vs So = 7 grt Oshawa Board Of THOUGHT FOR TODAY There is only the narrowest of margins between pardonable pride and unpardonable vanity. cation Oshawa Gime suilding f pen _P. 9: WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy with a few snow- flurries today continuing cold, and Saturday, OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1961 Authorized os Second Class Mai Ottawa and for payment i! Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash, SIXTEEN PAGES VOL. 90--NO. 303 Z Laos Meet Termed A Dead Loss VIENTIANE (AP) -- Premier|on allocation of the posts in a Prince Boun Oum's princely |neutralist coalition government. rivals today wrote off the Vien-| A round of diplomatic mano- tiane summit fiasco as a dead/euvres preceded the announce- loss, but said new attempts|ment that Souphanouvong and }must be made to find commonjhis pro - Red delegation were ground for a coalition govern-|leaving. ment. The three Laotian princes | Prince Souphanouvong of the!dined amicably together Thurs- #% |pro-Communist Pathet Lao andjqay night. Souvanna said then 40 of sadn oe gorse 2 the atmosphere was "excellent"' flew back to the rebel - held) | Plaine des Jarres aboard a Boe- we tasaee atte of date + ing Stratocruiser chartered by/ gotiations. jthe International Control Com- The suspicion was. strong fae ae for Souphanov- among Laotian politicians and pvong told reporters fresh efforts State diplomats that Un it e q | vet the| States military officers advising _ {would be made later to get the Roun Qum's army were pri- ad age rary 4 goa emphasizing: |vately encouraging him and his Prinee, Saiveiaa P houma, ag a i ae ae aed halfbrother of the pro-Rea|Princes in a coalition headed by prince, said he will return this Souvanna. American' diplomatic LA to his headquarters at officials deny this while admit- weekend to ting that such encouragement Xieng Kouang. was given in the past. "There is no use staylig here,"' Souvanna told reporters. Red Warships © o Bolster TSHOMBE WITH NEWSMEN were flown by the United ; deputies are to be flown by Nations to Leopoldville te at- | the U.N. to Leopoldville to tena the Congo National Par- | attend the parliament. lianient. Yesterday, the six ' took their seats in the parlia- --AP Wirephoto by radio from Ndola ment. Another nine Katangan Katangan President Moise fshombe gestures at left dur- ing news conference Wednes- Gay in Ellsabethville. The conference was held just be- fore six Katangan deputies "Both sides remain on their re- spective positions. But I hope that in the end they will find JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Indo- nesia today announced, it was bolstering its navy with Commu of Dutch some common ground: Be pa- final collapse came after a mor- iservative, pro-Western govern- grec cent 5 A navy spokesman said the Rhodesian federal premier, and|repeated United Nations charges|of the allegations could be justi-/after Boyn Oum for the third|€Ts, destroyers and subs from | ; " i irefutable evidence" of collabor-| jalready "were in Indonesian wa- \their- talks centred on co-opera- j ssi | Welensky and Hone reached jrequesting permission to present Plan Dis ssed [ance the strength of the Dutch." i iments to t military sup- - ; Welensky came to this border|Ments prevent military SUP-\the Negro United National Inde-| back to his capital of Salisbury, | GUN-RUNNING ltary-Genera! U Thant stated spokenhan' daid i ----~|tient, be patient .. .' & A Polish ICC official said the i i desia i O I i Ki 'rease ning meeting of Souvanna and Boun Oum, the head of the Con- lment in Vientiane. The Pole| jsaid Boun Oum took a_ stand) jeven more ein than during the for the "liberation" jprinces' angry opening eX-\wot New Guinea. NDOLA, Northern Rhodesiajcoming here for talks on the|been seen crossing into Katanga) Souphanouvong decided to re- ; I (Reuters) -- Sir Roy Welensky,|border situation in the wake of|from Northern Rhodesia. "None/turn to the Plaine des Jarres government was buying cruis- Sir Evelyn Hone, Northern Rho-|that the forces of President|fied," the statement said. jday refused to sit down with the aoe sap yo ae I Bags; desia governor, today agreed to|Moise 'Tshombe of Katanga) Negro nationalists in Northern |other two princes for joint talks " bide asi err! yf! M4 - _In- strengthen controls on the Ka-|were getting arms via Northern|phodesia claimed to have "ir- ----~jdonesia claims as West Iraian. lesia border | Rhodesia. | | ae ' ae, | He said three of the vessels w Sihtathe)~Anyjoint statement ~attersthelation "between Welcnsky _and| Tariff Cutting wen n Conge's"brewkaway province. |Welensky = Hone meeting said|rshombe and sent a message| jters and "'with their arrival, the |Indonesian Navy can now bal- their agreement during an hour-|tion between the federal and/the evidence before the UN. | . long meeting in Lusaka before|Northern Rhodesian govern-| yyiinza Chana, secretary of! 'The Indonesian Navy pre- ali 4 1 ee tet 1 | Viously had destroyers, frigates, area town to confer directly with) Pies and personnel crossing Into), ndence party, said that the| By T d Bl jcorvettes, submarines and pa- border officials before flying|Katanga. Peco - aes TiN. Sacre:| rade oc itrol craft. 2 BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Ca-|, The s Southern Rhodesia. The statement, however, de-|that party president Kenneth|pinet ministers of the six Com-|ave to increase naval power at The federal premier an-\nied UN allegations that mili-/Kaunda or another member of|mon Market countries prepared|o"ce, so we will be able to lib- itary vehicles and supplies hadlits executive committee was|to mect here today to decide|¢rate West New Guinea from nounced Thursday that he was ---- |ready to fly to New York with) whether the trade group-should|the Dutch colonialists in the go ahead with plans for a fur-|Shortest possible time." tanga soldiers were reported) A key factor whether the cut| Teal i West G killed and one wounded in a/wins approval appeared to be yd Ors, a Crmneny. € bd b] e clash with a Swedish UN patrol the question ot farm policy and|_ (in The Hague, political ritalin S l and in another incident there 100|the stand taken on it by France| S0Urces said The Netherlands pian UN jeep and hurled stones| veto unless slie gets her way. boged bene kali sec CAIRO (AP) -- The Arabj'The defence ministry ordered|@t its occupants. The 30-per-cent cut is pro-|dispute. Leegue warned Thursday night|the alert on the basis of intelli-| The Elisabethville incidents| vided for in the second four (Official sources refused to rity forces from Kuwait if Brit- Eart took up seats for the first time|ket's program and would go into], " : ; ish uoops return. But Britain's) Tre British alert was|Since September in the national] effect Jan. 1 following approval|tnternational talks" yore feats o! an Iraqi move against | prompted by urgent reports| Congolese legislature in Leopold-|by the Common Market minis- last Saturday by Dutch Premier the tiny oil sheikdom subsided/fy.n intelligence agents and dip-|V!¢- terial council in its current ses-/y34 qe Quay.) Indonesia Navy | | Britons shivered in the coldest nist warships and submarines) FOUND Vito Agueci (left) and Rocco Scopellitti, both of Toronto, were among 11 men convicted in New York Wednesday night of taking part in. an_ inter- national conspiracy which Thursday night in a month-long strike of empioyees of 10 car- hauling companies. The proposals were to be put before the 800 members of Lo- cal 880, International Brother- hood of Teamsters Ind. today. If approved they will probably go back to work Tuesday. The settlement plan recog- nizes the management position jjon joint administration of the GUILTY smuggled $150,000,000 in nar- cotics into the United States in the last 10 years. All the defendants will be sentenced Feb. 1, 1962. --(CP Wirephoto) By THE CANADIAN PRESS Cold Spell Takes 400 Indian Lives "Wel _|substantially company-financed welfare fund, central issue of the strike. The fund was previously adminis- tered exclusively by the Onta- rio Teamster Welfare Fund. Terms of settlement include a improved health and welfare plan, which the companies estimate will cost them $16 a month for each em- ployee. The jointly-administered plan would provide $6,000 life in- surance With double indemnity for employees; $1,000 on each employee's wife; and $500 on each child oyer two years. Medical features, including raising the weekly indemnity to $52.50, are expected to cost four cents per hour per employee. VOTE SATURDAY December temperatures for 11 years. But the weather bureau forecast warmer weather. In Britain. the Royal Automo- bile Club described the country's The worst cold spell in mem- ory took at least 400 lives in In- dia while in other parts of the world severe cold caused hard- ships and disease. down with influenza as snow, into a sheet ot ice. 126 deaths were reported Uttar Pradesh. Many of the vic: tims were homeless and beggars reached. the freezing point. i" evidence. : : In the Katanga capital of|ther 30-per-cent cut in tariffs) He said further ships and na- Ta Ss £3 use Elisabethville Thursday two Ka-|among its members. val equipment are being pur- chased from the Soviet Union, Negroes surrounded an Ethio-|which has threatened to use aj/2%d Indonesia were in "'in- that it will withdraw its secu-)"en-e reports from the Middle|occurred as Katanga legislators| year stage of the Common Mar-| comment on the contacts, which after the British show ofjjomats during the Christmas) ---- | sion. | A French veto would delay jthe second stage of the tariff-| | cutting program of the Com- }mon Market for a year after) strength in the Middle East. holiuay that Kassem--embold-| Sayed Nofal, deputy secre-ened by the UN failure to act) Czechs Release 2 |which it could be passed by a ying uspect | majority vote among the mein- | tary - general of the Arab/againsi India's invasion of Goa ber states. League, said that the Arab|--might soon try to make good PRAGUE (Reuters)--A Czech-| What France wanted as the sta.es would not permit their|his claim to Kuwait. orn Canadian@ccused of espio-| ministers assembled was de- 1cr es to carry out joint action! One diplomatic informant in with British forces in Kuwait|/Lonoon said there may be more| ™-\nage has been released from|tailed approval of -the 12 de- |prison and has left Czechoslo-|grees necessary to regulate a| uncer any circumstances. The} scares over Kuwait that don't|, league sent 2,500 troops to Ku-|pan out but the British gove vakia, the news agency Ceteka| proposed common farm policy|? repurted today. among France, West Germany,|Sults of a JACKSON, Mich. (AP) -- A aroled convict, faced with re- lie detector test, wait last August to replace Brit-|ment has to be prepared. ish units hurried there after) ----------______--_ Iraqi Premier Abdel Karim Kassem threatened to annex the sheikdom. Notal asserted that the dis- paich this week by Britain of sever, warships and air and troc, reinforcements to the Mid-' President Moise Tshombe of se- die East--where Britain feared|cessionist Katanga province r central] concern in Arab League Congo government troops SUD>| : : ported by United Nations jet He said the tiny sheikdom,| bombers have launched an at- which adjoins Iraq on the north-|tack on Katanga forces in the new threats Kuwait--had carsee "cireies on ern end of the Persian Gulf, did not ask the British to return and| - SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHERS MEET Back Curricula Change | HAMILTON (CP) -- Premier ence of the Arab security force|Robarts' plan to overhaul the in Kuwait is an expression o/|Ccurricula of Ontario's high the ieague membership's solid-|SChools has developed as the that Rritain '"'does not have any territories in this area (which) alluew her to order her troops to «he Mideast and protect these tetritories." ON ARAB SHOULDERS Nofa) contended that "the re- sponsibility of protecting the Arab zone falls on the shoulders of tne Arab states and the pres- < Tshombe Reports New Congo Attack claimed today that |northern town of Kongolo. | Milorad Cop, who was ar-| iresteg in July 1960 and sent- jencea@ to seven years imprison- ert for complicity in espio- ELISABETHVILLE (Reutérs)|naye, crossed into West Ger- linany Thursday, the day he was Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands| and Luxembourg, | France wanted this to precede| |approval of the second stage of | | the Common Market program} joutlined in the 1957 Treaty of| |Rome which set up the trade} | group. | The West German view was} (A Canadian embassy spokes-|that the French farm stand was| detector test and just decided an said Cop left Nuernberg to-|unreasonable because the hs day for London where he was| Countries have not yet reached| Capt. due to pick up a flight to Can- six} |agreement on the principles on} jwhich the decrees were to be} | based. | admitted tying up a 72-year-old retired minister and leaving him to die in a burning farm home, state police said today. Lynn E. Houck, 28, acknowl- edged his part in the human- torch death of Rev. Roy R. Decker because 'the apparently knows how he fared on the lie to tell us," said state police James Macdonald, Macdonald said Houck claimed the fire in which the Methodist clergyman died Dec. misunder-| standing of modern engineer-/names of the streams might|tion, commercial and technical The speaker was Dr, J. Dean Hodgins said proposed) jlead to subsiantial numbers of| W.|students selecting a course school streams matricula- --with six, the three toward uni- versity degrces and three for arity with Kuwait and their ob-| most contentious issue so far. at $ Hodgins, dean of engineering at/"'less than ideal" for their am-| lizat'on to defend its independ-| the annual convention of the On- | aria & D t Hamilton's McMaster Univer-! bitions. }go beyond high school: "Gen- ence" pgs sno ky School Teach-| sity. Target of the brunt of his! Under the plan, introduced in|¢ral," "trades" and "business." "St may all have been a false' \aoc¢ of Thursdav's sess jcriticism was provision of ajthe fall by Mr Robarts as edu-| One of the 400 delegates alarm," one British official in|... 4. urscay's sessions "'stream"' within the curricula|cation minister, students plan-|to the federation's convention Lenaoa conceded. "But govern-|"°r°,,taken_ up with discussion encompassing both "'engineer-|ning to enter university would|which' continues today, said ments, like fire brigades, find ih gt lag Be. torr ing" and technological courses.|choose from three streams,| following the closed sessions beiter to be safe than sorry." ; soma . MISTAKES POSSIBLE named "arts and_ science,"'}most of the criticism of the jof its aspects, " " tion Dean Hodgins said commerce, and '"'engineer-|/plan was to the effect the CITY EMERGENCY | When the sessions ended onl the plan). a ; | ore of tian siekolittiobe remained, | "could result in many mistakes) i" and technology. teachers hadn't been consulted POLICE 725-1133 students unwilling or unable to concern at the shortness of time} While it was gratifying that|they could continue to an engi-/32 rejected resolutions: That allotted for preparation of new|the plan represented a decisive| neering degree from the arts;music and geography weren't courses move to imp > ati ; =+ J as ions; i However, shortly after the) students proscit gem gl pe SCINNDE Stren. cient Feast Gk eee delegates had given the plan|technology, ise said, classifica-/ WILL SET UP SIX their approval, they heard one|tion of engincering in the same of its provisions described 45/ stream was wrong. the delegates agreeing in it to|in guidance of high school stu.) The dean said many prospec-|Prior to its announcement. |approve the plan but express| dents." tive engineers might not realize) Among the complaints in the FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 | ficient research had gone into|sentung 13,200° teachers the plan's formulation; and that|the province cast votes | The Robarts plan would. re-|its implementation had not been|the federation's annual assem- iplace the aaa three high-| postponed another year. jbl Slaying Admitted | State Police Say 26 started accidentally when Houck plugged in an electric heater to keep Mr. Decker warm. Thousands of Britons came and freezing rain in the British Isles turned the highway system A 12-day cold spell took 260 lives in India's Bihar state while in laborers Local authorifies distributed firewood for street . bonfires .as the temperatures|there was heavy snow as well, highway system as a vast skat- ing rink with some 120,000 miles 108 roads covered with ice. |FLU TOLL RISES Doctors said the flu was a mild form of virus B. But the government disclosed that 56 persons died of the flu during the week ended Dec. 16 com- pared with 19 during the same week last year In Scotland and East Anglia | with drifts up to eight feet deep around Glasgow and Aberdeen. Near Glasgow a bus with more than 50 passengers aboard was stuck in a drift for more than five hours. A water main"burst in down- town Bristol, flooding some streets to a depth of three feet Members of Local 880 of the International Brotherhood of, Teamsters in. Oshawa will cast their ballots Saturday at 10 a.m, This was revealed at the Team- sters' headquarters here by Gerry Donovan. Committee man for Oshawa and district. It is expected that the counting of the vote will be finished by Sunday evening, or Monday. If the membership votes in favor of the settlement arrived at in Toronto Thursday night the men will go back to work Tuesday. When asked what he thought the feeling was among the men, Mr, Donovan said: "That is hard to say at this point." He seemed to feel, however, that some of the members may be somewhat disappointed with \the result of the negotiations, after the month-long vigil on the picket lines. Travelling with the ballot box through the various places where the vote is to be taken are Bill Hayball, representing the com- panies and Gordon Couston, union representative. Voting will be held in Windsor, Toronto, Oakville, Gananoque and Osh- awa, Mr. Donovan said. Negotiating teams reached a, basis of settlement, in -Toronto} place in the Steelworkers Hall. AUTO-CARRIERS PEACE NEARER Basis To Settle Found Thursday Balloting in Oshawa will take JOINT ADMINISTRATION The settlement recognizes the Management position on joint administration of the company- financed welfare fund, but makes concessions on the origin- al offer on pensions and wages for, hourly rated employees. Insistence of the union on continued exclusive control over the management-financed wel- fare fund, which was adminis- tered by the Ontario Teamster Welfare Fund, was the central issue in the strike. Settlement terms include a substantially improved health . and welfare plan, which the companies estimate will cost them $16 per. employee per month, double what is now being paid into the Teamster Fund, MATCH CONTRIBUTIONS The companies have also of- fered to make contributions into a pension plan over the period of the proposed three- year agreement, with contribu- tions rising to $5 per month per employee in the year, when the plan would become effective. Employees would be required to match the employer contributions under the jointly administered plan. 'Cost of the pension plan is estimated at three cents an hour per employee. Wages of the hourly-paid em- ployees are to be increased by 15 cents an hour over the three year--six cents more than the pre-strike offer. Skilled mecha- nics will receive 21 cents--nine cents more than the original offer, FRINGE IMPROVEMENTS 'Other friage improvements include two weeks vacation after two years' service instead of after three under the existing agreement. In lieu of a retro- active increase, the companies will pay each hourly rated em- ployee $2.50 a week for each week worked since July 1, and $3 a week to skilled mechanics. The settlement was achieved with the assistance of federal conciliation officer Frank Ains- borough and Ontario concili- ation officer James Hutcheon. The talks were attended by Teamster internation vice-~ president Frank Fitzsimmons and Canadian Teamster director I, M. (Casey) Dodds. and heavily damaging business premises. In Berkshire, Bedfordshire and Suffolk temperatures ranged down to 12 degrees Fahrenheit. | Thick slush covering the run- ways delayed jet flights from London airport. Pilots were warned not to take off because of the danger of slush entering their engines. Fog hampered shipping off Houck denied the police theory! that the killer set the fire after the victim hac been doused with inflammable liquid. "All he would say is that sud- denly there was a fire in the house," another officer said.|the European coats. "There are still a lot of ques-| The 24,103-ton German tanker tions to be answered." |/Esso Berlin and the 24,228-ton , Swedish ore carrier Malgomaj RUNS AWAY ._leollided in the Scheldt River Frcs, Mable rate oe hen the| entering The Netherlands from fire started, leavingMIr. Decker, Belgium. Both ships were badly unconscious with his hands tied caneged behind his back, under a blan- ket on a bedroom floor. 'Ai Kill d The admission was announced! Irman 1 e shortly after midnight. It came In Auto Crash after a long day of questioning that began when Houck was ar- rested about 3:20 a.m. at the) BARRIE (CP)--A young air- home of his stepfather, Edwin! man was killed and another crit- Houck, less than a mile from) jcally injured near here Thurs- day night when their car crashed threugh a fence and the death scene. Houck was quoted by Mac- plunged into the path of a pas- senger train. donald as saying he had been staying in the vacant house} when Mr. Decker discovered} him and they struggled. Secondary Schools President Elected HAMILTON (CP)--D. Glenn Kilmer, vice-principal of . the Pauline Johnson collegiate-voca- tional school, Brantford, Thurs-|toria Hospital here. day was elected president of the Ontario Secondary School Teach- ers' Federation for 1962. Almost 400 delegates repre- during iy AC 1 Harold L. C. Chioda, 23, |of Ottawa was dead on arrival jat hospital here after a rescue |crew worked for an hour to free | him from the wreckage of the car. LAC Terry J Easthom, 21, of | Nanaimo, B.C.. was thrown out of the car before it hit the \tracks. His condition was de- scribed as critical in Royal Vic- The men were stationed at the | RCAF station at Edgar, 10 miles i |south of Barrie, and were re- turning to camp after an even-) |turn and went off the road. | | Police said they believe Chi-| 'oda was driving. ! Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, across|ing out when the car missed a| widow of World War I Presi- dent , Woodrow Wilson, died Thursday night in Washington at the age of 89, She is shown FORMER FIRST LADY DIES . in this 1959 photo as she held honorary membership com- mission on the Civil War Cen- tennial Commission, --AP Wirevhoto