Oshawa Times (1958-), 31 Oct 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY 'Any ad salesman knows that you can't get results by winking at a girl in a dark room. f OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1962 Authorized as Ottawa nd tor payment of Postagem Cooke VOL. 91 -- NO. 254 = : > "~ KMBULANCE MEN, OPP CONSTABLE COVER BODY | Pickering Man Killed . As Car Crashes Train PICKERING (Staff) -- a 46-|about a 100 feet away from the year-old Toronto Post Office|crossing, scattering engine worker was killed here this|parts and the steering wi morning when his car struckjover a 100 square yard area, -- an eastbound Canadian Pacific} The crash derailed the last : freight train. car of the eastbound train. The Fred Roesch, of RR 1, Pick-jboxcar was dragged for three-° ering, was thrown 25. feet/quarters of a mile before the through the air after his car|train was halted. struck the seven-car freight on| Railway ties were deeply the Audley road, north of High-| gouged as the empty boxcar' way 2, around 7.30 a.m. was dragged along the track. 'Héavy fog. blanketed t he/The rails were twisted in many crossing area, Whitby OPP be-| Places. | lieve Roesch was driving northignes GOUGED saan DEMOLISHES LATE MODEL CAR --Oshawa Times. Photos on the 'Audley road and did fmz|, The dead man. was identified see , ' crossing. There are no. signal i . ings Pad Ph lights at the crossing. Roesch purch 1 on, July L Mrs. Cowie said he travelled HIT FIRST CAR Roeschs car slammed into|°Ver the CPR crossing every the first car behind the engine.|Morning since he moved from A CPR brakeman said the wine fa the 10-acte 'Audley train was travelling at 50 miles R , : i oesch was retunning to his oer Do oem farm residence after working The impact bounced the car Quebec Election Nominations End POST-MORTEM PLANNED Dr. W... W. ..Tomlinson... pro-} nounced the man dead at the accident scene. The W. C. Town ambulance service in Whitby Nomina-|and then said in French: speak Italian like Mr. Diefen- baker (the prime minister) speaks French." Later, during a television] moved the body to the Osh- press conference of the CBC) U Thant's Talks With HAVANA' (AP)--Acting Sec- retary-Genera] U Thant sched- uled a second meeting with Prime Minister Bjdél Castro to- day to try to win agréement for UN verification of Moscow's promises to remove its missiles from Cuba. An initial two-hour, 10-minute session between Thant and the bearded Cuban leader made no headway Tuesday, informants said. Castro was reported to have stuck to such demands as abandonment by the United | States of its Guantanamo naval base in southeastern Cuba. | The United States already has FRED ROESCH . Was susperided; the quarantine|for the Thant-Castro 'meeting. into a more compact he afea. The original patro) star Cuba. The United States also sus-| living." pended its aerial surveillance ofi, Thant is scheduied to return JFK Pledge Not Ruling Out Force post-mortem will be held. «y| Roesch is survived by his jwife. There are no children. OPP Constable Charles White- side investigated the accident. QUEBEC (CP) tion of candidates in Quebec's general election Nov. 14 will close at 2 p.m. EST today, with the expectation that only the Liberal party will have a can- awa General Hospital where a Johnson| said that although the blockade;Cuba to ease the atmosphere fleet still -was at sea but pulled! Havana radio said Castro will 'rolispeak on radio and. television ted/ Thursday, "to analyze all the as far as 600 or 700 miles off|problems of the trans-cendential }moment in which the country is didate in ail 95 constituencies. Until early today, the Union Nationale had listed 94 candi- dates and the opposition party was not expected to enter a standard - bearer in Montreal Westmount-St. George. The west-central city riding islative .by Speaker Richard) Hyde, a Liberal. His only an- nounced opponent is an Indepen- dent, Richard B. Holden, 31, a lawyer who is running on a piat- Lesage French network, Mr. said 'he has agreed to meet Mr. in a 90-minute televi- sion debate Sunday, Nov. 11-- three days before the election. It will be carried from 8:30 to 10 p.m. EST on the CBC French |network, was represented in the Isst leg-;-------_--+.-- Milk Price Hike | Plans Cancelled | Court Convicts U.S. Gambler 'On Two Charges NEWARK, N.J. (AP)--Joseph (Newsboy) Moriarty, who. po- I 000 in gambling loot lying jrejected Castro's demands, made last weekend. He also de- manded lifting of all economic measures against his regime and guarantees against hit-run raids and invasion preparations. Despite the reported lack of progress at the first session, a | | spokesman for Thant cal'ed the} ice say left more than $2,500,-| meeting "very useful."' A com-| munique issued afterward said laround when he went. to jail) Cuba fixed her position and earlier this year, has been con- |viewpoints with clarity," which jinformants said meant Castro WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi- dent Kennedy's pledge not to in- vade Cuba if Soviet missile sites there are dismantled does not rule out force should Cuba--in | American eyes--pose a major }new military threat to the hem- jisphere, U.S. officials said to- day. | U.S. policy toward Fidel Cas- |tro's government will remain as jit was before Soviet missiles ar- they said. Castro' Resume, Little Progress Made late today to New York, and-ne- gotiations: for rémoval: of the missiles are expected to open as peep ips jot f ri' ciliatory in tone, repeating that Premier. Khrushchev has said he has faith in President Ken- nedy's guarantees, : A Chinese Communist bro§d- cast today backed up Castro's demands for an American with- |drawal from Guantanamo, The | official Peking People's Daily |also disagreed with the Soviet premier's opinion that Kennedy can be trusted not to invade without forcible interference by) Cuba. | the United States, be permitted | |to remain as a Communist col- jony and therefore as a base for the continued political and psy- chological subversion of other} nations in this hemisphere." The New York Times says the committee hopes to make a national issue of the assurances lto Khrushchev. Four. Republican K Welensk y Leads Rhodesian Vote LUSAKA, Northern Rhodesia Reuters)--The United Federal senators| Party of Prime Minister Sir Roy lrived on the Caribbean island,|cautioned Tuesday against any|Welensky jumped into an unex- lagreement that might provide a|Pected lead today according to Moscow radio remained con- form of opposition to expropria-| tion of power companies -- the iss ich the governmentiUled 19 - i n | oats ane bent tg weight increase in the price of} Muesday, Premier Lesage milk paid to Ontario producers - will not go into effect Thursday, campaigned in Nicolet and) 7 ; ' esis: Hivierss constituencies, |; Tomer Robarts announced to. accusing the Union Nationale of using '"'trickery to betray the : trust of the people." the premier announced a mora-| APPEALS FOR SUPPORT torium on the application ofa Meanwhile, Union Nationale, Price formula which would have Leader Danie! Johnson ap-| given milk producers the 19-cent pealed for the support of thelincrease. Italian community, most of which lives in the Montreal Lau-| rier riding of Resources Minis- ter Rene Levesque. Mr. Johnson spoke briefly in| Italian at the special meeting' HELP The Chest CLIMB $236,000 was unyielding in his demands. President Osvaldo Dorticos i nd protect Casiro took part in the meeting. hemisphere har- Following a cabinet meeting, US. Satellite In Orbit To Measure Earth Size CA'PE CANAVERAL, Fla.|above Ethiopia at a speed $200,000 $175,000 of Inchaustegui, his delegaiton for the last two years. Garcia told reporters he knew jnothing about reports that he $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 voy to the Organization of Amer- ican States drummed out of the OAS. Some diplomats felt that Lechuga's as- Page 13 |signment to the meant Castro hopes. to better jhis relations with the Latin American bloc: which has fro- Missionary Conference zen Cuba out of its deliberations In Oshawa °..... «+» Page. 3 /here for the last three years. Lechuga is said to have the respect. of a number of Latin esos Page 3 |American diplomats Page 13 Civic Auditorium cent - a - hundred-|°harges. operation in June, 1961, |second session. Thant asked|cans, the Kennedy administra-| The Milk Industry Board had) the other two charges. Cuba, said it was impossible to) day to Soviet Premier Khrush-| UNITED NATIONS (AP)--Fi- ment has no direct control. Nee cere, fee bees ae ee The president's guarantee| (jen crisis. ee " al! rial, < aN adeh ilar airandy ca¥s. belng ambassador to Mexico, to his solution. baker, chairman of Eastern Air to measure the size and shape of signals were being received) The blinking becaons -- plus a guarantee _that Cuba will, rose from Cape Canaveral at/vance. Sources said this was/vitational field with accuracy | The first stage pushed the|standing for Army, Navy, NASA|when to look. Dies Haplnined ..; TORONTO (CP) -- A sched |Yicted of two more gambling A federal court jury convicted isolate the Havana regime andj nism in Cuba ai him Tuesday of failing to reg-| to prevent it from spreading|from western ister for a $50 federal gambl-| BLOCKADE RESTS communism in the Americans) @Ssment, ing stamp and failing to pay the} The U.S. naval blockade re-|will continue. If Cuba bran- federal 10 per cent tax on gross| mained in suspension as Thant| dishes what the U.S. feels is an-| jreceipts from a numbers game|and Castro prepared for their| other major threat at the Ameri-| Castro Sends On a third charge, accusing) that the blockade of arms ship-|tion remains committed to de-| . Moriarty of trying to bribe two|ments to Cuba be lifted before|fensive measures including use) 2 Diplomats federal agents, the jury dead-|he began his Havana discus-| of force. 4 locked and Judge Thomas F.|sions. | This interpretation of Ken- ' |Meaney declared a mistrial. He} (Moscow radio, in a Spanish-| nedy's "assurances against an| For UN Team set no date for sentencing on|language broadcast beamed to|invasion of Cuba," given Satur-| announced that the increase was} moriarty could receive up to/say the Cuban crisis was "def-|chev, was supplied "by high : 5 : of the price formula, based on| year ig petaon and a Paes of|initely over." The radio said the|ranking U.S. authorities. Ken-|4¢l Castro is soning Hed bel production costs. |$1,000 to $5,000 on the gambling|U.S. must deliver its non-ag-|nedy is expected to say more| diplomats to 'bolster his hi hice psec does not di-| stamp conviction, and a $10,000| gression pledge to Cuba in the/ about it at his press conférence| eam ute tp rs ane re : fi i ' ited Nati t i- é y sho ma wer otek ibe pwn on failure to pay the tax, |United Nations before the cri-|Thursday at 4 p.m. EST. ..... \voice in any settlement of the |.Trenton State Prison since]. Thant's visit was front-page|does not take effect unless| i P But the premier's announce-|March serving a two- to three-|news here. The newspaper Rev-|Khrushthey goes through with! woes ae cue ment said the moratorium was|year sentence on a numbers| olution assured its readers that|/his part of the agreement--to| mont ork divece that Castro declared "'in the hope that sere conviction in Hudson County,/Thant "comes to negotiate, not| withdraw nuclear - capable So-|had assigned Foreign Minister will be no increase in the price|did not testify during the week-|to inspect." jviet weapons from Cuba. Butipoy) Roe and Carine Lechuga to the consumer." | In Washington, informants| questions about Kennedy's com- ; bs ; delegation in New York. raised. Many had expected that Roa, | FORMS COMMITTEE a veteran UN bargainer, would | In New York, the formation/SPeak for Castro when lof a Committee for the Monroe| United States and the Soviet Un- Doctrine was announced Tues-|{0n try to negotiate a Cuban day night by Eddie Ricken- Bu' word that Lechuga was Lines. accompanying Roa touched off The. committee's . declaration|rumors that Castro might pull charges that the Kennedy- : ; photographed, against a back-| Khrushchev terms are contrary (AP)--A flashing light Firefly|nearly 18,000 miles an hour. ground of stars as they flashed/to the Monroe Doctrine in that satellite soared into orbit today! Officials reported that clear|on and off at designed times. |it "would appear to amount to peal gpd As experiment ee the payload. jother precise radio, navigation Z cou produce more accurate ecause the rocket was fired|and tracking instruments--were world maps and establish guide/on a northeast heading in helps help ground stations calcu- YOU'LL FIND lines for tracking men to the! direction of Russia, 'the defence! late distances on the globe and moon. department announced time and/the general shape of the earth's The 355-pound satellite rocket/direction . of launching in ad-|surface and strength of its gra- INSIDE ene |3:08 a.m. EST atop a Thor-| done to alert the Soviet Union in| not possible before. Tool And Die | Able-Star booster. An hour later|order that the Russians would! Officials said the flashes! Firm Signs Pact ... the defence department an-|not mistake the rocket for al/would not be visible with the nounced it was in a successful|hostile missile. |naked eye but that anyone with) Boy Scout Council orbit about 700 miles above the; Official name of the satellite| binoculars would be able to spot} Year Successful earth. 4 is Anna 1-B, with the letters|them if he knew where and package to the edge of space.|and Air force, the participating) The light beacons were to be |The second fired for two min-|agencies. NASA is the Nationallintervals from the ground. utes, then shut down and/Aeronautics and Space Admin-| "Several nations over. which coasted for 25 minutes beforejistration. The Firefly nickname the satellite was to pass, includ- restarting its engine to ejectiderives from four high-intensity|ing Russia, were invited to par-| School Board the satellite into orbit biph| xenon gas lights designed to be| ticipate in the experiment. Hosts Staff .. Page 13 _ Start | | 'Thus Washington's efforts to|Permanent haven for commu- the|§ chief who has echoed Cuba's|§® harsh anti-American line. here! |might be reassigned, But Cuban |sources here said it seemed un-|) likely that both he and Lechuga|' would serve on the delegation. || Lechuga served as Cuban en-|; before Cuba was) > | "TANKS NEAR RED BORDER UN again} early results in this British pro- tectorate's first election under a |new constitution. Party. officials also were en- couraged by the surprise defeat --in a predominantely Negro district--of Solomon Kalulu, na- jtional chairman of African Na- jtionalist Leader Kenneth Kuan- ence party: Kalulu lost to the candidate of the rival African National Con- gress, led by Harry Nkumbula da's United Nations] Independ- h OF DEFENCE FOR | Menon Replaced, © Attacks NEW DELHI (Reuters) Prime Minisetr Nehru tonight took over the defence ministry post from V. K. Krishna Menon! amid growing protest over In- dian setbacks in the border war! with Communist China, Menon was appointed minis- ter in charge of defence produc- tion.and will continue as a cab- inet member. Menon's replacement was de- manded by a faction of Nehru's tuling Congress party that \claimed he had failed to build up | Indian defences to meet the mas- Sive assaults by Chinese forces. His replacement came amid reports of a new Indian offen- sive in the eastern sector of the oo as Chinese-Indian fron- ier. An Indian defence ministry |spokesman said Indian forces Tuesday bombarded Chinese po- sitions near Jang, east of Ta- wang which was captured by the Chinese earlier this week. The spokesman also disclosed that Russia is continuing to de. liver. military equipment to In- a. The esman said the So- viet equipment was or- dered before the heavy border fighting broke out earlier this month but. was delivered acconding to 'fighter planes. India has pesado with Russia for the es. but, no pepchaes.. ' nome Was believed to have been made. The Indian attack on Jang, which was madé with the sup. port of. artillery fire,» marked the second day in which Indian Unarmed Chinese In Front Lines TEZPUR, India (AP) -- The Chinese Communists are throw- ing masses of troops at Indian outposts -- ng ae even without weapons, a front line rt said Tuesday. ge An Indian major's account from the battle front said some of the Chinese soldiers in the followup waves waited for their comrades to fall dead or wounded and then picked up their rifles and sub - machine- guns to charge on. The major told of a Chinese onslaught that overran a lightly defended Indian outpost in. the Dhola sector near the Tibetan border. The major's report, which reached reporters here via a Scottish tea planter, was one of the first eyewitness accounts of the battle. Only severely wounded troops ave been brought back from the mountains and correspond- ents have been barred from go- ing up there for interviews. Continue forces have moved to the offen. 'Indians were pressing: Indian reinforcements from the Pakistani border, reliable sources said, tension between India and Pak-\. istan. The troop movement. came amid reports of Indian counter-, attacks at several points along i 2,500-mile Himalayan bor- er, ¢ A defence ministry _spokes- man said Tuesday Indian forces were "probing forward" with: artillery attacks on a Chinese' position east of the key Indian. administrative centre of Twagn." The spokesman said the In-° dian forces also launched an ar- tillery attack on Chinese strong-" holds near the village of Wa-. long, about 15 miles from the' Burmese border. It was the first government reference to offensive action by India since heavy fighting broke out along the border earlier this month. * (In Peking, the New China news' agency reported Chinese troops "removed" more. than five Indian "aggressive strong- points': after more fierce fight- ing old western sector of the- area and not be ab- their registered address. Breach of the order is punishable by five 'years in prison. In Rawalpindi, Pakistan For- eign Minister Mohammed All said Pakistan was disturbed over the Western military aid to India but added "'if we also get the same aid and assistance so that the balance of power ré- mains unchanged we will have no gripe against our allies." s s Asians Line Up . o Behind Indians NEW DELHI (Reuters)--As- ian and Middle East nations to- day were lining up behind In- dia in its border struggle with Communist China. Philippine President Diosdado Macapagal told a press confer- ence in Manila he sent a letter to Prime Minister Nehru assur- ing India of full Philippine sym- pathy and support. Cypriot President Archbishop Makarios said on his arrival in New Delhi for a two-week state visit that India's struggle against China was the struggle of all freedom-loving countries. Japan and South Korea in sep- arate statements disclosed that Nehru has asked for their sup port in the border struggle. | The state of the parties so far jwas UFP 10 seats; UNIP two; and ANC one. This was the first general election in which Negro voters outnumbered whites. The constitution provides for of legislators from a 15 - seat white dominated '"'upper" elec- toral roll, a 15-seat Negro-dom- inated 'lower' roll and 14 '"'na- tional" election districts. The remaining seat is: reserved for an Asian. out Ambassador Mario Garcia-|# Tanks of Turkéy's third army roll through street in Kars, capital of eastern prov- ,ince, about 40 miles from the | Soviet border, during prepara- | tions last weekend for army parade celebrating the 39th anniversary of the Turkish a 45-seat Legislature made up| Republic this week, Units of the third *army, Turkey's largest, guard the 300-mile long frontier with the Soviet Union. With the start of the Cuban crisis, the army was placed on standby order and all leaves Were cancelled. Soviet Premier ° Khrushchev had proposed that he would withdraw Soviet missile bases from Cuba if the Unit- States would remove their missile bases from Turkey. (cP Wigephoto) Ti f sent more than 24 hours from -- |

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