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Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Dec 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY If women dressed to please men, they would certa faster. inly dress a lot he Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT @ Cooler late this afternoon and tonight. Thursday partly cloudy and cooler. VOL. 91 -- NO, 284 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for payment Class Mail Post Office Postage in Gosh of TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES | i | | 'Assam today to inspect Indian|time of the Soviet Union back-, Nehru Flies To Inspect Front Line NEW. DELHI (Reuters) --; 'The fact is," he said, "there Prime Minister Nehru flew: tojhas been no question at any front lines along the disputed|ing out of the commitments northeast frontier with Commu-|thev made." \ on nist China. Nehru also c Informed sources here said|Chinese troops have fired sev- Nehru would meet local army|eral times at Indian troops commanders and _ repatriated|strtggling back to their lines troops and judge for -himself| following, the cease - fire an- the extent of the Chinese cease-|noynced by China Nov. 21. fire and he rt fk gh gm Moke « nad am of| 43 Road Deaths In Four Days | Of Safety Week doctors and stretcher bearers} left Tezpur, the key Indian post By THE CANADIAN PRESS Three provinces were free of in Assam, for the Chinese-held 53 wounded' Indian. prisoners traffic fatalities during the first taken during the fighting. In the meantime, Australia's external affairs minister, Gar-| field Garwick,, said in New) Delhi today his country would deal with any requests for mil- | 'DIED FOUR TIMES itary aid to India and Mrs. Cora Landau stands behind her husband, Dr, Lev Landau, last month in a Mos- cow hospital where he is re- covering from automobile ac- cident injuries received last Jan. 7, according to caption of picture from the Soviet agency Tass. The current issue of Medical World News says the scientist, winner of the Nobel Prize in physics this year, says Dr. Landau died and was brought back to life four times in the days following the accident and for seven weeks a pump kept him breathing. Last month, the magizine says, he sat up in bed and acknow- ledged the news that he had won the Nobel pjrize. (AP Wirephoto) (See-AP wire story by Alton Blakeslee, Page 15.) Argentine Crisis Conferen BOENOS AIRES -- President Jose Maria Guido today pre- pared to confer with military and other advisers on the crisis caused Tuesday night when nine of his 18 ministers quit in support of resigning Economic Minister Alvaro Alsogaray. The mass resignations, includ- ing the presidents of four state banks, were submitted to back up the widely criticized auster- Alsogaray. of terior, foreign affairs, healt defence, education and justice and three secretaries of the East Germany Leader Drops Berlin Threats BERLIN (AP) -- Walter Ul- bricht, Communist leader of Hast Germany, has dropped threats against Berlin and is advocating a policy of com- promise and coexistence. In a speech published in the Communist party paper Neues Deutschland today, Ulbricht did mot raise the threat of a sep- arate peace treaty between the Soviet Union and East Ger- many. Nor did he set any dead- line for settlement of the Berlin question. He called instead for "a flex- ible policy of negotiation, lead- ing to nonmalizafion of rela- tions between the two German states, whereby at least the liv- ing together of the people of the two Genman states would be made possible." Ulbricht called this "a long-| term policy of peaceful coexist- ence in Germany which would lead a German peace treaty, confederation (of East and West ce Today| armes forces remained in of- fice. Unconfirmed reports said Rear-Admiral Carlos-A. Kolun- gia also had resigned as navy | secretary. | Alsogaray resigned after week - long pressure, charging that divisions in the government balked his campaign to hold the line against inflation, Guido neither accepted nor "promptly sympathetically'? despite the apparent cessation of active hostilities. Garwick, who has just com- post of Bomdila to repatriate four days of Canada's safe driv-| ing week, but the total number of deaths across the country is already nearing the mark for! the entire week in 1961. DEADLY SMOG HIT LONDO N KILLING City Transport Chaos Mounting LONDON (CP) -- A suffocat- ing two-day-long killer smog-- causing widespread death and delay--blanked most of Britain today, and. weathermen pre- dicted it may cling on for an- other 48 hours. The freezing, choking gioom appeared to be the worst since the killer smog of 1952 that lasted more than 96 hours and caused at least 4,000 deaths in) London alone. the Medical Research Council. "Smog particularly affects the very young, and the very old and people with weak hearts or chests." London's last great exposure to smog was in 1957 when 1,000 persons died with chest and heart afflications- during @ three-day siege. ; Exactly 10 years ago, the toll was 4,000, and by some esti- |mates 12,000, in an eight-day Police said 36 people had)period. collapsed in public places and) Against the latest smog, Lone died since Tuesday morning in|doners including policemen put London. jon protective masks and went pleted a five-day visit to India| 4 'survey by The Canadian preceded by talks with Pakis-|pre.s shows 43 persons have tani leaders, said chances of al qieq on the roads since the = difficulties | be-| week, sponsored by the Cana- ski i. Se pond? 4P-\dian Highway Safety Council, 5 8 began last Saturday. The. week In a prepared statement, he/each year runs Dec. 1 to 7. said: "I have found a lively ap-| Last year 31 persons died in preciation by leading ministers)the first four days and 49 in the and officials of the need for a| week. settlement, and a firm desire to} Thus far Newfoundland, find a solution." _ Prince Edward Island and New . aye told peoiorr go Tues.| Brunswick have clean. slates. ay, Russia wou eep promise to send MiG jet fight-/death. Ontario has 15 deaths ers to India despite the border! and Quebec 14, compared with conflict, jeight each at the same point | oS ish 'olumbia as ei Italian Reds ass, atverta and' sastat Assail Peking |deaths, Alberta and Saskat- |chewan two each and Manitoba ROME (AP) -- Italy's Com- munist party, the biggest in western Europe, bluntly con- demned Peking today and pledged solidarity with Moscow, Giancarlo Pajetta, one of It- | one. i | Purpose of the week is to pro- mote safe driving in December, traditionally the most hazardous month on the highways. The day-to-day record this year, with the 1961 seven-day totals: December 2 4°62 '61 2 Co lected as: tions immediately. He told' Alwog aly's top Reds, turned to a Chi- nese Newfoundland at 'the Italian) PE" Nova Scotia its} Nova Scotia reported only one} UN Secretary-General U Thant, left is pictured with his host, Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov, U THANT WITH RUSSIANS during luncheon date Tuesday at the New York headquar- ters of the Soivet mission to United Nations. Centre is UN | | ing. Undersecretary-General C. V. Narasimhan, --(AP Wirephoto) UN # assador Says he would start a round of con-|Communist congress here and sultations -- beginning with the|Said his party unanimously military leaders of the govern-|"Condemns your unjust _posi- ment--today. tion." The war secretary, Lt.-Gen.| The 900 delegates rose to their Benjamin Rattenbach, appar-|feet in a cheering ovation that ently precipitated Alsogaray's|left no doubt where Italy's com- decision to quit by saying at a|munist party stands in the Mos- press conference that the eco-|cow-Peking ideological dispute. N.B, Quebec Ontario Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta iC Tim St ee =" wre Nations Ambassador Adlai E. |Stevenson said today that he jhad approved of the naval BWNH SOON OH MSM NOK OCNeYSS Sm NOSOHNHOSCOBS Kooconwooss SALONA DU Re 1 2 2 8 3 Total ... ae NEW YORK (AP) -- United nomic minister's policies were not adequate to pull Argentina out of its slump. | Alsogaray said the head of| the army told him Monday| "other cabinet ministers are! feeling the same way." Alsoga-| ray's austerity policy was al- ways opposed by large business, labor and armed forces groups, but he and his team also have} strong connections with ecrtain| business, political and military] factions. | Cuba Nationalizes More Businesses HAVANA (Reuters) -- The} council of ministers today an.| nounced nationalization of all) privately - owned clothing, tex-| tile, footware and hardware businesses in Cuba. | A decree signed by President| Osvaldo Dorticos, Premier Fi-| del Castro and Interior Trade} Minister Manuel Luzardo ex-| cepted only one-man businesses| with no employees other than} | | Plan Holy Cross | Ban Parking Near 238 6 6 4 The' Chinese delegation Tues- day lashed the position of the Italian and Russian Communists) in the Cuban crisis and dal eat Army Probing Albania. -- Mystery Object YOU'LL FIND ey oe INSIDE army officer planned to leave see for army headquarters at Fred- ericton for discussions on a Official Figures mysterious object found in the On Oshawa Vote .. Kiwanis Honors bush near here. Junior Farmers - Page 17 The 400-pound, glass-fibre ob- ject, equipped with\ radios and camera, was recovered by a |woodsman last week. .» Page 17| Maj. E. A.. Flewelling of the |No. 5. Militia Group here ex- is jamined th kK i Whitby Council Seat Page 17 wad Seinated tad Wee ms No Change In Separate | the bush at least two years. School Hours ...... Page 17| The navy examined the ob- ject, under lock and key in lum- +» Page 17 Move For Bilingual School Defeated Two Seek East blockade of Cuba at least three days before the government de- cided to impose it. Reiterating his denial that he had opposed the blockade, Ste- venson said on the NBC televi. sion Today show: "Tt was emphatically in favor of it." Stevenson previously had de- nounced as inaccurate a Satur- |day Evening Post article that portrayed the ambassador as having urged a soft line in the Cuban crisis. He asserted today the article was "fallacious from beginning to end, in every detail." Asked if he had been asked He Backed Cuba Move to resign his UN post, Steven- son replied: "On the contrary." He did not elaborate. Stevenson said that despite his support of the blockade, he hoped that the time has not come in the United States when it is felt disputes should be set- tled by war rather than peace- ful means. "Tf that time comes, world is doomed," he added. Stevenson also was asked if he expected President Kennedy to come forward in his support. He replied: "I have had no. discussion with him about it. I don't know what he is going to do, if any- thing."' He went on to say that Pres- ident Kennedy "has and will the jberman David McPherson's ga- |rage at nearby Indian Mountain jand determined it was not naval! 3 |property, Preliminary examination dis- |closed the object contained School Addition .. Page School Crossings .. Page Council To Discuss County Reported HALIFAX (CP) -- Canada is in a better position to go ahead |than at this time a year ago, Canada's Position Better pectations in the business com- munity of what easier money may do. Canadians now are EMO Withdrawal .. Page 3 members of the immediate fam- Germany) and to reunification." ily. CBC President Urges | 'Dual' Broadcast Plan LATE NEWS FLASHES OTTAWA (CP)--CBC Presi- dent J. Alphonse Ouimet today|the CBC could eventually oper. proposed eventual , estab-| ate entirely independently of one! operation lishment of @ "'dual'"' broadcast- ing system in Canada which in|greatly simplify the relatiuns fied ta reduce or eliminate built- in conflicts and'to simplify its and administration. ;done the private stations and) another. The separation would) jriodic review of effect would place the publicly-|between the two boards (CBC|broadcasting system. owned corporation outside the|and BBG). regulatory control of the Board) "Eventually, of Broadcast Governors. He suggested that completion "We need in Canada a long- the main con-|range master plan, a blueprint This should be followed. by pe-) the entire |three or four radios, some with] F, William Nicks, president, North American identification,|told today's annual meeting of |two windows and a camera lens|the Bank of Nova Scotia. |Projected from one side. "There is no longer undue | The object is about five feet|preoccupation with the fear of long, three feet wide and three|inflation," Mr, Nicks stated, feet deep. "nor are there unrealistic ex- much more aware of the kind of competitive world in which they live and are adjusting to it. We have an exchange rate which is at least in reasonable align- ment with our underlying eco- nomic interests. "Tt may indeed be that we are emerging from a period of economic disturbance into one more favorable to economic growth." | To date, however, although) | West German Coalition Talks (CP from Reuters--AP) BONN -- Leaders of West Germany's Free Democrat and Social Demo- crat parties today held one-hour talks here as three-party manoeuvring continued in an effort to form a new coalition government. cern of the BBG would be to/|for broadcasting. We need to! regulate and recommend of CBC's national broadcasting| garding private stations," he|and objectives for the system coverage with its own stations, |stations," he said, . . . '"withias.a whole as well as for each instead of having to depend on|the CBC continuing to answer|of its parts." private affiliates, would by it- self eliminate over the years} act the major complexities of the Canadian broadcasting system. Mr. Ouimet told a Canadian Club luncheon that if this were | directly to Parliament on all its jactivities but without tie pres-|¢ jent inter-relationship between! \BBG and CBC." |\CITES CUP CONTROVERSY te Mr. Ouimet said 'the recent, 5°™V!e: tradition behind it has no doubt as to the precise nature of its mandate, as Canada's national CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Grey Cup television con-| 'But the BBG may have a |troversy, which he desczibed as|'ifferent conception and CTV or ithe hottest in Canadian broad-|C-A.B. (Canadian Association of casting history, suggested there|Broadcasters) something else |may be room for improvement|@sain. Such 'a situation is a in the Canadian system. i He suggested that an inquiry,| uation of the controversy which perhaps a royal commission,/has plagued Canadian broad |be launched as soon as i; feas- C@S:ing fer so many years." jible to determine whether the, Text of his address was is- Ipresent system could be modi-|sued to the pres before delivery. re-'establish clear long term goals! The CBC president said the orporation with. 30 years of |breeding ground for the contin-| | "Had A Vision' -- Shot At Hoffa NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- A Washington, D.C., laborer, who said he "had a vision" a month ago to shoot Teamsters President James: R. Hoffa, dashed into Federal District Court here today and fired several pellets from an air pistol at the stocky labor leader. Hoffa, being tried on a $1,000,000 conspiracy charge, suffered only pellet marks on | the back and left arm. | Snowlflurries To Replace Fog TORONTO (CP) -- Snowflurries and cooler air are expected to replace the fog that has cov- | ered most of Southern Ontario for the last seven | days, the Toronto weather office said today. r there has been improvement, economic circumstances are by no means satisfactory, Mr, Nicks said, and the Cana- dian economy is operating well below its real potential. During the last few years Canadians had not been making the most of their increasing ta- lents nor of the widening op- portunities for industrial growth and they should pull away from "an obsessive ,attention'"' to ob- Vious difficulties of the present and recent past and should fo- cus their eyes upon. the hori- zons ahead. |' Urging that efforts be kept on ja sound competitive basis, Mr.| |Nicks added: "Our present-day world no longer offers any haven for the kind of 'small, protected. indus- try often built up-in earlier' pe- riods. Today's {industrial re- quirements turn very heavily upon technology 'and creative! research in specialized areds of! production, and more and more} a on both quality and volume."" have my views with candor and confidence." ' Stevenson also denied that he suggested at the conference-- where the naval blockade de- cision was made--that he ad- vocated trading missile bases in Italy, Turkey and Britain for Many others have died in hospitals and in homes. | Chaos on 'the railways, city| streets and roads mounted. | An Automobile Association! spokesman said: | "Visibility is down to nil in) some London areas." | An AA patrol in London's Hampstead district reported to headquarters by radio: | "Even the birds are walk, TRAVEL DISRUPTED Trains were cancelled or de- layed--some as much as six hours--all over the country. Those that did rumble cauti- ously through the icy gloom into London were packed with al- most unbelievable jams. Two commuter trains 'crashed outside London and injured three, Refusing to face the packed trains in dresses, many girl sec- retaries and stenographers came to their offices in blue jeans and thick sweaters. Shipping was" halted, ' Car drivers bumped along in iong agonizing lines. Thousands abandoned their cars. London Airport was _ silént. Planes due at London Airport were scattered all over Europe. No civil aircraft have moved for more than 38 hours. Health authorities warned that babies and old persons should be kept at home. "The situation is potentially serious," said a spokesman for about their work as best they could, 2 Men Killed In Burlington, Blamed On Fog TORONTO (CP)--The heavy fog that today went into its sev- enth day in the Toronto-Hamil- ton area has been blamed for at least two deaths, traffic tie- ups and diversion of airline flights. However, the weather office said early today that cooler, drier air moving into the prov- ince from the west would end tetoe by. mie oe ; 'wo men emplo: as veyors by the Burlington ne ¥ pipe ge were ' bd £ (from. '3 _ path of | 3 i train and walked into the path fof one coming from the site direction. Visibility time was limited to 80 feet, Killed was R. Flock, 27, of Bure lington and A. Green, 23, of Hamilton. The fog spread into the Ni- agara Peninsula as welf, halt- ing Shipping traffic and slowing road traffic around Hamilton. Toronto. International Airport was closed once again Tuesday night and Trans - Canada Air Russia's missile bases in Cuba. The decision on the blockade was made at a conference of the executive committee of the Na- tional Security Council. He said, however, that he did assert at the meeting that the United States would have to de- velop policy regarding the bases if it entered into negotiations with Soviet Premier Khrush- chev on the matter. CRITICIZES ARTICLE The ambassador attacked the magazine article as a "classic example of irresponsible jour- nalism" and said it was "'un- true as to what I proposed and as to what I opposed." Stevenson said he was not troubled over the incident as, he said, are many of his friends. "T am used to assassins. I re- member McCarthy very well." He did not elaborate on the reference. The Post article was written by Stewart Alsop, the maga- zine's Washington editor, and Charles Bartlett, Washington correspondent for the Chatta- nooga Times and a long-time friend of President Kennedy, Heavy Blanket Of Fog Over St. Lawrence MONTREAL (CP)--Air and marine traffic remained halted and highway accidents con- tinued today as a thick blanket of fog covered the St, Lawrence and Ottawa river valleys. It was the second day of the dense grey fog, and the weatherman predicted no letup until Thursday when cool winds were expected to sweep it away. A level-crossing collision at Coaticook, Que., 90 miles south- east of Montreal, that killed an elderly couple Tuesday night was attributed by provincial po- lice to the fog. Joseph Girard, 78, and his wife, 72, were killed when their car collided with a Montreal- bound CNR train. Visibility in Montreal was about one-quarter of a mile, but in some areas near the St. Law- Lines diverted some flights te nearby Downsview Airport, The fog, which rolled into the area last Thursday, was also blamed for slow rush-hour traf- fic in Hamilton Tuesday night while drivers in most Toronto areas were bothered with haze, Traffic was brought to a halt in the Lake Ontario end of the Welland Canal where eight ships waited in Lake Ontario for up- bound passage and four more were trapped between locks one and four for downbound passage. Fluoridation Date: May | For Toronto TORONTO (CP)--The target date for fluoridation of Metro- politan Toronto's water supply is May 1, 1963, Metro Chairman William Allen said Tuesday night. Hees The announcement came after Metro works department spent much of the day answering telephone. calls from citizens asking where they could pur. chase equipment to remove flu- rence it was zero. otine from their household wa- ter supplies, POPE GETTING WELL Pope John XXIII is shown as he appeared at his apart- ment window in the Vatican today and told a crowd of bishops and 'Romans' in. St. ' '4 Peter's Square that he is get- fing well. It was the 81-year- old pontiff's second public ap- pearance since he was confin- ed to bed eight days ago by a stomach ailment and anemia, (AP Wirephoto via radio from Rome) :

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