Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Nov 1961, p. 1

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

oin The Drive === = Oye Oshawa Gime Alimony could be defined as a man's cash surrender value. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy To The Community Chest Goal WEATHER REPORT Showers beginning this after- noon and continuing overnight. Cloudy and cool on Saturday. Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Pepartment, Ottawc CROWDS CHEER BIRTH OF SON TO MARGARET : Mother And Son. Are Doing Well London )cp) -- Princess Mar- aret gave birth to a son today -and her husband said she was thrilled and delighted. : First to see the baby boy-- VOL. 90--No. 255 OSHAWA. ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1961 TWENTY PAGES 10. |Radiation Proof | | OTTAWA (CP) -- Charles B. Limbrick, retired RCAF group captain and missile and radar} expert, said today he believes the Soviet Union has perfected an anti - radiation drug which has been mass-administered to the Russian people. : He said that in such circum- jstances Russia can detonate) Ene many more nuclear bombs, lure |the West intc testing its own 'poeeeeerne Ty Storm Killed 151, Interest Rates ssesgeeeee"™ success" in its search for an an- tidote for radiation poisoning. He did not identify his inform-/? ant but indicated that his source was a Western official closely associated with biological re- search, He said it was known five, years ago that Russia was aj) "good deal" ahead of the West); in the biological aspects of rad- jiation sickness. ik . a # "Russia will not only let off) siaaChins AND HUSRAND father he hurried to see the Queen Mother. With her, he re- visitea his wife and son. Before the baby's birth--10:45 a.m. (5:45 a.m. EST) -- Tony sent Margaret an armload of red roses. He repeated the or- der after the birth. Bursting with the news, the Queen Mother got on the tele- phone to Buckingham Palace. To the Queen, she said: "It's a boy, they're both doing well." Within three hours the Queen was at Clarence House to see her sister and the baby. The room in which the boy was born was the same in which Eliza- beth gave birth to Princess Anne 11 years ago. The news was flashed to the Earl of "Snowdon, the former society photographer Antony Arm- _ strong-Jones. Coming from the royal ma- ernity suite in Clarence House, he exclaimed to a member of the household: "The princess and I are ab- solutely thrilled and delighted." His son--fifth in line to the British throne--was born Vis- count Linley. The infant's weight was not announced immediately. An official announcement said "mother and son are doing |well."" far corners of the world. It ev "It's a sweet baby," said a|went out to jet airliners ber of the household flight. rn LOOTING IN BELIZE a long while for results." many fallout - producing bombs, Group Capt. Limbrick, former some very large, but also by the, e 'Cut To Curb director 0 Fig aes oo afte same action anne i ne RCAF, said in an interview that|States, Unite ingdom an Move Cit Inland | | Western nations for some years|France also to release fallout. | Pressure At Home Money Influx jhave known A Zeon | "The a ning wait a | 'on the track of a chemical pill|jong while for results." BELIZE, British Honduras|than the 1931 hurricane that) N (CP)--Britain's cut|0% substance to offset most of Biologists at the atomic cen- . i ue oe tl aes ee aaa EES Sets JFK Policy pry Pe ig" oc mag gg gS gy d reported|# Move designed to curb the), = . ae has a 'medical|m es wh 2 drug which may © at ns @ oe ee heli gens "Oresk pea at Gale's Tush of foreign money to this) | sas adiation.' "" hel to protect man against moved [iMCenbbean const - to|Polnt, 3 on Turnefte and-4 on| Word banking centre. eee Beanie caniation | WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-\U.S. Atomic Energy Commis- ao lca: re tes The latter two are| Financiers ever ready to take|NoT WORRIED --___________________--|dent Kennedy may be seeking/sion disclosed that the Russians oo t cineca anal 'tslend off the coast advantage of the highest re-| «Obviously, Russia is not wor- to ease political and military|continued to blast away with sameciae ac ae views death} I available rushed their\rieq about contamination," pressures at home without in- IN OWN ROOM Five persons were reported] turns toll from hurricane Hattie rose|killed in neighboring Guatemala|funds to London when Chancel- to 151, and many more bodies were feared buried in the mud and wreckage left by the storm Tuesday. River threat- which bore-the brunt of the 200- 3 one int ie city of 30,000, ~" | waves that crashed in from the | Caribbean. | Belize counted 62 dead. An estimated 75 per cent of the} | buildings in the capital were de- stroyed or damaged. The prop- , erty devastation was greater Large UN Powers 3:3 erccneiuen |tries after Britain's expected)' and two in Honduras. lor of the Exchequer Selwyn | Lloyd boosted the rate to seven FLY IN TROOPS jper cent in his July austerity "When we are able to remove British troops were flown! from. Jamaica to help guard! against looting as the clearing|in an effort to = the rae ae! of the debris went slowly, most-|of money. The bank rate now) fle-an-hour winds and tidal li' alt ger. cent. Most observers of the British) ly by hand. "When we are able to remove| | budget. Since then two cuts of one- half per cent have been made jeconomic scene take the view ce = cease ye that the short term crisis af- found," said Prime Minister|fecting the pound sterling is) George Price. "'We are waiting for heavy equipment." Kill Moratorium over. : | But, as The Times says in an |Group Capt. Limbrick said. | Group Capt. Limbrick said he jwas told in Europe last year that the USSR was "close to ae | Police Called To Mine Mill 'Union Meeting called to the Mine-Mill union Slays Wite, 2 Children, 'Himself LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)--A 28- year-old air force tanker pilot pursued his wife to the home of a neighbor early today and shot | SUDBURY (CP)--Police werejher to death as she sought ref- creasing criticism abroad with his inconclusive new policy on nuclear testing in the atmos- phere. | While giving the go-ahead on scientific preparations for re- (sumption of tests,.Kennedy al- lowed himself sufficient leeway ito keep the door closed on at- |mospheric blasts for some time |to come, if he so chooses. In the back of his mind may be the hope that meantime the |Russians may finally agree to juge in the bedroom of a sleeping| 128 a nuclear test ban treaty editorial, "The longer - term/naji Thursday night when sup-|child. Then he returned home, struggle to get the economy ef- ficient, flexible and ready to jentry, must still go on.' | Thursday's bank rate cut had to be made in-a' way that did not indicate Lloyd's tough porters of the national executive refused to obey an adjournment call at a meeting of rebel Local 598. Fifteen police officers arrived on the scene in response to a call by officials of the local, whose officers are at odds with |killed their own two children as jthey slept and took his own on Western terms, which in- |cludes strict inspection. life| '"We will continue to be ready with a shotgun. His parents are|' Sign the nuclear test ban |Canadians. Lancaster County Attorney }Paul Douglas said the victims jwere Capt. Frank Delon Pick- ard, his wife, Frances, 24; their |treaty which provides for ade- |quate inspection and control," he said Thursday in disclosing his atmospheric policy. But even as he spoke, the new atmospheric tests in the Arctic. The AEC said the Rus- sians fired the 29th and 30th shots in their current series Thursday in the Novaya Zem- lya test area of the Arctic. The blasts were of moderate force, the AEC added. While~ Kennedy claims the blackmail_the world through a threat of vast nuclear power, he also expressed concern that the Communists may be making some major improvements in nuclear weaponry. atmospheric tests. Russians are attempting tojence House. The Scots Guards It is this worry and question- ing of what the Russians really are accomplishing with their prolonged series of Arctic explo- sions that has given rise to strong congressional and mili- tary pressure on the White House to disregard world opin- ion and end the moratorium on The child was born in the room that Princess Margaret once used as a . She lived at the house, home of the Queen Mother,. until her mar- riage May 6, 1960. Both she and her husband are 31. Crowds cheered outside Clar- bagpipe band marched past fill- ing the air with highland music. News of the birth was relayed quickly to Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Congratulations began pouring in. Philip commented at Leeds in north England "'it's a great re- lief all 'round." Lord Evans, 58, one of the five medical men who attended the princess, broke the news to the father. Leaving the big square room that had been cleared of its regency furniture, Lord Evans Motors, Motors. Find Agreement D hour "ment on a new three- year labor contract Thursday night. A strike narrowly was averted. "The Chrysler pact brought peace between the UAW and all the automakers, except small- est-of-all Studebaker - Packard. Three-year contract previously had been negotiated by General Ford and American UAW President Walter Reu- ther said the Chrysler agree- ment, which came only 50 min- UAW, Chrysler OLT. (AP) yp Chilysjer cree ration and ihe Ueda ts ee on reached an f UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- p utes before the company's 60,- measures were being eased in|the national executive of the In-|daughter, Andrea, 2; and their| said: tion initiated by India and five| any way. The smaller countries of the UN|other non-aligned states. It ap-| ~ jternational Union of Mine, Mill jand Smelter Workers (Ind.). swarmed over the big ones peared certain to get the two- Thursday night in giving over- thirds majority needed in the| whelming approval to a call for|103-country General Assembly. | a voluntary, unpoliced mora-| France and Australia were torium on testing of nuclear| among the countries opposed. | weapons. TEST IF NECESSARY STOLEN TEETH NOT HUMOROUS TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs. Despite the successful attack, the small powers did not win. For different stated reasons, the great powers had turned down the plea in advance. The UN political committee voted 72 to 21 with eight absten- tions for the voluntary cessation of testing, overcoming the ob- jections of the Soviet Union, the| 'he atmosphere--and its explo-| United States and Britain. Canada supported the resolu- HELP The Chest CLIMB $215,000 --- $200,000 $175,000 14 $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 Russia and the Western nu-| Robert Green received a clear powers--from their sep- arate camps -- indicated they would endorse nuclear testing if they considered them necessary for their own safety and that of |the smaller powers. .Russia's long series of tests in sion of high-megaton bombs with radioactive fallout repeat- _ |edly described here as appalling --were in the foreground of committee debate. The vote came shortly after two more Soviet nuclear blasts were disclosed and President Kennedy announced the United States would prepare to conduct new. tests in the atmosphere to be ready in case free world se- curity demanded them. telephone call Thursday night from a woman who described perfectly Mrs. Green's five - tooth upper plate, stolen on Hallowe'en | along with jack-o'-lantern it | had adorned. The caller said the teeth will be returned, promising | a happy ending to the story | that came to light Wednes- | day when Mr. Green placed an advertisement in a Tor- onto newspaper asking re- turn of the teeth. Mrs. Green said dozens of other calls were received from jesters and drunken buffoons who considered her plight amusing. 'REPORT ON FALLOUT | The call was made after 200 \national supporters broke up a |meeting at the Mine-Mill hall called by Local 598 President |Donaid Gillis. About 700 Inter- national Nickel Company work- ers were on hand. When Gillis adjourned the meeting the hecklers refused to jleave the building and at- |tempted to take over the meet- jing. Const. Norm Raiche, one of two police officers who arrived ahead of the others, took over son, Franklin Scott, 4. Douglas said Pickard and his wife apparently had an argu- ment and Pickard killed their great dane dog. Mrs. Pickard fled across the street to the Jay Hyde home where she tried first to enter the Hyde garage, and 'HEADS RESCUE INC. Priest And Bible "It's a boy." husband, meaning Margaret. r. TIP-TOES IN "Can I see her?" asked the "I think so,'"' replied the doc- Tony went first to see Mar- 000 UAW-represented employees were to strike at midnight in support of demands, was essen- tially the same as that reached at GM and Ford. 3 Reuther and Chrysler Vice- President John D. Leary an- nounced verbal agreement and said they would initial the con- then tried a back door of the house, which she found open. 'NOT SERIOUS' BOSTON (AP)--A Roman Police said Pickard followed| Catholic priest read slowly his wife to the bedroom of the| and deliberately from the Bi- | Hyde's son, Steven, 4, and the! ble's book of Isaiah, undis- Hydes heard her say, "it was| turbed by a shotgun held men- the microphone, reminding the} hecklers a court injunction has the local's affairs. Const. Raiche said any at-|Slept and then turned the shot- tempt to continue the meeting| would result in serious charges} ing the other officers arrived) jand the dissidents elected to go} hore, a few boos their only re-| jsponse to the police interven- |tion. not that serious." She was shot| acingly 'at in the head his chest. And he shall destroy Tie 'attorney said Pickara| the. wicked and sinners to- gun on himself. | Douglas said there were evi-| Rey. being laid. As he finished speak-|dences of drinking at the Pick-| ard home. | : pt ; | gether; and -they that have rdered them not to interfere in|ten went home, shot his own) a ' ore children in the head while they| foresaken the Lord shall be | consumed . . ." | The man continued to hold the loaded. shotgun against Kenneth Murphy, 40. | The priest noticed, however, | the words of the Bible were Pickard had been stationed at) having a soothing effect. the Lincoln air force base as co-| pilot of a tanker. KC-97 Only Potential Hazard Three radioactive sub- stances in particular need careful watching as fallout from nuclear testing in- creases. But at this point, their distribution appears well below the immediate danger level to human health. Last of three arti- cles. | By ALTON BLAKESLEE | Associated Press Science Writer NEW YORK (AP) -- The jmain bad actor atoms in bomb jtest fallout are strontium, io- 'dine and cesium. Russia's gigantic 50 - mega, {ton - plus explosion shot an- jother dose of them into the air, |for winds to blow about and) How much is too much for | vulged |cause fallout atoms are poten- tially a hazard, especially if quirks of wind and weather make some localities "hotter" than others. The test fallout coming from great distance is of possible jeconcern only if it gets inside the body. The trouble with strontium-90 jis that it concentrates in bones, | while iodine concentrates in the thyroid gland. Too much of jthese atoms might cause can- lcers of the bone or thyroid, or| leukemia. | Cesium-137 becomes generally wpa through the body, in- cluding sex glands, where it | might cause genetic changes. would be tolerable without| harm. They can't prove it. They do know that fallout from tests so far hasn't gone above these limits. These limits, as in the case| of strontium-90 for example,| are at least 100 times less than the amount of strontium re- quired to produce bone cancers in laboratory animals. FIGURES SECRET Just how many of the bad-| actor atoms were created by| Soviets, as well as U.S. bomb| |testers in the past, have not di-| the makeup of the! for rains and snow to bringjhumans? No one can answer|bombs. | | drifting down on people around j the world. Is this a cause of serious con- cern for North Americans? | No, at least not yet, says the |U.S. Public which is keeping a super-cau- Start tious eye on fallout. : | | The watch is maintained=>e-' They think these tiny amounts|many years, It takes about 27|amount. |this, how It |human body. | To play it safe, international because no one is sure little jtremely low maximum doses for daily intake by humans. |dioactive atoms | | years for half the original) amount to disappear. If taken in| - | 'Woe to you that rise up | early in the morning to follow drunkenness and to drink 'till the evening, to be inflamed with wine." | The passages from the Bible pulled away his deadly wea- pon. | Police said the bravery of | Father Murphy probably saved six lives. Earlier, they said, the man with the gun-- food, these atoms can remain| long time. active in the body, emitti : "4 Cold active in the body, emitting po-! Survives Co Iodine-131 has a half - lte-| By Digging In in which half of it becomes| harmless -- of eight days. In HELENA, Mont. (AP)--Know- ing he had lest his way in a another eight days, only one-|blinding snowstorm, a Helena quarter of the original amount/man dug a hole in the earth remains. If milk became contaminated | Russia's monster bombs, and|With iodine, keeping it refrig- all its current tests, has not|¢rated for a month would make) been made public. Reason: The/|it safe to drink, Dr. James Ter-| , rill of the U.S. Public Health! Service points out. |with his hands, covered it with |boards and crawled in with his five - year - old son, thereby |surviving sub - zero tempera- jtures Wednesday night. Emil Tenneson, 26, and his json, Ski, were found Thursday by searchers. They had been From all bomb {ts through'lost for 18 hours in the foot- 1958, the actual amount of hills south of Helena, One estimate is that a 50-|strontium-90 in children's bones, radiation it takes)megaton bomb produces 2,750/on the average, was about 26 © cause harmful effects on the|pounds of some 200 kinds of ra-|times less than the maximum They jwere tired, celd and hungry but otherwise in good condition. "The boards plus the snow on at the outset. |amount deemed to be harmless|top of them helped to keep us Most of these "die". very|if it is in bones. All the Soviet| warm," Tenneson said. He said Health Service,;and U.S. experts have set ex-|quickly, and so don't travel far.|tests might double this -- and it his son w as partially under him But strontium-90 and cesium-|would still be about 13 times|and was "good and warm but less than the estimated "safe"|there were times I thought I \137 remain radioactive for! |was going to freeze." And Father Murphy read | refuelling} on... | and Roberts had had their effect. The man | Save Six Lives | Ralph Roberts, 34-~had threat- | ened to kill his five children and take his own life. The drama began to unfold at midnight Wednesday night when Roberts' wife, Rose, 33, ran to a police station and told of the husband's threats. Police quickly called Father Murphy, who founded and nominational organization ded- icated to prevent suicides. the same time. pleaded Father Murphy after he identified himself. erts for alcoholism. Police fetched Dr. Ulmer permitted him and the priest to enter. When Roberts lowered his gun, Dr. Ulmer--with the fath- er's permission--went into the and asked the other children | to follow him. "There are men here to help you," Father. Murphy told Roberts. The priest nodded to- ward the doo: and received permission to-open it. Roberts went. with police to the station house. Police said they will. charge him with drunkenness and arrange for him to take a. mental test. Referendum Urged On Secessionism QUEBEC (CP) --Dr. Lucien Diocese St. Jean Baptiste Soci- ety, said Thursday a referendum should be held to see if French- Canadians want to secede from Confederation. He said the St. Jean Baptiste Society is not a separatist' or- ganization, even if some of its members are attracted to the secessionist doctrine. The soci- ety is a French-Canadian cul- tural organization. heads Rescue, Inc., a non-de- | next room, picked up the baby | Boulet, president of the Quebec! garet. Then he tip-toed in to see his son. As excited as any other new tract as soon as_ technicians completed writing language ac- ceptable to both sides. Name U Thant UN Secretary - | UNITED NATIONS (CP)--,tell the assembly after his elec- The UN security council today|tion that he would consult with Police and the priest ar- recommended unanimously that/his advisers on important ques- rived at the Roberts home at |Burma's U Thant be named act-|tions and work with them "in a ing secretary - general of the spirit of mutual understand- the late Dag Hammarskjold. "May I come in please?" |world organization in place ofjing." The Russians originally jdemanded that the deputies The action was taken at a have a virtual veto over the ing a six-week-old deadlock. "Get me Dr. Ulmer," re- brief closed meeting of the 11- Secretary - general's decisions plied Roberts. Dr. David D. (nation council after the big pow- but abandoned this stand weeks Ulmer had been treating Rob- jers had reached agreement end- 289. The United States and Russia | The General Assembly was\also had agreed weeks ago that |scheduled to act quickly on the U Thant should get the job. council's recommendation at an afternoon session. Oerwhelm- ing approval was expected in a |serret ballot. : | The Russians backed down : after trying to specify the num- { |ber of principal deputies the |52 - year - old Burmese ambas- jareas from which they would be drawn. The United States jmade a similar retreat earlier \this week. called into a closed meeting this morning to recommend U Thant to fill out the term. of Dag Hammarskjold, killed in a plane crash Sept. 18. The General Assembly was to meet this afternoon to elect \April, 1963. U Thant, a quiet but de termined diplomat, broke the U.S.-Soviet deadlock over the issue of his principal advisers |by telling the big powers he {would name "a limited num- jber." He refused to commit himself in advance to any par- ticular number from any par- ticular areas and told the Rus- |sians and thé Americans they \could take it or leave it. ' U Thant said"he also would |U Thant. He will serve until jsador would appoint and the 3 The security council was |

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy