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The Oshawa Times, 8 Jun 1961, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT The latest import from the U.S, black rainclouds, will hover around for the next 48 hours. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Don't put off till tomorrow what you can do today -- by then it . may be outlawed, licensed or taxed. Authorized es Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy CONSTRUCTION STRIKE STOPS SUBWAY WORK More Projects May Close Down TORONTO (CP) -- Construc-| However, the Carpenters' Un- tion was stopped on tunnel ex-|ion said it would not stop work cavations at the new east-west/on the subway because it is in Fubvay today as jurkers conciliation with the Bullders walked out in sympathy wi xch e Exch reat- striking immigrants, and union|ened to boycott the condition officials claimed the entire $200,-| sessions if there was a walkout. Y0500 project will be closed by| The powerful Toronto Build- midnight. ing Trades Council was to meet Union officials. also predicted today to consider the action by that all the area's commercial the carpenters. projects will be shut down| ypiong jnyolvd in the original within a week unless ready-mix strike which began May 29 cement suppliers stopped cross-l.1oim pyilders and contractors me Immigrant Workers picket ve broken wage agreements ines in He s ; {with im mi grant construction Most residential buildings pro-| jects have already closed as jms | 7 2TkETS mare than 1,000 times, migrant work er s battle with CONFER WITH LEADERS contractors to obtain union com! premier Frost and chief con- ditions. ciliation officer Louis Fine be- VOL. 90--NO. 133 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1961 " Magistrate Raps Court 'Remanditis' | Deputy Magistrate Robert Bor- cized the accused for being im- |don Dneiper lashed out at crown | properly dressed in the court- |and defence counsels for request- room, The accused said he had ing a remand in Whitby Magis-| just come from work. The mag- trate's Court today. |istrate asked: 'Does your job " | "Remanditis" is a prevalent take precedence over Her Maj- - | |disegse in this area, he said.|esty's Court?" He ordeted the he ; wit | "Liberties taken by counsel,|accused to get properly dressed ATLAS AR LOSS ALAS {crown counsel and agents, are during the adjournment. Burke h appalling." ved t {did this. bat- readiness test. The Air | missile lies horizontally until | he magisirale Was Spurtel 10 After the adjournment, the | Force said the explosion was | jt is raised upright for fueling {asked in the case of 'Michael Dggisivale was lola that Showy due to a malfunction. The blast | and firing. |Gerry Burke, 21, of 75 Buck-| arise" ia is 8g 5 pong TE or a (ingham avenue, Oshawa, charg: would" like to handle it him- ing excavation in which the | fed with assault, | al t Acting Crown Attorney Arlie Hillman did not want to proceed because the accused had pre- |viously consulted him as a def- a 4 4 Flame and smoke cover the area as an Atlas interconti- nental missile blew up at Van- denberg Air Force Base in | California today during a com- | : --(AP Wirephoto) The magistrate said: "I might {point out that in my own view |it is improper for a Crown At- Some concrete pours at the U.S. May Remove Ban ense counsel. | Russell Murphy, of Oshawa, also wanted the remand. Defence counsel Magistrate Dneiper adjourned 1 torney to have strong feelings |about any case at all: He is sup- posed to be an impartial officer of the Crown." On Grain Unloaders repercussions it border re- | However, the magistrate said he was reluctant to proceed! without an agent for the Crown, | sc the Court was "forced to ad-| journ". He set it over for two weeks, and apologized to the at-| the case for three-quarters of an hour. He told the crown and def-| ence counsels to consult Crown| |Attorney Bruce Affleck who was {busy with County Court proceed-| lings. The magistrate suggested WASHINGTON (CP) -- The|reason to deny delivery of the|the possible United States government has|equipment." may have in cross - agreed to allow the export off Roland Michener, Speaker of lations. : certain grain handling equip-{the Canadian Commons, said The ruling against export of ment to be used by Norwegian|the issue likely will be discussed the equipment originated in the tankers hauling Canadian|at today's meeting of the Can- treasury department's foreign grain to Red China, it was|ada - U.S. interparliamentary|assets control branch which po- {another agent for the Crown |could be appointed. learned today. Magistrate Dneiper also criti- |group. Two dozen members of lices the American Prohibition] |tending witnesses for the incon- | subway were being completed although tunnel work had halted. Union officials said pours had to be finished to keep the gan to confer with leaders from both sides soon after the walk- out paralyzed nearly all resi- dential projects in the city. Gerry Gallagher, secretary- job safe. CLAIM STRIKE ILLEGAL The Toronto Builders' Ex- change said it would fight the walkouts and indicated it would treasurer of Local 183 of the International Laborers' Union (CLC), sald he was "very dis- turbed"- that the men had not followed union orders. He said ask the Ontario Labor Relations he could no longer control the Board to declare them illegal.' workers. |8 § ; i iog) FI A diplomatic informant said|Parliament and Senators from against trade with Red China.| the agreement--in the form of Canada are meeting with their The view in Canadian and Nor- an "accommodation" in the in"| American counterparts in a two-|wegian quarters was that the terests of Canada-U.S. relations| day session to discuss trade, de- decision had been taken by re- --was reached after the U.S./fence and diplomatic problems. latively inoy officials shout state department called a num-| prichener, leading the Cana-|the advice of senior sta p ber of emergency meetings t0|gian group, said hog a not con. |Partment administrators. verrule the treasury depart-|c; They said the senior diplo- ae ry depart: sider the issue a matter of great ied eC ot consulted until Under American' law {rade the ban blew up inte' a big is- with Red China is prohibited. | sue Wednesday with the véceipt US. 1S WORRIED The treasury department had] However, American diplomats|of Canadian and Norwegian re-| presentations. Then diplomatic|f; machinery began rolling to up- ; ruled that the suction equip-|are known to be worried over! ment, known as '"'vacuvators," the widespread attention the is: | could not be sold since the Nor-| sue has received in Canada and|set the ruling. wegian tankers hauli the, Bae we LAOS Talks Flop Over New Attack Informants said a decision GENEVA (Reuters) ~ The Poland--will send an "early re- was reached to make an excep- tion in this case and the decision | American, British and. French|port" on the new fighting. |delgeations told Russia today| had been conveyed to Prime Minister Diefenbaker. CALLED MEETINGS The state department Wednes- day called a number of emer- gency meetings in moves to re- verse the ban after Canadian Ambassador Arnold Heeney and| Norwegian Ambassador Paull Koht made representations tol the government over the ruling. Heeney made his argument by telephone and it was learped he co-chairman of the con received a warm and encourag- told Russia's Georgi ing response. Koht lodged a formal protest by delivery of a note in which he argued the equipment, made sessions of the deadlocked con-| government. ference on Laos until they re-| No session of the conference ceive new instructions from had been arranged for today their governments. although the Communists Malcolm MacDonald, British| wanted one. MacDonald said the ference, date of the next meeting would Pushkin | P® announced "in due course." . The Americans were hoping that the delegations were con-|that the return here of Soviet ferring with their governments Foreign Minister Andrei Gro- {about the future of the talks| myko tonight would salvage the by an Illinois firm, was not be. | following new leftist attacks on|crumbling talks. ing sold to Red Chinese inter right-wing troops in Laos. The American, British and ests but would be retained by The American delegation was French delegates met this the Norwegian shippers. The/ still waiting for word from| morning to discuss the serious equipment is required to unload Washington following what the|situation in the kingdom and its Canadian 'grain in Red China United States described as al effect on the talks here. which apparently lacks suffi-| 'blatant violation" of the cease-| An authoritative source said cient unloading equipment of i's fire agreement. the Americans were still "hang- own. The three big Western powers|ing on the hope" that Gromy- "One of the tankers is wait- expressed the hope that the in-ko's return might lead to an ef- ing to take off from Montreal," ternational control commission|fective cease-fire in the king- Koht said. "I cannot see any --made up of India, Canada and! dom. Fake Records C laimed None Killed In Camp JERUSALEM (AP) -- A| The Lithuanian-born woman form and took with her docu- woman survivor of the Ausch-|told the trial court she was sent|ments on the gassing in the witz death camp testified today to Auschwitz as a young girl camp to make public to the at the Adolf Eichmann trial from France, where she had world. that persons gassed or shot/been studying. She said in| 3 were not recorded -- or their|Auschwitz she was chosen "hap pore gil, Who 3 fied with 2 files were destroyed--so that hazardly" as a clerk because|yakian border when she asked camp registry books showed|she could speak German. Shela customs official for direc- only disease as a . cause of said she and a few other Jewish tions She was brought back to death. |women worked in the camp ad-(tto Birkenau sub - camp of . "According to the files, no- ministration office which regis-| Auschwitz ; body was killed in Auschwitz--|tered the deaths and the live| y not one," said Raya Kagan, prisoners of Auschwitz. [CUT HER VEINS who worked in the camp as a. Mrs. Kagan said there were| "The woman commander, The Canadian delegation also| they will not attend any further| sought new instructions from its! [ i It i i = 'Buck Rogers' 'Rocket Belt Now Reality | BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -- A |practical, working rocket belt, [Lom from the pages of science- fiction, has made a reality of {mankind's age-old dream of fly- {ing with the birds. | A twist of a throttle, a turn -- |of 'a lever, and man leaps from| | the ground, his own personal | rocket belt strapped to his back. {He hovers in the air, he flies {over rivers, he flits up a hill | that would leave him breathless to climb. His support is a twin-nozzle thrust of hydrogen peroxide | steam. All this was revealed today {by Bell Aerosystems Company, which developed the belt--called {a small rocket lift device | (SRLD)~--for the army transpor- tation research command. Photos of a test engineer, Harold Graham, in personal flight with the man - rocket showed him easily leaping a fire truck, handily swirling up a hill, casually jumping a stream. In 30 successful test flights this spring, Bell said, Graham achieved a speed of about 20 {miles an hour. His longest hori- 'zontal flight was 360 feet. He . |criticized Britain's "tragic" col- | onial policy in a speech Wed-| : (ago UK. Policy | Attacked By Welensky SALISBURY (AP) -- Sir Roy Welensky, prime minister of the| Rhodesian Federation, Ditterly) | | nesday night. He called the policy "the sell- out of Britsh Africa." Speaking at a dinner in this Southern Rhodesian city, Wel" ensky said Britain had a direct] responsibility for the recent re-| surgence of the Mau Mau move- | ment in Kenya. He said the Mau Mau almost broke the country four years! "and yet it seems that| some in Britain continue to put| the trust in the leaders of such movements as Mau Mau to gov- ern themselves and control their country." "Add to this Zanzibar, where in recent days we have seen a constitution virtually go to pieces." OLD POLICY DITCHED Welensky charged that Brit- ain at some stage had aban- doned its colonial policy which in the past had achieved steady and real advancement of colon- |ial peoples toward competence, | |integrity and civilization. | He also attacked Communist |aspirations in Africa which he claimed are creeping steadily southward from Cairo. He said Communists are be- {hind the African nationalists and| |their purposes which are mainly | ["to rule any sort of country, |w hether it makes economic) {sense or not as long as it's a | ROYAL WEDDING The Duke of Kent, 25, and his 28-year-old bride, the form- er Katharine Worsley, are shown at the altar after their | wedding in the Anglican York Minster Cathedral at York, England, today. --(AP Wirephoto via radio London) Ottawa Tree Hurt Kennedy WASHINGTON (CP) -- The White House disclosed today that President Kennedy has been suffering a back injury since May 16 when he hurt him- self planting a tree in Ottawa. Kennedy kept the injury se- cret from members of his staff. It was known, of course, to his personal physician, Dr. Janet Travell. White House press secretary | Pierre Salinger said there is no connection between Kennedy's present back trouble and that $50 MILLION FOR RAILWAYS OTTAWA (CP) The government is putting up $50,000,000 for Canada's big railways this year to im- plement the recommenda- tions of the MacPherson Royal Commission on Trans- portation. black country." | KENNEDY REPORTS WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Kennedy has informed con-| gressional leaders that Premier| Khrushchev raised his voice] when he told him in Vienna that| West Berlin is a bone that must | come out of the Soviet throat. W. Berlin 'Bone' Irks Khrushchev tariat direction of the United Nations. As reported by responsible sources, these were some of major topics discussed and the positions taken in the 12 hours of conversations between the fri viously and for which he under- went a delicate operation sev- eral years ago. om which he had suffered pre- Kennedy suffered the new in- jury in Ottawa May 16, the first day of his Canadian trip. PLANTED TREE It occurred when he was lift- ing several spades of dirt while planting a tree at Government House, residence of Canada's governor-general, Georges Van- r. Salinger called reporters into his office to tell them about the linjury. He said Kennedy would |appear today on crutches. But, even as Salinger was [talking with reporters, the pres- ident telephoned Salinger to say he would not use crutches today but would wait at least another day to see how he felt. Salinger disclosed that Ken- nedy did use crutches for two days while at Hyannis Port, Mass. This was just prior to his trip to Paris, Vienna and Lon- don. Salinger said Dr. Travell de- scribed the injury as a lumbo- sacral strain. Girl Killed 'By Lightning TORONTO (CP) -- Patricia Hargrave, 13-year-old Scarbor- ough schoolgirl, was killed by a lightning bolt today when she and a friend took refuge under a tree during a violent electric minister to make final tariff rulings was rejected today by a vote of 18 to 8 in the Senate banking committee. The majority strength of op- position Liberal senators carried an amendment proposed by Sen- ator David Croll (L--Ontario) to provide for an appeal to the tariff board from the minister's decisions. The measure now re- turns to the Senate for third and final reading. The Liberals have an overwhelming majority in the Upper Chamber. Senator Croll's made one concession to the gov- ernment's argument that such amendment|. - - Senate Kills Tariff Move OTTAWA (CP)--The key sec-|tariff decisions must be made tion of the government's con- promptly. It specified that on troversial tariff bill giving arbi-|any appeals the tariff board's trary powers to the revenue decision will be final, with no further appeal to the Exchequer Court or Supreme Court of Canada. He noted that under the law, any appeals from the minister's decision must be heard within 60 days. Senator Croll said that in pre- senting his amendment he is not opposed to the bill itself. HAS MANDATE "I recognize it is a measure in which the government feels it has a mandate." But his amendment would re- ject "government by minister secret decision on tariffs by minister and arbitrary ac- tion by the minister." clerk and now is an official in|forms even for punishment of Maria Mandel, demanded a the Israeli foreign ministry. prisoners, listing how many|spectacular punishment," Mrs. The *'great paradox of Ausch- whip lashes were given to a/Kagan said. "But Mala (the witz,"" she said, was that Jews prisoner or how much tim: he|girl) had succeeded in hiding a sent to the death camp as crim-|spent in the '"'stehzelle"--a tiny razor blade in her sleeve and inal offenders were spared|arrest cell in which he could/she cut her veins during the from the gas chamber. The of-|only stand. roll-call. fenders never had to 80 ON cA MOUFLAGE CAUSES "When an SS man walked up| parade for the gas SHambar "We received certificates of to Mala and mocked at her, she| paslectiohs #, arvied owt Y hel death," she continued, "and in slapped his face with her bieed:| Nazis hub OLers, With NO Crim, short time it became clear to|ing hands and said, 'I'll die a inal charges against them, were us that this was a camouflage. heroine but you will die a storm did not try for any great alti- y YE The other girl, Pat Latcur, 14, tude, but the belt carried him up a steep, 30-foot-high hill with ease. The president also reported|two leaders: Khrushchev indicated he re perling--KRFusichev lies not! was knocked unconscious. gards Cuban Prime Minister|Sangec nis position. of . more - . | A third girl, Joan Main, also Fidel Castro as unstable -- and| 1. tW0 years' standing that he yo shaken but was not taken {not a Communist. |intends to sign a separate peace|y,"pochital All three were be- Kennedy briefed | |treaty with East Germany. He: influential | fixed no date for this action. Flejleyed en routs to school "when {members of both parties at a 90-|told Kennedy that nobody but "power "wae cut off to more |minute White House conference|the United States still believes i .n" 100. homes traffic was | MORLAIX, France (AP)-.{Tueslay pelore he told the coun. Bast _and West Germany an slowed and underpasses flooded i About 4,000 angry farmers de-|try in a television-radio broad-be reunited. by the 1% inches of rain which tortured and killed. We had to record in the forms|dog.' " manding Higher rive for their|cast a few hours later that the The only time Khrushchev pelted Fit, in the hour that the all sorts of diseases as cause] Mala died in the camp dis-|produce occupied this town in|West is ready to maintain ify raised his voice in the whole pe-| torn' asted. CITY EMERGENCY of death such as pneumonia, | pensary. | Brittany today, blocking streets|rights to Berlin "at any risk." riod of discussion was when he! Streams of water pouring into PHONE IMBERS |general weakness, syphilis and] Mrs. Kagan said the staff of|with farm vehicles. The briefing, during which the talked about Berlin and used the gy, POLICE RA 5-1133 1 bway entrances forced {so on. : |Jewish girls in the records of-| Tearing up paving blocks|/president read from his trans-|bone in the throat phrase he has|transit workers to cut off es- { "When it said sudden deathifice grew from 10 to 60. In 1942|f FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 French Farmers Tear Up Street HUNGRY WAIF [, x. rom the street, the farmers|lator's transcript of some of/employed before. (Kennedy said|calators and riders had to wade it meant killing. We never re-land early 1943 the flow of|took over the local administra-|the conversations, was said to/in his broadcast report '"there|through deep pools. {corded a case that a prisoner|/deaths was so heavy, she said, tive building. {have disclosed that Khrushchev was no discourtesy, no loss of] The weather office said there {was shot "that we worked from 5:30 in| Some 100 police on duty were was vitally interested 'n ~='- tempers, no threats or ultima- would be showers and thunder- She told of one Jewish girlithe morning until 9:30 at/powerless to prevent the take-/two subjects at this time--Ber- tums by either side" during the showers throughout the day and ho escaped wearing an SS uni- night." |lin and by its mother, bottle feeding. --(CP Wirephoto) > Helle Bertelsen, 16, of Van- It thrives on couver, found this baby squir- rel after it had been deserted bi LJ Iw over. a change in the secre-|Vienna conferences.) into the night, clearing Friday. ----

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