The Oshawa Times, 19 May 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY One way to save money these days is to have short arms and deep pockets. Fhe Oshawa Ties WEATHER REPORT Cloudy skies are expected to clear by Saturday, pleasant spring the weekend. leaving weather for VOL. 90--NO. 117 Price Not Over 10 tice Not Oar OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1961 Pout jr ee loss Mail Ottawa TWENTY PAGES ~ SNAKE-PIT This ball of garler snakes was discovered on the farm of Roy Haycock at Inwood, Man., 45 miles north of Winni- Many US. Citizens Eichman's Remain In Cuba | Lightning HAVANA (CP)--Only 47 of 91 Americans scheduled for repa- triation to the United States from Cuba today turned up at the Swiss Embassy Thursday to collect their exit permits and buy airline tickets. The first flight in the repa- triation scheme involving U.S. citizens in Cuba is scheduled to leave Havana airport for Miami this afternoon. A Swiss spokesman expressed surprise that only a little more than half of those slated for re- patriation were at the embassy. The 91 were among some 400 U.S. citizens who responded to an embassy-sponsored newspa- per advertisement asking Amer- icans who wished to leave Cuba to advise the embassy. The Swiss embassy has been handling U.S. affairs here since Washington broke diplomatic re- lations with Cuba early this year. ON peg. Mrs. William Bachinsky of Winnipeg was walking with her two children when they discovered the pit with hun- would get the necessary per- mission from the Cuban govern- ment in time for today's flight. They are Harold Milks and Robert Berrellez of The Associ- ated Press, Mrs. Ruby Hart Phillips of the New York Times Press International. They are unable to buy tick- ets because their names were not on the list submitted to the government by the Swiss em- bassy. The Swiss appealed directly to Foreign Minister Raul Roa on behalf of the correspondents and said they obtained his promise=to expedite their appli- cations. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Thirty- eight Roman Catholic nuns ar- rived Thursday from Cuba. | They said they had been di- vested in Cuba of virtually all {their possessions except their Meanwhile, hope was fading|clothing. that four American news corre-| spondents wishing to leave Cuba Four-Year-Old Dies From Bums OTTAWA (CP) -- Jamie Hib-| berd died in hospital today as a result of severe burns he re- ceived Thursday. A playmate, seven - year - old Bruce Muirhead, told police four-year-old Jamie had thrown two lighted maiches into the air and they landed on his clothes The boy, who was riding his tri- cycle, kept pedalling as the flames spread through his cloth- ing. Britain, Russia Agree On Laos Group Memo GENEVA (Reuters) "~ Britain and Russia today agreed to ask the International Control Com- mission in Laos what it needs to perform its job effectively An official of the 14-country Laotian conference here said Foreign Ministers Lord Home of | Britain and Andrei Gromyko of Russia agreed on the text of a] message they will send to the commission The message asks the Indian- Canadian-Polish team to inform Britain and Russia what it needs to work more effectively super-| vising the cease-fire in the Indo- china kingdom. as co-chairmen qf the Geneva conference which ended the Indochina War. The agreement was reached session that Canada regarded States. in a 20-minute meeting between| Home and Gromyko before thy commission with the necessary leader joind other delegates for a morning conference session that lasted only half an hour. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Arriving with them on a spe- cial flight were 56 other refu- gees, all Cubans. Most of the nuns are Cubans Others are Spanish and Dom- inican. One, Jane Woodlock, 79, is English. "They took our house and furniture," said one of the ters. "Worse yet, they took freedom. They took away right to teach freely, and ou right to organize schools. "They did not force us to leave, but under the circum- istances we did not wish to stay." The nuns are of the Order of the Apostolate of the Sacred Heart, founded 53 years ago in Cuba. our our our Tr The conference agreed to the Anglo - Soviet' message to the control commission asking IT: "Please inform us whether the commission has any technical requirements to facilitate the exercise of its functions in re- lation to the cease-fire." CANADA URGES SPEED The initiative for the confer- ence's program to buttress the commission came from Cana- dian External Affairs Minister Howard Green, who urged speed and said the commission could not properly check the truce without its own fully self-con-| Britain and Russia are acting tained system of transportation,| .Meanwhile, the pro-Commu- 1954 communications and - mainten- nist Pathet Lao delegation used ance Green stressed to the morning the question of providing the a|facilities to operate effectively charged that the Un as vitally important. He said the commission's re- ouest for $200,000 had been granted, but its request about two weeks ago for planes and helping the 'rebe helicopters had not yet been!the right-wing gov: met. India's delegate, V. K Krishna Menon, told reporters he understood the United States, {Britain and Russia were ready|West proposals for a settlement/main Montreal-Toronto line in|floods, braced itself for typhoon| Shilo, Man., for instruction | 'to help out the truce teams {vithjof the Laotian problem. FARM and Martin Houseman of United | sis- South Africa f Bans Meetings i | CAPE TOWN (Reuters)--|lated offences! since 1,500 per-| Meetings in South Africa and sons were detained in the emer- | Southwest Africa from today to!gency last year, | June 26 were banned by an of-| The multiracial {ficial order. party, headed' by author Alan | 'The ban, announced by Jus- Paton, angounced it was send- litice Minister Francois Eras-|ing letters'to thousands of em-| mus, does not affect divine ployers asking them to use their | | services or other specific gath-|influence to ensure that the|} i |erings. {demonstrations are peaceful. |} Negroes have threatened to |baycott celebrations when South BUY GUNS : |Africa bcomes a republic May : But hany whites Sonu 10 la i i ake no chances and acte | {51 by staying quietly at-home self-defence. The citizens' rush |; for guns continued with more] The Rand Daily Mail said than 1,000 reported sold so far Thursday that the All - African | this month in Durban, a demand Action Council had ordered| estimated at 30 times greater non-whites to stockpile food and|than normal. ; said the council was consider-| The Rand Daily Mail reported ing prolonging the "strike" to|that a Ku Klux Klan is at work| | 14 days. in Cape Town, trying to frighten | i Nelson Mandela, secretary of colored (mixed blood) political) i the council, said Thursday that/leaders out of participating in| Negroes would not gather or|the month-end protest. | hold processions which would be] The Negroes themselves ares likely to result in clashes with!demanding voting rights and a| the police. share in the government for all| More than 600 Negroes were non-whites as their price for| rounded up by police Wednes-| "co-operation" with the new re- day in a drive against "the idler public to be proclaimed by |elements"--the biggest number Prime Minister Hendrik Ver-| {of Negroes arrested for failing | woerd's white supremacy gov-| be Liberal | {! |i Li the month. dreds of snakes, one to three feet long, just coming out of hibernation underground. (CP Wirephoto) Jo Morrow, pictured today in Hollywood, has lost her job as an actress because she weighs too much, says the show business trade paper Daily Variety. Not so, says Jo, and not so, says Columbia studio. Under unique terms of TOO FAT? . |June 3 and 4 for a "general ex- : [the major issues which affect | Pierre Salinger said Kennedy {millan after the talk with KENNEDY, KHRUSH WILL MEET IN VIEN June Date Set For Summit Meet WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev will meet in Vienna change of views" on major world issues, the White House announced today. The announcement ruled out any effort to reach agreement on "the major international problems that involve the inter- est of many other countries." "The meeting will, however, afford a timely and convenient opportunity for the first per- sonal contact between them and a general exchange of views on the . relationship between the two countries," said the an- nouncement, made simultane- ously in Washington, Moscow and London. It disclosed officially what had been rumored for some time--that after a meeting with President de Gaulle in Paris May 31 to June 2, the president will go directly to Vienna. White House press secretary will make the trip on the morn- ing of June 3. On June 4 the president will fly from Vienna to London for a visit with Mrs. Kennedy's sis- ter and her husband, Prince Stanislas Radziwill. TO MEET QUEEN This London stopover gives the president an opportunity to meet with Prime Minister Mac- HEV Ee statement disclosed that meet- ing will occur at a luncheon June 5. (Buckingham Palace in Lon- don announced that President and Mrs. Kennedy will dine with the Queen that day.) Tte announcement said the agreement between Kennedy and Khrushchev to meet in Vi- enna followed "discussions through diplomatic channels which began last March and an exchange of communications." SAVE TALKS Diplomatic officials say pri« vately Kennedy's primary inter-, est in having a talk with Khrushchev at this time is to try through direct personal di- plomacy to save the Geneva ne- gotiations on a nuclear weapons test ban. The talks among the United States, Britain and Rus- sia have been deadlocked for many weeks. In addition, the president is said to feel that it would be useful for him at this time to make clear to Khrushchev that despite the reverses to U.S. in- terests in the Cuban and Lao- tian crises the United States is determined to stand by various commitments to prevent free nations from being taken over by international communism. Salinger said Thursday that Kennedy does not plan to stop off at Bonn, West Germany. There had been speculation that he might meet Chancellor Kon« Khrushchev. The White House rad Adenauer. 'Junta Has Korea her contract, her weight was | not to exceed 132 pounds; her hips 37 inches, and her waist- line 24 inches. Variety said she weighs 145, but Jo says it's 138. She said her parting from the studio was amicable. (AP Wirephoto) Co andos to carry identity cards or re-!ernment. JERUSALEM (AP) -- AdoM|---- Bc - {after the German armies rolled, in, a witness at Eichmann's| |trial testified foday. Alexander Arnon, 63, former noon." {the 'Organization of Ameri 1jeconomic, social and political § "At five o'clock Croatian in-|States but the pos-ibility still is|developments in various Latin| § dependence was declared under| being considered, Prime Min-| American countries. | martial law." he continued. |ister Diefenbaker said today. But Canada's position has not Anti-Jewish measures ensued|L.tin American republics asitaken only - when it is. fairly with rapidity until most of Yu-/well as the Unitd States. [clear that the majority of the| goslavia's 75,000 Jews were| Mr. Diefenbaker said 'he Canadian people are in favor of| caught. Sixty thousand of them|president discussed the pointithis being done.' | was discussed with Mr. Ken- nedy and there was agreement | to "consult further over the next few months," Mr. Diefenbaker |Eichmann's commandos were . {geared to move at such speed C d D b t | {that they cracked down on Yu- ( 7 I 1 g | goslavia's Jews only two days| a a e a 11 OAS Membershij {Jewish leader in Croatia, testi-| elm ers 1D ie at t German tanks| : : : eq thst ave Pi April 9 OTTAWA (CP)--Canada has|Parliament and in private talks 1941, "at 3 o'clock in the after. made no commitment fo join where the two leaders discussed "On April 11, the Gestapo] He was reporting to the Com-|changed since late last month, came to the Jewish community,| mons on President Kennedy's he said, when External Affairs seized all the money and placed strong plea for membership in{Minister Green told the House everyone under arrest." {the OAS, which includes the 20{that "the decision should be were murdered, he said. this week in both his speech 19 DISCUSS RED CHINA "| The question of Red China's K C 11 | admission to the United Nations| 0) 0) I od 9 |said. He noted that the issue t Worthwhi © |ill wot come up in the UN un 1S1 til September. Mr. Diefenbaker said today's WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-|But his advisers said he didn'tjannouncement of a Vienna meet-| TORONTO (CP) -- Elmer] t I dent Kennedy returned to ajcome home empty - handed, [ing June 3 and 4 between Mr. Sopha, Liberal member of the|and his assistant Wilford Franks|and imposed stringent censor- Liberal Refused Police Crime Data | sioner Wilfred Clark of the OPP, came to his office seeking "in- formation in regard to allega- tions Mr. John Wintermeyer (provincial Liberal leader) and I made." i The information was not turned over to the police offi- cials, said Mr. Sopha because "I don't trust the Attorney-Gen- eral." "He would use it for political or purposes against us (the Liberal party)", he said. "We say he is a man motivated to cover up and save embarrassment to the government." SEOUL, South Korea (AP)-- President Yun Po-sun resigned today as iron-man rule pre- vailed again in South Korea for the first time since Syngman Rhee was ousted last year. A statement issued to report- ers over Yun"s name said "I regret that I made so little con- tribution to the nation that a military revolution has oc- curred." Yun's resignation, confirmed by presidential spokesmen, fol- lowed by one day Premier John Chang's capitulation and resig- nation to a military junta. The new military bosses have arrested 930 suspected leftists ship. Lt.-Gen, Do Yung Chang, chief of the military junta that seized power in a 62-hour re- volt, expressed confidence that the U.S. government -- despite its local representatives' opposi- tion to the coup--'"'will co-oper- ate with us and support us more positively than ever be- e." The 38-year-old general did not give any names, but most were believed socialists with left leanings. The Communist "In 'Iron-Man' Grip party is outlawed in this coune try of 23,000,000. Chang said deposed Premier John Chang and his cabinet ministers were at their homes under house arrest. They will be subject to severe punish- ment, he said, "if any serious crimes by them are uncovered." In Washington, Undersecre- tary of State Chester Bowles said the "U.S. can hardly cheer at the upsetting of a constitus tional government" but the: he thought the new regime would be recognized. As censorship was broadened, Korean radio stations were or- dered to quit relaying the Voice of America's twice-a-dey news programs in the Korean lan- guage. The object was to keep any criticism of the military government from the people. Newspapers were checked by censors. Foreign correspondents so far wre able to file outgoing dispatches without interference, but photo shipments were cen- sored. Gen. Chang said economic re- form is one of the primary ob- jectives of his revolution, but said more time is needed be- fore he can announce new eco- nomic measures. 'suggested setting up study the conference as a platform | for new attacks on the United | | Typhoon Alice 'Hits Hong Kong | HONG KONG (AP)--The sea- son's first typhoon struck Hong Kong a relatively mild blow to- day and whipped across the coast to buffet the southern| provinces of the China main- land. . { China's southern Kwangtung The Canadian Army now y t CNR spokesmen said it will|province, which has already suf-| has an Honest John surface- groups lo examine the KEast-|take about two weeks to get the fered from heavy rains and| to-surface missile at Camp Phao Phoumi of the Eo deskload of White House prob-|either. : [Kennedy and Soviet Premier|legislature for Sudbury, said to- lems Thursday, completing a| The president was reported to Khrushchev raises hopes Jorjday that two officials of the On- two-day state visit to Ottawa have been heartened by the| amelioration of the world situa-|tario Provincial Police entered which he described as "ex-/common ground he found in|tion. {his Sudbury law office unan- tremely worthwhile." {talks with Prime Minister Dief- = _ nounced Thursday and asked In bis firs, presidental vn enbaker on he urgent need to (od 5, me or ture outside the U.S., Kennedy|Strengthen the ' | | J Re " didn't appear to have picked up|Alliance. ; ew owers He ing id Mond: h any major diplomatic trophies.| Even more encouraging, he h He Sop a Sal oa ay that SA |found, was common accord with| | he has "evidence of bribery and [Diefenbaker on the Laotian is- or Ao) al (+) collusion of those engaged in the {sue and on the critical need of |pensinisi ration of criminal law." I3 Ap haw te tal 3 In his statement to reporters he providing effective controls lo, PARIS (Reuters) -- President shat government aieay Hated from the cold war and|f, th : a to - uisi- | ere involved, but he did not particularly from Communist! top Save) meet a Ten of ciaborate. : pressures. {industrial aorest. He said today that Commis- There was a feeling among| The decree empowers cabinet American aides, after the presi- ministers concerned to order dent's talks with the prime min- strikers in nationalized indus: planes, helicopters and other|ister, that Canada would not|tfles and public services to re- equipment, take any sudden action to rec- main at work under pain of| icnon' said Indian and Cana. 08nize Communist China, even fines or prison sentences. dian pilots could fly the Western though the country has pur-| phe government decision, at a| aircraft and Poles the Soviet|chased a lot of Canadian wheat. special cabinet session, came machines, Kennedy s visit also genorate |shortly after the end 'of a rail o : (enthusiasm among American|siyike and a 24-hour stoppage of FORMALLY COMPLAIN diplomats on finding he had hor transport workers which, Home disclosed to Thursday crowd appeal outside the United : : i : ; ; ; | ic of hi |combined with four-hour walk night's session that the right-| States and that the magic o he outs by gas and electricity work- wing Laotian delegation had personal charm is exportable.\or (aysed widespread confus- submitted a formal complaint| Even more so was that of Mrs. jo, Thursday. that the leftists ie Violating [Rowneuy. -- The strike move by the state- The aiid wi Sa) 3 Fon owned industries involved 500,- : AISSIon-- | » h T . 000 workers. More than 1,008,- Tudiz, Canals and Poland-- reig t Iain 000 civil servants and teachers a report on the are threatening a new 24-hour strike shortly. All the strikes or | Leaves Track threats of strikes are over pay TRENTON (CP)--Thirty-four| mands. cars of a fast CNR freight train plunged off the tracks here| . . |Thursday night. Four of the Vongvichit,|cars dropped into the Trent delegation, Canal. was. threaten h ited States| There were no injuries. I as oa ne Je Deace The train, travelling from Tor-| 4 ' I"lonto to St. Albans, Vt., was| tary personnel and Thai and|cpssin 5 ' i . oh . : [ sing the 500 - foot bridge South Vietnamese eons were which spans the Trent River forces of{and Canal when one car jumped ! ernment. {the tracks dragging 33 others Indian Defence Minister V. K.|with it. The cars were crushed Krishna Menon, meanwhile, together in a shower of sparks. HONEST JOHN ARRIVES here by WO2 B. O. T. Hig- | at launching. The rocket, gins, the free-flight missile is | powered by solid fuel, has a 27 feet long, 30 inches in dia- | range of 12 miles and is used inspected | meter, and weighs 5800 pounds | for close suppr:t of ground | loperatiop again: |Alice. | purposes. Being - A { vy | troops. It can carry either a nuclear warhead or conven- tional explosives. (CP Witphoto)

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