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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Nov 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's odd that the less logical a person is, the more belligerently he takes a stand, She Oshawa Gunes WEATHER REPORT Mainly clear tonight. Partly cloudy with moderating temper- atures Wednesday. VOL, 90--NO. 276 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottowa and for payment of Postage in Cash. NOVEMBER 28, 1961 EIGHTEEN PAGES Kennedy Cites Of Conflict WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- dent Kennedy told Izvestia edi- tor Alexei Adzhubei in an inter- view published today that the root of East-West conflict is the Soviet Union's efforts "to com- munize, in a sense, the entire world." The interview was published today by the Soviet government newspaper and made public by the White House. In it Kennedy told Adzhubei, son-in-law of Premier Khrush- chev: "If the Soviet Union were merely seeking to protect its own national interests, to pro-| tect its own national security| and would permit countries to live as they wish--to live in peace--then I believe that the problems which now cause so much tension would fade away." Kennedy said Americans want the Soviet people as well as themselves to be able to live in peace. Search For Son Dropped Today By Rockefeller HOLLANDIA (AP) New York's Governor Nelson Rocke- feller today abandoned his fruit- less personal search for his youngest son, Michael, in the treacherous Dutch New Guinea jungle and began the long, sad journey home. "The chances of finding Mike are greatly diminished," Rocke- feller told reporters as he left the search headquarters in Mer- auke, on the south coast of the island. Root "It is this effort to push out-| ward the Communist system, on} to country after country, that represents, I think, the great} threat to peace," Kennedy said.| MIND OWN BUSINESS "If the Soviet Union looked only to its national interest and| to providing a better life for its) people under conditions of} peace, I think there would be| nothing that would disturb the| relations between the Soviet Un-| ion and the United States." The lengthy interview took place last Saturday at Ken- nedy's home in Hyannis Port, Mass. To Kennedy's comment on the Soviet attempt to spread its sys- tem around the world, Adzhubei replied, "I cannot agree with you in that part of your answer where you are saying that we are trying to 'communize' the world." Adzhubei said the Soviet Com- munist party congress in Mos-) cow last month declared we are against any export o: the revolution, but we are also against any export of counter-! revolution." He told Kennedy that from the Societ viewpoint, the United States is interfering in the af- fairs of many other countries. In response to Adzhubei's re- marks, Kennedy said he did not want to get into a debate. But he asserted that the United States wants every nation to have the right to make a free choice as to its government. The president noted that in the beginning the great major- ity of Cubans supported the rev- olution led by Fidel Castro, but he said Castro has failed to keep his -commitments on free elec- tions and progress. Until Castro permits free and "that| GUARDS BEAT REPORT Petition Claims | | \Ur {began another round of talks on|testing last September. ja nuclear test ban that appears |doomed to failure start. |the resumption of negotiations|<ounded the death knell to any| |"a pure propaganda exercise.' |hopes for a treaty at this time.| ER Cons Run Prison | KINGSTON (CP)--Guards at Kingston penitentiary said Mon- day night at a meeting of the Civil Service Association of Can- ada that convicts in the institu- tion have become insolent to the point where "it is surprising they even let guards into the penitentiary." The statement, made in a The governor added: "A mir-|honest elections, Kennedy said, petition discussing conditions in acle could happen and perhaps|his regime cannot claim to rep-| penal institutions in and around it will, But we must be realizing} . .. the hope is very small." de Ata Se 23-year-old son, has 'missing since his cata- maran raft capsized off the resent the majority. n, leftist leader of British wuiana, Kennedy said: | "Mr. Jagan, on the other Kingston, was heard by a King-| With reference to Cheddi Ja-|ston reporter before he and a\from Otta were manhandled and) Macleod said he regretted t Asked for comment on/Britain, France, coll i ejected from the «mecting It referred to a lack of disci- swampy jungle south coast area|hand, who was recently elected|pline and said staff morale was Nov. 19 and he tried to swim prime minister in British Gui-|at its "lowest ebb" at the peni- to shore 3% miles away. object--because ; Ajana is a Marxist, but the United/tentiary, where guard William Dutch companion stayed with'States doesn't Wentworth was stabbed to death the overturned raft and was'that choice was made by an Jast Friday. rescued the next day. France Paralyze As Strikes Begin | | Reporter George McBurnie of PARIS (Reuters) -- France| was virtually paralyzed today as some 500,000 rail, gas, elec- d outgoing flights because its ground Staff joined the strikers Parisians awoke to find street tricity and other workers began|and traffic lights extinguished.| one-day strikes for higher pay.|They dressed by candlelight and| 'he Suards started to read a pe- Power dwindled. Factories, shops and offices shut. Much transportation ground to a halt Electricity workers cut off power supplies throughout the} country and announced it would not be restored until 5 p.m The Paris metro (subway), deprived of current, c halt. Suburban rail services were et a virtual standstill and only 53 of the capital's 1,073 buses took the road. All over France factories shut, with the exception of plants having their own power sup- plies. Workers were given a holiday. CANCEL FLIGHTS \t Orly Airport here Fiance cancelled all except six COMMON MARKET cooked breakfast on flickering gas flames at less than half- pressure. - Most shops and_ offices-- staffed by workers tranded in the suburbs--made no attempt to open. Streets were half - deserted "ame tO a'Garbage cans were left uncol-| lected by workers. Others joining the strike were hairdressers and employees of the French Atomic Energy Commission. The 350,000 railwaymen--ex- cluding main-line engineers-- began their 24-hour strike at 4 a.m. local time. The 110,000 gas and power workers started striking municipal Air their 11-hour stoppage on sched-|he heard the petition read ule two hours later. LEAK AFFAIR \tition honest election, which he won.} "The place is practically run by the inmates," said one of the group who presented the peti- tion. One reporter was beaten and another was manhandled when their presence at the meeting in the hall became known the Kingston Whig - Standard said he was punched and had his pen broken and his notes scattered | After a business discussion addressed to Allan J. |MacLeod, commissioner of pen- itentiaries, and Donald Mac- |Lean, warden of Kingston peni- tentiary. McBurnie, who had entered earlier and taken a seat at the rear of the hall, said that at this point he was recognized as a reporter and hustled to the |front of the hall along with jCharles Yellowley, news direc- jtor of radio station CKLC, who had just entered the building. |EXECUTIVE APOLOGIZED After a vote of members, they were ordered to leave. McBur- jnie said the executive apol- ogized for the roughing-up inci- | dent. | Before le left, McBurnie said, It declared the staff morale of % members was at "its lowest ebb" in Kingston penitentiary where guard William C. Went- worth, 42, was stabbed to death Sunday in a prison dormitory. The petition referred at one point to a lack of discipline among inmates and said they hed become insolent to the point where "it is surprising they even let guards into the peni-| tentiary." | In a telephone interview later| wa, Commissioner incident the petition, he added: "I feel if the officers want to send a petition we will ge due course. It was only 10 days ago I was in Kingston on their invitation and talked to 150 of| them. There was no indication| that they felt this way. I will be surprised if the situation has deteriorated to this extent." Market Move Rids Farmers | In Canada OTTAWA (CP)--Britain's ap- proach to membership in the European Common Market may} bring hope to Canadian farmers and:some producers of raw ma-| terials, but the outlook appears less hopeful to Canadian manu- facturers This became apparent with publication today of the hitherto secret speech by Britain's lord privy seal, Edward Heath, in Paris Oct. 10 in opening nego- tiations on Britain's application} to join the six-nation European trade bloc. Finance office Minister ' Fleming's said the minister would make no comment on the speech, which sets out in gen- eral the terms Britain will seek! to protect Commonwealth trade interests in the British market if the U.K. joins the European Six Canada Got 'Secret' Too LONDON (CP)--Now that the "secret speech" is known to the world, a British newspaper says Canada knew virtually every- thing it contained all along. In the latest development of a bizarre episode of leaks and counter - leaks, The Guardian says in a front-page story that the Canadians "have been keep- ing to themse'ves"' the fact that they, as well as the Americans, were recipients of a_ grand- scale leak. The story of Patrick Keatley The Guardian's Canadian - born Commonwealth writer, follows closely on other twists in the fantastic tale -- first that the United States had received a "leak" on the so-called secret speech made by Britain Oct. 10 in Paris, second that despite the secret stamp the document was being sent in full to newspapers CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | * a |"knew almost and news agencies by Reuters, which obtained it from "private sources" in Brussels. The Guardian story is of par- ticular interest since only eight days ago, in London, . Finance Minister Fleming of Canada made a point of asking Prime Minister Macmillan for the full text of the Oct. 10 speech, which Fleming said Canada had been trying to get ever since it was delivered Britain at first refused, then changed its mind after wide- spread reports that the U.S. government already had the full speech A Canada House spokesman said Monday the full text was received there during the after- noon But The Guardian story says that throughout the whole of what it calls the Common Mar- ket leak affair, the Canadians were also recipients of a leak In practical terms, the story says, this meant that Fleming the whole con- tents'"' of the speech before he arrived in London to submit a formal request for the com- plete text to Macmillan The Guardian recalls that Fleming was in Paris Nov. 15- 18 as chairman of the Organ- ization for Economic Co-opera- tion and Development, and was jin close daily contact with jmany western finance minis-' jters including those of the six 'Common Market countries, to whom the Oct. 10 speech was delivered by Edward Heath lord privy seal "Although his intention to seek a full text of the Heath speech was already well known in European diplomatic circles, Mr. Fleming did not refer to this publicly and had not re- vealed the plan to make the re- quest to Mr. Macmillan. How- ever, it now can be stated that a senior member the civil service of one of the Common Market countries volunteered to brief the Canadians." The story says Fleming and his advisers were briefed on the 62 main { aphs of the Heath text, "paragraph by par- agraph."" They were not given a verbatim report but were able to take away a "'fairly full aide- memoire, much fuller than the two summaries previously sup- plied by the British government to Commonwealth diplomatic jmissions in London." of (In a London press confer- ence Nov. 20, just after seeing Macmillan, Fleming said Can- ada had received a summary of "part of a document"--what it} wanted was the whole docu-| ment.) The Guardian story says few members of the Canadian for- eign. service knew about the confidential briefing. Fleming's aim, it adds, was not-to embar- rass the British government, but to have a trump card that} might have been played if the other trump had not been pro- duced in Washington--the batim text RENEWED PRESSURE "Mr. Fleming and his senior advisers were reportedly not particularly surprised or upset by anything they learned from their Paris leak; but the fact} that they found the forbidden} text circulating fairly freely made them even more deter- mined to press Mr. Macmillan for its release," In the House of Commons Monday, Heath announced that|the Interior Stewart Udall that the Cedarvale Ratepayers' Asso-| tawa on Carling avenue was because of the leak to the U.S. the full text of his speech was being issued in confidence to 'Commonwealth governments. | East away from a treaty for a con- trolled ban on nuclear testing)out any realistic prospect of an than at any time since they first|international control and inspec-| ~4 \began negotiating Oct. 31, 1958./tion system to prevent secret overwhelming the| with its major Western allies. t it in\--a chief target of the resolution) LOCAL 222 FAVORS GM STRIKE ACTION ' Should Contract Bargaining Fail By RAE HOPKINS jlocal agreement bargaining Local 222, United Automo-|tables," was said by George bile Workers, CLC, election com-| Burt, Canadian UAW director, mittee officials today recorded|to be the reason for calling for a 94.77 per cent vote in favor of| strike votes. strike action against General) Talks between the union Motors of Canada Ltd., should| and company have been continu- contract negotiations between) ing since Sept. 12. Union offi- the union and company fail. jcials charged GM _ negotiators The strike vote, which start-|have put nothing monetary on ed at Oshawa Armories Sunday|the bargaining tables and has afternoon and continued at}made no economic proposals, Union Hall all day Monday, | of any kind, to date. was one of the largest votes of} Mr. Burt said all that has any kind in the 24-year history} been put forth for discussion by of the local. the company is "bits and drabs Test Ban Talk Seems Doomed GENEVA (AP)--Britain, the|had been broken off by Russia's| Jnited States and Russia today/abrupt resumption of nuclear} On the eve of the new ses-/ the sion, the Russians published aj 'new treaty draft which, in the} called|yiew of Western officials,| from One Western official sources said were farther|NO CONTROL MACHINERY The Russians in effect ruled High Western and West Spain and South Africa abstained, Hon-| duras was absent and Portugal ----was listed as not participat- ing. The assembly rejected a So- viet proposal to have the as- sembly declare 1962 "'the year of the elimination of colonial- ism." The vote was 19 in favor, 46 opposed and 36 abstentions. Thus for the second straight year the assembly refused to let Russia take the leadership away from the newly independent countries of Asia and Africa in their drive against colonialism. ver-| PATIENTS WANT LESS VISITING GLASGOW (AP) -- Visit- ing hours at one of Scot- land's largest hospitals have been. cut because patients complained they weren't get- ting enough time to watch television. "Friends and relations are now allowed in once instead of twice a day," said matron Elizabeth Ballantyne at Law Hospital. 'Some patients ob- jected that the big crowd of evening visitors stopped them watching their ite program." Tke favorite program is Emergency Ward 10, a se- rial about hospitals. of satisfactory pro- Exact number of votes cast . preg teil pire The talks were resumed in re-| violations. Without such a sys- sel pe |for or against strike action were conciliation board, ordere sponse to the demand of anj|tem, the West says, any nuclear| e _GEORGE BURT |not revealed. jby the Ontario Department of majority of the|jtest ban is unacceptable be-| P ee joey bre met gg! 2 IN ae iy »y | Calls e Ce ssur- . argest local union within the|this morning, ar the case. ._ ee See Fo peg a Police Theory | Canadian General Motors Cor-| The board hearing lasted only a The Raviet Avatt aleh anak | poration, was the fifth to author-|few minutes. : R | ' . a Se lize strike action against the| Seven days after the concilia- Bac eso ution to prevent the United States On Death 0 | corporation. |tion board has handed down its PGI. COMMTUINR: . UNO PT er eure | Local unions in Toronto, St.|report, the unions are free to U + E d nuclear tests, launched after « |Catharines, London and Wind-| strike, rging n the start of the recent Soviet) ert gueci |sor have also authorized strike| At the hearing, General series--or of matching Soviet b ; action, by high percentage|Motors manufacturing com- ee advances in nuclear weapons} TORONTO (CP) -- Police to-\ ote.' against General Motors,|panies in Canada presented a To Colonialism -- sg gg i a pee von A ee te a theory | should contract negotiations con-| 'comprehensive review" of the onere, ritain an e nite a etic, * 1 ti eress 5 il-li ies' j The UN General Assembly Mon-|to reject the Soviet move. then taken by private plane to) The UAW's General Motors tions for a new master agree- day night gave overwhelming) necpite the lack of prospects|{he, farm --, rear are - Corporation Council fol-/ment between the Canadian endorsement to an Afro-AsiaN|ro, progress, both Soviet and|N-Y»» tit al arred body! lowing the closing of the Nov. 16 General Motors Corporation and resolution creating a 17-member| western representatives appar-|" 7, aa raven fetih the| Collective bargaining session be-|the United Automobile Workers, committee to make recommen- ently were prepared to go of Three detect etl ieee | tween the United Automobile! CLC, dations for speeding an end to|/.iKing indefinitely--here or in| Monroe County, N.¥., shen' ' S| workers and General Motors,| At the close of today's con- colonialism. some other forum--rather than|ffice were in Toronto today -ecommended that strike votes|ciliation board proceedings, the The vote was 97 to 0. Canadalne accused of refusing to nego-|YOrking on the case. \be taken Nov. 26, in all GM|GM companies made the follow- supported the resolution as ae tiate ' ae [gery es ph ton local raeipns. s J ing pane Figen nited States which sp! p s r shawa, members of Loca! e ations c with Bhs artha po wlh ob og ie here the cotics big na etsy pa now Un-| 922 jammed the Oshawa Armor- Automobile Workers a ary | saga eel aee Wee ee ee lies at two Sunday afternoon) underway at both the master test ban talks with general dis-| Police said _one reason for meetings, leaving standing room! contract. and local contract armament negotiations, and the/| slaying Agueci in Ontario and) only for few late arrivals. Hevels since Sept. 12. There have high Western official said Brit-|then taking the body across the) Speculation early Monday |been 27 meetings at the master ain and the United States. prob-| international border would be to| morning was there would not|table and 74 meetings at the ably would eventually have to|create a jurisdictional problem) }, a heavy vote at Union jocal tables To date, the UAW accede to the Soviet insistence|if suspects were caught and put} Hall because of the number who|has presented the companies on this. on trial. ___| attended and voted at both Sun-| with 366 demands. ae Sostee |day meetings. _ | "These demands involve mas- e e However, election committee|ter economic and non-economic chairman, G. J. 'Tony' Free-| issues as well as those issues to OI I lunican owe?r man said yesterday afternoon) be settled at the plant level, he was forced to double his four-| Some progress has been made member committee to facilitate] at both master and local levels. ° the influx of voters, both dur-|fowever, much more remains Shi t ©] I lan e ing the noon-hour and at the] to be done. : close of the day shift. | "Any overall settlement is Approximately 1,078 votes|contingent upon agreement be- SANTO DOMINGO (AP)--Op-|night said Balaguer had agreed| were cast between 12 noon and/ tween the parties in both master position leaders, backed by ajSunday to opposition demands 1 p.m. and more than half of| and local negotiations. jthreatened general strike, de-|for a provisional junta. The op-|that number was cast after 4) "We are still hopeful that a manded Monday night that|position leader demanded that|p.m. Doors opening into the|settlement can be reached President Joaquin Balaguer ac-|the president announce the gov-| UAW driveway had to be open-|through free and realistic col- cept a provisional government|ernment shift at once and break|@4 to permit a steady flow of/ lective bargaining which is yd immediately in a power shift] with "anti-Dominican, anti-| voter traffic at rush hour pe bl our employees, fair to = that would hand the presidency/|patriotic", representatives of) day. Six ballot boxes were used|companies and good for the |to the opposition National Civic|the Trujillo dictatorship. to hold the. "Yes" or "No economy of Canada. |Union's demand, the presidency| Otherwise, Fiallo said, en eco would go to Viriato Fiallo, head|civic union and the two smaller a | : ist the poets opposition parties would break|&Te 13 Bodies Located Under the proposal, Balaguer|off negotiations with the gov- would apnotet Hallo secretary |ernment and '"'continue er Queen Philip See In Wrecked Plane of state for the armed pe ruggle to achieve their objec- 7 PLATTSBURGH, N.Y.(AP)-- jtemporarily re placing Gen ES. 7 wo B-47 jet bombers |Pedo Rodriguez Echavarria,| Balaguer's whereabouts were| Agriculture Show ret vee Rta d over north- |who would become air force|not known Monday night, and} KENEMA (Reuters) -- Thelern New York crashed and jchief of staff. fe ek presidential palace was/Queen and Prince Philip ar-|burst into flames Monday niet then resign and Fiallo, next in/dark |ri h ay by air to at-jat Plattsburgh air force base. favor- |iine of succession, would as-| Support mounted for the first|fend Sierra ne fe largest an-|The second "| the six-engined sume the presidency, Rodriguez|general strike called in the|nual agricultural show. craft landed moments later Echavarria, who thwarted two|Dominican republic since the| The royal couple, on the sec-|with two engines disabled. Trujillo brothers' plans for ajlate dictator Rafael Trujillo}ond day of their tour of Sierra! One flyer survived. The bo- Samed sree toes caiene pen Some oe ee ed ee ee again. The strike was called by the! . They will return to Bo tonight)!" the wreckage. Tour Of Space | A seven-man junta, including|!@Wyers' association to back the|to watch a performance of tra-| The cause of the crash was la military member, then would|°PPosition demand. ditional dances. not disclosed. " lassume executive and legislat-; For Chimpanzee ive functions. Congress would be dissolved and the junta CAPE CANAVERAL (AP) --|would remain in power until Sometime after dawn Wednes-|general elections were called. ay a young chimpanzee will] Fiallo in a broadcast Monday enter a rocket for a whirlwind) _--_-- saat -|4 ride through space--three times i around the world. s 13 If all goes well, a U.S. astro- Committee OKs naut will ride another Atlas i i rocket into space for another Th d S b \f 44-hour ring around the globe 1r u way || perhaps after Christmas, per- | Be haps after New Year's Day. TORONTO (CP)--A third sub-| § The chimp, locked inside a;way for Toronto was endorsed/ two-ton space' capsule, is ex-|by a 4-3 vote by metropolitan] © pected to return to earth by|roads committee Monday follow-| | capsule parachute after rockets ing seven hours of arguing with) have slowed his 17,400-mile-an-|25. ratepayer groups. | hour pace. The project adopted gives ee = Te priority to development of the) . lrapid transit section generally | Bennett Seeking 'following Spadina Ave. and in-) {corporating an expressway. i i Cost of the subway has been) Columbia Meeting lestimated at $81,000,000 and ven! VICTORIA (CP) -- Premier|o the expressway at a further; Bennett of British Columbia/$67,500,000. The combined sub-| sent a letter to Finance Minis-|Way-expressway would extend) ter Fleming Monday seeking anjfrom Bloor St. where Toronto's| immediate meeting to discuss second subway is now being) @ financial arrangements for Co- built to Highway 401. | lumbia River power develop- The ratepayer groups were ments. mainly protesting possible de-| The premier shrugged off a|terioration of prestige residen-| question relating to a statement) tial areas by the projects. by United States Secretary of} Mrs. Joan Pass, secretary of HOUSE BLOCKS TRAFFIC to Mrs. Rose P. | rest of the structure tipped had been hauled | off the truck platform. The Eastbound traffic into Ot- | belonging | Alexander, unless Canada soon ratifies the'ciation, said today her group a few yards onto the house was being moved to a Columbia Treaty 'he U.S. will has collected a, war chest and z suburb to make room for a be forced to' seek other sources|will fight the project in the Su- day when this house tipped off | boulevard when parts of two shopping centre. of power. preme Court if necessary. 'a tractor trailer, The house, | brick walls crumbled and the | (CP. Wirephoto) ' A diverted for five hours Mon- | only

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