ital Board Sweepstake Debate -P. 3 Oshawa Cimes ' THOUGHT FOR TODAY Income taxes were more popular with the majority when they hit only the minority. * WEATHER REPORT Overcast this afternoon. Occas- ional rain tonight and Thursday, milder. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 90--NO. 271 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1961 Ottawa and for payment Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. FORTY-EIGHT PAGES Rea PCy F 'SECURITY COUNCIL DISCUSSION U Thant, left, acting United! the UN, in New York City to- | UN representative in the Con- Nations Secretary General, | gay. Valerian Zorin, Soviet | go. Man wearing _ glasses, chats with his advisor on arin delegate to the UN, sits at | right center, is Dr. Ralph go affairs, Gen. Indar Jit A ar right foreground. In rear, | Bunche, UN under secretary, Rikyhe during meeting of the : ll-nation Security Council at | right, is Conor Cruise O'Brien, --(AP Wirephoto) Reds Threaten Adenauer Agrees tremely dangerous." POLICE COMMISSION PLANNED FOR ONTARIO Shelters Seen As Dangerous By Physicists IOWA CITY, lowa so gti James Van Allen and seven ae other University of Iowa phys-| OTTAWA Ci icists take issue with Dr. Wil-|"wouldn't be welcome' in the lard Libby's syndicated series of|European Common Market even articles on how to survive i. it They hie heel Pras { . attack. Thev call it '"'ex-| Minister Fleming said Tuesday atomie attack. They call it 'ex Ge clas tid a near annie ence he' is "'very much inter- 'ested" in United States govern- ment proposals which he said are aimed at freer trade -- but not free trade -- between west- ern Europe and North America Mr. Fleming, who returned late Monday from talks in Eur- Dr. Van Allen, who detected the radiation belts circling the earth through satellite studies, heads the Iowa physics depart- ment The Iowa physicists, in a letter to the editor of the lowa Press-Citizen, said of the Fleming Tells Press | 'P) -- CanadaTrade Minister. Hees -- includ-;ized that the discussions were|today, by the government of/quced to six separate acts deal- (CP) Canada,Trade Minister. Hees inc ze at the discussions were Premier Robarts in the speech|ing with eaacation. No details "There are no grounds what-|{r0n the throne. ing one Tuesday concerning studies being mad on the effect of Canadian mem | ever for suggestions of anything bership in the Common Market |to the contrary.' Mr. Fleming said Mr. Hee:| Mr. Fleming in particular de- was referring to the broader|nied there had been any "re- question of Canadian trade re-|buff"' in the British refusal of lations with the Common Mar-|Canada's request for a full copy in Se mal om cordial." ket. The finance minister, who had talks in London Monday with Prime Minister Macmillan and Commonwealth Relations Secre- jof the speech by Edward Heath, |Britain's lord privy seal, in opening talks at Paris Oct. 10 on |Britain's application to join the ;Common Market. | aimed at 8 \crime in Ontarjo were outlined; Amendments would be intro- by Lieutenant-Governor J. Keil- ler Mackay at the opening of the third session of the prov- ince's pledged increased spending on education and industrial devel- opment. | Speech From Throne Read By Lieutenant-Governor TORONTO (CP) Steps|tions will be made to univer- tighter control of|sities."' were given. The throne speech dealt in |broad terms with almost every jgovernment department. But }with rare exceptions neither the extent of proposed financial pro grams nor the exact nature of planned changes in legislation was given in detail. The 3,500-word speech, read} 26th legislature, also The speech said the govern- ment "'will introduce legislation|INDUSTRY MAIN THEME providing for the creation of | Industry was a main theme City ope and London, said Canada | He said the importance of|4" Ontario police commission|of the speech. It stressed that charges by the United States! and Russia. To Scuttle UN 'On Further Talks Move In Congo "*™ _ WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-|Press UNITED NATIONS (CP) --jident Kennedy and Chancellor|ing' a Despite an impassioned appeal|Konrad Adenauer were reported' made by Adenauer by The Congo, the Soviet Union|today to have agreed that the; The chancellor cancelled the threatened Tuesday to veto a' Western powers should hold fur-jengagement Tuesday because proposal for broadening the ther exploratory talks with Rus-'of a cold. Aides called the ill- United Nations mandate in that sia on a Berlin settlement. ness slight. It did not cause him chaotic African country. They were also reported injto miss any of his meetings Meetings of the ll-memberjagreement on basic Western|with Kennedy. UN Security Council were ad-|policy positions to be taken if) Tuasday night he entertained journed to Friday after an an-\the talks lead to formal nego-'Kennedy and cther U.S. offi- gry exchange of obstruction |tiations. cials at a dinner at the Germaa The .U.S.-West German policy|Embassy. Prior to the dinner a leonference ends today with ajjoint German - U,S. statement; White. House session. Ar-|said the talks had gone well: | "The talks involved an ex- Club. Schroeder is keep- speaking date originally is due to leave for Bonn series by Dr. Libby, a Nobei Prize chemist: "It is extremely dangerous to give the impression to the pub- lic that the building of fallout shelters will enable the average citizen to survive a nuclear War. "couldn't join the Common Mar- ket even if she wanted to." For one thing, the six-nation trade bloc was essentially a European group. Besides, the Common Market "is so consti- tuted at the present time, and its policies are such, that it's "This gives a false sense of|quite clear to me from my dis- security. The small margin of safety gained be welcome." in no way detracts from the atomic war will mean the end of the civilizations of both op-'ket idea of political unification ponents."" which entered the thinking..of "I did not intend to. say any-|some Common Market thing like that. What J intended pers in particular. to say was that fallout shelters mem- percentagewise cussions that Canada wouldn't/family of five were forced out} tary Duncan Sandys, emphas-| nis was perhaps exaggerated iby the number of questions jabout it at a press conference jin London Monday. Nestleton Fire vested with comprehensive pow-|"as in past years, the govern- ers relating to the maintenance|ment's program has been de- of law and order in Ontario." |signed to achieve an economic No outline was given of the|climate conducive to industrial There had been no "demand"|Commission's functions. But the| expansion and employment." F by Canad. j \Liberal and New Democratic) Dama e $50 000 "He eat, peigghe be no|Party leaders have accused At er GROWTH : g a -General Roberts of leth-| It noted. an increase in eco- |suggestion that Canada is sus-|torney: NESTLETON (Staff) of their combination general \bership. rning by a flash fire that) tleton General Store owned and operated by Norman Mairs. He, with his wife and three children fled from the store at 2:30 a.m. On Proposal 'pe ; | ic th during 1961 and icious or mistrustful of what|®"8y in the face of what they/notiic grow AP ritein is saying in its negotia-(Call inroads of organized crime|reduced unemployment, i|tions on Common Market mem-|iN the province. Mr. Roberts|cannot be complacent, how- | , jhimself has contended that his\€ver." There were difficulties of "re-\store and residence here early| | very real possibility that an/concjling economic interests."|this m Another was the Common Mar-|caused about $50,000 damage. UN A t Destroyed by fire was the ail greemen a "We department is keeping a watch-| "The possible entry of the ful eye on. criminals and that|United Ki padom. other the situation is not out of hand.|countries inte the Eur nd Pas ' ee nn a % AID INDUSTRY -\troduce new rete: and Dealing with industrial prob-| strains, The price of progress jlems, the speech emphasized) must be unceasing attention to jthe need for expansion, adding: |ways and means of improving er era oe ae haustive ane Iictive dicone.greatly increase the chance of SEES NO CONFLICT | i i bree pr ay Ooo eeat aierin ay survival for those who were not! Mr. Fleming indicated he saw |after oe get smelled smoke} mamnunae retlecting. ae wasn ent it lationship|hit directly by blast or thermal|no conflict between his state-jand heard "popping noises" yg hgangy Ma Mere Dwertuan 'aiiee' the jment and recent speeches by|lfrom below in the store. | the two leaders on Berlin) With the Western allies," the| urst, e Premier Of B.C. "A Drone yoga iy ng is being quality and cutting costs." evolved to assist the economy The s " Pp peech said a "'compre- e pressing pce aged rate hensive plan is being evolved to c & s assist the economy in achieving While denying the existence of a "magic formula," Mao rate of economic pledged increased emphasis on} industrial research and expan-| sion of the work of the Ontario! Research Foundation. | -S. Proposal f authorized to help jre-train the Congolese army, | He said this wo Urging Talks | UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- |The United Nations political committee Tuesday approved by acclamation an Indian pro- }posal urging the United States jand the Soviet Union to reach e teleased in|Statement said. Dr. Libby, asked by The As- ys ceed Subbect ras final) West German Defence Minis-\Sociated Press by 0 aagatg for pproval by Adenauer and Ken-|er Franz Josef Strauss went |his comments, replied: edy, it was expected to stress|further. He told reporters as he! "I agree that anybody who R $} allied determination to protect left the White House that Ade-|interpreted my article as saying West Berlin against Communist|Mauer wants to negotiate on|that fallout shelters make a province, to take over '} tasks from the \ Congo and if yoy, try to a mai ; many ills, P*T#lyz "IT am to some AB tent The me yo : by should not take me up! lese foreign minister declared. AMENDMENTS OFFERED The proposal for re-training the Congolese army was one of several offered by U.S.. Ambas- sador Adlai Stevenson as amendments to a Security Council resolution by Ceylon, lin a Sia. 'omboko compared his 'oun-| Pressures and at the same time ¢Mding the Berlin dispute, and d by\t0 keep the way open for a added: peaceful settlement with Rus- Wwant to help|MAY GIVE INDICATION . Advance indications of the re- ou"your shoulders but help mejsylts of the conference, whic) to walk," the 35-year-old Congo-|hegan Monday, were expected luncheon address made by Foreign Minister Ger- hard Schroeder at the National to be 'SANTA COMING (FOR SATURDAY atomic war tolerable should be outraged "We achieved a common basis for further talks on the ambassadorial level. We achieved unanimity for talks.' Adenauer and Kennedy have agreed, it is understood, that if Russia is unwilling to strike a bargain which respects basic Western rights in Berlin, as well as rig of access to the city from West Germany, then the dangers will have to be faced formed sources said Tuesday President Kennedy conferred with Premier W. A. C. Bennett Fair Tax Share Debate At Meet sist Som» te MONTREAL (CP)--Whether|versy last week and may con- co-operatives are paying their sider meeting with Prime Min- fair share of taxation wasiister Diefenbaker on the same sharply debated Tuesday at alicsues later. panel session of the current) They conference of the Canadian Tax whether Foundation R. Craig Mclivor, professor of baker to a They discussed the need for further strengthening of NATO Liberia and the United Arab) Included in today's edition of|military forces in Europe, and Republic calling for an end t0\the Oshawa Times is a special Adenauer. presented his view neem Page petals and elim-| section on the Oshawa Shopping that NATO needs a_ nuclear ination of foreign mercenaries. weapons force under its own on £ thé @ d teiCentre, "Santa's on his way" The iment of me amencmen Santa will be at the Oshawa command was to broaden the mandate to give Acting Secretary-General Shopping Centre Saturday, Nov U Thant power to deal with se- oS. t) e. For mupre details $1] 000 000 Blaze i ' ' ---- Hit Storage Plant Giastaiiat 'ove no. snater turn to the special section. K W F GRANDE RIVIERE, -- ue (CP)--Mavor U.K. Wage Freeze «::": iere said Tuesday unity was '"'hard hit" by an ly morning fire which destroyed a government n a y roun ,cold storage plant holding win- ter food stocks for most of the population. LONDON (CP)--Primé Min-!also a nationalized industry, in Damage =o estimated at ister Macmillan says the "'pay|support of their demands. And "an bd than $1,000,000 pause" is still on. But-many in-|there are a host of disgruntled The mavor said about 90 per side and outside the House of| workers who had held off on de- C&Mt of the Commons have serious doubts.;mands in compliance with the 'tants were affected. where they occurred. Bertin Lauzier of it the com town's 6000 inhab- political economy, light-hearted summation of the;ment next week. arguments with the remark: These informants said the "My mind is made up--don't U.S. government will do every- confuse me with the facts." ge it he = ee . ' ,of the Columbia River power Pl ge: Mr a = development under way. They 5 a E . : |posed views expressed by. the bh reaper Bethe that Pc a iiig sin' tans Renin cous matter is of extreme sensitiv- a on the two sides of the lity because the president does q Critics of the co-operatives not want to be portrayed as in- said they are presenting unfair ie oe ee Shin tue We pay novel Gal _ Canadian ratification of the anes k joint construction treaty has pany taxes, and claimed the been delayed by a federal-pro- co-operatives are escaping alll vincjal clash on power export a Need taxation by subter-| ,olicy and construction financ- C-operative representatives anes said there is nothing to this,\U.S. WILL MOVE charge anc that co-operatives; U.S. authorities involved themselves suffer from tax dis-'the Columbia program have crimination The unpopular wage - freeze|pay-pause rules. plan of Selwyn Lloyd, chancel- jor of the exchequer, has been SHOWS HAS FAITH *ossibly Macmillan took hte WASHINGTON (CP)--Well-in-| jplace at Seattle last Thursday,|ain--the main Western nuclear! said the question of/for a start on Columbia con-|announcement, Kennedy should take/struction have brightened. They|noted that the Soviet Union has! the initiative and invite Diefen-|<aid possibilities have increased apparently finished a long ser-| meeting on the Co-ifor resolving federal-British Co-jies of tests. This included high- McMaster lumbia and other matters will}.4mbia_ differences through/ megaton tests in defiance of an University, gave a chairman's|be weighed by the state depart-'some form of compromise. tentatively agreed that if Can-!with planning the talks. agreement on the makeup of a base | "The broad economic picture | : alks | '@) Ke ined y "isin body on disarma-|;yggests a continuance of jment. growth and expansion through- out the coming year," legisla- Helping along this unusual ada does not ratify the treaty|display of understanding be- by next March the U.S. will/tween East and West was an| The speech promised a "ma- have to consider more expen-|announcement some hours earl-|jor increase in the province's sive alternative proposals tojier that the Soviet Union was|assistance to education," add- provide more power for the U.S.|willing to resume negotiations |ing that "not only will grants to Pacific Northwest. in Geneva Nov. 28 ona nuclearjlocal school boards be in- However, since the Kennedy-|test-ban treaty. jereased, but larger contribu- Bennett conversations took! But while the U.S. and Brit-| ----~------ ee ture members were told. Can Truck Crash Kills Two People authorities here said prospects;powers--welcomed the Soviet Officially they} Hopes Raised In Governor's 'Search For Son HOLLANDIA, Dutch New Guinea (AP) -- Optimistic re- ports from searchers today raised New York Governor Nel- son A. Rockefeller's hopes that his son Michael will be found alive. Arriving in Dutch New Guinea after a trans-Pacific jet flight, Rockefeller was told that his 23- year-old son was only about two overwhelming UN plea co-spon- On his return to Victoria from|S°red by Canada and other Seattle, Bennett was quoted as Smaller countries. saying he was more enthusias-, Joseph Godber, British minis- tic than ever that the Columbia ter of state for foreign affairs, project will go ahead. said he welcomed the Russian) Just how Bennett came to|Statement which showed that it talk to Kennedy on the issue is\W@S bowing to the expressed still unclear. Officially, the| Will of the 103-member UN Gen- White House declined to con-|¢ral Assembly. firm or deny that the talks took) place. Bennett was invited iM it b R Seattle for a Democratic testi-| monial dinner for Washington anl 0 a aps Senator Warren Magnuson and the head table wh M Kenedy' "aelvered the "man AMANAgeMent, speech. Informants said Kennedy and Bennett conferred during the in| dinner. WINNIPEG (CP) -- A Mani- toba government report, made public less than 24 hours after Kennedy had nothing to do ROYALTY GONE FROM GHANA on shaky ground since it was introduced in July. The decision !¢ad in the House to demon- of the Electricity, Council last Strate the faith the government Wednesday to grant a £4,500,- has in the plan and to impress 000 award to power - station|UPon the public that it is not workers, despite the pleas of) half-hearted about it. Lloyd, cracked it to its founda "lis insistence that the value tions. of the pause to the economy has eins 5; Pp The importance the govern- already been demonstrated and rage RA, Ghana (AP) { ment attaches to this electrichis rebuke of Electricity Coun- the Queen's charm and all the storm damage was underlined Ci! officials also was taken as Queen s prestige and integrity when an angry Prime Ministeran attempt to head off a sud- Couldn't put President Kwame "facmillan stepped forward to den eruption of wage demands, Nkrumah back on his pedestal handle the case in the House, When it was suggested by an The roya! visitors, the Queen Lioyd sitting silently at his side, 9pposition Liberal member the and Prince Philip, have come "We will not abandon: our government could have forcedjand gone and Nkrumah now > because we have had a 'he Electricity Council, as a na-/faces the future in a divided " Macmillan said. sean ages ge the line,!and unhappy country alone + 3 - ake Macmillan sai is WaS SU8-) While it lasted, the 11-day But in ive background were/ gesting a "'sort of Fascist s0- royal tour of Ghana seemed to eT eae ciety where we should impose pace strains -- which No nom Wk Gate ee threaten to topple Nkrumah or a wat ; doubt, now will point to the de-| Most fntce Wien dito aictatciat ? cision of the Electricity Council,! nce him into dictatorial rule CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 political London com menting on Macmillan's state- 'ment were doubtful he had sal- vaged the pause plan Ghanaians turned out to greet Says The Financial Times:|th¢ British soviereign.) Nkru- "The prime minister is to be|mah was always at her side. congratulated, without enthusi-| It was a rare demonstration asm, on his acumen in realizing|of affection for the island king that the wage pause policy t ich ruled ' about to be blown to smither-jcolony for year ens. Something had to beliudepe i es I Mr. Macmillan didjyears ago. Some of the Nkrumah's constant papers Hurdreds of thousands ,of sting of cone ifis best." sy dependence, warm smiles of friendly Ghan-|gees in neighboring aians. and the th No African colony was better With his-austerity budget and prepared for independence by|Wage-wi hholding program. its colonia) masters than} Due to Ghana. Economically and ad-|African countries. the arrest. of| Will ministatively, Ghana was pre-|one man can have serious ef-|With Moscow that he will be pared to take its place amongifects on dozens of persons. A|UNable' to extricate himself. the world's democratic coun-|man earning money often sup- tries and prosper jtive neutrality and one-party Meces. democratic centralism and with) Despite 10-week te pent ve pepe politt-'Russia and the 'al opponents in jail, the press,|_,.,° thy ih nee radio and labor union: titled, | tales, it is -By no meats certain Ghana is drifting toward au- thoritarian rule. The Queen, who granted in- talents his visit to , Is gone now and that a combination of Marxis! lonely in his 4 if-' socialism and capitalistic pri- must decide h'vate enterprise is the answei Ghana will turn. krumah t castle way ¥ Nkrumah No Better Off -- Alllagainst colonialism and imper-jis to do about the jailed hun-jhis ability to thread his way alism disappeared among the/dreds, the estimated 6,000 refu-|through the ideologies of East I Togoland|and West and arrive at what}; sands discontented is best for Ghana. 'lose family ties in)Nkrumah's policies is that he ports or provides education for|asteements with almost every Instead, decked out in posi- brothers, sisters, nephews and Communist government in the Soviet - bloc will be coming. jthat Nkrumah is heading into taking officer training with the/tice A. M. Monnin sentenced the Communist camp. He is a}Red Army. Several Communist|>cth to concurrent seven-year political leader of unquestioned/news services are distributed|Ptison terms on each of five} who sincerely believes|here. Ghana Airways has eight counts in the indictment. : ' to Ghana's economic problems.|Russian arms are stored in the|will be argued before Chief Jus- diatribes} He must also decide what he|He has unbounded confidence in country. jthe conviction in Brandon of jtwo Toronto businessmen on jcharges involving conspiracy, jfraud and theft in connection ;with the tangled affairs of a Brandon meat - packing firm, jhas denounced both union and jmanagement for having 'done tant Manitoba industry." The report, prepared by Mr. ustice G. E. Tritschler of the Manitoba Court of Appeal after a month-long judicial inquiry last November into a six-month styike at Brandon Packers Lim- ited in 1960, had been withheld |pending a verdict in the trial jof Hugh Paton and D. Hubert} Cox, the former principal own- fers of the firm. The great danger Western- oriented Ghanaians see in get himself so involved Ghana has concluded trade world. There already are more|#!S0 controlled companies with than 300 Communist techni-/OPerations in both Eastern and cians in the country and more Western Canada, were convicted , Monday night by a Court of There are 70 Ghanaian cadets|Queen's Bench jury. Mr. Jus- Russian Llyushin planes bought! An appeal was filed in the or $5,000,000 and for reasons|Maniteba Court of Appeal Tues- mknown, a large quantity of|day and the question of bail |their best to destroy an impor-| Paton, 42, and Cox, 47, who! Union In Strike | | | GUELPH (CP) -- A teen-age mother and a 23-year-old man were fatally injured Tuesday night when a car and a sheep- : laden truck collided. jearlier. The dead are Mrs, Marlene; Dutch navy men told the gov- McGladrey, 18, and Leslie Dea-jernor they had hopes Michael-- con, boht of Guelph. ja strong swimmer--had reached The car, driven by Deacon,jthe shore because a_ radar was taking five youngsters and|search had found: no trace of Mrs. McGladrey to a hockey|the two empty gasoline cans the game at Fergus near here when|youth had been using as a the collision occurred on High-|makeshift raft. way 6, | A spokesman for the gover- Mrs. McGladrey died at the|nor said,if Michael had reached scene and Deacon died early to-|the shore, there is a chance he day in hospital of severe injur-|may be alive; if not, there was ies. 'no hope. miles offshore Sunday when he began swimming toward land and not 15 miles as reported PRESIDENT FOR DINNER President Kennedy | walks with West German Chancel- lor Konrad Adenauer, right, at the German Embassy in , Washington, Noy. 21, where Adenauer entertained Kennedy two men is West .German Ambassador Wilhelm Grewe. Adenauer and Kennedy have had a series of talks in the White House on the Berlin situation. fice C.-C. Miller today. at a stag --_ Behind the | --(AP Wirgphoto)