Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Sep 1962, p. 2

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oa pees I New Yore eee hi te ec Aaa el 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, September 4, 1962 Britain Sees Arrival -- Of Prime Ministers RED WAVES TO Russian officer riding in a heavy nine-ton, six-wheel ar- in the U.S. sector. The heavy Soviet armored cars defied - BERLINERS the Russian war memorial in West Berlin. There was no in- By MOHSIN ALI | Lord Privy Seal Edward LONDON (Reuters) -- Com-|Heath, Britain's top negotiator monwealth prime ministers be-|at the Brussels talks, has made gan. arriving here today 'orjconsiderable progress toward their Sept. 10 "summit confer-|getting an outline of the terms ence" to discuss the Common-junder which Britain could join. wealth's future in the face of} But Macmillan's hope of get- Britain's plans to join the Eur-|ting a complete outline of an opean Common Market. agreement on Britain's applica- First to arrive was keith\tion received a severe setback Holyoake, prime minister ofjat the beginning of august, New Zealand. Australian Prime|when a weary Heath and the Minister Robert Menzies and|six Common Market ministers Nigerian Prime. Minister Alhajijadjourned their marathon talks Sir Abubakar Ta&fawa Balewa|Wwith vital points unsettled. were flying into London later! Heath* now has dropped his today. demand for 'comparable out- The Australian delegation also|lets" in the Common Market will not irclude Trade Minister|for Australian, New zealand John McEwen and treasurcr/and Canadian farmers if Brit- Harold Hlot ea the other|ain joins. members of the New Zealand s delegation are Deputy Prime WANTS PRICES DOWN Minister John Marshall, Exter-| He is trying to win reason- nal Affairs. Secretary A, D.|able future opportunities for McIntosh and Deputy Secretary|Commonwealth farm products, Foss ahaa han and wants the Six to agree to keep. future farm prices low enough to discourage European farmers from producing enouglr to make Europe self-sufficient, thus giving outsiders a chance. But the signs are that Aus- tralia and New Zealand are lig. ely to oppose the approach. _The Commonwealth confer- ence brings to London the lead- ers of some 700,000,000 peopie, about one-third of the world's population. They represent Can- ada, Australia, New Zealand, India; Pakistan, Ceylon, Ghana, |Malaya, Nigeria, Cyprus, Si- lerra Leone, Tanganyika, Jam- | aica, Trinidad and Tobago. The Thodesia-Nyasaland Fed- eration, though not a full Com- monwealth member, will be represented by its federal. prime | minister, Sir Roy Welensky. | The colonial territories of Brit- | ish Guiana, Kenya, Malta, Sin- | gapore and Uganda are 'sending 'ministerial representatives. The l5-country conference-- with certain colonial territories| also represented--will last 10 days. It is the biggest in Com- monwealth history. 6 The Australians, Canadians) and New Zealanders, whose) economies might suffer if Brit- ain joins the Common Marke:, are sending high-powered deie- gations. CANADIANS DUE FRIDAY Set As E By STUART LAKE OTTAWA (CP)--The medical Interne Method xample ja period of internship was held | jup Mnday as an example for|™ The Canadian team, led by Prime Minister John Diefen- profession's policy of requiring graduate doctors to go through | other professions to follow. | Ray Jones, a vice-president of terference with the cars by military personnel. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Berlin) orders from the United States and its Western allies to stay away from Checkpoint Charlie with their load of guards for ---- |the E.°B. Eddy Company, told » a students seminar that too Voting Power mim wares' fini: Hike Opposed By U Thant jtaken notion they are ready to take over key positions. "The graduate must realize) UNITED NATIONS (AP). --| executive. Acting Secretary - General U ' |Thant Monday night announced} The four-day seminar, spon- he ses any move to give sored by the National Federa- peg Gounizies increased tion of University Students, is \ votting powers in the A studying the impact of the uni- \Nations at the expense of small|VeTsity on Canadian life. About counities : |150 students representing 40 uni- : versities are attending. The Noting a so-called _crisis of | a ' 2 dj : tri _|seminar goes into its second confidence in the United Na day today. mored car known as BTR- 152's waves as he passes boo- ing and fist-waving West Ber- liners at Checkpoint Charlie baker, is due here Friday. Ex- |ternal Affairs Minister Howard ;Green will accompany the Ca- nadian leader. British Prime Minister Har- j}old Macmillan, who will preside at the conference, has given re- peated assurances that Britain will not join the six-nation Eur- opean economic community unless the Commonwealth's vi- tal inferests are protected. MASS GRAVE IN IRAN Takistan, Iran, Monday. There | (AP Wirephoto via radio from was no private grave avail-| Tehran). able in the quake area. | Political Comments Centre On Euromart > LONDON (CP) -- Politicaljence, the 11th meeting of the| The prime ministers of Can- comment here is beginning to|prime ministers since the Sec-jada, Australia and New Zea- concentrate heavily on the Com-|ond World: War, is likely to bejland plan to discuss the Com-| | Shrouded bodies of earth- quake victims are prepared for mass burial in a ditch at INTERPRETING THE NEWS Wilaya 4, New Algeria Terror , By ALAN WALKER jvexatious forces of Wilaya 4, a| tions because so many sc | Th his' thik Monday Ste. Joan! Canadian Press Staff Writer |group of youthful Moslem hold- cote hare Decmme, ment Nara nae at Algerians who chorea hlons, ting ewer St Wee "There ate suggestions thai|Profession is an intelligent safe-\Streets, after last March's) 70) Belle, : the principle of one vote per|suard. Graduates in other fields) cease-fire agrecmem nok Ott) 'Meanwhile Ben Youssef Ben member will perhaps have to|--esPecially French - Canadians|they may have been pane \Khedda, president of the pro- be reconsidered. I would like tol eiin a . ccOpt Olin the frying pan into the vision) aorenmatak' ee. tar 4 .| activities. state unequivocally my position) 'te S ecause | A ; . \Evian, wi i ili confer cs eld AR --_--------|tions. Australia, Ghana and OL naga an ae poe this po bag On his as on\feel their degrees entitle them| The marauding European Se- nag Pil ically gg By «8 dia are thought to be opposed : veered away into the darkness.|any other proposal, I am bound|t®- immediate p ro motion tojcret Army Organization has) Port himself, can do little but P ts '3 k S unless present terms can be al- | jthat he is only equipped with some tools and gimmicks and |must learn how to use them," said the 52-year-old Hull, Que., Man Who Shot. Police Officer Identified HAMILTON (CP)--The man who shot a police constable in Hamilton early Wednesday and then killed himself was posi- tively identified Saturday as Bruce Griffett, 38. Police had also been search- ing for Griffett in connection with the slaying of his mother, Mrs. Martha Griffett, 69, and a neighbor, Milton Nelson, 56. Their bodies were found in the fire-charred ruins of the Griffett home Tuesday. Police said they apparently had been beaten to death with a hammer found Man Faces Charge In Boat Collision ORILLIA (CP) -- Christopher Young, 30, of Oakville, was charged Monday with dangerous mon Market issue as the Sept.{a historic if not necessarily a'mon Market issue and their) 10 deadline for the Common-|decisive gathering. mutual problems in an informal! wealth prime ministers confer-| The_14 or 15 Commonweaith session before the main confer- ence approaches. i \leaders, most of them with sev-| ence begins. Britain's application to joinjeral members of their cabin-| _Most observers here class! operation of a. vessel and failing the European Community hangs/ets, witl confer for the first Canada with Tanganyika to remain at the goene: Of an over Westminster like a huge|time at Marlborough House,/doubtful about British entry. avcident. question mark and its implica-|ueen Mary's former residence.|New Zealand, Nigeria, Ceylon,) The charges follow an accl- tions 'punctuate policy discus-|It was presented by the Queen Pakistan and the West Indian] gent 9n Lake Couchiching Sun- sion on all levels. as a centre for Commonwealth|countries are considered likely| qay when a 25-horsepower out- The Commonwealth to support entry with reserva- wait for Wilaya 4 and the Ben Bella forces to resolve their | struggle. 'ivory tower positions." by the charter provisions as they stand (calling for sover- eign equality of all UN mem-) | Young was in hospital suffering) been replaced by the equally| multiple cuts and bruises. The four occupants of the tered, The Observer says Canadian Informal Tour MINDEMOYA, Ont. (CP) -- Liberal Leader Pearson Monday shook off the cares of opposition leader and informally his own Commons constituency, Algma East, joining in the Labor Day holiday festivities marking the end of the Man- {toulin Island centennial. Hatless and boyish-looking, he watched a hard-fought local baseball game, bought five tick. ets on a draw for a quilt raffled by the ladies of the Providence Bay Curling Club--depicting the island, its highways and its townships--and contributed to a tag day in support of a local Final Fling For U.S. Youth On Weekend NEW YORK (AP)--American youth had its fling on the last big holiday -weekend of the summer, but in seaside resorts on both sides of the continent his first visit to Manitoulin Is- speec! thanks informally 1o his con- He won his sixth contest June 18 with a comfortable majority. ATTENDS DINNER scholarship fund. He said the day was made doubly enjoyable because it was land without having to make a h. He was here to say stituents for returning him again to the House of Commons. Later he attended a dinner in the community hall catered by the ladies of several churches in pioneer costumes. Today, he tentatively plans an early morning fishing jaunt and will drive to Little Current and Blind River and then to Elliot Lake, for an evening ad- dress to the chamber of com- merce. _ On Wednesday He will head into the northern part of his riding and whistle-stop through communities on the main line of the CPR from Chapleau to Prime Minister Diefenbaker is expected to walk softly in Lon- don because of his govern- ment's weakened position after the election and the Social Cre- dit party's violent opposition to the market. bers). "I believe that if the United LNations is to survive as a dynamic force. for peace and security, these provisions have to be honored in the letter and cruiser were jarred awake when the outboard hit them broad- side. Mr. and Mrs, Don Mac- Gillary, of Toronto and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Allen, of Weston, a suburb of Toronto, were not injured. Biscotasing. ceca SCATTERED SHOWERS PRED the spirit of the charter." Sie a S\ers)--Two young British moun- 4| unconquered peaks. 4\Biven, 26, had some narrow es- '| jobs. By EDNA ATKINSON ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reut- | taineers are working their way back home after a summer of hair-raising adventures climb- ing some of Alaska's previousiy Tony Smythe, 28, and Barrie capes on the peaks but it was after they came down that their troubles really began. The two tried to join the 1962 British expedition to climb Mount McKinley in Alaska and when this failed, they decided to go to the far northern U.S. state on their own. : After making their way to Canada separately, they joined up'in Ottawa, bought a car and set out on the 5,000-mile drive to Alaska, working their way through the Canadian provinces and up the Alaska highway to the Yukon with a variety of Since only approved parties of good size are allowed to at- tempt Mount McKinley, Smythe and Biven turned to other British Climbers In Alaskan Peaks nearby. The following day Const. Da- vid Gregory was shot dead when he tried to detain a man carrying a 16-gauge shotgun, The man then turned the gun on himself, blowing most of his - head away. Since then police have been "almost certain" the dead mam was Griffett, but positive iden- tification came Saturday after a fringerprint was: found on a jar of paint in the Griffett home. The print matched the left in- dex finger of the body that has WANTED HIGH JOBS Wilaya 4 is one of the six Algerian divisions which cun- ducted the seven years of guer- rilawarfare against the) French Army. Whereas the other wilayas were content either to lay down what' few arms they had left or to join Ben Bella, Wilaya 4, under Col. Si Hassan, held out for positions in the government --any government--that was to rule the future Algeria. | Ben Bella counted the 15,000 troops, of Wilaya 4 and promptly moved them into Al- they built a log raft, lashed to- gether with climbing ropes, on which they hoped to float down- stream from the Ruth Glacier to Talkeetna. But as soon as the ratf was launched it was smashed to bits in the mountain torrent and Smythe and Biven barely es- caped.. Their equipment was lost but they saved their packs and some food. The two walked overland to the Tokichulitna River and built a second raft but it piled up on a.sandbar, leaving th stranded on fan island. Without food or firearms, they scratched an S O S in the sand, laid out brightly-colored shirts, built a fire and waited for rescue. An airplane saw their S$ O S while flying a regular supply run and they were rescued. Falls Victim Not Identified giers power. Col. e is 22--started a campaign of dalism which led the peo- ple of Algiers to hate and fear Wilaya 4 almost as much as they had hated the OAS. Although Wilaya 4 probably will fall, either by force or per- suasion, because of their smail numbers and lack of discipline jand equipment, the current Bella's forces has convinced many Algerians that any gov- ernment by military force is undesirable. : Here lies Ben Khedda's to help keep him in | Hassan then turned, against Ben Bella and with his young officers -- their average fighting between it and Ben been kept in the police morgue since the shooting. 5 DIE IN CRASH NOGALES, Ariz. (AP)--Five persons we killed Sunday when a twin - engine private plane crashed into mountainous, terrain some 45 miles north of this Mexican border city. SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges Deoler in'your area. | Love Quarrel | Said Cause © WEATHER FORECAST Of Slaying Cooler Cree NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. (AP) a Niagara park police' say they still have no clue to the'tdentity of a woman who was swept over the American Falls a week ago Monday before horrified sightseers at Prospect Point. chance. He and: his provisional government are rapidly gaining the reputation of a group which could stop once and for all the Algerian bloodbath by peace-| ful means. | police had the final throw. More than 200 college - age celebrants were tossed behind bars in the wake of riots in Seaside, Ore., Ocean City, Md., and Hampton Beach, N.H. In Lake George, N.Y., high | peaks. | From Talkeetna, in south- central Alaska, bush pilot Don Sheldon flew them to Ruth Glacier from where the 10-mile approach to the base of 10,260- foot Mount Dan Beard took 55 65 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 | Moosonee .. | Timmins | Observed Temperatures Monday | in the Adirondack Mountains, nearly 1,000 young persons milled about early Monday, then scattered without incident. Seaside, an Oregon resort community of 3,700, was hit by a riot of 1,500 to 2,000 youths over the weekend. Governor Mark Hatfield called out the National Guard, but the disturb- ance died down by Sunday night, At the height of the riots, police had to use nightsticks. Some heads were bloodied. All told, some 60 rioters were taken into custody, and 40 of them were released early Mon- day under $300 bail. At Ocean City, Md., some 500 college students and teen-agers milled around the boardwalk on the Atlantic early Monday, and police slapped a curfew on all persons under 25. Arrested were 48 persons, accused of violating the curfew. In Hampton Beach, N.H., po- lice took more than 100 youths into custody, and quiet was restored. 13 In Hospital After Crash WELLAND (CP) -- Thirteen persons detained in hospital Sunday after a car and station wagon collided near here were reported in satisfactory condi- tion Monday. | The most severely injured, Wendy Lou Meyer, 18, of Chip- pawa, Ont., and Harry Young, 92, of Niagara Falls, Ont., are "much improved" hospital) authorities, said. 4 'to mistake the two.' MONTREAL (CP) -- Police said Monday a lovers' quarrel may have caused the mistaken- identity slaying of Lorraine Kenny, a 32 - year - old office- worker from North Sydney, N.S. A 30-year-old farmer and la- borer ftom Alexandria, Ont., 50 miles west of Montreal, was being held as a material wit- ness in the slaying in which, police said, another girl was supposed ¢o have been the vic- tim. An inquest will be held later this week, probably Thursday, police said. In Quebec no char- ges are laid in violent deaths until after an inquest. Det.-Sgt. Felix Jean said the victim had been shot early Sun- day with a .303 rifle from about five feet away as she was about to enter her room on the third storey of a religious instifution in downtown Montreal. The institution, a residence for young working girls is run by the Sisters of Service, a Ro- man Catholic religious order. Sgt. Jean said the victim re- sémbled closely an 18-year-old girl in the residence. He quoted the girl as telling police the only possible motive she could think of for someone wanting to kill her was that she recently quar- reled with a man and told him she did not want to see him any more. He said the man who killed Miss Kenney had apparently en- tered the building by a rear fire escape and hid in the hall. "It's amazing that the two women had the same color dress--blue--the same style of| dress, the same shape of face,| the same style of hair and in that dim light it would be easy Cloudy, Forecasts issued by the Tor- onto weather .office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: An area of showers and thundershowers will spread across Ontario today in advance of the arrival of cooler weather. Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, Lake Erie regions, Windsor, London: Mainly cloudy today and Wednesday with occasional showers and scattered thundec- showers, cooler Wednesday. Winds south 15 today, becoming northwest 20 Wednesday. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Geor- gian Bay, Haliburton regions, Hamilton, Toronto: Increasing cloudiness today with showers and scattered thundershowers beginning this afternoon, Mainly cloudy with occasional showers and turning cooler Wednesday. Winds light, becoming south 15 this afternoon and northwest 20 Wednesday. Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Cochrane, White River regions: Cloudy with showers and sca'- tered thundershowers today. Cloudy with a few showers and continuing cool Wednesday. Winds northerly 15, - Timagami region, North Bay, Sudbury: Clouding over by) early afternoon, then showers! and thundershowers continuing through Wednesday, cooler Wednesday. Winds southeast 15,! ee northerly 20 Wednes-| ay. } Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High. Wednesday Windsor ....+ 60 70 | Weather Seen | Low overnight, High |Dawson .... Victoria .... Edmonton . Calgary . [Regina ..ssceseeee |Winnipeg ..+.+06 jLakehead ....+s+6 Lakehead 45 58 77 63 61 seeee 60 60 55 55 - 55 65 65 60 65 55 55 50 50 St. Thomas........ London .. Kitchener ...+++.+ Wingham .-: Hamilton St. Catharines.... Toronto ' Peterborough . Trenton ...+.+ Killaloe. ..++eeseees Muskoka ..+++sseee North Bay Sudbury .. Earlton . « 6 Kapuskasing....... 45 White River......... 45 |S. S. Marie.. -|Kapuskasing «,... Montreal Quebec .... Halifax .. them four days on foot--three of which were spent stormbound by a blizzard. |STOOD ON SUMMIT | "The actual ascent and de-| scent took about 18 hours and we stood on the summit at mid- night on July 18," Biven re- calls, Smythe says the climbing of |Dan Beard was "'nothing really difficult" but several times they | slipped into crevasses and went| \up to their waists in treacherous) \ ice. | Before climbing Dan Beard). | the two conquered the Moose's Tooth, a formidable 10,355-foot | | mountain "shaped like ya molar} |with twin peaks." The climb! |took them three days and there} was a constant danger of snow-| slides. jan Associated' Press member. A tourist, Jack Messick, of Media, Pa., pointed his 35-milli- metre camera at the brink of the falls and caught several pictures of the woman in the swirling water. One of two photos showed the woman apparently looking to- ward shore just as she was hurtled down the 167-foot catar- act. Her body has not been recov-| ered. Messick's pictures were left with the Niagara Falls Gazette, | BLACK'S Feature GYM WEAR FOR ALL OSHAWA COLLEGIATES Students from McLaughlin, O'Neill, Central and Donevan Collegiates can now obtain their complete gym out- fits from Black's, Each outfit is com- plete with the crest of their collegiate on T-Shirt ond Gym Bag. INCLUDES: EYE EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH After climbing for two weeks) @ Crested T-Shirts 1.75 | | NOTICE! 1913 Ontario Regiment Cadet Corps announces the 1962-63 TRAINING SEASON will commence Sepiember 12th Members of the Corps and new recruits will report to the Armories on Simcoe St. North, Oshawa, on Wednesday, Sept. 5th, at 7:30 p.m. to draw kit. signed-- Capt. E. S. Dawson, C.I. --1913 Ont. Reg. Cadets i Wed.--8:30 a. Sat.--8:30 a.m. 16 CELINA ST. fj "Garden Supplies FALL STORE HOURS Mon.--Tues.--Thurs.--Fri. 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Cooper mllt cu Gym Shorts 1.50 Sports Socks 89c Gutta Percha Running Shoes 4.95 Athletic Support 1.50 Crested Gym Bag 1.95 | COMPLETE '41.95 (Items listed above are available separately) m. to 12:30 to 5:00 p.m. "The House of Style for Men & 'Boys' MEN'S WEAR LTD. ACD <74 SIMCOE. 723-3611 723-2312 N, Since 1909" 1B

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