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The Oshawa Times, 2 Sep 1961, p. 1

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CE BE Ses ES EA > ar he Oshavon Tames ie Hi arte tin 1 th Me fo WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy with a few isolated thundershowers today and Sunday, continuing warm and humid, - ALG db Ed IVURT J TVR VT VOL. 90--NO. 204 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2,1961 Authorized as Second Cl Post Office Department, lass Mail Ottawa EIGHTEEN PAGES FORGE OSHAWA WORKERS READY NEW MODELS applying one of the five coats of material to the body of a 1962 model auto. One coat of Bondafite, two priming coats and two sprayed color applica- holiday in honor of the work- ing man, as a class) GM em- ployees have their hands full. Shown here is Jerry Prout, of the south plant body shop, Assembly of the new Gen- eral Motors cars for 1962 has just begun, and apart from a brief respite on Labor Day (originally set aside as a legal Union Local Protests Link With Teamsters SUDBURY (CP) -- The Port|deals with, but Port Colborne; The telegram, Gillis said, is Colborne lccal of the Interna-| president James Babirad was/considered by Local 598 as a tional Union of Mine, Mill and as inc id "retaliatory action . . . because Smelter Workers (Ind.) Friday Quoted earlier as saying in an ,¢ wnat has transpired in Sud- complained to the union's na-|interview "I expect Mr. Smith/p vu the last few days." tional president of the recently-|!0 Step down and stand trial On| since its inception in 1958 has! announced mutual aid agree. Charges of conspiring to deliver|poen at odds with the national ment between Mine - Mill and the Mine - Mill membership t0|oyecytive in squabbles that| the Teamsters union (Indk. |the Teamsters. came to a climax last Satur-| | The telegram, sent to Na-| He said 400 of Local 637's/day when a national executive-|claimed chief of state by 50,000 tional President Kenneth Smith|2,000 members have signed the appointed trustee tried to take| from the president of Port Col- petition which began circulating] over the Local 598 affairs on the, borne's Local 637, said the 637 Friday. basis of a temporary court in-| president has been titioned | The telegram, a copy of|junction, In a subsequent court by #he local's membetship "to; which was ceived by Don Gil-| hearing both Local 598 and na- lay charges against you under | lis, president of Mine - Mill Lo-|tional officers were barred Article 19, Section 7, of the {cal 598 and made public here, from the 398 offices and told constitution." |said the move was taken '"asito keep out of its affairs until Union officials were not im-ithe result of Mr. Smith enter-|Sept. 5 when the matter will mediately available to say what into an agreement with the|be argued in court in Toronto. that 'part union." fairs, working in separate of- fices here without the facilities of the local's records or bank- roll. All are banned to both TORONTO (CP)--Police Fri-|no sign of her when he was ar- cers was held to mobilize full day arrested Gilles Frenette, |rested. [strength behind the Sudbury 19, of Cap de la Madeleine, "We want to get to the bot.| Workers in bargaining with In- Que., wanted for questioning in|tom of this elopement story," ternational Nickel Com pany, theft, time required to investigate the States, said Sudbury member Quebec Provincial Police ar-|story in the Toronto area." ship can count on full support rived Friday night to questoin| Denise has been missing since Of American Mine - Mill mem- him and two others also picked|Aug, 8 when she left home tol | mantans| The. ter Iwo Hie Govld Rar that his daughter was kidnapped CLAIMS SUPPORT , 19, : + Wine tor Dubeau. 30. of Toronto. md SN} Hot Hun away. Mr. Gillis issued a statement description. All three men will guilty to a charge of attempted Local 598 officers and support be returned there when investi-| extortion. ers have been given "a great gations here are complete. Carbonneau was arrested Aug. moral lift" in knowing that '"'the The search for Frenette 24 in a public telephone booth rest of Canada shares with us oF We Jouitioh Both the national and Local sides until the Toronto hearing. connection with hte dsappear-|said QPP Inspecor Jean J. Scheduled for the year end. up on the car theft charge in|meet a man about an ad for a Harvey Murphy said all West- Police spotted the car, stolen bonneau, 30, of Shawinigan, was! supportng telegrams from "ev- started earlier this week when after a call demanding $5,000 in our fight to rid from the la- . 598 officers claimed Friday to Youth Questioned Mr. Smith said a meeting of ance of a Shawinigan, Que. Gauthier. "Our officers have| Al Skinner, an international connection with the disappear-|$25.a-week baby sitter. ern Canada locals have pledged in Montreal from a car rental| sentenced Friday to three years ery democratic trade union or- be in control of the locals af- On Missing Girl pational and international offi- teen-ager, on a charge of car been instructed to take all the | vice « president from the United ance of Denise Therrien, 16.| nr. rpporren 44 support. firm, after they were given its|in penitentiary after pleading| ganization in Canada" and said it was thought the Shawinigan|ransom was received by Mr. bor movement tyranny, dicta | 1 | teen-ager might have run away with him. Police said there was Health Service Probe Challenged By Lesage QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Jean, Lesage Friday challenged the that the federal government has right of the federal government the right to institute such an in- to establish a royal commission quiry." on health services in Canada: labelling the move an infringe- RECALLS STAND ment on provincial jurisdiction,| In his letter, Mr. Lesage re- The royal commission, he called Quebec's stand at the said, is inquiring into matters June, 1960, federal - provincial outside federal jurisdiction and conference that joint programs "we do not believe we can par- and conditional grants should be ticipate in it." eliminated gradually. Mr. Lesage was speaking at. The Quebec government could a press conference, during not accept an inquiry aimed at which he made public corre. expanding joint programs rather spondence between himself, than reducing them. Chief Justice Emmett M. Halll Mr. Justice Hall had written of Saskatchewan and Quebec Mr, Lesage July 13 inviting the Health Minister Alphonse Cou- Quebec government to submit aries. h to-th briefs to the royal commission. "We have come 10 the conclu ny 1esage said Quebec is in| sion," Mr. Lesage wrote Mr, tad i Justice Hall last Friday, "that jf peo! ie Progress of pub- the inquiry to be undertaken will c health, but provincial auto-| deal chiefly with matters which gore? a> 0 Scrupulously re. i n th is. . fall exclusively under the juris: |" The Quebec premier denied a of the provinces." diction P [reporter's suggestion that Que- bec's refusal to participate CITY EMERGENCY jos, be the prelude to another! The late Premier Maurice PHONE NUMBERS {Quebec-Ottawa battle. Duplessis had charged that the | Not at all," he replied. "The Massy commission investigating | position we are taking is sim-|the arts, sci i POLICE 725-1133 g is sim-| s, science and letters in FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 PITAL 723-2211 Therrien for the safe return of torship and the tactics and pol- his daughter. Denise. licies of the Communists." "We must energetically deny| Mr. Lesage was asked wheth- er he thought joint federal- provincial progams could be discontinued and operated on a provincial basis alone. SHOULD CONSIDER out over a long period of time," Mr. Lesage said. "Ottawa should consider this question mre seriously than it has so ar." Dr. Couturier said in a report to Mr. Lesage Aug. 4 that some medical services and external {hospital services are all that {are required to round out Que- bec's health services. Qubec is in a good position to establish a health insurance program, Dr. Couturier said, but the problem is "to find the money required to put such a program into operation." Quebec last refused to co-op- erate with a royal commission 10 years ago. | ply that the federal government Canada was dealing with mat- {is trying to inquire into a profiters relating to education: a field {Vincial matter. We do not ree|under exclusive provincial jur- ognize this right." isdiction. "I belive it can be worked o tions will ensure a gleaming, rust-proof finish for the latest GM cars when they arrive at the nation's showrooms. --Photo by Peter Ellias Leadership | Plans Made By Goulart RIO de JANEIRO (AP)--Joao Goulart went ahead today with plans to take over as Brazil's president amid reports he has agreed to govern with limited powers. The vice-president, a leftist with strong labor support, was pro- cheering followers Friday night as his plane arrived from Uru-| guay at Porto Alegre, capital of his home state of Rio Grande do Sul; Goulart's political strong- hold in the south. Goulart conferred with lopal leaders there, apparently mak-| Sift Evidence In Air Crash CHICAGO (AP)--Federal in-|of six and five each. It was an vestigation groups sifted through|all-tourist class flight. a mass of evidence today seek-| [Investigators were faced with ing the cause of the crash of the|z number of mysterious aspects Trans World Airlines Constella-| surrounding the giant aircraft's tion that killed 78 persons. Of-|prief flight from Chicago: ficials did not rule out the POS-| A seemingly normal takeoff| sibility that the big airliner dis- with a 3,000-foot ceiling and visi- integrated while still in the air. bility at three miles. | "We can't afford to rule out] A "routine radio exchange be-| anything," said Melvin Gough, tween the pilot and the control safety director of the Civil tower at Midway with no indica-| Aeronautics Board when he was|tjon that anything was wrong. | asked if sabotage was being Conflicting reports from wit-| considered nesses of an explosivi "afore or| Gough said it was significant, (after. the crash. | but he didn't say precisely how, . that one piece of the plane's TRIED TO RETURN? a B tail was 200 to 300 feet from the| On its normal course the rest of the wreckage. plane would have been travel- Gough said there was nothing|ling southwesterly but fell to indicate that the plane ex-|€arth heading due north indicat- in the air before it/ing the pilot may have been at- into a corn field near|tempting to return to the air-| suburban Hinsdale minutes POrt. : Sp after taking off from Midway| The plane was bound for Los airport at 3 a. m. EDT Friday, |Angeles, with a scheduled stop at Las Vegas, Nev. NO CANADIANS ABOARD The passengers were in a gay All aboard--73 passengers and mood with many looking for- five crew members--died in the ward to holiday vacations, oth- flaming wreckage. No Cana-|ers returning to their homes fo ploded crashed try to make peace with military leaders in the north who oppose! om. Congressional leaders in the| hinterland capital of Brasilia haggled over plans to install Goulart Monday as a figure- head president under a proposed parliamentary system that would give: power to a prime minister. ing plans to name a cabinet and$ dians were aboard after visits in the East. It was the third worst U.S - commercial plane accident and . the worst involving a single B d kB h commercial plane. | roa er 1g ts Deepening the horror of the » tragedy was the accent of youth B 11 P d among the victims--20 children 1 Iopose --and the wiping out of one| WINNIPEG (CP) -- Prime family of seven and two others|yfinisier Diefenbaker said Fri- - | day the federal government will NOT PUBLISHING propose a bill of rights affecting both federal and provincial AY fields of law as soon as a way ON LABOR D is found to amend the Canadian In observance of the Labor [constitution in Canada. " Day holiday, the Oshawa At a press conference while Times will not publish on of Monday. Regular publication Suciation Sonvention, Mr. Dief will be resumed on Tuesday. . ¥ "One of the first things the | government will do, if it can | Hunt Continues For Four HAVELOCK (CP) A bers. Canadian Vice - President|from a lumber worker who saw|scribed {two men fleeing into bushland | gan, Maurice Car- mentionng 2 great number of|search had been concentrated at! {Coe Hill. Sawmill worker Martin Mur- {phy told police he saw two men {crouching ahead of him as he \walked along the Bass Lake iroad about 7:45 a.m- When they |saw him, they fled into the thick bush. They in left footprints {rain and Cpl. William Baluk of {the Cobourg detachment, an identification expert, tentatively identified them as identical to |a pair of prints found Friday afternoon near the bandits' sec- ond abandoned getaway car near Coe Hill. The scene was a short dis- (tance west of Highway 62 in the |Steenburg area, about 10 miles overland and 15 to 20 miles by road from the location of the |original search. The four men looted the Tor- {onto - Dominion Bank Branch {here Thursday of $185,000 in {cash and securities, some nego- tiable. At the midnight shift change Friday night a group of provin- cial policemen left the Peter borough detachment, 26 miles west .of here, to relieve their weary companions in the search around Coe Hill, 30 miles north of here. tip| thei...» ground soaked by 'an overnight reach agreement with the prov-| inces on a may Saggmend the constitution in Canfita by Ca- nadians, will be to bring in a bill of rights applicable in pro- vincial jurisdictions as well as federal." "Quite an advance" had been| {made towards agreement on| | constitutional amendment pro- police constable de-| cedures, "with the exception of the area "typical,lone province," Saskatchewan. rugged bush country -- hills, | "I am hoping there will be a further conference so as fo] Thugs One {today spurred the hunt for four| {armed bank robbers. | Five provincial police squad |cars sped to the scene, about 10 {miles southeast of where the water and rocks." He said the isolated area has a lot of mos- |bring about that agreement." |quitoes and "they like to see humans." : Sojewhere in we bush = » Saarinen Dies 0f Head Tumor area seven by five miles -- the| | ling. One police theory was that| ANN ARBOR, Mich: (CP) of attending the Canadian Bar As-|g PRINCIPAL Dr. Alexander Corry be- came princpal of Queen's University at Kingston today. The installation ceremony will be held Oct. 20. Dr. Corry has been vice-principal since 1951. | --CP Wirephoto | | RUSS ii COULD TESTS Kennedy Faces Hard Decision WSAHINGTON (AP) -- Rus-|with the policy of *'atomic sia's explosion of a nuclear test/blackmail" which he said now device was expected today to|is being practised by Russia. hasten a decison by Presdent| ANNOUNCES BLAST Kennedy on resumption of U.S.| The White House announced nuclear weapong testing. {Friday the U.S. had detected Informed officials now con-|the first Soviet nuclear explo- sider it likely Kennedy willision since Russia, the United make a decision early next week | States and Britain imposed mo- |and that it will be to start up/ratoriums and began their test U.S. testing again. The last U.S. ban conference at Geneva al- {test explosions were held in he most three years ago. fall of 1958. The announcement said that It also was learned that the the Soviet test explosion was in Kennedy adminstraton is con-|the area of Semipalatinsk in sidering some modification of|Central Asia. the secrecy pelicy covering the, 'The device tested had a sube U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal.|stantial yield in the intermedi- |The reason: To give the Amer-|ate range," the statemen said. ican people and the world a bet-|"I was detonated in the amos- ter idea of the amount of atomic| phere." force available to the United] In London, a foreign office States for its own defence and | spokesman said the explosion in the defence of its allies. {the atmosphere rather than un- Kennedy said Thursday that derground 'increases by an U.S. atomic weapons system amount as yet unknown the are "wholly adequate" to deal danger to health from radioac- Diefenbaker Sees | Basis For Peace WINNIPEG (CP) Prime {Minister Diefenbaker has speech at the annual banquet of| sketched a course for negotia- tions with Russia and East Ger- {many which should, he says, | guarantee freedom and free ac- cess to West Berlin without war. "The freedom of"West Berlin, and the right of the West to up- hold that freedom, are things that are," he said Friday night. Mr. Diefenbaker said he could not elaborate hecause the West must preserve a bargaining po- ition. FIRST CHECKUP FOR OLD CHEV LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Any day now Alvin Garlick of suburban London will be bringing his 1929 model car into the city for its first 1,500-mile checkup. He took the car to a city garage recently for a 1,000- mile check, but decided to postpone the operation for another 500 miles because it was running so well. To mechanics who looked incredulously at the milo- meter reading he explained that the two-door Chevrolet had been on the blocks in a garage since 1930. His uncle, who owned it until last July, didn't like driving it. | | | | | {four men are believed to be hid-| they have a hideaway there, Eero Saarinen, internationally-| perhaps an abandoned over-| known architect who followed in grown lumber camp that, as|ihe footsteps of his famous constable said, "you'd have|father, Eliel, died Friday in the| one to walk into before you could| University of Michigan Medical : | Centre. He was 51. Another theory was that the| Eero (pronounced arrow) Saa men, who would surely get lost rinen (rhymes with far-'n-then) if they did not know the area, had undergone a two-hour oper- will try to make a break out of|ation for removal of a brain tu- it this weekend when cottagers/ mor. He entered the medical and holidayers swell the al- centre Aug. 21. most non - existent population] He was one of the world's enough to make outgoing traffic| most successful and best-known less obtrus.ve. architects. Loggers Return To Nfld. Forest ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-- {Newfoundland's loggers, ke pt after an aerial survey that out of the woods this summer there is still cause for concern| {by forest fires, will go back to|but '"'the situation is fairly well work next Wednesday and the contained." | province's fall hunting season, Main trouble spot was Salmon] will open as scheduled Sept. 11.|Pond, near Glenwood, 15 miles| The announcements were(west of Gander, where more made Friday night by Re- than 300 firefighters have pre- | settlement in_violation of funda- ling that Canada, having made tivity." The White House statement gave no detail of how the ex. plosion was detected, but offic. als ndicated that the initial ev- idence was obtained through de- vices that are sensitive to earth and atmospheric shock waves {set off by nuclear bursts. Presumably, as radioactivity in the atmosphere is measured and analyzed, further informa- the Canadian Bar Association he tion will become available to said grounds on which a peace-|the government about 'the na- ful solution could be achieved|ture of the explosion. i es Ba Sp SESE ii, i Mok By _r an; just returned from the ministration to the puppet gov-| . ernment of East Germany, does/foundering nuclear test ban not intend: talks at Geneva, is due fo - . {named the U.S. disarmament _ 1. "To change the social order|,eootiator jt the U.S. succeeds in West Berlin." lin arranging a general disarma- 2. "To cut the lines between ment conference with Russia la. West Berlin and West Ger-|ter this year. 3. "ro attempt to impose a Protest Soviet Bomb Testing OTTAWA (CP) -- While dem- onstrators marched outside, a three-member delegation pro- tested Friday to Russian Am- bassador Amasasp Aroutunian about the Soviet resumption of But at another point in his| mental democratic principles," MAY BE BASIS The prime minister said 'the Soviet leaders say they have no such intention. If they mean that, then we have indeed the basis for peace." He said the people of Canada are asking whether Western countries are '"'courting war|atomic testing. over a rubber stamp" by refus-| The delegation from the Ot- ing to accept East German in-tawa committee for the control stead of Russian signatures on|of radiation hazards, told the check-point passes on the route ambassador that world tensions to West Berlin {and dangers from radioactive He dismissed any line of think: [fallout will be increased by the | Soviet decision on nuclear tests, sacrifices n two world wars, In a press release, they said against Germany, is willing to/Mr. Aroutunian replied that the let West Berlin go by the boards.|Soviet decision was taken with Under the North Atlanitc Treaty |regret and with full understand- Organization, any attack on Ber-/ing of the radiation effects that lin will be regarded as an at-{such a move would have on the tack on Canada, he said. world population. Chief Forester Ed Ralph said sources Minister W. J, Keough:|vented the flames from reach-| % He said the forest fire danger|ing a valuable spruce stand. At had diminished to such an ex-|last report 50 men wielding tent that the two -month ban|back pumps had on power saws in the woods|fire in a green cut - over area. Cloudy weather was predicted trapped - the| ® : Cass Uncertain On Candidacy could be lifted Tuesday mid- CORNWALL (CP) -- High-| This means 5,000 loggers will ways Minister Frederick M. be back at work the next day, Cass said Frday nght he has cutting the raw material for the made no decision as to whether province's two paper mills. the will contest the Progressive Sparks from chain saws were Conservative leadership when|believed to have been respon- Premeir Frost retires this fall. sible for some of the fires. Following the conclusion of| The announcement does not the Ontario Police Association mean the government expects convention - here, at which he|the fires will be out by then was the guest Cass said: "'I have made no de- weather and the presence of cision yet buf plan to devote'2,500 civilian and military fire- careful consideration to the mat-|fighters is sufficient to contain Iter." lany fires which do break out. for today with sunny weather| : expected to return Sunday. New outbursts caused |cern in the Dunn's River area {on the southeast coast but 120 {men were keeping the flames |under control. The fire, largest |single blaze in the province, (had spread over 1,000 square | miles. The resources deparment is aerial survey of how wildlife survived the sumr of fires. {Many animals are known to have perished. ner con-| Robert Allen (left), super- speaker, Mr. But it feels the coming of fall making plans for a ground and visor of the Chicago office of Ey U.S. Civil Aeronauitcs ard, and Najeeb Halaby, | | Federal Aviation administra. | INVESTIGATO Ti tor, kneel in a muddy corn- field beside part of an engine of the TWA Constellation | which 'crashed hieraay with the loss of 78 lives. Various | parts of the plane will be gath- | Wah ; RS STUDY CRASH ered and reassembled in a search for the cause of the crash of the plane which had just taken off from Ciécago Midway airport. ~AP Wirephote

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