Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Nov 1963, p. 1

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Briain samc wilh neem ere Worcs rasiee Community "THOUGHT FOR TODAY Usually the girl who laughs at all her husband's jokes has beautiful teeth. t Drive Calls For Final Oshawa Gune Push WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy with occasional showers and snowflurries Thurs- day. VOL. 92 -- NO. 265 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1963 Authorized os Second Class Mai) Post Office Ottawa and for payment of Cash. Postage in Ca EIGHTEEN PAGES U.S. TROOPS HEAD FOR Men of Operation Big Lift, all troopers of the 2nd Armor- ed Division, board C-135 plane at Rhein -- main airbase at Frankfort; Germany, Mon- day, in first stage of return to base in Texas, The: airlift to Europe began last October. 22 and lasted only 63 hours and 20 minutes. The redeveiop- ment will take 10 days. The troops were rushed away in a 'UK. Tories Expand HOME * School Construction | LONDON (CP)--Prime Min-|Lord Dilhorne. The Queen has|reform to reverse the anti-Con-) lister. Sir Alec Douglas-Home's|cancelled »ublie appearances|servative trend. Wilson con- demonstration of U.S. ability |new Conservative government|because she is expecting her|tends the government can't to ferry large quantities of men to overseas trouble spots quickly. (AP Wirephoto) Meany Says Takeover Hitler-Like Procedure NEW YORK (CP)--Presidentiless of the merits of the indi-|ment on individual rights under George Meany of the AFL-CIO reiterated his opposition today vidual dispute involved. "The basic question is: Do we {the Canadian Bill of Rights. In Vancouver, Mr. Justice to the Canadian government's|agree to outside control; he|Victor L: Dryer, who heads the maritime union trusteeship. |said. answerin,: "Under no cir- "T am oppose¢ t. government|cumstances." control of trade unions here in! He added: the United States .. . in Ger- "A strike-breakei is a strike- jthree-man board of trustees, jplaced in control of the SIU and jfour other maritime unions last month, said the board intends many under a Hitler, in Russia|breaker, a scab is a scab and/to "continue its present course" under a Stalin and in the Dom-jyou don't change it by putting despite the SIU's legal plans. inion of Canada," the United States labor leader said. ja union label on it." Heads of the SIU in Canada He wa addressing the AFL-| and the United States said Mon- CIO's maritime tnades depart-|qay plans are being mapped for|SIU in the U.S. and head of! ment convention, which is ex- pected to give backing to the Seafarers' International Union in its fight against trusteeship over the SIU and four other! maritime unions. in. Canada... - | Meany said the cardinal prin. ciple of trade unionism is that the union be free, controlled by| its membership and not by any| outsie force. ms | "When we fight control of| trade unions by government,| we don't draw any lines." | He said this was true regard-| | t a concerted drive -- within the limits of the law--to have the trusteeship removed. Harold C; Banks, Canadian SIU: president, said SIU law- ; |yers will launch a court fight} against. the trusteeship legisla- tion in Montreal, seeking an immediate injunction against its application pending a court de- cision on its validity. Banks told reporters the SIU will charge that the la wis un- constitutional and an infringe- FORMS GOVERNMENT Moro May Give Posts To Reds Only a court order would stop action by the trustees, Paul Hall, president of the jthe Maritime Trades Depart- ment, also promised a continu- ing fight against the trusteeship "We intend to fight at every level that we can fight .. . subject:to the laws-of the jand," Hall. said. The means of maintaining the fight will be determined by pol- icy adopted at the MTD con- vention, he said, but he men- tioned three steps he expected to be pursued: Selective picketing of Cana- dian ships in U.S, ports; at- tempts to get acros3 to the pub- \tic--especially in Canada--what the SIU states are the real is- sues involved in the dispute; and moves to enlist help from WS. legislative bodies, TO HEAR POLICY Resolutions dealing with MTD policy on the SIU Great Lakes labor dispute were expected to today for consideration by dele- embarked today on a cfucial|fourth child. 0 struggle for victory in next) As Parliament reopened, poli-| year's genera' election with ajtical expectancy was higher jcall for modernization of Brit-| than at any time since the 1959 lish industry to get the full pro-|g-neral election. A classic con- ductive benefits of the age of|test seeme in the making be- automa*ion. tween Douglas-Home, a 60-year- The government, in thejold Scottish aristocrat who saed speech from the throne opening|six noble titles, to succeed Har- the new session of Parliament,|old Macmillan, and the Labor also announced plans for sweep-|party's sharp-tongued, 47-year- ing improvements in social ser-|old leader, Harold Wilson. vices, | Recent byelections and public The speech, written by Sir|opinion polis indicate strongly Alec's cabinet, promised toj|that if national elections were strive for world peace and "'to|held today, the Soyer hohe support the freedom of West|would suffer defeat and Britain Berlin." would have a Labor government | The Queen's speech was readjfor the first time since 1954. | to a joint session of the House| Douglas-Home is relying on a) of Lords and th House of Com-|program of housing and educa-| mons by the lord chancellor,|tional expansion and sonar, Mother Bitter As Doctors Save Girl CLEVELAND (AP) -- Eng- lish-born blonde Mrs. Lily Simko was fused, broke: ited, but most of all she was bitter-- at everyone. (Tiiree floors up in an operating "rpom, --surgepns were amputating the right {leg of Christine, her . 14-year-old daughter,.at the hip and in- cluded half the pelvis, Seated in a corridor of Metro- jpolitan General Hospital, Mrs. |Simko remain unreconciled to |thé facts. "What kind of life lean my daughter have now?" | broke her She asked as sobs | voice. | Christine had a life-or-death question hanging over her. She jhad a malignant tumor in her right hip. Doctors all agreed only removal of the entire leg-- even including the _hip--could Save the girl's life. Otherwise, life expectancy was reduced to jbe placed before the convention! six to 18 months, | Now Christine has a reason- ROME--Aldo Moro, Christian life, ensuring liberty and polit-\gates from 29 affiliated unions\able chance to be cured during Democrat party's secretary, to- day began consultations with a view to forming a government which would include left-wingjcialists will hold cabinet' posts| the ope Socialists for the first time in 16 years. He received in turn leaders of; each of the four prospective co- alition partners. First to call on the premier designate was a group of Social|in Parliament but were not part| Democrats led by Party Secre- tary Giuseppe Saragat. Moro, 47, "accepted with re- serve' President Antonio Seg ni's invitation to form a centre- left government Monday night. He said he would move quickly in his consultdtions in an attempt to form a govern- ment which would deal with It- aly's disturbing economic situa- tion. He also pledged a profound renewal of social and political HELP The Chest CLIMB 261,800 250,000 _ _ 225,000 _ 200,000 _ 175,000 _ __ 150,000 __125,000 100,000 __ __75,000 __ 50,000 _ 25,000 Start. ----+---- } ical | power for broader sections of society. If he succeeds the Marxist So- for the first time in 16 years. SUPPORT PREVIOUSLY The Socialists supported Amintore Fanfani's centre-left coalition government last year of it. The Fanfani government re- signed in June after April elec-jof fighting at a press confer-|Minister Sir Alec Dougias-Home| with total membership of nearly |1,000,000. Hall, in a keynote speech at ning of the three - day {MTD convention, which pre- \Cedes the national convention of the American Federation of La- jbor-Congress of Industrial Or- jganizations, said: "The fight will not end now-- jthe fight cannot end now." | He expanded on the methods ja five-year period. Every week and month brings added hope, doctors say. | A team of four surgeons com- pleted the operation in five hours Monday. All went | Sir Alec Takes | Seat In Commons LONDON (Reute:'s) -- Prime tions in which the Christianjence later, where he also an-|officir lly took his seat in the Democrats lost more than 700,- 000 votes, the Socialists held their own and the Communists |nounced that the SIU has lodged an official complaint with. the U.S. labor department over al- |House of Commons today at the opening of Parliament. Ruling Conservative party gained an impressive 1,000,000|teged hiring of private detec-|legislators erupted in cheers as votes, Political sources speculated the Christian Democrats would have about 15 seats in the cabi- net, Socialists five, Social Dem- ocrats three and the Republi- cans one or two. The minority Christian Demo- crat government of Giovanni Leone which ruled since the summer, resigned a week ago. It was formed after Moro ried unsuccessfully to form a government in May and June. Government May Enlarge Kingston Pen KINGSTON (CP) -- Allan J. MacLeod, federal commissioner of penitentiaries, said in an in- terview here today the justice department has plans for a tives in the U.S. by. Upper Lakes Shipping Limited of Toronto. Douglas - Home was admitted lt the House as a new member, Russians | MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet foreign office informed the U.S. 'embassy today that Professor Fred C, Barghoorn of Yale Uni- Arrest Yale Professor versity has been arrested as a j spy. Barghoorn, 52, is an expert on Soviet affairs and was on the siaff of the U.S. embassy in Moscow from 1942.to 1947. Since then he has been a member of the political science faculty at Yale. The embassy said the foreign joffice declined to indicate where Baghoorn had been arrested. |Embassy officials were not al- lowed to see him. He came to the Soviet' Union large prison complex--possibly| around Oct. 1 on a. month's tour- for this area. ist visa. Mr, MacLeod said "the site) Barghoorn, of New Haven, has yet to be selected," but|Conn., is the author of a book mentioned only Kingston as ajcalled The Soviet Cultural Of- |day to three men who escaped pleaded guilty likely site for the institution, to be started next year. Mr. MacLeod did not say when the department 'would of- tha to house about 150 difficult On- tario convicts, |fensive. Barghoorn had been here be- jfore and was believed once to 'have been a member of a join! F. C. BARGHOORN of. Western embassies|about the arrest, or on. what and the Western press. __|grounds the spy charge was The embassy spokesman said|based. smoothly. Christine will be out of bed in a few days. She will walk, first with crutches and then under physical therapy; treatment with an artificial limb, Since her hip is gone, the limb will have to be attached from a strap around the waist. Mrs, Simko never consented they believe she feared Chris- tine would one day blame her for the loss of the leg. to the operation. Doctors said)m raise the money to make good on its promises, In advance of the throne speech, Education Minister Sir Edward Boyle Monday night an- rovwnced a four-year expanded program of school construction costing £80,000,000 ($240,000,000) | | a year. Boyle said building levels would be increased one-third to| % handle Britain's growing prim- ary and secondary school pop- ulation and replace worn - out buildings. He said £24,000,000 would be set aside in 1965-66 or t ort schools, and £4,000,000 for schools for handicapped chil- dren. In the throne speech today the government promised to: --Further centralize Brit- ain's defence structure. --Plan redevelopment of depressed areas in central Scotland and northeast Eng- land. ~--Improve the transport and road system. --Move forward with the development of higher edu- cation to inorease the coun- try's pool of qualified sci- entists and engineers. Increase hind rate. of héme building. } The. basic a the govern- echnica] and industrial| ? LEAVES LOVE NOTE Erda Michela Kuhrig, 25, unemployed airline steward- ess was found dead in a San Francisco hotel room yester- day. A note was found beside the body which said she was taking her own life because of unrequited love. She came here only a month ago from New York. (AP Wirephoto) 3 More Dead As Filipinos - ment said, is encourage growth without inflation and to odernize those sections of Britain still living in a 19th-cen- tury world of old - fashioned heavy industry. Given To MONTREAL (CP) -- Prelim- inar. hearing of Hal C. Banks, president of the Seafarers' In- ternational Union of Canada (Ind.), on a charge of Cconspir- acy to commit assault was post- poned today to Dec. 18. Two other SIU members -- Paul Ernest Carsh, 38, and El- don (Jack) Richareson--facing similar charges were remanded to the same date. All three are free on $2,000 cash bail each, fixed during their arraignment last week. The trio appeared briefly be-| fore Judge Armand Cloutier of Sessions Court. ' No reason for the postpone- ment was given in court. Crown Prosecutor Jean Martineau told the court the new date had been jagreed upon in the presence of \Chief Sessi Judge Ed Month's Remand |with several persons and smil- jing frequently. d the SIU, at the time. Banks Montreal's top defence lawyers, had not appeared in the case previously. The accused were represented at their anraign- ment by Jc-eph Nuss and Mr. Cross. Mr. Nuss was one of the coun- sel for the SIU during the Nor- ris inquiry into violence on the Great Lakes. | Before the court was called to| order, Banks stood in a cor- ner of the courtroom chatting The charges against the trio were laid in connection with the 1957 beating of Capt. Henry Francis Walsh in Owen Sound, Ont. Capt. Walsh was an organ- izer for the Canadian Merchant Service Guild (CLC), a rival of | Archambault. Defence counsel Joseph Co-| jhen, representing Banks, and Myer Gross, representing the other two, both said their clients agneed to the postponement. There was court speculation! that a special judg-- will be) named to handie the prelimin-| ary hearing, expected to be a jlong one. Mr. Cohen, considered one of Escaping Jail -- 'Costs Man |4More Years -- FREDERICTON (CP) --} | Prison terms ranging up to five| |years were handed out here to-) |last week from the New Bruns- jwick central reformatory at nearby Kingsclear. Willard Daigle, 23, and_his| jbrother, Stanley, 19, both of Bathurst, N.B., and Gary Bur-|' |ger, 20, of St. Catharines, Ont., | charges of escaping custody and}rested on contempt charges |robbery with violence. Willarc Daigle was sentenced jto four years for the robbery jand a. additional three menths |\fclally announce the site but,service which read Soviet ma- authoritie had been unable tc|for the break, His brother Stan- initial construction wou!d/gazines and newspapers for the get any additional information| ley jinvolveé a special detention unit! benefit was sentenced to three years. plus three months and| [Burger will serve a two-year term plus three months. |Court, however, denied a hear- last week to! Supreme Court | | Backs Ruling To Halt Pickets WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. Supreme Court let stand un- changed today an injunction is- sued by an Ohio court against picketing by U.S union mem- bers at the Toledo berth of a Canadian ship, the James Nor- ris, A county court in Toledo is- sued the injunction and it. re- sulted in arrest and seven pick- ets of the AFL-CIO Inland Boat- men's Union. Counsel for the pickets ap- pesicd to the "J.S. Supreme Court, questioning authority of the county court, The Supreme ing with no comment. It noted that Justice Arthur Goldberg, rmer labor secretary, had dis- qualified himself in the case. The seven pickets' were ar- Cast Ballots MANILA (AP) -- Three more political killings were reported as Filipinos voted in large num- bers today for eight senators and 13,000 municipal and pro- vineial officials. The new deaths brought the official political toll since Sept. 1 to 19 killed and 44 wounded. Violence is characteristic of Philippine politics and the de- fence department said the situa- tion today was generally peace- ul ful. The election provided a baro- meter of President Diosdado Macapagal's popularity after nearly two years in office. The president and his Liberal party hoped to win control of the Sen- ate, which has, been split 12-12 between the Liberals and the opposition Nacionalista party |since Macapagal took power. Both parties made Macapa- gal's administration the chief is- sue, emphasizing the underde- veloped country's economic problems. The president blamed many of his problems on what he called Nacionalista obstruc- tion in the Senate. The Liberals needed an even split of the eight seats at stake to win a majority in the Senate. | been. fina. Timmins Flooded TIMMINS (CP)--Five empty buses plunged into the bowels of the earth early today when an abandoned mine shaft on which they were parked col- lapsed. Three of the buses disap- peared from sight, but another two could be seen, washed by 7,000 gallons of gasoline that *|poured from a 14,000 - gallon tank perched _ precariously avove the 60-foot-wide hole. Police , said they could not see the bottom of the shaftn but estimated it was at least 70 feet deep. They said they expected the storage tank to slide in any minute. Firemen stood by while oil company workers disconnected pipes leading from the threat- ened tank to three other stor- age units. Provincial mining officials and police sought information about the abandoned shaft, hop- ing to evacuate other danger areas before further collapses occur. "There's nothing wé can do until we locate maps of the mine working area," said Ro- bert Lockhart, provincial min- ing inspector for the area. The mine, once operated by Moneta Porcupine Mines Lim- ited, was closed in the 1940s, Police believe a platform was built over the mouth and cov- ered with nt. The site. has Limited, as @ storage. area for eight year's. " Hydro officials were disman- tling a transformer pole a few feet from the hole and Ontario Northlands Railways, which has a line running 15 feet away, was Madame Nhu Suffering LOS ANGELES (AP)--Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu is suffering from exhaustion, a doctor said Mon- day night, and again has post- poned a trip to Rome to see her three youngest children. "She is completely exhausted and in no condition to fly,"' said Dr. John Sharpe. Mme. Nhu had planned .to leave for Rome today but the doctor advised her to wait until Thursday or Fri- day. Dr. Sharpe, a Beverly Hills Physician, was called to the Bel, Air home of Mr. and Mrs. Al- len Chase, where the former "first lady" of South Viet Nam is staying. Mrs. Chase said Mme. Nhu had complained "she felt very, very tired and weak." O EMPTY BUSES PLUNG INTO ABANDONED MIN Shaft By Gas moving equipment and box cars out of the area. Officials of Hollinger Cons0l- idated Gold Mines Limited said gasoline that poured into the shaft could threaten operations at Canada's second largest gold mine, operated by the company. The working areas of the two mines burrow near each other and, in the past, water from the abandoned mine has seeped into the gold mine. They fear the gasoline will also seep through. No one witnessed the cave-in. It was first reported by a pa- trolling constable who went to investigate a noise which he thought was caused by soneone breaking into the premises. J. J. McRae, owner of Tim- mins Coach Lines which oper- ated the buses, said the cave-in occurred an hour before four drivers were to arrive to get the buses ready. for a day's work. He said they were valued at $40,000, Mission Seeks To Avert Tiff On Arms Ban UNITED NATIONS (AP) = A - go-between of = countries ert geass the UN General pei 90 - minute conference =) with Soviet Ambassador K. V. Novikov. Nigerian Ambassador §. 0. Adebo, head of the group named by the 46 nations spon- soring the general disarmament resolution, said he hoped to find out whether there was any Exhaustion-MD seins 'orciner."° ™ Pret The 46 sponsors had hoped for unanimous approval of their pro- posal calling on the Geneva dis- armament committee to step up efforts toward agreement in limited areas as well as on com- plete and general disarmament. The sponsors had expected to reach a vote last week after the United States and Britain signi- fied approval. But the Russians circulated a working paper among delegations Friday sug- gesting changes. The snag caused anxitty among delegates who had hoped that the restraint shown by both the Russians and the West- ern powers in fhe. arms debate this year promised some pro- gress toward a di: agreement. while cruising 'n the vicinity of the James Norris, owned by, Ypper Lakes Shipping Limited of Toronto. They carried signs stating their union protested 'Upper! Lakes shipping lockout of SIU (Seafarers' International Union) | of Canada." | Marion E. .Masters, dairy man, is taking no chances during Missouri's deer hunt- ing season that begins next Sunday. Here, he wields a paint brush to convert "Irene" into a walking billboard. Mas- ters has a herd of 100 regi- stered Jerseys and says that "Irene" is easily worth $800. HOPES HUNTERS CAN READ "One careless deér hunter could make her 'Goodnight Irene',"" he said. : {AP Wirephoto)

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