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The Oshawa Times, 27 Sep 1961, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Sunny and a little warmer Thursday, cloudy periods and scattered showers in the after- noon. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Reminder to hunters: Don't shoot at any two-legged animals wearing. clothes. he Oshawa Ses as Second Class Mail Department, Ottawo SGOUR LAKE ONTARIO 1 rice Not yori THIRTY-TWO PAGES td By 0 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1961 VOL. 90--NO. 224 w RAE Russian Asks Firm UN | Part In Main Issues | and insisted on a three - man|lhe was happy Gromyko wasn't board to replace the late Dag tougher. Hammarskjold. as United Na-| The Soviet foreign minister| | tions Secretary-General. stressed that Russia intends to| Gromyko received few plaud-| sign a peace treaty with East|? its from the Western side for|Germany whether the West likes | his speech. "The same old Gro-|it or not. He declared that a| drei Gromyko, in a long speech myko," a Canadian spokesman | War over the divided city could! to the United Nations General said. An Indian ambassador said!take hundreds of millions of Assembly Tuesday, gave 'the lives and proposed a firmer UN impression to American observ- 2 role in the great issues of the ers that despite tough talk Rus- day sia may be ready to ease the These Gromyko defined as/'_____ threat of war over Berlin. * Berlin, disarmament and the U.S. President Kennedy the "complete elimination of the co- day before pledged even nu- lonial system." clear warfare to defend West- In proposing a UN commis- ern interests in Berlin but-- i i > end of 4 again in the interpretation of , Gromyko said 70,- Boyd is the son of Mrs. T. J.if the boat was occupied when American observers -- left the 000,000 people around the world Gladys Comber, of RR No. 4,|they spotted it some 15 miles door open for negotiation still' labor under such rule. He Bowmanville, and was employ-|south of Bowmanville at approx- British Foreign Secretary made no mention of Kennedy's {ed as a paint mixer in the truck- {imately 8 a.m. Lord Home, addressing the charge that communism has im- cab division at GM here. The boat was later sighted by United Nations General Assem- posed a greater rule of colonial. Sellick is a spray painter in a second RCAF aircraft, but it |bly today, was expected to sm than otherwise known DETROIT (AP)--Ford Motor the North Plant Sheet Metal was difficult to keep sight of it probe the places in which East Gromyko warned the West| company and the United Auto Dept. of GM here. in the rough, white-capped seas. and West reach some under- against "spouting threats" on|workers were believed close to| An RCAF Dakota from Tren-| The search was being cone standing Berlin and repeated the Soviet agreement today on a new day at the first meeting of the In another development Tues- leave it basis Gromyko, speaking for one proposition that West Berlin three-year labor contract. It United Nations-Katanga cease- day, Conor O'Brien, the chief The House passed the $1,125, hour and 45 minutes, at no time should be a free city, for which may come Thursday or by the fire commission. UN official here, said that 997 341 supplemental appropria-|said he was replying to Ken- he pledged free access. end of this week. Following the meeting, For- Tshombe was willing to send a tion and then quickly closed up nedy but his rejection of a West- He said the UN must take aj Company and union spokes- eign Minister Evariste Kimba of | delegation to start talks with the shop. With the House in ad-'ern bid for a nuclear test ban firm position in the Berlin|men indicated Tuesday night Adrift On Lake '! In 14-Foot Boat BOWMANVILLE (Staff Spe-| chances of locating the boat to- cial) -- The chilling waters of|day were good. Lake Ontario today still held, He said visibility was good the secret of the fate of four and that the lake had calmed men -- including two Oshawa down considerably after Tues residents -- last sighted Tues-|day night when 57-mile-per-hous day morning, aboard a 14-foot|winds whipped up waves so bad. white craft with a 40 horse-{ly that two lake freighters power engine, by an RCAF |anchored off here and forced plane. |cancellation of the search. The Oshawa men are Lonzo| Fit.-Lt. Giles still held out R. Boyd, 21, of 21 Warren ave-|hope for the rescue of all four nue (married and the father of|despite the rough seas Tuesday a daughter, Cindy Lou); and because the lake water is still Sam Sellick, 31, of 189 Court! warm. street, married and the father| The 14.foot boat with the four |of five children. aboard was accidentally spotted - The others aboard were Don-| \ ald Terry, 2, of RR No. 1|.uesday by the RCAF plane | y i while searching for a missing {Hampton; Ross Prescott, Bow- | 1.33 Jet (later sighted). Agree ent manville, | The searchers could not tell UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The Soviet Union and the United States have finished a couple of days of stand-off fighting-talk and Britain steps into the pic- ture today. Soviet Foreign Minister An- BERNARD PERRY, GEORGE WRIGHT START SEARCH Demand Force Whirlwind Flee Katanga Wind-Up ELISABETHVILLE (Reuters) agreement was reached between Ot Congress The Katanga dispute today ap-|President Moise Tshombe of WASHINGTON (AP) The peared to be back where it Katanga and the UN after eight first congressional session of the started following demands by days of fierce fighting in the Kennedy administration wound the Katanga regime for the world body's attempt to end the yp in an angry whirlwind early withdrawal of all UN forces|secession of the province. today with the Senate having to from the Congo's breakaway! The latest Katanga demands accept a big money bill which province. seemed to put the situation in the House of Representatives The demand was made Tues- Katanga back where it started. bounced to if on a take-it-or- DONALD TERRY ANDREI GROMYKO talked about the section of a gas, which, along with their five, gave them an ample sup- crash boat was sent out--also| where winds and current might less" until a reply to the Ka- Tshombe and the central gov-| forced to go along with the bill Gromyko emphasized the Sov- |negotiations between the East| items that could bring on alations officer with the RCAF,|cruiser Monday. About five pat against appeals to send 'a Kennedy fo call a special ses. tions troops as guarantors of the | Said the discussions dealt with In Rescue | UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- powers may propose that the Last man to speak to the such a question impassively.| Renther took time out from! ply. in the search were an RCMP|have carried the boat. launch and a tug from Whitby| Bernard Perry, 51, of Bow- owned by the McNamara Con-{manville said he took Mr. tanga demands are received ernment have been reported re- providing money for a wide va- iet plan on general disarmament and West collapse. strike at the second largest auto- Trenton, told The Osha w a|miles offshore, they encountered from UN headquarters. cently to have been exchanging riety of federal agencies. -- --- Delegates noted that in dis- maker. Times this morning that the|Mr. Sellick in his 14-foot boat. The commission was set up messages via Brazzaville, cap-| The slightest Senate amend- {cussing possibilities for the fu.| In negotiations that appeared elegation to Beopaldyille an the sion to get the needed funds. | grounds that the Katanga offi} Senators minced no words in s: : : ii: cials might be arrested by cen- expressing anger at the House status of the free city." | gelicral Sul-economic Son Fae | The German question could 71, ers. 5 Ling y mean peace or war. "No state, | national contract covering work The possibility that the United | United Natigns take a hand in four men re ingi : ™ > i | 0 | ported missing in Outlined Nations will play some role in|carrying out any plan they can| a 14-foot fibre glass boat with OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian Army would be faced with ton air base was circling the|centrated along the lake east of Katanga termed further ses- central Congolese government joyrnment and no chance for|was a direct blow to one of the trouble, apparently making sure|they were filling in the details Struction Company. iTerry, Mr. Boyd and Mr. Pres. last week after a cease-fire ital of the former French Congo. ment would have killed the . [ture status of Berlin, Gromyko, !0 be without tension, both sides 0SS1 e oO e |said the Russians would agree "ere under secrecy wraps. ast Oo See to "the use of troop contingents After five hours of bargaining, od " tral government Premier Cyrille adjournment prior to final Sen-| no responsible government, no|ing conditions for Ford's 120,000 the herculean task of rescuing area this morning and a marine| Bowmanville towards Cobourg sions of the commission '"'point- at Leopoldville. compromise, the Senate was American president's proposals. that the UN can be a forum if|{rather than arguing over major| FIt.-Lt. J. Giles, a public re-|cott 'out in his 18-foot cabin Tshombe has in the past stood | measure and forced President 0 e - of neutral states or United Na.| U-o\' President Waiter Reuther In Berlin Crisis Missing M Adoula's regime. ate action. | g . responsible statesman can view hourly employees. 1,000,000 persons if all 16 target cities in Canada were hit during efforts to settle the Berlin cri- {sis appeared to be gaining head- way today. If the United States and Rus- sia in current diplomatic talks fail to agree on a formula for starting negotiations, the war- Calls ECM Move 'Tragic Mistake' before many {devise for the future of West Berlin. Indications are that So- {viet and Western leaders alike are thinking along these lines. U.S. State Secretary Dean {Rusk and Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko scheduled There can be no neutral states the Ford talks Tuesday to sign a 40 in this question. Neither can oriformally a new contract with should the United Nations, as a whole, be a neutral, indifferent |onlooker." General Motors, Perry, 51, of Bowmanville. "The last I saw of Prescott' hp motor, was Bernard 5 The GM settlement set thei boat was after I cut a towline pattern for the current Ford between his boat and mine," {negotiations and also for Chrys-|/said Mr. Perry today to The {ler, next on the list. | Times. Mr. Perry said he slashed the tow rope with a piece of glass from a bottle which he had broken on the bulwark of his boat. "With the waves starting to a nuclear attack. LONDON (CP) -- Emanuel|sionment years|ihreatening dispute likely willlanother meeting today on the get tougher,.1 did' know of any other way to get away from the other boat," he said. Parry then headed back to the Bowmanville shore. This was about 5:50 and it was the last time he saw the other boat. Falling in line with the GM| Perry said he left the four {pattern, Ford has offered the men in Sellick's boat on Mon- |UAW substantially the same|gay afternoon because the lake contract. ___|was becoming rough. | "They wanted me to go on to search board symposium which] In a debate on economic af- is to start here today. fairs, the legislators displayed Maj.-Gen. Wrinch said the almost unanimous anxiety lest government's decision earlier Britain's entry weakens and fi- this month to train 100,000 men nally destroys the Common- in the militia would enable the wealth system army to save many more lives. Shinwell said he fears that the "While it would be physically "harsh political integration" im impossible to save 100 per cent plied by Common Market mem- of all needing rescue . . we|bership will shackle Britain's in- believe we would be able to save dependence pretty well all of those who! "If the United Kingdom de- could normally be considered to|cides to go into the Common be rescuable." Market, we shall suffer disillu- {raced across oil-capped water scale shutdown of the structural! towline to -mine. | At 11:15 this morning Lloyd MAY BE PRIVATE to engulf the vessel. {steel building industry in three] "I didn't know what they|Prescott, 23, a GM worker and In their view the speech con-| One person was killed as a|major Ontario centres was ex- were planning to do, but it/brother of Ross Prescott, along tained nothing essentially new| Series of explosions continued|pected today, halting scattered|looked like they were going to/with Bernard Perry and BONN (Reuters) -- President © Berlin policy, but that had|!0 shake the tanker Potomac|strike action by employees. try and tow me to Alcott--37| George Wright set out in Per- tages. : Kennedy today was bitterly crit-|been expected. If the Soviet|for more than half an hour af- The International Association miles away. Iry's cabin cruiser looking for Commonwealth Secretarylii ad in a West German news. government is willing to engage|ter the first blast. At least 21 of Bridge, Structural and Orna-| "I gave them four gallons of|the missing men, Duncan Sandys promised Tues-|,oner for his UN speech while|in the wide negotiations de- | were injured and another was mental Iron Workers (CLC) be-| day that Britain '"'should un- East Germany's main Commu-{manded by the United States, missing. {gan strike action Sept. 11, but | questionably choose the Com-|pict newspaper praised his will-| Britain and France, the first in.| Although the flames were|bas withheld walkouts from | monwealth™ rather than Europe jngness to negotiate on Ger-|dications of change in its posi-|confined to the broken tanker,|Some member firms of the if it came to a showdown on the pany tion almost certainly would be|firemen ashore played water|Structural Steel Erectors Asso- question. | The Communist Neuesmade known by Gromyko not|around seven fuel storage tanks | ciation. He . | Deutschland attributed the pres-|in a speech but in his private|containing more than 10,000,000 An industry official said Tues-| That was the estimate given|Shinwell said today Britain's en-jand we shall discover we have hecome an issue of prime con-|East - West deadlock over how Tanker Blasts Tuesday night by Maj.-Gen.|try inte Europe's six-country made a Yagi Mistake cern for the General Assembly.|to get negotiations started. . A. E. Wrinch, head of the/Common Market would prove He predicted this discovery in| 1 negotiations can be agreed| - a re] Th t P army's national survival pro-!"a tragic mistake." |turn would bring about the fall on. both Russia and the Allied ne a onial issye is what to rea en ler ah ES gram, in a two-hour talk to Ot-| Shinwell, onetime Labor de-jof Prime Minister Macmillan's| -- - ; J ! MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. (AP) 5 tawa area civic officials, mem-|fence minister, was leading a government, and he called for On that issue Western diplo.| , * ast Gard fireboat oon |Alcott, N.Y. with them but I bers of the Clergy and Service'chorus of concern expressed by an alternative policy ut devel rmans gis found Ite encouragement) am and water today Poure. Stee ut OWI (01a them I didn't want to go Clubs legislators from all parts of oping ' co-operation within the {in the Soviet policy speech o tanks { | His outline of the army's role| Commonwealth at a conference Commonwealth itself . {Gromyke delivered io the Gen- BUTANE hulk vy, at De he smal san Som He said he thought the miss- in national survival preceded a of their Inter-Parliamentary Un-. Shinwell's views were sup aan = eral Assembly Tuesday dealing it discharged aviati mes xpecte 0 ay " igh Te lying. olin craft wa Py ' if three-day joint army-defence re-|ion ported by Alhaji Shehu Shagari at length with the Berlin situa-|? Schars ation fue They insisted I. go with|1N8 C $s carrying {] v of Nigeria, Senator T. P. de Il 1C1Ze tion (Tuesday night. The flames had] TORONTO (CP) -- A full-|them. Sellick tied his boat's Preservers. Zoysa of Céylon and legislator H. V. Kirk of Northern Ireland, | all of whom favored preserva-| tion of the Commonwealth's spe- enne advan- cial trading links and day night the full-scale shut-| UK. As From Reds On Berlin UNITED NATIONS (AP)-- Britain called on the Soviet Un.| ion today to seek an "honorable! deal" with the Western powers on Berlin, disarmament and other critical problems theaten- ing to throw a nuclear cloud over the world British Foreign Secretary Lord Home told the UN Gen- eral Assembly in a policy speech that the Russians are playing with nuclear fire by try ing "to set man against his neighbors." He accused the Soviet Union of deception and double-dealing in the collapsed nuclear test-ban talks. "Let her co-operate 'in keep- ing the peace," he said, '"'by strengthening the collective will of the United Nations instead of trying to drive her coach, pulled by three horses, through the whole fabric of our collective. ef- forts." This was a reference to Pre- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 _ | ident's acceptance of the possi- ibility of negotiations to the "firm attitude" taken by the | Communist bloc. {| The independent Bild Zeitung in West Germany, however, turned over its entire front-page to an editorial asking acid ques- tions about the president's speech Monday. Bild Zeitung said: "President Kennedy spoke of ks For Honor mier Khrushchev"s "trolk a", 'One is settlement of disputes plan to replace Secretary-Gen- by negotiation. One is absolute eral Dag Hammarskjold with a, three-man directorate. Lord Home praised what he called the "stirring" disarma-| ment proposals of President] Kennedy and urged that they belis broken by deliberate intent.' | this? used as a basis for renewed| He added: -- arms negotiations either by the «Negotiators must not seek 10-nation group of East - West iyictory over each other but an countries or by an enlarged), apie deal." group. Home backed Kennedy's ap- : El goverment stands Yeady peal for a strong UN headed by to take part In rene a single secretary-general lateral negotiations on this ba-| = «iy; we were ever to accept BERLIN (AP)--East German sis," he asserted, "and would the doctrine that no man can be Police fired warning shots Tues- like to see them in the most ef-| impartial in carrying out the or- day night when 600 angry West fective forum that can be de-igers of the security council," he Berliners threw rocks across the vised." said, "then the members of the border. The British leader also de- UN will have to pack their bags, Demonstrating against forced tional obligations freely signed.many which would take into preserve the peace if concilia-|legitimate rights of others. . . Border Clash clared his readiness to help ar- and go home, for the world willj€vacuations of Fast Germans nape an important bearing on disagree on the question ' whether Canada is to have a whether bullets may have been crisis, but he warned that the doctrine 'of reaction will have the crowd aimed rocks at Com- national pre-paid medical health fired into the body of one of the the!from East Berlin border areas range negotiations on the Berlin be morally bankrupt and West must have guarantees to won the day." munist searchlights illuminating protect the right of access to Soviet Foreign Minister An- the barbed wire barrier West Berlin drei Gromyko delivered a long) West Berlin police pushed the "If there is to be negotiation|SPeech to the assembly Thurs./demonstrators back about the situation in Berlin and|93Y and gave the impression to| Communist authorities have oy Americ. bservers that despite|been moving residents out of its people," he said, "settlement| American observers that pite must include uninterrupted ac. tough talk Russia may be ready houses along the border dividing A tv P © lto ease the threat of war over|Berlin, slowly turning a strip cess to the city, and suitable Berlin lalong their side into a Euarantses that the fre life Man's Land. They also the people have choser diegin trenc feet will be preserved." Y ! h i began wide Monday, Kennedy pledged even nuclear warfare tn defend interests in Berlin ht He told the Soviet Union there again in the interpretation of are three ways to peaceful co-| American observers -- left the|the border in the American set- existence; !door open for negotiation. (tor. 4 : n j- ich 10 the for a mile along a strip of open talks with Rusk. gallons of aviation fuel. Asks Provincial Health Plan Aid OTTAWA (CP) -- The chair- clarification of the federal-pro-| dustry respect for treaties and interna- a solution on Berlin and Ger- man of the royal commission on|vincial relations health services, And one is collective action to| consideration the 'historic and ting today, called on the prov-|one," inces to assist in clarifying and lations in the health field. Saskatchewan, also asked the provincial govern- |the best means of ensuring good health among Canadians The 62-year-old jurist was de livering a statement officially inaugurating the health study which is expected to last per- haps inte next summer Findings of the seven-man royal commission will likely plan Premier Jean Lesage of Que bec has said the royal commis- sion study infringes on provin- cial authority in the health field, |in the body came from ammuni-|of Quebec City, re-elected for a care to the greatest in every part of Canada." Crash Victim's Body Riddled STOCKHOLM victims of the plane crash that killed UN Secretary - General Dag Hammarskjold. The theory that bullets found (CP)--Experts of down is being imposed because |of uncertainty in the industry {following the scattered strike | action. | The strike involves union lo- cals in Toronto, Hamilton and | Windsor, but the locals operate] beyond these areas. | The union seeks a 37-cent| hourly wage increase. The in-| has offered a two-year Y in the health agreement with a two-stage 15- at its first sit-| field is a particularly important cent hourly increase and insti- he continued. "We will/tution of a welfare plan by May | "& welcome an expression of views|1, 1962. 1 tion is discarded and the peace/ What does Kennedy mean by improving federal-provincial re-| held by provincial governments, | -- their advice and suggestions as| Chief Justice Emmett Hall of (to the best means of using the chairman, | resources available for health possible ments for their suggestions on| benefits for the Canadian people Trying To Move | 3 Butter Surplus || HALIFAX (CP) -- The Na! tional Dairy Council was ex- pected to make an official bid |today for federal subsidies to get Canada's bulging butter sur- plus moving. Delegates seemed to be in agreement from the opening of the council's annual meeting| 4 Monday that a subsidy system] must be used to increase butter sales effectively in light of grow-| ing competition , from substi tutes Council President Pierre Cote and that his government will re-|/tion exploding in the plane was|second term, said in an inter-| fuse to co-operate advanced by Lt.-Col. M. C. M {view Tuesday night the council In his opening remarks, chair-| Barber, Rhodesian civil aviation feels a 10-cent subsidy recom- Noman Hall noted that the com- director, mi n' of reference empowe t to make m mendations "consistent with the ground on the southern end of constitutional division of legis- department, lative powers in Canada." "Our commission feels that after examining the burned wreckage Arne Svensson, chief of Stockholm police technical said the bullets {must have passed through the barrel of a weapon. But the mended four years ago will not b eenough Delegates appeared to favor suppert of at least the 14-cent-a pound figure requested récently by the Dairy Farmers of Can-| ada. &: GROUNDED BY POLICE Terry Appleby, who may be e only motorist ever to drive himself to kindergar- ten, stands beside his father's station wagon which he has learned to drive. Police in Sudbury, Ont. have laid charge his father, George Appleby, of permitting a per. » bd son under age of 16 to oper ate motor vehicle. Terry is only six. Mr. Appleby, who does not deny charge, says his son can drive in heaviest downtown traffic and park better than many adults. -CP Wirephuig

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