The Oshawa Times, 7 Oct 1961, p. 1

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She Osha Sines IN TODAY'S ISSUE OF THE TIMES Mainly sunny, very warm today and Sunday, winds light except southwestern 20 during the afternoon. "Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90-- No. 233 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1961 Authorized as Second C Post Office Department, lass Mail Ottawo TWENTY-TWO PAGES WASHINGTON (AP) -- De- spite a two - hour conference between President Kennedy and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, the United States and Russia were reported still far anart today on ways of nego- tiating a peaceful setlement of the Berlin crisis. Informed U.S. officials con- |sider the East-West dispute over {Berlin still extremely danger- ous. Ai the same time hope per- sists that a solution short of a military showdown will be found. ] Kennedy and the Soviet for- eign minister discussed the si- tuation in the White House late Friday and wound up their talks without issuing a formal state- ment. As he climbed into his limou- sine to return to the Soviet Em- bassy, Gromyko told reporters the conversation had been "use- ful." U.S. State Secretary Dean First Of Kind MEETING IN BONN Adenauer in Bonn, Germany, today. The Democratic Sen- ator is on a five-week tour of Europe, the Middle East and Africa. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Frankfurt). Minnesota's Sen. Hubert Humphrey chats with West German Chancellor Konrad East Germany Fetes On Twelfth Birthday BERLIN (Reuters)--East Ger-|delivered speeches Friday night| could mean 'an apparent many today celebigted its 12th! a¢ the Berlin Opera House. Ul- Switeh Som the hard Jo tie birthday in th Wake of al, ..ic g90.minute address was Of, Sell by Communis i tough - talking $pee§h by Com-| oncidered one of his toughest|ers Po0sting hopes of a possi- munist leader Walte§ Ulbricht. lto date on the Berlin pe postponement of the East- Soviet Deputy Premier Anas-| libricht. fi vi fest showdown on Berlin.) : tas Mikoyan eo Ulbricht, first secretary ofl Meanwhile, Belgian Prime U.S. Russia Still Divided Rusk, who sat in on the discus-| sion, called it "interesting." WEST TO STAND FIRM | Kennedy was understood to have told Gromyko that the] United States and its Western defend West Berlin against Com- munist pressures, their right to maintain troops in the city and to keep open the| supply lines from West Ger-| many. | Gromyko told conversation touched important matters" U.S.-Soviet relations. "several | bearing on sition of the Soviet government is concerned, we stressed first allies are fully determined tolf reporters the | ; "Of course, as far as the po- to preservelf of all the importance of the question of the peace with Germany." It was understood that Gro-| myko still has not told U.S.| |leaders what Soviet Premier Khrushchev means exactly when he talks of guaranteeing] Western access to West Berlin| after he signs a peace treaty with Communist East Germany. {Khrushchev has said that the treaty |& bd to start| te i wn East Germany's Socialist Unity offa round of anniv (Communist) party, said his re- gime will have '"'complete sov-| ereign rights" over all access| iroutes to West Berlin after a; peace treaty is signed. irsary cere- monies by placing a wreath at she massive Soviet war memor- ini Mikoyan later was fo address Minister Theo Lefevre said in a| speech at Charleroi that a cer-| tain degree of recognition will probably have to be granted to the East German government. "The West should show real- Seen In Oshawa This month's issue of "On- tario Today", which you re- ceive with today's issue o The ver- a, of Oshawa. 8 its ; ed which will also appear in 28 {other Ontario newspapers, 25, 000 Ibs. or 3,195,144 feet (ap- proximately 605 miles) of wax paper were used -- enough to reach all the way from Ottawa to Windsor. The combined talents of more than 100 people were employed in its preparation. Special inks were developed for seven-color printing, and 53 electro plates were made for the presses. The wax paper on which the Cut-Rite advertisement is print- ed was produced in the West-| Neither Ulbricht nor Mikoyan a ism and not want to freeze af all costs a post - war Germany will sign a separate Cos onc te | NO PAPER ON THANKSGIVING (The Associated Press noted! that Soviet Premier Khrushchev in an anniversary statement In observance of the also did not mention any date] Thanksgiving Day holiday, {for signing a peace treaty. AP| The Oshawa Times will not {correspondent Michael Gold-| Publish on Monday. Regular publication will be resumed on Tuesday. nist parties, wh iast for hours. | Both Mikoyas and Ulbricht Wind Tunnel Whips Up A Storm TORONTO (CP)--A storm in a wind - tunnel has blown up around Toronto's proposed new city hall, just as the Ontario Mu- nicipal Board is deciding whether to give the city permis- | smith noted that the vague terminology of all three Com- | munist leaders on a treaty date Visit To France, | wie: Popular Success 000,000 project, PARIS (CP) -- A son of Old|wound up after three days of| The verdict after 8 at France. That is how Parisians gn) luncheons, Sinners nel test on a model of the build-| : and lavish entertainment, the ing--variously called the "clam- Tefer io Presies dean. Lesage! yremier was a familiar figure %5 shell" or the "oyster'--is that|0f Quebec, whose official visit/{, Parisian newspaper readers. | cS: 0 tno. adiitionst the project would be subject to{here has stirred wide popular|So was Mrs. Lesage. The Paris Alley Printing, wo -adciiiona unusual strains in a high wind-|attention as well as special con- newspaper 1'Aurore described|c0ats of hot AY Were pressure storm. |sideration from the French gov-|her as "elegant." {rolled ie 3 e Lagi on one The municipal board, which ernment. Each celebration during the| Side and then the other. ] has power to turn down the proj-| Few visiting heads of govern-|last hree days seemed to give] The Cut-Rite advertisment is ect, meets again today. And ment have received such atten- rise to warm exchanges of(@ Canadian first -- a _remark- city fathers are worried thatition as was accorded Lesague friendship and reflected French|able achievement of Canadian they might take a dim view of during the last three days of of- nostalgia for its colonial empire | artistry, skill and craftsman-| the building in the light of the ficial ceremonies marking the'in the New World 200 years old. | Ship. a. engineers' findings. inauguration of 'la Maison du " In a toast to Quebec at Thurs-| . The proposed city hall is re- Quebec." (day's state dinner, President de 1 ally two curved skyscrapers fac-| Canada's French province was|Gaulle referred to "the incred.| Thirty Horses Die ing one another across a saucer-|treated with the deference of a|ible power" of this young branch| . shaped City Council chamber. major state with the result that| which has grown from a French| In Raceway Fire SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.| The design, by Finnish architectmay Parisians talking to Cana-| root. Viljo Rewell, resulted from a|dians now in Paris refer to Le-| "No lapse of time can wipe world-wide competition. {sage as "'your president." {out from the heart of French-{(AP)--Up to 30 harness horses City Solicitor J. Palmer Kent| The several hundred Quebec-|men the nostalgic thought of the|may have died in a fire early told the municipal board hear-|lers in Paris for the occasion children it abandoned far away [today at Saratoga Raceway, city ings Wednesday it would be "'ajand members of the 40 - man nearly 200 years ago." {police said. terrible blow" to have plans for official Quebec delegation have| The premier said Friday Eng-| Between 20 and 30 horses were the building stopped now, since spent much time in conversa-|lish - speaking Canadians know |stabled at the barn where the the city has already paid $5,500, tions with Parisians explaining that if French - speaking Cana-|firc was discovered about 3 a.m. 000 for a downtown site, spon-|that Quebec is one of Canada's|dians continue to affirm them-| Some of the horses had raced sored the design competition/10 provinces but still retains itsiselves they will help Canada Friday night at the track, which and advanced $20,000 in archi- French characteristics. stave off cultural absorption by|is near Saratoga race track, a tects' fees. Today, as the official visit'the United States. IRaceway spokesman said. couver plant. impregnated with wax three| times. Its fibres were then com-| pacted under 35 tons of pressure] and cold wax was rolled in. When the wax paper was {ready the special moisture-set- {ting inks were printed on it by |a seven-color letterpress pro- | peace treaty will establish East German sovereignty over the supply lines from West Ger- many and that thereafter the Western powers must negotiate with the East German regime for use of the supply line. Hoffa Considers Return To AFL-CIO NEW YORK (AP) -- Teams- sters Union President James Hoffa said Friday his 1,700,000- member union would be willing under '"'certain stipulated terms" to return to the AFL- CIO, from which it wes ex- pelled in 1957. Hoffa, addressing a national convention of the Transport Workers Union, did not spell out the terms but commented that minster Paper Company's Van-|a return would provide no bene-| fits for the Teamsters and The extra strong paper was would cost them $4,000,000 alas the result of a combined year. Japan's new Ambassador to Canada, Nobuhiko Ushiba, 52, will arrive in Ottawa Oct. 11. Mr. Ushiba, who entered the JAPAN'S AMBASSADOR | |cuers reported there were no { |survivors after a British airliner : [with 34 persons aboard crashed 'lin the snowy Pyrenees moun- | |tains between France and Spain j| wreckage lay on a steep mount- In Moun PERPIGNAN, France -- Res- early today. The plane, carrying mostly British vacationers heading for a holiday in Spain, crashed on the slopes of a mountain. Rescue officials said a heli- copter had flown low over the wreckage and reported "no sur- vivors." They added the helicopter was unable to land because the ain slope and high winds were blowing. The helicopter crew reported the plane had broken up and burned. Japanese diplomatic service in 1932, has held posts in Ger- many, Britain, and Burma. He succeeds Toru Hagiwara. Buildin + TORONTO (CP) --~ Ontario's strike « riddled eonstruetion in- dustry may be even further hampered next week as 1,200 millwrights from Windsor to Ot- tawa vote on whether to accept a two-year contract with a 15- cent increase or go on strike. Hamilton millworkers turned down the 15-cent pattern Thurs- day. Members of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners (CLC), they have been negotiating a 35-hour week with no reduction in take-home pay since last March. The present rate is $3 an hour, except in the |Ottawa Valley where mill |wrights earn $2.85. Structural steel construction is {tied up throughout the province Istrike and lockout. Members of 'AIR BORN BABY Pilot Delivers Baby In ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) "Get off the air!" Crackling over the radio went the warning to all points from the U.S. Federal Avia- tion Ageney's air traffic con- trol centre: "Get off the air!" "We're having a baby in | flight!" And from bush pilot Don Sheldon, flying wing to wing with the stork 4,000 feet over Talkeetna: ""He's half born." What do I do now?" Sheldon had picked up Mrs. Joanna Rock at Cantwell for a flight to the Alaska Native Hospital's maternity ward in Anchorage. High in the air, Sheldon suddenly found him- Flight self doubling as midwife while flying the plane. In answer to his radio cry for help the Aviation Agency got Dr. Gloria Park on the telephone and relayed ques- tions and answers: "Is the baby born yet?" "Yeah, we're doing great." "Is it breathing?" "Yeah, he's kicking around Possible Further Slow-Up Bridge, Structural and: Ornam- ental Iron Workers (CLC) called a delayed - action strike Sept. 11 that hit one firm at a time. The industry retaliated when the strike had affected 50 per cent of the firms by closing down the industry. GLAZIERS WALK OUT In Toronto Friday, 250 glaz- iers, members of the Brother- hood of Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of America (CLC) went on strike in support of demands for an 80-cent hourly increase spread over two years. The strike affected 15 firms. Glaziers are ~urren'ly paid $2.20 an hour. They rejected a man- agement offer of a 30-cent-an- hour increase and a 25-cent pre- mium for special work. More than 700 ready - mix drivers and helpers are in- volved in a concrete dispute which may lead to the layoff of thousands of construction workers after Thanksgiving weekend if settlement is not reached. The Teamsters Union (Ind.) demands the right to refuse to cross organizational picket lines of housing construction unions. One bright spot in the labor picture was a settlement Friday between Local 598 of the Oper- ative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Associa- tion (CLC) and the Torontc Builders Exchange. The tentative agreement cov- ers 400 workers employed by 103 general contractors and five floor finishing firms. the International Association of The British plane, a twin- engined Dakota, dropped from sight on a flight from Gatwick airport near London to Perpig- nan, a regional commercial cen- tre of 65,000 in southern France about 10 miles from the Medi- terranean and 20 from the Span- ish frontier. The plane was due to land at this town near the Spanish bor- der at 1 a.m. but airport officials said nothing was heard of it after 12:30 a.m., when it re- louse while flying over the city, 100 miles from Perpignan. CARRIED 34 (In London the charter com. pany, Derby Aviation, said the made radio contact with Tou- U.K. AIRLINER CRASHES 34 PASSENGERS DEAD Find Wreckage tains was transporting the passengers to buses waiting at Perpignan to take them on Spanish vaca- tions.) The search was centred on the Pyrenees after reports from shepherds in the mountains near the town of Carcassonne that they had seen a plane flying very low and apparently in dif- ficulty during the night. The search was extended over the western Mediterranean. Rescue planes and helicopters were forced to fly under a 2,000- foot cloud ceiling with a visibil- ily of about 10 miles. Officials said overnight weather conditions at Perpignan were "not particularly bad" de- spite fierce storms that lashed southern France. Winds up to 120 miles an hour were recorded along the Medi. terannean coast and brief tor- nadoes struck Marseille, Aix-en- Provence and other towns, par siyzing traffic and causing brief floods. Pessimistic About Situation In Laos cause it is "too late mow' ts. establish a neutral regime there, Sihanouk, original nt of - the 14-nation Laotian conference now meeting in Geneva, told a press conference here the United plane carried 31 passengers and a crew of three. The airliner States should never send troops into Laos. CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)-- Authorities are di 0 4 Mystery Deaths Of Two Students ~_. come of the Laos situation be- |. A ] examinations, authorities said,' ih d no evid results of an autopsy to clea up the mystery deaths of two University of North Carolina students in the dormitory room they shared. "We can't give any diagnosis until the autopsy is complete," acting coroner George Cannady said Friday night. Cannady said it probably will be two or three days before the autopsy report is ready on the bodies of William Henry Harri- son Johnson Jr., 24, and James Michael Barham, 21. The bodies, in their beds and dressed in night clothes, were found Friday by a janitor who went to their room to investi- gate when they failed to appear for their jobs at the university dining hall. The post-mortem was ordered after a coroner's jury ruled that the young men died "by unknown causes." Superficial n|d Tr of foul play. Cannady said one of the dead youths, whom he did not iden- tify, had foam or his mouth and there also were reports one of the youths had been ill Thurs- day night. The acting coroner said all angles are being stu- died, including examination of fresh fruit found in their room. Charles Henderson, dean of student affairs, said the two, students were ahout average n their studies, and their records did not "indicate anything ex- cept that both were fine boys." Only Thursday, Rober S. Mauldin, 33, a dental school la- boratory photographer and for- mer graduate student, was found dead under similar but apparently unrelated circum- stances. Cannady had ruled Mauldin's death due to natural causes and no autopsy was per- formed. here." How about the umbilical cord, Sheldon asked. Tie it but don't cut it, said Dr. Park. Okay, said Sheldon. The doctor offered advice on caring for mother and baby. To each suggestion Shel- don said "will do." Mother and baby were de- livered safe and sound. ACCEPT CANADIAN REQUEST UNITED NATIONS (CP) --|blay, Canadian ambassador to|wide study on radiation and its South Africa would be discussed | Over - riding Soviet opposition, |Chile, state once again that ra-|effects on health but the study after it. : of the 100-member United Nations|dioactive fallout over Canada|, not progressed greatly Semyon Tsarapkin, the Soviet| special political committee Fri- had increased to an alarming| ; : delegate, said there is nothing day accepted a Canadian re- degree after the recent resump- SUPPORT IMPRESSIVE in an anticipated report of the quest to consider first the dang-|tion of nuclear tests by the Sov-| Green, in his interview, ap-|UN scientific committee on the ers of nuclear fallout to humanjiet Union. di peared particularly pleased that|effects of radiation that could be/ Ith. Tremblay told the UN--as ex- ali : .|regarded as out of the ordinary. | hea . 3 hag non-aligned countries had sup : : : | The committee -- represent ternal Affairs Minister Howard ported the Canadian contention Tsarapkin, the chief Soviet ne- i all UN members--took the|Green did Tuesday--that, for ex- that the atomic-radiation matter S0tiator at the test 'ban negotia-| oi Bo after hearing Paul Trem-|ample, the radioactive fallout|p = ivon priority. tions in Geneva which collapsed over Toronto increased more after the resumption of Soviet] On a geographical basis, the than 1,000 times after the Sov- og Bs .~|tests. expressed fear that the | iet tests in the atmosphere. support was impressive. Shin gehate might be political rather POLICE 725-1133 The issue "is a matter of 'ar® Fukushima of Japan, the|ihap scientific. common and urgent concern to| Only country to have suffered an| He did not press the matter | FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 { . - us all," Tremblay said. {atomic attack, supported the Ca-lto a formal vote and the com-| Green said in an interview|Padian proposal '"'wholeheart-| mittee chairman, Yordan Teh. | later that the question of radia-|"@'Y banov of Communist Bul tion will be the main Canadian! Ghana's H. R. Amonoo said declared that ato initiative at the current UN ses- he had no objection to the Ca- would be taken u sion. In 1959 Canada initiated nadian proposal so long that the |item =f business f |what was meant to be a world-lquestion of race troubles in|mittee. ¥ 4; ig RN Mh a rg He RY British Empire's Consider Fallout Danger Rash Of Trouble LONDON (AP)--A rash of po- litical troubles is besetting Brit- ain's shrinking empire. The government of Prime Minister Macmillan long ago re- solved to help along independ. ence - seekers but intends with equal, firmness to avoid Congo-| type crises by surrendering too much power too quickly As a result British rulers now are trying to cope with situations in the West Indies, Africa and Asia. In the West Indies the people {of Jamaica have voted to. quit| Uganda. a 10-territory federation due for independence next year on the lines of Canada's Common- living federal project. iway from settlement. | British Guiana, Britain's only South American colony, also will press for independence as {quickly as possible, | PROBLEMS IN AFRICA | In East Africa, the protector- |ate of Tanganyika has been | promised statehood Dec. 20. New constitutional talks are lik- {ely to be arranged for self-rul- {ing Kenya next year. But diffi- culties have arisen in a parley on the political future of | In Central Africa British fe- gotiators are walking a tightrdpe {between the resolve of federal °h- wealth status. Jamaica instead|Prime Minister Sir Roy Welen- S garia, wants separate statehood. Brit-|sky to preserve white rule and mic radiation ain is hoping Jamaica will be/the demand of Northern Rhode- p as the first{lured back yet into the group- sian Africans for self or the com-|ing by the success of the still- ment -govern- The issues séem a long A Vi POLICE policemen survey the shattered window of a car used by four bandits Two Montreal wi q Gor who held up a branch of the Banaue Canadienne Nationale and escaped with about $2,000. After police shots broke the Y GETAWAY CAR car window, the men abane doned the car and fled om foot. --CP Wigephote

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