Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Aug 1962, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

WEATHER REPORT Sunny and less humid this after- noon. Sunny and warm Tuesday, winds light. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a man's son not only fills his shoes but his socks, shirts and suits, too. The Oshawa Cimes SPACECRAFT AIMED FOR PLANET VENUS 2 Die, 6 Hurt | OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1962 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per SIXTEEN PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 200 OranArmy Raps Move: By Rebels ALGIERS (AP) -- Military, "parliament," the National) leaders controlling western Al-|Council of the Algerian Revolu-| geria today condemned the at-|tion (CNRA), to revise the na-| temptby anti-Western guerrilla| tion's political leadership. | officers in Algiers to impose| The 72-man council met in their will on their new nation. Libya during the Algerian war The 45,000<man regula rand laid down general volicy army's general staffin Oran for the nationalist. Members of accused the rebellious guerrilla the council belong to various leaders of wilaya (zone) No. 4,factions of the National Libera-| in central Algeria of '"'irrespon'| tion Front (FLN), the dominant! Hope To Correct sible acts obstructing the re-| Nationalist soup during the re-| birth of the state and the re. Dellion against France, but vival of its economy." their public following has never cle ica aar a been tested at the polls. The general staff called on) 'The guerrillas' statement was| central Algeria's civilian popu- filled with: bitter attacks on All lation to form "vigilance com- gerian "neo-colonalists," "feau-| mittees" against the wilaya No. dalists" and former 'collabora+| 4 commanders. It appealed to tors with the French the wilaya's junior officers and' 'The statement called for land| troops to rally to the support of reform and socialization of: in- Deputy Premier Ahmed Ben qustry thro ugh unconditional Bell's political bureau, which it) expropriation. It justif*ed the called "the nation's only legiti- guerrillas' arbitrary ar-| mate authority. rests, seizure and searches in| Ben Bella flew to Oran over|Algiers as a continuation or the| HUNTSVILLE: Ont. (CP) --| Two persons were killed and six others injured' when their crowded, unlighted motorboat was run down in the dark on the Lake of Bays Saturday) |night. | Mrs. Evelyn Ruth Cave, 21, 51400 Sate the weekend and the political|struggle against terrorism by| bureau abandoned its work in| the European Secret Army. Algiers as the country's provi-| It, dismissed Western diple-) jmatic protests against raape,| sional government after the|igoting 'and general insecurity| wilaya No, 4 command began/as coming only from "repre-| to whip up public opposition in| sentatives of NATO countries! the capital to the civilian polit-| Whose support .of French. im-| ide! landibes jperialism is notorious." The ica statement suggested the pro- The rebel military leaders|tests were not worth consider-| were supported by an estimated ing because they did not come! 20,000 guerrillas. from African-Asian or Commu-| Strengthened by the armyjnist diplomats. general staff's strong declara-| -- oR: tion of support» Ben Bella was| reported planning to return to! Algiers to attempt to persuade | the wilaya commanders toac cept his leadership. PUT OFF ELECTION Election of a constituent as- sembly, scheduled for Sept. 2, was put off indefinitely. No one could forecast when and how Algeria would obtain an effec-| Robbery In Port Perry PORT PERRY (Staff) |Safecrackers broke into the J. J, Gibson poultry processing |plant early today, stealing WASHINGTON (AP) -- The, In holding the students' revo-|such hit-and-run pounded at Marathon, Fla., two Brooklin had $50 stolen from C the pa apparently used] its office safe; two attempts : were made to crack the Clare- Meanwhile a Cuban propa-|mont Co-Op safe and the Clare-| ganda barrage continued! mont Post Office safe was tam- against the United States, pered with. | After inspecting damage in-|. Chief Cameron said he ex-| flicted by the raiders, Castro|pects an early arrest. Whitby said in a formal statement: |OPP, Port Perry and Oshawa "We hold the United States/police departments are investi- government responsible." i gating. Lord Raps Tory Market Handling LONDON (CP) Britain's} The audience cheered and ap. Conservative government is not|plauded vigorously during six telling its people the full story|major speeches by leaders of of European Common Market! various anti - Common Market wROS 3 J cy | $1400, MARINER 2 STARTS JOURNEY | Port Perry Police Chief John} oe a ee Cameron said the 1500-pound| . ® safe was moved from a front of- é fice to a back room where Tresses : ] ulr nitro-glycerine was used to blow s is |off the door, 'in a professional 'manner'. e The plant is owned by J. J. | Gibson, reeve of Port Perry. into avana CLLITYG rotice tere | | Police were tipped off on the) |break-in by General Motors Se- ' ) J attacks only|curity Police in Oshawa. They tive elected civilian govern-|80vernment pressed an investi-lutionary directorate responsi-|serve to aid Premier Fidel Cas-|were following a GM disposal ment. gation today to determine ble for the sortie, the state de-|tro's claim that he needs Com-|truck to the factory dump on Wilaya No, 4 issued a fiercely whether the shelling of Havana) partment warned Saturday that/munist arms to build up his de-| Harmony road north when they worded statement accusing the| Violated the United States Neu-/ 'any repetition of such action! fences, |saw three men jump out of a een ire Leaner' the| 'tality Act. jby any group could involve the| Salvat said he and 22 other|car and run through the-fields. Algerian revolution : | The state department al-|provisions of the Neutrality!men ranging.in. age from 19 to|One of them dropped some # ready has pinned on a Miami-|Act." A spokesman said the/23 used a PT-boat and a 31-| papers in a ditch. The statement, read Sunday|pased exiled Cuban students| government had no advance|foot cruiser in the raid. More| The papers were found to be to a crowded press conference,| group the responsibility for Fri-|knowledge of the attack. than 60 shots were fired at Mi-|from the Port Perry poultry demanded an emergency meet-|day night's attack, but has not| ays |Tamar during the seven-minute|plant and the Port Perry Police ing of the old revolutionary) saiq whether the raiders sailed AIDS CASTRO - attack and a hotel headquarters| Department was notified. from this country. While U.S. officials personally of Soviet-bloc technicians wasiCAR STOLEN | The neutrality law prohibits| have some sympathy for exiled) damaged. | iis standoned aux ib elton Mapie Inquest |launching from U.S. soil armed|Cubans, they take the view that) «we gig it as Cubans seek- od to have been este treasl j attacks - view yp he "--< rast jing freedom for our homeland,"| stoyftyille | |with the United States. The jus- F he said. "We did it to show, 'i ' Ra S Lack Of lice department is trying to find| Blast Injures }democratic republics the world| thy 16 ie ee Figs p out whether prosecutions under} | over that we mean business," |tampering in Ontario County e lag peg Fee called od | Sg te Coast Guard, under! this month n a Miami press conference El Pp ] State department orders, im-| Gace 3 ~ ; Co-Ordinatio Sunday, Juan Manuel Salvat, even eop e| : | Cashway Lumber Co. in jleader of the students group,! , MAPLE, Ont. (CP)--A_ cor-| declined to say where the ships I P So d oner's jury decided Saturday!used in the off-shore shelling of n alry un | there was an appalling lack of Miramar suburb were based | co-ordination between govern-|But, he declared, 'I don't feel PARRY SOUND (CP)--An ex- ment departments responsible! we have violated any law of any|plosion at the height of a fire for fire and safety inspection at|country." in downtown Parry Sound the Superior Propane Limited a were are "| sprayed spectators and firemen} plant here. * with glass early Sunday. The jury, investigating an ex- B ] Up Eleven persons were injured, plosion which: took the life of erlin roar two of them seriously. Royce) one man Aug. 4.and destroyed Mackliam, 38, of Parry Sound| or ruined 21 houses, also said Blamed on Reds = Robert Haughn, 14, of Rich- there was a lack of assumption wood, Ohio, vacationing here, of responsiblity. MOSCOW (AP)--The United Conilder Ih Seeetok emer Caren rev recurrenc States, in a note today, held| © separa ' o eat esa si . the Soviet Union lt for| 8ency operations removed glass! uch mishaps in future, the jury h dd disond | from their heads recommended shootings and disorders along, 'T°! i : : the Berlin wall and again in-| Nine others, including two) 1. That the Ontario fire mar- vited it to a four-power confer-| firemen, were treated in hospi-| shal's office, which comes _un- ence to deal with the problem,|tal and released. Fireman Rob- BY der the provincial attorney-gen-| The note replied to a Soviet/ert Farrow, 21, required 52/ eral, assume responsibility for|occage to the United States| stitches to close gashes in his| regular inspections of fire pre-'rriday protesting against the| leg, back and ear suffered when Bh facilities in similar stoning of Soviet troop buses injhe was hit by a flying glass|negotiations, the Earl of Sand. groups. They are members of Pants: West Berlin and warning that) door blown out by the explosion.| wich told an anti-Common Mar-|the anti-Common Market league 2. That a study be made of/necessary measures" would Police estimated damage at| iat mass meeting here Sunday.| which favors instead closer eco- the way all stationary pressure pe taken. about $400,000. Two buildings) "yor Sandwich, 56, a Conserv./nomic ties with the Common- tanks.or vessels are placed and) "The U.S. government under-| Were destroyed and two heavily) ative member of Parliament,| wealth. installed. The jury was "'con-| stands the concern of the Soviet| damaged. said Prime Minister Macmillan| The resolution opposing Mar- cerned with evidence suggesting government about the stone| There was no immediate indi-\js determined to have Britain|ket membership also called on that the size and pressure set-!throwing at Soviet personnel,"|cation of the cause of the explo- join the European Economic)the British goyernment "to use ting or relief valves may notithe U.S. note said, "but the So-| sion. First reports that a pro-|Community on "President Ken-|the forthcoming Commonwealth| have been adequate. viet government cannot expect! pane gas heater at the rear of|nedy's instructions." prime ministers conferences as 3. A provincial-level study be|to escape censure for, orto one building had exploded were The crowd of 2,500 in packed | an opportunity to develop fur. made of possible legislation to avoid the consequences of, per later discounted when it was Albert Hall upheld overwhelm-|ther Commonwealth relations." control location of industries mitting these brutalities to oc- learned the tanks had been dis-jingly a resolution urging that} The Commonwealth. prime likely to result in danger of fire|cur in the sector of the city for|connected at the height of the! Britain not join the Common! ministers are to meet here Sept. or explosion which it is responsible." | blaze, [Market In Boat Crash | and Wolfgang Block, 24, both|™ from Toronto,were fatally _-- gled by propeller blades when al larger craft tore into them from} behind. Both boats--the 16-foot, five-|j horsepower craft rented and op- erated by Block and a 20-foot cruiser skippered by Harley Neilson of Toronto--were bound for a dance at the Muskoka re sort of Bigwin Island. The collision came about 150 yards of the southeast corner of the island. The night was filled with screams as the eight occupants of the smaller craft were hurled into the water. Mrs. Cave's left arm was severed by the cruiser's propel- ler and Block was slashed across the back. Both died in hospital here. Other craft bound for the dance at Bigwin Inn. altered course to help the floundering people. The six survivors,who. were treated for shock and minor. cuts, were Mrs. Cave's husband, Gordon, 26; Mrs.Patricia Block 25; Ann Moore, 18, of Toronto- Antonio Manze and his wife, Sylvia, 29, of New Toronto, anc Nicholas Prozza, 25- of Toronto. None of the occupants of Mr. Neilson's boat was injured. They were Mr. Neilson and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parkinson and their son, Harold Jr., of the Toronto suburb of Forest Hill, Police said the 16-foot boat did not have running lights. It = seeing its way with.a flash-| t. The craft's owner, Fred Boothby, said there were only three persons in it when it left his livery earlier in the evening hag it contained four lifejack- ets, Beeton Search Ends, Lacking Trace Of Girl BEETON, Ont. (CP) -- The largest search ever conducted in Ontario was called off Sun- day night without finding any trace of 10-year-old Thomasina Baker, abducted a week ago from her parents' farm. Some 2,000 men had joined in the search this weekend after a week of unsuccessful hunting by smaller search parties. A provincial police spokes- man said police investigations will be intensified. He said they would check every fragment of information and every tele- phone call they get. Insp. Jim Harris ordered the search force to disperse at about 6 p.m. It included troops} from nearby Camp Borden,! seven light planes, a helicopter,| lands and forests personnel and| other volunteers. | Insp. Harris said it was prob-| ably the largest search ever| conducted in Ontario. Another} police spokesman said: 'Public co-operation has been wonder-| ful." Dogs brought into the search| | from Kingston and London, Ont., picked up hole from which she was ab- ducted. But they lost track of her at a point where she ap- parently got into a car. CAQUETTE DEMANDS PROSPERITY Threatens Dief's Government TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP)|27," he said, "I will precipitate|the western provinces to extend| what political figures I admired|I admire in Hitler his economic} Real Caouette, deputy national/the worst crisis ever seen in the | to the French and Catholic min-|most during that period. While|reforms and I consider that he| leader of the Social Credit|House of Commons." jority the same treatment that) millions of Canadians were hun-|employed for war instead of! party, threatened Sunday night! Mr, Caouette made the state.|the Anglo-Saxons enjoy here in'gry, Germany and Italy were peace the ideas which he had." to "overthrow the government") ment at an open-air rally in| Quebec." living in the midst of plenty} at a press conference follow- unless Prime Minister Diefen-\Trois - Rivieres' Place Pierre) Earlier, the deputy leaders|and, to me and many others,ling the convention, Mr. Caou. baker comes up with "some-| Boucher, held at the conclusion|denied that he had ever chosen|this led to admiration for their|ette said that if asked today to thing jew, a forecast of pros-'of a weekend party convention! Hitler and Mussolini as his po-' leaders name his political heroes of his-| perity" at the September ses-! attended by some 800 dele-' litical idols "However, I never said Hit-|tory "it would-be neither Hit-| sion of Parliament. gates. The denial resulted from an ler and Mussolini were my po-|ler nor Mussolini but William "If Mr. Diefenbaker offers us| with him on the platform |article in the current issue of, litical idols." |Aherbart, the founder of Social an austerity program on Sept. were the party's national leader,|Le Magazine Maclean, quoting! The article said Mr. Caouette|Credit who was premier of Al- Robert Thompson, and J. A./him as saying in an interview) was asked: "Who are your po-|berta from 1935 to 1943, and Mongrain, mayor of this com.|June 16 that the Fascist dic-|litical heroes of history?" |Pope Pius XI, who put out an munity 90 miles northeast of/tators were his political heroes) y_ quotes him as replying @aevelical which was. the best Montreal. of history. \"Mussolini and Hitler," "and| charter of the | rights of man Mr. Caouette, a fiery orator] "I have been the victim of|then adding ever published. from Rouyn, Que., also urged! detractors who have taken my| « socialism and| Both Mr, Thompson gnd Mr.| better treatment for the French-/remarks out of: context," Mr.)¢gommunism a dictatorship, |Caouette denied any possibility} language minority living in Can- Caouette told the convention. Social Credit seeks the liberty Of a rift in Social Credit party ada's western provinces The interviewer and I were of the individual. 1 admire Mus. Tanks "In the name of the Canadian| speaking of the economic crisis|solini's quality as a leader and| Said Mr. Caouette: 'Confederation," he said, "I ask'of the 1930s and she asked me'I regret that he was a Fascist.! Quebec CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Fascism, like resolution urging "We of| provinces to band together and| statement of the President of stretch out our hands'form "a sovereign republic." 'the United States and the | to the western provinces, not as French-Canadians but as Cana. nt. the missing] } girl's scent beside a swimming] ; MB EXPLORER DIES Vilhjalmur Stefansson, 82, Arctic explorer, died Sunday at the Mary Hitchcock Hos- pital in Hanover, N_H., Stefans- son began his Arctic polar explorations in 1904 and in the following 15 years spent 10 winters and 13. summers in the far north. « (AP Wirephoto) Error In CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- A Mariner spacecraft rocketed into space today and scientists reported there is a possibility it will pass near the planet Venus as planned despite an early trajectory error. If its early course if followed the Mariner will miss the planet by more than 600,000 miles, but an effort will be made by remote control to steer it back on course. The key to jockeying Mariner II into its proper path is a small 50-pound thrust motor which is to be fired by ground signal eight days after launching when the spacecraft is more than 1,000,000 miles from earth. By then scientists will have calculated the vehicle's patch velocity precisely and will know just how long to fire the: small motor to straighten out Mari- ner's course. SHIP BLASTS OFF Mariner II blasted away from Cape Canavera at 2:53 a.m, GENEVA (AP)--Britain and United States today proposed a treaty for an unpoliced ban on nuclear tests.in the atmos: phere, under-water and in outer space--and thé Soviet Union immediately turned a cold shoulder on the idea. The Western powers proposed to continue working for a treaty to ban tests in all, environ- ments--but with provisions for international on-site inspection of suspicious tremors which might indicate underground tests. Less thantwo hours after the West offered the partial ban at the 17-nation disarmament con- ference, the Soviet deputy for- eign minister, Vasily V. Kuz- netsov, turned thumbs down. Kuznetsov told the meeting he would study the Western draft treaty for a parital ban excluding underground tests. But his subsequent remarks left no doubt his government would reject it. PRESENTS PROPOSAL U.S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean presented the West- ern proposal at the seventh ses sion of the 17-nation disarma- ment conference. He said the United States and Britain, while still preferring a comprehensive treaty including a ban on underground nuclear explosions, were offering the partial ban in the belief that it would represent "a substantial positive gain for society." West Proposes Bomb Test Ban first made knownin a joint statement by President Ken- n and Prime Minister Mac- E , issued by agreement to- day at Newport, R.I., where-the president was visiting. The two leaders said that un- like underground testing, nu- clear tests in the atmosphere, underwafer and in outer space "can be effectively verified without onsite inspections." Dean also put before the con- Course EDT atop a powerful Atlas. Agena B rocket. Half an hour later the rocket put the space. craft on an interplanetary traj- ectory at a speed of about 25,500 miles an hour. The exact reason for the spacecraft being off course in its early stages was not imme- diately known. But officials sus- pected that an abnormal rolling motion in the first stage Atlas rocket might have affected the trajecory. The rolling motion occurred for about 50 seconds of the five-minute Atlas flight, A statement released by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration five hours after the launching said: "Early tracking data from Mariner II indicates the space- craft will pass Venue by not more than 600,000 miles some time in the second week in De- cember. Because of the incom-. plete early tracking data it is not now possible to refine this figure to a great accuracy. "However, the mid - course motor on Mariner II may be capable of correcting this miss- distance to bring the spacecraft considerably closer to Venus. "All systems on Mariner II are working normally and good telemetry is being received by the deep space instrumentation facilitty stations." Although Mariner II was re- leased into space at a speed of 25,500 miles an hour, it gradu- ally began to slow down as planned for the long haul on the 109-day, 180,000,000-mile journey that is supposed th take it within 10,000 miles of the sunlit side of Venus Dec. 14. Shortly after the 447 - pound ayload was carried aloft, NASA officials said both stages of the Atlas-Agena rocket ap peared to have fired properly. ference a second British-Amer- ican draft treaty to bantests in all environments for all time. HAS NEUTRAL IDEAS Dean said that this draft in- cludes ideas expressed by the neutralist delegations at the Ge- neva conference and takes ac- count of improved Western methods of, detecting under- ground explosions. But he stressed it also provides for in ternational inspection on the site of a suspicious earth tremor, a provision that assured in ad- vance its rejection by the Rus- sians. Last week the Russians also rejected the idea of a partial ban policed only by each na- tion's detection equipment, such as the United States and Britain proposed today. The idea of such a partial ban was originally put before the conference by Brazil. So- viet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov told the disarmament conference his Live Viruses Made From | Inert Chemical CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP)-- A Utah scientist has succeeded in making infectious viruses out of inert chemicals for the first time, it was reported here to- day. Does this mean that life has been formed in a test tube? "If viruses are considered to be living objects: then the an- swer is yes," said Dr. George W. Cochran, who described his experiments atascientific meeting here. However, he said the most significant result was that by producing viruses apart from a living cell, the virus-formation process could be studied more government was only interested closely in seeking counter-weap- The U.S. - British offer was|in measures to end all testing. Loa eg i } ! t dians." Delegates adopted resolutions condemning the Conservative government's austerity program and the extending of credit to § Communist China. "In questions of trade with Communist countries,"' the reso- | lution said, "there should be no} question of credit, Only cash} exchanges should be tolerated." Other measures urged the fed- eral government to get out of| the field of direct taxation, to} raise family allowance pay-} ments and to establish a basic! salary of $5,000 for married men and $3,000 for bachelors The convention balked on a Canada's 10) ¥ Yl ANDREW HATCHER, Sistant White House secretary, reads the as- press jomt Prinie Minister of the Uniied Kingdom on the proposed ban to end all nuclear testing. The press conference was 4 4 called last night shortly be- fore midnight to make the announcement. (AP Wivephoto) rf

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy