The Oshawa Times, 29 May 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY If some woman did what effi. ciency experts do, people would call it nagging. Oshawa Tne WEATHER REPORT The weather is gradually im- proving, with cloud and some sunshine. Milder, VOL. 90--NO. 124 The OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MAY 29, 1961 Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawo TWENTY PAGES / FEW SOUTH AFI IN 'STAY-HOME' STRIKE Start M SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-- Dynamite blasts that shattered three microwave and cable re- lay communications stations in Utah and Nevada Sunday touched off a multi-state man- hunt and produced a war-like nervousness among citizens. | The question of whether the mysterious explosions were set by saboteurs or vandals was on many lips. Within hours after the dawn| explosions, Federal Bureau of | Investigation agents, armed na-| tional guard troops and area police began hunting the person, or persons, who for a moment cut a nerve in the civil defence communications system. 4 | The damaged stations all are| . |located in the desert of western a Utah and eastern Nevada. They |are part of the American Tele- anhunt rado, Nevada and New Mexico searched and then stood guard over other stations. The FBI had a blanket 'no comment" for every question about their investigation. At each blast site, broken steel, hunks of concrete and splintered lumber littered the scene. In- vestigators swarmed over the debris search for clues. Un- exploded TNT was found at one site. Peace Talks Stall Again Tower Blasts |! | | | { | § { GENEVA (Reuters)--The 14-| BELLE Voting in the Local 222. | UAW-CLC election this year | was an all time high since the formation of the Local in 1937. Approximately 42,000 ballots were deposited into ballot boxes by 6910 of the nearly 10,000 eligible vot- vs ers in the local. Counting of the votes began at 9 a.m. to- | day and early results are ex- pected by tomorrow morning. Many of the scrutineers at UAW Hall today were among the female ranks of Local 222. Above, Franka Pugliese, OF THE BALLOT-BOX 21, a "laid off" General Motors cutting and sewing department employee, is help- ed to an armful of ballots from one of the 21 ballot boxes which have to be counted. --Oshawa Times Photo !phon and Telegraph system. | The first blast demolished a microwave tower three miles west of Wendover on the Utah- Nevada line. The second, 55 minutes later, collapsed a cable relay station at Knolls, Utah, 40 {miles further east. The third, 55 minutes later, crippled a micro wave tower at Cedar Mountain, 20 miles further east in Utah. STATIONS UNMANNED The unmanned stations trans- mit radio waves up to 30 miles power conference on Laos, due| to resume today after a five-day #%® recess, has again been ad journed. { The date of the next session| will be announced later and will take place as soon as possible,| according to a joint statement | issued by the British and Soviet] delegations. The British and Soviet co- chairman of the conference, Malcolm MacDonald and Georgi Pushkin, failed at a three-hour meeting this morning to agree on a line-of-sight basis. Four Hut [Amazing In 401 Crash Four people were injured, | two seriously, during a collision | i of two cars at Highway 4o1| JERUSALEM (Reuters) ers A and Dunbarton shortly before ork psychologist te noon today 34 the rial of Auol Eicusaus y. oday that top Nazi war erim- ae acciled ogcuried at tel inals had told him some of their dirt road leading north to Dun-| Pest friends were Jews. | Dr. Gustave M. Gilbert, chair- barton. Several witnesses stated that/man of the psychology depart the accident occurred when a|ment at Long Island University, southbound car, attempting to| described his interviews with cross over the west lane of the Germans on trial for war 401, was unable to crowd past| crimes at Nurenberg after the two opposite cars in the centre| Second World War. intersection. | Gilbert said he made exten- Ontario Provincial Police at|sive notes after every conversa- the Whitby Detachment were(tion with the Nazis. Because unable to release names of the|/some things they said were "so injured until next of kin had|incredible," he had them write been notified. essays as substantiation. McEachnie Ambulance of Gilbert said he acted as in- Pickering said two of the in-|ternreter at an interview be- jured were "badly injured" but iy Judge Michael A, Mus- were alive when taken into the| ann now a Pennsylvania su- Scarborough General Hospital.| preme court judge, and Field ~~ |Marshal Hermann Goering. o Goering, referring to extermi- Jelt Chandler s nation ry Jews, said: ge "This of course was not any Condition Worse {business of mine. . . . CULVER CITY, Calif. (AP)-- | EICHMANN LINKED Actor Jeff Chandler is again in| "It was under the jurisdiction critical condition. New internal of (Henrich) Himmler (supreme bleeding Saturday forced him to| Nazi SS and police chief) and undergo his second emergency his boys, Reinhard Hey- operation in nine days. drich (chief of the security| The 42-year-old actor was re- headquarters), Eichmann and portec. conscious Sunday and so on. . .."" | "vesting well." Gilbert described the one oc-| Of Nazi Chiefs The three blasts snipped out Stories [i win immediately shuttled messages to another system. Associated Press circuits in the west were disrupted for a time. Telephone company officials said repairs would be made by tonight. Armed national guardsmen in Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, 'Colo- MR. K. OFFERED FREE DENTURES COPENHAGEN, Denmark (Reuters)--A danish dentist has written Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev offering him a set of false teeth free of charge. "From newspaper pictures you can see Khrushchev's back teeth are too small," dentist Finn Larsson said. "This can give chronic headaches, so I wrote to Khrushchev and offered to make a set of false teeth for him." No reply has come from Khrushchev. But Larsson has been criticized by the Danish Dentists' Association for '"'unprofessional adver- tising." Moise Tshombe Hans Frank, former governor Given Freedom casion on which he said he lost his "professional aloofness." "A survivor from Auschwitz had testified how children born in concentration camps were taken from their mothers and never seen again, and how in the rush season in 1944 children were thrown alive on to the ires. | "This was too much even for a psychologist, and I went to (Ernst) K alt e nbrunner (Hey- drich's successor as security chief) in the lunch break and told him: 'Do you really mean that you know nothing about this?' "He replied: "No, No. I did not have anything to. do with the extermination program as such. It was the others, Hey- drich, Eichmann and others from Himmler down in that chain of command, but they are all dead.' " ONLY LOOKS BIG Goering's comment on the testimony of Dieter Wisliceny, an Eichmann aid later exe- cuted, was: "Wisliceny is a lit- tle schweinhund who looks like a big one only because Eich- mann is not here." a bone, but automatic equipment|Said. on the subjects to be di at this afternoon's scheduled isession, authoritative sources They said MacDonald and Pushkin had a forceful ex- change of views on the future development of the conference which ended in complete dis- agreement. In another development Mac- Donald turned down an invita- tion to meet today in the French Riviera Resort of Nice with Pre- mier Prince Boun Oum of the Laotian right-wing government. Sources said MacDonald whose country was co-chairman with Russia of the 1954 Geneva talks on Indochina excused himself on the grounds he was too busy with conference work here. Algerian Generals Go On Trial PARIS (Reuters)--A military court assembled here today to try two French ex-generals for their lives on charges of leading last month's abortive army re- bellion in Algeria. Former generals Maurice Challe and Andrew Zeller faced charges of taking over a mili- tary command without legiti- More Freedom To Stand Trial JACKSON, Miss. (AP)--Sev-|--13 Negroes and four whites--| enteen more segregation - defy- go on trial on the same charges| ing "Freedom Riders" go onas the other 27. | trial in city court today.amid Four separate groups of riders) reports a fifth group would attempting to desegregate bus] leave soon for Jackson in an at-|terminals through the south tempt to crack the deep South's have arrived in Jackson since] "Jim Crow" barriers. {last Wednesday. In Forst Park, Pa., the riders' chief co-ordinator, Marvin Rich GROUP ARRESTED of New York, said a bus trip, Two bus loads arrived from would be made to Jackson from Montgomery, Ala. Members of| New Orleans today or tomor- the groups were arrested after row. {entering white waiting rooms Here in Mississippi's capital|and failing to obey police orders city, 22 "Freedom Riders" con-|t0 leave. victed on breach of peace| Sunday two more groups ar- charges last Friday were sched-|rived -- one from Montgomery uled to be moved today to the/and the other from Memphis. county farm They will work Both came from Nashville. their fines off at the rate of $3/ The Memphis-to-New Orleans a day. Five others posted bond bus group, seven Negroes and earlier and were released. two whites, was arrested dur- The 17 newiy-arrested riders|/ing the morning. Eight more, {six Negroes and two whites, |were arrested upon arrival in CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS {the afternoon. One of the latter | contingent did not participate in ithe test and was not arrested. POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Arrests were made after po-| lice told them: "You'll have to| move on." They didn't budge. In Montgomery, scene of {bloody rioting May 20, the rid- lers used white rest room fal i A 0 os Wu fo ret la ph |terfere with of Nazi-occupied Poland, told] LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters)-- Gilbert after the testimony at|Self - styled President Moise Nurenberg of Rudolf Hess, last Tshombe of The Congo's Ka- commandant of Auschwitz: {tanga province, smiling and {appearing in good health, was . | brought to Leopoldville today by Riders [ville where he was four weeks ago. No soldiers guarded him as he stepped from the boat at Leo- {poldville port. But he and his foreign minister, Evariste |Kimba, had an escort of 200 {troops for the drive to a para- lunchroom facilities, both white] side Leopoldville. and Negro, but they were| (Col, Michael Kiembe, chief of closed. No attempts were made! staff of the Leopoldville forces, to arrest them {and security chief Victor Ndeka SAT AT WHITE COUNTER [Were at the dock to greet Eleven integrationists were] Tohotmbe as he walked down the arrested at the same bus sta- Looking reat in a dark gray : | suit, Tshombe shook hands with Bn a , Yo Bunch Soupter: a Congolese officer, waved to Police in Montgomery and the crowd of several hundred Birmiigham, Wee walled into| and climbed into the black lim- ederal court today. NO crim-|gusine awaiting him. inal charge was pending against] ne . them -- only a justice depart-|CROWD CHEERS ment demand for an injunction) The crowd at the docks from allowing race rioters to in-|sionist leader, crying out his inter - state bus! name excitedly. travel. The boat which brought Patt mio TR Tshombe, charged by the Leo- . ze M. : PR aa: a similar Poldville c en tr a | government restraining order nine days ago/| With high treason, was packed against the Ku Klux Klan. With soldiers. None surrounded Johnson was to determine today| him as he left. overnment forces and The justice department charged "with treason when he blamed the Klan for the racial|tried to talk out of a conference Violets nd said the law on of Luhgolcse leaders at {Soquil orcement of Birmingham and hatville, miles up river. Montgomery had not properly|legal commission has been de-| protected the inter - state pas-|bating whether he should be | river steamship from Coquilhat- cilities and attempted to use the} commando camp six miles out- tion last Thursday when they| to prevent them in the future seemed favorable to the seces- whether to continue that order.| Tshombe was arrested by cen- sengers. |tried. insurrectional movement. The charges carry possible death sentences. The trial was expected to be interned Short, lasting only three or four days Nine judges will decide whether or not Challe and Zeller were guilty. Two other alleged leaders of the abortive revolt, ex-generals Raoul Salan and Edmond Jou haud, are still in hiding from French authorities. mate reason and organizing an| JoAnn Larouche five-year- old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. Larouche of Ot- tawa, shares a bath with nine wild ducklings found on the DUCKING DUCKLINGS front lawn of her home. The ducklings will be given to an animal park near Ottawa. --(CP Wirephoto) | HALIFAX (CP) -- Clear |weather was expected in the Maritimes today in the wake of la rainstorm that brought ram- |paging floods to New Bruns- wick, heavy destruction to the {fishing fleet and death to three men. Two died in small wooden {boats and another was drowned {when his car skidded off a slip- pery bridge. Heavy tolls were anticipated in the fishing fleets. The storm struck Saturday with winds that exceeded 60 miles an hour. Most of Nova rain. Fredericton got up to five inches of rain in a 36-hour pe- |riod. The St. John River rose nearly six feet. Bridges and highways in New |Brunswick were washed away, train schedules were disrupted, homes were evacuated and were cut off. Paul Emile Breau, 21, of Tracadie Beach, N.B., died in the Bartibog River after his car skidded on a bridge and crashed through the railing. DEAD IN BOAT William Dawe, 33, of Cape Jack, near Antigonish, N.S. was On Atom Tests | | GENEVA (Reuters) -- The -|West today proposed a compro- mise to meet Soviet objections to its earlier plan for inspec- tions in policing a ban on nuclear test explosions. The United States and Britain at the three-nation conference here put forward a new way o calculating the annual quota of inspections of "unidentified seis- mic events." The West originally asked for 20 a year on Soviet territory, to which Russia replied with a proposal for three. Today's plan proposes 12 a year, with an ad- ditional one inspection for every by the control system, up to an annual limit of 20. They also said a change in [this formula could be made only by unanimous approval of 3 the three powers. | The compromise proposal re- ceived a cool reception from Russia. Soviet delegate Semyon Tsar- apkin said the West was still|§ "unrealistic re-| {insisting on an |lationship" between the number {of seismic events and the size § {of the quota. | The conference's task, he said, was not.disarmament but the |cessation of nuclear weapon |tests. "If the West really accepted ment, you noses anywhere |Soviet Union," he said. could poke Scotia got an inch or more of} power and telephone services| found dead in a drifting dory West Compromise {ii Maritime Storm Death, Destruction after the storm passed. With him in the boat, and huddled in the coat Dawe had give him, was 10-year old Lloyd Melong, also of Cape Jack. He was un- harmed. The dory was picked up by the fisheries department drag- ger Kegashka after a search by an RCAF plane was called off because of high winds. The two had set out to pull lobster traps JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) Hesitant South Africans today streamed to work, generally ig- noring a "'stay-at home" strike called in protest against the pol- icies of Premier Hendrik Ver- woerd's government. The strike appeared to have collapsed after workers in Ne- gro townships surrounding Jo- hannesburg belatedly joined the movement to work. Many of the Negro workers formed groups in their districts and carried sticks to protect themselves against strike agita- tors. They were also provided with a heavy police guard. Police were posted at all main railroad and bus terminals in the Negro townships. The Witwaters and police chief, Col. John Olivier, de- scribed the situation as '"'almost normal for a Monday." AFRICANS Some Have Sticks But No Trouble "No serious incidents were reported, and there is no indi- cation there will later." be Only scattered reports told of small numbers of Negroes re- sponding to the three-day strike in protest against gove ment's apartheid (racial segre gation) policies and the nation's decision to become a republic Wednesday. the govern- Earlier today it appeared the strike would be 80 per. cent ef- fective in" the Negro areas of Johannesburg. But, after about an hour's de- lay, the city's Negro workers began to pour from their homes and commuter traffic soon reached about 90 per cent of normal. The three-day strike call was also reported to have received little response in Negro districts ot Sher major South African cities. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario accounted for, nearly half of -all traffic deaths re- ported on Canadian roads this weekend, A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunddy showed 48 Canadians died accidentally, 31 in highway mishaps. Ontario reported 15 traffic deaths. Alberta had six traffic deaths, Manitoba and British Columbia four each and Quebec and Sask- atchewan one each. There were six drownings, three in Quebec and one each in New Brunswick, Ontario and British Columbia. One fire death was reported in Nova Scotia, two persons were accidentally shot in Mani- toba and Alberta and there were seven accidental deaths by unclassified causes. A Quebec farmer was killed when his tractor toppled over. The figures do not include in- dustrial accidents, natural deaths or known suicides. Ontario dead Ernest Johnson, 47, Port Ar- thur, in a two-car collision on the Port Arthur-Fort William highway Friday. Raymond Joseph Robinson, 22, and Joseph Daniel Gallant, 22, both of the Sarnia area, Sat- urday when their cars collided Saturday. 48 Canadians Die During Weekend 16, Brights Grove, died of his injuries Sunday. Frank Dietsch, 58, early Sate urday on 8 Torento crosswalk. Douglas' Windover, 26, pipned beneath a car he was repairing in Toronto Saturday when blocks gave way. Gerald Perkins, 35, Kettleby, and Raymond McDonald, 39, Toronto, Sunday when their car plunged into the Holland River near Newmarket, about 20 miles north of Toronte. CAR ROLLED OVER Howard Cogswell, 32, Sunday when his car rolled over on a highway near Levack, about 22 miles northwest of Sudbury. Nelson Morphet, 53, and Mrs. Margaret Ann Astle, 79, both of Little Current, in a two-car col- lision Saturday near Little Cur- rent. Rheal Moisan, 14, drowned in Junction Creek near Sudbury Sunday. Ronald Nolan, 12, Manotick, about 15 miles south of Ottawa, when his bicycle collided with a car Sunday; Walter Gailing, 64, Hagers- ville, Sunday when his car went out of control near Cayuga, about 20 miles south of Hamil ton. Kelva King, 18, Copper Cliff, Sunday in a head-on collision on on highway 7, James Temple, highway 7 near Peterborough. This disorganized contrap- five unidentified events reported general and complete disarma-| tion is the Petersburg, Va., your | you liked in the| entry in a 'floating bed" race put on by Pi Phi frater- aity men on the James River o RIVER BED here yesterday. The lads row- | 'miles apart. ed like the mischief, but came in fifth (more or less) in a | six-bed field. The race course | | minutes was between two bridges 4% 14 A team from Chester won with a time more or less) of one hour 45 (AP Wirephoto) ¥ i --

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