THOUGHT FOR TODAY There are péople who show re- spect for old age only when it's bottled. She Oshawa Times Thin b= Join The Drive To The Community Chest Goal Winds westerly WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and cool today. Partly cloudy tonight and Friday, 10 to 20 tonight, light to suothwest 15 Friday. VOL. 90--NO. 260 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1961 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Pepertment, Ottawo TWENTY-SIX PAGES IN CABINET ead Persons After Big Crash RICHMOND, Va. (AP)--Res-| Conway told reporters there CROWDS GREET QUEEN cuers today began the almost/were 78 recruits aboard the hopeless task of identifying the|plane with its crew of five. bodies of 77 persons--nearly all|Army sources, however, indi- of them young army recruits--|cated 74 servicemen were who died near here Wednesday) aboard. night in the flaming crash of an. The Imperial Constellation, Imperial Airlines Constellation. |one of three Imperial aircraft Only the pilot and the flight|/under contract to the army to engineer of the big plane, which|haul recruits, had left Newark, * carried 74 servicemen and a'N.J.; at 6:22 p.m. It stopped at crew of five, survived when it!the Wilkes-Barre-Scranton, Pa., crashed into a marshy woodland airport and at Baltimore, Md., ravine while attempting anjto pick up additional recruits jemergency landing at Rich-|destined for Ft. Jackson, S.C., mond's Byrd Field with two of for basic training. its four engines dead The Federal Aviation Admin- Working in freezing weather, istration said the plane devel- firemen played streams of foam oped engine trouble about 10 extinguisher on the smoldering miles west of Richmond. and skeleton of the plane through the headed for Byrd Field, just east early morning hours. of the city limits, for an emer- A Civil Ajr Patrol officer at gency landing. FRED M. CASS ON ARRIVAL IN ACCRA the scene, Lt.-Col. Alfred C. No- witsky, said identifications might never be complete. "All the bodies were consumed that were left in the plane," No- It made one stab at a runway but; the FAA said, did not land because of trouble with its land- ing gear. It circled away to the south and then, on the return Heavy Security Measures Used ACCRA (Reuters) -- Queen |Elizabeth and Prince Philip ar- rived here today for an 11-day visit to Ghana Huge crowds lined the proces- sionai route into Accra where elaborate security precautions were in force in the wake of a series of bomb blasts which had threatened to cancel the visit. An afternoon sun blazed down on the vivid welcome scene, the most lavish in the history of this Commonwealth nation. On hand for the arrival was to entail some risks she is will- ing to face them," one infor- mant said. "Also, she feels that there is a job to be done for the Com- monwealth as a whole." Macmillan's statement in the House was warmly received. The only suggestion of criti- cism came from Robin Turton, leader of what some call the "ultra-Commonwealth" wing of the Conservative party. He asked whether it was not | | witsky said. "There was noth- approach, crashed into the ing anybody could do except W chief fetish priest Nai Wulomo "peculiar" that other Common- contain the fire." The pilot of the plane, Capt. |Ronald Conway, 29, of West Hol- lywood, Fla., said he survived by climbing out a window in the cockpit just after the crash. His | flight engineer, W. F. Poythress, 30, of Miami, escaped through a 4 \door. yoods. The time was 9:24 p.m. FIREBALLS EXPLODE There were several explosions --some witnesses said as few as three, others as many as 15-- and then great walls of flame leaped upward. J. F. Green, a member of the Neither was critically\mastover Garden fire depart- ment--one of the first rescue units to reach the scene--said "the woods were lit up" by the flames. "I walked back into the woods . .. When I got near the plane, I saw two crew members wan- dering around (Conway and 'Agree About \Working Mere, BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Brit--Someone went up and brought jain and the six Common Market|them out of the woods . . . The \eountries today agreed on a whole fuselage was on fire... 1 |working program for negotia--CUld see people in the plane, tions on British membership in|PUt No one was screaming.' \the continental trade alliance. So difficult was the terrain at | The first ministerial confer-\the crash scene that the first * * \ence on Britain's application to| Piece of fire equipment could not *\join ended after a day and a reach the wreckage until 10: 'half of talks that were described tea =a rage a a ge as "constructive and encourag- wh nlysos - Une pulper tuck got CHARLES S. McNAUGHTON |),.4. Britain, ECM the trip. CRASH SCEN pour on the ground as a libation E AT DAWN journey of the Queen and ll Inches Snow AtOwen Sound TORONTO (CP) Ontario awoke today to the fact that) winter is on the way as light! snow swept most of the province} during the night and lumped as much as li inches around! Georgian Bay. z Citizens. of "Owen Sound sloshed to work through wet snow after bearing the brunt of the province-wide snowfall with 11 inches in 24 hours. Work crews sprayed salt on) the roads as 28-degree tempera- ture threatened to freeze the damp blanket. One car heading into Owen Sound from nearby Bognor slithered into the ditch three times before completing! man. Negotiations on British mem- jbership got off to a good start |Wednesday, according to spokesmen for both sides, but Common Market sources Wed- nesday night said ultimate suc- ing' by a conference spokes- e S. Africa te, W. IRWIN HASKETT Reply |Prince Philip Most Africans appeared un- concerned by the government's warning Wednesday night that with a jug of gin he plans to of thanksgiving for the safe wealth governments had not ap- parently been asked to approve the decision on the visit. Maemillan replied that the government had been in touch with Commonwealth prime min- isters. He thought he could say that no "contrary view' had it would impose the maximum Toll Of Homes 5mggling Destroyed: 456 LOS ANGELES (AP)--Men|/$100,000 - and - up class in the and machines massed today for|movies colony. knowk as the another assault on the twin | blazes in the Santa Monica /sands of "persons mountains, the worst fire dis- is-|homes and schools. fetes in southern California STARS HOMELESS Firemen controlled flames in| , In the ce dein 7 exclusive Bel-Air and environs|'estroyed the homes of Bur Wednesday night. The fire in|Lancaster, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Joe nearby Topanga Canyon was E. Brown, Joan Fontaine, pro- near containment today. Au-|ducer Walter Wanger and com- thorities reported favor-|Poser Lukas Foss. able wind and humidity. | Actress Kim Novak, who Official damage estimates: |"@arly lost her home, told a 456 homes destroyed, all but|ePorter she also nearly lost Inine in the Bel-Air area; 14,150/Her famed cat, Pyewacket. "He . inv vatershed|WaS scared and ran up on the ee peat tanace en Oe" the shapely blonde star ; said. "I- went around yelling, haps in excess of $20,000,000. |Salad. y Insurance officials estimated| Pyewacket! Pyewacket!' and ' 'Methods 'Revealed NEW YORK (CP) -- Trunks Hollywood: Hills section. Thou-|and valises containing heroin) Without reve j\from passenger liners by an in- nesday. At the bakery the men broke open the trunks and valises to jtake out the smuggled heroin, the bakery's owner, Mattee Pal-| "The Queen feels that her job ; entails higk responsibilities and Palmeri was the first witness|!f those responsibilities happen jmeri, testified. jat the trial of 12 men charged jwith conspiring to violate the inarcotics law. The accused are linked with a ring that allegedly |smuggled more than $150,000,000 }worth of heroin into the United |}penalty, "including death," for 'any acts of subversion during ithe Queen's visit. | Throughout Ghana, the pre- dominant feeling was one of relief that the Queen's visit was Inot called off because ol Ghana's internal political diffi cwties 2 ; aling anything o fled from|were séht to a Brooklyn bakery/the private conversations = the, ternational narcotics ring in-|Queen. official sources made it volving three Toronto men, a/plain they felt there had been |federal court jury was told Wed-'no doubt about the Queen's atti- tude. She had never thought of tween Macmillan and postponing the trip. |WOULD FACE RISKS been expressed by any Com- monwealth government, Despite Macmillan's state- ment on security arrangements and the report by Common- wealth secretary Duncan Sandys, just back from Ghana, The Daily Telegraph says edi- torially that public anxiety is not "wholly allayed." _ ; f f Jean Demarquet Arrested For OAS Activities rested former National Assem- bly deputy Jean Demarquet in Damages $100,000 From Store Blaze ST. CATHARINES (CP) a Paris suburb at dawn today and said he has been sought since September in the drive against the outlawed extremist Secret Army Organization (OAS). total insured losses may run as|!'m sure the firemen thought I'States from Canada and Italy in| " was crazy. cess would depend to a large extent on today's talks. Delegates told reporters after ae: _. |today's session that ministers municipal affairs portfolio in from the seven countries will Fred M. Cass, of Grenville- Dundas riding, took over the Expected Today UNITED NATIONS (CP) South Africa was scheduled to stentions. Only the 10 Soviet-bloc countries voted against the high as $24,000,000. Miraculously, there have been} no deaths reported during the four-day holocaust. At least 150 firemen have been injured, \Fire swept through the A. A. |Widdicombe appliance store Wednesday night, destroying part of the building and causing heavy damage to the contents. {the last 10 years. She fled without the cat Mon-| Palmeri said Albert Agueci, jday, then found it soot-stained|39, of Toronto told him to meet \but safe Tuesday. ja passenger at a New York pier. | Television actor Richard|The passenger was another Tor- No charge was immediately announced against the 38-year. old ex-paratroop lieutenant, whe was acquitted in the trial in Paris last March of leaders of the abortive Algiers settlers® re- the cabinet of John Robarts. He was highways: minister in the Frost cabinet. Charles S. McNaughton was elevated to hold their next conference Dec. reply today to charges that it and 9. Meanwhile, their nego-/should be expelled from the tiators will meet Nov. 22 for a|United Nations because of its four-day business session. racial policies. ----------| Foreign Minister Eric Louw none badly. The fires have de.|Boone saved his Mandeville/ontonian, Rocco Scopellitti, 26. | The company estimated dam- the cabinet as minister with- out a portfolio. He is the Con- Ww. Radioactive Dust seravtive member for Huron. Over West Coast Irwin Haskett, of Ottawa | VICTORIA (CP)--A cloud of South, was named minister of |radioactive dust believed to be reform institutions. --(CP Wirephoto) HELP The Chest CLIM $215,000 $200,000 $175,900 from an atomic explosion--has jdrifted squarely over Vancou- jver Island to send radiation| .|counters soaring to a point al- "|; most four times higher than the October average. Pacific Naval Laboratory sci- entists here said Wednesday fringes of the cloud were noted Nov. 7 when the radioactivity level jumped to 2.5 times that of the October average. By Wednesday radioactive dust in the air had brought the figure to four times the aver age a month ago. was listed to speak to the 103- member special political com- mittee which has heard more than 60 delegations denounce the South African government's apartheid (racial separation). Considerable attention shifted to the committee after the Gen- eral Assembly approved over- whelmingly Wednesday night an Anglo - American proposal for immediate resumption of East- West negotiations on a treaty banning nuclear bomb tests The assembly action -- sup- ported by Canada--had an aura of futility, however, because the Soviet Union described the reso- lution as a "'stillborn infant," FIFTEEN ABSTAIN The vote in the 103 - country body was 71 to 11 with 15 ab- RUSSIA HAS 'DUBIOUS' HONOR Se WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-|ratorium "while we were at the) jdent Kennedy says Russia has|table negotiating with them." exploded far larger quantities of ' | "If they fooled us once it was $150,000 nuclear materials in the atmios-| iphere than all the Western pow- ey combined and that Russia! lefds the world in the "dubious category" of seeding the skies swith radioactive debris. Warning States won't be fooled twice on Soviet nuclear test ban tactics, Kennedy estimated before press conference Wednesday that all the Soviet nuclear bombs exploded in the air now | amounted to 170 megatons, the equivalent of 170,000,000 tons of TNT In contrast, jtests by the United States and} Britain amounted to about 125) megatons and that of France to} less than one megaton. Indicating the U.S. would re- ject any Soviet suggestion for another unpoliced moratorium on testing, Kennedy said that Russia had broken the last mi ! » $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 § $25,000 Start al \their fault. And if they fool us twice, it is our fault." MAY BE REPLY TO K This seemed to be Kennedy's| reply to Premier Khrushchev's| that the United Comment ata Kremlin reception) last Tuesday that Russia would halt tests 'when other powers test ban treaty which calls for inspections and controls to pre- vent sneak tests The U.S. packs military power total atmospheric; seesnd to none in the world,| Kennedy said, and to maintain its position, he proposed 1. To seek additional money for defence next year. He did not say how much 2. To keep a steady eye on U.S. strength, intelligence and commitments in relation to the capabilities of its adversaries. jne The U.S. maintains that if| |Khrushchev wants to show good| faith, he should sign a nuclear} resolution. Six delegations were absent. Despite the world-wide clamor for an end to nuclear tests, the great powers have been un- able to agree on anything. The assembly earlier voted for an Indian-sponsored moratorium on tests pending a treaty, but it was opposed by the Soviet Un- ion and by the United States, Britain. and France. In turning down both the In- dian proposals and that of the Western powers, the Russians argued that the only way te ban nuclear bomb tests was through an agreement on general and complete disarmament. The Western nuclear powers contend they cannot depend on an unpoliced noratorium be- cause of "treachery" by the So- viet Union, which broke the last three - year moratorium while} East-West negwtiations were in progress in Geneva. stroyed many homes in the| OFFERS REWARD jCanyon home by watering it! The witness testified that he own all night Monday. jand Scopellitti placed a trunk in Flames and smoke from the|Palmeri's truck and took it to age caused by fire, smoke and water at about $100,000 and said the property was insured. Cause of the blaze was not known. mountains still were visible for|the bakery where another man s. Associated Pres 2 FOR PRIZE QUILT oer éhirce weir, on Ping PORT PERRY (CP) Mrs. Henry Skerrett of the Port Perry district is offer- Air section, described the scene: 'It looked like a vast graveyard. of mansions." |was waiting. "They ripped the bottom. open} |Palmeri said. | Agueci is still at large after) ljumping .$20,000 bail. | ing a "no questions asked" reward of $20 -- her prize money--for the return of a prize - winning needlework quilt. The quilt was stolen from a display at the Markham Fair last month. It has been shown at the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition and other fairs, and prize money it has earned will pay for the reward. Mrs. Skerrett has been confined to a wheelchair for 10 years with arthritis. QUITO (AP) -- Carlos Julio Arosemena was due to take the 'today, promoted from the vice- presidency by a constitutional right that the air force enforced with a noisy: $ét raid on Quito. Leads World In Fallout 3. To get ready for nuclear} tests in the atmosphere and to} conduct them if necessary. NEEDS ANALYSIS | The U.S., he reiterated, would! not explode nuclear bombs in| the air merely for political or| psychological reasons. These air| that Nehru may be working r detonations would be under-| taken only if an analysis of Sov- iet explosions indicated a need for new American efforts to maintain world nuclear superi-| ority. Kennedy gave no indica- tion when this analysis would be! completed Atmospheric testing had to be} approached with great caution| because of the possible radia-| tion harm te future generations, but the United States also had responsibilities to maintain the freedom of hundreds of millions! of people at home and abroad, | Kennedy said. The risks in- volved had to be balanced off Turning to gther issues, Ken- dy said he and Prime Minis- | The show of force Wednesday \by three rocket-firing jet fight- ers led the army-backed provi- sional president, Supreme Court {President Camilo Gallegos To- j\ledo, to drop his claim to the presidency vacated Tuesday by Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra. That cleared the way for the succession of Arosemena, 42, ter Nehru of India "'are going|the vice-president elected with to disagree' on an approach to|Velasco Ibarra in June, 1960. | Air Force Clears Presidents Way tt to power by anti-gov- |brough' f t student riots that killed jernmen more than 100 in the last two weeks. \resigned within minutes after the jets fired rockets and brief machine-gun bursts in swoops over the military barracks as tank - supported soldiers held Arosemena a_ virtual at the legislative palace. Though the barracks seemed to be the target, the palace was jarred by two blasts from the jets, U.S.-made T-33s. Residents swarmed into the streets as ex- plosions. echoed off the sur- Gallegos, a political centrist, | prisoner] | The Widdicombe company set up business her- half a century veyed the damage in the Bel-|and took 10 packages out of it,"|ago manufacturing and selling buggy trucks. The company switched to electrical appliances with the passing of the horse and buggy era and is scheduled to mark its 50th anniversary next April. volt in January, 1960. Demarquet caused a sensation at the hearing by challenging the then government delegate- general in Algiers, Paul Delonv- rier, to a duel stripped to the waist using paratroop daggers. Meantime, seven plastic bomb explosions attributed to Euro- pean extremists slightly injured two persons in Paris early today while other plastic charges went off in provincial cities. oath as Ecuador's new president|at least 21 persons and injured| | | many of the world's problems|Congress already had pro-|rounding mountains. Despite all but he hoped it was possible to |Claimed him president Tuesday |the noise, no damage or casual- disagree without "charging each other with bad faith." He rejected any suggestion consciously or unconsciously for the Communist movement. The president said he had a high re-| gard for the prime minister and! this regard "'became higher dur- ing our conversations." On other subjects, had this to say: Press conferences--asked why he doesn't meet the press more often, Kennedy said the public interest justified his present schedule because most obvious topics deal with sensitive foreign policy. He'll hold conferences nearly every week after Con- gress reconvenes in January, he! in atmospheric testing}said, and wouldn't object to sev-| member of eral a week if he considered them in the public interest at| the time. Kennedy ( night. ties were reported. With major resistance broken,| Gallegos's resignation was re- Arosemena went ahead with the|ceived at the palace with cheers formation of a middle-of-the-|and applause. The troops and oad government. He had been tanks withdrew. Arosemena took over the presidential palace, where his opponent had holed Suspend Professor «wv. = Col. Aurelio Naranjo of the de-| % On Heresy Charge fence ministry announced the} PRETORIA, South Africa|2uito garrison accepted Arose-| Reuters)--Prof. Albert Geyser," as porta m. Sonne 43-year - old professor of New|'® Popular deman | ; Testament theology and ancient} The army command had dele-| é : Christian literature, has been/gated the pst eg ge to} suspended as a church minister|Gallegos Tuesday night, before} pending completion of his secret) Arosemena BS sh Saget ber Z9A ZSA trial for heresy, it was an-\the arrest Velasco Ibarra had] 4... ae nounced here Wednesday. \put him under earlier in the| f ee er bone Ms eg . - Geyser, whose trial is based|day. Wednesday the army lead-| oa a -- * ie ze iar on his rejection of racial segre-|ers refused to recognize the con-| 'hTough the ashes of her gaton as anti-scriptural, is. algressional proclamation elevat-| $275,000 Bel-Air home today the Nederduitschling the vice-president and, Seeking a floor safe in which Hervormde Kerk--one of South'claimed it had the backing of she said most of her jewelry Africa's three Dutch Reformed|th® national police force for| had. been secretéJ. Although churches. legos. the house burned to the SEEKS JEWELS ground in Monday's Los An- geles brush fire, Miss Gabor hoped to find the contents of the safe intact. After a half hour of digging, she decided to hire a skip-loader to re- move the debris. 4 --(AP Wirephoto)