Oshawa Times (1958-), 29 Aug 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT Every wife knows where money goes but can't figure out how it travels so fast. FOR TODAY Che Oshawa Times -- REPORT Sunny and very warm today and Thursday. Winds light. VOL. 91--NO. 202 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ON Authorized os Second Class Mail TARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1962 Ottawa and for payment of Postage in irtment Il Post Office De ash, THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES WOUNDED PEASANT FOUND Vietnainese soldiers proach a wounded Mac LONDON (AP)--Prime ap- peasant found in a flooded rice paddy during an attack on Commun- ist forces in the southern del- Shows Previous Assurances On Unity Min ister Macmillan revaled today|sion interview that as a Ger-junion." previous assurances to Chancel.|man and a European he greeted| : lor Adenauer of Britain's whole-|Britain's eventual membership|ter continued, "that once the|---------- "4 Soviet Proposes End To All GENEVA (AP) --The Soviet} Union today proposed that all three nuclear powers end atomic weapons testing at the beginning of next year. Vasily V. Kuznetsov, Soviet first deputy foreign minister,| | suggested the test cutoff to the] |76th session of the 17-nation dis- }armament talks. U.S. Ambassador Charles C./| Stelle and Britain's minister of |state, Joseph B. Godber, cate- gorically turned down the idea {immediately Western sources said Kuznet- sov's remarks made it clear he | was proposing an unpoliced mo- ratorium which is completely unacceptable to the West. Conference sources said |made the proposal in an infor-) mal manner 'during a_ long }speech in which he again cate- | gorically rejected parallel West-| jern proposals for ending tests in the atmosphere, underwater |and in space, or in all possible environments including under-| | ground. Kuznetsov told the delegates the Soviet Union supports a cut- the let-|off date for all nuclear testing. Pre oe wt ture was taken by AP Photog- rapher Horst Faas,. who ac- companied the expedition. --(AP Wirephoto) ta region of Viet Nam. The peasant was injured during a short battle that marked the landing of the Viet Nam/ forces by helicopters. This pic- Adenauer said in the televi-;move toward greater political "I can assure you," hearted interest in working for|in the economic union of West/Brussels negotiations (on Brit-) European political unity pressed some doubts. Macmillan ordered publica t tion of part of a private letterjall members of the Common : he wrote Adenauer Jast month.|Market should also be members|there was no conflict between) Adenauer, in a television inter-|of a European political union. had. ex- view pressed reservations abou British participation in a west European political union. The publication of Macmi lan's private letter, described|™P' here as unprecedented, under-jical union of Europe as well after|Germany, the West German leader had ex-| Netherlands, | France, Italy, Thejain's bid to join the Common I U Belgium and Lux-| Market) are successfully con-} nquest rges jeapoute. But he said that. it}cluded, we shall wish to join| . 3 | | More Suitable | had never been documented that| wholeheartedly in this task." | The British foreign office said) what Macmillan wrote Aden- Adenauer said Macmillan told)/House of commons. In the House, Macmillan said that | Life Jackets ommonsihad always been clear that! ~oRONTO (CP : "s dine ae ys } )--A coroner's July 17 "British membership 'membership in the Common jury investigating the drowning the Common Market does not|Market involved political impli-|o¢ a Toronto youth recom- ly membership in a polit-\cations but that Britain would] mended Tuesday that a federal have to judge, step by step, how| government committee design a "the British House of © L he| | the Nuclear Tests | ; lf That date should be the begin-, A moratorium covering all ning of next January and he in-|te sts, including underground dicated his government will] explosions, is completely unac-| # raise the matter formally later.|ceptable to the United States e Earlier, several Westernjand Britain. : posed the test cutoff for early} They are willing to sign an) in November, and said this date|unpoliced agreement 'to stop); came over the English simul-| tests in the atmosphere, under. taneous translation system. Kuz-|water and in outer space, but! netsov spoke in Russian, andjrefuse to accept a ban on wn- the November date apparently|derground testing which cannot came from a mistranslation. be efficiently controlled. | In an effort to overcome the Girl, Man Die | East-West deadlock the two | | Western powers have submitted In Car Crash | prehensive test ban providing ifor strict controls over under- COOKSTOWN, Ont. (CP) [girl and a man were killed and| DAVID GREGORY ground testing, and a ban on tests in the.three other envi- ,| ronments with no control what- ~*, | soever. % He) ; ; ; Kuznetsov categorically re- the girl's sister critically in-| j.cted the two rn for the jured Tuesday night in a Cat-/third day in a row. Conference j has said that it will take no final decision before scientists have evaluated the military sig- hificance of the Soviet series in ithe light of Western security. Fleming Named Acting PM truck collision near this town| sources said he used the same | Cc ng 5 miles south of Barrie. larguments, but expressed him- Police today identified the) self in even more forceful terms of Downsview, Ont., and Linda] fore, | : . Lou Neal, 15, of Gravenhurst," w, sources considered|, OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- Western source ar Ont | ikely that the United States|#Ster Diefenbaker presided at a ¥ lit unlikely that the United z{cabinet meeting today in prep- Newmarket hospital in} neloes.t iately preter si ospital i poerseigey re immediately on the Wah tis cnitend thas Coeninons: | : Soviet idea. wealth prime ministers confer- | Downsview, driver of the trac-| pressed its readiness to let the He told reporters: tor-trailer, was released after/Soviet Union have the last 1, Justice Minister Fleming being treated in hospital. ne car driven by Waters went out) of control while entering a de- tour on Highway 400 and jumped road one-quarter mile south of here. victims as Richard Waters, 36,/than Tusday and the day be-| During Meeting Carol Diana Neal, 16, was t2-/and Britain would commit/orotion for his departure next James Easton McLuskie of} The U.S. government has Xl enow in London. Police said the northbound|ing an effectively policed agree- while he and External Affair a cement block median line in Man Cut In Half | Sept. 10 3. Preparations of the legis: lative program for the Parlia- round of testing before conclud-| wij) pe acting prime minister 3)Small change and a box of ment to suspend tests. But it) Minister Green are in London.|Shells in his pockets. 2. He will arrive in London Friday, Sept, 7 and have pri- vate talks with Prime Ministers Menzies and Holyoake of Aus- tralia and New-@ealand, and with other Commonwealth lead- ers, before the conference opens lined a growing coolness be|But in a letter he wrote me twe@m the two statesmen on the|four days later, Mr. Macmillan issue of Britain's future role in|Said quite the contrary -- obvi- any type of boat The jury under Coroner Mor- | mentary session opening Sept. 27 are well advanced, and min- the Continent. French President|ously de Gaulle also has been d scribed as privately cool to Brit-, Macmillan's letter said the} Bands Ba kk ish entry in the Common Mar-|British government had been} Cc ket, although both he and Aden- "watching with sympathetic in-| auer have stated publicly they/terest want Britain in Fallout. of milk contamination from ra- dioactive 'iodine-131 has forced dairy farmers in two states to shift their cattle from fresh pastures to dried 'fodder barns. Three other states al are considering the move. With both the United States and Russia having bombarded the skies with nuclear tests this year, more and more Ameri- cans are reported becoming concerned, about the risk drinking fresh milk from cows which have grazed in areas where nuclear fallout has been heavy. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, Senate Democratic -whip, sai the forced shifting of cattle to more expensive stored feed is threatening the mid-west with economic disaster. "This is what- happens when the world goes crazy and when mankind engages in the sort of suicidal madness of an uncon. trolled arms race,"' said the Minnesota senator. 'The con- stant contamination of ie at- mosphere by radioactive fallout is a threat to the living--not only a threat to the living--not a threat to health . .. it is death and sickness on the instalment plan." Minnesota and Utah have shifted dairy cattle from fresh pasture, Iowa, Kansas and Mis- souri are studying similar plans but so far-have made 'no deci- sion. IS SHORT-LIVED A byproduct of nuclear tests, iodine-131 is a short-lived radio- active substance which loses one-half its strength in eight days. Stored feed would there- fore be relatively free of con- tamination. So is canned or in so Worries Cattle Farmers WASHINGTON (CP) -- Fear powdered milk bec d exceeded. because his ministers Four Guerrilla »far to go. lane ope suitable for use in . jafter hearing from Jolyon ahagen \ley, chief sailing instructor of the Island Sailing Club, at lifejackets approved by the Ben Bella 'transport department do not meet buoyancy requ rements| ALGIERS (AP) -- Four of | because they don't keep~ the} Algeria's six guerrilla. com-|Wearer's face out of water. ;mands and the regular army's| The jury was_ investigating general staff are lined up in|the drownirg earlier this month| |Support of Deputy Premier Ah-jof Alexander Peters, 16, de- |med Ben Bella's bid for control|scribed as a champion swim-| |of the newly-independent coun-|mer. He was found face down) | try in Lake Ontario after his canoe The military leaders, who | capsized He was wearing a publicly announced Tuesdayitwo-pad lifejacket of a type jeheth of dine re saea. = the their support for Ben Bella, are} which the transport department Aare si dairiber, gs Pro. | leaving to Ben Bella's politicaljhad refused to approve after ' i. oM-) bureau the decision of whether|June, 1957 | sumers to use force to quell the rebel-| Humphrey says the cumula.| lious guerrilla commands n Al. HOLD TEST tive effect of iodine-131, if taken giers and the Kabylie Moun-| A test of four types of ap- in sufficient quantities, could| tains. This apparently rules out Proved lifejackets carried out cause cancer of the thyroid an immediate armed showdown| by Toronto's Island Yacht Club "and is, particularly dangerous since the bureau members have| Showed only an improved ver- to children." voiced opposition to any fratri-|sion of the jacket the Peters A spokesman for the Public|cidal military clash. |Health Service suggests Hum-| Leaders on both sides were|Wearers' face out of water: if phrey has over-dramatized the reported fearful of the conse-|he became unconscious. situation; that although the nu-| quences of civil war in the na-| Keith Cole Angus, superin- clear fallout in some parts of|tion rocked by continual crisis|tendent of anutical safety for the U.S, have been relatively) since it gained independence|the transport department in Ot- high, nowhere has the estab- eight weeks ago. The Moslem/|tawa, disputed. the test and said lished health safety ceiling been population, weary after 714 'those taking part in the experi- years of civil war and terror- ment were probably trying sub- ism, strongly opposes new consciously to keep their faces : aca | bloodshed, down in the water. also that the dairy farmers in! Co) ouari Boumedienne, the, The jury found that the two states took voluntary!regular army chief of staff, and Darwyn Smith, 14, had jaction to shift cattle to stored) publicly threw the support of'taken the canoe without per- feed; that this action was not! his 45,000 troops to the political|mission from the club to which demanded by the U.S. govern- bureau at a press conference |they belonged. The jury blamed ment. However, in Minnesota it| Tuesday in Setif, 150 miles east/the Toronto Sailing and Canoe |was reported the move wasjof Algiers. He was flanked h'/Club for laxity and recom- jtaken on the strong advice of|commanders of four guerrilSi;mended a full-time supervisor a state advisory body. 'wilayas, or zones. to be in charge at the club. e-|were of a different opinion. the efforts of the six} (Common Market countries) to! This spokesman emphasizes Peters ton Shulman, made the ir Mor To Curb Cancer boy: was wearing would lift the | isters will work on the details while he is away. 4. Canada will press forcibly condemn Russia in the NEW YORK (AP)--A manjfrom birth with a spina bifida| cut. in half to get rid of the|--a two-pronged spine which is|to paralyzed, cancer stricken| open over the spinal cord. |United Nations next month for lower part of his body, has| When he was older 'an ulcer|Soviet impréialism. survived for one year and iS|on his buttocks became a huge| 5. He had no comment on on the road to what may be-|sore and cancer began its|Social Credit Deputy Leader come a useful life. _ : deadly work. Doctors predicted|Real Caouette's recent state- Surgeons at the University of|death within one year. Iments. "He has been com- Minnesota Hospitals, where the When 29 years old the man mented on over and over; news operation was performed to re-| vas takén. to University Hospi-|is only news when it is up to es the sees Roney 2g eee tals and given his choice of|date." iy weich 6 oot the its 'kind imited days with useless limbs) Canadian represcntatives for any length of time. and pelvis or a possible resto-|abroad have been canvassing The backbone was severed at| *#tion- ___ {other countries for support of a The man chose the operation.|resolution condemning Russia's MURDER- SUICIDE M INK TO FIRE DEAT Constable Shot, - Dies In Hospital HAMILTON, (CP) -- Police Said today the physical charac- teristics of the man who shot a constable in downtown Ham- ilton and then committed sui- cide are similar to those of Bruce Griffett, 38, being sought in connection with the death of his mother and another person. Griffett spent a year with the RCAF and "tentative identifica- tion must await confirmation from military records in Ottawa," Assistant Police Chief Howard Moreau said. Failing .such confirmation, Chief Moreau said, detectives will have to work from evi- dence at the scene of a fatal fire at the Griffett house Tues- day. Autopsies showed that Mrs. Martha Griffett, 55, and Milton Nelson, 58, a neighbor who tried to rescue her from her blazing | | | head injuries. Police said the injuries were consistent with damage that could have been caused by a hammer found near the char- red bodies. Police believe stains on the hammer are blood, but an official laboratory report has | not yet been released. |HAD 6MALL CHANGE The man who committed' sui- jcide after firing a blast of his | Shotgun at the policeman, Const. \David Gregory, 33, had only on himself. Const. Gregory was known in Hamilton as the police force's house, both suffered extensive) Only the lower part of his jaw and part of the back of his neck remained after he used the gun ig " . = = a former policeman, saw a man walking along a street carrying what appeared to be a rifle or shotgun wrapped in newspaper. Brewster drove to get Gre- gory and the two returned 'to where the man was walking. Gregory walked up to the man, who turned a = constable with a blast f. shotgun. FIRES AT MAN Police said the killer casually walked down the street. Brews- ter ran from his car, picked tip Gregory's revolver and fired-a shot at the man, hitting him in the hip. The killer fell, then shot himself with the shotgun, Police said the dead man was carrying no identification. A woman said she heard two shots and went out into the street. Gregory told her to "calk 'the police, for God's sake, call the police." _ Gregory died shortly after be- ing admitted to hospital, five blocks from the scene of the Shootings at the intersection of Augusta and Hughston streets. Girl Provides Lead In Rape, Murder Case NTO (CP) ~ A Palish- gitl. who identified photographs of a man she said tried to rape her provided tite rom the |*'young philosopher."" Senior of- jficers said he always took the view that all criminals are basically good. He is survived by his wife, a stepdaughter and a stepson who has been in a coma since a 1955 accident. Const. Gregory was shot from a range of 50 feet, Police said George Brewster, CNE Attendance Up From Last Year's TORONTO (CP)--Attendance jat the Canadian National Exhi- bition Tuesday was 178,500, up 500 from the same day last year. So far this year 103,000 more persons than last year have attended the CNE. h g lice Tuesday night with what they believe is a lead in the slaying of 16-year-old Julian Wolanski. The girl was taken to police eadquarters, where she idene tified a man from police files. She said the man posed as a doctor, came to her homé and attaaked fier. _The Polish girl said she fought him off and he ran away. Police said the man whose photograph was singled out has a record of indecent assault. The Wolanski girl was beaten, raped and shot through the heart more than two weeks ago. Her almost nude body was found in a suburban ditch, Twenty-eight detectives have been assigned to search for the man identified by the Polish irl, | RESULT OF PICKETS Shipping Loss Cited {o|big James .D. Norris interests, tangled with the SIU of Canada when it switched its labor agreements for its crews to the TORONTO (CP)--A Canadian|relations with clients shipping company subjected to) pickets and boycotts. Canadian and American picket-|__ b IS A MINIMUM ing told the federal shipping in-|*°,, # | quiry Tuesday that time lost so}. "1 think the $744,000 is the| rival Canadian Maritime Union, |far is worth at least $744,000, |Very minimum estimate," Mr. |created by the CLC to break the In a limited shipping season, | Kaake told the inquiry headed/ stu. The SIU was ousted from time lost is never regained. said |by Mr. Justice T. G. Norris of|the CLC two years ago for raid- Controller L. A. Kaa) » of Upper British Columbia. Maurice ing. |Lakes Shipping Limited Wright, counsel for the Cana- The SIU claims a tockout by due | | CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 The estimate ranges from the|dian Labor Congress, suggested} i 1961 navigation season's start to| the losses in tme might ap- va Pare. . last July 31. Mr. Kaake said it|proach $2,000,000 by the end of} Court injunctions in Ontario | doesn't include cargoes that had|the current navigation season if|ended SIU picketing. jto be turned down because of;Conditions remained unchanged. | It continues by American al- j difficulties caused by the Sea-| Mr. Kaake said he might bejjies of the SIU, including the |farers International Union of|/9verly conservative but perhaps/Seafarers International Union of jCanada (Ind.) or its' American) another $500,000 is indicated for/North America, in American jallies the rest of the year if no change lake ports where tugs, grain occurs. jloaders and stevedores decline The figure also omitted such factors as "somewhat strained"! Upper Lakes, owned by thel to cross the picket lines. the naval, but no vital organs " vee F or intestine were removed, doc-| "If we had let it go, it would imperialism, he said. tors said. jhave cost him his life anyway," | The normal outlets for waste|Dr. Aust said. j materials had to be relocated, | } and the patient = | | |have a catheter or tube in his 75 Ch h | | bladder. urc men | Six surgeons took part in the " operation. ] d Att The case was described in a Jai e er |report to the ae ye . gress of Physical Medicine and) R ] P t Rehabilitation meeting her e.| acla rotes University of Minnesota staff} aLBANY, Ga, (AP)--Seventy- Peomaggotav rg P Sratiey aver ve iclerayesn. on8 = hed aay *|members from 10 states o rage sp ST penta: neuToRaINS jail cells in three team; Dr. Frederic J Kottke |southern hc age ete Dr, Walter J Dawson and Dri artested Tuseday aiier Jesite KM 'Waeton '\trying to hold a prayer vigil) Tdentity of the 30-year-old pa-| Protesting racial barriers in| tient is being withheld. The| "Teer: Catholics and Seca Physicians would not say wherej;snts men and women, Negro| as by nec ggcoal es and white persons, young and) ference Drs. Aust, Kottke 'and | 014s went to jail after refusing) @ Easton said the man was Sorel or eg BAPWAIK 10 'lyzed from the waist down) 'We have come to offer pray- ers to God," said a clergyman. "Go back and preach to your own congregations and convert your own cities," said Police Chief Laurie Pritchett who or- dered the arrests after three times warning the group to dis- perse. Separated by race and sex, groups were sent to jails in nearby Leesburg and Newton Court injunctions 'also have|and others were lodged at tre) been chtained at various ports|County and city jails in Albany.| for some of the 17 Upper Lakes| Bail was set at $200 each on|} vessels. lcharges of disorderly conduct, |; Earlier, Mr. Norris rebuked|°teating a disturbance, congre-| William Glasgow, SIU agent at/8@ting on the sidewalk and re-| Fort William, for being unable/{using to obey an officer. | to recall whether a certain Up-|, Albany, after nine months of iper Lakes vessel had been|intermittent racial strife, wasn't picketed at Fort William this|noticeably ruffled by the latest! year. jincident, although some of the} : The justice said e|Several hundred white spectat- Bes a bunty helo cheered and applauded the | . Se ik */arrests. Negro leaders gave no| § | memory needed refreshing. clear indication of their next| Other witnesses called by Up-|move but Dr. Martin Luthor per Lakes testified about var-|King Jr. said many of the ious incidents this year in-Can-|clergymen when released might ada or the U.S. and difficulties|recruit hun reds of other} Irene Haword of Saskatoon, encountered in getting ships|churchmen for a similar pro-} Sask., gets in some practice berthea or loaded. test. for the country's first National \ \ Fitness Festival to be held in the Canadian National Exhibi- tion in Toronto next Monday. ' it PHYSICAL FITNESS FESTIVAL More than 2,500 will partict pate. _ --CP Wirephoto r

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