Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1962, p. 1

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RD ong FE BR AE rad County Council Rejects EMO Budget Share-Page 5 WEATHER REPORT Overcast with occasional light snow or drizzle, changing to scattered snowflurries this even- THOUGHT FOR TODAY A living wage always seems to be a little more than you are making now. he Oshawa Time ing. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 91--NO. 45 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1962 Authorized as Second Class M Ottawa and for payment jail Pos' ot it Office Departmerit, Postage in Cash, TWENTY-TWO PAGES Power Break) Hits Whitby Major Plants WHITBY (Staff) -- A breakja short-circuit developed in the;day when a breakdown occurred) in the town's main Ontario|binding wire joining the twojin Oshawa. ; Hydro feeder line left three! burning poles. A similar fire broke out in major industries without power} Workmen restored the power|the same hydro poles on Vie- today. to part of the town at 8.15 a.m./toria street one year ago The Affected by the 7.30 a.m,jafter electricity was re-routed crossbar burned off the top of power failure were Dunlop Can-|through Ajax and back into|the pole ada Ltd., DuPont of Canada|two Whitby substations. : Ltd., and Bathurst Containers) Power affecting the southern| Ltd. portion of the town will be out Hydro officia!s stated that the|until workmen fix the Victoria industries would be without! street substation power until at 'east.1 p.m; to Dunlop employees were sent day. home until the beginning of the The power failure is believed|second shift at 4 p.m., a plant Fanfani Rule Takes Office ROME (AP)--Premier Amin- operate with Russia peaceful .». Ready > For Joint Space Talk WASHINGTON (CP) -- The} United States is prepared to co-|tions General in joint|an international organization be exploration of outer|set up to ensure that outer space but President Kennedy |space is used for peaceful pur- advises against hasty conclu-| sions that such co - operation | will come quickly. | While Soviet Premier Khru- shchev has expressed a desire} to have occurred when two crossbars caught fire on poles straddling the CNR crossing at Victoria street east Ontario Hydro's 44,000 volt feeder line was disrupted when Soviet Minister Charges West Readies Attack LONDON (Reyters) -- A So- viet defence ministry chief charged today that the '"im- perialist" powers are preparing a surprise nuclear attack on Russia and other Communist- bloe countries The accusation was made by Marshal Andrei Yeremenko, in- spector-general at the defence) ministry, in an interview with| the Soviet news agency Tass. Yeremenko and Marshal An-| drei Gretchko, first deputyde-| fence minister and commander!) of Warsaw Pact forces, were making statements on the eve of the 44th anniversary of the Soviet Army and Navy. Both military leaders said for pooling of Soviet-American space efforts, Kennedy ob- served Wednesday that long ex- perience has shown that when it comes to negotiations with to be | Russia, it is easier to talk than to reach firm agreements. Kennedy said at a press con- iference he was willing to dis- jcuss joint efforts with Russia either bilaterally or through the United Nations. "We believe that when men jreach beyond this planet, they jshould leave national differ- ences behind them," said Ken-| nedy. Prime Minister Diefenbaker| jot Canada previously had pro- spokesman said@. is MEETING IN ROME U.S. Attorney General Rob- | Fanfani in Rome today. Ken- ert Kennedy meets Italian | nedy is on a world tour. Premier - designate Amintore | Fanfani heads a 24-member + Glenn, While Resting, Aids Rescue Of Diver we ai io tore Fanfani's new Italian gov- Pgs ree ror break|ernment--farthest to the left in| § will have to be cleaned, he add-|15 years -- took office today ed. Steam pressure throughout|oPening a new era in the coun- the plant was reduced. |try's post-war politics. : Production is believed to have) Fanfani and a coalition cabi- continued at the DuPont Plant/net--backed by Pietro Nenni's and employees were kept on at!Socialists, once allies of the Bathurst Containers Communists--were sworn in by The Ontario Hospital switched| President Giovanni Gronchi. onto auxiliary emergency power) Fanfani announced the Int the time of the break. member cabinet Wednesday The power failure was thejnight after getting Gronchi's second for Whitby this week.| approval of the list of ministers. | Residents were left without elec-/They include 19 Christian Dem- jtricity for 40 minutes on Tues-)ocrats, three Democratic Social- Tne ep ae pec ee Ee Ae tWO ROPUBUCANS, s No seats went to Nenni's So- Not Guilty Pleaded |-isists but the new govern- }ment has been assured socialist | coalition government sworn in tomorrow. --(AP Wirephoto from Rome) | | via radio | 24 On Stabbing Count backing. GRAND TURK ISLAND (AP){he went 'swimming in the At-jof the coloring provided by irri- | The development--a deal be- astronaut John H. Glenn backed|lantic, accompanied by TORONTO (CP) -- William a pada up his backup. pilot in a\sea res-| physician friends. Railey, 19, of suburban Scar- 4! ctkar nme aS 4.'|cue a day after Glenn himslf|_ Rene borough pleaded not guilty Wed-|biggest turn in Italian politics! was pulled from the ocean. WHILE MEMORY FRESH nesday to two charges arising|Since 1947. In that year, the late' Glenn, brought to this U.S.| Glenn today started the last from the fatal stabbing of Nor-/Premier Alcide*@e Gasperi, ai,ir Force tracking station in|half of interviews based on sev- man Saunders at a teen-age| Christian Democrat, kicked the|/the Bahamas for a physical ex-jeral hundred pre-set questions party last June. |Socialists and Communists out/amination and interviews about|While his memory still is fresh. Railey is being tried before|°f his government. 'his 17,500 - mile -an-hour flight] Doctoxs:also are-taking a bit Mr. Justice J. ¥. Donnelly and) 'Many Italians, including Fan-|around the globe, took part in|/of hit lime with another blood a jury on charges of being anjfaii, feel an entirely new era/the rescue of a skin diver Wed-|test and an electrocardiogram, accessory after the fact of mur-|for italian democracy can be|nesday. but so far have found no definite der or, alternatively, of being| opened up by winning thé So-| His backup pilot, M. Scottjchanges from his pre - flight an accessory after the fact ofj|cialists over and isolating the Carpenter, had been swimming) Status, said Dr. Ashton Gray- wounding. {Communists. with two skin divers who live/biel. junderstand Yuri Gagarin's re- port of seeing plowed fields on earth. He also recognized the Mississippi Delta even when he was 700 miles east, out over the Atlantic' coast, and looking back. Giennt said he 'thought he jlevels of different cloud forma- tions, A satellite able to do this could be extremely helpful to weather forecasters. Glenn also saw swarms of Russia's forces included rocket|---- "space fireflies" which still are see how deep he could go with-\day meets President Kennedy, lout a supply of air. and the public also through a Carpenter accompanied him |Press conference at 'Cape Ca-| units capable of bringing dc47n any high-level aircraft in the} world which dared invade So-! a mystery. | The "fireflies? were luminous viet airspace. Yeremenko said although "un- der no circumstances will we be the first to deliver a blow," a realistic assessment of the pres- ent situation showed '"'that the imperialist powers' are prepar- ing a surprise nuclear attack on the Soviet Union and other so- cialist camp countries."' He added that Russia's young rocket troops were the pride of the armed forces and "can hit any point of the globe." There now are almost 2,000 units manned by these troops and they have developed "ex- cellent" precision, he said, add- ing that Soviet anti-aircraft de- fences were "'greatly improved" and one or two rockets were enough to down any aircraft in- vading Russian airspace. U.K., Australia Split Foreseen LONDON (CP) -- The Man- chester Guardian says a major policy dispute between Britain and Australia will come to a head at today's Common Mar- ket ministerial meeting in Brus- sels If the Austialians win their| point, The Guardian says, it! "would set off a chain reaction" in the rest of the Common- wealth. The front-page story by Pat rick Keatley, the Guardian's| Commonwealth writer, says the) Australians, as a "result of aj sritish slipup over the tariff| pronsals on tinned fruit,"' fee! that no'other country can be "an effective watchdog for is-| affecting their in-| sues keenly terests." j ! the story nding an eighth ice table and formally requested that Edward Heath, lord privy seal who is handling Britain's nego- tiations, put their request to to- day's meéting. It adds "All the other Commonwealth} countries are keenly awaiting the outcome of today's bargain- ing behind closed doors | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | --------- -- on the island. One had dived to} Calm and relaxed, Glean Fri- Giving U the items f discussi | Men thins 8s feat"sne. ate) Talks Expected) |minum, Their |nore Paco and said the man appar- |naveral. Vice-President Johnson lently became unconscious at the} |80-foot depth, on his way up| |from 110 feet Carpenter could Frost Active Politics rt sacred. ning im his LINDSAY, Ont. (CP) -- Hon.|Queen's Privy Council for Can-/him to the surface, where} Leslie M. Frost, the man wholada--an honorary post--in De. Glenn, sitting in a boat, helped guided Ontario's d«velopment|cember during a federal cabi- Pull the man aboard. through 12 of its most prosper-|net meeting in Quebec City Glenn was taking time out ous years, has decided to give| The 66-year-old Lindsay law-|from physical examinations and up active politics yer declined to elaborate onjgiving details of his orbital The former Ontario premier) Wednesday's letter and refused/flight to space administration! said in a letter to the Pro-!to comment on his plans gressive Conservative Associa-| In his letter to the associa- ition' for Victoria Haliburton tion, Mr. Frost said lcounties that he will not seek| 'I feel that the association lrenomination as candidate for|should be in a position to deal |Victoria, the riding he repre-|with the matter (his nomina- sented for 25 years tion) and to take whatever ac- Mr. Frost, who resigned asj|tion is necessary in the best in- jpremier last Oct 21. was ap-|terest 'of the party in this rid- 'pointed a member of theling." He said he had "'arrived at this decision, naturally, with some regret." He felt that ®" younger manjihat Lord Snowdon is scooping would be able to carry the other news photographers be- jparty banner and provide the cause party with continued success. Princess Margaret's husband,| ; "Relative to the future, I shall now working for The Sunday | tne ace an" A? any flends|Times, is "getting privileged annual anpoting ? ha eye ys pe oe ae lens-| The association wil! hold its alts The, Daily Mirror representatives on the spot will/annual meeting in March. [pine re j be standing by for Mr. Heath's| Mr. Frost has never suffered, [It Said Snowdon, formerly| briefing afterwards. ... electoral defeat since entering|Commoner Antony Armstrong-| |the legislature in 1937, H jJones, was allowed a solo ses-| WANT PRINCIPLE SET ei pero his party to sweeping victories|Sion with his camera at a Cov- "The Australians are trying!in 1955 and 1958 ent Garden rehearsal before to establish 'the principle of the|- -jother photgraphers were eighth chair.' They do not sug-! 'lowed in. gest that it should be continu- The pictures he took then ously occupied by an Australian) were published in The Sunday ... Australia accepts that when Times this week. They showed Margot Fonteyn and Rudolph aes cng rehearsing for Wed- n To Reconvene '" Chrysler, UAW al- newsprint and wood- pulp which are also scheduled) under the formula, the eighth chair should be occupied by Canada's representative." | WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Nego- | The British feeling, the story|tiations between Chrysler of| yy; ; : i says, "'is that it is hard enough |Canada and the United Auto| coreestinntithers is . pert in Brussels now with seven na-| Workers union, aimed at settl-| new dodge in this country tions in a room; more could be/ing a strike that is in its fourth! «4 royal dodge : unwieldy or even disastrous.' day here, are scheduled to re- dicky bird dodge." "The Canadian government|S¥me today. 3 will be watching the Australian| Negotiating committees met|DIDN'T COMPLAIN | move with particular vigilance.|Separately Wednesday to assess) The Mirror editorial recalls It is reasonable to suppose that|their positions. that the newspaper didn't join Mr. Menzies (the Australian} Three thousand union mem-|in complaints from other sec- prime minister) has one strat-jbers went on strike at midnight|tions of the. press when Snow- egic eye fixed on the next gen-|Sunday after negotiators failed|don started his job with The eral election, forecast to' take|to agree on a new contract to Mire is oan place within the coming year,|replace a three-year pact that and Mr. Diefenbaker cannot ig-jexpired Nov. 15. ' the obvious lesson since| The union is seeking a one-| in the Canadians, too, are expect-jor two-year contract, Their ne-| ing to go to the polls, perhaps/gotiators argue that a_three-| After Operation as soon as the autumn." year pact would permit the ;onDON (Reuters) -- Prince Britain has admitted that it|Company to allow working con-/Charjes, 13-year-old heir to. the inadvertently failed to inform|ditions to deteriorate without|throne, left hospital here today Australia--as part of the normal fear of a strike. 10 days: after an operation for Commonwealth briefing process| Union officials said 2,300 of| appendicitis. --that tinned fruit was being|the 3,000 employees involved in} 'The prince was driven to added to the list, under. the niljthe strike have registered for|Buckingham Palace where he tariff formula now being dis-|picket. duty. Pickets are work-| will spend two weeks convales-| cussed between Britain and the|ing for three hours at a time|cing at. home with his mother,| Six. fevery other day. lQueen Elizabeth, A elle. Says The Mirror: "If the facts are what they jseem--and if they 'are not The Prince Goes Home day night's performance of| ¢ The royal] ; is due here late today or early Friday morning to escort the astronaut from his rest home Remarking on Glenn's calm- ness under stress, Dr. Graybiel said he never did get a rapid pulse beat before or during the flight SEES CITY Glenn reported he had recog- nized El Centro, Calif., because Papers Squawking AtSnowdon Scoop LONDON (AP) -- A squawk Sunday Times, published by Ca-| Maritime Academ went up in Fleet Street today/nadian Roy Thomson, last Feb:|Diego. Ai "God luck to the no privileges." "If Tony w tographer again, sleeves and work from nine to com-'five (plus) like the rest of the| Bear. press photographers, why shouldn't he? "Alas, it looks as if it ain't working out like that." jparticles of something stream- ing past his spaceship at each sunrige. Glenn was facing away from the rising sun, 'and de- scribed them as 'space fire- flies" which, when they were close to his window, more re sembled snowflakes. 26 People Die In Train Crash BOGOTA (AP) -- A head-on|aiq collision of passenger an freight trains killed 26 persons| mp, today, the Colombian N railways announced. two|gated fields and said he could) | | | }eould distinguish the heights or|Labor Party Leader Dom Min- ational] alienated the Roman--Catholic} Malta's Labor Blames Church For Vote Loss VALLETTA, Malta (Reuters) toff Wednesday night conceded) defeat in Malta's general elec-| tion. He charged that the vote was "the most unfair in the his-! tory of the island" because of | Roman Catholic Church inter- posed before the United Na- Assembly that poses. While the president expressed willingness to join in Russian- American peace efforts in space, he seemed to reject any Holdup Man's Flight Foiled By Snowdrift TORONTO (CP) -- A holdup man whose stolen getaway car stuck in a snowdrift near the mid - town Toronto bank he had just robbed of $2,437 was ar- rested as he told his troubles to a bank accountant who had fol- Accountant Ants Piirik said he took a revolver from the bank and followed the man on to the street. He saw the man get into a car and drive away. Mr. Piirik then stopped a car and asked the driver to follow the getaway car and when it became stuck he went over and started talking to the occupant. The man asked him to drive the car to the police station, said Mr. Piirik. "I asked him where the starter was and he said he didn't know because he'd just stolen the car and wasn't fam- iliar with it. I couldn't find it, so we just sat there and talked 'lowed him. suggestion that he delay or put off resumption of nuclear tests in the atmosphere. A letter writer's suggestion that Russia and the U.S. each prepare nuclear shots as a guard against cheating doesn't meet the present problem, Ken- nedy said. Russia had already completed a long series of at- mospheric explosions, WILL PAY POWERS Kennedy also said that a pre- liminary investigation of U-2 spy pilot Francis Gary Powers indicates he did not breach his flight contract. This would mean there would be no charges against him and that he likely will receive his $52,000 back pay. Powers was hired by the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency on a $30,000 - a - year flight mission over Russia that failed and sent him behind Soviet prison bars for 21 months. Some U.S. con- gressmen have suggested he should have killed himself rather than fall into Russian hands. Wave of Attacks Sweeping Algeria ALGIERS (AP)--A wave of terrorist attacks swept Algiers today as the right-wing secret army made a last-ditch effort to wreck an impending French- Algerian agreement to end the 74-year rebellion. Police reported more than a score of scattered attacks as jfor a few minutes until the po- an-|lice came." that) Leonard Fraser, 28, of Lon- vention. first As European gunmen in cars and nounced in results were te afoot fired at Europeans and the polling ended Monday, observers fam-|4 iliar with Malta's complicated} proportion representation sys- tem said the nationalists of for-| mer premier Geoge Borg Oli-! vier seemed certain to win 24/ to 26 seats in the colony's 50-| seat assembly. Mintoff's party was expected to have a minimum of 16 seats. In the last Maltese election in 1955, Montoff's group had 23 seats and the Nationalists 17 in a 40-seat assembly Mintoff's! government resigned in 1958 in| demand for more financial] from England. | Mintoff's left-wing pronounee ents since the last election} hierarchy here and priedts this About 100 persons were re-|time urged their congreations to ported injured, including five|vte for 'any of the five parties| United States cadets from Alopposing Mintoff. training ship of the California The collision occurred between jcruise aboard the shi y at San|S ? od young) Cali and Buenaventura, in west-| of his royal connections.|man,"' it said. "God luck--but!ern Colombia. : | Final counting will hee The cadets were among ajcorpletdq until tonight but the| ants to be a pho-group of 86 who arrived _ at] Democraths Nationalist Party of to roll up his|Buenaventura on a training} Herbert p Golden) pellegrini LOGANS POSTED | Many church walls carried anti - Labor posters declaring} "God will curse you if you vote; socialists." not be Ganado and Anthony *s Christian Workers Party also were expected to Medical authorities said their|/ garner some assembly seats. information indicated none of \the cadets was injured seri- iously. Olivier and Mintoff both were assured of seats in the assem- bly. ; INDIANS TO BUILD AMMO BOX Chippewa Indians of the Shelton Basket Hayward, Wis, formalize a contract with the U.S. Army Company of | on, Ont., has been charged with armed robbery Moslems, killing at least 11 per- sons and wounding 15. Liquor Permits Will Disappear TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario's much - maligned liquor permits imforce since 1927, will disap- pear from use April 1. Premier Robarts, announcing the abolition in the Ontario leg- islature Wednesday, said liquor prices will be revised slightly upwards to compensate for the loss of $1,300,000 in $1 fees for the permits. Mr. Robarts said the move would remove a long - standing irritant many purchasers feel at having to produce the permits as well as a relatively recent ir- ritation caused by introduction of a three - per - cent provincial tax. The price increase will be de- signed to round off liquor prices, including the tax, to the nearest five cents. Mr. Robarts said the odd amounts in prices of liquor following introduction at the Elwood Arsenal at Joliet today t>» manufacture 162,000 wooden ammunition boxes for 105 shells. Contract ES is for $350,000. Left to right: Charley Bilelle, council mem- ber; Joe Trepania, chairman of tribal council; Steve Tay- lor, council member and vice- president of the basket com- pany; and Lt. 1. Paul J. of the sales tax have been a "slight irritation" to customers. As ar example, he said a bot- tle of whisky now priced at $4-- plus 12 cents sales tax -- will 'cost $4.15, tax included® CAN DRINK IN CAMP The premier also announced plans to change the meaning of , "residence" in the Liquor Con- trol Act to permit a person leg- ally residing in a camp to con- sume liquor in the camp. "This will preclude the likeli- hood of past situations," he said, "where, for example, a persons occupying a tent could be charged with an offence be- cause of a technical interpreta- tion of the term residence." Mr. Robarts also said the meaning of a public place will be clarified to avoid the situa- tion where magistrates have dismissed vagrancy charges and similar offences on the grounds "licensed premises" were not a "public place" under the liquor act Mr. Robarts also announced a $225,000 boost in the annual grant to the Ontario Alcoholism and Drug Addiction Research a to a high of $1,065,- STUDY CONTINUES He said a_ special cabinet committee under chief liquor commissioner Allan Grossman is continuing a study of the province's -liquor laws. The announcement suggested a more sweeping liberalization of the liquor regulations. In place of the permits, de- clarations will be required with each liquor purchase that the customer is legally entitled to make the purchase "The penalty for a false-state- ment in this purchase order form," Mr. Robarts said, 'will be the same as the venalty for- merly imposed for a false state- ment in an application for a permit." The Liquor Control Act now imposes a fine of not less than $100 and not more than $1,000 or two months in jail for the first such offence and three months for a second offence. The opposition benches greeted the announcemegts with Savage, arsenal éommander. frequent, but generally. good- natured, interjections. <

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