces in Laos, left under his command and I E ] d that the pro-Communist. Pathet In n an TOUGH TO PROVE : Remanded "We must conclude that in 2d dition there are Vietminh forces.| LONDON (Reuters) -- Three Nhouy said breaches of the Official Secrets Act today were ordered held for two-minute hearing that every- |thing was arranged for the full| hearing to begin a week from Rritish. Air Force officials are investigating how top secret radar equipment The store deals in govern. PT IRARFTHY " py ment surplus equipment, ers were also en route here. wEHISABETHY 11. LE (AP) i Asked whether he expects to They get bigge Tr, oug eran (uglier--every day. forming a key part of a radar device used in detect. Smith replied this depends on ing nuclear-armed subma- the h ope of Ms Pon with [looked distastefully at a group of young men clambing out of army, and then by a Baluba re: qay 2 bellion in northern Katanga Store owner M. J. Mile U.S. Navy planes spotted the latest additions to the Katanga Santa Maria at 7:30 p.m, Sun- gendarmerie, : isi , These mercenaries are 4 any definite mission except t0| guq electrical equipment at day cruising in apparently aim-| These mercenaries are joined keep order and "make an im-| a government auction sale pression' on rebels and invad recently." Galvao was under instructions they have come from the United from Gen. Humberto Delgado, States, Britain, France, Ger- to keep the Santa Maria in in-|Belgium. Some the better ternational waters until after pes De come Slicers the inauguration of Brazilian the others, undisciplined, unticly. PY 9] Quadros gave an assurance froue he Exige). ' Russ a S a ge 4 Thole a Bra. ne Ss 8 Ege r-- that if 'Galvao sails into a Bra UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Zorin's letter was a prelude to oe a for rely from the webbing of their cam- he 30, 906-ou Hiner for peti lo ouflaged paratrooper smocks, with new acts of aggression in nesday. her Por Hue al uw De © AIS0 prey are usually unshaven, The Congo, including the forma-| Seven pro-Lumumba govern- offered a haven to Galvao, tion of a foreign legion to fight ments have asked the council to taches, EY AW "n spor sales } u wd States! predicted Galvao would sail into y (a an N wl: (hig da > v Glzengs Jose Casavul as dems y OTTAWA (CP) - A five-per- sales to the nited Slates { How did Ratakga come io.col hig Yeputy, Autoive Gisehga. o py Ph Kasavitu hay demanded cent increase in Canada's export slipped 4.6 per cent to $3,036, . _ drew following independence, Valerian A. Zorin, in a letter to/war Da ; : : WOULD RETURN SHip ] the government of Moise the president of the Security| UN representative in The Congo, | 00,000 for 1960, the smallest|ports to the U.S, fell sharply, The outgoing administration pshombe had little left in the Council, charged that Belgian|And Hammarskjold has warned|deiicit since 1954, the Dominion 16.7 per cent below year-earlier Galvao political asylum if hejunteered to join the new Ka. Lumumba's forces and caused|troops from the UN force may| The deficit--excess mer- and import figures by areas for entered Brazilian waters, but toitanga gendarmerie and, aiter numerous casualties, compel its withdrawal from the chandise imports over exports-- the two years (in millions of told of the arrival in Katanga $68,600,000, Exports province of foreign fighting men |= noia) exports were valued at| United States to serve as mercenaries for es a5 300 000 compared with $5,-| United Kingdom cruiting apparently was stepped | 000. declined 2.1 from wealth as a res { the invasion|$%495,800,000, declined 2. { is up as a result of Ui $5.508,900,000, All others | Imports i » i ini . p h 958,500,000, But : 2 The Sunday Express said the i? Manono, a tin-mining centre, 800,000 from §1,058,5 { United Kingdom Labor party would "treat the [other SumON. ment is 'appeasing' South Af- LATE NEWS FLASHES rica." ; |APPEASING VERWOERD? : Senda +1 a Obsolete A-Bombs To Be Retired never thought that (South rw can Prime Minister Hendrik)| _. . . nak . EN Verwoerd's writs would run on started relegating obsolescent models to retirement, the Atomic Energy Commission disclosed today The paper said it is not too Mrs. Geiger Admits Embezzlement late to stop the insult to the v ' yY X 9 > apie Royal Navy, "in whose ranks SIOUX CITY, Towa (AP) -- Mrs. Burnice Ive rson Geiger, accused embezzler of $2,000,000 from her father's bank, plead. | about the admiralty's practice in! Britain." this matter," he added Fenner Brockway, left - wing The admiralty spokesman/ Labor MP, said he would ask Man Shot In Toronto Hotel Room in TORONTO (CP) -- A shooting in a hotel room early today JCE RA 5.1133 sent Walter McCulloch, 35, to hospital in serious condition E DEPT. RA 5-6574 PITAL RA 3.2211 hn] government claims of an in- countries, Red China and North He added, however, that it is Thailand Nhouy said rebel Cap. Kong Lao guerrillas have no more We are certain they are partici- men and two women charged another eight days ' . » | ARMY SURPLUS ongo rrightiuls iy wound up for sale in a store The secret equipment transfer all the passengers or| : . e Dassen | The security officer at Elisa- rines--was seen by a pass- G 8 : " alvao, the plane that had just come in As an experiment, a combat| ¢aiq: © bought them as less patterns off Brazil's Atlan- every day by new soldier-ad- ers, exiled leader of the Portuguese many, Poland, Israel, South Af: President-elect Janio Quadros rowdy and ruthless have joined wi "sofa sharoe of Sometimes stagger -- around zilian port for safe discharge of (AP)--The Soviet Union today|a Security Council meeting on iy "MY have cropped heads or long oily old friend, against forces loyal to deposed |protest the imprisonment of Lu- Recife or the Brazilian port of ject them? When the Belgian | deputy foreign minister Hammarskjold replace Rajesh. (Sales last year helped trim the [400,000 from $3,181,000,00, In of President Jusecelino Kubit-|yay of a defence force. A few "colonialists" bombed several|that plans for pro-Lumumba Bureau of Statistics reported to- levels. chaotic country vas cut to slightly more than dollars): Premier Moise Tshombe, Re-|146.300,000 in 1950. Imports, at|Other Common- Total incident as evidence supporting | wealt yi : | All others to Cape Town and The Sunday Dispatch quot "1 WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States has built up such the quarter-decks of the Queen's over hundreds of years colored ed guilty to 35 charges in U.S. district court today said, "In the navy we just do/Prime Minister Macmillan with a 38 - calibre bullet two inches from his heart. Police small included in any of his docu- partments to refrain from ap man's ments. It would be monstrous peasing "the racialist policies" {10 suggest there is a color bar." of South Africa. not know whether a man is{the House of Commons Thurs colored or not, The fact is not|day if he would instruct all de- were seeking two men believed to have been in the room with him. } | ' unemployed men and women machine operation and com- mercial skipps at Cornwall Collegiate and Vocational School, Left to right tional training courses for un- employed in Cornwall discuss plans for expansion, Some 50 | | Ralph Froats, principal of the | school; Howard Fullard, office manager of the National Em« ployment Service in Cornwall; Thomas Phelps, director of the are: | training courses =' Wirephoto

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