THOUGHT Isn't it about FOR TODAY time your wife decided where you will spend your vacation? VOL. 90--NO. 128 dhe Oshavon Time WEATHER REPORT Clouding over after midnight, cloudy with showers early Sat- urday, clearing by mid-day. Price Not Over 10 Gents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1961 Post Office as Second Class Maoil TWENTY PAGES -- KEVIN MORTON AT RECOVERY SCENE Anxious Ready For Talks VIENNA (Reuters) ~~ Theitime for translations is -de-{harbo covered from about 25 feet of water shortly before noon to- day. The driver, Kevin Morton, 17, of 794 Glenforest street and his friend, Grace Verby, 15, of | conference, 341 Pine avenue, harmed. small neutral nation of Austria expectantly awaited the arrival of Nikita Khrushchev in Vienna today for his weekend meetings with John Kennedy. The Soviet premier was sched- uled to arrive here by train late today from Bratislava, Czecho- islovakia, 40 miles away. y The youthful American presi- 'dent is flying in Saturday mor- ning fresh from his Paris talks with French President de Gaulle. Both men are being ac- companied by their wives and] advisers. The Austrians arranged the Kremlin leader because "this is opened the door and pulled the! biggest security precautions in their history to safeguard both men. More than 8,000 police, detectives and gendarmes were taking up their posts for the two arrivals and the K-K talks Sat- urday and Sunday. TRAIN WELL GUARDED Khrushchev's rail trip here from Com m u nist Czechoslo- vakia involved three major se- curity measures: 1. An Austrian police helicop- ter hovering low over his spe- cia; train and in constant radio contact with the ground. 2. A special locomotive, with Austria ducted. The Americans say they will not be drawn into any negotia- {tions while the Russians add it would be unthinkable for two days of talks to clear up all the problems accumulated during {the long years of cold war. | During his stay in Bratislava, |Khrushchev, 67, said he was sure the American and Russian peoples shared a desire for peace and the relaxation of in- ternational tension. Kennedy, 44, has said he is coming to Vienna to meet the which plunged into the Oshawa '| TORONTO (CP)--Motorcades involving about 1,000 strikers ' [from 12 unions virtually halted apartment construction in Metropolitan Toronto Thursday at the price of a total of 18 arrests in two days. But bargaining in the dispute, in which immigrant construc- i [tion workers seek union bene- fits, still has not started. So many contracters are involved that union leaders find them- selves with no representative body to approach. Housing subdivisions were also hard hit as teams of union . {members Kept up pressure to impose a shutdown of all hous- ing and apartment construction in the area. Afier fights and the arrest of five men Thursday on mali- | cious damage charges, police in suburban Scarborough warned strike leaders they must con- duct themselves in an orderly manner. Large congregations of strikers, they were told, will be classified as an unlawful as- sembly. REHIRE DRIVERS One crisis was averted when a ready-mix cement and build- ing supply firm reinstated three : Teamsters Union drivers who i (had been fired for refusing to * [take their loads through a Walker Urges Slum Action HALIFAX (CP) -- Federal Works Minister Walker Thurs- day criticized Canadian commu- nities for lagging behind in slum clearance and for expecting too much financial aid from the central government. In a flying one-day visit here, Mr. Walker hit hard at lagging muticipal interest in cleaning up of blight areas--and at too much municipal interest in the federal coffers. He held an hour-long press addressed the an- escaped un-/nua! meeting of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Mu- There was a heavw fog in the|nicipalities and opened a giant harbor area ; low-rental housing project--Hal- " A : ifax's first step in slum clear- "I heard a scraping noise, a5 | ance. Car Plunges Into Lake A car, with two people in it, r Thursday night was re- Apartment Building Blocked crowd of 200 construction work- ers. Their dismissal raised the threat that construction unions would refuse to accept ready- mix cement from the firm on commercial projects. Charles Irvine, international vice-president of the Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Association (CCL) and key figure in the drive, said he is willing to negotiate with any reasonable group. The construction workers, most of them Italians, say con- tractors are not living up to terms of agreements signed last summer. Many laborers are. reported receiving 90 cents an hour, bricklayers $2 to $2.25 and carpenters $1.40 to $1.90. Top union rates are $2 an hour for laborers, $3.05 for bricklayers and $2.70 for carpenters Arab Mufti Accused At Trial JERUSALEM (AP) -- The prosecution claimed today in the Eichmann trial that the Arab Mufti of Jerusalem worked behind the scenes to prevent the rescue of 5,000 Jewish children from Nazi-controlled southeast- ern Europe. Attorney - General Gideon |{Hausner said the Mufti, Haj {Amin el Husseini, asked the Nazi authorities to do every- thing in their power to prevent the emigration project. Hausner introduced in evi- dence a letter in which the Mufti, then a guest of the Nazis in Europe, told Foreign Minis- ter Joachim von Ribbentrop that an "avalanche of Jews' had already brought a "cgtas- trophe" for Palestine. The Mufti warned that the Arabs, "loyal friends of the Axis, would be hurt and of- fended" if the plan were carried out. He charged that the Jews were "agents of the Briitsh and Communists." I made a right turn to go north," | * said Morton, "the next thing I| b Follows |girl through his door and Sam] {to the surface. They were help- led up a dock-side ladder by [a dangerous time for us all." |Marie Powlenzuk, of 109 Mont- |rave avenue. Home Collapse | T 1 | Morton revalled tat his meth | insisted that he rea e 0 1 Now 18 id i id to get out PARIS (Reuters)--The known|of 2 submerged car, which {death toll in the collapse of 25 Were published in the Oshawa homes. rose to 18 today when Times following a harbor tra- {rescue workers recovered an-|gedy involving three persons. | other body and a woman died| Dennis Mackey, of 585 Athol in hospital. |street east and Miss Powlenzuk | Workers had rescued 55 per-/had been parked about 40 feet {sons injured in the underground|away from where Morton's car gas explosions that wrecked went off the dock. He saw the half a square mile of suburban |tail light go over the side of the dock. He went to phone the fire armed security men aboard, Clamart. running ahead of Khrushchev's| But a woman rescued Thurs- train on its 30-mile trip from the day died today in hospital of frontier village of Marchegg to!injuries. ne Vienna's Southeast station. It was feared more victims 3. Armed police guarding the|Were lying dead or seriously in- department while she waited in the car, Hearing Mofton's cries for help, she went over to the edge of the dock where she helped Morton and his girl out rail line and posted about 270 yards apart. Meanwhile, preparations were almost complete for the face-to- face "get-acquainted" session. Many observers said gloomily that little of lasting value would emerge from their 10 hours-- actually about five hours if the of the water. The late model sports car was on its nose in the water, severa feet from the harbor break- water. Oshawa skindivers Police Constable Peter Man- dryk, and Don Cranfield located the vehicle and hooked a chain {jured under the ruins. The 25 houses collapsed in a| few seconds Thursday after a |series of explosions. Several of [the houses slid into a hole 60 feet deep. A factory and a [Shree - storey apartment house {also were reduced to rubble. 1 | 1 neral service. Dictator Father water." . | They stayed in the car until it | filled with water, then Morton, CUIDAD TRUJILLO (Reut-|to his country was being used ers)--The playboy son of Gen.|to finance lavish spending by Rafael Trujillo prepared today Rafael in the U.S. but he de- to take over command of the nied this. Dominican Re public's armed| Despite his failure to com- forces following his father's as-|plete the military course, his sassination. {father made him chairman of Rafael Jr. was named Thurs-|the joint chiefs of the Domin- day night to the new post of chiefjican armed forces on his re- of staff or the combined armed|turn home. forces. He will take up the post| The decision to make him as soon as the necessary laws chief of staff of the combined are pushed through. {armed forces was taken Thurs- Meanwhile, the dead dictator, day night at a meeting presided gunned down by a band of at-/over by President Joaquin Bala- tackers in a carefully - timed guer, the man handpicked as plot Tuesday night, was being head of state by the dead dic- buried today at nearby San|tator. An Ottawa Defence Re- search Board scientist, Dr. Marcel Chaput, may lose his job because of a speech he made Wednesday urging Que- bec to proclaim its indepen- denee from Canada before the MAY LOSE JOB 1967 centennial. The sugges- | tion that Dr. Chaput resign | came yesterday from the act- x |dercover man, was testifying at POLICE AGENT CHARGES TIPS Claims Friends Admitted Bribe TORONTO (CP) -- A police double agent, under cross - ex- amination, said Thursday he had been told that James Bart- lett, deputy commissioner of the provincial police, once tipped off a gambler to a club raid. The agent also testified that two fellow members of the anti- gambling squad -- Constables Carman Lawrence and Ken La- morie--admitted to him that they had taken bribes. Const. Lawrence, he said, "had a piece of' a downtown Toronto gambling club. Const George Scott, the un- the trial of Robert Wright, for- mer provincial policeman, and Joseph McDermott and Vincent Feeley. The three are charged with conspiring to interfere with the administration of jus- tice by bribing Const. Scott. The agent testified also that there was ill - feeling between ing chairman of the Board, Dr. J. E. Keyston. (CP Wirephoto) {Lawrence and Lamorie on the |other. At one time, he said, Wright on the one hand and VIENNA (CP)--With the start of the double-K summit talks, a new phase opens in the East- West struggle. The future of Berlin, disarm- ament, nuclear test bans, Laos --these are among specific sub- jects for discussion in the five hours of dialogue this weekend [between President Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev. Beyond lies the hidden part of the iceberg -- the ceaseless contest for the uncommitted countries. There is every sign that Ken- nedy changed his mind, and |agreed upon a summit confer- |ence he originally did not want, for these reasons: ] He would like to convince Khrushchev that the United States, smarting from setbacks in Cuba and Laos, is in no mood [to be pushed around. |LAY GROUND RULES ; He hopes to draw up with Khrushchev, however sketchy a set of ground rules for the continuing cold war between the| super-powers. | Ideally, there would be a sort of gentlemen's agreement to avoid accidental war through a clearer understanding of each other's intentions. The two have met briefly be- Cristobal, his birthplace. | The government arranged to have his body lie in state for| three hours here before the fu-| HAS HUGE FORCE As head of the armed forces, | Rafael Jr. will have under his| command an" army of 100,000) men, the third largest navy inf NEW YORK (AP) -- Heiress Heiress, Father Fight Over Fund Authorities feared at eight persons are missing. Jeast!to the rear wheel spring. The lyehicle was not damaged. Kennedy Asserts U.S. To Strengthen Forces |be linked with the security of ajarmament agreement, but are|the military field. PARIS (AP)--President Ken- nedy said today the United States is determined 10 "We are determined to main-|Communist threats or pressures|time that American foreign aid strengthen its forces in Europe to guard the freedom of this part of the world. "Phe United States of Amer- jca intends to bear its full part," Kennedy told several {free Europe." |fully determined not to yield to| his 'brother Leonidas Wednesday the Caribbean and an air force Diana Cullom Davis has refused |equipped with Vampire and Sa-|to surrender a $3,800,000 trust {bre jet planes--all built up by|fund to her father's alma mater, his father to maintain control Princeton University. of the country. Miss Davis, 22, is at odds with Raiael Jr., 32, flew A her investment banker father, Shelby Cullom Davis, over the huge trust fund he set up for her, and which he promised to Princeton. Davis set up a meeting with Princeton officials to have his daughter sign over the trust fund. Diana didn't show up. Congressmen charged at the| But Thursday she denied {knowing about the meeting and said she was resisting "pres- from Paris after news of their father's death reached them. Rafael took a military course in the United States in 1958 but did not complete it--largely be- cause of his activities outside {tain and strengthen the forces|on West Berlin or any other we now have stretched across| disputed point. {Europe to defend this part of] {the world, whose security af-|de Gaulle was a two-hour morn- [fects the security of our owning meeting at the Elysee Pal- |country." ace. Their main subject for this session was the North At. Kennedy's final meeting vin Graduates Then sure" to sign over the fund. She added: 'FOR HIS OWN GLORY' "I called him and told him that after my marriage I would consider seriously what to do Dies In Crash "Diana has always been a |discriminatory immigration pol- Double-K Talks Open New Cold"War Phase fore but only long enough for a fleeting impression. Kennedy is on the defensive. He has been described by The Times, a London newspaper, as the "incarnation of a restless wish for change and the embodi- ment of hopes already in part deceived." Now the president seems to want to make a fresh start. while he is seeking lim- ited understanding with the Rus- sian leader, he is also groping toward a fresh strategy in rela- tion to what some call the The era of containment is over. For years, the United States has been pumping money and arms into countries like Laos, South Korea and South Viet Nam, The policy has had many flaws. Laos has received more financial aid per capita than any 'other U.S. dependency, but not enough of the help has trickled through to the masses. Often the U.S. is seen to be propping up unrepresentative, feudal-style cliques that lack American "client" nations. popular support. CRITICAL DOCTORS TORONTO (CP) Liquid, diets, smoking and Canada's icies were criticized by doctors Thursday at the 41st conference of the Health League of Canada. Dr. E. C. Robertson, associate physician at the Hospital for Sick Children, said liquid diets are only a crutch for persons who want to lose weight, and one brand she said is likely to reduce an individual to "a men- tal case at the end of two weeks." "Certainly persons using it for lengthy periods would have to reform their whole eating hab- its," she added. Diets, Smoking Get Hard Look Dr Robertson said one Cana- dian in every 16 is overweight and advocates a moderate, well- balanced diet avoiding fats and starches Dr. W. G. Cosbie of Toronto told the conference there ap- pears to be a definite associa- tion between cigaret smoking and lung cancer--and last year Canadians smoked 34,000,000,000 cigarets. . He said smoking appears to be a major field for preventive health measures since, in the last 25 years, the incidence of lung cancer in Canadian males there was a suggestion that Lawrence and Lamorie be squeezed off the anti-gambling squad to "protect the interests" of Wright and Const. Scott. The deputy commissioner's name came into the case dur- ing cross-examination of Const. Scott by John Brooke, 'counsel for McDermott. The policeman testified that, while posing as a tipoff man to collect evidence for his supe- riors, he telephoned McDermott May 5, 1960, to tell him of a raic planned for the Ramsay Club in Niagara Falls. He said McDermott told him he was already aware of the impending police action. "Who did he tell you told him about it?" Mr. Brooke asked. "Jimmy Bartlett," the con- stable replied. "Who is Jimmy Bartlett?" "The deputy commissioner of the OPP," Const. Scott said. The other two officers came into the testimony during cross- examination of Const. Scott by Joseph Sedgwick, counsel for Feeley, who questioned the offi- cer by quoting from his re- ports: "l am actual counse! Lawrence and I in pro method of taking bribes," the lawyer quoted. "What does that mean?" "The reason I reported that was that Lawrence and La- morie had found out , . , that Wright had suggested they be pushed out of the gambling branch," Const. Scott said, Subsidies Discussed HALIFAX (CP)--Housing and housing subsidies in the hands of government were criticized Thursday as delegates to the annual convention o fthe Cana- dian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities considered muni- cipalities' housing needs and responsibiliites. Mayor Christine Thomas of Oshawa, speaking at a seminar on the second day of the four- day conference, said allotment of federal housing subsidies should be taken from the hands of elected members of Parlia- ment. Reeve N. C. Goodhead of North York, a suburb of Tor- onto, was critical of all levels of government. He said unneces- sary delays in obtaining needed public housing are caused by many authorities, plans." Mayor Thomas said Oshawa has repeatedly proposed a low- rental housing project and has made submissions to the fed- eral government. But the city was still "getting the run- around" although "we wer promised subsidized housing." , "If the money is available, why don't they give it to us?" too many increased 50 per cent. she asked. good girl, but money seems to encourage greed. We were far happier when we had less." WANTS TO TEACH Diana, a graduate of Wheaton College, was reported seeking a teaching job of her own in New England. The big trust fund grew from a $4,000 fund started at Diana's birth, With additional gifts and and investment management by the father, it mushroomed to its present stature. Davis said his daughter's $3,800,000 fund was intended by him as a memorial for his father, George Henry Davis, Princeton 1886. Coolish Weather § "too many governments, too ° hundred officers and civilians : il lantic alliance, about which the] TORONTO (CP) -- Nina Za- standing in the rain outside VISITS NORSTAD NATO military he a d quarters (S.H.A.P.E.) just outside Paris. Referring to U.S. participa- tion in the two world wars and in the North Atlantic alliance, the president said the United States three times in this cen- tury had demonstrated that its own security "must inevitably CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 | JIOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Kennedy visited the head- French and U.S. presidents are quarters of U.S. Gen. Lauris/known to hold some Norstad, NATO's supreme com- different views. sharply bashan, 22, of suburban Port Credit died in a car crash Thursday night after celebrating her graduation from the Univer- |about the trust fund. He was so bitter that he hung up on me. He's doing all this for his own glory, anyway." mander, before his concluding| U.S. and French officials sai talks with French President | Kennedy ny a wad Charles de Gaulle. [pleased with the results of their On June 24, Diana is sched- uled to marry John Means Spencer, a history teacher at sith of Toronto. Her mother and sister Val- |Soviet Premier Khrushchev. The U.S. president flies toll As his visit drew to a close, talks. Diplomats reported that Kennedy apparently was satis-|the 70-year-old French president fied that he and de Gaulle had obviously was reinforced Allied unity on the|pressed with his {eve of his first meeting withially. erie, 23, drove past the crash scene on the Lakeshore Road without realizing she had been killed. Nina, an honors graduate in modern languages, was being driven by. Toivo Miljan, 22, of suburban North York and ac- favorably im- 44-year-old, It was understood the two eaders decided Kennedy would the Darrow school in New Leb- anon, N.Y. Dianna also intimated that her parents are against the marriage. Davis accuses his daughter of "unreasonable selfishness" and Vienna for a two-day confer-/make clear to Khrushchev that ence with the Soviet leader. He|the Western powers will protect intends to emphasize to Khru- West Berlin and defend fully shchev that the Western Allies their rights of access to the city want to improve East-West rg across Communist East Ger- lations and to negotiate a dig many. companied by Joanna Piotrow- ski, 22, of Islington, fellow grad.|000-a-year income for life and uates. vehicle. says she has "an assured $30,- During Weekend TORONTO (CP)--It will prob- ably be a cool weekend in Southern Ontario, the Dominion public weather office said today. Most important influence on the weekend's weather appears to be cool weather now over Northern Ontario and expected early Saturday. Showers early Saturday should be followed by clearing skies. Expected mid-60 afternoon tem- peratures are a few degrees to reach the Great Lakes by Heavy black smoke hangs over the intersection of Uni- la $100,000 cash gift." The car spun out of control] Before leaving Thursday on a into the path of an vucoming biisiness trip to Europe, Davis] 3 said in a statement: | blow normal for the date. Outlook for Sunday is partially cloudy and still a bit cool. | versity avenue and King | streets in Toronto as fire burns underneath in the new Uni- | versity avenue subway under construction. The fire, be- lieved to have started when a | welder's torch ignited some waterproofing, calised traffic FIGHT FIRE IN SUBWAY jams in the downtown area at the height of the evening rush-hour Thursday. (CP Wirephoto).