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The Oshawa Times, 28 Aug 1961, p. 1

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YI A AA cd THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's not necessary to give the bridegroom a shower -- he's all washed up anyway. dhe Oshavwon Times WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudiness with widely scattered showers today and Tuesday, warm with light winds. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90--NO. 199 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1961 Authorized as Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawo TWENTY PAGES With Proper Weather It was brought under con-|the insurrection were taken by|charged with inciting to riot, but fronts heavy timber. | nsur | A total of 1,000 soldiers fanned meeting in Libya from Aug. 9 toons. out over the central and eastern|Aug. 27. Rebels Propose Stiffer Fight TUNIS (Reuters) -- Algerian headed for Cairo for a meeting |insurgent leaders today an-|of the leaders of the six "Casa {nounced plans to intensify their blanca powers--the insurgent | | struggle for indépendence in the | government, the United Arab | wake of the appointment of Ben Republic, Morocco, Ghana, | Youssef Ben Khedda, a battle- | Guinea and Mali. | hardened nationalist, as head of -------------------- the rebel government. | | A cement by the Na-| Ww ek d Bi ie Alor e en lots | | Revolution said it had decided . |on ways of strengthening the in- Bring Court - Action Plan Isurgent army, mobilizing the! | Algerian people and organizing {them in political and social | spheres. The communique was issued MONROE. N.C. (AP) -- The |g city eouncil planned to seek an|¥ injunction in court today against 'anti - segregation picketing by mixed Negro and white youths a day a'ter Ben Khedda was named to replace Ferhat Abbas as leader of the insurgent gov- lof th . t t that set off a weekend of vio-| of the government, was not ence in this city of 10,000. ; given a new post. Ben Khedda + | lis 41, Abbas 62. A policeman was wounded |® to mobilize the maximum ma- (patrol said 20 shots were fired nemper of International terial and political and diplo-|Dy Negroes, and the highway| ;nion of Mine, Mill and Smel- It also repeated the insurgent house Sunday night, morning he isn't willing to en- claim to the oil-rich Sahara as| Sporadic fights downtown re-| .. besieged Mine-Mill union part of Algerian territory. sulted in at least 47 arrests by bi |Germany and said the subject of such talks could only be the WORKER WON'T ENTER hall. Riot Act had to be read to milling crowd outside. Tur- bulent Local 598 of Mine-Mill union has been placed under trusteeship by executive. --(CP Wirephoto) | ernment. Abbas, regarded as the leader of the moderate wing | Today's council communique Sunday, a white couple was said a new effort will be made held hostage for several hours matic support for the battle for at 2 carload of white persons| o. workers Union tells crowd Algerian' independence. passing a Negro integrationist's| in Sudbury, Ont., Sunday Da y S MET IN LIBYA " |early today. The decisions on stepping up! Most of those arrested were after burning through the council--which amounts to|several persons were charged {the insurgent parliament--at a|with carrying concealed weap- ovince Sunday to] The same : Louk 'Robert Kennedy saying the | | city had been invaded by "free- UAW Pressures meeting decided alga fo Us. pri doe Big 3 Car F irms hag the jo hob Newfoundlanders who|replacing 'Abbas have been on the job for weeks, tougher Ben Khedda. Immediately after the an- dom riders" and "carpet bag- |nouncement of his appointment|gers." He asked that they be DETROIT (AP)--The United, for agreement "if there is good Auto Workers union, armed with|will on both sides." He pointed a profit-sharing settlement at{out the AMC and UAW pact was Ben Khedda'restrained. American Motors and with other sprinkling of rain today, On the major (fire fire to the co-ordination cen- was danger, all the fires were bombing planes and land forces. | firefighting equipment, the sol- smouldering in the wake of|of a flareup at Bay Bulls, 15|N.B., were prepared to stay on the weekend. 4 Poe > destroyed 1,000,000 acres wind was driving today's show. Bush Explodes spruce and fir--enough potential would shake rain from the trees two paper mills in operation for helping quench fires. W. J. Keough said the loss just A 1) R munity still evacuated. Two KAMLOOPS (CP) -- Forests| He said direct cost to the were staying here, but unless loops forest district ex-| third paper mill |gary climbers, one of them in- e| weekend as lightning struck the province of fighting the fires has| Mountain slope 9,400 feet above i y ft their|dry estimated to have le To C d blazes Saturday night raised the wis ud : J ling weather on 9,600-foot Moun Fires Set anada number burning in any other F P lj or 0 iceman mountain is in the Kananaskis OTTAWA (CP)--Forest fires taken turns as the most critical Light showers sprinkled the thier won a 10-minute, 14-shot| A helicopter was expect The federal forestry depart- . : firefighters their first break in| In hospital in fair condition| platform of planks and poles on reported forest fires in Canada district was the Horsefly coun- legs cue landing Sunday but was acres of forest land. Phillips said "the whole of thela wild man had left the res fires damaged or destroyed 941,- Within hours, three lightning| - Constable Gauthier spottedia 70-foot tumble. Raubach also 8.162 fires have been reported, 30.000 acres of valuable fir and gunpoint and unsuccessfully|await rescue. vear, 5646 fires had destroyed GANDER, Nfld. (CP)--New- communities since the fires be- ital. and chief forester Ed Ralph es- of Glenwood-Gander, Bonavista tre Sunday and they were under control early today,| A report from St. John's told|diers, from Camp Gagetown, Sunday night, nearly an inch of rain during|miles from the provincial cap-|the job indefinitely. So far this year the fires have| FELL 70 FEET A 35-mile - an - hour ra of | ers. Forestry officials said it pulpwood to keep the province's and drive it into the ground, Into Flames {10 years. Resources Minister | Carmanville on the northeast| Ww C | about ruin§ the province's hope coast today was the only com- est oast hundred Carmanville Fegidents the central British Columbia|province's nope of attracting aj CALGARY (CP) -- Two Cal- the fires spring up again, they in flames during the| He said direct cost to the jyred, were huddled on a Rocky More than 50 Poh neir dry area 81 times in three days. reached about $1000.00. Ise level in freezing winds to- homes in several Newfoundland] Men |day. They were not expected to area's total to 171, double the Blane were Gordon W. Cocker, : forest district. Record This July | MONTREAL (CP)--Montreal{range 50 miles southwest of were reported in record num- forest fire area. northern Prince Rupert and|duel Sunday with a berserk pluck the men to safety ' ment said today there were 3,400 weeks is Roger Ducharme, 32, suffer-/which the aircraft can land. during the month and that they : try, 130 miles north of Kam- Police were sent to an east forced to abandon it by the steep Previous record high for July Horsefly 'Lake country is on/taurant taking pot shots at/HURT IN FALL 000 acres. strikes joined forces and, | him and took off in pursuit. The|fell 20 feet to a ledge and destroying or damaging 3,700,000 spruce. About 170 men were bat- trying to start it, ran down an| They had sleeping bags and or damaged 1,231,000 acres Two Climbers strike authorization, applied | pressure today on General Mot- ors, Ford and Chrysler for new | contracts. Each of the Big Three go back to their respective bargain- ing tables with union represent- atives today Except at Chrys- ler, there was a week-end re-|go100 that route. cess in negotiations. Unless something gives by, Thursday midnight, when cur- rent three-year Np Aan i | out, UAW President Walter Reu- OF loves; YEngers, who $id re | ther said there will be a strike ground. |against one of the Big Three. Clouds swirled around the Workers aiready have rolled up mountain and temperatures Overwhelming majorities to escue rescue attempt by a small party {dipped below freezing Sunday ack up demands with walkouts| | have no intention of following a |ence Saturday that unless one Ikeda § foundland's forest fires got an-| gan nearly three months ago. |trol timated that if present weather North and Swift Current-Claren- days. : ) He said although there stilliquickly controlled by wate arrying their own field and of attracting a third paper mill. soon would return home. {ploded ee rushed into service after 20 new . be rescued until Tuesday. A Gun Duel Win | Trapped in the mists and bit- 129, and Vieter Raubach. The The five coast districts have| policeman Jean - Claude Gau- here. bers in uly. Prince George districts, giving gunman. day morning after rescuers 1 The hot spot in the Kamloops ing from bullet wounds in both) * A helicopter attempted a res- damaged or destroyed 1.317.000 loops. District forester W. C.|end restaurant after a call that|sjope and loose rock. was in 1960, when 3,172 reported fire." everything in his path. Cocker was reported hurt in To date this year a total of pushed by strong winds, covered man, after stealing a taxi at crawled to the injured man to acres. At the end of July last tling the blaze alley. food taken to them Sunday in a | Reuther said there still is time Wooden planks and poles to| Kh h h believable"--were being hauled mountain reached forest rang- {base camp. TOKYO (AP) Japanese | | Khrushchev he was meddling in A jet plane coming in for al In reply to. a personal mes. through the roof of a giant de- Soviet Union has aggressive in- night. The men were unable to|if necessary. [ build a fire since no wood was| available above the tree line. |-- build the platform--a feat de-| scribed by one ranger as "un-| "000 feet up the steep slope. | M ] Word of the pair's predica- S e er ment near the summit of the ers when four other members of Tked S {the climbing party reached their d d S Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda Jet Plane Crashes today told Sovie t Premier | {Japan's affairs by demanding On Roof Of Store | abrogation of the U.S.-Japan se- WILLOW GROVE, Pa. (AP)--| CUIity treaty. : 4 from Khrushchev landing at the Willow Grove 25: . le {naval air station Sunday crashed| 21 in effect thal gmless Hie | partment store a half mile from | tentions against Japan, the US. the runway. The pilot was killed | and between 30 and 35 persons Japan pact could not be a threat] ¢ to Moscow. Tkeda's message delivered to whipped together between Tues- day and Saturday. The new American Motors {agreement "ought to lay the | basis for economic settlement" |with other automakers, but if |any of the Big Three knows a | better way" to answer pressing human needs" he's willing to The Big Three have said they profit-sharing path. They insist production workers have shared in industry progress through wage ' increases that have brought the average wage to $2.80 hourly and added fringe benefits worth 35 to 40 cents ourly. They have offered wage raising packages this time that the union has rejected. Second offers have been made in the past before negotiations broke down and strikes erupted. Reuther fold a joint UAW- American Motors press confer- of the Big Three requested it, he would not re-enter negotia- tions personally until Wdnesday morning. A reporter suggested, "after a strike target has been picked," and Reuther replied, voice in any East-West talks on conclusion of a peace treaty. Neues Deutschland, organ of party, said in a front-page ed-| itorial: "It should be clear that ne- gotiations about the German problems without the (East) German Democratic Republic are unthinkable." The editorial said it should be clear now to everybody--after the slamming down of the Iron Curtain through Berlin -- that East-West talks are inevitable. Such talks would have to be on a peace treaty for both East and West Germany or, if the West should refuse that, a peace treaty with East Germany, the Red organ asserted. Neues Deutschland asserted that if a separate peace treaty is signed with East Germany-- as Soviet Premier Khrushchev has promised to do by the end of the year--all countries who want to use the land and air links between West Germany and West Berlin will have to make bilateral agreements on the subject with East Germany. OFFERS GUARANTEES It added: "We are prepared to give any Necessary Syarantee that rightly can be expected from us against any violation of the free city status of West Berlin." The Red regime ewould de- mand "guarantees for the un- disturbed peaceful life of our EAST GERMANS SHOUT FOR VOIGE AT PARLEY Quiet Weekend Around Border BERLIN (AP)--East German|antees that West Berlin won't Communists today demanded a be turned into a centre of sub- version against the peaceful construction of socialism in our republic." The Western Allies have al- ways refused to negotiate with the East German Communist|the East German .government, contending that it was imposed illegally by the Russians and is kept in power by the Red Army. Britain, the United States and France also contend that their rights in Berlin and their routes of access to the city were obtained by conquest in the war and can be subjects of negotia- tions only with their other ma- jor ally in the war, the Soviet Union. Barricades Criticized NEW DELHI (Reuters) --- Prime Minister Nehru said to- day any action to prevent West» ern access to Berlin would have "the gravest consequences" and condemned the setting up of barriers to divide the city. The United States and Britain expressed concern over a states ment last week by Nehru on Berlin and he told Parliament today he wanted to clarify "one The misunderstanding arose after a statement Wednesday by Nehru that Western access to Berlin was based on a conces- (East German) citizens, guar- sion from the Russians. Katanga ELISABETHVILLE (Reuters) The United Nations moved swiftly with Katanga govern- ment approval today to disarm European officers serving with the armed forces of this break- away Congo province. UN troops occupied strategic centres throughout Katanga and swooped down on the headquar- ters of the Katanga gendarm- erie to arrest the European of- ficers. President Moise Tshombe of Katanga said his government had agreed to the operation and called on the population to stay "calm and dignified.' He said the UN had given written assurances that the Ka- tanga armed forces--apart from the white officers--would not be disarmed and that the move was "that is right." not intended to clear the way Arrest European Officers for the entry of central govern- ment troops into Katanga. The president repeated, how- ever, that his province had a right to determine its own fu- ture independent of the central government. He said that "no- body can wish the one region in the Congo which is still orderly to fall into anarchy and chaos." Irish, Indian and Swedish troops carried out the operation swiftly at dawn, taking over such key installations as the central post office, the radio station and the airport. Ireland's Conor O'Brien, head of the UN operation in Katanga, said the operation was *"pro- ceeding successfully." Crowds of Negroes gathered in the streets of Elisabethville, the Ka- tanga capital, but there was no sign of any armed opposition. {injured, none critically. | Khrushchev by the Japanese | Officials said there were 75 to ambassador in Moscow was re-|: {100 shoppers and some 30 to 40 | leased by the Japanese foreign: employees in the discount store. ! office. Next Round In Court » SUDBURY (CP) -- A bitter; Supporters of local president the barricaded] Financial Secretary Raymond l ft i i : gor nt ' P main office. | Poirier, released on $100 bail! I 1S ou ar power struggle between the na- Don Gillis stood outside the hali| : tional executive of the Interna- today but honored his plea for, Windows were smashed in the|after being arrested Saturday tional Union of Mile, Mill and peace while lawyers fought the union hall. At one point, a group, on a charge of interfering with . . . Smelter Workers (Ind.) and its|case in court. A hearing was ran up the Communist hammer- police, told the crowd the Sud- A t defiant Sudbury local settled] expected Wednesday on expiry and-sickle emblem, an appar-|bury local's records are being wdal S eCclsion into an edgy siege today follow- of a temporary injunction re-'ently snide reflection on the al-|stolen from the union hall by| ing weekend violence straining the union from inter- leged left-wing leanings of the the national officers. ; RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) --|Latin American affairs. called I won't rest until T've seen prayijian Vice-President Joao|the Soviet charge absurd. Representatives of the na-/fering with Kennedy. national executive. r t until | cutive who seized the, § 's 17,000-strong local PLEADS FOR CALM |those thieves in jail," he said. Goulart wai i it . et ie : tional executive who seize | Sudbury's 1 2 The Taianetion iaken om by Gola t Waited in Paris today | War gh 0dylio a S an an local offices Saturday noon and|598--almost half the national! The weekend events were cli- I ke ut bickered over| Denys, army touched off a near-riot, held out membership -- accuses the na maxed when an estimated 4,000 the national executive expires| whether to let the left-wing la |g staunch Anti GC A inside the local union hall while tional leadership of being pro- persons turned out on two hours' Wednesday. Until then, it re-\yo. jeader take over the 80V-| showed Oe Ee hoo mun st; knots of Sudbury miners stood! Communist. The leaders of the notice to hear the Sudbury ex-|strains the local from interfer-|onment. in ex. anol. lowing around outside union, barred from membership ecutive plead at an open - airjing with William Kennedy, aj Amid the confusion created|syme the presidency he inher- The national executive pea {iu the Canadian Labor Con- aay for calm in the qays/ember of the National execu yy the resignation of President ited with Quadros' resignation : tee Williz Ken. | gress. says local 598 was trying aheac S "| Janio Quadros, the military ap-| : y : to Bl wre. to join. the rival United Steel- Don Gillis, president of thejtrator of Local 598. Jane Qua firm control of fel Goulart sent word to Denys caded Se the two-storey, red workers' Union (CLC) huge Local 598. told the cheer-l District Judge J. M. Cooper, situation. Sunday night by telephone: "1 brick building and were re- Trouble started Saturday (ing crowd: "They may close| who issued the injunction, said| The Foréign Office suspended 3™ fswning Pb Brazil to fulfil} ported holding out with food|when members of the nationalithe gates of East Berlin, butlit prevents anyone from inter- negotiations with Russia for res-{™Y duty. You ulfil yours. The| stored in the hall. executive, armed with a court(I'll be damned if they'll close|fering with Kennedy exercising|toration of diplomatic relations| pieSRéSe was conveyed through| 3 injunction, took over the Sud-|the doors of the Mine-Mill Halllhis legal rights. But he did not after a 14-year break--negoti- Braeil's Mmbassador to the UN, C bury district offices and ap-to the members of Local 598 {specify what those rights are. |ations that contributed to Quad- : SHnCiseD Santiago Dante, who CITY EMERGEN Y pointed an administrator to run! Jim Robertson, representing| He rejected a request from|ros' downfall and which Goulart oy ed wi e vice-president 3 PHONE NUMBERS the local the Canadian Labor Congress,|the national group for an order| supported. aris POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 ments were brought in and the ers. He urged Gillis supportersiof the injunction is scheduled|the United States in Brazil's af- stitutional right" to succeed leader, at Amritsar, India, |B Act was read Sunday tojto maintain their resistance to|Wednesday at Osgoode Hall in fairs." Robert Woodward, U.S. Quadros and wants to get back| Aug. 23, on ninth day of his Stone-throwing dnd fist fights promised support from the cen-|turning over all the books of the! Moscow radio charged that! Goulart himself kept in seclu broke out among members of|tral labor body for the local inllocal to Kennedy. Quadros was forced to quit be- sion but an aide said the vice- HOSPITAL 723-2211 disperse a crowd of hundreds the takeover. Toronto. lassistant secretary of state forito Brazil as auickly as vossible.| fast unto death in support of bd + » " DOCTORS CHECK FASTING SIKH Master | his demands for a separate A hearing on the continuation| cause of "crude intervention by| president 'will insist on his con. Tara Slagh, 76-year-old Sikh | sikh state in the Indian Pun- Doctors examine Delhi in attempts to reach | agreement with Indian Prime jab. Sikh negotiators have | Minister Nehru | made repeated visits to New | --AP Wirephoto 2 } rival groups. Police reinforce-lits dispute with national offic-

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