to Community A penny saved is a penny earn- ed, and the taxpayer who man- ages to save one has earned it. Home Siretch WEATHER REPORT Wednesday cloudy with a few sunny intervals. Continuing mild, hest Drive Entering be Oshawa Time Authorized as Second Closs Mail Post Office Department, Gtows ond: for payment of Pastage in Coch, OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1963 THIRTY-SIX PAGES VOL. 92 -- NO. 259 * : parmenstonnenenegean of > 'GIVE TRUSTEES TIME' LABOR CONGRESS TOLD Nobel Prizes Split MacDonald Urges By Five Scientists Ye ee ee stances which differ in molecu- lar weight. ; The two chemistry winners specialized in fundamental me- thods of guiding the construc- tion of large organic molecules and opened the way for numer- | ous new products such as syn- SHARE CHEMISTRY AWARD |thetic detergents, anti-knock in- Another West German, Pro-|credients for gasoline and' new essor Kar] Ziegler, shared the plastics. ith Giali with Glalio| INVENTED DYNAMITE The award money comes from a $9,000,000 bequest by the late NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) The federal marine union trus- tees should be given an oppor- tunity to do a thorough clean- up of Jabor lawlessness on the Great Lakes, Donald MacDon- ald, secretary-treasurer of the Canadian Labor Congress, said today. Mr. MacDonald said the three trustees appointed by the fed- eral government to control five marine unions are facing a dif- ficult and thankless task. "They have really only just and as effectively as possible, We want to see honest, demo- cratic trade unionism estab- lished for the men on the Great Lakes--and we will be satisfied with nothing less." Mr. MacDonald said the CLC is co-operating with the govern- ment trusteeship although it op- poses the principle of trusteé- ship. At the same time, the congress, central body of trade unionism in Canada, had re- tained its full right to criticize any action of the trustees which begun their job," he told the|contravenes the principles of annual "convention of the On-|trade unionism. tario Federation of Labor. He said the Congress tried to "We are in a time of testing|achieve a private trusteeship |now. It is only reasonable that|but when this proved impossible we should give the trustees an|'"it was a matter of cnoosing opportunity to fulfil the respon-jthe lesser of two evils--a pub- lic trusteeship or the Banks STOCKHOLM (Reuters)--jtween Professor Maria Goep- The Swedish Academy of Sci-|pert-Mayer, 57, of the Univer- jentists today awarded the No-|sity of California and Professor MEETS SON FOR FIRST TIME bel Prizes for physics and/Hans Jensen of Heidelberg Uni- jchemistry to a total of five sci-|versity. They received the Mrs. Louie Yuet-Sun and enter Canada recently. It was jentists. Three of them split the) award for discoveries concern- her husband, Fuk Kiang, hold the first time the boy had {Physics prize and the other twojing nuclear shell structure. five-year-old son David dur- Kong David remained in deen tila father. brother and shared the chemistry award. ing reunion in Ottawa today. Ottawa with friends. The Chi- -- ' i Two American scientists, one The son was born during a nese couple were allowed to (CP Wirephoto) |g woman, and a West German! Tee ee eae . ~~ |scientist, shared the physics} A ; |jaward for their fundamental to-ltonta ar fete evo frase the nature 0 nu-/ 'The Nobel committee said/ CARAT PHYSICS: |Professor Ziegler, of the Max ( | Each award was worth 265,-|Planck Institute for Carbon Re-|Alfred Nobel, inventor of dyna- |000 Swedish crowns ($51,000). |search at Mulheim, West Ger-\Mite, who directed that the in- | | Di 's Broth Given - Half the physics award went|many, ¢ terest of the bequest be distrib- ysics | y, and Professor Natta of To Rebel Viet Forces 9 rei eer ne cinemas fied se sgee Sis Seek \61, Princeton University for ltis|ogy won the prize for their dis-| The aber 1963 Nobel winners, contributions to the theory Of|coveries in the field of chemis- visit here by Mrs. Louie who was later deported to Hong- sister. of law. "Ngo. Dinh Nhu, his closest ad-\nome Can was building there. SAIGON--Ngo Dinh Can, boss|private reliable sources havejbe assumed by the chairman of\the atomic nucleus and element of Central Viet Nam in the re-|been widespread in Saigon that/the military revolutionary com-|particles, gime of his brother President|they were assassinated. mittee and the executive power! he other half was split be- |try and technology of high po- |lymers. ' Polymers are related sub- Ngo Dinh Diem, was turned! will be delegated to the provi-| over to South Viet Nam's new CLAIM BODIES FOUND' -- sional government headed by revolutionary government today, Unconfirmed reports circu-/the prime minister." after he sought asylum at ihe|!ated a Hue, capital of Central! But there were growing signs U.S. consulate at Hue. Viet Nam, that 180 bodies had o¢ giscontent among younger of- a ; been found in a mass grave at! rip, in th df US. officials were understood) ,..,; : icers in the armed forces. , ; Can's mansion there. : ' to have received assurances They were unhappy to see the Can "'would not be lynched and oa were found in an old French ar- tight hold on power despite the receive the due process is |senal on property owned by Can appointment of former vice -| ermMsTEDT, West Germany Reds Still Del : prt Responsible Vietnamese offici-| is. headed Maj.-Gen.| A Som nan cay aaa ees tr Sage eet, Gaon U.S. APMY Convoy standing by, but as a heavy rain pelted the vehicles only one So- viet soldier |was visible. The steel-helmeted sentry manned a heavy machifie-gun on an arm- ored car. The gun was uncov- ered and pointing diagonally across the road. The blockade -- the third in- Several ao jeeps also were selected last month, are: the 1963 Peace Prize, the Interna- tional Red Cross and League of Red Cross Societies; medicine, Britons Andrew Fielding Hux- ley and Alan Lloyd Hodgkin, and Australian Sir John Carew Eccles; and literature, Greek Giorgos Seferis. The formal award ceremony for all but the peace winner will be held Dec. 12 in Stockholm. Pauling will receive his prize at Oslo, Mrs. Goeppert-Mayer is the second woman to be awarded a Nobel physics prize. Marie Cu- rie of France shared the prize with her husband in 1903. She also received a chemistry prize PREMIER RESIGNS Italian Premier Giovanni Leone arrives at his office in Rome this morning for @ meeting of his cabinet to re- sign and clear the way for an. attempt to. give Italy a centre-left <minority govern- ment, Leone, a stopgap prem- ier, later presented his resig- dont Adbend |sibilities which they have ac- | cel |situation cleaned up as quickly pted. "We want to see this whole Canada Buys Three Oberon | S ] . 1 OTTAWA (CP)=The govern-| ment. has decided to proceed with purchase of three conven- nation to Presi in 1911. Segni. (AP Wirephoto) volving allied convoys in less than a month)-- caused concern | in Washington. Again it centred on the issue) of who is te{make the rules for} allied milit-fy convoy travel on the autobahn. The Russians de- manded a head count of U.S. soldiers on the vehicles, and the Americans refused. The U.S. Army's Berlin gar- riso postponed a training exer- cise scheduled to start today for |24 hours. The army insisted the} troops were mot placed on the alert, but army officials. pre- sumably felt it was wiser to keep the men in their barracks in readiness. In West Berlin,. U.S., British and French commandants con- ferred and reported they were 'in complete agreement on the| jissues involved and how to deal| with the situation." A US. Army spokesman called the blockade a 'flagrant |violation of the Western allies' junrestricted right of access to |Berlin, for which actions the So- |viets must bear the full respon- sibility for any consequences." | | Ontario Suffers | 18 Forest Fires | | TORONTO (CP) -- Eighteen fires were burning today in On- tario forests, the department of lands and forests reported. There were 11 fires in the Fort Frances area, four in Ke-| nora and one each in the Sioux]! Lookout, Sault Ste. Marie and Tweed districts. Fire conditions at Kenora, Fort Frances, Port Arthur and Sudbury were rated as high by the department. MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont-, Paul Asselin, president of thejat last year's rates. The fed- real longshoremen want their'2,200-member stevedores local,'eration has announced that back pay paid more quickly, said his members are also com- lump payments representing the and some of them hint at the/plaining but haven't yet planned'wage increases will be paid Berlin autobahn went into its é | Foreign observers believed|tween those from the south' and] The 12-vehicle, 44-man convoy Paper Claims : jwhen the coup overthtew Di-|Van Luong, whose police ar-|blocked their path. Two other South Vietnamese President| Can was flown 400 milesitransfer power to a POpUu-| voy, which was stopped at the Joseph Fried, the news cor- over to the revolutionaries. tically asked which side Amer- goda* formerly the headquarters| ROME (AP) -- The three There they were put on a com- coup which deposed him . pytie B ' [can do.' Mme. Nhu's brother - in - law) cans, is considering returning to a provisional constitution Mon-| The archbishop is in Rome for|Mme. Nhu's eighth-floor hotel dent's attention to the rebel revision and the "'legislative,volt in South Viet Nam last\mer secret service ufficer who 250,000 possibility of another work stop-|any moves. ec. 6. page to get it. . He had written to the Ship-| Mr.. Taylor said the checkers : shoremen's Association (CLC)| The back. pay is due because / the payments date, and made |premier. ary government said they com-|charged that Can ruled his bai-| among the ruling gener-|The Americans were boxed in line probably would be tried by|those from the centre' of Viet|tried to run the blockade just / ige Offer | jlong prison term. jdent discontent over the release) Soviet personnel carriers jem's regime last weekend, went | rested thousands of students\Soviet personnel carriers NEW YORK (AP)--The New Consular officials notified the) The Viet Nam press agency; A Soviet radio command car Ngo Dinh Diem spurned two at- south to Saigon in a U.S, mil-|larly elected one "when tae si-'Marienborn checkpoint on the Diem's life during the coup in;ment. It was not known whether, oa respondent in Saigon, gives this LODGE WELCOMED Nhu Children the U.S. Embassy late Friday warm welcome from Buddhists ica supported. lof the Buddhist campaign Younger children of Mme. Ngo|mercial airliner for Rome. adding: 'I am concerned for/measures against the Buddhist|P!@%¢ today from Saigon tojaide says Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu, and Nhu. "But Diem brushed off the re- minded the coup, held power)4Md two girls 11 and 4. Their|children in Rome. The News says Lodge in a day. night. jthe Vatican ecumenical coun.|suite since the military coup command's offer of safe conduct quoting the Provisional Consti.\dent Ngo Dinh Diem-and their) Most of the messages were and executive powers are tne we The children at the has accompanied Mme, Nhu on ' jsort 150 miles north of Saigon. | whelmingly sympathetic reac- € est The agency continued: 'The 225,000 150,000 | Leo Taylor, president of the} ping Federation of Canada ask-|feel Dec. 6 is too late. ___ 75,000 said 50 of his members haveithe ILA, in its contract with the!no attempt to discuss a com- cuss the back pay question./strike, won pay increases ret-|work stoppages, he said, but he Start _ | Jnot working. strike Oct. 4, men were paid|more members petition for it. [lust "wouthh of "Hue. "Mobs Mon-|president Nguyen Ngoc Tho, 8|(ap)-"a Soviel' blockade of A viser, were captured by the) Buddhist leader s, students) 'The officers also were un-/second day today with no indi- mitted suicide, but reports from|liwick as a bloody tyrant. als themselves, particularly be-/by the Russians. the new government and given|Nam. inside East Germany early this Can, who dropped from sight/of Diem's interior minister, Buijroared out of nearby woods and Diem Safety to the U.S. consulate in Hue during last summer's crack-|parked behind the convoy, box- York Daily News says that revolutionary government. said the government would was parked ahead of the con- tempts. by U.S. Ambassador itary plane and turned over to/tuation permits." It gave no in-| western end of the 110 - mile Saigon. he knew he was to be turned| account: U.S. Ambassador Henry Ca- ° afternoon as the rebels con- when he and his wife paid al Await Mother ~ "Lodge replied that he could against the Diem government. }Dinh Nhu, former, first lady of {our personal safety. Please let|majority 'await the arrival of their/heartened by a number of sym- The military revolution-|Archbishop Ngo Ding Thuc of the United States after a offer and insisted on resisting irmly in its hands today after)mother was expected here Wed-| More than 3,000 telegrams second telephone conversation leil. jthat overthrew the regime of 'out of the country. CENTRALIZE POWERS jher brother-in-law Ngo Dinh tutional Act, said the old con-|father, who was Diem's closest sympathetic, he added tralized in the military revolu-jtime were in Dalat, a hill re-l\her U.S. tour, said the over. A U.S. Air Force plane flew|tion Mme Nhu has received CLIMB _ 200,000 125,000 influencial 400-man checkers lo-\ing for faster payment but had| He said the federation. gave 50 000 petitioned him for a_ special|Shipping Federation that settled! promise date with the union. Scheduling a special meeting cn\roactive to Jan. 1. Diem and asother brother,/day sacked and destroyed the!55-year-old Buddhist, as neWlij.s. military. convoy on the rebels Saturday. The revolution-land others in Hue long haveinappy to see signs of dissension\eation of cetreat by either side. jeither a death sentence or a} There also was rumored stu-| morning, but three armored Monday and asked for refuge.|down on the Buddhists. jing in the Americans. Henry Cabot Lodge to save Officials of the new govern-|dications when this might be. |Superhighway to West Berlin. "Diem telephoned Lodge at/pot Lodge today received a verged on his palace and fran- half-hour visit to the Xa Loi Pa-| make no decision in Saigon, Catholic Diem' s repressive South Viet Nam, arrived by) LOS ANGELES (AP) -- An last A st s | ' " ° me know. i' there is anything the vee posed hec|mother from the United States. pathetic messages from Ameri- ary committee, which master-|Hue, met the children--a boy 15|union with her three younger to the last." announcing a new cabinet and|nesday. and messags have poured into with Diem called the presi- The Viet Nam press agency, The children's uncle, Presi-\niem Friday, the aide said. HELP stitution was suspended pending|adviser, died in the military re-| (o|, William K. Eliscu, a for- I | tionary committee." authority of chief of state will'them to Thailand Monday night.|was surprising. 261,800 175,000 __100,000 cal of the International Long-|received no reply, he said. {no reason for picking Dec. 6 as méeting Monday, Noy. 11 to dis-\last month's 10-day waterfront. -He didn't want any - more 25,000 a working day means, in saa, From Jan. 1 to the start of|tion to call a meeting if 25 or > the tri Dockers Issue Threat , Capt. J. E. Matheson, assist: | jant general manager of the fed-| eration, denied there has been} jany unjustifiable delay in mak- ling back payments, and said ithe ILA had requested payment by Nov. 25, J The federation's lawyers, in a letter to Mr. Taylor, told him the. federation intends to hold 'him liable for any damages they |suffer if he can't control his ;members, and they would also} and ILA members een liable. | pregnant, Brazen T Rob Alexandra LONDON (AP) -- A brazen buglar broke into Princess Al- exandra's palatial subur- ban home Monday night and escaped with jewels valued at thousands of pounds. Scotland Yard responded by laying on a search rivalling those mounted for major crimes, Thirty tracker dogs were brought in, roadblocks set up and squads of police assigned to comb the grounds. Finger- print experts went through the house. The Princess, cousin of Queen Elizabeth and one of the most popular members of the Royal Family, is not assigned a de- tective except for public func- tions. The intruder scooped up all the jewelry from the dressing rooms and bedrooms on the second floor. Some of the loot was costume jewelry of small value. Some also was reported hieves brooch woth £4,800. The jewels lost in both cases were recov- ered. The princess, 26 and 12th in the succession the throne, was in the house at the time with her 35-year-old business- man husband, Angus Ogilvy. Ogilvy said when he arrived at his London office today he could tell "very little' about the robbery. Asked how the princess took it, he said "she has been very "We have not counted how much 'was taken. The finger- print men do not want anything| touched." A member of the household Staff disturbed an intruder in a second-floor bedroom and chal- lenged him. The intruder fled. The residence, in Richmond Park south of London, is a 12- bedroom Georgian house stand- ing in four acres of private gar- dens surrounded by 2,000 acres tinal Oberon-class submarines from Britain, Defence Minister Hellyer announced today. The purchase will run to ap- proximately $30,000,000. The submarine program was originally announced in April, 1962, by former Conservative defence minister Douglas Hark- ness. But no production-sharing arrangements could be worked out at that time with Britain. Mr. Hellyer, appearing before the Commons defence commit- tee, said Britain now has de- cided to share in development of an army _ reconnaissance drone by Canadair Limited, Montreal. He also said Britain will make defence purchases in Canada | * he did not specify them. WON'T BUY BOMBERS Mr. Hellyer confirmed that the government will not buy 66 additional CF-104 nuclear bomb- ers as mequested by the RCAF. However, .16. more CF-104 two- seaters have been orered to check out the operational read- iness of crews. for training purposes. Mr. Hellyer also confirmed! that no more Voodoo jet inter- ceptors will be bought for air defence command. The previous government acquired 66 of them of park. ~ fi This brings the total CF-104 order to 238 planes. 38 of them/northern Ji (President Hal C. Banks of the Seafarers International Union of Canada) reign of terror." "We had reached a point where we were faced with an effective public trusteeship or a continuation of the kind of thing that had been going on under this reign of terror on the lakes," he said, "We found no choice under circumstances and I find Cr ne could Mr. MacDonald also said that those who try to use the Great Lakes tion to destroy the relationship of international and national unions in Canada and the United States "are going to be disappointed." ' The statements were included in a text issued to the press before delivery. Premier Ikeda Escapes Knife Attack TOKYO (Reuters) -- Premier Hayato Ikeda escaped a knife attack by a young rightist while day night. Police said Takao Ishimoto, 24, a member of the Japan Pa- triotic Youth League, was ar- rested on charges of attempted murder and illegal possession of arms. Ishimoto approached Ikeda following a campaign speech in for home defence. to be wedding pr ts. -- the princess was. married in April. Princess Alexandra, who is was going through this her remaining jewelry morning to make an exact ac-|§ counting of what was missing. It was believed to total a sub- stantial amount. This is not the' princess' first jewel theft. In 1958, some of her jewelry was stolen from a friend's car in London, and: last year in Stockholm she lost a 8 Million Pounds Of Butter Lost ST. DENIS SUR RICHELIEU, Que (CP)--More than 8,000,000 pounds of butter were destroyed today when fire burnt half of a storage depot and processing l plant in St. Denis. Bernard Blanchard, son of fhe owner of the depot, estim the total loss at some $4,000,-| ! 000. 1; His father Leo was overcome by smoke while helping fire-| | men from St. Denis and St. Sours, on the Richelieu River 30 miles east of Montreal, fight the flames. Origin of the. fire was wn- 5 own. \ The butter was Being stored for the federal govérnment un-! der its dairy industry price-sup- port program. jis bound by the local constitu-|try to hold the local, the ILA} The plant employs some 300) people in summer and 100 in winter. Firefighter Bernard F. Woods tries unsuccessfully to revive tot by using mouth to " RESCUE Se Rea ATTEMPT mouth . resuscitation. The youngster and his brother, ages 6 and 5, i in a FAILS blaze that gutted their apart- ment in the Dorchester sec tion of Boston jast night. |