WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny and cold Wednes- day. Winds westerly at 15 mph becoming light. THOUGHT FOR TODAY The impossibility of yesterday becomes the luxury of today and the necessity of tomorrow. She Oshawa Times Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. R EIGHTEEN PAGES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, DECEMBER HARBORS BILL KILLED * BY SENATE COMMITTEE 2000 Atom Watheads |Await Soviet Attack Carbon Fuel Company coal | mine. Ten others who were Price Not Over 17, 1963 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 92--NO. 295 | Consent Clause Gifford's Idea OTTAWA (CP)--The Senate|sion would be able to carry on banking committee today in ef-|in the same way." jfect killed legislation to set up a new national system for har- bor commissions after objec- {tions to the proposed bill from the City of Hamilton. The committee killed the bill,| which originated in the Senate} and not in the Commons, by simply adjourning indefintely. Offcials said the bill will have Se le ct MINE PRESIDENT James Diamanti, right, and his bro- ther, Steve, left, are shown with Dr. Oliver Phelps of Helper after they gave up on rescue attempt for the nine men who died in an un- derground blast today at the Nine Men Die In PARIS (AP)--Defence Secre-jlaunched in answer to a Com-|to run ships efficiently wth ' ' tary Robert McNamara said to-|munist surprise attack, a 100-\crews of dfferent nationalities nearby in the mine escaped day the awesome might of the| per-cent increase in the last/also is questioned. with their lives | growing U.S. atomic arsenal|two years Monday, Rusk had urged the (AP Wirephoto) | could destroy Russian society if} He said there also were im-jalliance to support the Soviet heey increases in tactical|/Union in its 'fundamental and) . 24 U.S. Airmen OBJECTIONS ECHOED A telegram read at the meet- jing indicated that the North |Fraser harbor commission also objects to the proposed legisla- tion. Mayor Lyman Gifford of Osh- awa said the proposed bill had merits but asked that it be the West ever was subjected to pressive t a nuclear surprise attack nuclear weapons but gave no rig roan split with Commu-/ e also said the North Atlan- definite percentages nist China : ue siteeee is strong enough to| U.S. combat ready division) Rusk told the North Atlantic! lfight a conventional war with|strength has been increased by/treaty ministerial council Mon- 45 per cent in the last two/day: Utah Mine Blast > HELPER, Utah (AP)--Nine 2,000 feet from the explosion coal miners were killed and an-|/The blast hurled Nunez 200 feet, other injured Monday in an ex-|broke his arm and cut him plosion in what was described! badly as a "model mine in the west."| «1 pnow I was lucky,"' he said The blast occurred at f 2 the face, or end, of one of two one shafts which branch out from/* 4, : ta hich branc m™/mine for an hour after the blast the end of a 2,800-foot tunnel ae into the side of a mountain near, "We've been told that the mine' was a model mine in the this central Utah community a west Diamanti said, "Every "They never knew what hit them," said James Diamanti,/safety precaution was taken. There hasn't been a trace of mine co-owner, 'They fell right where they were working. It}2@S in the area for many, many months, Was a tremendous, terrific ex-} plosion. Thy must have hit a' "TI just can't explain it." pocket of gas."' -------- State industrial' commission officials a. the scene suggested the blast was caused by either coal dust or methane gas. Mine} officials started an_ investiga- tion South Korean Charged With Drug Offences BENTWATERS, (Reuters)--Twenty - four Amer- ican airmen, all Negroes, massive drug 'investigation among American which led to allegations or race discrimination A spokesman at Bentwaters U.S. Air Force base near Ips- wich, eastern England, said the men were accused of either pos- sessing or using. marijuana At the same time the base ~ commander, Col. H. F. Alexan- der, denied charges by. five of the accused that racial trouble exists at the big base He also denied there had been|/enemy attack. By 1967, the mis-|ciencies in NATO strength could) increased 10)be made good now any "wholesale dismissal' of |the Soviet Union without plung ling the. world immediately into a nuclear conflict | McNamara told the ministe rial meeting of the North At- llantic Treaty Organization that |Western military little or big. He gave his pic Servicemen ture of U.S. strength By 1966 the United States wi have more than 1,500 intercon tinental ballistic missiles present more than 500 long-range mis siles, The Strategic Air jers on air alert BASES DISPERSED Missile bases now are largely y|MeNamara The! retaliatory forces have| nists, Com- |mand has more than 500 bomb- years. McNamara said that by| "In the quarrel between Chi- 1968, U.S. airlift capacity will|nese militancy and Russia's be increased 400 per cent. Tac-;peaceful coexistence, our inter-| tical air squadrons will he|est is to see that Moscow pre-| boosted 33 per cent. Their pay-|vails . We must not allow, England) jo, appraisals of Eastern andjloads have been doubled and|militancy to pay dividends." strength their | today | <howed that the West is able tojfour to 10 times better than it/NATO allies were a long way faced narcotics charges after a take care of itself in any war lused to be target accuracy is from| Although .he conceded ~ the from resolving differences with In his speech, relayed to cor-|Russia, he said: "We in the} respondents by briefing officers,|West should let Moscow know| put the American|that we are interested in peace- lease for a multitude of possible|ful coexistence." | Western responses to Commu-| ranging all the way from small loca! engagements to nu- clear war McNamara stressed that this lwas not the moment for the| {Atlantic alliance to slacken its efforts to build up conventionai| military strength. With a_ bit} Rusk's view found some sup- port immediately from the for- eign ministers of Canada, Bel- gium and Italy | 'Halt Cold War' dispersed and fairly immune to/more effort, he said, the defi-| sile sites will be TELLS OF PROFIT SPLIT (Trudy) Novak, a widow, told Senate investigators Monday that she and her husband split a $54,889 profit with Robert G. Baker even though the former Senate aide invested no money (AP Wirephoto) Mrs. Gertrude C. stock of his own. to be reintroduced at the next session of Parliament. Mayor Victor Copps of Ham- ilton asked that the Hamilton harbor commission be excluded from the proposed act as the committee already had recom- mended in the case of Toronto. Mr. Copps said the Hamilton commission and the city have done a good job and "we don't want to change for the un- known." Hamilton harbor had been developed to the point where it of cargo annually, Further de- velopments were planned sion. that co-operation," Mr. said, handled more than 8,000,000 tons through co-operation of city council and the harbor commis- amended so that the consent of the municipality concerned be -- given before application and that the municipality have the right to inspect the books of the commission, Despite pleas from transport department representatives that the bill should be proceeded with and that the national ap- plication of the bill not be de- stroyed, the committee agreed junanimously to defer it. Parents Irked By Removal Of | "We don't want to endanger'| Nativity Scene Copps NEW HYDE PARK, NY. (AP)=The school board of this Johnson Asks UN "Tt would be foolish to change AC sent arré ts in the lems and certain actions. are|the total number protected|, For years NATO has. man UNITED NATIONS (C ' i illi lane et the 'cy and ombtiaies |taken dis nding on the sevetiie against nuclear attack tained a target of 30 battle- eal aent een cedar te tes, wer --aind ls. willing ------ ending y} . of ome ivis >yHloy wy-/P resident Johnson today|to fight the good fight against the case, but there is cer-| McNamara said that with U.S. Teady divisions deployed in Eu y 8 ent ag , Test Anti-Etc. President Inaugurated SEOUL Negro airmen times compared with the 1961) | : es "We have disciplinary prob-|total: with a big proportion of GOAL NOT REACHED Lang Island "community has removal of a nativity scene from Memorial High School. The board acted after 60 pa- rents crowded into the board room Monday night and pro- It was the second major mine disaster in Utah this year. Eigh teen men were killed Aug. 27 in a potash mine explosion at epg es oy ledged his "unswervi 'om.-|h er ani isea: i - (AP)--Constitutional) tainly no wholsale dismissal of|alert forces more than 2,000/0Pe, but has never been able ran hha ay ee eee Moab, about 100 miles south of . i . he alli-/itment to the keeping and the|ance and misery--will find the government returned to South|individuals." 'atomic warheads 'could bel snce'y strength wow moc re strengthening of peace'? and|United States of America by -- id that th ; : Korea today after two years)------~ ' ~~ Sa at the -- -- a ie and seven months of military; ry ° vesus Nunez, 4, was near the/ rule, but the soldiers still had Tin Miners Free was inaugurated president. He 4 US. Host ° ges told a shivering, tain-soaked entrance to the west shaft, about | control, se, Chung Hee Park, who led the * Bank Tie-up audience he would not permit) ORURO, Bolivia (AP)--Four|dissident Vice - President Juan \dictatorship or "the reappear-| Americans held hostage for 10|Lechin, boss of the mine work-! May, 1961 coup and has headed) To Specialize | 2 , dpe : ance of incompetence and cor- days by Communist-led tin min-jers' federation the military junta. since then,! | xport ea S | jers hoped to return today to La! The Americans, three mem- TORONTO (CP) -- The Tor-|Name of democracy." their release Monday night in La Paz and a Peace Corps onto-Dominion Bank today an-| A few hours before the in- The Americans and 15 other|Vvolunteer, were' found in good nounced a+ tie-up with three auguration the new national as-|hostages got their freedom after| health but in a highly nervous other Commonwealth banks to|sembly convened, bringing into|a noisy, tense "meeting of 4,000|State by mine company doctors be known as Midland and Inter-|force the constitution written by|miners approved an agreement| The other hostages--a West about 23 divisions. State Secretary Dean R spoke of the political and mili fary advantages of Washing ton's proposal for a mixed president Kennedy, This plan is welcomed by the|the helm of government Nov. Wes wou say in nuclear strategy. t Germans, because It ruption masquerading under the ria? i ving | ' as taffother countries -- particularly)'. I "q z Paz, Bolivia's capital, following|bers of the U.S. embassy staf France and Britainshecause of| the costs involved in setting up} 5-ship fleef. The ability . ? such a U.S. Communist usk|wants to see the cold war end it} * Id give them at least some)" is} i viewed with scepticism by some/Make it unmi United States them every step of the way.' --"once and for all," | Johnson | The new U.S. leader ad-| ldressed the United Nations in| vast problems remain: jternational forum since he took 22, on the death of John F. Ken-|nersistence of ancient wron edym | "T have come here today t2ioroblems of colonialism. Johnson said, 'that the assas-| 1) But eee fe sin's bullet which took his life|@S€ . Pro! ieee h § did not alter his nations pur- apart can solve t em by work- ane ing together, the president said. The He did not emphasize specific president thus brought the reassurances expected, but) 47@as of conflict and disagree-| no new major policy pronounce- ee or suggest any specific so- ments or proposals. utions. their side, willing to walk with lauded the United Nations for successes exceeding | : failures. Yet he recognized that manned Polaris armed surface|the Great Hall of its General A ; Con- fleet---a pet project of the late|4sSembly. It was his first in- flicts between great powers and between small nations, dis- agreements over disarmament, gs against human rights, tag-end|fe which created by _ working ' U.S. Missile WASHINGTON air force will start early nex neces, The missile is called Athena. It mounts an instrument-laden siles, but in scaled-down form. Athena nose cones will vary jin shape ,and design, and will eigh up to 100 pounds each. High-powered radar will study jtheir flights, particularly as the ig (AP) -- The year to launch a new breed of test missiles whose job will be to help U.S. scientists find ways|0ard. to elude Soviet anti-missile de- warhead similar to those used on intercontinental ballistic mis- tested removal of the display. The scene, set up two weeks ago, was taken out last Wednes- day under an order by schoo) principal Jerome Niosi. The order originated with Mil- ton Levine, a member of the t Levne said he acted to pre- vent trouble after he received a telephone call objecting to the display. He declined to identify the caller. Charles Brind, counsel of the New York State education de- partment, has given an opinion that nativity scenes and similar displays in schools are proper if presented as historical mat- ter and teachers do not attempt national Banks Limited,,to spe-|the military rulers last year. 'between the government and|German, a Dutchman and 13 cialize in export financing on a!~ Lio aan esa 7 -- medium- and long-term basis. The three Commonwealth banks are Midland Bank Lim- epor ited of Britain, the Standard Bank Limited of London, and the Commercial Bank of Aus- tralia limited ; The head office of the new or ganization will be in London. It will start business early in the} new vear Authorized capital of | président--Kennedy, the new bank will be £20.000.-| Gontial investigating commis- 90 ($60,000,000) of which £10.-/sion is calling for the evidence 00.00 will be issued to the four on which the report was based. associated banks Chief Ju The Midland Bank will havelthe Us. Supreme Court, a 45-per-cent interest in the new ing the high-level board organization, and Toronto - Do- quiry, announced | its minion a 26-per-cent interest. \Monday night Viscount Monkton of Brench- jhat the commission is building ley, chairman of the Midland Bank, will also be chairman of the new bank. H. J. Witheridge.| an assistant general manager of the Midland Bank, will be gen eral manager of the new bank share head- of in- decision evidence Warren told reporters the move was "a perfectly' normal "\thing." But it was clear the commission intends to study The new bank will have capi- and evaluate the FBI's work on officials, makes no flat declara-|U.S. the case instead of taking the 'ion of the sole guilt of Oswald, |ficer. at exceeding tal and reserves estimated $444,000.000, assets $10,000,000.000 and about 5,000 branches throuzhout Canada/REPORT STILL SECRET Britain Australia and New Zea- land and South, East and Cen- understood to indicate that Lee tral Africa Harvey Oswald, 24, was the FBI findings at face value n JFK's Murder Delayed WASHINGTON (AP) -- Afterjhidden mfleman who. ki}led|SEIZED DEC. 6 preliminary study of the FBI's) | report on the assassination of|to dismiss, hy omission, the the-|6 in retaliation for the govern-|States for failure to register un-|common tasks-- the presi-|ory that Oswald had help or ac-|ment's arrest of two Commu-|der the 1950 Subversive Activi-)peace and save the future Kennedy Nov. 22 in Dallas and jcomplices The appears Warren wants it every commission, to. sift which might resolve, one way or the other, any suspicion of collusion or conspiracy. Such captured Oswald, an embittered lice k was shot dead ina Dallas po garage by nightclub owner Jac |Ruby, 52 ar The FBI report, according to but leaves open no other inter- pretation. It was written in nar- rative form with the idea that The still-secret FBI report is it would be made public prom | Development, iptly--an idea wh 'QUEEN NOT FOREIGNER' -- PICKERSCILL commission has scotched |Bolivians -- returned to their He did suggest in generalities) He did say what the United!warheads re-enter the atmos- families and jobs in where they had been held The Americans were brought | by a jeep convoy over 30 miles of treacherous muntain road through pouring rain to Oruro, hub city for this Andean min- ing area | The hostages were seized Dec /Nist mine union leaders, Irineo Pimental and Federico Escobar, | jon criminal charges. The Amer- stice Earl Warren of|scrap of evidence available|!cans had gone to Catavi, 150/the government f hi that no volunteer was available|keeping and the strengthening) ™@!ry 'lm. Thus, the world's most pub-|raven-haired {miles southeast of La Paz, to ideliver a $15,000 U.S. aid cheque to help '1 the construction of and disclosed|talk gained circulation after the|tWo Schools "For the last 10 days, the a legal staff to help it scan the|young Marxist and ex-marine,|commies have tried to force us |to ask for Pimental's and Esco- |bar's release, but not one of us gave in," icans, Thomas M. Martin Jr Information | Another hostage, Bernard Rif- kin, 52, labor adviser. for the U.S. Agency for International said the worst ich the Warren! part of the ordeal was the night/someone willing, even if not leg-! lof their capture Catavi,' said one of the Amer-| that a modern new deal could|States wants. 'phere, to draw religious connotations from them. build a better world, that it is time for a peaceful revolution {on a universal scale to improve} human welfare and dignity. | WANTS PEACE Party Wins Register Trial WASHINGTON (AP)--A fed-| But, said Johnson in a pre-| eral appeals court overturned) pared text: today the conviction of the Com-| "The greatest of human prob- jmunist party of the United lems--and the greatest of our is to keep the} "If there is one commitment Appeals for,more_ than tres Control Act The U.S. Court' of the District of Columbia said) would leave you today, it is my) ™4!Ty | i : P ailed 6 prove unswerving commitment to the|May be free any day now toidie Fisher to institute Mexican|are ironed out, the actual court- |who could register for the party|of peace. | under the act. It returned the either a new trial, if the gov jand above all." ernment requests it, or directed "President Kennedy, I verdict of acquittal. : party argued during the trialithree years as incriminating himself The three-judge decision said|Peac' j legal precedent indicates "that its government." | an organization can always find/ MAINTAINED TOP SECURITY| SFor the president's one-hour} lally bound, to act for it." |trip to the UN, the world or-| Biculturalism Rattles MPs OTTAWA. (CP)--Driving for a night sitting did the apparent pre Christmas prorogation, spirit of goodwill :rumble un- members.of Parliament showed der the sensitive subject of bi- rare unanimity Monday as they culturalism churned five pieces of | With the tion: through final debate sta ters are Not until the Commons took crisis," an amendment: to the Na- ill Act the '€") Robert Prittie " (NDP--Burn- aby-Richmond) said remarks by Mr. Churchill Set Confederation back several years The Liberal government 'and particularly Privy Council Pres- ident Maurice Lamontagne are sowing dissent and disunity in Canada, said Opposition: Leader Diefenbaker State amendment "mat- being pushed to a charged Gordon Church- (PC--Winnipeg' South Cen- ges up tional at Centennial CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725- HOSPITAL 723 (mor ' i 6574 2211 | Secretary Pickersgul, rose and repudiated earlier re- marks by Auguste Chouette (L--Lotbiniere) that Canada has a foreign ueen "I repudiate any suggestion that the Queen of- Canada is a foreigner,' said Mr. Pickers- gill." At issue in the amendment was the question of removing the word "national."" Mr. Pick- ersgill said that the word, with two meanings in French, gives rise to misunderstandings, and when any such words 'causes ir- ritations it was wise to change! it providing it didn't cause prob- lems in other languages "It seems lo me 1 only in the this way can we have the united,may be, they cannot be push-d,of third reading nemains. country that we want to see," he said. Gilles, Gregoire (Creditistes-- Lapointe) jumped up in the wake. of Mr. Churchill's speech and said the Conservative mem- ber. would be a good candidate for the office of high commis- sioner to London. Canada would thus "be rid of him."' At a time when there were great strides toward a bicultural country, Mr. Churchill -had driven it backwards. While he didn't agree entirely with Mr. Chouette, the Credi-} tiste member, said that Canada should have more distinctively Canadian images "No matter what the symbols ganization mounted extraordi- nary security precautions. The headquarters guard force was jreinforced to full emergency | Strength of 250 men and the gen- eral public was' barred from the |Bast River headquarters during |Johnson's stay. Johnson asked the delegates of the 112 other UN members : 9 convey to their countrymen on to the people," said Mr. Di2f-\the gratitude of all: Americans enbaker for their companionship in sor- "They must be accepted na-| row at Kennedy's death. tionally, by our people as a|° "And' I hope you will tell whole there must be that) them,' he said; 'that the United feeling that each and all are|States of America, sobered by endeavoring to bring about that/tragedy, united in sorrow, re- Canadian citizenship, strong vi-/newed in spirit, faces the new tal and free." year determined. that world The opposition leader's speech peace, civil rights and human , any other that [ard Burton Burton Divorce News Starts Eddie Singing HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- Rich- is free today Elizabeth Taylor, "The United States wants san-|licized lovers are half way to! Cz he district cc lita tee 5 the altar, a trek that took two' Anything Liz wants, ase to the district court forjity, security, and peace for all, ears 'and $40,000,000 to accom- y ' plish. sure, would regard as his best' The love affair started when) Lawyers for the Communist/memorial the fact that in his|Burton played Mare Antony to} president the! L 27, "They tried all 'sorts of that no officer of the party could/world became a little safer and) Sybil Burton, long - suffering) ; j Agency of- formally register it under the) the way ahead a little brighter. wife of the swinging Welshman,|York now discussing settlement ei terms of the 1950 act without/To the protection and enlarge-|got a Mexican divorce Monday|terms with Eddie's lawyer. ment of this new hope forland a reported settlement ofjsetthement is expected mome: e, I pledge my country and/$1,500,000. She also got custody/tarily, Then the lawyer -- not | iz's Cleopatra. : Phen was punctuated with points of|welfare become not an illusion! © order and _ privilege as he but a reality." | pointed to Mr, Lamontagne as| '"'Man's age-old hope remains one of 'the people "that in the our goal--that this world, under past several years have contin-|God, can be made safe for di- ued to activate divisidn in this|versity, free from hostility, and country." a better place. for our children After the arguments, the-bill and all children in generations passed committee stage--on di-/co come vision--and only the formailiiy "And therefore any man and lany nation that seeks peace--| * ius FISHER WISHES LIZ "TH who} of the couple's two young daugh- ters, Next step calls for singer Ed- | to |divorce proceedings against the star he married after Mike Todd's death. she can get from Eddie. "I will do any- thing to make Elizabeth happy, I wish her only the best," he |told a reporter. Elizabeth's lawyer is in New A n-| Eddie--will go to Mexico and obtain the divorce by proxy. Once the pretrial formalities room proceedings take about 15 minutes, | There is a six-month resid- lency requirement to obtain a |Mexican divorce, But a partner can file from abroad if the other party is in Mexico to contest or janswer the action, This was the | |situation with the Burtons: She \filed and he was in Mexico to respond. | On the other hand, Miss Tay- jlor could not file for. divorce | without six months' prior resid- jence but Fisher could file against her in Mexico when she is available in that country to respond. Fisher, informed of Mrs. Bur- ton's divorce Monday, said: "Marvellous! Bravo!" 'Then he asked where the di- vorce was obtained. Told that the dateline on the story was Guadalajara, he burst into song over the phone with the first two bars of the famed Mexican song--Guadalajara. Insiders believe that the Bur- ton-Taylor nuptials will take place almost immediately after the settlement between the ac- tress and Fisher. Th setting will undoubtedly be Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, the remote resort town where Bur- ton. recently finished filming + The Night of the Iguana. Elizabeth and Burton have bought a four - storey house there, the biggest in town--and plan. to live there until Burton starts rehearsals next year for , his plain clothes Broadway ver- BS ; E BEST' sion. of Hamlet. 'Richard and I love Puerto Vallarta,' Elizabeth recently told this reporter. "We have found a tranquillity such as we have. not had any place else in the world."'