Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Nov 1963, p. 1

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Community Chest Drive Calls For Final Push She Oshawa Gimes == Cloudy with sunny periods to- day and Sunday. Warmer with Wea 85 NO ORD Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16,1963. yaa poymant of onoge ry 5 Men Die RUSSIA RELEASE In Crash VALE DROFE TORONTO (CP)--Five men--; The multiple crash occurred '« " ~~ | Plea By President THOUGHT FOR TODAY Those who say the auto has made people lazy probably never tried to pay for one. Oin Comh, EIGHTEEN PAGES including newly appointed Lib-| when an east-bound car blew a eral Senator Duncan K. Mac-|tire, plowed through a. steel Tavish, 64, of Ottawa -- were|cable in the centre of the four- killed Friday in a five -car|lane highway, and smashed into smash-up on the Queen Eliza-;westbound cars. Police said two of the dead beth Way west of here. Also dead are taxi - driver Frank Collinson, 56, of Toronto,| Ervin Daniel Kuttnich, 22, of suburban Downsview. Brian Kenneth Sandover, 22, of Port Washigton, B.C,, and Norman William Roger Redmond, 25, of Edmonton. Prime Minister Pearson and Progressive Conservative Leader Diefenbaker paid tri-| bute to Senator MacTavish, for-| mer president of the National Liberal Federation. were in a taxi and the remain- ing three were in westbound cars. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Vucetic of nearby Port Credit were in satisfactory condition in hospi- tal with minor injuries after the smash-up. The impact of the pile-up strewed wreckage of the vehicles along hundreds of feet TWISTED WRECK % | HAULED OFF QUEEN ELIZABETH WAY of the throughfare. All Mr. Vucetic could say after the accident was: Traffic was backed for ia aes mm ET -CIO Pot Simmers up miles while' police rerouted it to detour around the smashed jvehicles. It took several hours China Sights 'On Cambodia 'msco Barghoorn, arrested TOKYO. (AP) -- Communist China seems confident of mak- 'ing a major Southeast Asia despite costly United States attempts to de- fend that strategic area from communism. The target is penetration Cambodia, in a MOSCOW (AP), -- Professor in the Soviet Unign as a spy, was reparted to have left today by plane for London: Barghoorn, whose release was announced earlier by Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko, was reported by 'airport author- ities to have left on a British plane on a scheduled flight to Gromko close to infiltrators, South Viet! Nam claims Viet Cong guervil- las now use Cambodia as a base for raids across the bor- der. BROKE TIES Prince Sihanouk has broken diplomatic relations with South jungle nation next door to Laos, Thailand and South Viet Nam, where the United States has in- Viet Nam and Thailand, charg- ing both with border violations and plots against what he calls London. said Barg-|<, hoorn was being freed because of the "personal concern" of President Kennedy. Opened Cell Doors U.S. minister counsellor of the embassy, that Barghoorn, who was arrested on a charge of es- pionage, would be released and expelled from' the Soviet Union. dication ge . Barghoorn, "4 ica en B specialist in Sovie t affairs, would be released, The embassy gave out the sy in a brief statement which "The charge d'affaits ad in- With Canadian Issue accepting, th. trusteeship legislation, the CLC and its officers, the Norris investigation and other Cana- dian labor. leaders. Argentina Cuts Off Oil Ties BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- Ar- gentina Friday night ignored a U.S. warning of possible. serious consequences and annulled its multi - million - dollar oil con- tracts with eight United States and four other foreign compa- nies. President Arturo Illia carried through with a campaign pledge and issued decrees placing for- eign petroleum production and \vested heavily in blood and money. \ f Peking broadcasts boast that He abled stele of -- Cambodia's chief of mates oe ar 5 a ios : Prince Norodom Sihanouk, has| Viet wait in ds ching pledged close friendship and co-| ling that operation with Communist) He has expressed feeling tha' China. jcommunism aiready has tri- Sihanouk has explained he|Umphed in Viet Nam and the is grateful for "disinterested" |"est of what once was known Chinese help at a time when/|@s French Indochina. so - called imperialist nations| "The fate of Viet Nam ap- are threatening him, Peking|Pears to be sealed. That of my broadcasts say. Almost daily,/0wn country certainly yerefont the radio describes "friendly|2!so some time later," he has/' and cordial" talks* between Chi-/Said. : nese and Cambodian officials. | The prince appeared worried If the Chinese are able to es-|that Dg pit shor shat tablish a base of operations in|People, . square Cambodia, all of Southeast Asia) Would be able. to stay afloat in al be more seriously threat- or pee < crisis caremiting it, Cambodia's fong, ill-defined|policies were @ key reason for borders with its three eS supposed Communist tri pers bs = -- "Our American friends are : remarkable orgahizers, iia technicians and' excellent S0l- diers," he wrote. "But their in- contestable realism stops short Cambodia's neutrality. MOSCOW. (AP) -- The Soviet] te Union notified the U.S. embassy today it will release Yale pro-|,, fessor Frederick C. Barghoorn because of the "personal'"' con- cern of President Kennedy. Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko told Walter Stoessel, |before the highway was cleared |for normal use. The accident came on _ the first night of a Toronto police drive to reduce traffic acci- dents and deaths through a crackdown on- drivers. for government's NEW YORK (CP)--A certain;jment meetings Canadian |aciet has' settled over what has|¢h nit , Sisteeaht sFT.cto| Maritime union trusteeship-- become known at the AFL-CIO) 5. restated to AFL-CIO dele- national convention as "the Ca- cates Friday by CLC Executive jnadian issue'--the labor union Vice-President Joe Morris. dispute on the Great Lakes. |MANAGEMENT DUPE One motion accepted cailed| . F " . ; i yes'ion with ex-- MUST RETAIN RIGHT Jodoin a tool of management Priests ace | ese engi gat cosas He said the Canadian labor|and a disgrace to the labor lerupt at any time within the movement believes it must re-|movement. There was talk that uban Draft, lconvention. _ tain its right te make de¢isions/a committee set up to carry out Raul Claims | But now that the big 'noise Concerning its own national af-|policy calling for representa- MIAMI, Fila. (AP)--Premier lhas been made on the issue by|faits, and added: tions to the United Nations and) its Maritime Trades Depart: "I am confident that I speak|possible boycott of Canadian) ment, the AFL-C') seems to for the vast majority of trade|goods might seek- support from Castro's brother, Raul, said Friday that priests must regis- ter like anyone else for Cuba's stowed away the bass/UNionists in our country and forthe full AFL-CIO convention. | a of public ea the Canadian people generally,| There was ne such talk Fri- development under the controljnew army draft, and conceded te of the government - run oiljsome resistance already has A- its conv day, not even from Paul Hall, } , Yacimientos Petrolif-/developed toward the conscrip- y eres Fincnles (YPF). The de-|tion decree announced Tuesday. ' authorized YPF to i "essed for) When 1 emphasize that the lead-| the Prod noch gay getter the|ership of the Canadian labor) president of the SIU in the U.S. giant labor organization was de-| movement. has given in this)and hea" of the MTD, and one turmined to let private discus-/matter has been based firmly|of the most outspoken critics of sion deal with the difficulty, |¥P0" our intention of preserv-/Canadian labor leaders in the ee 'A talk by Raul, who is armed| The difficulty lies in differ- ing the right to determine our| issue. P » "foree if necessary to take overiforces minister, to the Cuban ihe operations. |Workers Confederation was re- It was not immediately known|ported by Havana radio. in a whether the companies would| Miami-monitored newscast. ences' between segments of-or-|2WN affairs."" 4 | ts a Pa, ganized labor in the U.S. and AFL-CIO Presicent Ge or ge ' ] 3 . i Resign! Resign! sc tments in Canada and differ-|Meany, who previously has 2 she LC used strong language to con- ences within the AFI-CIO over | demn the. Canadian trusteeship RES Ae a am A | be fully compensated. The final} Castro said "a few hundred annulment papers will be drawn| (Cubans), especially youngsters, up by Argentina's procurator|started to enrol] in schools to the steps and positions taken in the lakes dispute. : The position of the Canadian) general. There was no indica-jevade the law--but our Com- tion when he would deliver his decision, very well." Labor Congress--under severe munist young. men know them|criticism early in the week at . the Maritime Trades Depart-/ The U.S. companies, who Pa have estimated that they in- vested $397,000,000 for drilling and exploration oper ations, have already indicated they wil! take legal action to gain com- pensation. 7 4 | ~ 228 | a) CastroRules | \x:.73? i e Paul toy was reported to be Public Trial considering a proposal that he| intervene to break a deadlock * in the ecumenical council on or 1 ots the question of a pontiff shar- ing his administrative powers HAVANA (AP) -- A foreign}with bishops. ministry official said Friday) Church sources said he also| that two Canadians accused of was considering proposals' for| trying. to smuggle explosives|the date of the third session. of into Cuba will be tried in public|the world-wide Roman Catholic| and foreign correspondents will} cathering. } » allowed to report the pro- pe It was understood that the "This would Be the first public proposals were submitted to the trial of its kind since the mass|POMiff Friday when he met for trials of supporters of former|™0re than two hours with, the dictator Fulgencio Batista in "tire leadership of the council| 1959. --four moderators, or presiding} The official said the trial of|°fficers, the steering .commit- Pope May Break an Deadlock UITY \aP)--Pope|of the council's theological com-|: ip lav. mission refused to accept the vote as binding. Sources said 300 bishops, in- culding 10 cardinals, signed the petition and gave it to the coun- cil moderators to be delivered to the Pope. The Pope is said to have agreed to consider it without committing himself to a final question, The question of a 1964 council session also was said to have come up at the meeting. I] Tempo, a Rome daily, reported today that the council was likely to resume Sept. 8, 1964. This session is to recess Dec. 4. Soviets Launch -\0' the Eastern Conference fin- law and criticize CLC President Claude Jodoin for his stand in| the issue, said only: | "I share his (Morris') feel- ss that whatever differences ns there may be, they should be} | ST. TITE - DES - CAPS, Que. jworked out by a common ap-|(CP)--Angry, table - thumping proach based on the principles} ratepayers demanded and re- of our two movements." Nag A |ceived the resignation of the St. Earlier in the week; at the/7ite Roman Catholic school MTD sessions, delegates gave/poard Friday for its handling of overwhelming backing to the/school taxes, a dispute which MTD-affiliated Seafarers' Inter-|has closed schools attended by jnational Union and pledged to|599 pupils for two weeks. | { cht for removal of the trustee-| Henri Boivin, school board |president, tried to convince 300 MTD delegates, among them|demonstrative ratepayers he President Harolc C. Banks of!and his four - man board had the Canadian SIU, condemned|showed good faith and worked hard to settle the issue. The meeting had been called |to inform ratepayers that school taxes were being increased to $5.31 for each $100 property | valuation from $3.75 for the cur- Good Weather S$: Taxpayers Shout of the realm of politics, where the attitude of the ostrich seems to them to conform best with their interests." But the United States has poured $366,000,000 in economic ers were unpaid. The schools and military aid into Cam- there were closed last Monday, F. C. BARGHOORN giving 430 students an unsched- uled holiday. A ratepayer meet- ing is scheduled for Sunday. The committees are both about 40 miles northeast of Que- bodia between 1955 and June 30, this -year. Shipments of American planes were stepped up last year, ap- parently in reaction to Cam- B.C. Labor May paid since September. bec City. In other developments, eight teachers at St. Augustin in the Lake St. John area, about 250 miles northeast of Quebec City, quit work Friday until the school board pays them. back They, had not been opening The school board hopes to obtain government ap- proval of its budget and pay the teachers within several days. alaries, school in bodia's threat to lean more heavily on. the Soviet Union for military hardware, President Kennedy took notice of the Soviet and Chinese pres- sure on the prince, telling a 'press conference in. Washing- ton Thursday that it would be folly for neutral Cambodia to abandon independence and sov- ereignty. Kennedy ex pre ssed doubts that Sihanouk would let this happen. Boycott U.S. Shipping VANCOUVER (CP) -- US. ships face the possibility of a labor boycott in British Colum- bia ports in retaliation for pick- eting of Canadian ships in Great Lakes ports. day, is the effect of a resolu- tion endorsed Friday at the an- Seen For EC Football OTTAWA (CP) -- Light rain) fell early today in the capital| 'but good football weather was expected for the opening game rent year and to $7.81 two years from now. | A meeting of ratepayers |Thursday refused to approve of the rate increase. Some rate- payers complained they would have accepted the tax increases without too much protest if they had been informed of the neces- |sity to pay them last summer als \ |when the province said they Cloudy skies with sunny per-|were essential. Others accused 3-Block Parade Jails Dissenters By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A.three-block march from a nual convention of the B.C. Fed- eration of Labor, mother body of most' West Coast Canadian unions. The resolution itself was coined in cautious terms. It merely asks that the ex- ecutive of the federation con- sult with individual unions on possible "economic action'? in retaliation for U.S. picketig Fifteen white clergymen from New England and 32 Negroes celled cultural tions which were a ae next Tuesday in Moscow. Kennedy denounced the arrest ington and denied that Barg- hoorn was involved in espion- age activities. In. Moscow, U.S; embassy personnel boycotted. a meeting to celebrate the 30th anniver- sary of the recognition of the come Union by the United to open This, labor officials said to-| states There' were speculations the Russians arrested the professor in retaliation to the arrest of three Russians in New Jersey on espionage charges. Two of the Russians, members of the Soviet UN diplomatic mission, were expelled from the country because of which resulted from the fed- iods were forecast as Ottawa/the school board of being re- Rough Riders and Hamilton| sponsible for the situation which Tiger-Cats prepared to take to|led to closing of the schools. the fi ick ; he field for the kickoff. The| wony APPROVE BUDGET forecast high was 48 degrees, | other space vehicle named Cos-| The Lansdowne Park™ field} The Quebec youth department mos 22," the Soviet news prior to the rain was hard at aaa bukere colese ~~ agency Tass announced today, dry, and because it drains creased taxation The board re- Tass said Cosmos 22 was an-|quickly, it was expected to be| , i : Negro church to the courthouse landed 22 more Negro demon- strators in newly-desegregated cells at the county jail in Wil- liamston, N.C. The march Friday was the second in as many days pro- testing racial segregation in the eastern North Carolina town of 6,000 persons. The 22 were charged with parading without a permit, Pre- sumably they also will be charged with violating a Super- ior Court order which forbids demonstrations until Dec. 6. were taken into ¢ustody Thurs- day during.a march. The min- isters staged a hunger strike un- til Sheriff Raymond Rawis agreed to integrate the jail. They missed two meals. CONVICT STUDENT At Macon, Ga., a federal court jury convicted Joni Rabinowitz, a 22-year-old New Rochelle, N.Y., college student on three counts of a perjury indictment. U.S. District Judge W. A. Bootle set Dec. 23 for sentenc- ing, Miss Rabinowitz is free on bond, Each count carries a maximum penalty of $2,000 fine and five years imprisonment, The white woman was con- vieted of falsely testifying be- 'ore a grand jury in Macon that she was not at the scene during Negro picketing of a _ white aged last April 20 in Albany, 7a, AGREES TO TALK Meanwhile, the justice de- partment agreed to answer questi by an Alab grand jury about use of a government- Ronald Patrick Lippert, 32, pst co-ordination commission, Kitchener, and William David/S€cretary-general and five-un- Milne, 31, of Montreal, prob-|4er secretaries, ably would start Tuesday or' No communicues was issued Wednesday. after the meeting. but sources! However, External Affairs said they discussed a_petition| Minister Paul Martin said in calling on the Pope to spell out Ottawa Friday he had been ad-\how he wants Roman Catholic eral government's trusteeship over Canadian maritime labor]: bodies, aimed mainly at the|' Seafarers' International Union (Ind.). But one federation spokesman said today the phrase "eco- omic action" used in the reso- lution could mean "almost any- thing, including the picketing of American ships in B.C. ports." The resolution found support among conven tion delegates) © who. for two days have been talking behind the scenes about a possible boycott. They found voice in federa-| | tion secretary Pat O'Neal, who won re-election without a dis-| # sident vote. He said that U.S. picketing at Great Lakes ports must sooner or later be met with retaliation, A majority of ships which call at such big B.C. ports as Van- couver are American, bringing] | U.S.. imports and loading such cargoes as lumber products and pulp and paper. Space Vehicle MOSCOW (Reuters)--The So- Union has launched an- viet vised that the trial was set for! h'shops ; rj i 'he é Shops to share authority with\other in the series Soviet |i iti fused and was not able to ob Now. 93. -Sn0f ; gg le series of Soviet in good condition for the game. |;o; . him in governing the church. /earth satellites. Ottawa was a three - pointibanks ta say then chee The petition was cir jated| Tass said the unmanned' sat- , fs i y ; on the total-points-to-count ser-|" The school boar t HELP egiality, then became involved) The previous' Cosmos satel-|ies which concludes in Hamil-|st, éieol also is Loe Ba n a controversy when the head'lite was launched a week ago. 'to Sunday. Nov. 24. 'pay higher rates and the teach- 261,800 250,000 A 225,000 ater th ecouncil voted 6 to liellite carried scientific coarcioe om 1 de weg tame, bull since the start of the school The Chest] TREAD SOFT WITH CNR, NDP MEMBER WARNS 200,000 LIMB | ps : ., Fisher Blasts Quebec MPs STEALS CHILD | Robert J. Moreland sits inva Los Angeles jail where he is being held on a child-stealing charge for spiriting his three- OTTAWA (CP) -- Outspoken | around CNR president Donald|annual reports of the govern-|Portneuf) said last year's| The lightly-attended _ Friday Douglas Fisher has urged Que- Gerdon. _ |ment-owned CNR and TCA. |s.ormy committee meetings On|session of the House--at one bec MPs to tread softly in the There are two sides to this, Gordon's appearance before|the issue had great repercus-| ; . : why issue of the CNR's treat-|areument--not two sides in jus-|the committee likely will be his Point 28 MPs were in the 265- mined or B \tice but two sides in prejudice/second-last. On his reappoint- : --and if you keep on hammer-|ment a month ago he said he sions in Quebec and he hoped] it would happen again. Seat chamber--made progress Mr. Fisher, who has had fre-|on. other fronts. its French - speaking} 75,000 employees. 150 000 The New Democratic MP for ing at it you will raise some| planned to step down in about/quent verbal clashes with the| bowl|/18 months. prejudice that is going to CNR president, said he is "'per- rented car by a Negro integra- tion leader provided the ques- tioning is done in Washington. It approved a preliminary resolution introducing a govern- 'Not Sage' Says year-old daughter, Sanci Ann, out of the contagious diseases ward at General Hospital. He Port Arthur told them in the], ou over whenever the pendu- Commons Friday that if theyjium comeé swingine' back." keep pushing this criticism of|GIVEN CHANCE the CNR, they'll touch off a re-| Mr. Fisher -- said Mr. Fisher's urgings were re-| sonally delighted" at Mr, * First Negro MPP TORONTO: (CP) -- Leonard Braithwaite, first Negro mem- ber of the Ontario legislature, says he is not a spokesman for Negroes. Speaking at the close of a Negro exhibition Friday, Mr. Braithwaite said that since his election many persons have ap- proached him if he were a sage on the Negro question. ¢ : Gor- ir ; sisted by some Quebec MPs, /don's plans to step down. vgn er pon obert Beaule (Creditiste--| But he said he is shocked at i 7 i cealan ee : ch of the CNR Quebec East) said it would be a) speculation that his successor oben ---- ---- wave Of prejudice else-|should be given a chance to|rreat error to drop the issue of/may be. Justice Minister Chev- ol as where in Canada. show what it can do in current! bilingualism in the CNR jrier, a former transport minis-/STUDY ESTIMATES "You have made your major/e'forts to give French-speaking) 'We have already let this is-|ter and one-time president of} The House renewed, briefly, point--now for God's sake leave|employees bette representation|sue rest for too long," he said.|the St. Uawr «ve Seaway Au-|its study of the health depart- it alone for a little while," he/at all levels in the company, |'.f we continuc to let it rest, tLority. He sai1 he couldn't/ment's spending estimates and said, aiming his words at Cred-- 'He spoke just before the|we fear the president will go to|think of anything that would ac-jthen, in the evening, opened itiste and Social Credit MPs|Commons adopted a resolution|sleep and never wake up." celerate the CNR's destruction| debate on the $45,000,000 budget frym Quebec who last year|setiing up a 26-member ses-| WANTS RECURRENCE more than the appointment of|of the department of mines and|Selma, Ala., to attend a vote istirred a storm of criticismlsional committee to study the' Jean-Louis Frenette (SC --'A¢. Chevrier. technical surveys. registration meeting, . f The justice department offer followed a ruling by the 5th |U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals jin New Orleans that the state grand jury has no right to sub- poena federal officials in the matter, The case concerned a car in which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. rode from Bimingham, to said he was told she probably had sleeping. sickness and would gradually sink into a re- tarded state. He said he took her fro mthe hospital, moved in with friends, and gave her therapeutic baths, massage and exercise. "She 'needed love,' Moreland says, "and the more love < gave her the more she responded." - ° / iAP Wirephoto » 125,000 100,000 75,000 50,000 25,000 Start

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