Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 4 Oct 1961, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

a wb 1 THOUGHT FOR TODAY A bachelor is a fellow who never finds out how many faults he really has. hie Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT Continuing very cool today with ground frost likely in many areas tonight, winds light. VOL. 90--NO. 230 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1961 Authorized es Second Post Office Department, Class Mail Ottawo TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES : |of foreign countries, including a aa --= |Paris. = PICKETING POOCH Cigar in mouth and dressed | Norfolk, Va., where 1,169 to the teeth, this dog of | hourly production workers dubious ancestry joins the | walked out picket line today at the Ford : 'Motor Co. assembly plant at --AP Wirephoto : | velle jet airliner with him from Tedious Talks Face Ford Co. PARIS (CP)--Premier Jean mier, elected fo office little 3 Lesage of Quebec arrived here/more than a year ago, had by air today for the first official promised the people of Quebec |visit to France by the head of | he aud open an ape in | » i /incial govern- Paris to encourage particip: the Canadian provincial § by European capital. in the de- a-| velopment of the province's na- |tural wealth and to intensify | ment. Travelling in the same Car the Riviera was Princess Grace of Monaco, here to see her {dressmakers. Because of the strong ties be- {tween France and Quebec, Le- sage is being given honors usually reserved for the heads private meeting with President {Charles de Gaulle. | His main object in visiting | France is to inaugurate special | representation for Quebec in The Quebec delegation | will deal with cultural, economic {and technical matters of the province. Lesage is here to inaugurate Thursday Quebec House (Mai- son de la Province de Quebec) § which will in effect be similar to a special embassy for the |province. Because of the long French traditions of Quebec, it was decided the province should have semi-autonomous repre sentation in Paris. It will be headed by Charles | Lussier, assisted by cultural, |economic and technical aides, | working in close liaison with the Canadian Embassy. A 40-man official delegation JEAN LESAGE Quebec's cultural exchanges with France and the new Afri- can republics that were former French colonies. ADVANCE CULTURE Georges Lapalme, head of DETROIT (AP)--Ford Motor|plants in 26 states. Half of its|from Quebec made up of eight Quebec's new cultural affairs Company, its plants closed by a employees and 32 of its plants| provincial cabinet ministers, 24|department, told a press confer- United Auto Workers unionlare in Michigan. Normally] membe strike, today apparently faced about 30 per cent of all autos/top civil rs of the legislature and|/ence today the provincial offi- servants arrived in|cials posted at Quebec House long and tedious bargaining be-|sold in this country are Ford|France Monday to attend recep-| will attempt to complement the fore the automobile firm can re-| products. turn to full production, (In Oakville, Ont., a union, three-day tions and luncheons prior to a|work of the Canadian embassies program of official in Europe with regard to the 1 development Quebec Premier Paying Official Visit To France 8 Canadians. |] fi viet newspaper Pravda today] ocean A | t called "'a gigantic trace of an| unknown to sci-| 8 | opening of a Quebec House was |any indication that Quebec is | seeking its independence from the rest of Canada. | | Lapalme said there was no SUGGESTS DEAL ON E. GERMANY {question of it. Some groups in| | Quebec preach separatism, he |said, but the influence of their doctrine was not widespread. At a luncheon address earlier, |: Quebec's| Paul Gerin - Lajoie, minister in charge of education, | said the establishment of Que | bec House was only an expres-| sion of a growing sentiment of national pride among French-| = | Mystery Animal | Picture Shown LONDON (Reuters)--The So- it| {published a photograph of the bed. showing what animal so far ence," the Soviet news agency Tass reported. It said the photograph was| taken nearly 10.000 feet down] by the staff of the Soviet re. search ship Vityaz. No details] were given The agency did not say ex- actly where on the sea floor the picture was taken. But it said the Vityaz now was on its 33rd cruise, 'having covered 30,000/ miles in the Indian Ocean, rang-| ling from the shores of Africa to Indonesia and from India to {the 40th latitudes. | } Trend Confusing | WASHINGTON (CP) -- Sen- ator William Fulbright says he would support de facto recogni- tion of the East German Com- munist regime if other condi- tions for a Berlin settlement * | proved satisfactory. The chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee, a powerful voice in U.S. foreign policy, said in an interview the Western powers should seek a ' lcompromise with Russia that woud enable West Berlin to re- main free "under the best guar- antees we can get." He also advocated location in "| West Berlin of some United Na- tions agencies, such as the World Health Organization or the Food and Agricultural Or- " | ganization, so that non-aligned OIL TRUCK CRASH Beverly Charlton, 35, of Owen Sound, died when he was pinned beneath the flaming wreckage of his Canadian Oil Co. truck after a two-truck | collision north of Chesley. The | McDonald of Chesley, driver of a milk truck, escaped ser- ious injury. The fire burned for nearly an hour before Chesley firemen could get close enough to put it out. | Meteorologists | three-ton, stake-body truck | was loaded with cans of mo- | ROME (AP)--The earth has| tor oil and anti-freeze. Jack | Chesley is about 20 miles south of Owen Sound. | --(CP Wirephago). |peen getting gradually warmer plot to assassinate Nkruma scheduled to resume at 11 a.m./not affect production at the|the arrival by air of Lesage. One French newspaper man Ford Tuesday morning in sup sufficient American-made parts from Soviet 'Siberia to, Green- been reached, but non-economic/| Malcolm Denise, Ford vice-| ' ' Titular Ton | Meteorologists and clilmatole- Y | gists kere for the World Mete- Ninotnaix dass afnugoliation "The issues op,which we are | Janel 0 bring agreement a | walked out. Ford operates 88 we have a con stance they cannot tell even if a trend [Reuther said the union did all| LONDON (Reuters) -- Disap- Mirror has a feeling--despite of-| Dr. J. Murray Mitchell, clima- ble for 95 days, more than ade-| British press today on the mews|want this title. States still is warming up along| inet. C {3p the details of our economic|jije. |ing known as Mr. Antony Arm-| "Some places are \ tructi | ons ruc on paralleled the union's agree-|; ane to go on calling him "Mr.|very likable and unassuming of Canada, Greenland and Obetsebi Lamptey escaped the p 4 g a move to counter a strik The Queen Tuesday bestowed ° : ° 8.000.900 Estate New Irish Parliament here who insist the industry | photographer who married Prin- Pog om The strike was called by em-| Actress Marion Davies left an|soon. was suspended for refusing tolfiled in court Tuesday Welsh origins. Snowdon is the ect aronsiire. where the new earls day to elect a new Dail Eireann areas will not begin until Thurs-| sence removed much of the fire : 'V S , Ww ments. G. Brown Jr.; her sister, Rose|ionant oo honorary title {the Republica of Ireland gained|likely to be known before the|in the old Dail compared with The ballotting followed one of The final composition of the|Gale) and 12 for Labor. The oth- continue 'until the union agrees| Her husband was willed $500.-/style reference to Snowdon, de-| The main issues have been| The prolonged process of| There will be 144 seats--three Stoppage of the flow of con-|home in Beverly Hills to live in{nouncement Tony the Mountain The Congo and the compulsory| tion system, which in some of} reduction is because of a revi- area ISprings. front-page editorial says: "The excitement among the voters, |(alis a dozen separate counts Fine Gael, directed his appeal Negotiating se s sions were spokesman said the strike would| ceremonies starting today with! province's cult The UAW went on strike atja month or more. There are EARL OF SNOWDON since 1900, but now wide reaches A national money package had|weeks.) experty, don't know why. bling block. {management negotiator, said: tion workers Based on appearance ° . say the pattern is so mottled | wei: Burns Britain UAW President Walter ing: "We have been at the ta-|oyerwhelming sentiments in the(trary--that he did not really bureau, said Tuesday the United| Strangles {lems, but we didn't even clear|i ong_Jones has been given a would much prefer to go on be. Pacific coast of Asia. getting 48 persons who were in custody, The economic package closely| ation Daily Mirror, says it has every sympathy with this Peninsula of Russia and parts| leaders B. Danquah and concrete plants closed today in| reached two weeks ago. "Tony." -- Brotherhood of Teamsters (Ind.) the 31-year-old former society picket lines. SANTA MONICA, Calif (AP) garet is expecting her first baby terials Limited when a driver according to a will and codicil|chosen to note Armstrong-Jones' : " : 3 i DUBLIN--The Irish voted to-| The vote count in nearly all|idency in 1959. De Valera's ab- line at a Toronto housing proj-| 4.04 or cancer Sept. 22. narhed| Wales and is in County Caern- strike violated written agree. Her husband, Capt. Horace yf °F O08" © daputy lieu. | Eire gained independence from stantial batch of results is un-| The Fianna Fail held 78 seats independence from Britain 1921.| afternoon. | ger of the Ready-Mix Concrete/Charles Lederer, and a niece, DESCRIBES IT day the plant shutdowns will{tor Arthur (Dagwood) Lake press reproduced a gazeteer-|in Ireland's stormy history. Friday. half-dozen minority parties. honor their agreements." monthly income and the family altitude and headlined the an- mon Market, the Irish role in(t0 the proportional representa-'--in the new parliament. The in the Metropolitan Toronto{house and three acres in Palm' But The Daily Mirror in a schools. None has created much !2ining five members, often en-| James Dillon, leader of the | mined. {urgent task confronting Ireland {and some members of his cab- countries attending such meet- ings could see the contrast be- tween East and West Berlin. The Arkansas Democrat, whose recent statements on Ber- lin aroused resentment in the state department, reiterated his view that the Kennedy adminis- tration and the previous Eisen- hower administration had been '"'damned slow' in attempting to resolve the Berlin dispute with Russia. State department officials pri- vately deplored Fulbright's statements and maintained they may undermine the Western ne- gotiating position and embar- rass the Kennedy administra- Alleged Assassin | Plan Uncovered | ACCRA, Ghana (Reuters)-- Dozens of opponents of Presi- |dent Kwam Nekrumah were un-| deputy {der arrest today following alle-| gations by the government of al h| Among those arrested was 38- year-old lawyer Joe Appiah, leader of the parlia- mentary Opposition since 1958. He is married to Peggy Cripps, |daughter of the late British La- | bor chancellor of the exchequer, | {Sir Stafford Cripps. | Other well known names |among those arrested included tion. Made aware of state de- partment re a c tion, Fulbright said he had no intention of pre- judicing current negotiations. He was merely expressing a per- sonal view, mainly on the ori- gin of the dispute. He added, however, that Sen- ator Mike Mansfield, Senate ma- jority leader, shared his view that the West had delayed too long in attempting to settle the Hint New Red Space Surprise Kwame Kesse, city editor of the | Ashanti Pioneer, a newspaper| {opposing Nkrumah; and P. K.| | Quaidoo, once a Nkrumah min- |ister and now an outspoken | parliamenary opponent of the! government. | | A government statement re- ferred to '"'clandestine and dan- |gerous activities of certain in- dividuals" calculated to '"'sub- vert and endanger the security of the state." | The statement said the acts included "violence, secret meet. ings, the taking of oaths to as- | sassinate the president and cer- [tain members of the govern- {ment, strikes, sabotage and | lockouts." | Big Betting House Raid On Factory | TORONTO (CP) Police broke into a suburban North York factory Tuesday night and seized sheets recording a total fof $13,000 bet in one day. | Police estimated the operation {would handle more than $3,000,- LONDON (AP) -- A Soviet rocket expert hinted today Rus- sia is about to bring off a spec tacular new space launching. Dr. Vladimir Dobronravov said on Moscow radio that cur- rent tests of 'new and more powerful multi-stage rockets for! the launching of objects into space are going off very suc- cessfully." He added that the final stages of these rockets have landed on targets in the Pacific, up to 7,500 miles from the launching points, with "striking accur- acy." Western observers have guessed that Russia might stage a space spectacular of some kind either just before or during the Soviet Communist party congress opening in Mos- cow Oct. 17. Senator Irks State Officials Berlin issue. Mansfield also sup- ported de facto -- informal-- recognition of East Germany as part of a Berlin seitlement. Fulbright and the Kennedy administration have been at odds before, particularly at the time of the Cuban invasion fail ure. Fulbright had advised Ken- nedy not to go through with it. Secretary of State Dean Rusk supported the president's deci- sion to encourage the invaders through arms, instructors and aircraft, The latest Fulbright view that aroused Rusk's associates was his statement in London that the United States had failed to nail down full legal rights to ground routes between West Germany and West Berlin at the time of Allied occupation in 1944 and 1945. West Berlin is 110 {miles inside Communist terri. tory. Mantle Out Ot Lineup NEW YORK (AP) -- Mickey Mantle definitely was out of New York Yankees' starting lineup for today's first world series game with Cincinnati. After taking two or three swings in batting practice, Man- tle told manager Ralph Houk he would not be able to play, "It will be a day-to-day proposi- tion," said Mantle. Mantle underwent minor sur- gery for an abscess on his right hip last week and has made a slow recovery. This was the first time he had swung a bat in more than a week. ai With Mantle out of aetioh, Houk switched Roger Maris, the home run champ with 61 hom- ers, to centre field. Hector Lo- pez replaced Maris in right. FIRST INNING Reds -- Blasingame struck out. Kasko singled to left field. Pinson flied to centre. Robin- son struck out. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left on base. Yankees-- Richardson singled to centre. Kubek walked. Maris flied to short left. Howard flied fo centre. Skowron walked, BeBrra flied to centre. No runs, one hit, no errors, three left on. SECOND INNING Reds -- Post grounded out. Freese grounded out to third. Coleman grounded out to Ford. No runs, no hits no errors. Yankees--Lopez flied to deep right. Boyer popped out to third. Ford grounded out to second, No runs ,no hits, no errors. r i is "fo restore the profit-earning|000 a year at that rate and said EDT today. Ford plant there unless it lasts), The 49-year-old Liberal pre-lasked Lapalme whether port of new contract demands. at Oakville to last several land are getting colder. Climate matters proved to be the stum-| president labor relations and top| nd, apart are of gréat importance. pe + [orological Organization meeting | between us." to warmer or cooler climate has| ; { > Pl set in Plant Closure; could to avoid the strike, say- pointment and regret were thelficial indications to the con-|lologist with the U.S. weather| quate time to settle our prob-ihat commoner Antony Arm-| "We have a feeling that he With central Europe and the A government statement listed agreement until 8 am." One newspaper, the mass-cir- strong-Jones. 'This newspaper colder--the Kurile (Kamchatka) | but opposition United party TORONTO (CP)--Ready-mix/ Ment With General Motors, y cn or" more simply, bloke. Alaska," he told reporters. | roundup and were being sought. e by members of the International the title of Earl of Snowdon on should recognize organizational! Left By Actress cess Margaret last year. Mar- ; ® LJ ployees of Canada Building Ma-|estate in excess of $8.000,000,/ The earldom of Snowdon was After Quiet lection 1 gross an organizational picket! my. gs vear.old actress, who highest mountain (3,560 feet) in Industry spokesmen said the 2S principal heirs: father, Ronald: Armitrone. (parliament), the 17th since day morning and the first sub-| from the campaign. | NS 3 R. L. Moran, general mana.,Douras Adlon; a nephew, | 40 for Fine Gale (Soldiers of the Association of Ontario, said to- Mrs. Patricia Lake, wife of ac-| Lord Beaverbrook's Daily Ex-|the quietest political campaigns Jew Dall will not be known until ers were scattered among a to some form of guarantee to/000 in trust to provide a $3.000 scribing its position, height and! Ireland's move to join the Com. counting and recounting is due fewer than in the previous Dail crete will strangle construction|for the rest of his life, plus a Peer teaching of Gaelic in Irish the Digger constituencies con |sion of constituencies. otk RR a {before the fifth seat is deter- to the farmers. He said the most Plan Sweeping Changes OTTAWA (CP) -- The admin- § | istrative setup of the Anglican 7 Church of Canada is in for a . major overhaul. Wide organizational changes | were approved Tuesday at the | annual meeting here of the church's executive council They will be debated further at next year's general synod in | Kingston. The changes recommended in- clude an overhaul of the general synod -- the legislative policy- making body of the church-- the holding of synod mee'ings every two vears instead of three, and the replacement of the present executive council by a new national executive council. Delegates to which continues CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 | FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 | HORRITAL 723-2211 _ | sionaries. HOPES FOR UNITY Most Rev. Howard Archbishop of Rupert's and Primate of All said come in our time." administrative allow the synod tiveness." Convening of the the meeting, today, also | {United Church, every two vears and the Pres byterians. who meet annualls Composition of the would be reduced to 210 mer ceses. Clark, | Land Canada, "We all hope that union WILL BE SYNOD (of the Christian churches) wil! Rt. Rev. H. R. Hunt, Suffra- gan Bishop of Toronto, said the|present, changes would|lower house are represented in!gram for clergy, lay readers "to proceed|the electoral college with great efficiency and effec- permit the legislative body to|suade wealthy church membhers|training courses of cler: deal more effectively with the|to leave bequests to {rapidly changing position of the church finances. church. It would also bring the| {church more into line with the money available and the church tary. which meets|was making only half - svnod! soma The missionary, religious, ed- tendency heard the head of the church ucation and social service de-|might give, he said, to fear that say world events may hurry partmental church union, and a plea from! separately instead of in joint|buildings rather than in direct The West Indies for more mis- session with the executive coun- human assistance. boards would sit{such money would be spent on cil and the council would be| 3 : abolished to be replaced by a/APPROVE RESOLUTIONS large central committee to be| The executive council ap- called the national excutive|/Proved resolutions authorizing council. | the setting up of a new curri- {culum "designed to met the present day needs' of Anglican The electoral college, which|Sunday schools; approving con- ithe general synod itself. and teachers: and encouraging The church was urged by setting up of regional training| Sure for Britain to five up the later this week. Archdeacon T P. Crosthwaite institutes to provide more ex general of Toronto to use "imagination! tensive training for lay workers synod every two years wouldjand creative insight" to oer- and centres for short - term gy and | bolster laity Canon A. H. Davis, the mis- He said there was lots of such sionary society's general secre- attempts to get a share of it William Wright "desperately" for Canadian as-! Bishop of Al-Isistance will be Tle said there chnreh "00 000 Anglicans predicted there to the are some | in. The West oreal heannsts bers from 300 by lowering vep- but onlv. "il we confront each Indies but thev are served hy represented resentation from the larger dio- individual personally our only 300 clergy. By contrast Ja- have changed selves." among thoss who!Anglicans served by 320 clergy. | LEMASS UP AGAIN eligible to cast ballots. Up for About 1.750000 voters: were capacity of the agricultural in-|it was the largest they had come 9 shies : dustry." across. re-election was Prime Minister Sean Lemass, head of the pow- erful Fianna Fail (Soldiers of Destiny) party. Lemass took over as head of the Fianna Fail, which has dom- inated Irish politics almost con- tinually since 1932, when Eamon de Valera moved up to the pres- Condemns U.S., Russ Testing BLACKPOOL, England (CP) expressed guarded op tim ism|Russia holds the veto power. |: chooses the primate, would be|tinuation and expansion of the George Brown, deputy leader ofthat a formula might be an-' But if the selection is left to] | At|religious education depart. Britain's Labor party, today nounced--perhaps when Soviet|the General Assembly alone, as only 84 of the synod's|ment's leadership training pro. cOndemned the resumption of| Foreign Minister Andrei Gro-ladvocated by some Western na- : i | ¥ nuclear tests b, Russia and the myko meets U.S. State Secre-|tions, the Soviet Union will re- United States but rejected pres- t bomb Brown delivered the opening i speech in the party's debate on defence at its annual conference here | was assured in advance of the|l t said the Anglican church debate of victory over opponents|of the uncertainties confronting | viet hearted|in The West Indies is calling|of the H-bomb who at last year's(the UN in The Congo. Stat : 3 This could be done on an in. Latin America, Asia and Africa. |" conference pushed through a vote calling 'or unilateral nu- t clear disarmament by Britain Since the several unions ( the conferences vole a bomb. Prospects appeared a little|the im brighter c their stand and! decisions There was a growing pan had an estimated 40,000 now want Britain to retain the essential work tariat, Prospects Better For UN Secretary UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Soviet delegates 'were giving pression that their only, marskjold is that he be screened Informed American sources Dy the Security Council, where ary Dean Rusk in Washington fuse to recognize the new retary general '"'even if he were External Affairs Minister a Russian," one high Soviet loward Green of Canada, in a| Source said. There is no vote ountry UN General Assembly union and the United States, the other three from erim basis while a longer-range/ There was no indication] olution is being worked out, whether such a plan would be ireen said, but the appointee acceptabe to the Russians. who hould have full powers to make have proposed naming a secre | and keep going the|tary-general to work with three of the UN secre-|deputies 'representing Ea st) West and neutrals. today for East-West|demand on the naming of aj} agreement on naming a United|temporary successor to Ham . Nations secretary-general. major policy speech to the 100." the General Assembly. Latest speculation centred on| Tuesday, stressed the urgency|2 plan to name an acting secre- i Partly Leader Hugh Gaitskell of picking a successor to the/tary-general with five deputies. ate Dag Hammarskjold in view TWO would come from the So-|: sec-| 3 Manager Ralph Yankee Stadium in New York today before his players take | YANKEE MANAG Houk of New York Yankees looks over | playing field from dugout at | pre-game workout. The Yan- kees will meet Cincinnati Reds in opening game of World Series later in day. =(AP Wirephoto)

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy