Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Mar 1963, p. 1

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School Costs Boost Bowmanvill THOUGHT FOR TODAY Dad complains that when he says "Eat your dinne "Motivate me." r", Junior says e Tax Rate Oshawa Fi -P age | 4 | REPORT Milder with rain tonight, end- ing early Tuesday, becoming partly cloudy by. noon. VOL. 92--NO, 59 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1963 SFG Payment TWENTY PAGES Terrorist Executed By French PARIS (AP)--Lt.-Col. Jean- Marie Bastien - Thiry was ex- ecuted today for leading the at- tempt last August to assassinate President de Gaulle from am- bush, . : Bastien-Thiry, 34-year-old air force missile technician, fell un- der a volley of rifle fire in Fort D'Ivry near Paris. The time of death. was an- nounced as 6:46 a.m. Bastien-Thiry and two other terrorists held in custody for the Aug. 22 attack against de Gaulle were sentenced to death last Monday following a 26-day trial before a military tribunal. Sentences of the other two have been commuted. De Gaulle refused pleas of Bastien - Thiry's lawyers to spare his life. Bastien-Thiry admitted during the trial that he organized the plot for the subversive Council of National Resistance headed by former Premier Georges Bi- dault, but denied the prosecu- tion's contention that the plot- COL, BASTIEN-THIRY Missing Plane Search Halted HALIFAX (CP) RCAF search and rescue headquarters here said snow and freezing rain has temporarily suspended a search for a missing civilian aircraft in northeastern New- foundland. The Cessna-180, piloted by Robert Thurston, 31, of Fruit: land, Ont., disappeared last Wednesday on a 30-mile flight to an island fishing community in Notre Dame Bay. Five aircraft searched Sun day without finding a trace of the -missing plane owned by Newfoundland Transport Ltd. of Pasadena, Nfid. ters intended to assassinate de Gaulle. Instead, they said, they only intended to kidnap him to make way for a mew regime. De Gaulle, his wife and son- in-law were ambushed Aug. 22 as their limousine sped toward an airport near Paris. As the car rolled through the suburb of Petit - Clamart, machine-gun- ners 'sprayed it with bullets. One bullet narrowly missed, de Gaulle's head and anot her pierced the helmet of a motor- cycle policeman. Officer Killed, Ex-Cons Held HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP)-- Authorities are holding two ex- convicts on charges they kid- napped two Hollywood police of- ficers and later killed one in a moonlit field 75 miles north of here. The suspects were taken into custody separately Sunday--one in an automobile on U.S. High- way 99 and the other in a Bak- ersfield, Calif., rooming house. The slain officer was Ian James Campbell, 31, His com- panion, Karl Hetting, 28, es- caped Campbell's fate by run- ning away when a cloud sud- denly passed over the moon. Woman Forced To Quit Walk By Policeman An Oshawa woman had to give up her intended 50-mile walk along Highway 401 from Oshawa to Kennedy road, Tor- onto, and back Sunday, not be- Cause she was tired, but because Police ordered her off the road. The woman, who wants to remain anonymous, bore a pla- card identifying her as a mem- ber of the Whitby Chapter of the Rosicrucian Order. She said she was stopped just after dark by a plain-clothes policeman in }/an unmarked cruiser near the Sheppard Avenue interchange. He shone a flashlight in her face and told her no one is al- lowed to walk on Highway 401. She quoted the police officer as saying he had had '"'hun- dreds of telephone calls," by to her or to other walkers also. | 'She said she walked well of | the highway facing oncoming traffic. remained unchallenged all the way from Oshawa to the |Kennedy road intersection, |Where she turned around to |walk back, She was stopped lonce by .an OPP constable in- | Vestigating a broken down auto- ;|mobile but was allowed to walk on Apart from her encounters jwith the law, icy winds and | salt thrown up by passing cars she said she had "a lovely 'walk", people complaining. He did not! say whether that referred only) An unidentified sailor, his face a mass of burns, is car- ried off the Portugese ship Vasco d'Orey after a cover blew off a tank containing INJURED SEAMAN boiling cod liver oil. Ten other seamen were scalded about the face and hands by the hot oil. (CP Wirephoto) Reaction SAIGON (AP) -- Communist charges that the United States and South Viet Nam are using poison gas in the guerrilla war here have caused little official reaction but there are indica- tions the propaganda campaign has had some effect in the coun- tryside. Communist China announced over the weekend it had pro- tested to the International Red Cross about use of poison gas in South Viet Nam by "U.S. imperialism." U.S, officials here and in Washington denied the charge. But in some provinces, par-| ticularly in the northern high-| lands and in the Mekong River| Delta, many peasants appar-| ently believe it. Demonstrations by women amd children, presumably or- ganized by the Viet Cong, have been held several times in the important provincial capital of Iraqi Court Rules Execution Of 26 BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP)--Rev- olutionary military courts have handed down 26 death sen- tences and two stiff prison terms to persons accused of battling the coup which over- threw. Abdel Kraim Kassem Feb, 8. Exports To U.S. Rise Under New Deal MONTREAL (CP) -- Cana-jof labor and business leadersicould be affected b dian exports to the United States could increase by $230,- 000,000 if the U.S. makes full|/Act passed last year, granted|EXPORTS UP MILLIONS? use of new tariff powers, the| President Kennedy negotiating] Canadian - American commit- tee reported. In a report prepared by Dr. Howard §. Piquet of Washing- ton, a specialist on interna- tional economics, the commit- tee said Sunday that the im- pact on Canadian exports of the new U.S. trade legislation will depend on two factors. These are: The extent to which the legislative authority is used, and the ability of Ca- nadian producers to supply the U.S. market. "Many Canadian manufactur- ing industries have not been able to expand production be- cause they do not have access to markets sufficiently large to warrant the large overhead needed to make low unit costs possible," Dr. Piquet said. The committee is composed CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 4 cient Capen he) ongn all Th | 5 gh im cat from both countries, The U.S. Trade Expansion authority on a most-favored-na- tion basis to eliminate tariffs on goods dutiable at five per cent or less; reduce to zero tar- iffs in any category in which the U.S.-and European Com- mon Market nations together account for 80 per cent of Free World export value; and a broad power to reduce any tar- iff by as much as 50 per cent. These powers affect 40 per cent, or $1,200,000.000 of Cana- nadiaw exports to.the United States. Canadian exports falling within the '"'five per cent'? au- thority are valued at $754,000,- 000, Dr. Piquet estimates that if President Kennedy exercises his authority to eliminate tar- iffs in this category, the in- crease in U.S. imports from Canada could total $75,000,000. Increases could be expected in exports of pleasure boats, pork and other meats, fish products, feeds, and paper and paperboard, the committee said. If Britain eventually enters jthe Common Market, Dr. Pi- quet said, $126,v00,000 of "pres- ently dutiable Canadian exports eet SelB age Se A od May Poison Gas Claim Slight Ben Tre, 45 miles southwest of Saigon. Communist North Viet Nam has been hammering at the theme for a year with little in- ternational reaction. The cam- paign began when U.S. Air Force C-123 transports began experimenting with a plant-kill- ing spray to deprive the guer- rillas of ambush cover along roads and canals. Somali MOGADISHU, Somalia (Reu- ters)--The Somali Republic an- nounced today its decision to break off diplomatic relations with Britain because of Brit- ain's decision not to permit Kenya's northern frontier dis- trict to join Somalia. Premier Abdi Ali Shermarke jjannounced the decision to an emergency session of the So- '|mali Parliament following an all-night cabinet meeting. The decision is subject to ratifica- tion during the present emer- gency session, A British foreign office spokesman in London said Brit- ain regretted the break in dip- lomatic relations. Britain recently assured So- malia's government severa times that it will have the op- portunity to express its views about the disputed territory, in- habited by 280,000 Somalis, be- fore any final decision on the territory is taken. Officials in London stressed that the decision to make the area a province of Kenya will not prejudice the Somalia case for secession. mR eae a ion to break off diplomatic relations foly lowed an announcement by the Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys that the northern fron- tier area will be made Kenya's seventh province and given a large measure of local auton- omy : ' The Somali population in the 10-Year Sentence For John Papalia NEW YORK {CP) -- Judge Thomas Croake today sen- tenced four men--one a Cana- dian--to prison terms ranging from 10 to 15 years for their part in a multi-million-dollar in- ternational narcotics smug- gling ring. John Papalia, 38, of Hamil- ton, Ont., was sentenced to 10 years. Three other men, all of New York, received 15 years each. They are Frank Caruso, 56, Vincent Mauro, 47, and Sal- vatore Maneri, 51. Judge Croake also sentenced| Caruso, Mauro and Maneri to an additional five years each for bail jumping but the terms will run concurrently, The four men had pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy to smuggle narcotics into the US Judge Croake said before passing sentence in U.S. Dis- trict Court that he was consid- ering the health, age and the fact that the defendants had pleaded guilty. y the zero} jlist authority." | | By implementing his "zero" |powers fully, Dr. Piquet said, the U.S. president could. in- }crease imports of Canadian goods by as much as $90,000,- 000. Among the products af: fected would be organic chemi- cals, petrochemicals, certain types of power-generating and metal-working machinery and radio and television apparatus, If the president fully used his powers to reduce tariffs 50 per cent, Canadian exports not cov- ered by the five per cent and zero categories, could increase by $65,000,000. High-tariff items that might be affected are Canadian whisky, wax-coated paraffined Paper, tobacco § scrap, ethyl chloride, rifles and shotguns, elgctrical measuring mecha- nisms, cigarette lighters, clock assemblies; manu factures of synthetic textiles, cordials and liqueurs, gin, synthetic textile yarn, mechanical pencils, wom- en's clothing and lawn mow- ers. Dr. Piquet said there is little likelihood that quotas that limit imports from Canada, such as zinc, wheat powered milk and cheese, "will be liberalized in Judge Issues Warrants For Anti-Gaullists MUNICH, West Germany (Reuters)--A Munich judge to- day issued warrants for the ar- rest of five persons in connec- tion with the kidnapping of French anti - Gaullist terrorist ex-Col. Antoine Argoud from a Munich hotel. A spokesman said the names of the five mentioned in the warrants would not be released. He said the whereabouts of the five were not known. - Argoud was found bound and gagged by French police in Pa- ris two weeks ago. Police said he had been be- trayed by fellow - members of the underground Secret Army Organization, but there has been increasing speculation that he actually was kidnapped from a Munich hotel by French secret service agents. West German authorities said last week they would make no move to demand Argoud's re- turn from France until investi- gations into the case had been any meaningful way." Pat --- a Se completed, He said the case otherwise might have dragged on for sev- eral months. The sentencing closes a case that began 2% years ago. The four men, charged with conspiring to smuggle $150,000,- 000 of heroin into the U.S. from Italy and Canada, changed their pleas to guilty in a sur- prise move a week ago two hours after the selection of a 12-member jury to hear the case, Papalia was free on bail so he could undergo medical treat- ment for tuberculosis. The other three men--all in custody--had bail set at $350,- 000 each after they had skipped bail totalling $110,000 and were recaptured in Spain following a tip to the RCMP. They had false Canadian passports when picked up in January, 1962, after being fugitives for four months. : The smuggling operation re- sulted in ii previous convic- tions, The 11--including two Cara- |dians--were sentenced in a U.S. federal court a little more than a year ago to terms ranging from five to 25 years on charges arising from the nar- cotics. case. Rocco Scopellitt: got 10 years and Vito Agueci 15 years. Both are from Tor- onto. Papalia started serving an 18. month term in Canada for as- saulting a Toronto gambler. He had the remainder of the sen- tence commuted by Canadian authorities so that he could be extradited to the U.S. to face trial on narcotics charges YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Church Names New President .. +» Page Kinsmen Attend Zone Conference .. Page Scouts Planning Good Turn ........ Page $2,000 Damage In Six Accidents ..... Page Park Superintendent Honored .. Page | Printers Walk To Caesarea ...... Page U.K. Relations Breaks area has been agitating for the right to secede and join the So- mali Republic. Britons here have been warned to keep off the streets since anti-British riots broke out Friday. A 7 p.m. curfew has been in force the last t hree nights, and several Britons have left the country for Nai- robi. Planes were standing by to evacuate Britons if necessary. The Somali Republic, which has an area of about 396,000 Square miles and a population of 1,870,000, became independ- ent July 1, 1960, when the Brit- ish Somaliland protectorate and the Italian Trusteeship Terri- tory were merged. MARTIAL ASSELIN US. Considers Closing Down Bomber Bases WASHING (CR), = U.S. Air Force fias decided close down two bomber refuel- ling bases in the Canadian north and is considering the shutdown of others, an air force informant said here. He said a joint U.S.-Canada announcement likely will be made shortly, disclosing that with the use of new tanker planes, refuelling bases at Churchill, Man., and Frobisher, N.W.T., no longer will be re- quired. The missile testing base at Churchill will not be af- fected. Churchill is on the west coast of Hudson Bay 610 miles north of Winnipeg. Frobisher is on the southeast coast of Baffin Is- land about 1,200 miles north of Montreal. France Making First Satellite PARIS (Reuters) -- France soon will start building its first satellite, to be launched by a United States rocket from Cape Canaveral early in 1965, the French National Centre for Space Studies announced today. {The laysiching will be within the framework of a Franco- American agreement for co-op- eration in investigating electro- magnetic waves in space. It will be followed by putting into orbit the first French satellite launched. by a French rocket, the Diamant Diamond, al- FRANK McGEE DIEF NAMES THREE TO CABINET POSTS 2 From Quebec, 1 From Ontario OTTAWA (CP) -- Three new cabinet ministers, one of 'hem a former MP defeated in the 1962 federal election -- were named today by Prime Minister Diefenbaker, Martial Asselin, who lost a re-election bid last June in the Quebec riding of Charlevoix, was appoin minister of for- estry. Theogene Ricard, MP for St. Hyacinthe-Bagot in the last! Parliament, was appointed min- ister without portfolio for Que- named minister without portfolio for Ontario. forestry portfolio was previously held by Revenue Minister Hugh John Flemming. Mr. Diefenbaker said he wants to be pesent at the swearing-in of the new minis- ters but if it is necessary in his absence to hold a cabinet meeting of importance would be sworn in before that and they would attend. "Generally the prime minis- ter is present at the swearing- in," he said, "Though there is no constitutional: requirement for that." Mr. Diefenbaker said he had nothing to say about the asso- br ya Syeece Fy pe vacated when Pierre Sevigny along with Mr, Hees re. Mr. Asselin, lost Charlevois to Social Crediter Antoine. Belan- ger last June, 8, 645 votes to 6,341, He is seeking to win back ry the seat in the April 8 election. last month after the resignation The rane probably new r - Sunday Mr. Diefenbaker said the ap- pointments will not change the status of Justice Minister:Flem- ing, who has been acting as prime minister while Mr. Dief- enbaker is on the campaign trail, State Secretary Halpenny or Works Minister Fulton. None of the three is standing for re- election. He was first elected to Pars liament in 1958 when he was in his second term as mayor of La Malbai, his home town on thé north shore of the St- Lawrence River above Quebec: City. A lawyer, he is married with twa children. 5 eet Mr. Ricard, 53, had been an ;|MB since 1957 and was a par- atiien ae li tary secre prim sion. A native of St. Gu Que., he lives with his wife five children at St. Hyacinthe. Mr. McGee is a 37-year-olc native of Ottawa who won York! Scarborough, a Toronto ares riding in 1957, 1958 and 1963 During the last Parliament was parliamentary secretary Immigration Minister Bell. DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- Syria's new revolutionary re- gime was urged today to join four other pro-Nasser Arab states in a joint military com- mand as a step toward uniting the Arab world from the At- lantic to the Persian Gulf, The unity proposal was made by Iraqi Deputy Premier Ali Saleh el Saadhi, who came to Damascus to help Syria cele- brate Friday's bloodless coup. He proposed that Syria, Iraq, the United Arab Republic, Al- geria and Yemen form the uni- fied command. El Saadi said the five nations' armies should be empowered to cross the border of any of the five states "in the event of be- ing threatened by outside ag- gression."" They also could in- tervene if member govern- ments were menaced by "an international plot backed by imperialism to topple the pro- gressive government."' ready undergoing. testing. Syrians gave a rousing wel- Unity Step Urged For Syria Regime come to the Iraqi delegation, whose government seized power a month ago. The Syrian coup is not ex- pected to restore fully the Egypt-Syria union severed by an anti-Nasser coup in Septem- ber, 1961. Like the Iraqi re- gime, Premier Salah Bitar's Syrian government is believed 4 favor a loose political federa- on, CITY FESTIVE Damascus was festive but vigilant as demonstrators surged through the streets de- manding union between Syria and Egypt. Tanks and army patrols roamed the capital. Security forces of the new regime hunted Communist leaders and other opponents of the Arab Un- ionist B'ath Party. Anti-aircraft guns were set up in squares and outside government build- ings. Bidault Appeal Jolted By Adenauer's Refusal MUNICH Anti - Gaullist leader Georges Bidault's bid for political asylum in West Ger- many received a jolt today when it was announced Chan- cellor Adenauer has refused to accept his letter making the re- quest. The announcement of Aden- auer's refusal was nade ds a government spokesman in Bonn as police questioned the former French premier about his acti- vities in West Germany. The Bonn spokesman told a press conference Bidault's let- ter had been taken by special messenger to Adenauer's home during the weekend but had been returned to the messenger immediately. The Bonn spokesman said "the letter has not been ac- cepted" but he stressed this did not mean political asylum had been refused. Asked to whom Budault must apply for asylum, he quoted a law stating that application police department in the area in which the applicant was resi- dent. In this case it would be Starn- berg, a lakeside town near Mu- nich, Informed sources said it was likely that.as a result of the questioning Bidault would either be arrested for a tormal investigation of his activitites in West Germany or taken to the frontier of his choice and ex- pelled from West Germany. Federal Prosecutor Antonius Berard told reporters today's interrogation had nothing to do with the former French pre- mier's request for political asy- lum in Germany. He said this was a matter for the Bavarian state government, although the federal govern- ment in Bonn "naturally" would give advice. _ Bidault, cool and immaculate in a grey overcoat, turned and posed for photographers on .he must be made to the foreign Steps of the police station after \ being '@¥iven there from his hideout villa. in the. village of Steinebach, on Lake Woerthsee, southeast of Munich- During the night, police main- -- a heavy. guard on the ASKED FOR ASYLUM The 63-year-old former pre- In 1958 he won over a Libera' by 35,428 votes, the largest mar. gin ever recorded by a federal candidate. Mr. McGee is married to-a daughter of Senator Grattan O'Leary of Ottawa and has three children. He was a de- partment store buyer before he entered politics. OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUTH Shortly before he left by air for Quebec, Mr. Diefenbaker mentioned to reporters that both Mr. Asselin and Mr. Mc- Gee are in their thirties and said their appointment "'repre- Sents an opportunity for young men to serve." "There's an accentuation on youth in public service," He was asked why the ap- pointments were made now ra- ther than after the election and- he replied: "'Now's the time to make these appointments." Cabinet ministers who admin- ister departments receive $15,- 000 a year plus a $2,000 car allowance. Ministers without portfolio receive $7,500 a year. These payments are in addition to an annual parliamentary in- demnity of $8,000 a year and an expense allowance of $2,000 a year. The allowance is tax-free for MPs but not: for senators. mier and foreign minister § asked for asylum immediately after he was found Sunday in the Bavarian village. The discovery of Bidault, po- litical chief of the terrorist movement sworn to overthrow de Gaulle, puts a new strain on French-West German relations. Bidault's request for asylum was referred to Chancellor Ad- enauer, who may order him ex- pelled to some third country, probably Austria or Switzer- land. Extradition to France ap- peared unlikely, since he is wanted on a political charge-- treason. Extradition on political charges is barred by interna- tional law. GEORGE BIDAULT

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