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Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Jan 1962, p. 1

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j ee RLS LLL AP AT ENE C i aed Oshawa THOUGHT FOR TODAY Taxes are now so high that you have to work like a dog to live like one. i Nf me ie A SE AG A GS ALIN cE CEP eae it Se Council Appointments Oshawa Gune oe "" ther o goat ¥ 4 4 -- SR ae AR AOE gpm, PR DME Ser aa) ET TS I i FP i RRs Vr EAE Ge emed Sate Made -- P. 17 WEATHER REPORT Mostly cloudy and milder today. Cloudy with little change in tem- perature tonight and Thursday. VOL. 91--NO. 2 Bhe Price 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIC, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1962 lass Mail Authorized as Second for yment Cc Ottawa and pa Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES CAR THAT HIT BUS KI PORTUG RESIGN rf Castro Barred 'By RC Church | Vatican prelate said today that) between the Vatican and Cuba.| : | LLING FIVE PEOPLE UK. Fleet Mov Linked To Reb Car Crashes With Bus, ement ellion B"IRUT, Lebanon (AP)--In-; Jumblatt expressed views|continued to round up suspects. | | Killing 5 ST. JOVITE, Que. (CP)--Five persons were killed Tuesday| when their small European car collided with a bus outside this community 65 miles north of Montreal. | Those killed were identified) . as: Gilles Belanger, 23, his wife Mercedes, 23, and their son Yves, 18 months, of Laval des Rapides, Que.; Belanger's brother Denis, 25, and Denis'| wife Pauline, 27, of Montreal. | VATICAN CITY (AP) -- A Fidel Castro and certain offi- cials of his regime have fallen }under automatic excommunica- tion. Archbishop Dineo Staffa, leading expert on canon law in the Vatican secretariat of state, said excommunication had been incurred by Castro and all Cu- ban officiais responsible -- "impeding and imprisoning {Roman Catholic bishops in Cuba. The statement by Archbishop Staffa was not a formal an- nouncement but was given in re- ply to a newspaper man's ques- tions. Archbishop Staffa, who is sec- retary of the Vatican's Sacred Congregation of Seminaries and Universities, said the excom- |munication had been incurred), without .formal announcement by the Vatican. He said announcement of ex- communication in these cases is normally made by the Pope himself. Vatican sources specu- lated that Pope John had made no announce"*ent in an effort to Provincial police said the bus} carried no passengers apart) perty. \from }the driver, Gerald Men-| jard, 32, of Val d'Or, Qte. Me-| alka included Mare /pacaned unhurt. the government dissolved. the terior Minister Kamal Jumblatt,|siruar to those published in}A communique said 1,195 had a disciple of President Nasser|Caie, Baghdad and other Mid-|been arrested, but the armed of the United Arab Republic,|die Eastern capitals. The plot-/for.es met with resistance in charged today that last week-jters opposed Nasser's pan-Arab|oe¢cupying two mountain strong-| eud's unsuccessful rightist up-)na'ionalism and favored a "'fer-|holds of remnants of the plot-| rising in Lebanon was linked to tile crescent' union of Lebanon, |tcis Tank guns were used to) British fleet movements in the Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Palestine|rout them, the communique) Me'iterranean. and Cyprus. said. ; : "The authors of the attempt) 'The Lebanese radio said the a went .nto action only after hav-jar:ny also had seized a supply Rhodesians Blame ing made sure of the move-/of arms and two truckloads of mevements of the British int posers oF pomp ee : in the Mediterranean," he said.| strongholds of the extreme right- UNIP For Violence |; proves that the events of | wing Popular Social cv Vir- sii |Dec. 30-31 (the dates of the|tually all those arrested were sarciee Whsdelian covavniar Coup) were not unconnected believed to be members, and Tuesday. placed a total blame|With events now unfolding else- on the Negro Nationalist United|Where in the Middle East." -- National Independence Party for) 'Tc only al mov s\ anti - government violence that/by British warships noted re-| shook this Briitsh protectorate|certly in the Middle East were from July to October last year.|thcse by a fleet dispatched from In a 78-page report, the gov-|Africa's east coast to the Ku- ernment claimed no other or-|wa:t area after new threats by ganization than the UNIP wasilray against Kuwait. They in any way involved in the|steamed into the Persian Gulf wave of riots, arson and sabot-|but dia not come near the Med- age in which 21 persons were/iter:anean. ; killed by security forces and) The government today an- more than 3,000 arrested. nourced that. six members: of The report rejected as "ut-\(he nationalist Social party were| terly false" allegations by the/killca while attempting to evade UNIP that the security forces)a roundup of persons involved! carried out a deliberate cam-lin the coup. paign against villages in which "hundreds of deaths and count-/ ROUNDUP CONTINUES less atrocities" occurred. Security forces meanwhile | Nest Of Rocks Holds Vessel VICTORIA (CP) -- An RCAF) The ship is without power, helicopter was to make a bid'lights or radio communication today to put two salvage ex-/ard is reported to have a perts aboard the wave - swept {lcoued engine room. deck of a crippied Greek freigh Rough seas prevented trans- ter wallowing in mountainous|fer of emergency pumps to the Pacific seas. ship and hampered efforts by The airlift could climax ajsalvage tugs to put heavy- tow night of waiting for the 27ling gear aboard. crew members of the 10,000-ton) [ne salvage tugs will attempt Glafkes, surrounded by jagged to tow the Glafkos into nearby rocks about 95 miles north Of sheltered' waters of Barkley here on the west coast of Van- Sound, pump water from the en- couver Island. zine room and patch up the gap- Reports indicated the vessel ing hole in the ship's bottom. was veing held in the middle of Aites temporary repairs, the "a nest of rocks" by her anch- ship is expected to be towed ors ahd a towline from a tug at here Tne we . Sgt. Florent Landry of the) 300 machine-guns, 200 rifles, 300) nrovincial police in Montreal sub-machine-guns and 14 cases|said' Menard will be arraigned of ammunition. lon a charge of reckless driving, Parhament in a unanimous|probably today in St. Jerome, vote denounced "'criminal ag-| Que. gression against the security); The bus and the Belanger car and peace of the country" andjcollided head-on. The bus was deciared its support for meas-|bound for Val d'Or after a ures taken by Premier Rashid| scheduled run to Montreal from Kerami's government to deal|Val d'Or. It was operated by with. the revolt. Abitibi Coach Lines. Fist-fighting and desk-pound-| Sgt. Landry said the QPP ac- ing broke out when Albert Muk-|cident report said the bus was| heibe1, chairman of the foreign|damaged only slightly while the| affairs committee and a minis-|car was wrecked. ter in the cabinet Baik ge president Camille Ch: d 'Weaver Quartet Barred By Show ing an insurrection in 1958, com- pured Sunday's attempt to the NEW YORK (AP)--The Na- tional Broadcasting Company 1958 coup. A deputy who had supported |said Tuesday night it has barred la folk-singing quartet from ap-| the 1958 uprising twice slapped |pearing on the Jack Paar Show] Mukhciber while other members . Car-Train Crash because its members had re-! pounded their desks. i fused to sign loyalty oaths. Kills Two Youths The quartet--The Weavers-- BRANTFORD (CP) -- Two|said it had unanimously de-| youths were killed Tuesday|clined when approached by NBC} night when their small Europ-jand asked to sign statements ean car colleted with a slow|that they were not members of moving CNR diesel at a level|the Communist party. crossing in downtown Brantford.| Fred Hellerman, spokesman Wayne Gurney, 20, of Hamil-|for the quartet, said 'We feel ton, died at the scene. A secondivery strongly that no private youth died in hospital. business establishment; such as He was not immediately iden-| NBC has the power or the right fied. to require proof of a citizen's Firemen and police used hack-/patriotism." saws and hydraulic jacks to pry! The four members of the apart the car wreckage. It took|group are Hellerman, Lee Hays, more than a half-hour to reach/Ronnie Gilbert and Erik Dar- the bodies. ling. ti the scene. Another tug, the Sudbury, won the first round of the battle when it dragged the Glafkos frei a pinnacle of rock which ripped the ship's bottom plate Monday At.a critical moment just be fore dark Tuesday, when the tug W. New Guinea Called Indonesian Province | | | finatiy pulled the vessel free, the light towing tackle parted.) JAKARTA (Reuters)--Presi-|the province and define their The vessel drifted toward a dent Sukarno today officially, powers. rocky shore until its crew mem-/proclaimed Dutch - held West) The announcement came on bers managed to drop anchor. New Guinea an Indonesian the heels of Dutch Premier Jan province, de y's CABLES HOLD At the same time, Foreignithe Netherlands woe willing ts [ne anchors bit into the sea/Minister Subandrio apparently|drop its insistence that self.de- hotter. at 20 fathoms and the|turned a cold shoulder to aitermination for the 730,000 na- straining cables held the vesse!)/Dutch concession aimed at get-|tives of West New Guinea must under the pounding of the seas|ting negotiations to reach albe a prior condition to any untd a line was put. aboard.jpeaceful solution to the fate of|taiks with Indonesia. é Darkness and hidden reefs made|the disputed territory. In announcing the policy the operation dangerous. Subandrio said that judging)switch, de Quay also indicated fe Glafkos was inward/from reports of the Dutch state-lthe Dutch expected Indonesia bound for Vancouver in tballast|ment he doubted that the new}to give up its demand that ary emphasized that self - determi-| nation for West New Guinea! was still the basis of Dutch! policy. Subandrio said Indonesia did 'not object to the bilateral ne- gotiations for the purpose of transferring the administration of West Irian to Indonesia." But it would be of no avail "if negotiation is to be used as a tactical device to prolong the 'Dutch colonial administration in West Irian. It might even make things more explosive." frvm Japan when she struck ajposition "can become the basis recf at George Isiand, nedr the/for a solution to the Indonesian- entyance to Ucluelet Sound. jDutch dispute." | A 'broadcast of Sukarno's {proclamation said the Dutch- CITY EMERGENCY eos gona is about to be- come Indonesian. PHONE NUMBERS | The new province was named POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 \"Irian Barat' (West Irian) and the capital of Hollandia was made "Kota Baru' (New City) The proclamation aid Su karno will appoint jand members of Parliament for! ' negotiations proceed from the Subandrio said that if the assumption of a transfer of the territory .were transferred to territory to the Jakarta govern- Indonesia, its people would get ment. the fullest autonomy possible} De Quay said he did not en-|within the framework of the visi with Indonesia, but discussions 'charter. "within a wider framework," involving a third party power Subandrio Quay's or Tuesday that Indonesia had of-| ficially broken off telegraph and postal connections with The however, said de Dutch leader at the same time!30. q ' t DOG UNCHANGED 'BY PSYCHIATRY SHOREHAL, England (Reu- ters)--Time was running out today for Butch, the dog who evidently. doesn't give a fig for psychiatry. A local court has ordered that the big boxer, who pre- fers biting to head-shrinking, must pay with his life for his sharply disturbed habits. Butch won fame of a sort in 1959 when he underwent "psychiatric treatment" -in- tended to remove his dislike of other dogs. His owner, Mrs. said he | Constance Gamble, had a gentle nature and would not: attack. humans. Unfortu- nately, though, Butch had suf- fered a trauma in puppyhood when a German police dog at- tacked him. Butch wound up in such sad mental shape that thing he liked about other dogs was biting them. At the court hearing Mon- day, Mrs. Gamble agreed Butch had not. been kept un- der proper control as previ- ously ordered by the court. A police officer said Butch had attacked a poodle--and its owner as well. The policeman said the boxer had attacked other dogs repeatedly and the court or- dered his destruction. But Mrs. Gamble declared she would appeal in a bid to save Butch's life. OAS Will Meet 'On Dominicans WASHINGTON (AP) -- The /eouncii of the Organization -of |American States will meet Thursday to remove diplomatic and economic sanctions against the Dominican Republic, reli- able sources said Tuesday. They said the council will act on the recommendation of a special committee appointed to keep watch over the Dominican situation after sanctions were imposed in 1960. The committee's report has heen kept secret but may be made public today. Informants said the commit- tee will recommend lifting of the sanctions in view of the of government New Year's Day. Drowning Report Of 29 Fishermen on two - way negotiations|republic and the United Nations} SEOUL (AP) -- The govern-| o ment five South Korean fishing boats|preme Court of Errors has up-|tugal had held down the 650,000} Another fish- Six sank in a storm erman iS missing other statement seemed to. be Netherlands, following the sev-|boats with about 30 men aboard. tive a governora mere formality because thejering of telephone traffic Dec.|failed to make port and a search| Parenthood League of Connec- was under way. avoid further strain in relations DECLINES DETAILS Archbishop Staffa said bishops had been impeded in their work} ajin Cuba and had been impris-|; oned, but he declined to give | details. dal was for| along with 135 priests last Sep- »| tember. At. the tomatic excommunication. Archbishop Staffa said the ex- communication was under a | provision of Roman Catholic ca- | Bishop Eduardo Boza Masvi- : expelled from Cuba} time Vatican) sources said Castro and his of-| ficials might have incurred au-| * | 1 | | | ~~ SLAIN WOMAN Mrs. Shirley Coleman, 23- year-old divorcee died in hos- pital Tuesday after suffering | | 'and non law imposing automatic ex- communication upon any person who directly or indirectly im-} pedes a prelate in the perform-| ance of his duties. | Effects. of excommunication, | riefly, are loss of the sacra-| ments of the church and, in a) | broad sense, ostracism from the| church of any person so pun-| ished. Pardon for this type of excommunication can be given jonly by the Pope or his dele- gate. stab wounds. Robert Simmons, a 20 - year - old unemployed laborer, has been charged with capital murder. Mrs. Coleman 'and Simmons both lived at her parents' home in | Galt, Ont. --CP Wirephoto Bordeaux Jail Inquiry Opens | Etobicoke To'Have) monrreat (cp) -- Bor the only | Cocktail Lounges TORONTO (CP)--Judge Rob- ert Forsyth announced today that suburban Etobicoke will have cocktail bars. . After recounting 40,000 votes cast Nov, 25, the judge found |that 60.54 per cent had voted approval. This reverses an earl- ier count which defeated bars by less than one per cent, Din- ing lounges were approved at the original vote. The recount showed 24,863 in favor and 16,538 against cocktail |bars. peg jail Governor Leon Lam- bert today opened a formal in- | quiry into a five-hour riot at the violence-ridden institution New Year's Day. "Except insofar as those in- |volved are 'concerned, and pos- |sibly as a lesson to others, I do jnot see how an inquiry report | will change the findings on gen- eral conditions at the jail," he said. The inquiry is expected to be completed later today. Two prisoners--Bernard Bay- liss, 28, and Charles Chase, 30--| suffered bullet the riot. wounds during Violated On Birth NEW HAVEN, Conn, (AP)-- | Two officials of a planned pa- renthood centre have. been con® victed of violating Connecticut's 83-year-old birth control statute. Dr. C. Lee Buxton, chairman jof the obstetrics and gynecol | ogy department at Yale Medi- }eal School, and Mrs. Richard |W. Griswold, executive director of the Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut, were fined $100 each in circuit court Tuesday. They were charged with ad- |vising on the use of birth con- | trol devices at the league's re- cently opened planned parent- |hood clinic here. | Police raided the clinic Nov. /10 and it has since been inop- erative. The clinic was deliberately opened Nov. 1 to challenge the old statute, which the U.S, Su- merely "dead words." The tribunal refused 'to rule on the law's constitutionality on the grounds that no one was being prosecuted under the 1879 sta- jtute. The league, which has op- preme Court last year called| Statute Control cal director of the birth con- trol clinic. Buxton contends the law pre- vents him from*carrying out his physician's duty to -give birth control advice to women whose health might be endangered by another pregnancy. India Threatens To Use Force On Red Chinese WASHINGTON (AP)--An In- dian diplomat said Tuesday night India will use force if nec- essary to remove Chinese Com- munist troops from India's ter- ritory. Satish D. Kallelkar, chief of ithe information service of the Indian embassy, made the state- ment during a 90-minute radio debate with Bernardo Texieira, |a member of Portugal's delega- |tion to the United States. | Asked why India had moved | | | | | i | posed the law for 39 years, was) forced to close ist last clinic in Goa first before tackling Chinese 1940. .,|Communist troops who have Judge J. Robert Lacey said) pushed across India's northern "the evidence is clear and con-|frontier, Kallelkar said "'in jclusive to the court that there| Goa people are concerned while ;was a violation." He said there|in the Himalayan Mountains was no doubt that the defend-|there is only barren land at ants had given advice on the!14.900 to 17,000 feet." juse of contraceptives. "You cannot push them out in | FORBIDS INFORMATION jone day. It takes time for prep- The law forbids both the sale| aration. We have served notice into the Portuguese colony of |Dominican Republic's installa-| of birth contro! devices and dis-| We Will not tolerate the Chinese |tion uf a new civilian council] +jbution of information about|to remain on Indian territory. We will discuss the question to them. the bitter end and then use force Miss Catherine Roraback, de- {fence counsel, said she would |appeal the conviction to the ap- |pellate division of the. circuit | court. | The league has said it would arry the case as high as the held the law ir past test cases. Mrs. Griswold, 61, is execu director of the Planned iticut, and Buxton, 57, is medi- if necessary." CONTENDS USED FORCE Teixeira contended that India had used brutal force and fol- lowed the Fascist code--'if you have the strength, impose it'-- reported 29 fishermen|U.S. Supreme Court again, if|in seizing Goa from Portugal. Dutch officials announced|were drowned Tuesday when/necessary. The Connecticut Su- Kallelkar contended that Por- people of Goa by force and "we had to use force to liberate our own people." I "But we went in with a sad 4 of the Indian conceded. P LISBON (Reuters) -- Fre mier Antonio Salazar said today) his- government refuses to ac-| cept India's occupation of Goa Suggested that Portugal may decide to leave the United Nations. Salazar made his first address to the National Assembly since India occupied the Portug UESE MAY FROM UN | Goa Occupation Not Recognized operation which would shock the world" and that mission had been fulfilled. A few hours before the pre- mier spoke, an army ministry communique accused the Com- munist party of leading an un- successful revolt at Beja army barracks Monday. The i said five com enclave last month, The premier said that 'in the ijsame way that there has been no surrender of forces or hand- ing over of ships, (to the In- dians) there cannot be a treaty to recognize the sovereignty of the Indian union over the Por- tuguese territories in India." He said Portugal will "have jto wait for the international jcommunity to redress the of- fence done to Portuguese sover- \eignty and restore it to its legit- jima Sights before a normal \situation can be re-established." | RE-EXAMINE TREATY | Turning to Portugal's. rela- |tions with Britain, Salazar said |his government will have to see iwhat "'positive content" is left jin the Anglo-Portuguese alliance jand base its future attitude to \treaty obligations with Britain ee this. He said the British govern- ment had refused a Portuguese request to use some airfields "needed by Portugal for connec- tions with Goa." Portugal and Britain have a long-standing mutual defence! jpact. At the time of the Indian invasion of Goal, Britain said there could be no question of fighting another member of the Commonwealth. The premier paid tribute to ef- |forts made by the United States jand Britain to prevent the In- |dian invasion and bring about a {Peaceful settlement, but re« gretted their impotence in this }connection. He also expressed apprecia- ition for similar efforts by Can- ada, Australia, West Germany, Argentina, Belgium and The Netherlands and for the '"'sol- idarity" shown by Brazil and Spain. FULFILS MISSION Salazar said one of the mis- sions of the 3,500 Portuguese troops in the Indian territories was "'to force the Indian union to set forth on a large military | } | army officers had been dismiss- ed. and investigation of the plot "showed that it was an action planned and oriented by the Communist party ... within a general plan of action whose details are being investigated." There was speculation in Lis- bon on what the rebels intended to achieve--whether they hoped to gain control of southern Por- tugal or hoped for a sea landing by sympathizers. Miliions of Portuguese awailed Salazar's speech won- dering what he would say about the revolt, But their main interest was in his remarks about the Indian invasion of Goa, Daman and Diu--particularly as it affected Portugal's relations with Brit- jain and the United States. There was considerable anger here at Britain's failure to re- spona to Portugal's invocation of the ancient alliance between their two countries at the time of the Indian invasion. A- mass fally in. support._of the 72-year-old premier was panned for today but was can- celled as a mark of respect for amy Undersecretary Lt.-Col. Jaime de Fonseca, killed in the revolt and buried after a state funera! Tuesday. Fonseca was the only death on the government side. Unoffi- cial figures put casualties om both sides at about three killed and five injured and the nume ber of arrests so far at 28. The Roman Catholic newspa- per A Voz said a former Cath- olic youth leader, Manuel Ser- ras, was among those arrested in connection with the attack by about 50 civilians and soldiers on the army barracks at Beja. In a previous plot, crushed in 1959, Serras was arrested with others in the cloisters of Lisbon Cathedral but escaped and went abroad after taking refuge in the Cuban and Argentine embas- Sies. | Lisa Lane of New York,said ; | by many to be the prettiest chess' player in the world, withdrew from a tournament | at Hastings, England, because "T couldn't concentrate on my | LOVESICK CHESS PLAYER game,"' she said. The 24-yeate old petite brunette added, "I felt so dreadfully homesick and besides I'm in love." --AP Wirephote

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