Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Aug 1962, p. 1

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Trowel Trades Union, Builders Sign Pact -- Page 9 Oshawa Ti THOUGHT FOR TODAY Invention isn't the only thing born of necessity -- there's also work, WEATHER REPORT Sunny late today and Saturday, Not much change in temper- ature. VOL. 91--NO. 186 10 Conte Per Copy oe OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1962 Class Mail Payment Department, Post Office of Postage in Cash. UK. Drops Plan. For Blue Water Nuclear Missile LONDON (CP) Britain an-;oped by the British Aircraft nounced today cancellation of|Corporation and English Elec- her Blue Water nuclear missile,|tric Aircraft as a successor to|by production. | The missile--a 75-mile-range|the American Corporal. It was; "'The sudden and unexpected tactical support rocket -- was a competitor with Corporal's|cancellation of a weapon which! due originally to go into army/succesor, Sergeant. |has been engaging a consider- service in 1965, The defence ministry said/able part of the total resources The dfnc- ministry said the|Britain will push ahead with|of Luton and Stevenage is project is being abandoned be-|other rocket projects such as|bound to lead to early redun-| cause of the increasing number|Bloodhound II, a surface-to-air|dancies among the 5,500 employ-| and yield of other tactical nu-|missile, an anti - tank guided | ees, | clear weapons becoming avail-/weapon called Swingfire,-and| "The corporation will do all| able to the North Atlantic|another surface-to-air Treaty Organization. --named CR-299--designed to be|dundancies to a minimum and| The surface-to-surface Blue fitted to small ships. to help those made reduntant Water missle was desgined| Britain also is ordering athird'to find alternative em- specifically for the support of nuclear submarine, the minis-| ployment." | troops in the field. ¢ try added. --_------ ca a sea Bid eae my it eciogied es us cated that another reason for|the decision would be a blow to| N Ch { | egro Chief s Faces Trial scrapping Blue Water was that|the manufacturers and _ their} The government's cancella- z no other NATO country had| employees. shown enough interest in the! WILL BE LAYOFFS tion followed a decision not to) ALBANY, Ga. (AP) -- Dr. renew existing Anglo-American|Martin Luther King Jr. faces i thei a ; : rocket to order it for their o The British Aircraft Corpora- agreements for the stationing Of trial] today for his part in a oar tion said the "sudden and un-| Thor missiles in Britain. prayer vigil and his followers ggg A will, of/expected" cancellation of the g {Blue Water contract is bound to The corporation statement pnjanned mass demonstrations said: |during the day. course, ensure that the British : ls é Army of the Rhine continues to layoffs among 5,500 "The Blue Water was Dr.. King, symbolic leader of main project have the necessary tactical nu- ment at the corporation's Eng-|ment, has been in jail trials of Blue Water already held would have been. followed result in employees. clear support to play its full part in NATO." WILL PRESS AHEAD Cancellation of the project will allow Britain to press ahead more quickly with plans to boost the mobility and firepower of its conventional forces, the an- nouncement said. the since under develop-|the southern integration move-) -- missle|in its power to keep these re-| # SD inal William Malwitz cups an} ear during his 108th birthday celebration Thursday at a | convalescent home in Detroit. | 50 cents he Only one thing bothers him, ' Ford when the automaker was Mrs. August Malwitz, report- his grand daughter - in - law, | ed. He hasn't gotten back the | loaned Henry | 12 Fig CELEBRATES 108TH BIRTHDAY -- | a boy and needéd the money y jified defence source said today 3 has been issued for the arrest .\of former French premier Canada May | TWENTY PAGES Cut Fighters From NATO WASHINGTON (CP)--A qual- Canada plans to withdraw about one-quarter of its overseas di- vision in 1963. This informant said the move will eliminate Canada's night- fighter role in NATO's Euro-| pean forces, leaving main Ca-| France Hunts Ex-Premier As OAS Chiet PARIS (Reuters)--A warrant an- Georges Bidault, police nounced today. | Bidault, who is in hiding, is the head of the National Coun- cil of Resistance, a right-wing organization closely linked to} |the extremist European Secret) nadian fighters. This move had been consid- ered and accepted by the NATO powers long before Canada un- dertook an austerity program to protect the Canadian dollar, he said. But implementation of the) move is being accelerated be-| cause of the austerity program. | Exact timing of the withdrawal) is still confidential. | This informant said NATO powers have not criticized Can- ada's decision because it had been generally agreed that the over-all night-fighter role by responsibility on day OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker discussed world military affairs informally for 30 minutes in his pine-panelled library today with Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, chief of staff of the United States Air Force. Gen. LeMay described the visit afterwards as a social call on the prime minister during his first visit to Ottawa. Mr. Diefenbaker met the gen- eral at the top of the steps of his 24 Si Street resid where Mr. Diefenbaker is con- find with a broken ankle. They talked in the main floor NATO aircraft should be re-|study with Air Marshal Hugh d luced. In other words, Canada's de- cision to trim her overseas air force commitments would not mean added burdens or respon- sibilities for other NATO coun- tries. Campbell, retiring chief of the Canadian air staff. Mr. Diefenbaker told report- jers later that the discussion }covered the military situation |"in the various areas around 'the world." Third Do to buy books on mechanics. | Army Organization which made, Mrs. Malwitz said. (AP Wirephoto) The Blue Water, which has cost at least £25,000,000 ($75,- 000,000) to develop, was nick- named "scott and shoot" be- cause of its extreme mobility. lish electric aviation factories|July 28 when he joined at Luton and Stevenage. nine other Negroes in praying "The development of/before city hall. the weapon had been proceeding) Ajl are charged with disor- with |satisfactorily and it had been|derly conduct, congregating on The rocket was being devel-|anticipated that the successful Wreckage Found, But No Survivors NEW DELHI (Reuters)--No survivors were found today in the wreckage of a Royal Nepal Airlines Dakota missing nine days with 10 persons aboard, three of them North Americans. The wreckage was discovered Thursday on a steep mountain- Dhorpatan, according to a mes- sage received here from the Nepal government. NEW IN CABINET RICHARD A. BELL CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Nine bodies were found scat- tered around the plane while the 10th was believed buried under for|the wreckage. Both India and Nepal have jsent helicopters to the crash jscene in the rugged border|grant a permit for the proposed aging Director Richard Terwa-| jarea. Among the six passengers) side five miles southwest of|aboard the plane were Sidney}were sent |the sidewalk and refusing to |obey an officer. In protest of the trial, a group jof Negro mothers planned a | 'prayer pilgrimage" to city, jhall, to be followed by a similar. NEW YORK (AP)--The Eu-mion would become possible if jdemonstration by white and}ropean-owned mining firm Un-| Union Miniere would pay taxes Negro ministers from other|ion Miniere du Haut - Katanga|to the central government states. | Says it has no choice except to|headed by Premier Cyrille More than a dozen clergymen| continue paying taxes to Ka-|Adeula instead of the Katanga \from as far away as Los An-|tanga, the secessionist province| province regime headed by |geles and New York have joined in The Congo. | President Moise Tshombe. ithe fight against Albany's scg-| It also intends to maintain. a| said: regation policies. policy of non - interference in| "statements and suggestions A decision was promised to-| Congolese political affairs, of this kind are based on the day by City Manager Stephen) The company's attitude was) assumption that Union Miniere A. Roos on whether he would) Set forth Thursday by its Man-| can choose its own tax collector, Europe-Owned Mine Paying Katanga Taxes a thing that no other private enterprise can do. "An ironic siuation has thus developed. Many who are the first to demand the non-inter- ference of non-African individ- uals and corporations in polit- ical affairs now demand that this company take political ac- tion in the form of unilaterally ceasing payments to the de facto authorities of Katanga. "They cannot have it both gne, in a cablegram to the New! permits York Times from Brussels. Negro Terwagne's statement was | pilgrimages. Letters requesting to Roos 2 MEN, WOMAN by jJacques and Oscar Holder of|jeaders. Under a city ordinance {Washington, inspectors for the|\--as US S. Administration of Interna- jtional Development, Clara Grindley, 45, ;school teacher. {AMBASSADOR ABOARD Another passenger was the Nepalese ambassador to India, Narapratap Thapa, returning to| New Delhi after a conference in a Toronto applied by police--such 1a-|demonstrations require. permits and Miss|and are classified as parades. A negro spokesman said the jdemonstrations would be held even if a permit was denied. Seven Teen-Agers| sof U prompted by a recent comment}! Thant, acting secretary- general of the United Nations,! and an article published by The ON HONEYMOON RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)--Two men and a bride ways, Either Union Miniere is in politics or it is not. We take this opportunity to re - empha- size that the only safe and cor- rect course of action open to a private company in 'ex-colonial areas is indeed complete and Katmandu, capital of Nepal. The plane was last heard from Aug. 1 shortly after it had flown over the mountainous bor- od area between India and |Nepal on its flight from Kat-/day when a Santa Fe passen. }mandu to New Delhi. ger train hit their stalled auto- The wreckage was reported t0| mobile. jhave been found by a Nepali! One youth scrambled from |cow-herder about 50 miles north|the auto seconds before it was jof the route the missing plane! crushed. jwas flying. -- : | Engineer Norman Bickers An intensive air and ground/saij the train--travelling at 79 jsearch has been under way|miles an hour--fused the auto jsince the plane disappeared. A|to the cow-catcher and pushed jreport last week that the plane|it a mile down the track. Bodies had crashlanded with all aboard|wer strewn along a 105-yard |safe was checked out as false.| path. ' | | Killed In Crash SHALLOWATER, Tex. (AP)-- Seven teen-agers en route to a church picnic were killed Thurs- OPPOSITION SAYS ERRORS ADMITTED Times. . Thant said the UN troops would protect Union Miniere's properties in Katanga if the company quit paying taxes to the province. Taxes, dividends and royalties paid the Katanga government} last year totalled $40,000,000. FACILITIES SCATTERED | In his cable to The Times,} Terwagne said that the compa- ny's facilities are scattered over a 6,000 - square - mile area in which UN forces are largely ab- sent '"'and where the Katangese gendarmerie is in complete con- trol." Terwagne added: "All of these facilities, some} of which would take years to} replace, would be at the mercy) of saboteurs or other hostile forces." Last Sunday, a Times dispatch from Washington presented the! view that a Congolese federa- consistent non-interference, "As a matter of fact we have began a three-day honeymoon | Thursday, The bride is 22-year-old |n0 choice. Union Miniere, and Albina Santos, a social] |indeed the world, have been worker. The groom is William |Publicly warned by Katangan Souza, also 22. The third man, | Officials that non - compliance Fernando Guimaraes, is the | With their regulations would be | mitted bridegroom's prison guard. The triangle developed when Souza, serving a 10-year sentence for robbing a jewelry store, met the social worker during her visits to the prison. They fell in love. The prison warden per- the wedding and granted the couple a honey- moon in the resort town of Caxambu. But he ordered guard Guimaraes to accom- | pany them and maintain vigil- ance- Said Guimaraes: "I consider my mission a delicate and discreet one." | countered by all means at their disposal." Another Red Blast | In Current Series UPPSALA, Sweden (Reuters) Swedish scientists reported Rus- sia touched off another nuclear blast today in its current test series in the Arctic. The scientists at the Seismo- graphical Institute in this north- ern Swedish city estimated the power of the blast at three me- gatons--a megaton is equal' to) 1,000,000 tons:of TNT. | "Grandpa's never forgotten," |an abortive attempt to block) |Algerian independence. | The 62-year-old Bidault has {been named in documents as ithe new head of the Secret | Army in succession to former general Raoul Salan, who is jserving a life prison sentence \for terrorist crimes and other /treasonous activities. | The arrest warrant was is- sued following the lifting of Bi- last month by the French Na- tional Assembly. Bidault was premiér of the 1953, and also served as foreign minister in the provisional gov- ernment of President de Gaulle shortly after the Second World War. Bidault has been. in hiding since April. 12, when he disap- peared from his home in Paris. He now is believed to be in Ba- varia, West Germany, and to have set up the headquarters of his council there. The council seeks to re-estab- lish French rule over Aigeria which became independent from France July 3. Last month, a Paris magis- trate opened an inquiry into charges that Bidault was plot- ting to overthrow the French government, Bidault, a veteran of the First World War, volunteered again in 1939 and was serving as an infantry sergeant when he was captured by the Germans the following year. In 1941, he was released and went to live in Lyon where, while posing as a meek history |teacher, he joined the resistance movement and finally became its head. He was in Paris to greet de Gaulle on his triumphal return at the end of the war and be- came foreign minister. For nearly a decade he played a prominent part in var- ious governments, as premier, deputy premier, foreign munis- ter and defence minister. More Cabinet Changes Hinted OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-|But he indicated the early ter Diefenbaker's cabinet re-jappeletment of parliamentary organization Thursday may be| secretaries and announcement followed by a further consolida-jof the date for opening of the tion of responsibilities of minis-| first session of the 25th Parlia- ters. ment, elected June 18. Informed sources hinted at ac OR ae the possibility of further moves| MINISTERS DEFEATED following the appointment of} Thursday's appoint ments) three new ministers--including|atose from the election defeat} the surprise addition of a front-|0f five former cabinet ministers rank financial figure -- and|--Postmaster - General William changes in portfolios for six. n , The immediate reaction of the, Dorion and Mines Minister three opposition parties, who|Jacques Flynn, all of Quebec; will outnumber government rep-| Works Minister David Walker! resentatives in the next Parlia-|0f Ontario and Solicitor-General ment, was that the changes| William Browne of Newfound- made no substantial difference land. in the makeup of the adminis-| In the new cabinet lineup tration and were an admission former justice minister Davie of mistakes by the former Fulton, 46, fills Mr. Walker's | cabinet. place in the works 'department. Opposition attention focussed, Mrs. Ellen Fairclough was mainly on the shift of Donald|moved to the post office and | Fleming to -justice minister and|replaced as immigration minis-| jattorney- general and his re.|ter by R. A. (Dick) Bell of placement at finance by former) Ottawa, session, entered the cabinet as] It is expected he will be|but Quebec's Conservative rep- mines minister, At 41, he isjcharged with. responsibility for| resentation in the Commons now youngest of the 22 cabinet mem- long - Tange government plan-/ was 14 of the province's 75 seats bers, jning, and his appointment may| compared with 49 at dissolution, G. Ernest Halpenny, 59, min-|be aimed at winning the confi-| The cabinet shuffle--Mr, Dief- ister without portfolio for the|@ence of the business world for|enbaker's second major realign- last two years, became state|the government. Mr. Diefen-|ment of forces since 1957--left secretary. |baker regarded Mr. McCutch-| Newfoundland without a repre- As the cabinet now stands, it eon's entry into the government| sentative and boosted Ontario's is without a solicitor-general--a\ 5 a prize acquisition. |representation to eight from| post without statutory respon-| Another shift in the distribu-| seven. can be filled to accommodate| Mr. Halpenny of Mr. Nowlan's| with tradition came with the} regional interests. Justice Min-|former task of reporting to|swearing-in ceremony itself, It ister Fleming will fulfil the|Parliament for the Canadian| was the first time since Confed- duties, |Broadcasting Corporation andjeration that it has taken place Forestry Minister Hugh John|'#¢ Board of Broadcast Gover-|in the prime minister's resi- Flemming took on Mr, Nowlan's 6 = Page than at Rideau former duties in the 'revenue! ; ! CHANGES anaes Severnar, = Bqnerals department as an_ additional hag one _ in| ceamence. The Changs Was responsthility. Mr. Diefenbaker, dressed in| made necessary by the injury to ei lies aid sasibte 4 | Striped trousers and short black|Mr. Diefenbaker's ankle which! a Maint, ¥Y more) coat. for the Swearing-in cere-|/has confined him to home since! significant addition to the cab-|mony, and carrying one crutch! July 23. | inet, is M. Wallace McCutcheon,\to relieve the stress on his 56, of Toronto, vice-president of|broken ankle, told reporters; NOWLAN NEEDLED E, P. Taylor's Argus Corpora-|that other appointments would! All concernedy were in good) cutfing taxes at the moment," he warned. ' "Oh, too bad, George, you'll never be a success as finance! minister," interjected his pred- ecessor Mr. Fleming. Mr. Nowlan, 63-year-old MP for. Digby-Annapolis-Kings, later stated he plans no basic changes in financial policies. The aus- ; : } |terity program would be termi- Hamilton, State Secretary Noel Sibilities, but a vacancy which|tion of duties was transfer to| Perhaps the greatest break|Nated "as soon as possible" and the dollar would remain pegged at 92% U.S. cents. The new finance minister, from Wolfville, N.S., becomes the fifth Nova Scotian to be named to the post in times of] | great economic problems, Others since Confederation were W. S. Fielding at the time of the 1911 reciprocity treaty, Ed- gar Rhodes and J. L. Ralston during the 1930s and J. L. llsley' during the Second World War. The cabinet shuffle and ap- pointments were met by a Lib- ukhobor Group Emerges daults parliamentary immunity|4 French government in 1949 and VANCOUVER (CP) -- There|been signing documents as Re- now are three groups of Douk-|formed Doukhobors for years hobors in British Columbia. ;but not one has paid much at- Doukhobors released this|tention. : week after a magistrate refused| The reformed group claims it to commit them on conspiracy|has 2,000 followers in the Kres- charges made that clear Thurs-|tova, Shoreacres and Glad y. 'eo areas. Sons of Freedom follow- Heretofore known as the Fra-\ers are reported to number ternal Council of the. Sons of|about 50. Freedom Doukhobor- sect they} The Freedohites -- or Re- made it clear they now wished|formed--Doukhobors,are onty a to be referred to as the Re-|splinter of the 25,000 orthodox formed Doukhobors. Doukhobors living in the prov- Joe Podovinikoff, spokesman)ince. for the group, said: "We area body separate from the group) . s generally known as Freedom-| Animals Drift ites. We want to make sa clear, to try to break the ae nal confusion in the mind of A C. Y d nal cont cross Canada The 54 men in the group were) MOF FETT FIELD, Calif. among 70 men charged with|(AP)--Two monkeys and four conspiracy to intimidate .the|hamsters drifted in a balloon Parliament of Canada and the legislature of B.C. through acts of terrorism. The remainder had been convicted of terrorism pre- viously and were returned to prison. Magistrate William Evans of Nelson, an expert on Doukhobor affairs, said when he dismissed the charges the accused were Reform Doukhobors. Certain across Canada today in the third of a series of high-altitude tests considered a prelude to manned lunar flight. The balloon and its four cap- sules were launched from Goose Bay, Labrador Thursday night- Ames Research Laboratory scientists following in a track- ing plane, plan to release the capsules electronically Saturday revenue minister George Now- lan & newcomer to the tion, who severed his connec-|be made later. tions with Argus and 21 other Pau! Martineau, formerly par- companies to become a senator |spirits for the occasion and| | jeral party statement describing He noted that Quebec as/ after the ceremony Mr. Nowlan Mr. Fleming's i. oted that Quebec now has|\).- teady: fr reporters leming's removal as fi ques-/nance minister as "'an admis-| cabinet. Mr. Diefenbaker gave no def- liamentary secretary. to Mr \inite word on further cabinet announcements 'Speaker of the Commons. last| and minister without portfolio. vacancies to 10. 1 four ministers in place of the the timing of Diefenbaker and Deputy|His appointment.reduces Senate|Six it had before the defeat of|do in the ticklish finance post. three in the general election,| tions about what he intends to| "No, no. I have no plans for| sion of the government's| |disastrous economic policy all] Jeanette LaFleur of Syracuse through the past five years." night after about 54 hours of flight. They expect the capsules to drift to earth by parachute somewhere between Edmonton, and Prince Albert, Sask. other elements were Sons of Freedom, The people known as Freedo- mites and their leaders have PLUNGES THREE FLOORS Caught in mid-air by Post- Standard photographer Bob Johnston was 17-year-old floor ledge of Syracuse Psy- chiatric Hospital' today. The girl was not seriously injured as she landed in bushes break- as she plunged °c third- | ing her fall (AP Wirephoto) e i | "

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