The Oshawa Times, 3 Jun 1961, p. 1

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IN TODAY'S She Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Sunny skies should prevail during the weekend, with the weather warming up a little on Sunday. VOL. 90--NO. 129 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1961 Authorized as Second 'Class Mail Post Office TWENTY PAGES "MISS JET' FROM GERMANY Beauties employed by the | Jast night. Wally Wania, an | return ticket to Rome. Here world's leading airlines vied | employee of Lufthansa Ger- | she is congratulated by Judith for the honor of becoming | man Airlines was the win- | Livingston, "Miss Jet of 1961" in Toronto | ner. Miss Wania's prize was a | Canpacair Club. Trujillo's Driver Tells Story Of Assassination (my| wounds in the abdomen and CIUDAD TRUJILLO (AP) --|in defence of "mi jefe" "They shot him like he was an/chief). ad. animal." | He said he managed to wound| The chauffeur, father of seven is is ay Rafael Tru-|two assailants. children, described the attac Si 5 the way alse. Fri "I dropped them, I dropped|as merciless and he said Tru- day the assassination of the/them good," he said. |jillo had no chance to surrender. : hl Ig RELATES DETALLS ne sad. the ssa ants snot 1 ari , he said, the assailants § SHIACUT, + dacariay From his hospital bed here, fe, hers He expressed hopes that *"'an- de la Cruz, 55, was Tecuperat:;;,, chauffeur gave this account : | '| TORONTO (CP) -- One teen- president of the | 'Teenager Shot During Gang Brawl {ager was shot with a police gun |Friday night, seven were ar- rested and nearly 50 more dis- persed in a melee in front of suburban North York police sta-| tion. | William Thomas Scott, 18, of| |Toronto is in fair condition in : [hospital with a bullet wound in his shoulder. The seven arrested : |have been charged with possess- ing offensive weapons --- iron| bars. | | >coit was hit by a bullet acci- dentally discharged from the {revolver of Constable Frank |Thompson, a motorcycle officer, | | | |one of a dozen officers called to| {quell the disturbance. | | The trouble started at a shop-| |ping plaza, where police were] |called to break up a gang fight, | when an iron bar was thrown lout a car window. | Two youths were taken to the station for questioning. They were followed by about 50 oth- ers who had been milling around | |the plaza. | When Constable Thompson ap-| {proached one youth he tried tol flee. The constable pursued the| youth and was followed by a crowd of teenagers. | Fearing he would be mobbed, Be officer drew *¥41d he had |when he caught the fleeing |youth. The gun slipped from his Ontario Cities Win Safety Awards, VICTORIA (CP)--Several cit-| ies have won awards sponsored by the Canadian Automobile As-| his _revolver.isociation.. for. their RR ah 'safefy programs, pedestrian; Hamilton won first prize in a nedy's first effort at European SUMMIT TALKS BEGIN. KENNEDY 'CONFIDENT Tiny Room Scene 1 bE FS FIRST MEETING OF EAST, WEST CHIEFS Paris Talks J.F.K. Success a PARIS (AP)--President Ken- {competition among cities with/summit dipolomacy, his three In the final analysis, this first confrontation was not as im- portant in the things they talked about as in how they talked Of Histo VIENNA--President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev began their historic discussion of East- West problems today over a coffee table in a secluded house on the outskirts of Vienna. The world's two most power- ful men had their first meeting in the small but comfortable music room at the home of American Ambassador H. Free- man Matthews. Their initial discussions lasted | 75 minutes, delaying the start| of their lunch together for al half hour. | They continued their talks over lunch and then retired to| the music room again for more| discussions. Khrushchev arrived punctu- ally at the ambassador's resi- dence to begin the talks. Ken- nedy, who had arrived a short time earlier, greeted him and| led him into the red and grey music room. Top advisers, including State Secretary Dean Rusk and For- eign Minister Andre Gromyko, waited in adjoining rooms for any summons from their lead-| ers. Kennedy headed into the talks | with what he described as a| "good deal of confidence" fol- lowing his successful three-day state visit to France and exten- sive talks with President de Gaulle, Kennedy had flown into Vienna two hours earlier from Paris. He told Austrian President Dolf Schaer' he had come to Vienna for 'this most important occ- asion in an effort to improve the ric Meet landed on the rain-swept tar- mac at Vienna airport. About 100 young men and women at the airport waved placards at Kennedy, urging him. to "lift the Iron Curtain" and "help Berlin." Kennedy was about 10 min- utes Jate in arriving here be- cause of a series of hitches at the Pairs airport which de- layed his takeoff after a crowd- ed three-day state visit to the French capital and extensive talks with President de Gaulle on world problems. Kennedy and de Gaulle had agreed that the Western allies must stand firm in their com- mitment to defend West Berlin against any Soviet attempt to take over. Kennedy said the meetings with de Gaulle enabled him to confront Khrushchev "with more confidence." Kennedy's plane landed at :50 a.m., two hours before his scheduled meeting with Khrushe chev. He bounced down the stairway as soon as the big jet rolled to a stop. Rain was falling. The president called the big. two conference a "most impor tant meeting in an effort to improve the prospects for more general understanding and peace." Khrushchev arrived in Vienna Friday and said: "We know one cannot settle everything at once. If, however, one has good will, one can also achiexg much within a short time." ing from numerous bullet , wounds suffered when attackers|%/, the attack: lother Trujillo will stay at the/grasp during the struggle an Idischarged. about them. Austrian President Schaerf, killed Trujillo in a gunfight Tuesday night. In an exclusive interview with| the San Juan Star, the power- fully built chauffeur who had driven for Trujillo for 18 years) said he was wounded five times| Team Surveys East Coast Flood Scenes FREDERICTON (CP)~--Scenes | of devastation and desolation| were viewed Friday by officials the New Brunswick disaster fund on a tour of areas of the province flooded by rain-swollen rivers last weekkend. Water-soaked cushions and a mattress perched on the roof of a small home, a television set floating down a river and pieces of furniture stacked in front of a battered house are symbols of the devastation that struck the province. Bridge wreckage, broken, road washouts and|f . silt-covered farmland were com- HAD OPERATION along Nashwaak| The chauffeur was taken to|dividuals from further violence |g =o oq. buildings, mon sights River Valley 23 miles north of {hospital and underwent an im-|against in the| Maugerville and Sheffield dis- tricts, pulpwood logs hurled up shoulder. { to the roadside were evidence wound in another part of his left of the St. John River's fury. U.S. Navy Alerted To D ominican Tr ouble Ei organizations as here. Ten miles south, WASHINGTON (AP) -- Navy and marine units were on the alert along the eastern United States seaboard today amid re- ports of further disturbances in the Dominican Republic. State department press officer Iincoln White said use of U.S. forces in the Caribbean country was not planned now. But he did not rule out the possibility of such action later if American lives were endangered. According to latest reports, the 5,200 Americans in the is- lang stil: were unharmed. These military movements during the night made obvious that there was a considerable alert of navy and marine forces on the East Coast and in the Caribbean Sea: CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 more than 200,000 population.|days of meetings with President Saskatoon was first, Windsor, Charles de Gaulle, carries all Ont., second and Sudbury third|the earmarks of a personal | ° » {in a competition among cities| success. | Prohibits {with 50,000-200,000 population. There had been some fear u g e | Cities with 25,000-50,000 popu- that the American president {lation: Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.,|might not get along with de The murder car came from| overnment." Debio With 1s Heht vor He Jo Head of the § warning was a short blast of {machine-gun fire that hit Tru- |jillo but not the chauffeur. The \car then swerved to the right Both men discussed openly and frankly the problems that beset them and saw eye-to-eye on a number of items. Most im- mediate among these was Ber- Freedom Riders or| . mediate operation. Bullets|other interstate bus passengers.| 1 Want to make it abundantly {fractured his left leg and right {clear that this injunction and He also suffered a NEW TACTICS FAIL |restraining order will be en- Meanwhile, another group of forced. If there are any such superficial |integrationists tried a new tac-|incidents as this (mob violence) again, I am going to put some| Klansmen, some city officials, {some city policemen and some Negro preachers in the federal penitentiary." One of Johnson's orders was la restraint against the Con- {gress of racial Equality and three other leg and received [well as five Negro leaders and (Would receive his reply at " 5 i i {mass union rally § y 1. The aircraft carrier Shan-| 4. In Washington, a Pentagon | 21 Persons acting in' concert] Gerald a unday _ Te : | A y sallagher, secretary [gri-l.. put out to sea at Jackson-| spokesman said there would be treasurer of Local 183 of the ville, Fla., under a "generaljother ship movements before! International Hod Carriers tured three others. But the ac- alert" condition. Its decks were morning. but declined to discuss | |iammed with jet fighters. Alany specific military move- {navy spokesman said it was or-/ments. dered to sea "'to be ready in the | Another Pentagon source jevent of an emergency." {noted that since last year the ARINF PREPARE + [United States has kept a 2,000- 2 At Camp Lejeune, N.C., aman battalion landing team of marine spokesman said units of (the 2nd Marine Division afloat {the 2nd Marine Division were|in the Caribbean, ready for im- undergoing "a test of our abil-| mediate action. |/ity to move out rapidly." The| Greensboro Daily News, quot-|SHIPS SAIL ling reliable sources, had re- This source also noted that Toronto man was arrested to- porte that marine units along|the Northampton, flagship of|day and charged with murder in the coast were being loaded|the U.S. 2nd Fleet, put out 10|the clothes hanger slay aboard carriers to take position|sea from Norfolk, Va., Wednes-| § ger say |in the Caribbean off the Do-!day. He said the aircraft car- : {minican Republic's coast. rier Intrepid sailed Thursday|day night. &. At Providence, R.I., tele-'from Norfolk. Ronald Ralph Andrews, 21, vision stations interrupted pro- Reports reaching Washington Was arrested in the Central and cut in front of Trujillo's (first; Lethbridge, Alta.; second; |Gaulle. The contrary was true. |lin and Soviet efforts to oust |distance ahead but its occu- lation: Trail, B.C., first; Dun-|th i DISCUSS DEFENCE | : ya : : , B.C., first; -| that sometimes have marked de jpats did not participate in the das, Ont., and Brockville, tied|Gaulle's high - level dealings in| They also discussed the When the first car blocked his| "federal judge Friday issued|at Jackson, Miss. They were|tor i : i.| def ted by the Ameri- ) s| : lat J , program improvement; Bar-| Although the French presi-|defence created by the Ameri passage, the chauffeur yelled: series of sweeping decrees oaefyl but unsuccessful. rie, citation for pedestrian pro-|dent is old enough to be Ken.|can-Soviet stalemate in nuclear But Trujillo insisted, "We are cent racial challenge in Ala-| The awards were announced|al ff at G --nucl : je | Be : ail |aloof as Mount Everest, the conferences at Geneva--nuclear {going to fight. bama and the violence thatrived at Jackson in two Trail-| "spo 5cconiation convention. [two got along famously. [test ban and Laos. car, steadied himself against the| : : | rei ; | d not to back-track in Ber- coh | s Friday night. ' agreed not to back-track in {right front bumper and blazed] U.S. district court Judge noon and seven i Jy drag on [Frank Johnson issued these or-|While Negroes in the groups BUILDERS' STRIKE Xin under Soviet force or threat Trujillo soon fell mortally|ders: |went into the white waiting It was understood they had an * still inside the car using two|stop their racial challenge in|Negro waiting room. All 13 D t t [touchy problem of U.S. restric- light machine - guns, one after Alabama until further notice. [were arrested for breach of the e or a 1011 |tions in giving nuclear informa- {the other. 2. He put Montgomery police peace. They brought to 65 the [tion to its allies. They talked Shortly afterward the chauf-iand a former reserve police- number arrested at Jackson . | broadly about Latin America, 3 {man under no-bus-violence in- [since the rides began last week. ? |ably from a creasing head junctions, with indefinite jaill Johnson said in his Montgom- or Tl ers i |stake. wound. Left for dead, he awoke jorms as the penalty for viola-|ery ruling that the bus trips to Kennedy believes that the |several minites Jater aud was) ion. |challenge segregation practices banning of nuclear tests is a iscovered by rural poiice WHO! 3 He left in effect, pending "are directly causing an undue| TC : gral {had been attracted by the gun-, tye court action, a restrain- | burden and yD inter-| calling for deportation of immi-|cials. total disarmament. De Gaulle ing order which prohibits the|state commerce » {grant workers convicted of us-| The plasterers' union and the has been non - commital about |Ku Klux Klan and three in-| Ee 7% ing violence or intimidation to|laborers' union called the walk- France's future plans in nuclear port strike action against out, claiming that employees|testing. was sent Friday by the presi- builders, who, they say, are not tries and emerging Africa took dent of the Toronto Metropoli-| sticking to agreements signed ajup part of the conference, with tan Home Builders' Association year ago. 'no specifics reached. to Citizenship and Immigration H. P. Hyatt, home builders' 4 = . P. Hyatt, home builders'| leader, stated in the telegram | Claim Trujillo that open defiance of the law | should be cause for deportation. | vice-president of the Operative] Plasterers' and Cement Ma-| CIUDAD TRUJILLO (AP)--|was taken into custody on (CLC), said Friday night Hyatt The Dominican government charges of giving asylum to the a tonio Tejeda Pimentel. |dead one of the assassins of dic- | : tator Rafael Trujillo and cap-| The army said guards were 4 : {churches to protect them |Building and Common Labor-|¢used mastermind of the Plot | canst reprisals by angry builders were trying to work on| Gen. Rafael Trujillo Jr., 32, a A : fas. rel) > i > : An armed forces communique I 'H Fl {the Italian immigrants' fear of the dictator's son, was directing | ©. Lieut. Garcia Guerrero n anger | " hiding in an aunt's house here. [circulating leaflets concerning|of a widespread crackdown on He put up a fight and shot two M d C the Ontario Labor Relations Act|suspected anti-government ele- Aviuraer vase | hl The plot against the elder| Th in the band large type. {Trujiilo, who ruled with a tyran- ere Were seven in the han {that carried out the assassina- Mr. Gallagher said the men|; ' § {have been putting up with "ter- into the presidential palace. Livi eden A ey | |be scared by these tactics now." Guerrero, an aide to President ¥ The unions Friday organized Joaquin Balaguer, the agent lfeur. An engineer, Roberto Pas- riza, also was in custody. grams to notify the crews of indicated a purge may be un-|YMCA. Police also detained as jon jobs i i jaz, (In a group of cars. that . 1 / : LA Bs S| construction jobs in Markham tired Gen. Juan Tomas Diaz, Pp iS. lat am the .fleet oilers Calooshahat- der way on the island in the| Witnesses Lewis Mclsaac, 39, of and Etobicoke townships. |was still at large. |bushed the generalissimo were auto. . | Peterborough third. From the start there were none|the West from that divided Ger- | Another car was parked some Race Violence | Cities with 10,000-25,000 popu-lof the personality _differences|man city. ttack MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)-- tic on Mississippi racial Jaws for second; Pembroke, -citation|the past, changing problems ef European "Let's turn around, Jefe. {aimed at stopping the most re- Thirteen Freedom Riders ar-|gram activities. |nedy's father and often is as|Power and the two plaguing The dictator got out of the| 0 wih jt. |ways buses--six in the after-|-- Both Kennedy and de Gaulle wounded. The chauffeur was| 1 "Freedom Riders" must room, the whites went into the linformative discussion on the feur lost consciousness, presum- {in which France itself has a TORONTO (CP)--A telegram |$200 bail provided by union offi- first and necessary step toward | After issuing his ruling John- gn, |apartment and house builders, are being victimized by the/ Aid to underdeveloped coun- Minister Ellen Fairclough. the law must be obeyed and| Charles Irvine, international Murderer Shot sons' International Association | - i ifi . claimed today to have shot/MaM identified as Huascar An {being posted around all Catholic Man Charged :: Union (CLC), said the Was still at large. | mobs. | : deportation. the manhunt for members of [°° ©" " "10 He said contractors have been the band of killers amid reports 2 machine-gunned: 10 death : A | § ity agents, killing one, be- and the Immigration Act, the ments. (Zecun i i i deportation section appearing in| fore being killed himself, TORONTO (CP) -- A young| ; » ARE nica, hand for 31 years, was|. a ; [won T BE SCARED disclosed to have reached right tion of Trujillo Tuesday night. A former army captain, Pedro ing of alrihle working conditions for| The slain assassin was identi- 2 i | i i e HE bi hl . ! ; i ia |@fte= being wounded in a gun- {woman in a rooming house Fri-|years and they're not going to|fied as Lieut. Amado Garcia fight with Trujillo and his chauf- a flying squad of 60 cars carry- head Dominican chief of state, [1071 h AN ing 300 members to descend on| The accused chief plotter, re-|,, 1nree others who were riding |chee and Allagash to return to| wake of Tuesday night's assas-|Toronto, and Samuel Martin Rights broke out and in one| still at large. One of them, An- {their ships at once. The navy sination of dictator Rafael L.|and Elsie Andrews, of no stated|fight a striker was struck with| PRIEST ARRESTED tonio Imbert, was believed to said later the crews were called | Trujillo. These reports also in. addresses. [the blunt edge of an axe and a| Among the three accused con- have been wounded in the road- back because the ships had re-| dicated that some anti - Trujillo] The dead woman, in her 40s, worker was hit on the head by a/spirators seized was a civilian side gun battle. The others| ceived orders to get under way elements may be in control of was found partly clothed on alflying brick. Neither was seri-/caught in a Roman Catholic were Salvador Estrella. an If or "routine refuelling opera- areas outside Ciudad Trujillo, bed, her head beaten and a wire ously hurt. Police arrested eight|parish house. The resident/army officer's son, and Antonio| tions. ithe Dominican capital. clothes hanger around her neck.men and all were released on priest, Rev. Gabriel Maduro, |de la Maza Vasquez. ¥ prospects for more general un- derstandings between people." CHEERED IN RAIN The president received a more warmhearted welcome from crowds lining his route into the city from the airport than the one accorded Khrush- chev when he arrived here by train Friday night. Crowds stood four and five deep at some points along the route despite steady rain. They surged forward cheering as he drove by with Austrian Presi- dent Adolf Schaerf and there were none of the boos which marked Khrushchev's arrival. Another crowd waited at the Austrian president's office and cheered as Kennedy and his wife arrived for a formal visit before the beginning of the sum- mit talks. A big crowd, many of them from vienna's American colony, set up a loud cheer when Ken- nedy and Jacqueline arrived from Paris. Schaerf and top members of this neutral nation's government standing bareheaded in the steady downpour, welcomed Kennedy as the first American president ever to come into this historic capital on the Danube. Schaerf said he and millions of other Europeans "wish that the talks here will have real results." The last time an American president and Khrushchev met the fire works plunged U.S. Soviet relations to a disas- trously low point .and ushered in six months of intensive cold war conflict. That was a year ago at the Big Four summit confernce in Paris. President Eisenhower to apologize to Khrushchev for U-2 spy plane flights over the Soviet Union and Khrushchev denounced him as "my fishy friend." When Kennedy landed today Khrushchev was at the Soviet Embassy residence in Purkers- dorf. He stepped out on a porch and waved to newsmen waiting in the quiet street below. They called him to come down. But he pointed to the sky and said were on hand to greet Kennedy and his wife as their plane '"'dozhd," the Russian word for rain. CANADIAN Leslie Gordon, 41, a Polish | Jew now living in Montreal, | Canada, testifies at the trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jeru- salem, June 1. Gordon told the | TESTIFIES court he lost his parents, five brothers in the Nazi pogrom ana then was forced to dig graves and cover up Jews while some were still alive. (AP Wirephoto)

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