Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Oct 1961, p. 1

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le : : me ': cas "THO"GHT FOR TODAY WEATHER REPORT Those who sow their wild cats Any : j : Clearing tonight, sunny with a must pray for a crop failure. , few cloudy periods on Friday. VOL."90--No. 242 ~< et ee OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 havent memes eee THIRTY-TWO PAGES - Ld ln , e : uf j Play JPetty 4 , @ e : j Politics, i e 4 alee MATRON {0 =| oe Cansdbn, Mais. boo) ;Canada and other countries of/ MENTION K-BOMB | a "petty political game" in| Although the emphasis in one their campaign for a world-wide| committee was political and in| {measurement of nuclear radio-|the other scientific, speakers in| activity. both chambers referred Wed-| Gime : eS | Soviet delegate Semyon Tsar-|nesday to Soviet Premier Mie es Lee : dil I I i ou apkin made the charge in the)Khrushchev's announcement of} : ie ele : eB United Nations General Assem-|jgyention to explode a bomb bly's special political commit-/equal to 50,000,000 tons of TNT. Bn ee ; : ' fe ' tee as pressure grew in the UN External Affairs Minister Ho-| ; ss aes , ot = omestic for a move aimed at Feerig fd is Green of Canada, who} ee és off Russia's plan to explode his-icame to UN headquarters in| #. |. 5] : ' i tory's biggest bomb blast. [New York Wednesday night,| | OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada s|all the nations of the world, to Tsarapkin, bitterly critical of|said his delegation\s main im-| ie 4 protest against the Soviet plan} which all countries should have the Canadian resolution which|mediate concern yemains the! @ a ee 'oe to explode a 50-megaton nu-| access free of contamination, is spoMsored by 24 other coun-|radiation resolutioyl, now hear- clear bomb will be taken to the | he added. , / a , $ tries, said the Soviet Union was|ing a vote. 7 Pe United Nations, Prime Minister) The reaction of other coun- forced to resume nuclear tests| In the meantime, "we. are : 4 he yee" said today. ,_ tries to Russia's announcement CLOSE CONVERSATION yf because of what he claimed] considering the situation with) -- __ He said External Affairs Min-|that it plafis--te let loose the : ( J. were Western preparations for/regard to the 50-megaton test,"| : ister Green would reiterate Can-|equivalent of 50,000,000 tons of Israeli Premier David Ben- | some close conversation at | group of Western \ Nigerian | war {Green told a reportey/ $ ada's position, rejected Wed-/TNT has been one of wide- Gurion and Chief S. L. Akin- | Ben-Gurion's official residence | officials on a form#¢ one-week Although Soviet Premier|iet embassy in OttgWa Wednes-| | : ee : : nesday by the Soviet embassy| spread condemnation, the prime tola, Prime Minister of Niger- | in Jerusalem, Pair met last | visit to the Jewish state Khrushchev said the Russian|day rejeqed a QAnadian pro-| : : : - » jhere, and action might be taken| minister added. ia's western region, epgage in weekend as the Chief headed | --(AP 'Wirephoto) tests would end at the close of test abockcaie omb on. the} gi ag : -- United Nationsagainst} He declined to say what ac- SEER - eacmeung "ee gmp: -- pica ng ground it was 4 domestic mat-| §% : i Z : Ser titadiaken meeting reysion Canada might take in the tg, indicate further blasts in the'ter : ' : : Sn ; ited Nations, but added that +s ature by saying that such tests} The United States has ap-| ' s : Lipa = . pager igs! a specific resolution might be us OTIGQTSSS DOOSCLOT rr cece eel teri oe to eee ae ne meeting, sid tt while | considered until the Western powers agree|the bomb and Sweden spokeouty ee : bet mats aaa sth ain es-| Mr. Green, he" said will to general and complete disar-|aoainst it Wednesday during de-) Ws Le ; gsi gc ptt speak in the UN's debate on e jmament. -- oe _|bate on the Canadian radiation| F o tamination of the world's at-|nuclear testing generally, but The Soviet spokesman fe-|proposal. Green indicated be-| ' ' f here by -fallout "'scarcely'|that. debate would provide an |peatedly charged that Canada's|fore jeaving Ottawa his gov-| | ' : j p MOsnere Hy Tay snmbaaiad i di i iativ radia y lit- paaie | ; : came under the heading of| opportunity for discussion and initiative on radiation was pollt:/ernment was thinking of put-| Zz : "4 ticity." action on Russia's intention to cea on ge og some eof ee Bini : a "Mr. Green will express our|unleash the big bomb. MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So-jnesday night as he ended more|in the face of the" united front| ict peril ag a Sua asking Russia not to carry out Ne viewpoint in New York in the| Earlier Wednesday, Mr. Dief- viet Communist party congress|than 12 hours at the speaker's of imperialist reaction. It|S°te™ : th natin its plan. : * ee: ,, |General Assembly debate," Mr.|enbaker told reporters that the went into secret session today|rostrum in two days. breeds nationalistic tendencies). He spoke x *y testa een: ne Diefenbaker said. government was considering two to debate the massive reports! He spoke for six hours Wed-|and in the ultimate result could|struggle Over nike ee acariblys ee i : || ©] said a week ago that lod-|possible steps--a protest to the on foreign and domestic policy nesday on his ambitious plan to|lead to the loss of socialist vic-|tinued today in the as litical torm es | [ding @ brotest would not WelSovin Vaiss, eam spensorahl® presented by Premier Khrush-|traftform the Soviet Union into) tories," ' 101 : ee te Soviet! iJ effectual, but some newspaper|of a United Nations resolution chev / _ a' Communist patadise within} Khrushchev's addregs pro-|comml area procedural tie i asa SO a : "4 |columnists disagree d. We|condemning the proposed blast. Western correspondents, who/20 yeaks. duced no surprises such as his|Union suffered pro cor -th | ( lodged the protest and I think were allowed into the congress! He optlined plans for increas-| announcement Tuesday that|feats Wednesday night rould 'sg eavy 0 '| MEETS VICE PRESIDENT the anewer ty te UGB. were hall to listen to Khrushchev's|ing pfoduction, lashing the|Russia would explode a record- order in which debate should be | a speeches Tuesday and Wednes- workweek, providing free hous-| size 50-megaton hydrogen bomb conducted. terday showed who is right." j|devices will ul ° " f 2 Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, | day. Taylor also conferred y 8 day were barred today. ing for all and tes in acral by the end of this' month in its) On the scientific front, Can- en hips f ; ' i | The Canadian note of protest|war and to a war-measured in i ; President Kennedy's special | with United States guerrilla | : shceadeathe?. te Khrushchev was hoarse Wed- of the -- States in gfneral| current series of nuclear tests.jada was leading 'a campaign in | military adviser, meets with | g was read to, and examined by,|meg 5 said in a Se nT LO OLALy + ; i ' rfare experts. a Soviet embassy officer. He|statement. ; South Viet Nam Vice - Presi- | ¥® | A : Jeclin f talis d the|--the special political -- for a} LONDON (Reuters) Gales san hi rs Pes : to via radio from \refused to accept it, saying it Draws Material "1" WON'T SHAKE eventual world tetumnt er lan nae > wide measurement of|battered shipping in-thé North) dent Nguyen Ngoc Tho in the |---AP Wirephoto, v | : ] ' ice i i Saigon |dealt. with a purely domestic bias His speech included an attack) munism through peacefullatomic radiation resulting from|Sea today, taking a heavy toll| latter's office in Saigon to- 8 ter. Reds : . jon Communist countries which means. 'nuclear tests and other causes./of men and_ ships»... | Mr. Diefenbaker said the ex- aie From Childhood ict sc nshea communis 7 ed fad or sin oes ve" ; sonnei eigy hep Pg en shed, Y ported dead or missing as a re- pice endous danger for the) . TORONTO " (CP)--A Torotite|ChinesePremier Chou En-lai) ° sult of the 24-hour storm. ear Journ 'uaa a Br Stand On composer has reached into his|Slipped out of the congress hall, Better Cc OO in The casaaties e trom two! "Domesticity is scarcely the ehildtiood for a work to bel witout shaking hands waa --_ ships--the 533-ton British traw-| ith d to ¥t played next Tuesday by the | Tine. Soviet "premier was | oe rh Dae te te aati "oh i Abducted By: Reds actor afecing th a oe Air Flights CB | ' asd bene ° ton Dutch trawler Elie Chene- Q | te Unk oe Dey core ra wa = AASSIStS Economy wae | ; " , jend of the ch and then ' ois ) | - worey le Sey York. Iwalked over tov write, Aretic Viking went down) \ii-nia ¢Ap)--Police today, The caller, identified as| PreGict Defeat | wasivcton (AP)--Diplo Godfrey Ridout says he was walked: over to. where 'top for- *, a idnt | Le lapest. busi-| matic sources: said today Mos- commissioned by the CBC. to(¢is", Communists were sitting) PETERBOROUGH (CP)--Ca-jsee living standards of Cana-|England. Five berger tnd art es sai a A ad ak tas ee oo ® A Con: hin meee noke ton ewikey a write an Overture for an Occa-|" as Khrushchev shook hands|nadian Labor Congress Presi-|dian workers reduced and ob-|Clew. Were a ce re d : he|ous disappearance of Dr. Aurel/firms, slipped into Hungary. worl ation Soviet stand on Berlin air cor- sion, but when he got to Wr ith leaders of East European|dent Claude Jodoin and_com-|served that when the working |S a tha a P lbh oie *lAbranyi, a Hungagian exile|shortly afterthe call. Detec- ., |ridors that-ds- unacceptable to at the end of August; the ideas| embers of the Soviet bloc,)merce- and Development Min-|class is prosperous, all classes |e pesed, FOuen snip. Per: journalist believed'¥® have been|tives, notified by~Mrs. Abranyi EDMONTON (CP)--Fluorida-\t5 the West. 5 tit came to him were far from|Choy sauntered' away with his|ister WiJliam Nickle of Ontariojare prosperous. "Ten members of the Yxew bf|kidnapped by Com munist\when her husband failed to re-|(.0f Aaa. id The text of the Soviet-\note, solemn. He renamed the piece!hands in his pockets and leftjagreed Wednesday that im-| Mr. Jodoin said labor would} e eh | . Te-\in AYberta's two labgest cities| , © A Slie C , i i pents. : turn home, found the villa delivered to the Ame » |Brit- Fall Fair. proyed educational standards continue to press for a compre-|{he Elie Chepeviere--includin agents appears headed for! defeat for rican, the hall. \ J . i p lone dead manwere ked up|\ The only known suspect wasjempty. Traces of blood, broken ; ish ang, French embassiés in K pic up 7. ; ; the second time, bs te ; shchev an all-important factor in|hensive medical-care plan, port- : $ : FS ener sage o" P In his speech, Khrushchev 8 chnadian ses able penelone Gaal eihee pon. this morning 'after they had} safely behind ed lye Sigh athe ee = ' ---- Unofficial retutns from pleb- psec to not immediately fe t said hes i . ; warned that Communist coun- Shanking batdse $00 dctecates fits abandoned their ship during the! ranyi, a refugee from Hun-|indicate at the journalist had) i..ites held Wednesday in Ed-|#Vailable here. : : vai reg hagor : te rita t Lak Held tries must strengthen their ab the Aaa' industrial wanie ------ ___|night. But the rescue vessel, the|gary since 1949, disappeared/been overpowered in a fight.|monton and Calgary indicated| Informants said the Russian (Ont) 0 Bong I nk a kid, * ---- apo that ovthelipal conference sponsored by 181-ton_ British trawler Granby|last Thursday after a telephone|druyged with an. injection and 2 vhe! s kid, and way an eclare that "'the - § 9 PEE GD st Uae ee I id fai set; communication replied to Sept, : | ' | s Queen, reported this afternoon|call from another Hungarian for|kidnapped, Ga Aatouary tantiieds tends what I remember best is the|path of isolation , . . is harm-|the Lake Ontario Development estern ity He confidently forecast the|another 101-member committee * : = : the necessary two-thirds major-|8 Western notes warning thé that another man had died. [a rendezvdy§ in a Vienna villa.| Geroe, an acquaintance of the|; ner i i dust. There were horse races| ful." Association, they stressed the ie ; Abranyi family, was checked by ity of votes. Fluoridation, used|Kremlin that any interference and dust, a ferris wheel and} Such a path, he said, "could|need for improved standards to ; Austrian border guards when to prevent tooth decay, also Mean gs Fe ray =a " i M eta aie | 4 rds i i * es ermany dust, sideshows and dust * |weaken the f f socialism|help meet the challenge of for- M R falld So: get the requited mies eee ae i ON ws an s weaken the forces 0} Bae cosouitien, ayors eturn 5 DEAD, 100 HURT \ he crossed the frontier in his i would be "'aggressive action." sale aia bi EDMONTON (CP)--The may-| car about an hour after his sup- yey nate et also| Moscow poo to have res Mr. Nickle said his depart- 4 . F y"} posed meeting with Abranyi. : ment is planning a specialized|ors of Edmonton and Calgary Mrs. Abranyi said Geroe had voted on fluoridation. In Brooks,|stated its view that the air @) e es WoOoOer |selected migration program|Wwere returned to office Wed- E t p it s to meet shortages of skilled|nesday but Mayor A. W. Shac- xX Ta re) Cc LON frequently. met with: her - his- a town of 3,000, about 56 per ane og only supposed to cr) labor in the Canadian economy.|kleford of Lethbridge failed to band ih Vienna in the last two cent of voters favored it. Sixty-/be use: supplying the West- 4 six percent was needed. How-jern garrisons in Berlin. The Mr. Jodoin said organized la jhold his seat after 20 years op| : on ot ine finaea Yuetemetae be | " ever, it won approval of about/Western powers regard the air a "lcity council. #| I 1 ~ ° one of the firms represented by|s9 per cent of the voters in\lanes as a vital lifeline for the : Back ; O Power reir Candin "dst ton poe Mayor Elmer Roper of Ka-| alt Rioti lg Geroe in Budapest, said they/tnabasca, a town of 1,300 city, to be used for general acy |monton and Mayor Harry Hays hac no idea that Geroe had ever|ahout 190' miles north of Ed-|civilian purposes and otherwise sright to free education up to Ane ph , ' |been outside Hungary. The : ; nas university level. This, he said,|°f Calgary won re-election for ' . jcompany's business was han- monton. without Red interference. JOHANNESBURG (Reuters)|main opposition, had won 44). a ape "ang|two-year terms by comfortable, PARIS (Reuters) -- Shock|to report regularly to French ; ; Prime Minister Hendrik Ver-|seats by toon today and th would call for new schools and margins. Both were first forces of tough riot police to-| authorities. dled through his Budapest im- Gasedle Matlon ist P ee aie National Union Pasty ene i new or enlarged universities. lciectea in 1959, z day commanded strategic| The two days of demonstra-|Port-export firm because Geroe returned to power today in the Progressives had one seat each.|.., Nickle warned that the| Mr. Shackieford's defeat was|Ppoints in the Paris area to pre-|tions here were the first of|°laimed he couldn't get oe first general election since' A total of 70 candidates, 59\m2nufacturing industry in On-|the only major upset in council/vent further demonstrations by|their kind in France since Al-|Visa to the West. -- : South Africa became a republic from the Nationalist Party 'and pre is ate very Canigeroue voting as Alberta's nine cities|Algerian Moslems which have)gerian rebels launched their Pip io i Sl tteaggaen hens _Jast May 20 from the United Party. were|Pore in Ms history. It must pro-jand towns and villages held|caused a toll of five dead and|fight for independence seven|°% Roman Catholic newspapers Incomplete returns ve Ver-| returned unopposed The Na. vide 60,000 new jobs a year for| civic elections. Only three cities|nearly 100 hurt in the last two|years ago. es Budapest and a close asso- woerd's segregationist y 78\tionalists put up candidates for the next 10 years but this could|/haq mayoralty contests. days Two Mosiems and a French-|clate of Joseph Cardinal Mind- seats in the 156-member house. 60 of the 86 contested pati not be done unless it became) ernest Newman, former city; A force of 4,000 extra police- man were killed in the clashes/szenty, returned to Hungary The Nationalists cpected| The United Party and the) Ore competitive and stopped) commissioner was elected men took up their positions as|Tuesday night and two more during the 1956 revolution as to win 25 of the ; where National Union had a total of D2icing itself out of foreign' mayor of Red Deer, to succeed|France began deporting 1,500|Moslems died Wednesday night|free -lance correspondent for the counting of Wednesday's 80 candidates, the Progressives ™atkets. retiring J. M. McAfee. |Moslems arrested during Tues-|in clashes between police and) Western newspapers and Radio ballots was not complete 24 and the Conservative Work-. Mr. Joddin declared that} The mayor of Lethbridge is\day's demonstrations to their/an Algerian crowd in suburban| Free Europe. This would give the National-;ers Party, the Liberals and the/either labor nor employersielected by city council from|hometowns in Algeria. . |Nanterre. : t | He left the country again ists one seat more than they|/Independents 15 among them hould be saddled with all the|among its members. Voters ap-| The Moslems were being air-_ The demonstrations were injwhen the Russians quelled the held in the last parliament, -- _ In the outgoing assembly, the blame for rising prices. The proved a\change to the system|lifted to Algeria in a.two-day Protest against a curfew im-juprising and later published a The United Party, Verwoerd's Nationalists had 102 seats, the blame should be shared by gov- of choosin ir mayor by pop- operations and were under or- posed on Moslems here by the book, Hungary In Flames. ' United Party and the National/ernment. He did not think any-jular vote, the method used iniders not to leave their home-/Police under which Moslem) In 1957, Abranyi quit Radjo g Union 43 and the Progressives one in Canada would want tolother cities : lowe: hee ol ; dered| Cales were shut down at 7 p.m.|Free Europe and went into ex- G4 11. is : : towns. They also were ordered ang Moslems were '"strongly|port-import business. Two-years j jadvised"' to stay off the streets later he joined a Vienna Jaw +. BOOSTS STOCK after &30 p.m | firm. He also published an anti- Verwoerd appeared to hav A total of 11,538 Moslems|Communist information service profited from_the recent United pecu '@ | ee uss '@ | I ' S were rounded up by police afterjand helped fellow Hungarian Natons censure of South Af- Lerten be Slgr paisa and) writers get their, works' pub; rea's apartheid (segregation) authorities took stern meas-)jished, : policies which seemed to have & e jfres aimed at preventing new) brought wavering voters among ' |violence Wednesday: night. | . South Africa's all-white elector n ac Ing T1C |_, Some 1,600 riot police were' Pageant Director e back to the fold. 3 ynoved-in from outlying area: / By contrast, the - Progres i and guards mounted on bridges s ;Sives,. a 'small but energetic BERLIN (AP)-Officials and|Berlin, forcing them to negoti-jplauding his master like crazy|@nd rail lines leading to down- Retires From Job oup, backed by multi-million--commentators in West Berlinjate with the Kast Germans theyjafter' every period and .every town Paris with orders to pre-) HAMILTON (CP) -- S. Rad- aire Harry Opperxheimer fared|speculated today that Moscowlhave so far refused to recog-\comma," the West Berlin news-|Vent Moslems from infiltrating] ojjffe Weaver, director of the badly in their bid to convince|may soon fire its East German|nize or fight: their way through| paper BZ reported. into the city centre. . _|Miss Canada pageant for 16 the country's 1,000,000 eligible|puppet, Walter Ulbricht if the East Germans try to! wtbricht's Communist press, Dut Sespite the precautionsiyears, announced Wednesday voters that South Africa must) There was widespread belief\block their traffic reported Khrushchev's speech|Some, 4,000 Moslems joined in\night'he is retiring. adopt a policy of merit rather|that East Germany's chief of ; if aaer : S pect street demonstrations in. Paris He made the announcement than color in the future staté would disappear. from the: MAY MEAN CAREER prot bannerlines proclaiming and its nearby suburbs. t th i. 1 di t- . : i " : The triumph of communism. prselhager Met oar pneatrnaey wtame ttf nsl ai Instead, Verwoerd held steady scene in an,effort to make. di m peice treaty Defore thei. key 'nastage of the speach jing of the Burlington. Chamber the image he has projected of rect negotiafions with the East/¢nd of'the year" has been the on esi wal carcied without| i N B ib [of Commerce. himself as the only man who|German regime more palatable|Keynote~vf all East. German rothinetice and without Decide 0 Dri ery Noting that he has been the oan save "white cisilisaton" inito the Weal [Propaganda for m antbs. lt eat eee ee k | continual target. of. criticism Africa. Soviet Premier Khrushchey|seemed almost as thoug | : a Em lover the years, Mr. Weaver de- . HENDRIK VERWOERD [,.. 18¢.elfect of the election wasidealt Ulbricht a bitter blow n|bricht had staked his career on| The Berlin Nacht - Depesche mong Linployees \fended the phe tt dethroning READS MESSAGE vad M P jto leave the way clear for himjhis Kremlin speech Tuesday by|'t._ said the removal of the dead-| TORONTO (Ch)--Council of of Connie Gail Feller of Ottawa to push ahead with his Bantus-/abandoning the Dec. 31 dead-| Ulbricht apparently has been|line "can not have put Ulbricht/suburban New Toronto Wednes-|as the 1962 Miss Canada for -- Peace Corps member Mar- ; government and students in CITY EMERGENCY tan policy * Under this policyjline he had set for signing ajttying to force the' Kremlin's|in a v@fy cheerful mood." |day might decided no bribery ex-/what he termed "her failure to gery Michelmore, surrounded | connection with implied criti- a a -- Poona set up|peace treaty with East Ger- Ere sea on eet The East German boss is not ists in the bn department keep commitments." 3 by Nigerian newsmen, reads cism,she made of living con : within Sou Tica for non-|many. | sncnev s spee rupUyjonly in trouble with his much-jafter questioning employees.| He added, after saying that| farewell message to Nigerian ces ¢ : PHONE NUMBERS whites, bringing nearer his| The peace treaty is the main|Pput him back in his place, and! heralded timetable, the paper| William McPherson, a dis-|certain contributors eee. with-| people in light of Ag nt ditions in the country. Flank- ideal of complete segregation. |instrument for Khrushchev's|like a true puppet he.accepted|said, "He is likely to be slowly|charged temporary works de-|drawn from the 'pageant as a} lights Wednesday night at air- | ing her in rear are Joseph POLICE 725-1133 | The opposition charges that/threats against West Berlin jthe new line without any sign of!but surely removed from the|partment employee, charged|result of the dethroning: | port, in Lagos, Nigeria. Miss | Greene, Jr., deputy U.S. am- FIRE DEPT. 795.6574 this policy if carried out would With it the Soviet Union threat {hesitation scene- because the Russians re- Tuesday that workers were ply-| 'This year has been a hard) M@Melmore left by air for | bassador to Nigeria, and his a CPT. 725-6574 double taxes for the white pop- ens to turn over to the Bast! Western diplomats listening tolalize more and more they can-\ing their' superiors with beer one for the Miss Canada pag-| Puerto Rico for a fresh start | wife HOSPITAL 723-2211 ulation and ultimately lead the| Germans control of the Western|Khrushchev's ; é| ' : speech wereinot expect Western statesmenjand liquor to gain preferential eant pt it will come out) in the U.S. Peace Corps. he --AP Wirephoto via radio ~ lcountry to disaster. lallies'S access routes. to Westjamused-to notice Ulbgicht "ap-ito negotiate with him." treatment. tall right."© | expressed regret to Nig ian | from London e 3 { of

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