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Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jan 1962, p. 1

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Expert Praises THOUGHT FOR TODAY If you think it's expensive sup- porting a wife, try not support- ing her City Man he Oshawa Simes ager System -- Page-Nine WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy today. Cloudy with a few light snowflurries tonight and Wednesday, Not much change in temperature. Price Not Ove: 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 91--NO. 7 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JAN Authorized as Second Class M Ottawa and for payment UARY 9, 1962 iail Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. SIXTEEN PAGES | | government agreed MACMILLAN MEETS ADENAUER alongside Chancellor Konrad | millan are to confer on Ber- | Adenauer, who greeted him on lin. (AP Wirephoto via radio arrival Monday night. The West German leader and Mac- Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, left, stands behind microphones at Wahn airport near Bonn, Germany, | Bitter Cold Follows | Heavy US. Snowfall | DENVER (AP)--Bitter cold| dropped to 24 below zero at Cas-)ord was 78 in 1899 and the Oak- moved into Colorado and Wy- per and Laramie and to 15 be-|/land record for January was 72 oming today in the wake of one|low at Cheyenne. in 1948. of the winter's heaviest snow-| Bus and airline schedules; Elsewhere, five inches of new falls. were disrupted in both Color-|snow was on the ground at Buf-| The storm which blanketed|ado and Wyoming as snow cov-|falo and Muskegon, Mich., had the two mountain states with 12\ered all major highways. la new three-inch fall. inches or more of snow Monday) Two deaths were attributed to} Generally fair weather pre- moved eastward into Kansas|the storm in Denver, both re-lyailed in the far West, with and Oklahoma. sulting from heart attacks in-| temperatures inthe 40s and 505.) Up to six-inches of snow was|duced by over exertion in try-\tn 'the South, _temperatures| Reds Release PLAN ACTION TO OUST CONGO PARTY LEADER Belgian Plane (AP)--The MOSCOW t today to re-|in. But statement conforming with Sa- down Monday in Soviet Armenia : bena announcements in Istan- while on a flight from Tehran} |to Brussels with 27 persons bul and Brussels, he said the Caravelle was intercepted and forced to land. Airport sources said the pilot times that four MiGs were trail- ing him, then that the MiGs had ordered him to follow them down. The plane's route lay aboard. : oe First Deputy Foreign Minis- ter Vasilyv Kuznetsov told Bel- gian Ambassador Hyppolite Cools that ali passengers and crew members were safe and staying at a hotel in Grozny,| north of Yerevan, where the) plane was reported forced down. | n¢ , Kuznetsov delivered a rou-|diplomat in Moscow speculated tine formal protest about the! that the pilot had strayed across violation of Soviet air space by|the border as a result of de- the Caravelle jetliner. fective radar contacts. The safe landing of the plane ne eegraenereeinee was reported earlier from Teh- ran, Iran. | The U.S. embassy, checking} on three Americans aboard the} plane, said Iran's ambassador) Convicted Spy in Moscow reported the wr Gets University "in Moscow, ine soviet toesn| Post In Ghana ministry told the Belgian seer bassy it stili did not have suf-| P) : 1 ficient information about the) Nunn May, British atomic sci- irliner to give any details. The|entist who worked in Canada Pinthtry said it was investigat-|from 1942 to 1945, has accepted at Tehran g. Iran's ambassador to M , cow, Ali Gholi Ardalan, said he} sity of Ghana, it was learned : y. Soviet| the fighters were escorting him| i | the airline's Tehran|} lease a Belgian airliner forced| manager contradicted this. In a] # radioed three| @ near the frontier, and a Belgian] 7 LONDON (CP) -- Dr. Alan|; /an appointment as professor of os-| nuclear physics at the Univer-} § | COST OF LIVING | Fe 19492100 1298) CUMOMUYMLUE LE F\for a showdown to oust Gizenga §|from an active role in the Con- B| golese government. p|dent of Gizenga's African Sol- 74 Cyrille Adoula. . takes ; btain the was taking steps to obtain | ay BO: was teen: expected in the Oklahoma Pan-|ing to cope with the city's 1S9"| vanced from' around the freez.| W2S t st to ae handle and roads in the north-|inch snowfall. . jrelease of iwo Iranian passen 1946 to 10 years' imprisonment] § west section of that state were) icing. The storm, second in pushed as far south as Am illo, Tex. Blizzard conditions struck Monday night in the Texas Panhandle. At Amarillo) the temperature droppe ) | Monday night from a daytim high of 40. More than half a foot of snow fell in Western Kansas. Some of the coldest air of the|blasts which swept the m season swept across the north- east plains of New Mexico and| Francisco with 79 and Oakland,|the Canada - was expected to spread west-|Calif., ward to the Continental Divide. In Wyoming, the mercury|The former San Francisco HALIFAX- (CP)--The Pana-, manian freighter Suerte today} remained upright in diminishing seas on rocks off Shut-in Island, 15 miles east of here. She was taking water in her engine room in a heavy swell and with surf breaking. Early today a Navy helicopter took off her captain and flew him to Halifax, but the re- mainder of the 28-man crew stayed aboard. A lifeboat had been lowered, but no attempt made to reach Three Harbor, a half mile was Fathom away. There was no immediate ex planation for removal of the skipper. Apparently those re- maining aboard were in no danger. The nava! patrol ship Loon and the tug Foundation Vigilant stood near the 7,238-ton ship, lodged in breaking around her. The crew earlier was reported preparing to abandon at dawn. But daybreak brought bright sunshine and diminishing swells) and they decided to stay aboard. SENDS SOS The freighter, bound for Hali- fax to pick up a load of grain, crashed onto the rocks late Monday night. Shortly after- ward she issued an S O S, say- ing she was leaking badly and wanted help mountain passes, Loveland,| | Germans, ure in| veek,|West of Denver and Monarch in| U S. P » Amar.|central Colorado. Monarch was abJe rogress d to 20|Said they would stay closed to- e/day. Many stores in downtown} Vessel On Rocks East Of Halifax _, area most of 'the night. rocks with waves ~~ ing mark to the 60s. | gers > . Belgians, | P ' : -- | gers ergy fen groan Leb.|for leaking information on anese and Greeks made up the| atomic energy to a e arb ist. There|POwer. He was released from ee ce enger list |prison in 1952 and has been sengers and eight) *"'s). SD crew members aboard the bwin-| Working at a laboratory in Cam- jet Sabena Caravelle. ridge, CLAIMS PURSUIT Snow slides blocked two cleared. Hundreds of schools were I F d S closed in Colorado and ofticals| n '00 om tamp Plans Probed ran to Istanbul and Brussels,|the propagation of radio waves ) OTTAWA (CP United) landed at the Armenian border in the ionosphere. He is ex- Arctic Statics progress in a food-stamp|city of Yerevan after radioing| pected to leave in a few weeks. oun-|Plan for needy families will be|that it was being pursued by; The British scientist, at his San|investigated this weekend at| Russian MiG jet fighters. é e§ U.S. committee A Sabena spokesman in Teh-|March, 1946, was said by the and economic|ran said the plane's radio com-| prosecution to have admitted in pass went out of order, the/a statement to police that he pilot asked the Russians for per-|ave a report on atomic re- | mission to land at Yerevan and| search to an "'individual" who U.S, project was started Pleads Guilty, Vico, inas and Yemnst| Tegal Entry ni | vania, and is being expanded.| | Russia, Mr Hamilton some time ago) BUFFALO (AP) A well-|entists from Ghana The news- was delegated to-examine the/armed young Canadian; whose| Paper says it is not clear what possibilities of a comparable hopes of joining anti-Castro ele-| connection there may be be- scheme in Canada to improve|ments in Florida were cut short|tween May's appointment and tne diets of legitimately - needy |py U.S. immigrati ites,|the building of a Russian re- y ey i 2a whe 0 Yiby U.S. gration authorites,| It was foggy in the area when) 'amilies who otherwise would/has pleaded -guilty to' entering| Search reactor. the Suerte grounded. The/go without the ingredients for|the United States illegally. waar R egg weather was expected to re-|better health and nutrition. Joseph W. Gardiner - Littler main clear today with winds in- pe gr Bagi bite Bas een 20, of Toronto, and a companion ae 'tay CPI ais des S| S Ut ane i ; Z ;)| creasing from light to westerly| ciyding a system of distribution "°"°, ying tid yee sex about 25 mies an hour. | terminal. last Dec. 16. using food stamps. said they -were Ae Fe : Local agents for the Suerte) Canadian and U.S. ministers three carbines, a -.38-calibre re- O an said she was in ballast when|beg.n a two-day meeting here|,, cn sige Se she grounded and was believed|/Fr.¢ay, the first since last sf ale Oa rey " sears vs en route here from the United|March in Washington and the Fuh Gag 2 5 My . tgp ae Kingdom sec. nd with members of Presi- he pavonels dhe ee Sl-land other combat. gear. The 441-foot ship is reported|deni Kennedy's cabinet. Gardiner - Littler admitted to be carrying a Greek crew, The problem here and in the)yonday that he crossed the There was light fog in the U.S is the same that hobbled)/peace Bridge connecting Buf- death' toll in Holland's worst "6 plana Po phionkg by oe oa falo and Fort Erie, Ont., in vio-| ail disaster was set at 91 today d > balance e eedy |}. ' SIGE NG tattan| 'i ee ' fatuties, It's a question of get- etl Se Peat be ReponaHOn ag more than 1,000 tired rescue to get into the rocks. |ting through to recipients with-|Jan. 15. Residents in Three Fathom|out the stigma of a means test, | Harbor recall two ships break-| ing up in the same area before, one -freighter during the First World War. May told reporters he would | work in Ghana under Professor Denver closed early Monday. 79 IN SAN FRANCISCO In contrast to the tain and plains states, with 75 chalked up rec-|talks on trade ord highs for January Monday. | affairs. rec-- Agriculture Minister Alvin ~|Hamulton said Monday he in- jtevds to quiz his counterpart, |Orva! Freeman, on how the U.S |pilot project is working. The | apartment. The Guardian of Manchester, in a story on Dr. May's ap- pointment, notes that the uni- versity is to be equipped with ja nuclear reactor provided by I ia, which is to train sci Vigilant reported by radio there was "no indication of when a tow would be attempted." WOERDEN (Reuters) -- The The Suerte passed two buoys \j learing wreckage. 4 a His companion, David R. eg Veg pv egy ll by and still avoiding abuse of the|Corbin, 21, also of Toronto Was|the i 'Finati ' SESS ; Shed) ' \the identification service of program by those who do not/allowed to return to Canada.|Utrecht's Central Military Hos- se any aid, Mr. Hamilton/He had no previous immigra-| pital after earlier estimates put ri ete tion violation. the tol! at 87. Ae sii Difficulties in counting the dead from Monday's two-train crash arose because it was un- certain whether dismembered human remains belonged to bodies already identified or un- known persons. The toll was. not expected to rise much higher because most Indonesia Expecting Anti-Dutch Outburst of the 75 persons in hospital JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Indo- tive revolt against the Indone-| Both Sukarno, then tourin / ti a t the Sukarno, g nesia today expected a new!sian government. the South Celebes, and Titov 85-Year-Old Beats anti-Netherlands outburst inthe} Meanwhile, Indonesian For- were unhurt Spinster Daughter wake of the two-day-old "Dutch-|eign Minister Subandrio told) suykarno, his expression gr nk sagen attempt to assas-|reporters. a final decision will] returned to "Jakarta Monday: President "| foreign] % The plane, en route from Teh-|R. W. H. Wright, an expert on| |trial at London's Bow Street in| --|ecallca on him at his Montreal); Train Disaster with injuries were reported in|¢atlier. The index is based on): sentenced) workers finished their all-night] The tug and patrol ship went/inate to the area 'but high seas kept) them from venturing too close to the ship a grenade. An Indonesian statement -charged Dutch Sukario with}be made within 10 days on! whether diplomatic means government could be of any use in. settling) hombing w the dispute. He claimed the government had TORONTO (CP)--An 85-year- ciadien Gan noe 'Canadian Living Costs Set Record in Canada reached a record|equalling 100 -- followed almost high in November as the con-|a year of relative stability in sumer price index rose by one-|living costs. tenth of a point to 129.8 at Dec.| increases in the indexes for ER jtvod, housing and health and | The increase from 129.7 at|personal care in November Nov. 1 was caused by higher|were offset by decreases in the |prices for food, housing and|ciotning and transportation in- health and personal care, the|dexes. The indexes for recrea- bureau of statistics reported to-|tion and reading and tobacco day. |and alcohol were unchanged. The slight rise in the index in FGOD IS HIGHER November followed a sharp up-| 'T},e food index in November ward bounce in October, boost-|.9-; nine-tenths of a point to ing the index to the Nov. 1 fig-|1945 from 123.6 as a result of ure of 129.7 from 129.2 on Oct./higher prices for beef, chicken, 1. This October increase in the| turkey and most fresh fruits Ran keene ce land vegetables. Lower prices were reported for eggs, grape- fruit, pork and powdered skim milk. The November advance in liv- ing costs followed a further rise during October in industrial wages. The index of average s Worst Nov 1--latest date available-- was 184.0 compared with 183.3 a month earlier and 178.3 a year satisfactory condition. |1949 wages equalling 100. | Investigation of the crash was! The wages index, computed |hampered by the fact that the|{rom a survey of firms employ: engineers of both trains were|itg more than 10 persons and killed. However, the brakemen|cove:ing a wide range of indus- survived the smash in dense|trics, represents an average of fog. total wages paid. Monday night the wreck scene) The housing index in Novem- almost had a second accident|ber increased to 133.8 from when a heavy crane dropped a/1337 with both the shelter and of six feet. li narrowly missed|at slightly higher levels. a shed where reporters cover-| -j the area of shelter, the ing the story were taking shel-|rent index was unchanged but ter. _|the home-ownership index was Netherlands Railways Presi-|up. In household operation, the dent Dr. J. Lohman said the|rise reflected higher prices for Rotterdam-bound express was|turniture, floor coverings and roaring along through the dense|textiles, fog at 75 miles an hour Monday morning when it plowed into the} P li S side of a coinmuter train coach| headed for Amsterdam at 40 olicemen scour miles an hour Part of the com-| f#s s muter train plunged down an| City For Driver embankment | TORONTO (CP)--More than ;|much of his support. UVITAWA (CP)--Living costs,;inicx -- based on. 1949 prices| industrial wages and salaries at} ' smashed coach from a_ height| household operation components| i obtained information that the as "perpetrated by agents of the Dutch." year-old spinster daughter with The crash occurred on one of |The Netherlands. That part of old Toronto man beat 'his 61-| the busiest stretches of track in|200, Policemen were scouring ' 2 Metropolitan Toronto today for Finch of the agents organized the plot as a reaction: to Sukarno's drive to "liberate" Netherlands-r ule d | West New Guinea and annex it to Indonesia Government officials here said those responsible for the jattempt on Sukarny at Makas- |sar in the South Celebes were |believed to be followers of -for- mer Dutch Captain Raymond | Westerling, who in 1950 led*his 'own private army in an . Capt, C. F J. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 a hammer on Monday, then! AYER TE i _|the driver of a car which struck At least three suspects were|killed himself by gulping por bilby se ay Weta a ite sata killed a 64-year-old pedes- diplomatic channels 'because Teported under arrest. bolic acid, police said today. equipment. trian Monday night. the Dutch altitude remains so}. One top-ranking Indonesian) Max Cohen, retired clothing) Until Monday, Holland's) Harris Baxter -had just vague." military man said the incident|merchant, was dead on arrival) worst train wreck was in 1918|Stepped from a streetcar in sub- It was disclosed that Major|apparently had been intended|at hospital. His daughter Rose|/when 42 persons died and 41|¥tban Mimco and was about Gherman Titov, the second So-|to "break the spirit of the peo-|is in hospital with head cuts| were injured. five feet from the curb when viet spaceman, was riding in a| ple in fighting the Dutch colon-| and a suspected fractured skull.| Working under blazing spot-| bowled over by the car, which car with Sukarno at Makassar|ial rule' of West New Guinea,| His wife Millie, 82, took allights, the rescue workers/did not stop. Sunday when the grenate ex-)which this country has been|hammer blow on. the arm when|found seven more bodies, in| The death was Metrenc'+- ploded abou! 100 yards away,| threatening to take by force in|/she tried to intervene in the! cluding that of a.child, as they|Toronto's first traffic fatality of killing three persons and injur-|its dispute: with The Nether-|beating. The daughter lived! shifted the tangled mass of962 and the firs nvoiving a ling 31 others. lands. with her parents. wreckage during the night. pedestrian in 75 days. He said there seemed no like- lihood of settlement through Gizenga LEOPOLDVILLE (AP) -- An-| toine Gizenga's political party today disclaimed his leadership as moderate forces converged Felicien Kimway, vice-presi- idarity party, announced that Gizenga no longer is president of the party. Kimway's announcement fol- lowed a resolution by Parlia- ment Monday demanding that Gizenga -- a deputy premier backed by the Communist bloc --return from self-imposed ex- ile in Stanleyville to answer parliamentary accusations of secessionism. Most of the so-called Lu- mumbist bloc voted for the anti- Gizenga resoiution. They indi- cated clearly that disenchant- ment is growing among even those leftists who once sup ported Gizenga as the legal) head of the Congolese govern- ment after Patrice Lumumba's| death. If Gizenga fails to return, ob- servers feel action might be started to oust him from the post of deputy premier he ac- cepted last August in the cen- tral government of Premier Gizenga has secluded himself in Stanleyville for months, and reports indicate he has lost LOSES SUPPORTERS During the heated debate Monday, deputies accused Gi- zenga of secessionist activities in Stanleyville and refusing gov- ernment demands to return here and take up his post. The reso- lution was introduced by a member of Gizenga's own party. As the self-proclaimed politi- cal heir to slain Premier Pa- trice Lumumba, Gizenga was | Repennined for months by the Communist bloc and some neu- |tralists as The Congo's legal |premier. But when Parliament met last summer and confirmed Adoula as premier, Gizenga's supporters gradually deserted him. AP correspondent Peter Grose, on a visit to Stanleyville, reported Monday that Commu- nist influences that once worked jon Gizenga are largely absent. The last Communist diplomat, a Yugoslav, has left. Anti-white feeling has evapor- Called Back From Exile are puzzled by Gizenga's posi- tion. Gizenga had hoped to use the secession of President Moise Tshombe's Katanga province as a lever to overthrow the central governmem and to declare him- self the only leader capable of unifying The Congo. But the Adoula government, with the support of the United States and the military aid of the United Nations, stole much of Gizen- ga's thunder by taking steps to- ward bringing Katanga back into the fold. The United Nations charged meanwhile that 35 French- speaking mercenaries arrived Monday in Brazzaville--in the former French Congo across the Congo River from Leopoldville --and immediately left by char- tered plane for Northern Rho- desia. A UN spokesman said they acknowledged they were paid to fight for Katanga. Tshombe recently has denied that whites re fighting for him as mercenaries. UN officials charge mercenaries and sup- plies have entered Katanga from neighboring Northern Rho- desia. Britain, which handles Rhodesia's foreign affairs, has denied this. Monday the British handed Acting Secretary-Gen eral U Thant an invitation to visit the area and make a per- sonal inspection of the situation, | Mac, Adenauer Meeting Today About Berlin BONN (Reuters) Prime Minister Macmillan and Chan- cellor Konrad Adenauer met for important talks here today expected to be dominated by the Berlin crisis and the cost of keeping British troops in West Germany. The talks came in the wake of the disclosure here of a So- viet memorandum to West Ger- many which Adenauer de- scribed as another Russian at- tempt to "drive a wedge" be- tween West Germany and her allies, The memorandum was handed over last month to West German Ambassador Hans Kroll in Moscow and proposed talks between Russia and West ated, at least on the surface, and inhabitants of Stanleyville Germany on the German prob- lem. Lorna Bishop, a Ridgeville, ; Ont., school leacher, has been declared champion girl rider in 1961 by the western Horse Association of Ontario. She CHAMPION RIDER won a wis of 432 points during the season She is also the 1961 Ontario Girls', Barrel Racing champ. i' (CP Wdephoto

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