THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some believe in: heredity and others have dumb children. ¢ Oshawa Gimes s '14Year-Old Oshawa Girl Raped, Beaten < Page 9 WEATHER REPORT Cloudy with sunny periods and some scattered light tonight. showers, winds VOL. 91--NO. 188 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1962 Authorized es Second Ciass Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES KILLER'S VICTIM, JULIA WOLA Girl Shot, Body In Ditch TORONTO (CP)--The nearly- nude body of a 16-year-old Tor- onto girl who had been raped and shot through the heart was found Sunday in a_ roadside ditch near the Humber River at suburban Clairville. The weeping parents of Julian Wolanski identified their daughter's body. Investigators said the body wearing only silk stockings, had been lying in the ditch for three days after being thrown from a car. A young woman riding on a horse found it about 4:30 p.m. » Sunday. An autopsy showed the girl had been beaten, raped and then shot with a .32-calibre pistol. The girl's stepfather, Michael Danek, and her mother, Jean, , said they had last seen her about 4:20 p.m. last Tuesday. Inspector William McNeeley said the rest of the girl's clothes, including a white blouse, green pleated skirt and - brown flat shoes, still are miss- NSKI Border Guards Mob At Berlin BERLIN -- Border guards|which were enveloped in a thick early today, a West: Berlin po-|wouldn't even go to dances with- fought a fierce tear gas battle cloud of gas. : I wae as massed West Berlin-| The water cannon withdrew/f ing. He said she also had been carrying a straw summer hand- bag containing $10 when shc was last seen by her parents. SHY WITH BOYS Julian was described as "shy"" |with boys. She was the sort of girl who went on picnics with her parents every Sunday. She Fight Wall iceman kept all Westerners|out her parents. 4 rom within 400 yards of the) The autopsy showed the bul- ers screamed their hatred of the|about 30 yards. The gasping,|monument, atop which an East) let, fired at close range, passed built "wail shame" on the first anniversary for fresh air. | of its erection: | Western police were soaking The battle erupted in the Wil-|wet, as were the youths carry- helmstrasse, opposite the for- ing the cross. mer, Nazi.air ministry. It now; A company of 100 West riot is the seat of several East Ger-'police was rushed to the scene. man government ministries. (There were about 80 Eastern po- East police shot a stream of|lice--vopos -- massed on the water from a water cannon at|other side of the wall. West Berlin youths carrying a| The Western reinforcements wooden cross along the wail. |were ordered up after thousands Enranged West Berliners then|of booing, shouting persons hurled stones at the water can-|massed abong the waill. sa 8 15,000 GATHER | Eastern guards then tossed) At jeast 15,000 West Be tear gas grenades into the thickly massed crowd. The gre-| wall, witnesses estimated. nades went off with loud explo-| mrosic and work had og $s) t sions and poured out clouds Of |, fj , roan 4 \for three minutes in West Ber- stinging, choking gas. lin to mark the anniversary. THREW GAS GRENADES Wreaths were placed along)' West police immediately|the wall in memory of at least} threw about 150 tear gas gre-|37 persons who have died on it| nades over the wall. They fell/during its year of existence. all around two water cannons, At the Brandenburg Gate Private Medical | must get any closer," the West- ern policeman said. guarded the wall from both lin police sources also reported seeing several Soviet jeeps on reconnaissance missions rare sight along the wall. ' armored half-tracks, water can-| , S rliners | non and troops on trucks were! |were at various points on the|observed through field glasses nists began building the wall last Aug. 13 ina move officially | |stated to be aimed at stopping} teurs." Its real purpose was to stop the flow of refugees to the West. issued a statement lauding the| |courage of Berliners in the last| ary budget. lyear and assuring them that| h with of/ choking crews had to get out)German armed guard stood through the heart and lodged in duty. the spine. Police, after checking the \girl's friends and background, | jsaid they are following several) "We are sorry, but no one!| Thousands. of armed men | Ben Bella Cuts | Police Power Of Guerrillas ides to prevent trouble. The East Germans double heir border guards. West Ber- Across the wall, East German} _|Bella's ruling linto a unified national army. 'provocateurs" a | - P nd sabo with commanders of the ing zones), the bureau The Western commandants| | A communique said the "patience, courage andijaya commanders had shown) and all e caught up in a heart-clutching jadventure, as. two Russian sat- 'ellites chase each other around | the globe, followed by as many | Russian citizens as can possibly |erowd around their radio and) ite ALGIERS A a Ben nation all but wired to its com- political bureau) munications systems listening The East German Commu.(today stripped guerrilla troops|for the latest base-voice an-| of their police and judicial pow-|nouncement of 'vnimanie, tov- ers in a move to bring them) arjshchi . . jrades . At the end of a two-day meet-i venture in identification. guerrilla willayas (military) tion as expressed by the crowds also @N-/tha: have been gathering and jnounced that the army from| dissolving since Sunday after- now on will draw its funds eX-/noon in Red Square, or moved clusively from a national milit-/hy the loud-speakers blaring i | patriotic wil-|--------- Left ileads but did not expect an Im- mediate arrest. The girl who found the body, |Linda Wilson of Toronto, was on ja horse being led by Gerald Stevenson, 20, of a nearby} farm. When she shouted that) she sa USS MAY PUT HIRD MAN UP Two Astronauts w what she thought was| | |a mannequin Stevenson climbed] 7 idown the slope to see. |. Bill Dononuk of Malton, fish-| / ling in the nearby Humber) | |River, heard the commotion, jinvestigated, then stopped sev- to get the police. The roadside was for half a mile in each di- rection in a futile attempt to ifind the girl's missing clothing. Julian's stepfather told police Sunday night that she was "a real good girl." The couple came with Julian from Poland 10 years ago. A neighbor said Julian was) "a little mother' to her three younger half-brothers, John, 10,| Teddy, 8, and Stanley, 6, all of| 7 whom were born in Canada. & cial course she was taking. "She was a nice, gentle girl,"'| : "She wasn't! 7 neighbor said. \flightly, and didn't run around] * | \w ith boys." Rus leral cars and told the drivers| © searched| interest' in a special commer-! sian Crowds ¥ g # ORBITS OF VOSTOKS In Team MOSCOW (AP)--Two Russian astronauts hurtled on through space today in an_ historic double flight that once more f put the Soviet Union ahead in 4 Pet As %, ee 2 si - Get Big Thrill By THEODORE H. WHITE MOSCOW {AP)--This capital Russia have been levision sets, : The adventure which has this ."' (attention, com- . .) is above all an ad- It is not only mass identifica-| music, choral song, and marches along Gorki Street and other main thoroughfares, but a personal identification. For the Russians, Andrian Nikolayev and Pavel Popovich, like Gherman Titov and Yuri Gagarin before them, have be- come overnight dream symbols, individuals ~ with names, pa- rents, faces, biographies, lifted out of the bleak anonymity which coats all human effort in this vast collective society. The Russian government, through the sophisticated or- chestration of radio, television and press, is sparing no effort to satisfy the country's appe- tite for human heroes, larger than life but still part of life. Unlike the presentation of American space flights, which make Americans participants in the minute-by-minute progress reports measured against pub- licly announced flight plans and schedules, whose goals, objec- tives and problems are known vigilance" the western cause|'great understanding" and were| Support Sought | REGINA (CP)--The provin- mission would stop , recruiting] cial Keep Our Doctors Commit-|doctors upon the signing of the tee has unged residents of Sas-| agreement. katchewan to subscribe to pri- vate medical insurance ag-|discrimination agains t doctors encies which, '"'will guaran-jalso was broken, the statement tee - . . a freedom of choice of|said. doctors and insure adequate) "It has been brought to our medical care." attention that co-operative clinic In a prepared statement re-organizers are using pressure leased Sunday following a re-\to coerce certain doctors to organization meeting in Regina, practise under the plan. the committee president, Rod- ney Thomson of Prince Albert|mission has refused to recog- accused the provincial govern-jnize the private agencies as ment of breaking several cov-| promised.' enants of the Saskatoon agree-| The Medical Care Insurance ment, Act amendments passed Aug. 2 The 29-point agreement signed permitted the operation of co- July. 23 by the provincial gov-|operative, non - profit medical ernment and the Saskatchewan|clinics and the continued oper- College of Physicians and Sur-|ation of private medical care|fer of space travellers from one|ent assembly to be elect | space vehicle to another. geons ended a 23-day boycott|insurance agencies. Another section, promising no/Beals, men in space vehicles certainly|istrative and "At the same time, the com-|shows are maintaining their lead in space travel," he said. would prevail. in agreement with the new ; é is ~~} measures. Space Twin 'Link | The six-man political bureau is dictating Algerian policy 5 '« since Premier Ben Youssef Ben Big Achievement OTTAWA (CP) -- Dr. C. |Khedda of the provisional re- gime stepped down to become a S.|mere figurehead. dominion astronomer,| Searches, confiscations The orders brought the bu- jreau in line with Ben Khedda's -- Guilty | Of Unfairness | WASHINGTON (AP) -- The International Ladies Garment Workers Union was judged forming their own labor organi-) |zation. ; | George A. Downing, trial ex.| to all, the Russians' presenta- tion makes the Russian people an audience to a drama whose script will be known only as it unfolds. In Moscow there has been no such period of agonized concern and worry as wrapped the fate and/ guilty today of a wide array of|of Scott Carpenter when for 15 said today that the ability of|tax collecting by the guerrilla|unfair labor practices in trying|minutes he was lost to radio Russia's space twins to commu-|chiefs had previously been|to prevent its employees from|contact from Cape Canaveral, nicate with each other appears} banned. to be the most significant ach-| ievement in Russia's new space venture. and all America waited on his fate. For the Russians, the last two policy: He had blamed the wil-jaminer for the National Labor|days have unrolled like a mys- "This experiment with twojlayas for much of the admin-|Relations Board, made the rul-| tery. story with an assured economic chaos Russian scientists|since independence. The political bureau has in- |troduced far-reaching measures that ing against the ILGWU, a union} affiliated with the AFL - CIO} and headed by David Dunsky, | an AFL-CIO vice-president. | happy ending. Each fact is given cold with no predictions or promise following it. Each news item follows another over Dr. Beals said that if man is|to bring the loosely co-ordinated; Among the charges cited by|radio or television like a happy One of the political bureau's nstitu- ed Sept. 2 on a one-party system. by the doctors of the prov- ince's compulsory, comprehen- ance scheme. Legislative amendments out- RUSSIAN SPACE FEAT PRAISED lined in the agreement were made law at a special one. day session. of the Saskatch- ewan legislature Aug. 2 The Keep Our Doctors Com-, mittee was formed during the| dispute between the doctors and) government, | RECRUITING DOCTORS permanent British doctors are|tastic" and vivid new proof of now being recruited through' soviet scientific powess. the Saskatchewan agent general) British scientists. said and Dr. Hugh Gainsborough of Big Lead For Soviet | LONDON (AP) -- Russia's|nity," the 80-year-old head ofjan early development of anti-jwhole load on one giant multi-|war, appeared at least tempor- ? jlatest pioneering space feat was|the "It has been established that/hailed abroad today as '"fan-|said. Roman Catholic Church/satellite satellites that could Sir Bernard Lovell, director/such as the U.S. Midas and of Britain's Jodrell. Bank radio|Samos Satellites. the astronomy launching of two manned space/tracked the Soviet space vehi-|get a second spaceman into or- observatory which) "It is fantastic shooting to London," the committee state- ships into close orbits may give/cles, called the Soviet feat "the|bit within a few miles of the ment said. This, the statement said, was a contravention of a section of the agreement which said the Medical Care Insurance Com-| oon, Pope John said he hopes the lead in the race with the United|i CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 . FIRE DEPT: 725-6574 'HOSPITAL 723-2211 |homage to God." i they are inscribed in the an-jj space, could: then become ex-|| jful progress, with a solid foun-|t |dation, of the human fré'er- the Russians an important m 1-|most jitary edge as well as a larg?)man has ever seen jfantastic."' pressions of the true and peare-|ahead of the first American as-|from a spac2 said of So- hours," secretary Interplanetary development|other after 24 a strik-| Leonard Carter, the British remarkable ng demonstration of the depth British scientists the moon in about eight ng the Soviet Union an impres-|it much closer, say under four "These historical events, as|sive lead over the United States! years." n space research. Lovell said it is nals of scientific knowledge of} Some said the Russians might|considered that the best methodjers in the sky,' lunar flight. is platform launched in segments and joined in or- bit rather than by lifting the and a man on the moon yearsjof staging a ronaut, | They added it could lead to |Dubinsky expressing "'hostility"| he the Federation of Union Rep-) jresentatives, an 'organization |formed by ILGWU employees to, obtain bargaining rights on wages and grievances. stage. rocket. Tokyo University said: these successful launchings"' as bel troops who deployed for bat- jtle at the height of the four-day | Kuo Mao-jao, president of the|crisis were reported back at their bases and the country out- wardly appeared calm. States to land a man on thejof Russian resources -- quite|ciety. "This practice of orbita!;Russians and said their accom-| But one' officer rendezvousing means that|plishment "testifies anew to the) the dispute said: " generally|whereas we thought of a inanjadvanced, outstanding achieve-|civil war, a c jnew space experiment "would|viewed the-twin Russian space|on jassume the significance of anjvehicles. in close orbit as giv-|years, we must know think of!technology." these if the Soviet Union used a cold war tool. jCommunist Chinese deh ages of Sciences, congratulated the iments of Soviet |gentina's military crisis, which 'brought the country near civil arily resolved today. However, destroy 'spying space vehicles} Professor Takeo Hatanaka ofjintense political manoeuvring "Tt;continued among the army of- would worsen the international/ficers. | to travel in space he must_be/ guerrilla units directly under|Downing were statements by|surprise, making the faces of able to communicate with Gther| central government control. space vehicles besides stations on earth. The next experiment|main tasks is to draw up lists would appear to be the trans-jof candidates for the co: cooks, servants, subway riders, auto drivers crease into smiles} as it comes. | Troops Report | Back To Bases In Argentina BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- Ar- | Nearly all the loyalist and re- involved in} We are in a old civil war, but! science and!a civil war to the end." The latest crisis was patched Continue Talk About Germany WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. State § Rusk and: So- viet in discussed the German today. "We continued to discuss the question of a German peace settlement, picking up where it was left in Geneva by (Foreign) Minister Gromyko and Secre- tary Rusk," Dobrynin told re- porters after the meeting. He said no notes were ex- changed at the meeting, but de- clined to answer a question as to whether any new proposals were submitted. Dobrynin also was asked whether the simultaneous orbit- ing of two Russian cosmonauts came up in his conversation with Rusk. "We talked about it; there was no discussion, only an ex- change of veiws," the diplomat said WASHINGTON (CP - AP)-- President Kennedy has congrat- ulated Russia on its latest space accomplishment, but a member of his space advisory group warned of the military implica- tions involved. While relaxing. during the weekend at Boothbay Harbor, Me., Kennedy said in a state- ment: ~° "I congratulate the Soviet Union on this exceptional tech- nical feat and salute the cour- Anatoly Dob- rynin problem in a 20-minute meeting the race to the moon. "Moscow radio said that by 8 a.m. Maj. Andrian Nikolayev, 32, in Vostok III had neared the end of his 31st earth orbit and journeyed more than 776,000 miles since his blastoff early Saturday. Vostok IV carrying Lt.-Col. Pavel Popovich, 31, went up Sunday and had orbited more than 14 times and covered about 366,000 miles. Tass said the two spaceships travelled so close to each other the astronauts could see each other and converse by radio. (As the two spaceships whirled along similar orbits at :18,000 miles an hour, Reuters news agency said Moscow |buzzed with unconfirmed re- |Ports that a third manned space jshot in the series was planned for today. NO CONFIRMATION (Reuters reported that-an un- source said that altogether five the series. Officials refused to confirm or deny the report. (The space shots were be- lieved by Western observers to be the first step of a long-term program to put a platform in space for an assault on the moon.) Tracking of the Vostoks in Japan and Ohio indicated they were about 75 miles apart--a hair's breadth in terms of space --much of Sunday. But the Ohio Research Centre in Cleveland said that by the evening they had moved 385 miles apart. Moscow radio said in its 8 a.m. broadcast today that both Soviet spacemen had enjoyed a restful seven-hour sleep 'and feel fine." "During their sleep the pulse of both cosmonauts was near 60," it continued. "'The appara- tus of the spaceships functions without fail." The double flight marked a Soviet cosmonauts who are or- biting the earth in twin space- ships. The films were flown to New York after they were recorded in London from Euro- vision broadcasts picked up from Moscow. ABC, CBS and NBC then transmitted them across their television networks Sunday. North American radio listen- ers also heard recordings of the voices of cosmonauts Andrian Nikolayev and Pavel Popovich age of her two new astronauts. The American people, I know, wish them a safe return." In Washington, a spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said: "Until we know more about the Soviet mission we can't com- ment intelligently about it." reporting back from their or- bital flight. official but reliable Moscow shots would be carried out in Astronaut Malcolm Scott Car- But Edward C. Welsh, execu- & tive secretary of Kennedy's Na- tional Space Council, said "Russia will be able to practise a form of military blackmail by threatening to put a thermonu- clear .bomb into orbit, and we can see by the ambunt of weight they can put up that they would be capable of such blackmail." "We are gradually closing the gap in Soviet space leadership § but I couldn't be more im pressed with what Russia now has done in putting two ships into orbit," Welsh added in an inttrview. "We could do more than we now are doing. We could in- crease our effort on the mili- tary side of space. exploration. In Peking, a!! Chinese news-|up with the swearing in Satur-|We still haven't pushed devel- papers today headlined space to the flights of the two space 'ships as well as jgraphies and the spacemen. thejday of Brig-Gen, Cornejo Sara-| opment generaily|news of the two Soviet "'broth-|via, 53, as the country's new|basis. * devoting much|war secretary. | The appointment was gener-| on a_ round-the-clock The Soviet accomplish- ments likely will affect our space plans by adding stimulus bio-|ally considered a victory for the|to our effort." photographs of rebel faction led by Gen, Fed- erico Toranzo Montero, Across the United States, tele- \ylewers saw films of the two Flight fantastic feat of Soviet rocketry that the United States does not hope to match until at least next year. The ability to send up a second space ship 24 hours after the first one had gone up, and bring it into orbit in the vicinity of the first ship marked an im- portant advance toward the day when satellites can join in space for construction of a space plat- form from which a moon shot can be made. British scientists also said the Soviet accomplishment could lead to the early development of military satellites that would home on such spy-in-the sky satellites as the U.S. Midas and Samos and destroy them. Soviet announcements so far gave no indication when the two spaceships would be. brought te earth. An informed Russian source said he believed the two cos- monauts would not come down today. Sir Bernard Lovell, director of Britain's Jodrell Bank radio telescope, said in London Sun- day he had 'been advised by Moscow sources that the flights would continue "a few days." TO LAND IN. CASPIAN Rol of the bert. Citron, ef Smithsonian Institute's track- ing station near Johannesburg, South Africa, said a study of the orbits indicated the ships were fired from: Kosmondor in Kazakhstan, about 220 miles east of the Aral Sea, and would land about 380 miles north of Astrakhan on the Caspian Sea. Premier Khrushchev declared jubilantly that by these flights "the Soviet Union is the first to blaze the path to group flights in outer space." His elation was echoed by the Soviet military newspaper Kras- naya Zvesda (Red Star), which said, "no matter what efforts it (the United States) is making, the gap between it and U.S.S.R., far from being nar- rowed, is widening." the Soviet scientists hailed the flight as a triumph but avoided predictions about a moon trip. Blackmail Possible U.S. Official Fears penter, who circled the earth three times last May, expressed confidence in the U.S. space program. Carpenter, vacationing at Pal- mer Lake, Colo., said the Rus- Sian dual-orbit would not alter it. "We've got a good plan put together by intelligent men and we're sticking to it." Earlier, the Soviet news agency Tass reported that a message from Carpenter, re- ceivtd in Moscow via The As- sociated Press, had been re- layed' to spaceman Nikolayev while he was in orbit. PILLT OF SOVIETS VOSTOK IV