Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jun 1963, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY "The meeting room of the ladies' club is where they knock after entering. he Oshawa Fimes cr WEATHER REPORT ~ Mostly sunny today and Friday. Chance of thundershowers. Con. tinuing hot. ~ A VOL. 92--NO. 151 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JU NE 27, 1963 Authorized es Second Closs Mail Post Office Deportment, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES PRE SIDENT KENNEDY FINDS HIMSELF SURROUNDED AT RECEPTION OTTAWA (CP)--The minority |Liberal government pushes on |with its legislative program in ____|the Commons today after riding out a 13-day storm sparked by Grits Survive Storm Stirred Up By Budget sharp criticisms of the budget) made Tuesday by Quebec Lib-) eral Premier Jean Lesage. | Former transport munister Leon Balcer said Mr. Lesage's | | Mr. Hellyer said nuclear dumps are planned for Chat- ham, N.B., Bagotville, Que., Ot- tawa, North Bay and Comox, B.C. Voodoo jet interceptors Kennedy Visits Family Homestead In Ireland DUNGANSTOWN, Ireland (AP) -- President Kennedy re- turned to the homestead of his manure pile has been removed) from a nearby field, and the farm animals are gone. Sudbury Brac 'For Walkout At INCo. SUDBURY (CP)--The United In the field behind the farm-|Steelworkers of America (CLC) house, where the presidential/here is preparing for a walkout helicopter was parked, several at the International Nickel Com. es the budget. By a vote of 119 to 74 the government was upheld Wed- nesday in the budget debate. Social Credit MPs. sided with the Liberals while the New Democrats, for the second time in three days, abstained from voting. The vote concluded the six- day debate on Finance Minis- ter Walter Gordon's June 13 budget. Today the Commons "violent denunciations" of the!are based at all five stations. federal Liberals "'increased the|The minister added that con- strain on Confederation' and| struction will, not go ahead until warranted an urgent debate. {a nuclear custody agreement Speaker Alan Macnaughton| and technical agreements are ruled the motion out of order.|signed withthe United States. He said the subject could be| Mr. Cameron said it was a discussed later during the|'gross discourtesy" for govern- budget debate. jment: spokesmen to announce Mr. Balcer and other Con-|this move before the Commons servatives appealed the ruling|could be informed. Mr. Hellyer and Mr. Speaker said rulings on|said his department had issued such motions cannot be ap-|no press release. jand that he will Irish forefathers today and; Hundreds of jubilant Irish|dozen children assembled as a|pany of Canada Limited and the drank tea in the barnyard with! milled around the lane in front|"guard of honor" the little girls)city is bracing itself for a strike. cousins and their neighbors. of Mrs. Ryan's home. The president's third cousin, The president came to the |--starched and combed--looked| Donald McNabb, 'president of uncomfortable but pretty. _|the Steelworkers' Sudbury local Mrs, Ryan served the presi-|6500, said Wednesday a strike will consider a government bill to establish a department of in- dustry. The Conservatives started the pealed. Mr. . Balcer appealed) this ruling but the Speaker was} upheld by a vote of 108 to 107.| The question period amd the other developments left only 13 minutes. for the conclusion of The vote on the budget rep-|the budget debate in the abbre- widow Mary Ann Ryan, laid) hamlet of Dunganstown after a Wednesday session with a mo- long tables for tea, cakes and| tumultuous welcome from thous-|dent his tea, which he took with) deadline pies to serve "cousin Jack." Neighbors, some in their Sun-|port from which Patrick Ken-|Wich and chatted in complete| 'The welfare committee is be-| day best and some in aprons,|nedy sailed to the United States.|informality with the Irish farm-|ing appointed as well as picket helped serve. The party assembled in the barnyard between Mrs. Ryan's! house and the tin-roofed cottage the president's great - grand- father Patrick Kennedy left when he emigrated to Boston 120 years ago. The cottage now is stor shed, The hut, last visited by Ken-| nedy when he was a congress-|farmhouses, a country lane and| welcome from about 250,000 ju-| | J man in 1947, bears a sign iden- tifying it as the Kennedy home-| stead. It has been cleaned up| for Kennedy. The barnyard has/a Kennedy and she introduced] ing 'welcome home, John Ken-|but said it may be too late and been covered with concrete, alcousis, uncles and aunts. nedy,"' as the presidential mo-|@Sked for an earlier date. ands at nearby New Ross, the} "Tf he hadn't left, I'd be work-| ing at the Albatross Company," Kennedy told the welcomers. drawing a roar of laughter. The Albatross Company is a fertilizer factory on the other) side of the River Barrow. The president arrived in New | 'age|Ross by helicopter and drove| Ryan and "all the Kennedy: |to his ancestral home, Dungans-| who stayed here" for the party town consists of a couple of} a few pastures, | The farmyard was crammed) with Kennedys, Mrs, Ryan was torcade drove to the residence! JFK Must Show Practical Plan BONN (AP)--The attraction of a new-generation president on this continent ruled by old men is not enough to shake the old) men out of their ways--or to| get the Atlantic alliance mov- ing on the '"'great new mission" which President Kennedy pro- posed.: The president faces the chai- lenge of producing a practical program to convert his oratory} into action. In his speech at| Frankfurt Tuesday he spelled out what he wants but not now to get it. The address explained in part why Kennedy made this visit. He wanted a platform in Europe from which to counter French President de Gaulle's go-it-alone aspirations for Eu- rope. | Kennedy replied to the 73-| year-old de Gaulle's rejection of) U.S. - European interdepend-| ence by reasserting his deter-| mination to get it. But the president cannot lead the rest of the alliance around de Gaulle's roadblock unless * other allies co-operate cific projects He is assured of co-operation from Chancellor Adenauer on all issues involving resistance to the Russians and 'building up NATO military forces. on spe- |, by the Profumo scandal that he| is hardly able to lead his gov-| ernment any more. Italy is in political turmoil as} a result of last April's inconclu- sive general election. For weeks Italy has been without effective leadership, and no solution is in sight before fall. Elsewhere in the alliance, Prime Minister Pearson ,having| committed his Canadian govy- ernment to arm some weapons with nuclear warheads, is re- ported reluctant to get involved in the proposed NATO nuclear fleet project at this time, Thus one specific Kennedy project is stalled for the mo- ment. Adenauer and Kennedy agreed the NATO nuclear force plan should not be an exclu- sive U.S.-German force. Ken-| nedy may ge} the project mov-| ing in a few months, but. his timetable is definitely slowed down. i His partnership goals, how-| ever, are much broader. He wants the European na tions formng the Common Mar cet -- France, West Germany! Italy, Belgium, The Nether. lands, and Luxembourg--to join the United States in sweeping tariff reductions. Preliminary talks have not |--ticker tapes and torn paper|last contract expired during the may be announced sugar.. He munched on a sand-|within a few days. 1 a a gid a Lpgegipar |captains, he said. The 10-man found 6 "hicrennne cae oe bargaining committee = ~ nae ll-man executive met behin -- he ke He picked it up and closed doors Wednesday to plan He did the honors in cutting Walaa kana tidal Lestie a white cake baked in the farm- Rowntree stepped i Wednes. house. ' i day to arrange new union-com- The president thanked wei pany negotiations to avert a strike by 13,400 Steelworkers at} Inco's Sudbury and Port Col-} borne plants. bilant Irishmen Wednesday as| Mr. McNabb told the minister he arrived from West Germany. the union will attend the meet- Dubliners waved banners read-|!ng, set for July 3 im Toronto, Kennedy received a. ringing} The strike was authorized of U.S. Ambassador Matthew| Tuesday when more than 8,000 McCloskey. \Sudbury Steelworkers over- As the Kennedy party crove|whelmingly rejected the latest past the general post office--|company offers. where a famed battle for Irish} The men have worked without independence was fought in 1916|a contract for 18 months. The rained from windows. |Steelworkers' prolonged strug- gle to wrest bargaining rights at the plants from the Intema-| tional Union of Mine, Mill and | Smelter Workers (Ind.). ] Major issues which. have dead-| locked alks are company re- jfusal to check off union dues jand the union's rejection of the ;company's proposed pension jplan Final Chance For Change In Race Rule ee TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian|mendous mandate cast in Tues- delegates to the Optimist Inter-|day's strike vote is an indica- national convention today are/tion of the strong support of the down to their last chance to bargaining committee and its push through a_ constitutional! demands. amendment giving charter. -- membership privileges to Ne- Two U.K. "tre-| groes, The amendment would make Negroes eligible to become} charter members of -Optimist} clubs. They now are permitted Soldiers Released In Yemen ADEN (Reuters)--Two of 18 to join once a club has been/British soldiers held by Yemeni formed. |tribesmen have been released A resolution asking the policy|because of iliness and are be- be changed was tabled Monday|ing flown to Aden, an army by the resolutions committee of spokesman announced today. the convention. But Herbert T.| The other 16 servicemen to-| Barnes of Toronto said Wednes-|day were removed at gunpoint} day pressure from the floor/from the Yemeni customs post} could cause the directors to) where they were being held, and! bring the resolution forward be--were presumed to be heading} fore the convention ends today.|for Ta'izz, capital of Yemen, the! Mr. Barnes said in a state-,army spokesman said, | ment that he hopes the 2,000; The two men being returned) delegates from all parts of Can-'to Aden were Senior Aircrafts-| ada and the United States would)men T. P. R. Loftus and M, D.} _ja tion to set aside the day's busi- ness in order that the Commons might hold a special debate on Paris Traffic Hit By Subway Strike PARIS (Reuters) -- A Paris subway strike today turned the morning rush hour into a com- muter's nightmare, creating) monster traffic jams and forc- ing thousands of people to walk in the rain. It was the second straight of stoppages in protest against new pay scales. Of the city's 14| subway limes, only five were/ground that there was no ur- Tunning normally, | resented a test of Commons strength for the goverment which is six members short of a majority. | When Mr. Balcer's motion) was rejected, Colin Cameron} (NDP -- Nanaimo - Cowichan- The Islands) submitted another seeking an emergency debate on the government's nuclear policies. Mr. Cameron quoted a report! by The Canadian Press that the| defence department already is) planning to build nuclear war-! head dumps at five RCAF sta-| tions across Canada. | Defence Minister Paul Hellyer confirmed the report, but Speaker Macnaughton rejected Mr. gency of debate. YARMOUTH, N.S. first engagement by catchin fire and sinking? You try to salvage the boat again, says Eddie Kohn, whose ship, the Fleurus, went to the bottom at dockside here Wed- nesday. The 37 - freighter--c year - old converted 1 its first voyage as port-hopping Noah's Ark-- caught fire about 2 p.m. and 135 firemen battled the blaze in the hold. The 35 performers and crew members escaped uninjured. A zebra, drowned when water poured into the ship's hold, was the only fatality of more than 20 animals. The 1,100-ton Al G. Kelly and Miller Brothers boat was load- ing to leave for a second en- gagement at Shelburne, N.S., when the fire broke out. Cause of the blaze was not immedi- ately known, : UNLOAD CAGES Six cages of wild animals-- including lions, leopards, cou- gars, tigers and bears--were taken off the ship by crane. Circus Ship Fire Ends Ist Program (CP) -- private pastures offered by lo- |What do you do for an encore|cal residents. The circus person- when your circus ship ends its|nel--30 men and five women--| ig |W | | |and get the show on the waves|day for jts premiere perform- | Atlantic. But in Britain, Prime Minis-/gone as well for Kennedy's pur- ter Macmillan is so paralyzed|pose as U.S. officials hoped they would, largely because of } France. The president also wants Eu- ropean allies to carry more of the cost of helping underde- veloped countries and to join with the United States in form- ing common monetary policies. He is particularly concerned that the Usited States is still spending more money abroad than it is taking in. He asked acceptance of a guiding principle that trade bar- riers should be lowered and that no Western nation seek eco- nomic advantage at the expense of the others. The president recognized that) when there is no crisis with |Russia the Western powers |draw apart. He argued. that the lallies need positive goals to unite them ahd proposed a part- nership dedicated to building a AUDITORIUM ESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 | about make it known that "they do not want to practise discrimina- tion aga'nst any race or color." LONDON (Reuters) -- Joseph Godber, previously. minister of state for foreign affairs, has been appointed war minister in place of John Profumo, it was announced today. Profumo resigned office three weeks ago after admitting he lied to the House of Commons his relations with 21- year-old model Christine Kee- ler Godber, 49, had been minister of state at the foreign office since 1961. U.K. Names New Minister: Of War McEwan. They were handed| Three elenhants walked to! jover to a British doctor, the) safety and ponies and dogs "Spokesman said. __|were led to the wharf by circus | workers. A white stallion anda brahma bull were washed out of the hold and swam to shore when the 'ship filled with water. Fire men st oodbywi tghhih- Firemen stood by with high- powered rifles while the ani- |mals were being unloaded. engaged in farming and horti-|CTowds feii back quickly when jculture, an exempt occupation.|the lions' cage slipped from its |He took part in civil defence|cable and landed on its end. 'and other public service. The cage didn't break. Godber entered Parliament as|_The animals were taken to a Conservative in 1951. He be-} ne gan his ministerial career as a} government whip and in 1957 ;was made joint parliamentary |secretary to the ministry of ag- jriculture, moving to the f gn loffice in 1960 as joint LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -- The jmentary undersecretary. 'rian government is inves- Godber earlier this month wasjtigating charges that an anti- named to the Privy Council, the|smuggling patrol sank four gi- Report Of Sinking Probed In Nigeria $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 . , $50,000 | "new social order, founded on liberty and justice." Thus, in opposition to de} Gaulle's concept of a loose Eu- ropean confederation increas-' He has been a familiar figure|group which advises the Queen, | at Geneva where he was Brit-\and from which Profumo was) ain's chief delegate to the dis-/removed Wednesday. armament and test ban talks. Thomas was a bomber pilot His post now will be taken by|in the war and was shot down! ant canoes in the Gulf of Gui- nea last weekend with the loss of 200 lives. I. A. Brown, a member of Parliamen, claimed that the ingly independent of the United|Peter Thomas, parliamentary/over Germany in 1941, bécom-jcanoes -- runnihg contraband States, Kennedy put forward the|undersecretary at the foreign'ing a prisoner of War for four|from the Spanish island of Fer- vision of a unified Europe closely linked to the. United States and moving toward a union of Atlantic powers. U office. years He followed Godber to nando Po--were attacked from Unlike Profumo, Godber had the foreign office in 1961 from the sea-and air by- "squads of no military career in the Sec- the labor ministry, ond World War when he was'was pesievuentary secretary. where he|the lice." customs . reventive -- serv- ere billited in rooms and tents. | The Fleurus, out of St. Peters- burg, Fla., arrived here Tues- ance, three weeks late because of engine trouble. At one point she drifted for six days on the! It reached port with a severe list to starboard, caused by three elephants, all stowed on one side of the hold. A former Gulf Coast freighter for the Clarke Steamship Com- pany, the ship had been idle for four years before being bought last month by the circus com- pany. Capt. L. Brown, skipper of the ship, said he would attempt to have the Fleurus refloated as soon as possible. Only the fun- nel and the masts were above Cameron's motion on the; viated 34-hour Wednesday sit- i¢ HELLYER QUESTIONS RCN BUILDING PLAN More Finances Sought For Weapons Selection OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min- ister Hellyer indicated today he wants to scrap the eight-ship, $374,000,000 naval fnigate pro- gram initiated by the former government to give him finan- cial room to manoeuvre in se- lection of new weapons, He also hinted before the Commons defence committee that more transport aircraft will be obtained to carry at least one 6,000 - mam army brigade reject the RCAF's proposal for acquisition of more CF-104 low-level nu- clear jet bombers. Mr. Hellyer, in his first. ma- jor policy speech since he ase sumed the defence _ portfolio April 22, said at one point: "All major procurement pro- grams ate being reconsidered. In particular, any procurement program which would tend to limit future policy or interfere ting. with the exercise of future op- Government Aids Uranium Mines OTTAWA (CP)--A new lease on life was given to two Ontario mining communities by the fed- eral government's announce- ment Wednesday that it will buy and stockpile uranium for one year from two mines in Elliot Lake and one in Bancroft. Iyyime Minister Pearson's an- nouncement emphasized this was strictly a short-term meas- ure to give the government time to develop alternate em- " {ployment for the two communi- ties. He said to stockpile uranium any longer could force down uranium prices for many years. The mines affected are Fara- day Uranium Mines Limited at Bancroft, and Milliken and Con- solidated Denison at Elliot Lake Officiais of the three mines expressed approval of the gov- ernment action. But Edward Futterer, chairman of Mr. Pear- son's committee to investigate the economic future of Elliot Lake, said he is disappointed. Mr. Futterer said the commit- tee had hoped that the govern- ment would stockpile sufficient uranium to continue production at the existing mines until 1970. He said by then the demand for the mineral is expected to reach another peak, SUGGESTS LOANS A. W. Johnstone, president of Faraday, also suggested that the government arrange produc. tion loans for the industry against concentrates companies expect to sell in the next five years. E. B. Gillamders, executive the 30-foot water. Loss of the} vessel and perfonmers' belong- ings was estimated at $150,000. vice-president of Rio Algom ment the mine would have closed. July 31, putting 450 men out of work. He said a second Rio Algom mine, Nordic, would stay open until 1971 under arrangements made previously to a stretch production, stockpile could unsettle the uranium industry by causing fears of lower uranium prices. Mr. Gillanders said he agreed with the government that a big tions is being carefully re- viewed, "One of the programs is the general purpose frigate pro= gram. It is a project involving the expenditure of large sums of money. For this reason all present and likely future options have to be carefully considered" before proceeding." One of these options, he said, was construction of fast, anti- submarine hydrofoil boats. @ $9,100,000 contract was awarded to de Havilland aircraft of Can' ada Limited last month for @ prototype 200-ton hydrofoil. Mr. Hellyer said he hopes de- cisions on existing weapons proj- ects will be taken "within a few weeks." After that, a general review of future policy would start. He said he is "considerably concerned" about-the effective- ness of the four CF-104 squad- rons to be based om France be+ cause France does not allow American nuclear warheads on her territory. "We intend to review care- fully the question before pro- ceeding with any additional pros curement," the 39-year-old mine ister said. Mr. Hellyer said CF-104 tar gets would not include popula- tion centres as such. Targets would be dockyards, airfields, radar installations, military headquarters, fuel dumps and transportation facilities. : "The yield of the (nuclear) bomb assigned would depend on the particular target but in most of these cases would be relatively low-yiekl --. a very small fraction of figures (one megaton or 1,000,000 tons of TNT) which have been used in the Commons and in the press." A. W. Stollery, vice-president of Denison Mines, said the stockpiling should keep the El- liot Lake and Bancroft: areas go- ing until an increased demand for uranium expected in 1968. Mr. Pearson had promised as- sistance to Elliot Lake during the last election campaign. The community is within his home constituency of Algoma East. REVIEW WARRANTED Concerning reinforcements for the navy: brigade in Europe in wartime, Mr. Hellyer said a re- view is warranted to determine whether the commitment -- to send two more brigades to Eu- rope--should be changed "or whether steps should be taken to increase substantially the 're- lality' of the reserve components YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Oshawa Water Pumpage Sets Record ... ... Page 13 Pedestrian Safety Plaque Given ..... Page 13 Two Injured In Motor Accidents .. Page 13 Navy Announces Firing Practice .... Page 3 Oshawa Man Wins Track Meet ....... Page 13 Church Conference Opens Tonight ... Page 13 Pastor Inducted At Southminster ... Page 13 Mines Limited, owner of Milli- ken, said without the announce- |in today's circumstances." On the Bomare anti-aircraft missile, Mr, Hellyer said the weapon "is an effective anti- bomber weapon -- as good as anything we have available." | (In the 1960 Commons de- fence committee Mr. Hellyer seconded a CCF motion that program be lthe Bomare | scrapped.) . | "The effectiveness of the sys- tem is sufficient to justify the maintenance costs involved," Mr. Hellyer said. : He said Canada's two Bomare squadrons originally were to have been deployed in northern New York State and Michigan. Canada had persuaded the U.S. to change these plans. Mr. Hellyer said a special ad- visory group has been set up in the department to consider future policy. Two visitors from the U.S.S.R. toured the Oshawa plant of General Motors Wed- nesday. Shown during | the eight-hour visit to the City are Cs "TOUR OF OSHAWA PLANT left to right, C. V. Coulson, of Toronto, who is a member of the Canada-U.S.S.R. Society; Don Sandford of the GMC Public Relations Dept., Osh- awa; I.P. Sidorovich, direc- .tor of Minsk Truck Plant-- manufacturers of heavy-duty trucks for minthg and lumber project; N. Popov, an inter- preter from Toronto, and P, E. Medvedev, head of the Vitebsk Educational Institute, which is a teachers' college in the U.S.S.R.

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