The Oshawa Times, 16 Oct 1961, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudiness today and Tuesday, milder Tuesday, winds light today ,west 15 Tuesday. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Another reason people are so fond of living is that life is a gamble. OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1961 ussians mother roposal UNITED NATIONS (CP)~The|in view of the worry about fall- Soviet bloc moved during thejout evident in speeches at the weekend to smother the urgency|current UN session. of Canada's proposal for a| The Czech resolution says that world-wide study on the hazards|the 1961 report of the commit- of radiation. tee indicates the body has '"'con- Czechoslovakia presented a|tinued systematically to carry resolution suggesting that the out its work according to plan." report of the UN scientific com-| It also notes that the commit- mittee on the effects of atomic|tee in the ordinary course of radiation--which mentions anx- events woula report "on its |iety caused by the resumptioniwork and on the results thereof| of nuclear tests--be treated inito the general assembly at its la routine manner. 17th session" -- which does not A Canadian resolution pre- open until next September. sented to the UN secretariat; The Canadian resolution -- co- [Friday takes the opposite view, sponsored by 22 other countries {saying the committee's ~work|--would require the committee]! {should be accelerated in view|to meet before March, when it {of concerr all over the world it|has scheduled its next session |the dangers of nuclear fallout. to work out its second compre-| | The struggle was scheduled to|hensive report, | come into the open late today| The resolution envisages a when the Genera! Assembly"s|system of collec cting radiation 101 - member special political] data through the facilities of the {committee meets, with Cana- World Meteorological Organiza- dian delegate Paul Tremblay|tion and by world-wide analyz- scheduled as the first speaker. |ing of samples of sil, bone and A Canadian source said the other substances. Czechs -- backed by the nine- @s_ Second Class Mail Department, -Ottawo ROYAL SAFETY WORRY TO UK. Query Wisdom Of Ghana Tour LONDON (Reuters) -- Two more London newspapers voiced concern today about the safety of the Queen during a sched- uled tour of Ghana next month. Both the right-wing Daily Sketch and the Conservative Daily Telegraph questioned the wisdom of going ahead with the tour in view of strained rela- tions between Ghana and Brit- ain and the current unrest in the African nation. Leaders of Britain's Liberal party have called for cancella- tion of the tour because of pos- 7 {sible risk to the Queen. The sketch suggested today ; [that Prince Philip might be © |asked to make the tour without ' ther. i| "How else can the Queen be i|spared possible involvement with party politics without up- setting President Kwame Nkru- mah too much?" the news- : [paper asked. | |UP TO NKRUMAH .| It said the British government { [could play no part in the deci- Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Post Office TWENTY PAGES VOL. 90--No. 239 the birth of Prince Andrew-- might be taken as virtually breaking off relations with Ghana. . . ." The Telegraph said there must be "much graver doubt and anxiety" about the visit than a week ago. "There was always the dan- ger that her visit might be mis- construed as expressing ap- proval of the regime and its ac- tivities," the Telegraph said. "It would certainly be a cruel mockery for those now suffering for ideals we share to see her chatting with their jailers. "To this danger must be added another: the risk to the Queen herself. The air hums with rumors of unrest in Ghana." Refugees Of Cuba 1 a 42 MOSLEM GENERAL IN FRENCH ARMY General Ahmed Rafa, | ceremonies last week at | The bulk of Algerian infantry above, the lone Moslem gen- | Batna, Algeria. On Oct. 4, | are Frehch troops. Rafa com- eral officer in the French Rafa was named by French | manded the 7th regiment be- | ob. couiat bloc--may press | BRIGHTON (CP)--The ish Conservative party annual conference ended Saturday with Large Variety were rumblings of discontent in {nomic blow. delegates c on siderably more[the Conservative ranks against pleased with the way things{the bid to enter the Common went than they had a right|Market and the country's eco- Riflemen during farewell | of infantry forces in Algeria. ill be Rh ge hig ed end. . 'Economy Ends On Firm Ground | press surprise that Czechoslova- {ation of the "'workers' militia" clearer than it had been for handling the conference went to army, poses with flag of the government to be commander | fore his new appointment. 'or priority for their resolution Say Militia EEE Es fore the Canadian draft Friday.| CANADA SURPRISED |kia would take a routine view of BERLIN (AP)--East German Brit-{behind the strengthened leader-|week's end that the party "im- |to man the East Berlin barri- years. the a Pole 4 (AP Wirephoto) on the ground it was presented i | hd {Its terms did not become known | Bl T Tories' Annual Meet =i Slow do Tremblay was expected to ex- the radiation committee's report| Communists admit that mobiliz- | ship of Hugh Gaitskell. There age" had emerged stronger and {eades has 'been a 'serious. sco. The biggest assignment in home secretary the man respon- the immigration debate, popular R. A. Butler, as| |sible for immigration and law | Of Resolutions In CSL Meeting HALIFAX (CP) -- The ninth annual Catholic Social Life Con- ference 'ended Sunday night with resolutions ranging from for nt 4 ployment projects fo a need for education in social doctrines. The three-day conference sought initiation of projects by federal and provincial govern- ments in areas where unem- ployed is having "detrimental physical and spiritual effects." It also sought assistance for "family farms" by means of {legislation providing effective |control of prices and markets. | large - scale immigration pro- gram to exploit Canada's agri- {cultural potential and the pro- | vision of subsidies, if necessary, to farm families to preserve the {family farm--"the cornerstone |of the Christian social order." put was up. But he said over- 2 all production was failing short The 500 delegates urged a | Economic chief Alfred Neu- {mann told the Communist |party's central committee Sun-| day "the withdrawal of workers| |from a factory for outside activ- | |ities not connected with their| trade must be extensively | stopped." Neumann said industrial out- Dr. Louis Vilsoca examines a dart which struck 14-year- old Gilbert Lindo while he played basketball alone in his back yard yesterday and im- bedded its 3-inch tip in his head, . Police . investigation disclosed that another youth of targets fixed in the regime's "HIT BY STRAY DART more than 200 feet away had tied the dart to a string and was whirling it around his head when it broke loose. Hospital attendants said Lin. do's injury appavently was not serious. "(AP Wirephoto) sion. "It is Dr. Nkrumah's right, as head of the govern- ment of Ghana, to give "polit- ical advice' on the practicability of the Queen's visit." This was because officials were not satisfied that the tour would involve 'grave physical danger" for thé Queen, the newspaper said. "If they were satisfied seven-year plan. [ The brown-uniformed militia-| men played a large role in| building the wall dividing East and West Berlin when the bar-| ricades began going up Aug. 13. | But early this month they | seemed to disappear -- appar-| ently back to the factories. Despite the close police guard ay {on the Berli | MOSCoOw (Reuters) -- Dele- | refugees pier | gates poured in here today from [the West. abroad and from the remote a . corners of the Soviet Union for Sporadic shots were fired the opening Tuesday of the along the 100-mile-long border Communist party congress. Sunday but there were no major| Some 4,500 Soviet delegates incidents. East German police and representatives of 30 for- tossed tear gas grenades at|eign countries are expected to 4500 Reds Attend Party Congress world problems in the wake of recent East-West contacts. On the second day of the con- gress, Khrushchev is expected to present his program for building a Communist utopia in the Soviet Union in the next 20 years. -- |1,700 employees it represents in ees | In Besides authorizing workmen |pytler said it was true Britain West Berliners waving to rela- {tives and friends in the E at Walton Hills to continue their yas strike in support of local-level demands, the UAW's interna- tional executive board told the the only Commonwealth] country without restrictions on member countries and he would consider making it a require- ment that all immigrants have an engine factory at Wayne, | broof of a job before being ad- Mich., they could continue their| mitted. walkout for at-the-plant settle- sector. Twenty-seven East were reported to have suc-| MISSING AGAIN ceeded in making their way top LLANFAIRPWLLGWYN - the W est during the weekend. LONGEST SIGN {be in ast Kremlin Congress Hall to hear| |Premier Khrushchev report on Germans international and home affairs. {thinking on Berlin and on other | CHINESE ARRIVE Top Communists from Soviet [bloc countries have been arriv- ing here for the last few days. The Chinese delegates, headed by Premier Chou En-lai, ar- rived Sunday and -were greeted their seats in the new The speech was expected to roduce an outline of Soviet GYLLGOGERYCHWYRND ROBWLLLANTYSILIOGO GOGOCH, Wales (AP)--The at the airport by Khrushchev and Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. cargo of pig iron to Savannah, tion," , the trip would be off without ques- "To call off the tour again--. it was put off once because of Suspect Ship Will Be Sold To Cuba MONTREAL (CP)--A former Canadian lake ship left Mont- real during the weekend under the Bahamas flag and shipping sources here suspect she will be sold to Cuba. The Ganandoc, former laker, of the N. M. Paterson and Sons, Ltd., fleet of Fort William, was sold to Island Shipping Ltd., of the Bahamas. She has been renamed the Sugarland and is carrying a a., before going on to the Ba- amas, Rescued MIAMI (AP)--A report that a Cuban boat had fired on 45 Cu- ban refugees after they had reached a small British island turned a routine U.S. Coast Guard rescue into a delicate weekend operation. "A 95foof Coast Guard boat, with a U.S. destroyer standing by, took the refugees off the Bahamas island of Cay Sal, 35 miles north of central Cuba, and brought htem to Florida Sunday. Sir Robert Stapledon, gover- nor of the British Bahmas, said shots had been exchanged be- tween "two Cuban fishing boats" just offshore after the refugees landed. Willmore told reporters: "I spoke with the Cuban refu- gees and they said that they were not shot at and that there was no shooting in their vicinity while they were on Cay Sal or while they were in the boat." Cay Sal, because it is British territory and yet close to Cuba, is considered a gate to freedom by many Cubans who flee Pre. mier Castro's regime in small boats. ment jo supplement the national Foreign reporters here were told unofficially Sunday they would only be admitted to the first day's proceedings. Khrushchev's 20-year program for the Soviet Union was first published here last July, | longest railway station sign in | Britain was missing in this Welsh town today, presum- ably lifted by pranksters. The town, which boasts the iongest name in Britain, lost 3 Tugs Refloat Damaged Tanker dy and|sidered effective as an opera- rime Minister' Diefenbaker tion, the exercise presumed missiles and interceptors to de- were given preliminary reportsionly that the "enemy" tried to in|stroy strategic defence bombers after the exercise came to an|invade North America with nu- | r. Kinsman rejected the idea --Pre-lof a North American bloc con-|NO LONGER SET THEM to expect when the sessions{nomic position, vocal pressure started. for reintroduction of hanging s| i d for controls on As the nearly 5,000 delegates|and flogging an ; gathered at this seaside resort|/immigrants' from other Com- enforcement. among party leaders. lan's cabinet shuffle a few days|pathy since many Gels | érades Wren Conference and. y specu ; demoted when he was suc-| with an ominous show of unity! But most observers agreed at|ceeded as House leader by Iain Macleod, the former colonial F 1 ; Ai . F | minister, in the cabinet shuffle. $ | that Butler had in fact been pro- ° moted as a close assistant to F 11 P d i Nn {the prime minister. u TO uc 10 | It was known Butler had been seriously overworked in his dou- DETROIT (AP) -- The Ford|Cleveland, which employs 3,300 ble role and Macmillan said workers back at their jobs by, A union spokesman predicted|Butler to '"'give special assist- Wednesday, following the United today that if this plant were not ance" to the prime minister Auto Workers' order Sunday to|back at work in nine days all over a wide field of public local unions to call of strikes at|Ford assembly lines would be cuties all but two of Ford's 85 plants |affected. There was doubt, however,| two plants still struck--the Wal-| ton Hills stamping plant outside UAW, Harvester Reach Agreement CHICAGO (AP)--The United! Ford and the UAW reached Auto Workers union and Inter- agreement last Thursday on a on a new three-year contract|improvements the union esti- Yao RIE (CPA peddestrzan est ai near midnight Sunday, about/mated at more than 12 cents killed sunday night on Highway its sign to a group of univer- | TRRE EY 5 : : ; : . seven hours before a scheduled hourly in take-home pay. 0 was identified ,loday as| sity students a year ago. It Mg The Fouge: fois Were anchored slave er bes) 1) dncorporates lis theme of strike by 32.000 workers at com-| Chrysler corporation is the Mary Yetman, 21, of Toronto. later turned up in Manches- |; oc too cdvane 'of high. tide fon the Dort of Quebec. The)peaceful co-existence with a be- any plants in 11 U.S. cities. [next target for UAW bargain. = Provincial police said Miss| ter. bs Re Ot oh tide ferry from Quebec City to theljief that communism will con- pan) arg r U4 argain I shortly before midnight Sunday |south shore suburb of Levis was the world eventually with- Spokesmen for the company|ers. Yetman and another woman 3 quer wo! e y J on aE Co ns ro wan prvmd] Tu 1140100 " 3 i > | DO! ho union's council and by UAW lo- settlements, Ford called about companion was being taken to| Lima P % He $l name 7,000,000 gallons of fuel oil and|zuela when gn on cals. They said it provides for one-third of its production work-| Victoria Harbor police office six ae a Whit Hazel, close|benzene into the St, Lawrencea rocky stretch near the Quebec an annual wage increase of 21 ers back today. It said most|miles east of Midland but, while|2 hollow o He are ee niver. bridge, Four or fre oo tl | . . six cents z ti sorkers. w he cruiser was stopped in Mid-| 10 a rapid whirlpool and St. | : ; _ bridge. Four or five of the ves. | n In Ruto per cent or six cents an hour, production workers would be the cruiser was stopped in ilio's Church." | Refloating operations were di-|sel's 35 compartments were eepl whichever is greater, and other back on the job Tuesday and all land, the woman became hys-| Tsilio's Church. rected by Capt C F. J Finch | split open and her cargo Phi ANCASTER (CP)--Two chil increased benefits, ; by Wednesday, it hoped. ____ lterical and fled. | lof Halifax, who was driven to|into the river. dren slept on the back seat of Quebec City from Nova Scotia a car at a service station near| | SKY SHIELD OPERATION The refloating climaxed a|visibility was good at the time five-hour struggle during which and there was no fog. combed Ancaster Township for three other tankers salvaged| No estimate of damage was|almost four hours searching for| § ® some 1,700,000 gallons of the available immediately. them. Vibex's 8,400,000-gallon cargo. £2 2 ] ; ( 6 ! ove eS) O 1 The port of Quebec declared a tile benzene and ignite the large solidly effective against invad- patches of oil. ing "enemy" jet bombers Police patrolled both banks of the weekend Sky Shield opera-|and key industrial communities. end at 1 a.m. EDT Sunday. Ken-|clear-armed jets of the B-52 and|the St. Lawrence and traffic on tion, biggest air exercises ever|A U.S. B-52 jet bomber with nedy was reported gratified|B-58 types. Moscow unveiled|a 35-mile stretch of the river RINE v : i i staged by Canada and theleight men aboard was missing | with results. ; faster bombers in its July air|was halted for 21 hours. | RII NIORY CLUB, Que. be working with the Americans United States. and presumed lost over the At-| Air Marshal Sir Kenneth show. During the emergency, 22 ves, | (CP)ods linge an extension as no aide Nie Genera] -- me | POSS : iffs and Trade tide th ibility of rt . [trade will be of the most lasting|--to persuade Common Market Canadian and American air tached to Seymour Johnson Air was extremely well con [Eudes © possi ; ny 9 an er Tshombe Mi ht |oSnatit io Lanka) B = L Jepihers fo be more outward officers, controlling the 12-hour|Force Base at Goldsboro, N.C., ducted" and: both the attack | continental ballistic missile at-| g | aman Pres ent A the [Ca-{looking? If we lose some of the test from NORAD headquarters(was believed to have run out of|and defence were handled "ef.|tack. There. is no present de-| asian exporters Association, British preferences can we not at Colorado Springs, Colo., said{fuel. Air and surface craft |fectively." |fence against the ICBM. Kee Hosta es gain more in compensation else- they were gratified by results, |swept a wide area in the Atlan-| Kept secret was the extent of! But Kuter found the exercise| g most of which will be kept se-|tic in search of the plane after penetration made by the attack-| LEOPOLDVILLE (AP) | |mier Cyrille Adoula, protesting sisting of the United States and] Mr. Kinsman, who is' vice- | damage they would have done North America" Benefits ported as more than 200 bom- Air defence officers said the had they been enemy invaders| achieved would mean success in ber streamed in from the north warning systems, including the 2 ~ "8 Nuclear warheads. [fighting off a real aerial as-|cial President Moise Tshombe,|Canadian industry and 'Ynde-|Company of Canada Ltd., said [three big ones in Canada--the|'KILLS' ARE SECRET |sault on the continent. |leday declared the Central | pendence. he old, sci satisfied and Some) -- - IAC aneds a 1 lay ; ale 4 | | 'ongo government is still deter-| In regard to the European|times self - complacen or CITY EMERGENCY {Wid Lanada and Pinetree Filo, Secret ore Je number THOUSANDS JOIN IN : {mined to take over the rich se-| Common Market he said that in| American post-war world has CHOSEN MISS RED FEATHER The hol o e 2 ¢ arm, 0 | y 5 Tepor 0 oy ome 1- In wet, soggy weather in the|cessionist province. {the short run it is "restrictive" irrevocably gone and Nort Virginia Pi PHONE NUMBERS hey described the operation as interceptors, including nine pastern parts of the continent The UN meanwhile got alin its trade with the rest of the| American standards, costs and irginia Piper, a Central POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 last Wednesday, there was am-|monwealth countries. Possibly some of the support As the convention concluded, Motor Company aimed today at|and makes pressed metal parts Saturday that one of his objects just how far Ford could g0| Accident Victim national Harv e st er Company new three-year national contract Local residents have short- | end : \ | night to refloat the British|hal § and union said the new contract] On the strength of its national | were walking along the highway halted for several hours. {out war. > | No reason for the mishap was| Saturday night. their homes here Sunday night tate of Frid ight | : state of emergency Friday night | aim iiene! Exporter Touting WASHINGTON (CP) -- Northjand the two coasts in attempts| Both President Kenne A squadron of British Vulcan |!lantic. Cross, head of Britain's Bomber| The exercise also did not in-! said today in an address to the where?" inesti le v » in im-| cret, it was reported down. ing bombers ol iuestinable valte in im the new United Nations-Katanga|Canada, as impracticable and|president of Alcon International {99.9 per cent effective," Gen.|Canadian squadrons, and about and sunshine in the West, more| warning from Tshombe that un-|world, but its markets could be|prices no longer set world. pat-| Collegiate Institute student, HOSPITAL 723-2211 hl by the camera with a bou- quet of roses following her crowning. Joanne Cox, OCVI, ple reason for concern, partic-) And Prime Minister Macmil-| given him was a show of {however, there was speculation having its 120,000 production|for all of Ford's car divisions.|in the changes was to enable without settlement at one of the Identified Today reached a tentative agreementthat carried wage and fringe ened their town's 57 - letter | The 40 is subject to ratification by the contract and a series of local when she was hit by a car. The e ,400-ton tanker was Objects Of Search |given. The signals service said| while more than 100 volunteers spark might touch off the vola- American air defences proved to sneak past radar screens, |P ° Multilateral Trade | bombers also participated. The eight - jet bomber, at-/Command, said later the test| association's annual meeting. M rod : and how much|y,:oving aerospace defence of| nly one tragedy was re- ? a ) 2 C 1 x f : WORK LIKE CHARM pact strengthens provin- as having special dangers for|Ltd., a selling arm of Aluminum {Lawrence Kuter, NORAD com-|250 missile bases providing the than 800 NORAD units re.| ; : i was chosen as Miss Red Ler, A : : 5 Te less the UN advisory committee|partly opened through negotia-|terns. . hi ; mander, was reported "tickled main defence. Bomarc, Nike-|sponded when headquarters| on the Congo ratifies the agree- Sion y "We have to learn," he said,| Feather for the Greater Osh- ; fo death the operation worked|Hercules and Nike-Ajax missiles|fiahed orders to take to the ment, he will hold as hostages| 'Our problems in this re-| "what more competitive foreign) awa Community Crest Cam. | and June Fleming, OCVI, so well" The deputy com. Were aimed at the skies but nolgyjeg against the invaders. the 184 UN troops--mostly Irish|gard," he stated, "are much the|countries have learned, .that| paign at the Get-Together | were named as the funners- mander is Air Marshal Roy Shots were fired. ; | y §i Isi J ud About 250,000 air force, army|--taken prisoner in the recent|same as those bieng faced by management and labor have to| Dance in the OCVI auditorium | up. Slemon of Canada. While the defence was con-land navy gersonnel took part.!fighting. Ithe United States. Should we notiWork together as a team." Saturday night. She is caught 23- 2 --Oshawa Times Photo 4

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy