City Seeks THOUGHT FOR TODAY Just about the time a woman figures her work's done, she becomes a grandmother. a She Oshavwn Fimes * ~" WEATHER REPORT Clearing this evening. Sunny and colder Wednesday. Winds northerly 20, tonight and Wed- nesday. VOL. 92 -- NO. 18 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JAN UARY 22, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of P. in Cash. Ottis SIXTEEN PAGES. New Test Made For WASHINGTON (AP) -- Brit-) Effort Ban The ground was broken for PRIME MINISTER MACMILLAN French Rebuked On EEC Approach LONDON (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Macmillan has rebuked France's position on the Com- mon Market talks in an argu- ment laced with logic but de- void of bitterness. The essence of his speech Monday to some 2,000 Liverpool Conservatives was that Britain should have been told at the be- ginning of negotiations 15 months ago if there was any political or ideological objection to entry into Europe. "What has happened has been a setback," Macmillan said. "I trust and pray not a fatal set-) back. | gotiations was acter, Macmillan said de also knew that Britain would probably accept the United States Polaris missile at last month's Nassau conference. "T explained to him in some detail my view of the relation between interdependence and indpendence and said we must have a British deterrent avail- able for independent use if need be. I am sure that he under- stood." Isolation and independence "And while recrimination is|during the 19th and early 20th useless, it is right that the truth| centuries had only brought wa be wn. and that the confusion sai e to be built along--the. Jines..of/Proved. equal partnership in which no nation could dominate another. I be kept . Macmillan said that Britain has made it abundantly clear that she accepts the key points in the treaty founding the Euro- in Economic Community and is prepared to align herself with the political implications. . "It was on that basis that ne- gotiations started and it is on this basis that negotiations! have continued until now. "If there was an objection in principle we should surely have been told so from the start." He said France's President de Gaulle had reminded him last month that the length of ne- second half of this century there can be domination or the pur- suit of the concepts of hegemony by any one free state over other equally free states." Heath, chief British negotiator in Brussels, believes the techni- cal problems involving British membership can be solved fairly quickly if the talks re- sume after ministers meet next/hospital aids will start at $2,760 Monday. r, he led and destruction, new need "I do not believe that in the Lord Privy Seal Edward ain, the United States and Rus-|the new round of nuclear talks sia launch here today a major|by an exchange of letters be- new effort to reach a nuclear|tween President Kennedy and inevitable be- cause of their complicated char, Gaull test ban agreement. The ,conference is regarded as the best chance in almost deadlock. told: a_ political meeting in Liverpool, England, Monday night that "after all our long efforts, there seems at last to be a sign of progress' toward a nuclear test ban. However, U.S. officials stres- sed that many issues--both big and little -- will have to be solved, particularly the U.S. and Soviet differences over an inspection system to guard against cheating. In Moscow Monday, Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko told correspondents that Russia can agree to only three on-site in- spections a year. The United States contends that this is not lenough. He also said France, jnow building an atomic force, must join in any test ban agree- ment. The nuclear talks begin this afternoon when four Americans, four Russians and two Britons are scheduled to sit down at a conference table in the state de- partment. Nurses Given Pay Increase TORONTO creases for 5,530 nurses, hos- pital aids and attendants in On- tario hospitals been ap- roved by the Ontario govern- ment, Provincial Treastirer Jamse Allan announced Mon- day. He said the increases, retro- active to Sept. 1, will cost an additional $1,100,000 annually. A director of nursing's maxi- mum pay will jump to $7,800 from $6,300. A registered nurse will receive $3,750, compared to $3,360, in the first year of employment first-year salaries for hospital attendants will in- two years to break the loag| Prime Minister Macmillan} (CP) -- Pay in-| Soviet Premier Khrushchev, made public Sunday. Khrushchev told Kennedy he would accept two or three on- |site inspections a year in Rus- sia as part of a system to pre- vent sneak testing. Kennedy re- plied he was encouraged by Khrushchev's change of atti- tude which the Soviet premier had called "a major act of good- Union." However, U.S. officials said that beyond accepting @ prin- ciple Khrushchev has offered little. They noted that in 1959 Khrushchev agreed to on - site inspections. He renounced this, however, in November, 1961, shortly after Russia broke the voluntary test moratorium. Cold Weather \Clings To U.S. Again Today CHICAGO (AP) -- A fresh snowstorm swept across areas from the Rockies eastward into the middle western United States today and a new surge of cold air spread into the east and deep into the southland Sub-zero temperature clung to much of the northern middle- west, with no general, immedi- ate relief indicated in the pro- longed cold wave. The new mass of Arctic air which in- vaded the northeast temperatures below zero in northern Maine and western New York State. Freezing weather chilled areas in northern Florida and much of the southeast. Miami shivered as the tempera- ture dropped into the 40s. There were sharp drops in tempera- tures throughout the east as the icy air spread from the snow - covered sections of the middlewest. The cold air from Canada crease to $3,000 from $2,760 and linstead of $2,280. W. Europe Threatened By Shortage Of Food LONDON (AP) -- Food and fuel shortages threatened West-jing admitted than normally, a'65 or older. More people over 60 are be- ern Europe today as its winter| hospital spokesman said. In ad-| ice age entered its 33rd day. |dition, hospitals were reluctant The arctic spell threw ajto discharge: older patients for heavy burden on hospitals where|fear that their condition' would extra beds were crowded with! deteriorate outside. | the aged and infirm laid low by| All Belgian hospitals were full] biting winds, ice and snow. with hundreds of extra beds to Weathermen reported no re-|cope with the emergency. More) lief in sight. than a doen persons have died London reported emergency) there directly from the cold. hospital admissions running at} In Antwerp, where 400 éxtra 1,600 a week. Hospitals cut down|beds have been added to the routine admissions to normal } of patients were reported to be Zz In Britain, authorities re- ported that blood donations had dropped by 20 per cent in many areas because of transport dif- ficulties. The National Blood Transfu- sion Service in various parts of the country feared an acute shortage of blood for transfu- sions if roads cannot be kept] clear, Guy's Hospital, London,| | } jas a similar storm tapered off | 0 _ western New York. |that fell Monday. Spread southward east of the continental divide in Montana and Wyoming and covered most of. the Dakotas and Nebraska. Heavy snow and _ blustery winds battered sections of north- eastern New York today closing schools and clogging highways, Snow squalls east of Lake On- tario spread a white carpet over southern Jefferson County, add- ing to the two feet of snow will on the part of the Soviet) SOFTEN DE GAULL HOPE OF ADENAUE House leaders and party whips of the four political par- ties represented in the House of Commons get into a huddle as Parliament resumes ses- IN A HUDDLE sions following the holiday re- cess. They are' (clockwise from upper left): Stanley Knowles, NDP, A. B. Patter- son, Social Credit, Lionel Chevrier, Liberal; and Veter- an Affairs Minister Churchill, Progressive Conservative. --(CP Wirephoto) KOLWEZI, The Congo (Reut- ers) -- Some 1,000 United Na- tions troops today were in full control of this last remaining stronghold of K-tanga's Presi- dent Moise Tshombe who greeted his former enemies with. smiles, jokes and laughter. UN Troops In Control Of Final Stronghold UN force came as friends, not the Katangan people and thanked the seces- sionist president for "keeping your word" in connection with conquerers, of a previous agreement between Tshombe and the UN on the peaceful occupation of Kolwezi. UN attempted to take Kolwez by force, paved the way Mon Youth Guilty On Dangerous Driving Count BOWMANVILLE (Staff) A 19-year-old Oshawa youth | today pleaded guilty to a, any resistance. After the entry, of the UN outside 'his occupation day for the peaceful entry of} the troops by telling a mass] rally of his forces not to offer Tshombe} posed for pictures with Indian) ] Brig. Reginald Noronha, leader| é S ortgage troops, | (Tshombe's) tem- Tshombe, who at one point) Tshombe answered "we did had threatened a '"'scorched/everything we could to make earth" last-ditch stand. if the|sure there would be no trouble, i/but that also depends on you, |General," Striking Guild | room for emergency cases Canada By Frigid Air | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | A girdle of cold air aroud|s Canada's mid-section was ex-|ti pected to give way a bit in|Lake Huron Monday. About 40 southern Ontario today, but|s there was no hint of immediate|a relief on the Prairies. the province have been closed) because of towering drifts, the|clear power station at Douglas relief was likely to be brief. Point, The forecast calls for a returnjhalted Monda to frigid weather by tonight. [of 420 employees made it On the Prairies, where sub-|through the snow ~- blocked! zero temperatures followed or| roads. accompanied weekend storms,) Highways department snow- today's forecast was for more|plows were taken off roads of the same. 'around Owen Sound Monday High winds have been blamed|ni for much of Ontario's. troubles, | si eburning drifts up to high and making the thermome- ters seem optimistic when they|some sections there was no registered zero or: worse. jroom to push more snow off ithe roads. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 fr jie | vi m vi make! hospital's of 1,070, more than 35 per cent ( jinland at Owen Sound, several For Ontario, where highways/schools remained closed again and schools in western parts of/today. 15 feet!20 inches of said the drifts were so high in ardous driving conditions from|t hit areas to keep off the roads. complement Girdled | | Gusts up to 40 miles an hour truck Huron and Bruce coun- es on the eastern shore of chools were closed in the two gricultural counties. Farther Work at Ontario Hydro's nu- in Bruce County was y when only eight ght after plowing continuously nee a weekend storm dropped Plow crews The rest of western and south- ee of new snow, reported .haz- e, drifting snow and reduced sibility. | Both the highways depart- ent and provincial police ad-/f, sed motorists in the hardest-|t ? where many heart operations Charge of dangerous driving are performed, complained of|Which arose out of an accident| porary residence. To Pay Benefits Noronha told Tshombe the "extreme difficulty" in getting|in which a pedestrian man was blood | killed, G FUEL STOCKS LOW ene Peters, of Montrave javenue pleaded guilty to the Two Children Die NEW YORK (AP)--The New lYork Newspaper Guild (AFL- |C1O), announcing it is mortgag- entry point for ships carrying| fuel, oil and coal i can only work by day and, dur- mg freezes up again. ties were discussing water con-| servation measures. reservoirs just above the emergency level that must be maintained at all| ern Ontario, although generaily|t crops from the frozen ground. They hit carrots and potatoes with A spokesman for coal merchants federation re- ported the fuel situation was se-| rious Stocks in dealers' yards| were down to 1,000,000 tons -- about two weeks supply if. un- replenished. Coal was freezing} tracks in sidings. In western Germany, the fed eral railroad reported all its! rolling stock was in to| transport food, fuel and other! essential supplies. Special oil| | Britain's| charge before Magistrate R. B. |Baxter in Bowmanville Magis. trate's Court this morning. |July 7 at the Oshawa Town Line. in trucks and had to be thawed|S0"S Toad, was killed by a car out, tying up thousands of coal] While Was standing beside |the road. In Burning Home PEMBROKE (CP)--Two chil- dren died Monday night when fire destroyed the frame bunga- low of Mr. and Mrs. Clairdent Lair near this Ottawa Valley town. Peters also pleaded guilty to| They were identified as Jos- The accident occurred on Craig Howe, of Steven- charges of driving while 'dis-|eph, 12, and Richard, 7, qualified and failing to remain at the scene of an accident. Mr. Lair, 31, and two other children--Robert, 11, and Ann- The youth was remanded in/ette, 9, survived. Mrs. Lair, 32, trains were put in service to| CUStody for sentence in Cobourg) was at work in a Pembroke fac- carry heating oil from the re-|0 Jan. 25. fineries j in the north to the! tory. snowbound cities of the south. | Holland was using 30 icebreak- ers to keep the Scheldt Estuary free from ice. This is the main) LATE NEWS FLASHES al Icebreakers| the night the waterway Vienna and other Austrian ci- ; mi Vienna's| were reported only imes in case of big fires. | British farmers used pneuma-|- ic road drilis to dig vegetable hammers to free them| rom ice before sending them © market. Frost has ruined! much of the vegetable crops. | | Thieves Take $3,500 From Safe Priests Said Beheaded By Sudanese LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (AP) --- Roman Catholic sources said today refugees from the southern Sudan reported Msgr. | Ireneus Dud and another priest have been beheaded by Sudanese intent on converting non-Moslems to Islam. Confirmation was lacking. The Vatican had no official. report French Nuclear Force Ready By 1964 PARIS (Reuters) -- Defence Minister Messmer sdid today France's independent nuclear strike force would be ready by the | end of the year. | | LONDON, Ont. (€P) -- Thieves stole $3,500 -- the proceeds of a bingo game Monday -- from the safe in an office of the special events building in East London. The money was missed today when a bank manager entered the building to collect the proceeds of the game. Jenough to effectively discuss a ling its headquarters building to jhelp pay strike benefits to members, has urged that fresh personnel be brought into nego- tiations if necessary to end New {York City's newspaper down, now in its 46th day. At a membership. meeting | Monday night, the guild adopted la resolution calling on Labor Secretary. W. Willard Wirtz and \federal mediators to insist chat} istriking printers and newspaper | |Publishers 'resume negotiations) jand continue in session until an} jagreement has been reached."| | Both sides, the resolution said |"'seem to be unable to remain at the bargaining table long jsettlement."" The Guild, editorial and ployees, is one of which represents commercial em- 10 unions whose members have not been|a man injured while trying to|David slipped on a steep. slope. |working because of the print-}! ers' strike. Local 6 of the International went on strike against four of the city's nine major néwspa-| '/pers Dec. 8 in a contract wage|PY ; ! ve major|from the village of Lillooet, dailies closed down, saying a|Where they were taken after the strike against one was a strike|escue during the weekend. dispute, The other fi against all. In Cleveland, the Guild andjand a friend, William Fleming, jthe independent Teamsters,16, are weekend trappers. Ger- |Union have been on strike forjald and William were with Da- |54 days against the Ohio city's|vid when he fell 60 feet into \two dailies--The Plain Dealér|about two feet of water and suf- fered a broken neck. and The Press and News. shut-| | In New York, informed sources at. UN headquarters said the occupation would vir- jtually end the military. phase lof the UN Congo operation. | One point still under discus- sion here is the disarming of Tshombe's gendarmes. It has been agreed they will retain their uniforms and not be treated as prisoners. The UN appeared to be doing everything possible to allow Tshombe to retain his dignity and authority as provincial leader, at least temporarily. InWashington, President Kennedy called on the Congo- lese "'to rally behind their. na- jtional and provincial leader- | ship." He said the peaceful entry of UN forces into Kolwezi, con- firmed , the downfall of |Tshombe's regime. And this, he jsaid in a statement Monday, iis warmly welcomed by the |United States and all who are iconcerned with the future of The Congo and the whole of Ways Discussed . To Save Talks'. PARIS (Reuters)--West Ger-,lian |man Chancellor Adenauer today ity.' . met privately for two hours} Macmillan said de Gaulle is with President de Gaulle to dis-|qyposing Britain's bid to enter cuss ways of avoiding a break-|the Common Market for polit- down of the Brussels negotia-|ja.) reasons. tions for Britain's entry into the The' British 2éader alee re a ey ce gp le retype minded de Gaulle that the move said the Brussels crisis was the|™ent ig age ye nod was main subject of the second day|founded "by the greatest Eng- of top-level talks between the|lish patriot of this or aay other time, Sir Winston Churchill. two statesmen. "The chancellor said last; Informed sources said Mote night it was his intention te die-iday that the West German fos cuss the matter with de Ganfle./eign minister, Gerhard Schrog I think one can assume that he|der, had insisted "energetio did so." ally" in talks with bis French The German source said the|counterpart, Maurice Couve de chancellor put these proposals|Murville, that France should to de Gaulle for averting ajjoin Germany and. the other breakdown at Brussels: Market couatries in trying to To entrust Italian Trade Min-|avoid a direct break in the ister Emilio Colombo with the/talks. He noted that such a break task of drawing up an -- list of agreements so far/coyld have serious political re reached with Britain; percussions in West Germany. Or to give this job to the) 'he sources said Adenauer Common Market executive Com-| tiyizeq Monday's talks to draw mission. f de Gaulle's attention to wide- Adenauer. was willing, how-|spread support in West Germam ever, to consider any method|nolitical and industrial circles for British membership in the ces are essential to secut- acceptable to France, the source said. Market. = West' German sources said) 4 spokesman for Adenauer Monday night after the first day|caiq Monday West Germany - of talks in which Adenauer) rayors British member ip. xg, was- reported to have told de/had made this' positioclear ln Gaulle his government was 4n-|the course of the Brussels ne- xious to avoid a definite break! gotiations. in the entry negotiations -- to- day's discussions would be the most important as far as the Market issue was concerned. The sources said the official German view now is that it is necessary to play for time in deciding on the British bid. De Gaulle last week delivered a major blow to British entry hopes and France subsequently urged that the Brssels nego- tiations be suspended. WARNS DE GAULLE Monday night in a speech, Prime Minister Macmillan warned the French president trying to dictate the future of free Europe. Macmillan told a political rally in Liverpool that no country "in these days can stand entirely on its own, Al- Talks Opened On Rhodesia Federation SALISBURY, Southern Rhode sia (Reuters) -- R, A. Butler, British minister for central Af- rican affairs, today opened crue cial 'talks with Federal Prime Minister Sir Roy Welensky on) the future of the Rhodesian fed- eration, The talks are aimed at find- ing a formula that would retain some form of unity between Northern and Southern Rhode- sia and Nyasaland, and be ac+ ceptable to the federation's 8, }000,000 Negroes and 300,000 Eu ropeans, ; Flag Marks Ukrainian The present political structure Independence ..... Page 9 | already has been cracked by the |British decision to permit Ne- Labor Asks : igro-governed Nyasaland to se Board Representation Page 9|cege from the federation later this year. The new Negro government in |copper-rich Northern Rhodesia also will demand the right to se 9 |cession when its leaders meet Butler later this week. 9 | Attention centres on the pros |pects of reshaping the federa- jtion into a looser association 3 | with emphasis on economic ti jparticularly as the wealth |Northern Rhodesia's copper }mines hold up much of the YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Parks Commission Head Named .......Page 9 | Jaycees Honor Don Brown ....++.. Page City Drops Federation Membership ....... Page School Heating Problem Discussed . Page Oshawa Teachers Going Overseas ... Page 3 | Africa." | 'whole federation's economy. « 2 People Break Necks - In Mountain Mishaps VANCOUVER (CP) -- Sep-| arate hazardous rescue opera-! tions on mountain trails plucked|weekend to check the trapline jtwo persons--both with broken/and reset the traps. We picked necks -- from icy streams on|up only one marten and set out | snow-covered Mount Brew about|for home. 125 miles north of here. slipped and fell 10 feet into the creek, His neck was broken and he was paralyzed from the waist down. : While the first group. carried David out, a second party of William told this story: "We go up the mountain every | "I was walking in front at/80, among them Dr. Michael The second accident involved|about the 3,000-foot level when|Clark, Nigel's brother, ~ was made up. | "I heard him-yell and he) site of the accidents was rescue the victim of the first.) Two. separate rescue forces;smashed through the ice and were made up of about 100 per-|into the creek." | Typographical Union (AFL-CIO) esse jabout two miles from Lillooet in treacherous mountain country.' ISAVE DAVID When Dr. Clark had been ree Dr. Nigel Clark, 22, and Da-| William and Gerald pulled|coverd, it was found impossi- vid Offin, 16, were flown here|David from the water unconsci-|Dle to carry him over the slip- RCAF. helicopter Mondayjous and gave him mouth-to-|Pery trail. The rescuers formed David, his brother Gerald, 14, mouth respiration until he be- came semi-conscious. by Dr. Nigel Clark was organ- ized after William had climbed down flagged passing RCMP Corporal Ted Guinyk. move David out, a chain and passed the stretcher |from one to the other. Each man would move down and take his place at the other end of the line as the stretcher passed him. About 14 hours elapsed from the time of David's accident unm started to/til he and Dr. Clark were safely Dr. Clark'in hospital at Lillooet. < A A 20-man rescue party headed to the highway and When the party } ] j N 5 On School Costs -- Pg |