Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Mar 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY A man needs a woman to take care of him so she can make him strong enough to lean on. he Oshawa Sime WEATHER REPORT Sunny today, cloudy Friday. Light snow beginning Friday afternoon. Very cold today and tonight, milder Friday. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottewa and for payment Class Mail ga! Office Department, Postage im Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 51 ---- ecord Budge Plan Revealed In Legislature ation which will be a deterrent Jo PEOPLE DIE IN JETS CRASH $128,900,000 from the record) TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario government today embarked on a record billion-dollar spending Program and announced a new five-year plan of provincial de- velopment. "Under this plan our aim will be to maintain an adequate rate of economic growth consist- ent with the financial capacity of the province,' Provincial Treasurer Allan said in deliv- ering his fourth budget address) to the legislature No new taxes or tax increases oe the type of expansion and de- velopment that our positive pro- lgram is designed to achieve. year just ending. The biggest jump will be in educational out- lays. | "In other words, we must SURPLUS ACHIEVED keep things in balance. We Mr. Allan announced a Ssur-|must proceed in accordance plus for the 1961-62 fiscal year|with good judgment and good on ordinary account--the day-to-| sense and obtain the maximum day expenses of running the gov-|yalue out of every dollar of ernment--of $432,000 on gross! expenditure." revenues of $853,121,000 and) The 67-year-old treasurer re- gross expenditures of $852,869,-| ported the gross provincial prod- 000. juct--sum of all goods and serv- For 1962-63 he predicted aj ices produced in Ontario--is run- Seeking Boys Lost On Lake Finding No NEW YORK (AP)--An Amer- ican Airlines jet liner crashed N.Y. Coast Guardsmen Survivors when this plane was taking off. I just happened to turn my head and look out the train window were announced, although there Surplus of $374,000 from gross/ ning six or seven per cent ahead) will be some minor amendments revenues of $1,005,408,000 andjof a year ago | in existing tax structures. gross expenditures of $1,005,-| Unemployment had dropped Other features of the budget| 934,000. jin the last year and was: "'sub- TORONTO (CP) -- Boats andglasses, then called police, as aircraft are searching Lake On-|the canoe was blown from about tario today in a longshot hope of | 100 yards off shore to more than and burned shortly after take- \off today, apparently killing all 95 persons aboard. Coast guardsmen at the scene and saw this giant airplane climbing and then head straight down to the ground. include creation of an economic There will be broadened ex-|stantially less than the rest of finding alive two boys believed) a mile. council with representatives of/¢mPtions in the three-per-cent|Canada and the United States." government, management, la-|retail sales tax which went into Retail sales increased modestly) bor, agriculture and the natural effect last Sept. 1, but they will)jast year and were expected to resource and export industries; |clip only about $1,000,000 off the| rise more in 1962. ; an extended housing program;|total take. They are designed) "The prospects are bright accelerated northern develop-|Mainly to help educational and) for continuing growth and for ment, including a $7,200,000 pro-|religious institutions, hospitals|increases in personal incomes, gram to extend commurications|/@#"4 trappers. 'corporation profits and sav- | lost overnight in a canoe. Mr. Ward watched as dark- Police said chances of anyone! ness closed over the lake. surviving the night on the lake| A tug was sent out but found |--where temperatures were|no trace of the boys or canoe. |down to 1.6 degrees above zero|Two more tugs took up the hunt jwith a 25-mile-an-hour wind--| but quit shortly before midnight were slim. | with high winds washing waves The boys, John Arthur Sheri-| onto their wheelhouses in 15-de- facilities of the government-|. The Succession Duty Act will owned Ontario Northland Rail-/be amended to permit insur- way; and a 200-man increase in|ance payments up to $5,000 to a the strength of the provincial|Widow without consent of the police. provincial treasurer, double the Combined net ordinary and|Previous amount. There also capital expenditure for the newjWill be a new six-month exemp- fiscal year starting April 1 is|tion of interest on unpaid duty, forecast at $1,126,000,000, up/dating from the death of the de- ceased. Changes to the Hospital Tax Act, which Mr. Allan said at a pre-budget press conference are designed to give some relief to small. movie theatre operators, will take a cent or so off the (4 tax on some tickets costing less than $1. DISCUSSIONS PLANNED Of the five-year plan, Allan said: "Through our economic coun- 4 cil and various departments and agencies, discussions will held with industry, management and labor on ways and means of fostering more processing, expanding exports and increas- ing the Canadian content of our ings." 'AScore Killed 'Hundreds Hurt After Storm LONDON (AP)--At least a score of dead and hundreds of injured were reported today on the Indian Ocean islands of} Mauritius and Reunion after a; hurricane with winds up to 156 |miles an hour. | The British colonial office said the howling winds. and ldriving rains Wednesday took| at least 11 lives on Mauritius, a; British-ruled island 530 miles east of Madagascar. Another 125 |were injured and 1,300 buildings destroyed. The Red Cross said special | refugee centres were being put jup to handle more than 8,000) left homeless on the 720-square | flashbulb -- of }dan, 13, and Martin O'Hagan, 14, had attended classes in the|~ morning, but they didn't arrive ". |home for lunch ; ON a wise git It was the third time the boys ' |had run away together in less SAVED BY FLASHBULB |than two months. | Early in January they hitch- scared the attackers who jhiked to Hamilton. Two weeks) fled, leaving Cortez on the |later they rode a freight train} ground. The near-fatal inci- |to Alliston. dent took place in front of Z the Manila Times building. | WENT TO ISLAND Police believe they went to Cortez was taken to the hos- || * 0% ; pital by the crew of a mobile |Ward's Island, just off down-| patrol car summoned to the jtown Toronto, Wednesday. The scene. AP Wirephoto |O'Hagan family once lived on --_--_--_--_--_------ | the island, William Ward, who lives on the lake shore, told police he was at dinner when he noticed two boys in a canoe. He watched through field An assailant whips out a dagger to finish the job on Narciso Cortez, 25, who lies on ground after being beaten by a group of men in Manila. The light coming from the Manila Times photographer Elphidio Rustia while making this picture | Rampage In Oran By Moslem Rioters Lawyer Requested | To Back Charges | ORAN, Algeria (Reuters)--|--favorite weapon of the secret} Thousands of Moslems clashed army. | gree temperatures. Loanes Cited In Chrysler, UAW Strike WINDSOR, On.t (CP)--Chrys- ler of Canada President Ron Todgham said Wednesday in a letter to employees that both the company and the United Auto Workers Union (CLC) have suffered "grievous and mounting losses'? because of a contract strike by production workers, Three thousand hourly - rated employees have been on strike at Chrysler's three Windsor plants for the last 12 days. Mr. Todgham said Chrysler did its utmost to prevent a work stoppage "which, frankly, it can just off the south shore of Long Island said they found 'no sign of survivors. The tragedy came just as the city was about to give a joyful welcome to Lt. - Col. John H. Glenn Jr., the astronaut who or-| bited the earth. | The plane, with 87 passengers) and eight crew members aboard, had taken off from Idle- wild Airport for Los Angeles at 10:07 a.m. : The airline listed one of the passengers as W. Alton Jones, board chairman of the Cities |Service Company and a golfing companion of former president Eisenhower. Tronically, the $5,000,000 plane crashed in sparkling clear) weather, the first fair day after) almost a week of rain and fog that had delayed or cancelled hundreds of flights. CRASHES IN SWAMP | The aircraft, a modernized Boeing 707 known as an astro- jet, crashed in a swampy area known as Broad Channel in Jamaica Bay off Far Rocka- way in Queens Borough. The area is just off the southern shore of Long Island. The plane was half in the wa- ter and half on the marsh. Huge clouds of smoke rose "I couldn't believe my eyes. It went absolutely straight down--on a 90 degree angle. I was so shocked I could hardly move." In Washington, the White House announced Federal Avia- tion Administrator Najeeb Hal- aby and a number of aides left for New York within minutes of learning of the crash. American Airlines said the 87 passengers included three com- pany employees, in addition to the crew. Sixty passengers were travelling tourist class and 27 first class. American Airlines said its last accident in scheduled operation was Feb. 3, 1959, when an Elec- tra crashed in the East River near La Guardia airport. That crash cost 65 lives. The scene of the 707 crash was one of desolation. Bodies were scattered over a huge area. The plane itself left a trail of wreckage estimated to be a quarter mile long. Danger Of Bad Advertising Aired In House -The bombs went off near a} f reckage. boulevard where two time rom the wreckage Witnesses said the plane tts, "io provide the.most satis- ith pistol-firing police in pre- TORONTO (CP)--A city law-|ill afford from either a finan- dawn riots here today after it f ab 500,000 | W 4 mile island :ef about lyer has been ordered to appear|Cial or share - of - industry factory assurance of adaptabil-| ity to economic change and| long-term economic growth, we will continue to seek new meth- population. Reports from Saint Denis, Re- union's capital, said hurricane!® Jenny killed nine, injured 250) bombs exploded near the edge f the Moslem and Jewish dis- icts. bombs killed 30 Moslem men, Gninkh: ahd cuidien Wednes.|Defore the Metropolitan Toronto} police commission to substanti-| When the riots broke out,|4te @ charge that police officers) point of view."' "Organized labor," said Mr. Todgham, 'knows that its mem- climbed to about 700 feet from Idlewild, then turned left and plunged at a steep angle. and left thousands homeless on| Police opened fire as the riot- committed perjury. jbers never really recover the| Some witnesses said they saw heavily-armed police rushed to ods of raising standards of edu- cation and job retraining, of im- proving health and physical fit- ness, of safeguarding our natu- ral heritage, and of strengthen- ing our system of highways and roads and other services. "All these aims must be re- lated to the financial capacity JAMES N. ALLAN of our people and our industries. that French-ruled island 110} miles southwest of Mauritius, | Many persons were reported) missing, including the crews of ithree fishing boats. The storm) almost completely destroyed the) jisland's telephone communica-| jtions, cut roads with mudslides} }and caused heavy crop damage.| | Red Ctoss headquarters in, London cabled its offices in Kenya--about 1,800 miles from| Mauritius on the African main-| land--to ship all available med- ers rampaged through this west- jern city shouting 'Moslem Al- geria," "Long live Algeria," and calling for the death of Raoul Salan, leader of the Eu- ropean terrorist Secret Army Organization. Since the New Year the secret army has led a wave of violence throughout the North African territory in an apparent bid to provoke bloody counter-violence, from the Moslems jeopardize the imminent cease- and thus} Lawyer Frank Nasso, appear- ing recently at a testimonial din- ner for Alderman Joseph Piccin- jnini, objected to a police crack- down on gambling which -- he said--was centred on members of the Italian community. the scene of the demonstrations and began shooting at the Mos- lems, who threw anything they could lay their hands on at the security forces. Though police reported no riot casualties, Moslems often carry f 1 away their dead and injured) He said one case involved 40 before security forces and am-|men and was adjourned 15 \bulances can ge to the scene.|times before it was dismissed | Military officials said 65 pe@-jin court. isons, including 55 Moslems,| "I know police constables were killed and 93 wounded/were lying," Mr. Nasso is re- throughout Algeria Wednesday. | ported to have said. | jfull wage losses entailed in a/flames coming from the plane |lengthy strike. The economy of| before the crash, others did not, greater Windsor, already de- |pressed by past major labor| mediately after the impact. | conflicts, is ill - equipped to withstand another one." In a reply, George Burt, Ca- nadian UAW director, said |Chrysler has not met the terms of its competitors on working conditions and general manage- |ment attitude toward employ- ees. Mr. Burt charged that "'man-| | but the plane was in flames im- The plane was known as "flight No. 1." By 11 a.m., the report from coast guardsmen at the scene was: "There now is only floating, smoking debris in the water." Police at Idlewild. said at the} same time: 'Apparently survivors." there were no, OTTAWA (CP)--The perils of misleading advertising, the un- derdog status of "Brand X" and the difficulties of buying a de- tergent without towels in the box got a Commons airing Wednes- day. The consensus was that some- thing should be done about it. But, in an hour - long debate, nothing was decided. J. Chester MaeRae (PC-- York-Sundbury) touched off the discussion with a resolution urg- ing that a special Commons committee be set up to study commercial advertising and rec- ommend steps to prevent "the We must avoid any rate of tax- ical supplies to the stricken fire in the 744-year nationalist agerial ineptness at Chrysler North Rhodesian i: Proposals Rapped Dupont Forced insurrection. Observers have been im- {pressed by the restraint shown \thus far by the Moslem major- ity in the face of daily indis- jcriminate killings by secret! has become a byword through- out the length and breadth of the auto industry. Management has tried to make up in its workers' sweat what it has lost in sales," Although major issues still un- Nehru In Control | distribution of fraudulent and The crash scene was about tC U misleading advertising to Cana- three miles from Idlewild con- trol tower. dian consumers." The crew of a Mohawk Air-| Robert McCleave (PC--Hall- lines plane that had taken off|fax) confessed to a life-long de- immediately after the astro-jet| sire "that Brand X will some witnessed the crash and radioed LONDON (Reuters) -- British) tution. roposals. for a revampe diconsideration.' Northern Rhodesia constitution; John Roberts, --designed to please everyone--jdesian leader of Welensky's satisfied hardly anyone today|United Federal Party, ex- as legislators, African national-| pressed 'bitter disappointment" ists and Rhodesian white lead-jat the new plan and said it ers sniped at the new recom-|could "make a laughing stock mendations. jof the British government." I will give this further Northern Rho- | To Drop Shares CHICAGO (AP)--The Du Pont Company and Christiana Secur- ities Corporation were ordered! today by the U.S. District Court jto divest themselves of more} than 63,500,000 shares of Gen- army fanatics. | But Moslem patience finally} burst early today after the ex-| plosion of seven plastic bombs) With Less Margin NEW DELHI (Reuters)--|come, Congress had won 142) Prime Minister Nehru's ruling| seats in the 288-member legisla-| Congress Party today retained|ture. The final result also was) control. of the key Lower House|still in doubt in the state of Effective Cancer | 'of Parliament as it headed to-|Bihar. settled are non - economic ones, union spokesmen have said they are the type that could cause a prolonged strike. These include production stan- dards, relief time in plants, Seniority, job opportunity and the amount of time allowed for an alarm back to the airport. FIRST IN U.S. The crash was the first ac- cident of a Boeing 707 in the United States involving a loss of life for passengers and the sec- ond in the world. | day triumph on television." Union 'Regrets' Snowdon Move eral Motors Corporation § stock However, Congress retained""ion members on the job to| , Another 707, owned by Sabena) 1 onpon (AP)--The Institute Almost as soon as the govern-| The leader of Northern Rho-| within the next three years. Pain Killing Drug ward a slightly-tarnished victory| ment announced its long-\desia's African National Con- The order, by Judge Walter LONDON (Reuters) -- Three awaited proposals to give more/ gress, Harry Nkumbula, said he\y political power to Negroes in the|rejected the proposals and ail protectorate Wednesday the) might find it difficult to control constitution ran into heavy criti-; his supporters "'if they decide to cism. go into any unpleasant activi- Sir Roy Welensky, prime min-'ties."' ister of the Central African! Ip Federation, of which the protec- here, La Buy, appeared to agree/pritish doctors say a new drug h proposals by Du Pont law-|_phenazocine -- effectively re- |yers with respect to divestiture |joyes pain in elderly persons -- to be taken, ___ |suffering from cancer. mal fraed an jnspectin tye arug was injected inp the House of Commons! department. tients with Arete sale. 4 ne Labor and Liberal party) La Buy, putting' into effect a//> in two milligram doses three torate forms a part, flew tolopposition spokesmen criticized|Supreme Court ruling which up-|tmes @ day, the three say in London early Wednesday in athe new constitution but di-|set his own finding of June 3,20 article in The Practitioner, last-minute attempt to modify|rected most of their fire at|1957, held that retention of Gen.|@ medical magazine. the proposals. He met Prime! Welensky, who said in Londonjeral Motors stock by the Du! 'Most patients experienced Minister Macmillan. Wednesday he would be pre-| Pont Company and members of relief within 20 minutes, In only He declined comment on the pared to use force to carry out|the Du Pont family does violate|two patients were the results not new proposals, but has in the/his policies. the Clayton Anti-Trust Act. satisfactory." past vociferously attacked any . pees ION em TIT TE ay gee efforts to give Negroes more power in copper-rich Northern Rhodesia. Colonial Secretary Reginald Maudling said the proposed re- forms would give the Negroes| more voice in electing the 15) members of Northern Rho-| desia's 45-man legislature who Dief Summit Position | | are elected by both white and colored voters Deplored By Russian lin continuing returns in the In-|its majorities in the 10 remain- jdian nation! elections. jing Indian states. | The party has won 251 of 346; Nehru himself easily retained seats declared so far. Thejhis parliamentary seat but had |Lower House, the Lok Sabha,|a whopping two-thirds cut from has 494 elected seats. |his 1957 margin. Latest lineup of the parties is:| Notable defeats for the Con- Congress, 251; Communists, 18;|gress Party included informa- Jan Sangh (Hindu) 13; Praja So-|tion Minister B. V. Keskar and cialists 9; Conservative Swa-|A. P. Jain, party president in tantra 8; Socialists 5; independ-|Nehru's home state of Uttar ents and other parties 42. | Pradesh. The Congress Party held 365) In general, Congress candi- seats in the outgoing Parliament/dates who lost dropped their |while the Communists had 28.|seats to opponents who had quit | Other standings were Jan Sangh|the party to run as independ- 4, Praja Socialist 20, independ- ents 36, others 41. CONGRESS LOSES SEATS The Congress .Party victory was not overwhelming in the 10 days of voting that ended: Sun- day. The party lost its majority in the state assembly of Rajas- Predicts Long gress Party 'cabinet in Rajas| Hotel Strike ronto - Dominion Bank. |than went down to defeat as the | Lalonde was identified |party dropped a totai of 33} TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario} Labor Minister handle union business. | Havelock Bank Holdup Suspect 'Stayed In Tent PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- | Yvon Lalonde, one of four sus- pects in the $232,000 robbery of a Havelock bank, stayed over- |night in a lonely tent and trailer ;camp three nights before the \robbery, a witness testified in |court Wednesday. Lalonde, 31, Jean - Claude La- jlonde, 23, Rober Poirier, 31, and |Roger Martel, 41, are charged | with the Aug. 31, 1961, robbery ig the Havelock branch of the |To in court Wednesday by William |Airlines, crashed near Brussels, |Belgium, Feb. 15, 1961, and killed 73 persons. Among them were 18 young American figure skating stars. There have been other fatal jet accidents in the U.S. but they either involved only crew mem- bers 'or the aircraft were manu- factured by other firms. The 707 costs $5,500,000 and can carry up to 179 passengers, depending on the seating ar- rangement. The 707s are ca- pable of speeds of more than 600 mph. WITNESS GIVES ACCOUNT John Petersen, of Bayport, N.Y., an executive, said: "IT was pulling into Jamaica railroad station this morning | of Journalists expressed "pro- founded regret" Wednesday night over the Earl of Snowdon's membership in the rival Na- tional Union of Journalists. The institute pointed out the union is a body affiliated with the Trades Union Congress, committed to strike action and dedicated to the closed - shop principle. The statement said it is a matter of profound regret that Princess Margaret's husband "should have accepted an asso- ciation which might be misin- terpreted and, in certain cir- cumstances, place him in an embarrassing position in the eyes of the public."' te < MOSCOW (CP - AP) --Pe-|Diefenbaker's statement about|Diefenbaker coincided with re- saets, mostly to the Swatantra Labor Minister Warrender, said|2¥"Pin, operator of the camp AFRICANS CRITICAL mier Khrushchev has expressed the need for maximum efforts oF ya yg dlp whi regret Prime Minister Diefen-|toward disarmament." central committee of Kenneth| axe? So ~rl Summarizing jhe Soviet, cows Kaunda's United National Party|P0S#! that the opening of an 18-! agency said: went into confe : ay 4, nation disarmament conference} Veit ck. 3 re s rence today to in Geneva be attended by heads Nikita Khrushchev pointed discuss the new constitution. | : B "/out that solution of the problems Kaunda said Wednesday jof government. ti : : British govern age ho The Canadian Prime Minister,|°! Usarmament cannot be ap " ; | ic 4 |proached without a _ definite dodged the issue." He said the|iM, his reply to the Soviet pre-\- easure of trust and frankness. constitution "cannot work" and|Mier, had said instead he would) pt this. 'trust' can "baat "can only result in political)>€ Prepared to attend a heads- achieved among those who bear stalemate." of-government meeting if pro- i be} But he added: "I am not say.|8Tss were made first at a for-|the highest responsibility before the peoples of their countries for lease of similar letters to French President de Gaulle and 'Swedish Premier Tage Er- jlander. | Canada is one of the 18 na- tions to be represented at the Geneva disarmament confer- ence opening March 14, which Khrushchey wants to convert into a summit meeting. The Soviet leader expressed satisfaction at a qualified re- sponse of Erlander. The Swe- dish leader said last week he Conservatives. near Bancroft, 44 miles north of In the state of Madhya Pra- desh, with two results yet to Wednesday night the financial |}, | resources of the Canadian Pa-| Mn ock. ; cific Railway Company are al. Mr. Turpin said Lalonde drove strong factor in his belief that|into the camp about 7 p.m. in the Royal York Hotel strike will|2" Oldsmobile bearing Quebec remain deadlocked for pian |e ae He ---- bd ' P ; é ; e camp that nig -- MES Se: OGD peters snd Mr. Turpin did not ask him Speaking at the King Edward| '0, register because of a heavy Hotel to a meeting of the Young | "nestor. : Progressive Conservatives, he| "Pother car drove into the said he has no hopes for a set-|°2™P about midnight but before tlement of the strike, which be-|M- Turpin could get dressed it x ne AIRPORT | bod © : More Peruvians Die In Avalanche LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Rescue and relief teams hurried to the remote Andean town of Con- chucos today where from 60 to ing I have rejected the consti-|¢ign ministers meeting. seed | President Kennedy of the u's, their security. | ; 'will go to Geneva if the chiefs and Prime Minister Macmillan! "There is hardly any need to of the big powers agree to 100 persons were reported killed and dozens injured by an ava- lanche. currently stand. He. said the Hotel and Club gan last April 24, as matters a Heft again, followed by Lalonde's r. Lalonde's car was back next jof Britain replied in generally|@tgue that it is precisely the |similar terms but Khrushchey|!eaders at the highest level and |has continued to suggest anjin the highest positions who jearly summit meeting. Khrush-|C@n in personal contacts, most chev's message to Diefenbaker|easily display this trust in the |was apparently part of this cam-|intentions and proposals of the CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 make the trip. Khrushchey wrote Erlander: "Your positive attitude . . |enables me to hope that the jgovernment of Sweden will jmake its contributiq, to the -|were killed," Employees Union stand essen-|™0rning and Mr. Turpin wrote tially is that the hotel accept/down the licence number and all 1,200 strikers back to their) @Sked his guest's name. He was jobs, except for justifiable | told: Perrie. Lalonde left the cause. The management refuses|Camp about 11 a.m. and drove to rehire 10 per cent of the strik-| South. "We have Ween advised that between 60 and 100 persons said acting pre- fect. Oscar Darrios from the town of Huaras, 80 miles south- west of Conchucos. "People all | | FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 |paign. jother side and thus create con-|speediest solution of the prob- Tass quoted the message to-/ditions most favorable for the/jem of general and complete |day as saying "this position is Success of the negotiations. |disarmament, which deeply agi- not easily reconciled with Mr.! Disclosure of the message toltates all peoples." ' ; ' © Tis A through the valley are panic-|ers and will not show cause. | moment,' cause of insubordination. a ae Nan he Fiater diner Sooradinevee ek eee A farmer in the Detlor area, stricken and afraid another} The hotel will never take|SOuth of Bancroft, found the} fray avalanche could occur at any|back 10 per cent, he said, be-|Oldsmobile parked in the bush jon his farm Sept. 22. | QUEENS Fy fockoway Blt ae : 28 Eee Attanta Ocean LONG iSLAND ° BAEC WHERE AIRLINER CRASHED

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