Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Jan 1963, p. 1

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

notre aioataainiseiiose THOUGHT FOR TODAY Modern driver: Man on expen- sive super-highway in mortgage car with credit car gas. Oshawa Gimes SPN cp MRED is om he : "3 ect econhliecnmeange ce : ; ee fartly cloudy and milder today and Thursday. Winds northwest 15. VOL, 92 -- NO. 1 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY. 2, 1963 Ottawa and for payment UN Forces Close On Jadotville ELISABETHVILLE -- United Nations forces in The Congo to- day were closing in on Jadot- ville, Katanga's second biggest town where President Moise Tshombe has set up temporary headquarters. An advance guard of a United Nations armored column was last reported 15 miles from Ja- dotville, 85 miles northwest of Elisabethville, the capital of se- cessionist Katanga 'province. The column of more than 150 vehicles was backed by UN fighter planes that provided air cover Tuesday for Indian, Irish and Ethiopian troops as they crossed the Lufira River. Katangan forces blew up a bridge across the river in a bid to stop the UN advance on Ja- dotville but it was repaired by Indian engineers. A UN spokesman in Leopold- ville said four UN soldiers have been killed and 19 wounded in the 70-mile advance on Jadot- ville from Elisabethville. Tshombe was reported to be ready to return to Elisabeth. ville provided he was granted freedom of movement in the Ka- tangan capital. The secessionist president, in messages to diplomats here Tuesday, asked that American, British and French consuls es- cort him on the last third of U.K. Papers Caution JFK be ! LJ ess' LONDON (AP)--British news-| his journey from Kolwezi to Elisabethville. There was no immediate UN reaction, but Tshombe's demand for a cease-fire on the road from Elisabethville to Kolwezi was 'likely to cause difficulty. Secretary-General U Thant of the UN already has stated that Tshom be and his ministers would not be molested in Elisa- |bethville if they refrain. from jstirring up trouble for UN jforces occupying the capital. | But Robert K. A. Gardiner, |the Ghanaian chief of United |Nations operations in The |Congo, has declared the United |Nations would not 'make the |same mistake again" of allow- ing Katangan armed forces a chance to reorganize. He referred to UN military operations in Katanga in Sep- tember and December, 1961, which ended inconclusively. Tshombe arrived in Jadotville }from Kolwezi, 220 miles west of |Elisabethville. He flew to Kol- ;wezi Monday from Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia, where he met with Sir Roy Welensky, prime minister of the Rhodes- ian Federation, and top British officials. Britain has urged Tshombe to lose no time in returning to Eli- sabethville in order to use his authority in helping bring about a peaceful solution to the crisis in the province. The Katangan leader's bar-| gaining position has weakened sharply since the UN military operation began last Friday. The UN now controls Elisa- bethville and several! other main Katangan towns, includ- ing Kamina Town, 280 miles northwest of the capital. The United Nations was re. ported to be planning to link up troops from Kamina and Jadot- ville for a drive on Kolwezi, a President Ker- bedy. today. against sring on fa Were alince inant a role. big mining town near the North. tighter to play too dom-/att Concern was evident here at|84n air base, fit's reported inten- tion to exert stronger lead! over the West's cold war the cost of offend- ing sensitive allies. These re- , attributed to sources close the _-- received wide : Daily Mail can a story headlined: "I decide for the West, says Kennedy." I* said in the body of the story that Kennedy "is in a suprem- ely confident if not cocky mood following the success of his Cuba crisis confrontation with Mr. Khrushchev." The London Daily Te,egraph says "the experience of acting without his allies" in Cuba has left its mark on Kennedy. "Britain has stretched more points than others to fa'l .n with American policies," the Con- servative newspaper declares editorially. "What irks is Wash- ington's reluctance tc stretch any points to make Britain's continuing tasks in Africa and elsewhere any easier." The Telegraph says leader- ship of the free world is "a role which will require not only ex- ertion but tactful give and take. . . . It is no crime for junior partners to be sensitive; and there are moments when they might wish that the senior part- ner would not go out of his way Niagara Falls ushering in an- NEW YEAR DAWNS The sun comes up over icy other year of activity around Canada's top tourist attrac- the scenic wonder -- one of tions. --CP Wirephoto year with a salute by French President de Gaulle to the pos- West would be destroyed in any nuclear war "unleashed by cap-| ker italism." Ri tell the Soviet people he was not making "a' New Year's threat" to the free world. He said that the Soviet Union prefers peace- By THE CANADIAN PRESS The world ushered in the new 1963, and "al Khrushchev went on radio to PHYSICIST DIES Sir Charles Galton Darwin, 75, grandson of evolutionary theorist Charles Robert Dar- win and a noted theoretical physicist in his own right, died Monday in his home neat Cambridge, England. Sir Charles, formerly director of Britain's National Physica! to make perfect devoticn to the partnership more difficult." _ cent years in quantum physics and optics. | (AP Wire Photo) ful co-existence. Gaulle told a New Year's. Day sg oes foreign diplomats that Laboratory, specialized in re- | At his Paris residence, de all the countries represented at the gathering--"'above all, the most powerful among them--! are endowed with means of de- struction so terrible that every- one knows that by putting them blessed a holiday 000 gathered |Square. But a New Year's Eve = washed out a traditional by Rome municipal workers. CRITICIZE ITALIAN RED Possibility For Peace Saluted By De Gaulle fore Christmas to meet Primejfor "departing further and fur- Minister Macmillan. Diefenba- ker was scheduled to fly home Lady F their home, Star. Acres. John of 50,- Peter's In Vatican City, Pope crowd in St, to the square New Year's greetings between Soviet nd Chinese leaders took newspapers to criticisms of Pal- miro Togloatti, the Italian Com-|lized at the expense of world munist leader. He was chastised' peace," he said. ther from Marxism-Leninism." Sino-Soviet New Year's greet- LON Faved ape yee gal tee TWENTY-SIX EXP MORE BLIZZAR By THE CANADIAN PRESS Newfoundland today. hour range. areas. rain. TEMPERATURES RISE clear skies west of Toronto. night. of 19 to 13 degrees zbove areas of Manitoba. Northern Al ings were printed on inside page Communist pa Pravda gave front-page play the exchange of new year me: sages between the Soviet Unig and China. The two messa familiar vein between R and other Communist . bloc countries. : In Bonn, in a_ broadcast beamed to East Germany, Pres- ident Heinrich Luebke of West Germany urged restraint in the pursuance of the reunification of lized "Tt must not be rea- to work they would proceed to their own destruction." De Gaulle added: "I believe | THORNEYCROFT SAYS --like you--in the possibility of peace and in the compulsion of peace, It is this possibility and this compulsion that I salute as the threshold of this new year, in the name of France." ATTENDS MASS President Kennedy welcomed in the new year at a party in Palm Beach, Fla. He and his! wife attended a 10:30 a.m. mass at St. Edward's Roman Catho- lic Church. Kennedy later at- tended the Orange Bowl foot- ball game in Miami. Prime Minister Diefenbaker| |spent the New Year's holiday) quietly in Nassau, the Baha- mas, where he journeyed be- Avalanche Hits Skiers Killing Girl Student FIELD, B.C. (CP)--Swiftly,)remove Miss Sharp's body. Thejedy Tuesday near Revelstoke, silently, a half-mile long and aj13 survivors were expected to/75 miles west of Field. There, quarter . mile wide, the ava- lanche swept down upon the lit- tle group of skiers from the mists that shroud Mount Whale- back. They hadn't a chance of escaping scot free. Thirteen of the party of Uni- versity of British Columbia stu- dents survived the massive fall of ice and snow. Jean Sharp, 21, died. The tragedy occurred Sunday about 1,000 feet below the sum- mit of 8,200 - foot Whaleback, which rises 15 miles. north of come today to Field, about 50 miles northwest of Banff, Alta. There was another near-trag- Field, but word of it did not' © become known unti] Tuesday | when RCMP and national parks officials moved into the area to x CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 oe an avalanche common in this Rocky Mountain region, thun- dered down upon the Rgers Pass Highway and trapped two cars containing four persons. The occupants, RCMP Cpl. J. Konopetski of Winnipeg and Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Peters of Kam- loops, B.C,, and their child, were safe in a snow shed built for such emergencies and were rescued Tuesday night. Th UBC students, all expe- rienced skiers, were on the lee- side of Mount Whaleback Sun- day afternoon when the ava- lanche struck without warning. The 13 who survived managed| to dig themselves out. Miss Sharp was the daughter} of Vancouver's superintendent) of schools. A parks department . spokes- man said most of the surviv- ors were only shaken up. A few) suffered bruises | A police spokesman said those students who dug themselves} out first helped others and re- vived those who were unconsci- ous. U.K. Deterrent Status The Same LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit- ish Defence Minister Peter Thorneycroft met a delegation of Conservative party back- benchers Tuesday to assure them the Polaris missile agree- ment with the. United States will not change the. status of Britain's independent nuclear deterrent. Delegation leader Sir Arthur Harvey said after the 90-min- ute meeting with Thorneycroft: I feel satisfied . . . that we will have the absolute right to use this weapon as the government thinks fit--that is, to take it out of NATO at a given time--and that it will be feasible and practicable to @o'so." Under the agreement reached by Présiuent Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan in Nassau, the British Polaris de- terrent will be integrated with an over-all NATO deterrent, with Britain retaining the right to use it independently. Harvey said Thorneycroft had also allayed the delegation's doubts about the "'gap" in the British deterrent before Polaris replaces the present aircraft- boone Blue Steel missiles in A joint statement issued after YOU'LL FIND _ INSIDE... T. D. Thomas Cites Medicare Cost Page 15 John M, Greer Named Queen's Counsel ... Page 15 Ajax-Pickering Hospital Tenders Called . .. Page 15 | Olive Avenue Home Gutted By Fire ..... Page 15 Two Oshawa Babies Born New Year's Day .... Page 15 a the meeting said Thorneycroft told the backbenchers he would take steps to beef up the pres- ent deterrent system. Harvey said this meant 'we will have something better than ger range than Blue Steel." the government will build a the present V-bombers. Explosion Kills Eleven People In Terre Haute TERRE HAUTE, Ind .(AP)-- Aa explesion demolished a meat processing room of Home Pack- ing Company today, killing 1 workers and injuring at least 36 others, State Police Sgt. James Bailey said six bodies had been taken from the ruins. An army of rescue workers, searching for an undertermined number of other workers, spotted two sur- |vivors in the rubble and worked gingerly toward them to avoid any further injury. Almost three dozen injured }were reported in hospitals. Police and firemen believed the explosion started in a boiler room. Ammonia gas, apparently es- caping from ruptured refrigera- tion lines, hampered the rescue work and a. coal mine rescue squad used gas masks to dig nto the rubbie. Company officials had trouble determining exactly how many production workers were in the wrecked section. were followed by others in al Blue Steel--it will be a weapon of greater capacity with a big- There has been speculation Blue Steel Mark II to replace 200-mile nuclear missiles carried 'by Britain's rty newspaper |/ Ure ps The _ Atlantic; storm, which struck the Maritimes Sunday and moved into Quebec Mon- day, left large sections of the Maritimes with unseasonably warm temperatures. MUCH SNOW FALLS However, before it pulled out to sea again the storm had piled up 28 inches of snow at Quebec Traffic Deaths Low Compared To Christmas By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadians came through the four-day New Year's holiday with about a quarter the num- ber of traffic fatalities recorded during the five-day Christmas holiday period. A Canadian Press survey from 6 riod a week \ ings and eight deaths from other causes pushed the over- all New Year's toll to 39. There were 129 fatalities during the Christmas holiday last week and 51 in the three-day New Year's weekend a year go. The toll by provinces, with traffic deaths in brackets: On- tario 14 (10); British Columbia 8 (4); Quebee 6 (3); Nova Sco- tia 5 (1); New Brunswick 2 (0); Manitoba 2 (2); Alberta 1 (1); Newfoundland 1 (1). Prince Edward Island and Saskatchewan were fatality- free. Four fire deaths were in On- tario. The survey does not include industrial accidents, slayings or known suicides, Ontario dead, in addition to those reported earlier: Sunday Mrs. Gerald Edwards, Oak- husband 'collided with a truck near Burks Falls. Tuesda her daughter Theresa, 25, in a fire that destroyed their Sarnia home. Lily.Warikasz, 16, when struck a car which lid not Stop as girl near Windsor. Joseph McAleer, 69, when struck by a car as he walked across Highway 401 in Oshorws An unidentified man in a house fire in Kingston. A storm that clogged Quebec and the Maritimes with snow earlier this week and brought record low temperatures to parts of Ontario was stili hang- ing over the Atlantic south of The weather office reported freezing rain over most of New- foundland and mixed rain and snow over northera Nova Sco- tia and New -Brunswick, with winds in the 25 to 30 mile-an- In most other areas of Can- ada, the new year's cold snap had ended as warm air pushed across the southern Prairies and temperatures climbed to nor- mal or near normal in sorthern Northern Ontario had season- ally mild temperatures of 20 to 25 degrees above, accompanied by light snow and freezing iight In southern Ontario, milder temperatures were forecast for today. Varying cloud conditions prevailed across most of east- ern Ontario and Quebec, with Forecast temperatures for today ranged from 31 at Windsor to 27 at Kingston, with lows to- At Winnipeg a high today of 22 was forecast and snow flurries were ex pected for southern cta an? Saskat- .m, local times Friday) . to midnight Tuesday showed 22 road deaths compared with 85 in the Friday-to-Wednesday pe- Six fire deat three drown- ville, when a car driven by her} y | Mrs. Daisy Mackle, 69, and) walked with another Storm Hangs Over Atlantic dropped ing levels, tack victims, and one death from exhaustion. as 10 hours, City and 20 at Montreal and temperatures as far west as Windsor to bone-chill- At least five persons. died: in the Maritimes as a result of the storm -- including two heart at- two drownings, Heaviest snowfall in the Mari- times was recorded i+ north- central New Brunswick, where railway crews had to break through 10 - foot drifts that plugged the main lines, delay- ing passenger trains by as much Arctic Air Still Holds Crippling Grip On U.K. LONDON (Reuters)--Britons, huge drifts caused early Sunday today awoke to another arctic-|/by what one meteorologist cold day with weather forecast-|was the worst winter snowfal ers warnings of new and heavy/|in 82 years. : blizzards likely to hit the Lon-| From his' snowbound Cams don area late tonight. bridgeshire home, the meteors An automobile association de-|ologist, Gordon Manley: said} scribed the road situation as|"The falls of the last few days "3d--dodgy, dicey and devil-| equal the classic snowstorms of ish." . heap 2 ego 8 Bann You At least 11 persons were|"@ve to go back to Blac' day of January, 1881, to find known to have died as a result of the bad weather and weath. ee ar --s erman said the cold was likely to go on for the next day or two. Boag wae ee came after another inch of snow fell Many small villages were New Year's Eve, adding to the|;.10404 Helicopters The big snow had a crippling effect on business and industry Tuesday. Thousands of workers were made idle. By THE CANADIAN PRESS cold, boy was asphyxiated, Fires Kill Four During Holiday Four persons died in fires in Ontario during the New Year's holiday as a rash of blazes ac- companied record - breaking Two deaths were in a fire at Sarnia. Tuesday in which five other persons were left home- less. A man was found dead in a Kingston home swept by fire Tuesday night and in another blaze a seven-year-old Oshawa Dead are. Mrs. Daisy Mackle, food while bulldozers tried to plow, away the drifts to open -- and free trapped vehi. cles, The estimated cost of clear- ing away the snow and ice from Britain's roads was put at £20,000,000. Farmers in the south of Eng- land threw away 250,000 gall wd -- or trucks were able to get through to points. Bi Thousands of homes have been without bread or milk and at least 2,000 livestock already have perished in the cold. Mackle, 25, both of Sarnia, and: Richard Dove of Oshawa. Police withheld the victim's name in the Kingston fire. Patrick Mackie, 33, owner of the Sarnia house, escaped with his wife Rita, their son John, §, and daughter Janice, 2, Mackle, who fled into the street wearing only his trousers, had to be re- Strained by = from return- ing to the in a bid to save his. mother and sister, Firemen said it was impossible}. lazing home. f to enter the b! 69, and her I ir fic on For Holiday Low In US.. and 12? haps for a total of 574, The National Safety Council before the start of the count at 6 p.m. last Friday estimated a traffic death toll of 420 ta 480. revised the figure downward to) 350 to 380 after analyzing the statistics produced by tha first three days of the holiday. The record low traffic death toll for a four - day U.S. New Year's holiday was 375 during the 1951-52 period, The record high four-day New Year's traf+ CHICAGO ,(AP)--U.S. traffic deaths during the long New Year's weekend appearcd today to be one of the lowest for a similar four-day holiday and far below early estimates by safety experts, The count at midnight Tues- day, the end of the 102-hour hol- iday period, showed 364 deaths| in traffic accidents, 83 in fires in miscellaneous mis- However, the council Tuesday Pipe: temperatures Monday in an ef. fort to get help to save her burning home after she and her two young daughters jumped 6. from a second-floor window, The home was destroyed and Mrs. Coules suffered severe|' frostbite. a A $15,000 fire at Parry Sound destroyed a restaurant and taxi office Tuesday. A $10,000 blaze destroyed a home at Orillia ogee a oe being used) '0 thaw frozen pipes ignited in- sulating meatal behind the pg S. Loss was estimated at $11,000 in a New Year's Eve fire that destroyed a four-storey chicken barn at Norwich. .Hose spray turned to ice in 13-below-zero weather. : Toronto firemen said Dec. 31 was their busiest day of 1962. They answered 57 calls in thel¥ 24-hour period, Most caused mi-/Bert fic toll was 409 in 1956-57 nor damage. .. WALL CRUMBLES IN BLAZE Wall of a nine-storey ware- house tumbles as fice raged | through the Philadelphia building last night and spread | to 40°homes in the northern section of the'city. 'The' blaze, « > described as the worst in the city's history, wrecked homes in the neighborhood, forcing more than 200 persons to flee into--sub - freezing «temper- 5 atures. Only. injury reported was that suffered by . Fire Chief George E. Hink. who fell on icy' streets. *"aAP' Wirephote

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy