Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Mar 1963, p. 1

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'THOUGHT FOR TODAY When the time comes for Junior to drive the family car--don't stand in his way. She Oshawa VOL, 92--NO. 68 Price Not 10 Conte Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1963. r t Bw ia pireoaay ok Wer COMPANION KILLED Wally Lorz, 23, his face -scratched and bleeding from rock fall below San Fran- cisco's famed Cliff House yes- terday, is comforted by a hos- 'pital attendant. Lorz was stranded, clinging precarious- ly to an outcrop of rock over- looking the Pacific Ocean. His companion Michael J. Mac- Donald, 24, went to his aid and fell from the cliff to his death in the surf below. The two boys are members of touring Catholic Youth Organ- ization rugby team from Van- couver, B.C, --AP Wirephoto Kennedy Reports On San Jose Talk WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- se tonight on Gort lc, cont Comedia tha tly ities based in Cuba. -aBea ta esis Jose late Wednesday. he an- nounced he would open & 6 p.m. EST Washington press confer- ence with a statement on his Monday - through - Wednesday talks with the presidents of Panama, Costa Rica, El) Salva- dor, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras. The press conference will be carried live on NBC, CBS and ABC radio networks. It also will be carried live on television by NBC, Kennedy, who left Washington| last Friday for a weekend in Palm Beach, Fla., before going te San Jose Monday, returned here Wednesday night. As he did throughout his stay in Costa Rica, the president emphasized the theme that the hemisphere nations must co-op- erate to achieve stronger econ- omies and a larger measure of social justice through '"'peac2ful revolution." The presidents at the Costa Rica conference in a Declara- tion of Central America agreed to speed up their fledgling com- mon market which: would tie in later with a Latin American free trade area. In a five-point economic pro- gram, Kennedy agreed to: 1, Consider long-term loans to finance an. economic feasibility survey; 2. Provide a develop- ment fund to further economic integwation; 3. Offer funds for loans to private industry; Provide technical and financial 4.| aid for a system of home mort- Bage loans; 5. Set up a multi- million dollar panned nf fund in indus- NICE, France (Reuters)--A senior official of King Saud's court here denied today that the monarch had made a direct per- 'sonal statement to Radio Mecca charging 'a crashed jetliner was blown up by a bomb. "It is not the King's practice to send messages," the Saudi Arabian protocol chief, Abdel Monhem Akil, told reporters, "and above all he would not King Denies Reports On Jet Crash -- Mecca radio broadcast charges by Saud that a bomb jthe crash be gee in the U.S Italian Alps 50 rmuies north of i cichte & were i en persons j aboard the king's British-made) comet jet. A rescue party which reached Rancher Drives Four Months To See Queen BROOME, Australia his wife, who took four months driving 750 miles across the out- back to see the Queen and Prince Philip, today received a special invitation to meet ihe royal couple. Howard Stafford and his wife started out from their ranch in December and arrived here at sundown Wednesday night. When told of their arrival, the Queen and Philip asked to meet them during their two-hour visit to this once-flourishing pearl- diving port. The Staffords abandoned their house trailer with a broken_axle 94 miles from here, but carried on in a truck with two dogs, a cat, a cockatoo and a crimson- wing bird. The Queen also talked to a busload of aboriginal children who had come from Derby, 140 miles away, and arrived just as the royal couple left to rejoin the royal yacht Britannia, an- chored offshore. Se The yacht had arrived in hot sunshine, and the Queen and PI then came ashore in the . The Queen wore a ception. the . airliner reportegt no survi- vors, WEATHER TURNS BAD Avalanches and bad weather today kept rescue crews and in- vestigation teams from setting out immediately for the crash site 6,000 feet up. Police waited for heavy fog to clear so heli- \copters could take them there. (Reut-| Saud's protocol chief made ers)--A cattle ranch owner and) his statement after Swiss of cials cast cold water on the me- dia of sabotage. The protocol chief said he had not heard 'the broadcast but it was possible that in broadcast- ing news of the crash Radio Mecca had speculated on the possibility of bomb sabotage. DESCRIBED AS RECORDING Reports. on-;the . broadcast from Amman and Beirut said the Mecca station quoted Saud as having made. his charges in a radio-telephone hookup. It was claimed in Beirut that the broadcast heard there was a tape-recording of the King's voice. The Middle East political sit- uation has darkened for Saud since last month with the revol- utions in Iraq and Syria and current moves aimed at linking them with Gamal Abdel Nas- A wall of the Wellemeye Fumiture Company store in the north 'central. Iowa town of Klemme, came tumbling down Wednesday as a result of a fire which first destroy- WALL TUMBLES DOWN ed the interior of the building. Cause of the blaze in the two- storey brick building was not immediately determitied. Don- ald 'Bacon, the store owner, CANBERRA (Reuters)--Aus- vote tatay to seoport the inate vote to lation of a United States naval radio eye basemmata for west ern At Rat in the radio station' for A Polaris submar- ines now has earned the formal approval of Australia's two ma- jor parties, it remained a con- troversial issue. The Labor party's insurgent left' wing, echoing similar -de- bates which have occurred in Britain' and' Canada, charged that the: base. exposed Australia to the risk of. becoming involved in a nuclear war. Left-wing members of the La- bor party leadership said after the 'voting they would' attempt to reverse the decision at a meeting in: July. _|tralia's opposition Labor ia | Prime Minister Sir. Robert estimated the loss at between $40,000 and $50,000, imcluding $15,000 to $20,000 worth of furniture. -AP Wirephoto Menzies, whose. ruling, Liberal- Minap | party holds an adyan- tage of only two seats in the House of Reatires tie. party had attached so many qualifications to its support for the U.§, ed that' it "threatens tion's. establishment." ser's Egypt, bitterly opposed to Saud. Mecca radio was reported to have quoted the King as saying that when .his plane "'reached me ed had, potent a ponte ex- ploded blew up: the [with ] Ceetent Communist eration, residents 1 To ask the Sreanization of American States for early ac- tion to counteract Castro-Com- munist subversion. 2. To hold a meeting of se- curity officials at the cabinet level within four weeks--prob- ably at Managua, Nicaragua-- to plan measures Communist money, propaganda and arms from Cuba 3. To arrange for more rapid and complete exchange of in- telligence on such movements. U.S. "LONG PIG' FAT SAID UNFIT LONDON (Reuters)-- Polynesian cannibals no longer allow their tribes to eat Americans because their fat is contaminated with insecticides, Lord Shackleton told the House of Lords Wednesday. He told the story during a discussion on the toxic dangers of chemicals in food. "We are rather more edi- ble than the Americans," Lord Shackleton, a Labor party peer, said amid laughter. "Recent figures published show we have two parts per million DDT in our bodies, whereas the figure for Americans .is about eleven parts per million." 400 Reported Dead In Bali Eruptions JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)-- Bali Island's rampaging Agung volcano has killed at least 400 persons, a spokesman for the Indonesian civil defence organ- ization said today. The spokesman said there was an increasing threat of more violent eruptions from the 10,380-foot volcano in northeast |Bali and President Sukarno had | |zone, It was not clear immeiiately whether the increased death to!) was due to new eruptions. Pre- viously, officials. had put the death toll at 150 or more. A' Red Cross source said lat- fest reports listed. 125 known injured. However, in view of the jump in the death toll, the num- ber of injured also was expected to rise sharply. The volcano--quiet for more than a century--erupted brisfty Feb. 19, killing 17 persons, then lapsed into a lull. Last Sunday it began spewing out rock and lava. The civil defence spokesman) said some 250,000 persons are} |being evacuated from an area| }20 miles around the volcano. Bill On Firefighters Rapped By Opposition TORONTO (CP)--Opposition members charged Wednesday that the Ontario government has given in to municipal coun- cils by passing legislation ex- cluding deputy fire chiefs from fire department collective bar- gaining units. Ray Edwards (L -- Went- worth). said in the legislature that deputy chiefs throughout the province had voted 41 against any move to remove them from the bargaining unit. "In many cases the deputy chief has the title only as a title and rides the rig and works as an ordinary fireman," Mr. Ed- wards said. The amendment to provincial legislation given second reading or approval in principle Wed- nesday was '"'not in complete harmony wjth the wishes of the Ontario Firefighters' Associa- tion," Mr. Edwards said. NDP Leader Donald C. Mac- Donald said it was a "serious violation" of the government's policy to pass the amendment at a time when "more people should be given' collective -bar- gaining rights rather than less." He said the government had given in to the wishes of the Ontario. Municipal. Associa- tion, Deputy chiefs, like ordinary firemen, had the right to "free association on an economic front," the NDP leader said: CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS Vernon Singer (L--Toronto- York Centre) said he objected "strenuously" to the principle of the amendment. Similar leg- POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 islati had been introduced Attorney-General Cass asked Mr. Singer to 'produce figures rather than words" about the number of police officers in re- lation to policemen. He defended the amendment regarding deputy fire chiefs as a move to separate manage- ment from the bargaining unit. "The deputy chief is manage- ment" because the deputy is in command in the absence of the chief, Mr. Cass said his that deputy chiefs should be re- garded as management was "supported by a brief of the Ontario Municipal! Association,"| However, the amendment did not mean the deputy would be} deprived of bargaining rights e said. Fire departments! would have, two bargaining} units--one for firefighters and one for chiefs and deputies. some years ago for some ranks in police forces, he said, and) "in Many areas now there are more chiefs than Indians" in HOSPITAL 723-2211 police forces. Another section provides for| a reduction in the maximum! | work week for firemen from| the present 56 hours to 48 hours effective Jan. 1, 1064 |declared the island a disaster | decision Reuters news Saud as saying in a "message to his subjects: "The plane crashed with its entire load. Certain members of the retinue were on board whose names will be revealed to you, God willing, later." Reuters said that it had er- roneously interpreted the mes- sage as saying the King said he 'would. name the persons re- sponsible for the conspiracy. The plane crashed on Monte Matto in the Argentera Moun- these plots and those base acts.""| DETROIT (AP)--Health aw thorities still seek positive an- swers today to whether contam- inated tuna caused two food poisoning deaths and, if so, how many cans from the same batch still are on pantry shelves. If any of the 5,760 cans shipped to Detroit area A. and P. food stores were contami- nated, was there more than one? Were there others among the 26,400 cans of Japanese tuna packed the same day by tain area of the Italian Alps. the same west coast packer? 104-DAY SHUTDOWN NEW YORK (AP) -- Mayor Robert F. Wagner charted a new course today for settlement of the 104-day New York news- paper shutdown. He announced that negotia- tors for the publishers of eight closed newspapers and for the striking Mailers Union reached tentative. agreement on terms for a new contract, The mailers are a sister un- ion of the printers, whose strike jagainst four newspapers last |Dec. 8 led to the shutdown of the city's major newspapers. Wagner. urged that members of Local Six of the Interna- tional Typographical Union re- consider his formula for settling their strike. He suggested that a membership meeting be held next Sunday at Madison Square Garden for a new vote. Wagner, who has been trying for almost two months to end the shutdown, announced the Mailers Union settlement and his proposal to speed a printer [settlement in a statement at 2:30 a.m. EST. Negotiations in- | volving two other newspaper unions were in progress at the time. The mayor recommended that Bertram A. Powers, presi- YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... GM Awarded Defence Contracts . Bell Plans Toll-Free Call Extension .... Page 13 Page 13 County «+» Page 13 Len Hagerman Checker Champ Apartment Bylaw Change Urged ..... Page 13 Traffic Fines Total $1,000 ........ Page 13 Record United viet Union manned research satellite) Mire. called Cosmos VIII today, Soviet news agency Tass series for the continuation the Soviet space rese gram .origi nally March 16 of last year, said. Counties Budget ... Page 3 Tevolution is 80.77 minutes, New Tack Tried To Settle Strike dent of Local Six, call a meet- ing in Madison Square Garden to provide larger accommoda- tions for the men to.hold a sec- ond vote on his settlement. for- mula which the publishers have accepted, Local Six--which rejected his proposal Jast Sunday by a 64- vote margin -- has a regular monthly membership. meeting scheduled for next Sunday in a jhall much smaller than the Gar- den. The 9,000 members of Local Six. are eligible to vote. A little more than, 3,000 are employed on newspapers. The 6,000 print- ers employed in commercial shops are usually hesitant to vote on newspaper issues. At last Sunday's meeting 3,178 printers voted. The tally showed 1,621 to reject Wagner's terms and 1,557 to accept. Food Poisoning Dea 'Experts say the answers may, be several days away. Two Detroit women died of food poisoning tentatively diag- nosed. as 'type E_ botulism," a rare type generally associated with marine life from ex- tremely cold waters. (In Toronto, a spokesman for Canadian A, and P. denied that canned tuna will be withdrawn from sale in its Canadian stores, ("This report has nothing to jdo with the Canadian market," |the spokesman said. "We have never imported canned.. tuna from the United States. We get most of our tuna from British Columbia.") Ralph Johnson, U.S. Food and Drug Administration bacteriol- ogist. at Detroit, said "we have some toxic (poison) cultures" from the can from which the women ate, and that "'prelimin- ary indications make us very suspicious." But he was not ready to say whether it was type E or whether the tuna would have been responsible. About a dozen cans from the Germans Urged To Halt Arms For Egyptians JERUSALEM (Reuters) '--' Foreign Minister Gold Meir has déscribed West German scien- tists working for Egypt as an evil crew with a Nazi inclina- |tion to hatred of Israel, She called on the West Ger- man government Wednesday to Stop the scientists from work- ing on Egyptian .weapons, in- cluding ones. she, said~ are Russia Orbits Unmanned Cosmos XIII MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So- Jaunched an un- the! Te- ported. | Tass described the launching} as routine and said the equip-| and Dr. ment aboatd Cosmos XII was|trian who Swiss auth functioning ' normally, back information which was be- ing processed at the Soviet co- ordinating-computing centre. sending | | The satellite was one of the! of arch pro- announced Tass| ; Cosmos XII, another of the| jseries, was launched last Dec. |Ben Gal 23. iy at The sputnik's initial pe by international, law. Mrs. Meir was addressing parliament 'on the case of two alleged Israeli agents held in Switzerland on suspicion of try- ing to stop West German sci- entists working - for' Egypt on tockets by threatening their relatives. Israel and. Egypt, neighbors, rind been . at heer for many Meir's - statement had been approved at an extraordi- |Nary session of the cabinet. The two. alleged agents are Josef Ben Gal, 33, of Tel-Aviv, Otto Joklik, an Aus: orities say worked for the Egyptian goy- ernment until he fled last. year. Swiss justice authorities said Ben Gal and Joklik are sus- pected of trying to exert pres- sure on West German physicist Paul Hoetcke through. his 25- jyear-old daughter Heidi to stop his work for Egypt. A West German court has issued arrest warrants against and Joklik on the | grounds that they are suspected 1 shelves- negative in FDA tests. F Milton P. Duffy, chief of Cali- fornia's food and drug inspec- tion, said at San Francisco he was confident a full checkout would show fo tuna botulism involved. He said that the can- nery is completely new and modern. George T. Daughters, Detroit FDA chief, said that if botulism is proved in the case it will be the first in his 40 years experi- ence that had been traced to a commercially canned product. The last known occurrence was in the mid-1920s and was in canned ripe olives,.-he said. Mrs, Margaret. McCarthy, 39, died in Detroit Tuesday, three days after her neighbor, Mrs. Collette Brown, 37, with whom she. had shared a tuna fish snack late last week. Both de- veloped symptoms resembling type-E. botulism. The tin from which they ate was traced to a consignment of 120 cases to Detroit area A. and P. food stores. A. and. P. ordered all A+ and P. brand tuna withdrawn: tem- porarily from its »4,400° super- markets across the United States. realistic action, 'which rarely allows manded. of the Labor: vote meant that the United States. would -not be able to use the facilities of the Station 'except with the agree- ment of whatever Australian political. party happened to be in power. "It will clearly be 'seen that this is a most dangerous and frustrating condition," Menzies said. "Tt means that.if the United States becomes involved in hos- tilities with some common en- emy, and the Australian gov- ernment is disposed to isolate 'itself under a> cloak: of neutral- ity, a direct. blow will be:struck against the United States and against its, effect conduct of naval warfare." Menzies declared hotly: "I 'only hope htis miserable com- promise- will 'not inflict serious charged later that 'the Labor' Opponents 'of the Labor, party declared' this' would place un- limitations on the United States in the context of present-day iightning. military time for the consultation de- Menzies charted the condition) "°! 'By 'Auaahone: b erga on Australias' sere The by Fy base, costing 000, " ) as much again for housing and other facilities," is scheduled to operating by 1966. The base was believed to be key installation in world-wide American strategic use of Po- latis submarines, and Austra- lian officials said the only' simi- lar station was in Maine. Sub Bases Protested By Italians ROME (AP)--"No missiles in Italy. words wete, scrawled across a score of. placards tield high by pro-Communist demion- strators 'marching down a: road near the Gioia del Colle NATO missile 'base in southern. Italy. the. ig: a, modernization. Somé critics call it a concession to neutral- ism, if not to the Kremlin. The shift has become a major issue in Italian politics, moving toward. elections April 28-29. Premier Amintore Fanfani, campaigning for a new lease on Parliament for his centredeft government, is walking a tight- Ris neutralist socialist allies, once allies of communism, are claiming credit for getting the Jupiters out of Italy--and sup- posedly removing the threat of Soviet retaliation. His rightist opponents, inelud- ing some members of his own Christian Democrat party, de- mand to know whether the re- moval of the Jupiters repre- sents an Italian retreat from 'its NATO: commitments. Fanfani's government says it doesn't, that NATO is just mod- ernizing. : Communists insist Fanfant will grant Italian bases for Po- laris subs as soon as -the elec. tions are over. Rightists. con- tend he should commit himself now and ignore. the socialists, Fanfani says the question is one for the post-election. govern- ment. socialite, stands with her of trying to murder Dr. Hans Kleinwaechter, bridegroom - to - be Mahara- jkumar Thondup Namgyal, just before their wedding in Gangtok, Sikkim, yesterday. Mi f SOCIALITE WEDS ROYALTY Hope Cooke,- 22, New York the Crown Prince of Sikkim, 'The c rown prince is a 39year- old widower with three chil-: dren. (AP Wirephote)

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