Join THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some men leave sions -- like th cigars in phone booths. The lasting impres- ose who smoke he Oshawa Times Drive To The Community Chest Goal WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and a little colder with scattered snowflurries today. Thursday mainly cloudy. VOL. 90---NO. 259 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1961 Authorized os Post Office Pepartment, Second Class Mail Ottawe TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES FLOWN TO HOSPITAL Deer hunter Gerald Kellog | of Campbellford, Ont., wrap- ped in blankets, is removed from the pontoon of a Hydro helicopter after an emergen- sy airlift from Campbellford to hospital at Peterborough, a distance of 35 miles. Kel- JOHN ROBARTS NAMES NEW ONTARIO CABINET Queen's Ghana Visit Starting On Thursday LONDON (CP) -- The Queen; j will pay an ll-day visit to |Ghana pak 2 { log was shot in the eye while hunting. Nurses at Civic Hospital wheeled a bed out onto the front lawn and transferred the patient to it. Left to right are: Dr. Don Aitken, Dr. R. B. Pritchard and pilot Bruce Best. Kellog, | reported in fair condition fol- lowing an operation, was strapped to the side of the helicoptor because there was not enough room for him and the pilot in the cockpit. --(CP Wirephoto) Ships Collide, Ecuador Chief | starting Thursday as scheduled despite a series of bomb blasts in the troubled West African nation; it was an- nounced today. The announcement was made in the House of Commons. Earlier he had heard a first- hand report on security ar- rangements dys, who returned from Ghana's capital of Accra this morning. Four explosions, apparently aimed at the government of President Kwame Nkrumah, were set off in Accra Saturday night and Monday night. Macmillan said of the Queen: "She has never been deterred from Common- wealth Secretary Duncan San- Resigns Under Toll Uncertain Amy Pressure HOUSTON, Tex. ships carrying oil and chemicals collided and burst into flames Tuesday night in the Houston A U.S. Coast Guard "Bs rie said she was in bed|Preme Court in the office, But! added. two men were killed 'were missing at mid-! morning. At least three women and a child were aboard. the hospital cases were from the Union Reliance, a 494- foot freighter of Nationalist Chi- nese registry bound for New Orleans. The other ship is the 9,003+ton Norwegian tanker M. S: Berean, bound for Houston. WEATHER CLEAR The ships rammed their bows together in clear weather. Ships' agents said 46 were aboard the Norwegian vessel, including the captain's wife and the couple's four-year-old son, Michael, while 52 were aboard the Chinese freighter. A Belgian ship, the Luxem- bourg, which rescued some sur- vivors, had picked up three women, believed to be a stew- ardess, a mess girl dnd a Ger- man woman who was a passen- ger on the Berean. The Union Reliance was al- lowed to burn itself out. The Berean fire was extin- | guished by 4:30 a.m. and the) ship. was able to move away un- der its own power The tanker carried explosive | QUITO (AP)--Jose Maria Ve- \fats. The freighter had oil injident of Ecuador during |barrels on her deck. congress named leftist Vice-| shaking. r ident Julio Arosemena to! "T got dressed and dressed the |"ead the country. : boy (Michael) and ran up on|The court president, Camilio the bridge and asked my hus-|Gallegos Toledo, took the oath band what to do," she said. of office as president. There was "The other ship was blazing|"° Clear word as to the where- fore and aft. It was terrible." |8bouts of either Velasco Ibarra jor Arosemena. | The army announced it had Insurance Swindle installed Gallegos because "'the| | jbreach between the executive | Indictment Laid and legislative powers had be- re so deep it could not be ridged." dca mod Jar ina Tat cones 0, Be ote, han | "jelevated the vice - i |bert George Sharp Tuesday on teint PgR ARE) gg ed charges of swindling a Cana- the position as prescribed in the dian insurance firm of $100,000. constitution. Before being thrown out as The indictment charges Sharp president for the third time in with impersonating Morris Han- four times elected to the office isch, owner of a $500,000 apart-|Velasco Ibarra accused Arose ment house in north Toronto,;mena of being a Communist |Using this identification, Sharp allegedly called the London Life Insurance Company in Toronto and asked for an additional |$165,000 loan on the building jwhich tHe firm already held |$50,000 mortgage. ¥ T when "suddenly there was this |ship and said he no longer was vice-president Gallegos was in the president- ni itle of "interim president." in undertaking previous tours} becayse of persona: risk to her-| self which is inevitable, espe-| cially when great crowds as-| semble." "The government has reached (AP)--Two|chemicals, solvents and animal'!asco Ibarra resigned as pres- the conclusion that the degree} the of risl: attaching to this tour is| jnight under pressure from the no greater than that which has) Mrs. Birgit Larsen, 30, wife|military. The army then in-\been present in many of her} ship channel in Galveston Bay. |of Capt. Steen Larsen, 39, of the | Stalled the president of the Su-| previous journeys," Macmillan explosions do not indicate any intention to perpetrate acts of violence during the Queen's visit Bomber Missing With Crew Of 11 BOSTON (AP)--A U.S. navy bomber with a crew of 11 was reported missing today en route from the carrier Lake Cham- base in Brunswick, Me. The Coast Guard said it was supply would have been ex- hausted by 10 a.m. Coast Guard planes from off Cape Cod. HELP The Chest CLIMB 'A quiet revolution has been changing the teaching of medi- cine in Canada since the Sec- ond World War, thanks in part to the considerable assistance of Oshawa's first citizen. Tonight at 7.30 a very dis- $215,000 -- $200,000 $175,000 $150,000 tinguished group of young medi- cal specialists will sit down to an informal dinner with R. S. \"Mr. Sam" McLaughlin at | Parkwood. The 22 specialists will thank |Mr, McLaughlin -- well known as the founder of General Motors of Canada, but almost unknown for his assistance to Canadian medical schools--for jhis part in the revolution. | LIMITED TEACHING Before the war many Cana- jdian medica: schools depended on voluntary teaching by physi-| al Revolution thered By 'Mr. Sam' Inside the heart he was the first to perform this operation| against the per-capita increase. | inclined to love that system (the in the Maritimes. He is still the| But more than two-thirds of the/Soviet system) that I am ready only man in that area of Canada qualified to do these delicate cardiovascular operations. No one at Dalhousie Medical School in Halifax was able to teach the doctor cardiovascular surgery when he was a student there -- he had to travel to per- fect his skill. But today the students at Dalhousie Medical School are able to watch the surgeon and his team of physicians perform these exacting operations as part of modern medical train ing. SPECIAL SKILLS The students are not the only ones to benefit, of course. Be- which would endanger Her Maj- esty's safety... . "The cancellation of this visit would seriously impair the in- valuable contributions made by the Queen's journeys toward strengthening of the ties which bind together . . . people of the \by Prime Minister Macmillan Commonwealth." The prime minister said the decision to go ahead with the tour was made after consulta- DRINKERS GET 'EXPERT ADVICE CHICAGO (AP) -- An ex- pert on alcoholism who | drinks himself advises drinkers to go on the wagon three or four ddys a month as a means of avoiding al coholism. The expert, Archer Ton- gue, executive director of the International Bureau against Alcoholism, Lau- sanne, Switzerland, told re- porters Tuesday of his me- thod of moderation, explain- ing that he drinks beer or wine with meals and some- times has a drink on other occasions. "A person should abstain completely for three or four | days each month, just to | make sure he doesn't be- come dependent upon alco- hol," he said. "I do this." Macmillan said the Queen's safety was the primary consider- ation, although '"'no royal tour is without risk." He added: "On the information and ad- vice available to it, the govern- ment has formed the view the tion with all other Common- wealth prime ministers, with no government objecting. "On behalf of the whole House we send the Queen our warmest good wishes for the success of her West Africana tour and a safe return," Macmillan said. Opposition Labor party leader Hugh Gaitskell joined in wish- ing the Queen a safe and suc- cessful trip. Macmillan announced the go- jahead for the trip after a 48- hour security check by Sandys. Sandys made his report fol- lowing a personal assessment of the political atmosphere in the African country. The clinching factor, it was said, was the slow automobile ride Sandys took Tuesday through the streets of Accra at) the side of President Kwame} Nkrumah, That ride produced) cheers and smiles from the ped-| ple, not sullen frowns. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Democrats dealt a stunning /one-two punch to the Republican |party in two major elections in New York City and New Jersey Tuesday as voter unrest was ap- parent in many parts of the United. States. Mayor Robert F. Wagner, a mild-mannered man who sud- denly turned tiger ir his suc- cessful campaign to end "boss- ism" in city affairs, was elected to a third four - year term as mayor of New York City by slightly less than 400,000 votes The cabinet discussions were secret, but the outline of Sandys report was known. Macmillan carried the final responsibility ,for deciding whether or not the trip shall go on. The prime minister will re- port his decisicn later today to the Heuse of Commons after om hand with the Queen 'her- self, The cabinet meeting lasted 45 minutes and Macmillan, looking cheerful, drove to Buckingham Palace to tell the Queen his de- cision. UAW Chiefs Lose WINDSOR (CP)--United Auto: Workers leaders from Windsor » plain, off Virginia, to its home fought on the losing sides in two battles at the Ontario Federa- tion of Labor convention here jand trying to set up a dictator-|estimated that the plane's fuel| Tuesday. First they were unsuccessful in opposing a two-cent increase in per-capita payments to the Onjial palace, abandoned Tuesday Salem, Mass., and Brooklyn,|federation. Trade unionists now Velasco Ibarra. He has|N.Y., were rushed into a search| Will contribute five cents month The second blow came with the defeat of a resolution con- demning the Canadian Labor |Congress for what was termed raiding of the Sudbury local of jthe International Union of Mine; | Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.) by the United Steelworkers of | America (CL£). | Hugh McConville, president of |Local 195 of the Auto Workers, |and Victor White, a former pres- \ident of Loca) 200, both spoke) a Circle 1 Blaze Fight Other To A Standstill LOS ANGELES (AP) -- An army of 2,300 men, hacking | encircled one of two monstrous fires in the Santa Monica moun- tains--and fought the other to a standstill. . In 2 OFL Battles jtent," the CLC leader said. jmy back. This matter in Sud- across flaming canyons, have] 800 delegates supported the move. _ Douglas Hamilton, the federa- tion's secretary-treasurer,. said demands for increased services by local unions and steadily ris- ing operating costs demanded at least $60,000 a year more in revenue. The resolution condemning the CLC, sponsored by the Auto Workers' Local 444, brought a rebuke from Claude Jodoin, con- gress president. The resolution named Mr. Jod- |Oin as the leader of a movement which was destroying the labor movement, The resolution also implied he lacked courage. Mr. Jodoin described Local 444 and its president, Charles Brooks, as friends of commu- nism. "T say to these people who are to start a collection to send them on their way there so they can enjoy it to the fullest ex- "I have no yellow streak up bury is an attempt to bring a measure of freedom to the min- ers in that area. It is an action of liberation to free men who want to make up their own Premier Keeps Education Post TORONTO (CP) -- John P. Robarts, 44, today was sworn in as 17th premier of Ontario suc- B ceeding retiring Leslie Frost. LESLIE M. FROST Mr. Robarts rel d to the Agriculture--William A. Stew- art of Middiesex North, former minister without portfolio. REMIER KEEPS POST press a list of his new cabinet members: Mines -- George Wardrope of Port Arthur, former minister of reforms institutions. Economics and Development --Robert Macaulay of Toronto Riverdale, former energy re- sources minister. The depart- ments of commerce and devel- opment, energy resources and economics are merged into one portfolio to be called the depart- ment of economics and develop- ment. k Democra ts Take 2 US. Elections in a three-way race. As had been expected, he breezed past Republican Louis J. Lefkowitz and independent Lawrence E. ,Gerosa, but his margin was more than 500,000 votes less than in 1957 when there were only two major can- didates. New Jersey elected its first Roman Catholic governor, a De- mocrat, in a major upset that saw President Kennedy's deci- sion to personally back the win- ner pay off. BEATS MITCHELL Richard J. Hughes, a little known Liberal Democrat, knocked off a nationally-known liberal Republican, James P. Mitchell, also a Catholic, in a cliff-hanger finish. Hughes, a former judge, won by less than 40,000 votes in a First Witnesses In Smuggling Case NEW YORK (CP)--First wit- nesses were called today in the trial of two Toronto men charged along with 10 Ameri- cans in a conspiracy to smug- le heroin into the United States rom Canada and Italy. 41, both of Toronto. Agueci's brother, Albert, 39, of Scarborough, Ont., was named in the original indictment but jumped bail. When he failed to appear in.court Oct. 9, his $20,- 000 bail was forfeited, and he was adjudged a fugitive and a warrant was issued for his ar- minds." rest. If winds stay down today, firemen hope to gain the upper hand against both blazes, | | Bitter UN Attack The defendants include Rocco| ' Scopellitti, 26, and' Vito Agueci, poll of more than 2,000,000. Ken- nedy, himself the first Catholic ever to be elected president of the United States, carried the ago. artillery in ne for Hughes. Former pr state by only 22,000 votes a year Both parties had used heavy New Jersey campaign. Kennedy and former president Truman campaigned ti Premier Robarts, who has held the post for the last two years. Attorney-General--Kelso Rob- erts of Toronto St. Patrick, un- changed. Highways -- William Goodfel- low of Northumberland, former agriculture minister. Labor--William Warrender of Hamilton Centre, former muni- cipal affairs minister. Treasurer -- James Allan of Haldimand-Norfolk, unchanged. Municipal affairs--Fred Cass of Grenville- Dundas, former minister of highways. : NEW MINISTER Reform Institutions -- Irwin Haskett of Ottawa South, ele- vated to cabinet. Replaces Mr. Wardrope Public Welfare--Louis Cecile of Prescott, unchanged. Travel and Publicity -- Bryan Cathcart of Lambton West, un- changed. Public Works -- Ray Connell of H amilton-Wentworth, un- changed. Ontan Pog pt Pst ga of Ontario : A Lands and Fevestend. With Spooner of Cochrane South, un- changed. Provincial Secretary and Citi- ell tis S. Harrison Jr. -- and the victory over Republican H. Clyde Pearson in the race for governor. In Kentucky, however, Repub- licans ended 28 years of Demo- cratic rule in Louis ville by sweeping into the mayor's office and other top posts. WIN IN WAYNE The only seat in the U.S. House of Representatives at stake gave the Democrats an- other unexpected victory in strongly - Democratic Wayne County (Detroit) Mich. Demo- crat Lucien N. Nedzi defeated Republican Walter Czarnecki in a special election to fill a vac- ancy in the First District. But the county's attention was occupied by the barometer races in New York and New Jersey. These two weathervane con- tests. plus a party member's victory in a special election in Texas last Saturday, oifted De- mocratic morale for the 1962 off- year congressional elections, which traditionally go against the party in the White House. _sgemrceeneeogr eee Eisenhower stumped for Mitch- Virginia voters followed tradi- tion by giving Democrat Alber-| ., state organization of U.S. Sen- ator Harry F. Byrd--a one-sided hip--John Yaremko of Tor- onto Bellwoods, unchanged. Transport -- H.. Leslie Rown- tree of Toronto York West, un- anged, Ministers without portfolio-- Charles Daley of Lincoln, for- mer labor minister; William Nickle of Kingston, former com- merce and development minis- ter; Allan Grossman of Toronto St. Andrew, unchanged, with the added post of liquor commis- sioner; Charles MacNaughton of Huron, elevated to cabinet. John Root of Wellington-Duf- ferin, former minister without portfolio, was dropped from the cabinet. Kenyatta Pelted By Imperialists LONDON (AP) Militant British imperialists threw eggs at Jomo Burning Spear Ken- yatta, Kenya nationalist leader, twice today, as he arrived at the colonial office for talks on the East African colony's future and as he left. The egg that hit Kenyatta's raincoated right arm when he arrived was fresh. The one that splattered at his feet as he left two hours later was rotten. Both throwers were arrested. Hits West Powers UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- cians in practice. The teaching} COL, R. 8. McLAUGHLIN was good, but limited by the! wherever the demands of private practice. conducted. fore the doctor completed his |studies, cases such as blue is|babies had ta be sent to Boston |or Toronto in the company of termed the worst fire outbreak) in southern California history. | latest work Tuesday night firemen con-| $125,000 was using colonialism as a pre- $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 Start _ The important clinical years) Canadian specialists are in medical school -- the last travelling to far-flung centres to three years of medical work in bring back the latest tech- hospital and lab -- and post- niques. specialized) graduate study in fields, were necessarily limited) UNIQUE FOUNDATION to areas in which the voluntary} This revolution under the | teachers had training or special direction of the medical schools! interest, is being assisted by a unique In the past 15 years this has|foundation working quietly in been changing as Canadian] the background--the R. Samuel medical education has shifted|/McLaughlin Foundation. into the hands of full-time clini-| Ten years ago, the McLaugh- cal specialists -- highly trained|lin Foundation set up a pro- men who have mastered the gram to help bring the medical latest advances in medicine. j|world at large to doctors in At the same time, medicine] Canada jis changing more and more! It has meant things like this: jrapidly from one broad field to) Four years ago when a young jhundreds of specialized profes-|Maritimes surgeon inserted his sions, each requiring year; of| index finger into. a living heart study that can only be done to break down an obstruction' their parents at great expense . Now the blue babies or a man with mitral stenosis who suffers a crippling shortage of breath can be taken from some district point in Nova Scotia, undergo delicate heart surgery and return restored after three) weeks in hospital. The maritimes surgeon is only one example of the young specialists from coast to coast who have been able to travel to bring back special skills to alter the course of Canadian medical education. The names are too numery- ous, and all are outstanding, but a random selection shows men like Rr. Hugh Smythe of (Contiaiued on Page 3) fire in the Bel-Air area, home of millionaires and movie stars. ers around fiery brush and in- accessible canyons to clear a the flames' perimeter. A few miles away, in sparsely jsettled Topanga Canyon, wind fuelled '"'hot spots" prevented similar encirclement. But they kept this blaze from expandiny. | Assessing damage from the jthree - day - old fires, officials gave this estimate: More than $15,000,000 worth of property damage; 259 homes destroyed; jhundreds of others badly dam- jaged and scorched; 11,000 acres of mountain watershed, prime} | [Befence against spring floods, destroyed. tained--but did not control--the | The Soviet bloc and a host of |Afro - Asian countries today |pressed one of the bitterest at- ers in UN history. | Colonialism was under simul- General Assembly and two of its main committees. However, there was no attack so far on Communist domination of sub- ject countries to which most of the Asians and Africans turn a blind eye. In the assembly debate got un- der way on proposals to carry out the UN's 1960 declaration against colonialism. Russia de- nounced the United States and Britain as the main colonial powers barring freedom for mil- lions of people. Staets countered that Russia' The United! text for a propaganda attack on the West. In the trusteeship committee a They drove tractors and bulldoz-|tacks on Western colonial pow-| parade of Communist, Asian and | African countries blasted Portu- | gal for the way it runs its over- swath 20 to 50 feet wide around|taneous fire in the 103-country | seas territories. | ASSAIL S.A. POLICY In the special political com- jmitee, country after country bitterly assailed South Africa's white supremacist policy and pointed to it as an outgrowth of jthe colonial system. | Colonialism also was probably jin for another going-over in the }main political committee, which |opened debate on an Afro-Asian jresolution demanding that all |Africa be kept free of nuclear eapons and all foreign bases wn the continent be liquidated. CONGRATULATIONS FOR WAGNER |