The Oshawa Times, 13 Oct 1961, p. 1

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' THOUGHT FOR TODAY Whether 8 man winds up with #2 nest egg or a goose egg de- pends on the chick he marries. dhe Osha Times / WERTHER REPORT Cloiidy with scattered showers or thunderstorms cloudy and cooler tonight, Saturday. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. VOL. 90--No. 237 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1961 Authorized Post Office a es Second Class Mail Department, Ottowo UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- | Ghana sought support today for 4a resolution calling on the Se- § | curity Council to expel South Africa from the United Nations. Ghana Ambassador Alex Quai- 4 |son-Sackey said his delegation had drawn up a draft demand- 4|ing the ouster of the white su- premacist nation and would put it before the 26-country African group today. He declined to say ilon what grounds the demand was based until he had con- sulted the rest of the group. Presumably it says South Af- rica is unworthy of UN mem- bership because it is continu- iT ing its apartheid--race segrega- ACTIVE DUTY Mrs. Darlene Nowak, 18, receives a farewell kiss from her husband Sp4-C David, 22, as he left Detroit today for active duty. They have been married weeks. Nowak is one of 800 Michigan Na tional Guardsmen of the 156th Signal Battalion that left for active duty at Ft. Benning, thrae | | tion--policies in defiance of re- peated UN appeals. Some Africans doubted Ghana would get strong support from their group for such a drastic demand. A number of African delegates, although bitterly op- | posed to South Africa's racial policies, have said privately they feel it is wiser to keep the republic in the UN where other members can bring pressure to ust South Africa hana Resolution Asks UN Council made his policy speech in the General Assembly that brought down the wrath of the African group and resulted in a 67-to-1 vote of censure against Louw. Louw assailed the United States and other Western pow- ers for failing to defend him in the General Assembly against By JOSEPH MacSWEEN UNITED NATIONS (CP)--In| what one delegate termed a| "deep measure of unhealthy sus-| disarmament. Debate was scheduled to re-| sume late this afternoon as the 100 - member political commit-| tee, senior body of the 16th General Assembly, sought to al- bear and perhaps eventually get some results At least seven affirmative votes would be required in the doubted that could mustered. Ghana's resolution was drawn up before External Affairs Min- many Ga. (AP Wirephoto) ister Eric Louw of South Africa Expect Murder Trial Verdict SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. \ (CP) -- A verdict was expected today in the trial of Leila Mar- On April 18 her husband came home drunk again, Mrs. Steinke sald, and threatened to kill her. lene Steinke, 29, on a charge of The husband then left the house. ) e her esha, Baward Hubert pleted Thursday, the third day of the trial. Mr. Justice E. G. Moorhouse was to deliver his charge today to the Supreme Court jury before it retired to consider a verdict. In her testimony Thursday Mrs. Steinke, who weights 88 pounds, described a life of mar- ital strife punctuated with beat. ings by her 200 - pound hus- band. She sald she married Steinke when she was 15 and he was 17. They have fine sons, four of whom are living. Steinke, she said, started drinking sbout four years after| their marriage. When he was] not drinking he was a '"'differ- ent personality." TAKES OVERDOSES Once when she became preg- nant she said Steinke kicked and beat her and tried to make her lose the baby. Twice she took an overdose of sleeping pills "because I couldn't stand the stress and strain any more." Mrs. Steinke said her husband came home drunk April 19 seek- ing a cheque she had put away #0 he could go out and drink again. She said he attacked her and tried to force her and their 13 - year - old son into indecent i two in the m lot priority to agenda items--a | process that itself evokes sharp | debate. ; : | Although only priority was be-| 11-country security council t0|;,5 giseyssed, the Soviet Union| expel South Africa. Observers|ianoled hotly Thursday with the| ®| United States and Britain over| {nuclear bomb testing and dis- {armament, with smaller coun- |Pipinelis of Greece said the | "suspicion and fear" evident in| [various statements was the] greatest obstacle to any solu-| tion. He added that nuclear agreements would be useless without effective controls. Canada, meanwhile, was pre- paring for submission in another committee a resolution on radi- ation which, although not under the heading of disarmament, is| related to it. This aimed to focus world at- tention on radiation hazards to human heal outline th and s. The Us States and Britain said, in effect, that the Soviet resumption of nuclear tests in the atmosphere despite a mora- torium but Russia '"'callously" violated it although some prog- By JOHN YORSTON QUEBEC (CP) -- The Salvas royal commission has adjourned until next week after hearing 12 witnesses tell tales Thursday of kickbacks received under the former Union Nationale govern- ment. The 12 witnesses--including a defeated UN candidate, a teacher, a farmer, salesmen, a lieutenant in Quebec City fire commissioner's office, Quebec City and provincial government employees mentioned the names of three party bigwigs in their testimony. Several said they received cheques directly from UN Treasurer Gerald Martineau or relations. in the mail through his inter- Witnesses Relate Kickback Stories cession. Others said they were| members of election teams of the party's interim leader An- tonio Talbot and Armand Mal- tais, legislature member for the vote of censure. The United States and Britain did not par- ticipate in the vote Canada ab- stained. The foreign minister warned that the censure vote was cer- tain to trigger demands at home that South Africa pull out of the UN. |ress was being made in three- power talks on a treaty in Ge. neva. Dean reiterated President will resume testing of weapons in the atmosphere. The U.S. conducting nuclear blasts unde ground. Dean said "with all solemnity |and regret" that if the Soviets {persisted in testing in the at mosphere, the U.S. would have to reconsider its decision not to test above ground. ficials of |tries joining in. | Former foreign minister >| Ordered To Leave THE HAGUE (AP) -- The | Netherlands government is ta- {king as yet undisclosed steps against Soviet Ambassador Panteleimon K. Ponomarenko for his part in an airport free- for-all with Dutch police. A Dutch note to the Soviet Embassy Thursday ordered two other embassy officials to leave the country by Saturday. It i that had a the am airport Monday during an argument gver the veturn to Moscow of the wife of defecting Soviet scientist Alexei Golub. Ponomarenko left for Mos- cow Thursday and told report- ers he would lay his case be- fore his superiors there. The Dutch said he "not only made no attempt to stop the fight, but actually participated in it." The Dutch note said the gov- ernment planned to pursue its complaints against the ambas- sador with Soviet authorities. A spokesman declined to spell out the steps the government might take. He reported earlier, how- ever, that the cabinet might de- mand Ponomarenko's expulsion. Soviet commercial attache S. W. Chibaew and press attache Quebec East and former cabi- net minister. {chief organizer. SAYS GOT MONEY A Quebec City teacher said] he had worked for the UN in the lower St. Lawrence region in two elections and that he had received $3,115 in kick. backs "for services rendered to the party." "What party?" asked govern- ment lawyer Georges Pelletier. "The Union Nationale." No Agreement Hopes In New Red Proposal By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER |West Germany. They are di- WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S.|vided over what, if any, conces- officials Khrushchev's latest package proposal for a German settle- said today Premier |sions they can make to Russia {if Khrushchev will modify his [basic demand for a change in ment failed to advance the pros-|the status of West Berlin. pects of East-West ag end the Berlin crisis reement to They also found nothing en-|, proposal on the proposition couraging in the Soviet leader's declaration of readiness to at- tend a summit meeting in order to achieve a peaceful solution of the crisis. A summit conference, U.S. leaders say, should come only as the end result of lower- level negotiations which would assure success at the summit, Some of the points of his pro- posed Berlin-German settlement may be negotiable from the Western point of view. But it does appear that at present the Western policy posi- tion in responding to the Rus- sians on specific issues is se- verly handicapped by lack of agreement among the United States, Britain, France and CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-657 |SAYS TREATY NEEDED Khrushchev based his pack- that only a German peace treaty--by which he means a treaty signed separately with East and West Germany--'can remove the danger of a new war." U.S. officials say that there is nothing the Western powers can do to prevent Khrushchev from signing a separate peace treaty with East Germany. But they have no intention of [participating in a pact which would formalize the division of Germany. Basic Western policy still calls for ultimate German unification. Specific points covered by Khrushchev in his letter to the British Labor party group were these 1. Guaranteed Western access to Berlin--~Rusk and K d ern powers alike recognize West of signing a& peace treaty. But| this assurance was given in the context of changing, and weak- ening, the Western rights to maintain troops in West Berlin. MIGHT NEGOTIATE 2. Recognize the Oder-Neisse border as the border between Germany and Poland--there has been some speculation that the United States and Britain, at least, would be willing to nego- tiate on this among other issues, if a suitable basis for negotia- tion on the whole range of Ger- many and Berlin problems! could be found. | 3. Recognize East and West Germany--Russia and the West- Germany. The Western powers do not recognize the Communist regime in East Germany. There A. D. Popov were expelled. The Another m e n-|Dutch accused Chibaew of be- |tioned J. D, Begin, the party's/ing the first to use force at the {airport and said Popov man- handled Dutch police. The Dutch also took exception to Popov's statement at a press conference that Dutch officials had kidnapped Golub. Parking Authority Scandal Revealed TORONTO (CP) -- A scheme whereby 12 Toronto Parking Au- thority employees were dipping into the till during the Canadian National Exhibition was dis- closed by photographs taken by private detectives, Authority Sharman Ralph C. Day said to- ay. The employees were dis missed and no criminal charges were laid againsi them because "we thought it best to say nothing about it to the public." The photos showed men work- ing in two-man teams, Mr. Day said. One attendant would re- move the parking ticket from parked cars and sell them to the cashiers for 25 cents. The ticket was then resold to an- other parker for 50 cents, Each man's take was 25 cents. One man said he Kad taken in about REFU Back To Nuclear | Tests Question | picion and fear," the United| Kennedy's warning of Wednes-| Nations returns today to the day that Russia is forcing the § questions of nuclear testing and U.S. to re-examine whether it| boa group of Japanese farm- | ers, nearing the end of = | round-the-world tour sponsor- ed by the AllJapan Dairy Farmers' Association, are VISITORS FROM JAPAN tral Experimental Farm at Ottawa yesterday. Today they visited the agricultural school at nearby Kemptville, Ont. Left to right: Kahaji Haneda, a dairy farmer from Sapporo, Japan; Takeo Haraguchi, -di- rector of the Holstein Cattle Association of Japan; Kai- chiro Takami and Shigeru Kondo, counsellors of the Sapporo Dairy Farms Co-op. --CP Wirephoto shown on a visit to the Cen- First Bomarcs Arrive Here Next Week OTTAWA (CP)---The first Bo- marc anti-aircraft missiles for the RCAF Bomarc base at North Bay are scheduled to ar- /mext week, the RCAF ported today. { The RCAF anroibcement con- firms air force statements dur- ing the early summer that launching equipment for the Bomarcs was being installed and would be ready for opera- tion by this fall. No decision has yet been reached by the government on whether American nuclear war- heads will be provided for the weapons. There will be 28 Bomarce launching pads at the North Bay site and 28 more at the other Bomarc base at La Mac- aza, Que. The latter base is not expected to be ready until early next year. A senior RCAF officer said there will be no test firings of the Bomare in Canada, with or without nuclear warheads. The two Bomarc bases will cost a total of some $13,000,000. The United States is paying for the launching equipment and the missiles, a total of about $91,000,000. The Bomarcs will be control- led and operated by the SAGE (semi - automatic ground envir- onment) electronic control sys- tem. A SAGE centre is being built underground at Trout Lake near North Bay, Until the Trout Lake SAGE is ready, the Canadian Bomarcs can be controlled by SAGE units in the U.S. Mongoloid, X-Ray Connection Found LONDON (Reuters) -- Two Canadian women research workers today claimed they had found a significant connection between maternal radiation and the birth of mongoloid children. "Maternal radiation" is a term used to indicate that the mother has undergone x-ray in- vestigation during pregnancy. ¥¢ling through the E. Berlin Fire At Refugees BERLIN German police fired more than 250 shots into West Berlin today in a futile attempt to prevent nine East Berliners from escap- Police Milit MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet Premier Khrushchev has made clear that Russia will continue its current series of nuclear tests -- to counter what he termed the "inflaming of war passions' by the United States. The Russian leader said in a reply to an appeal by 59 British Labor party leaders that the Soviet Union could not stop its tests while the United States was building up its military might. "How can we in the light of all this stop nuclear testing?" Khrushchev said in his letter published here Thursday night. The letter replied to an appeal that was sent to Khrushchev and President Kennedy by a Laborite group headed by for- mer defence minister Emman- uel Shinwell asking for steps to ease world tension. Khrushchev took a similar stand in justifying Russia's cur- rent series of nuclear tests, mainly in the Arctic, since Sept. 17, in a letter to Kaoru Yasul, SES TO HALT RUSSIAN A-TEST Bm To Counter US. Might be letting down both itself and its friends. If Russia had not resumed testing, he claimed, this "might have pushed the aggressive cir- cles of the West on the road of military adventure and this un- doubtedly . would lead to the most mankind." terrible catastrophe of The 'Russian leader restated his insistence that a German peace treaty could be reac! while ensuring free access West Berlin and no interference in its affairs. He said that German ment envisaged by R would provide: 1. Guaranteed access to Bere 2. Recognition of the Oder Neisse German-Polish border under which Poland got former German territory. 3. Recognition of both the West German and Communist East German regimes and the admission of both to the UN. 4. A ban on either Germany having 1 head of the Jap paign against atomic and hydrogen bombs. The letter to Yasui was pub- lished in Tokyo on Oct. 7. In it, Khrushchev said Russia (Reuters) -- East Germans but they made good] their escape. The incident occurred in the American sector of the city, fence, The barrage was described by West Berlin police as the big- gest since the border was closed Aug. 18. The nine refugees, all young men, roared up to the barbed- wire fence in a truck, but the vehicle stuck in the wire. The refugees leaped out and ran for safety with bullets whining over their heads. A large group of police ran to the border as soon as the truck ran into the wire and opened up with rifles and| tommy-guns at the fleeing East JAIL HAS EXIT LIGHTS DOUSED LOCKPORT, N.Y. (AP)-- After an inspection of the new Niagara County jail, state correction department officials recommended that "'exit"" lights in the central corridors be turned on only in emergencies. A military trols returned the fi SHOUT WARNINGS re. warnings to the Americans and West Berlin police to stay away from the fence where the refu- gees' truck was stuck In the wire, eyewitnesses said. The East Germans kept shoot- ing sporadically for an hour. They rushed an armored car to the border with a heavy ma- chine-gun mounted on it but it did not fire. Two jeeploads of U.S. mili- tary police arrived and were warned to stay away from the fences. The East Berlin guards have been shooting almost daily along the tense Berlin border, bringing warnings from both West and East officials of the danger of setting off the pow- derkeg. DRAG TRUCK FREE The shooting stopped shortly after the East German police had dragged the truck free from the wire fence. Cracks In Strike Resistance Wall MONTREAL (CP)--The first cracks have appeared in the wall of resistance Montreal builders put up four days ago against a general strike in the construction industry. About a dozen contractors Thursday night formed an As- sociation of Building Contractors and signed collective agree- ments with the Building Trades Council (CLC) and with the Sheet Metal International Work- ers Association (CLC), whose LATE NEWS FLASHES $12 a day. Acting Mayor Donald Sum- mervilie said he will investigate why the matter was hushed and why criminal charges were not aid. Planning Leaves For Civil Servants TORONTO (CP) -- Provincial Treasurer James Allan, today d a plan to provide has been speculation that the United States and Britain might be willing to accept in some way the fact of Red rule over East Germany, though indica. tions are that France and West Germany are opposed to any such move. sounded out Gromyko on what the Soviet govern ment has meant by repeated offers of ac- cess guarantees. It is under. stood his replies confirm that the Soviet government was rill. 4. Disengage the forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiz- ation and the Warsaw Pact in central Europe -- U.S. officials say Washington is opposed to disengagement on the assump- tion that what the Soviets really leave for civil servants enlisting in Canada's militia program .for the training of personnel in civil defence and survival, Under the plan, recommended by the Ontario Civil Service Commission, the Ontario gov- ernment will supplement mili- tary service pay to maintain each employees rate of pay while on the six weeks' training course, Ontario thus becomes the first employer to co-operate with the federal gowernment since the Kekkonen Fog-Bound made an unscheduled landing Tories Support Lloyd 5-Year-Old Strangled NORTH BAY (CP) -- A transport department plane carrying President Urho Kekkonen of Finland and his party thé area between here and Sudbury. President Kekkonen left Ottawa for Sudbury but zero visibility forced the plane down at North Bay. After a brief stop here, the party was whisked into six air force cars to be driven to Sudbury BRIGHTON, Eng. (CP) -- The annual Conservative party conference today gave apathetic support to the anti- inflation monetary and taxation policies of Chancellor of the Exchequer Selwyn Lloyd. Lloyd got little more than polite applause -- there also was criticism -- as he sought to ex- plain the necessity for recently announced tax increases and the unpopular "pay pause", READING, Pa. (AP) -- A five-year-old girl, strolling along the edge of some woods near her home, was strangled to death Thursday by a 13-year-old boy who became angered over a remark she made, authorities said. The body of here today as fog blanketed tanks exploded in a populous northwest Miami section today, showering debris and putting householders to flight from the area of the Southeastern Na- tural Gas Corporation. some injuries. personal grievances with the Montreal Builders' Exchange started the general strike, the first in the history of construc- tion here. : Jean-Paul Menard, president of the Sheet Metal Workers, said about a dozen small con- tractors have signed, agreeing to an interim across-the-board pay increase of 15 cents an hour for all trades and the submis- sion of all issues to an arbi- tration board with decisions binding on both sides. The agreements will get about 2,000 of the 30,000 construction workers in Montreal back to their jobs, Menard estimated. "Within a week, 70 per cent of the men will be back at work," he said. SET NEW PRINCIPLE The signings established a new principle of direct bargain- ing for the construction indus- try in Montreal. Contractors must sign individually the agreement worked out last right. Householders Flee Fuel Tank Blasts MIAMI (AP) -- Fuel storage First reports said there were The blasts began about 8 a.m. Neither West Berlin police nor i police pa- East German police shouted brown-haired Ann Darlington, partially nude, was found by her father, John Darlington, an insurance broker in the In moments the area was thronged with householders flee- resumed nuclear testing to pre- vent itself being attacked by the West and that the development of bigger Russian hydrogen bombs would prevent world war, The letter to the Japanese, however, said that he was ready for summit peace talks at any time with world leaders, par- ticularly President Kennedy. His letter to the British La- borites said that if Russia stopped its tests now "when we are being threatened by a new war, when the U.S. is. testing new types of attack - weapons and are pushing their military machine to the utmost" it would 5-Year-Old Dies When Hit By Car OAKVILE (CP)--Jack Veer- man, five-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jan Veerman of Tra- falgar, was killed near here | Thursday when he walked into the path of a car after getting out of a school bus. Driver of the car was Ed- ward C. Broks, 37, of Oakville. Police said the boy was cross- ing the road to pick up his Tr W 5. Dismantling of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and its Communist counterpart, the Warsaw Pact. Hope Ford Producing By Monday DETROIT (AP)--The United Auto Workebs Union is counting on getting Ford Motor Company back into production Monday despite unsettled disputes over working conditions at 20 plants. The UAW's 180-member Ford council 'late Thursday approved overwhelmingly a three-year la- bor contract. The council decided to end & national strike that shut down all of Ford's plants 10 days ago, making idle 120,000 production workers, But the council turned over to the international executive board the problem of settling disputes over working conditions at 20 key plants in the Ford system. UAW Vice-President Ken Ban- non, who is director of the UAW's Ford department, said, "We are hopeful of getting this family's mail wrapped up over the weekend-- possibly today." VIOLIN FOR Juanita Hampton, 3%, of Niagara Falls, Ont, prac- tises on this scaled-down vio lin which she is able to hold comfortably her small CHILDREN strument is being used by a Niagara music teacher to train young children, Juanita, one of the studentsfis learn. jing to give guarantees in writing i aim at is the withdrawal of U.S. in connection with or in advance| HOSPITAL 723-2211 {forces from Europe. new militia program was an- woods near their home in the exclusive Hampden Heights inounced. ing, some barefooted d i section of the city. : gid night elothing. arm. About 18-inches long, the ing quickly. Japanese manufactured in- \ ~CP Wireshote

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