Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jan 1964, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY "A person laughs at the boss's joke because he's afraid his loy- alty is being tested. She Oshawa Sines Bik Ss Te i i se 2 = a hm "" a "ig EEE ee day. Colder, Wet snow tonight changing to scattered" snowfhirries Thurs- ord VOL. 93--NO, 6 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1964 Authorized os Second Class Mail Ottawa and for Payment Post Office of Postage Pin coh, 14 Warships | Going Into Mothballs OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- +») ment today announced the mothballing of 14 warships to , Feduce naval operations and maintenance costs. The three Second World War tribal-class destroyers Nootka,| Cayuga and Micmac will paid off and declared surplus. Two minesweeping squadrons on the East and West coasts, comprising 10 ships in all, will Deep River Rocked By 2 Earthquakes DEEP RIVER, Ont. (CP)-- Two earthquakes, three min utes apart, shook a wide area of Northern Ontario early today | and awoke residents in this Ot- tawa River community, 100 miles from the capital, The first tremor came at 5:04 a.m. and the second, a larger shake, at 5:07 a.m. A roaring, rumbling accompanied the shocks and gradually died away. jada's commitment in an emer- be placed in reserve at Halifax and Esquimalt, B.C. The escort maintenance ship Cape Breton will be placed in reserve on the West Coast. It is intended to canry out this mothballing before the end of March. statement by Associate De- fefice Minister Cardin said the changes were agreed on 'as part of the over all objective of enabling Me armed forces to carry out their primany roles effectively but, from the sav- lings achieved, providing a greater proportion of funds for new equipment while holding defence expenditures at an ac- ceptable level." The resulting reduction in manpower would be achieved deaths, discharges and so on plus a "temporary slowdown in recruiting. The statement said that Cen- gency to the supreme allied commander Atlantic will re- main at one aircraft carrier and Woman Leaves through normal] attrition --| ; Firemen use a 40-foot ladder "DANGLING DANCER wicommunications empire and inson, Ill., and his co-driver, Chet Bartley, 42, Franklin, S,8 British MP | to. rescue two men trapped to- | day for two hours in a truck Ind. The Highway Patrol said Thomson TORONTO (CP) -- Publisher Roy Thomson said today he re- gretfully accepts the loss of his Canadian citizenship to become a British baron but hopes the law might be changed to re- store it, In any case, he told a press conference, he plans to return to Canada from Britain on re- tirement as active head of his then would go through the legal lure to become a citizen. Mr. Thomson, whose citizen- ship was lost when he became a British citizen because the Queen does not confer titles on Canadians owing to long:stand- ing Canadian government oppo- sition, made a plea for allow- ing Canadians to accept life- Citizenship Loss Nobody was injured. The disturbance was felt in Peterborough, 132 miles south here, and a few people in Tor- onto, 200 miles south, reported a faint tremor. Dr. W. A. Gorman of Queen's University geology department, Kingston, where the shocks were also felt, said the earth tremor probably was caused by an upward adjustment of the earth's crust. Malcolm Bancroft, seismolo- gist with the Dominion Observ- atory in Ottawa, said the trem- ors recorded the died Dec, 19, left this to Sir) Marti $250,000 | NEW YORK (AP)--Sir Marf- tin Lindsay, 58-year-old British member of Parliament, inher- ited more than $250,000 from) Mrs. George Hamlin (Filo| Shaw, even though he never) proposed marriage, as she had) ho' | In a will filed Tuesday in| Surrogate's Court, Mrs. Shaw,| an American philanthropist who} in: from Stur-|complete were from : | Her luxurious apartment with valuabl head cab hanging off a bridge on the Will Rogers 'Turnpike four miles north of the Tulsa gate. The men, who clambered to safety on the ladder, were driver Darrell Mauk, 39, Rob- the truck ripped out 186 feet of bridge railing after it went out of control and wound up with the trailer on the bridge, but the cab dangling. --AP Wirephoto Bus Sale Irks US. LONDON § (Reuters) of a British 400 area were jammed|made mention of necessary tax|"% residents who|adjustments in case the - man} -- ThejCuba, declared: firm planning|are not strategic war material To Cuba Officials i? the Pec saying not Help U.S, efforts to faust give up my Canadian citi- time (non-hereditary) titles. He said he feels itis 'very narrow-minded and quite un- realistic" not. to have "'reason- able" titles awarded in deserv- jing instances, and he suggested jthat a Canadian homers com- |mittee could screen eandidates. |SERVICE TO COUNTRY The new baron-designate said |he could understand fiow a good | case could be made gut against jhereditary titles for Canadians Regrets work even harder for Canada in the future." 'WON'T FIGHT IT' Mr. Thomson--his title has not been officially gazetted yet --told a battery of reporters and cameramen that he has no grievance against the Liberal government "in any shape or form" in maintaining the eiti- zenship law in his case--he's a former Conservative politician. "This isn't political and I won't fight it," he said under' questioning. "It's all legal formality and not in my opinion tremendously important," he added. 'I think! it's unduly restrictive and ob- viously I think it's quite wrong. But that's the law, "IT would hope that Canadian public opinion will eventually dictate that I keep my Cana- @ian citizenship." He hoped that members of Parliament would hear enough from con- stituents to have the law changed. Mr. Thomson said he had been aware for some time that the possibility of losing his Ca- nadian citizenship existed. Only recently had the situation been clarified. } \--"now that I've got one, I can \say that"--but there should bejreferred to him as a "former" |of a snowstorm. a. few "These buses|"0 argument against lifetime|/Canadian.) honors for service to the try. 4 'oid that zenship."" (Prime Minister Pearson. has The publisher said he will al- ays be a Canadian in ' East Berlin his|move late' ) JOHNSON HUGE BUD ™ Russians to match. LYNDON B. JOHNSON Escape Amazes West Germans BERLIN (AP) -- A middle. aged East Berlin couple and] 999 their three sons. slid down ropes from an abandoned border apartment Tuesday night and escaped into West Berlin. Friedrich Motter, 58, his wife Helene, 50, and sons 9, 14 and 24 made the break under cov ities peg cons is uth i to the Berlin ¥ --~ - paet Kennedy's final, record-set- President War On WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Johnson announced today a surprise budget cut to. $97,- 900,000,000, even below the cur- rent level. And he told Congress he will slash output of weapou- making uranium by 25 per cent --a moye he challenged the In an unusually brief yet meaty State-of-the. Union. mes- sage, prepared for personal de- livery at a joint session of Con- gress, Johnson also declared "unconditional war on poverty in America." He ticked off his specific policy ideas for the first time since he became prés- ident seven weeks ago follow- ing the assassination of John F. ee Kennedy. Johnson's proposals -- many requiring action by Congress -- were aimed at problems rang ing from the depths of ooverty to the height of the moon. For most taxpayers, the big- gest surprise probably lay in the budget disclosures. At $97,- ,000,000, the Johnson spending plan would be $500,- 900,000,000, the first Johnson spending plan would be the $500,000,000 smaller than the latest estimate of spending un- THIRTY-EIGHT PAGES } ay - * 4 ba i oa Wants Poverty goals cited by the president, who sought to balance concilia- tion and determination in dis- cussing cold war buried, We can fight, if we must, as we have fought before --but we pray we will never have to fight again," As for specific administration policies, Johnson made these major points in the U.S. elec tion year address intended to set the tone for the 1964 congres- sional session: hues of $93,000,000,000 indicate a deficit of $4,900,000,000 or than half the fiscal mate. 1064 esti- --Production of enriched ura nium, used in nuclear weapons and small reactors like those' nuclear submarines, will Slashed by 25 per cent by Ji since the 30--the first reduction invention of the atomic bomb 1945. Said Johnson: "We cal) our same." And he justified cision by declaring. ' Ne adversaries; to do Sata weak lip tne er ll Bence Ser eas Bomare nuclear war-|who was her frequent escortiLeyland Motor Corporation : the Bo-|"'should be my husband at the|which has concluded a £4,000,- time of my death... ." 000 ($12,000,000) bus deal with isolate the regime of Cuban Premier Fide] Castro. Commerce Secretary Luther Hodges said- the way some La- tin American countries used "I find it difficult to under- stand why this should be so," he added in a formal statement. "T still consider myself a Cana- Suffered Stroke Yukon Couple Claims Dog Food Saved Lives WATSON LAKE, Y.T. (CP)-- Six pounds of dog food, scrounged from an empty trap- per's cabin, helped sustain a Yukon couple through 30 days of hunger, pain and exhaustion while lost in rugged bush coun- try east of here. William Alexander McDiar- mid, 43, a trapper, and his wife Maggie, 25, were reported in 'good condition Tuesday after being flown here. In an interview they told of leaving their Larsen Lake cabin Dec. to snowshoe to Smith River, 60 miles away. Within a| few days of blizzards and deep) snow they became lost. | "By that time my feet were frozen to the knees,"' the trap- per said. "We knew our way back, but weren't sure how much further we had to go. "My nose kept bleeding; Mag-| gie was fine. "I was carrying 60 pounds; -1 had 31 marten, an axe, a hat-) just couldn't keep up. "We had macaroni on Christ- mas Day. I had a sardine sand- wich and Maggie had some canned sausage. "Our New Year's dinner was macaroni and canned sardines. Our food ran out and we ate moss and snow. We found six pounds of dog food in a cabin and ate that." Bush pflot Bob Harrison said he was supposed to meet the couple, but found a note on their cabin door saying they had "gone to get sleigh dogs." "Twenty-six days later they} had not returned and I checked in to see if they had arrived," | he said. Harrison said he notified the| RCMP who sent a plane out) New Year's Day without suc-| cess and that he flew over the area with a three-man ground party the next day. "While flying over the snow,| I suddenly saw snowshoe tracks and I followed them ket. i Maggie said she couldn't be- lieve it when she saw the plane. "J ran out to get wood and threw it on the fire. I screamed to Bill to wave a blanket. He was laying down and had trou- ble getting up with his frozen feet. "We weren't really sure the people in the plane had seen us or realized we were in trou- ble. It flew away and I felt aw. ful. buses "'they were strategic." DRAW LINE SOMEWHERE A British board of trade spokesman said the line had to be drawn somewhere between strategic and non - strategic goods--and quoted Russian Pre- mier Khrushchev as once saying that even trouser buttons could) be considered strategic because they held up soldiers' trousers. Stokes said today that first de-} liveries of the buses will start! in April, with East German| ships picking up 100 buses a month from a British port. Stokes said: '"'We could not get any British shipowner to ship them." The United States "'blacklists" any shipping line carrying cargo to Cuba and prevents the lire from carrying any government- dian and always will. Now I have formalized my Britisa citizenship, I am told I can no longer be a Canadian .. . "I wamt to be called 'Cana- dian.' I am bound to ask what object is served by depriving me of my Canadian citizenship. In what way will this be of serv- ice to Canada? Indeed, will it not deprive Canada of. import- ant world prestige? "T will, of course, accept with grace the decision of the Cana- dian government, and I shall Ontario Taxes $150,000 Damage In Cornwall Fire | CORNWALL (CP) -- A $150,-|lish company doing a deal with; 000 fire destroyed the ware-| house and drum-cleaning shop} at the Iroquois Industria] Chem-} ical Limited plant today. three-hour battle. Fire broke out shortly before! the air. | financed cargo, Stokes said: "I am sorry they disapprove. But this is an Eng- Cuba, We did not have a press) conference when they (the U.S.)/ sold wheat to Russia, I have} ino knowledge of having to gojcial budget for 1964-65 is pre- Firemen extinguished the|t0 America for permission to/sented to the Legislature next blaze of unknown origin after a/Se!! buses. We have dealt with|month, Premier Robarts said Cuba before." He added: 'We sold them} I saw al5 a.m. A series of explosions|$10,000,000 worth of buses injgive details of the increases be- chet, blagkets and my rifle. We fire and a figure waving a blan-|mushroomed some 300 feet in| 1949 and about $6,000.000 or $7,-\cause the budget is not yet com- 000,000 worth in 1050, 7059 | NOT INCLUDED IN MEDICARE PLAN © Optometrists Angry -- TORONTO (CP) -- Optome- legislation setting up the voiun- tend protection against medical;ment hag said trists today joined the queue of critics attacking Ontario's draft medical insurance plan on the|the optometrists association,|cja) Workers and ° Associated population--and part of the pre-|Much of the increased taxation ground that it is too restricted. said the legislation discrimin-| Nursing Incorporated|miums of» another, undefincd| would be spent on grants to all tary insurance program. Robert J. Broad, president of expenses. | The Ontario Association of So-| Homes i ; it would pay premiums for the indigent--an estimated 10 per cent of the The Optometrical Association ates against residents of at least/peth predicted premiums rates|Matginal income group. of Ontario and the College of 80 towns and small cities be-|would remain out of reach of Optometry in Toronto protested|cause "'they will be paying for|the marginal group between in-\of Social Workers stated that! The 1,016-member Association specifically. against the exctu-|specialized vision care protee-\digents, who receive free medi-jthe 'draft p!an "does not pro sion of their services from the|tion which will be available only|oa). care ° under welfare, andivide a significant stage toward speculation that the three per plan : They appealed in separate briefs to the government-ap- ponted medical services insur- ance inquiry to include optom- e'ry as one of the services to be covered under the standard med cal plan outlined in draft ~ CITY. EMERGENCY - PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 728-2211 1x tained $ in large centres and only by} oculists, medical doctors spe- cializing in eye care." i In a statement jssued before) formal presentation of the} briefs, he explained that only) 47 of Ontario towns and _ cities with more than 3,000 popu'ation have resident oculists but 108 have their own optometrists Mr. Broad pointed out that in- quiry chairman J. Gerald Hagey himself. would be unable to get] The draft legislation provides} Associated Nursing Homes, a/extra '$90,000,000. eye-care benefits under the plan|for both commercial: and non-| group of about 100 licenced) In the current' fiscal those who already can afford medical. insurance. Therefore, the plan would not meet its own aim of providing universally - available cover- age, they said Some members of the govern- ment-appointed committee hit back at the criticism, ¢halleng- ing statements and data pre-| sented by some witnesses, | \the achievement of adequate |health services for the people of Ontario, nor is it designed as part of a comprehensive plan" The association's brief called) instead for a truly universal, comprehensive health plan fi-| nanced by taxes. The group's spokesman, Canadian Associa- tion President Dr. Elizabeth Go-! van, indicated this would thus| be a compulsory plan. in his own hometown of Water-|profit'insurers to offer the pub |nursing establishments throuzh-| loo because no oculists are reg- istered to practice there Two groups at Tuesday's ses- sion attacked the principles on/schedule and an insurers' organ stead to the success of govern-ury. lic standard protection plans under maximum premiums, with doctors | setting the foe out the province, described the} draft legislation as "a very} meagre effort" and pointed in- |be doubled from' the barr, Going Up 'Premier Says TORONTO. (CP)--Taxes will] be increased when the provin- Tuesday night. The premier said he could not pleted. Mr. Robarts was speaking on a taped CBC television inter- view that will be broadcast to- night. He said heavy estimated ex- penditures, particularly on ed- ucation, were responsible for the increases. In 1963-64, the province budgeted a record $387,500,000 for education. By 1970, Mr. Robarts said, Ontario will need three times as many schools as it had in 1960. | * Pi : \forms of educational institu- jtions. The Telegram. says there is jcent sales' tax will be in- jcreased to five per cent or hos- pital insurance premiums: will $2.10 for a 'single person and $4.20 tor tamilies | It said the sales tax increase would bring. in. an additional | $120,000,000. Dowbling the hospi- tal premiums would mean an year, énding March 31, increased tax- BHUBANESWAR, India -- Prime Minister Nehru's doc- tors said his condition today was very satisfactory but re- vealed he had suffered a "slight weakness" in his left arm and leg. The doctors said the weak- ness showed signs of improve- ment. The report of weakness in his left limbs aroused speculation that the 74 . year - old Indian leader might have suffered a stroke. However, some medical experts--who have not treated Nehru -- said there could be other explanations, Nehru, here for the annual meeting of his ruling Congress party, was ordered to bed Tues- day. His doctors said he was suffering from weakness and high blood pressure. The first announcement of Nehru's illness Tuesday said his doctors had advised him to take a complete rest and accept o engagements for two weeks. Later "two weeks" was changed to "for the present." But after visiting Nehru, Ku- maraswami Kamaraj Nadar, the Congress party president, indicated the prime minister might be back on the job in another day. He told a party session Nehru was "in excellent health and excellent spirits," and wanted to attend today's session, but the doctors advised at least one... . An official bulletin said Nehru who was almost singlehandedly carried the burdens of India since independence in 1947, had been under heavy strain be- cause of a hectic round of offi- cial engagements during the last few weeks. After his illness was an- nounced, there was consideér- 3rd Delivery Of 'Atom Warheads able speculation he might de- cide to give up power, at least temporarily, if his health failed to improve. In any case, it was almost certain he would be forced to miss several critical party debates during the con- vention, which drew some 3,000 delegates. Since March, 1962, when he suffered a serious illness, Nehru has appeared to age by 10 or 20 years. Although officials in- sist there is nothing vitally wrong with him; outside medi- cal men have speculated that he sufferes from hardening of the arteries, common in men his age. His doctors have declined the strongest civil rights bill in 100 years, enactment of a mas- steps toward int and selective increases in overtime pay rates. Other Johnson programs -- many inherited from Kennedy-- included broader minimum 'wage coverage, hospital insur- ance for the aged, an ,ead to discriminatory immigration quotas, a bigger housing pro- gram and a determined effort-- prefrably in co-operation with the Soviet Union--to put a man on the moon by 1970. Prosperity at home and peace to comment. sive tax cut by Feb. 1, new) war pro- mote "better etter training and oppor tunities." He asked Congress to set up special committees empowered to increase the time-and-a-half overtime pay rate in industries "where consistently excessive use of overtime causes in- creased unemployment." He did not name any industries or sug- schools, b better job in the world were the broad gest alternative overtime pay scales. NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters)-- Hostile Greek- and Turkish-Cyp- riots today slowly began remov- ing barricades and roadblocks on both sides of a cease-fire line after three weeks of ten- sion and bloodshed between the two communities. Both factions had arranged to remove roadblocks and barri- cades starting this morning at 6 a.m. but by late morning, al- though some barricades were down, others were still in posi- The pact also covered the re- storation of telephone services.| Telephone lines on various parts of the island were cut during fighting before. Christmas, in- cluding the capital's Turkish- Cypriot quarter and between Ni- cosia and the north coastal town of Kyrenia. Government sources said the Greek-Cypriots, who form four- fifths of the population, . would tion guarded by armed men. agreement between the two fac- tions for the removal of the bar- ricades there still were many signs of mutual suspicion and bitterness. Away from. the immediate area of the cease-fire line--still deserted except for British stores doing a brisk trade. The agreement to remove the barricades was part of an ac- cord negotiated by both sides Into Canada NORTH BAY (CP) -- A third! shipment of nuclear warheads! was delivered at 3.a.m. today) by a United States Air Force! C-124 Globemaster. | Delivery was made to the 446) Bomarc defensive surface - to -| air missile squadron. A_police- escorted convoy. took the mis- siles from the RCAF™station to the Boare missile base seven miles north of North Bay. } ation was forecast to add $150,- 000,000 to the provincial treas- The net debt, however,} which the Ontario plan is pasedjization adjusting the maximum ment-run medical care in Sas-|was expected to inerease $75,- uulikely greatly to ex/premium rates. The govern-'katchewan. 1000,000 to $1,300,000,000, Canada's first nuclear war-; Year's Eve. A second shipment was made within a week. It was not known if today's ishipment would be the last. and announced by British High Commissioner Sir Arthur Clark Tuesday. The pact affected Greek- and Turkish. - Cypriot armed police positions 'and the armed irreg- ulars of both sides in Nicosia and the countryside, Clark said The one exception was the mining township of Lefka, where there were difficulties in communication and liaison. | Five thousand Turkish - Cyp- riots were surrounded by Greek- Cypriots in Lefka, Both were jheads arrived at the base New dug in facing each other, Despite a British - negotiated « troops -- both quarters of the 3 capital looked normal with @ Clark said he hoped normal trahsportat'on and communica- tions would be restored in Ni- cosia by Thursday morning. 3 t GREEK CYPRIOTS: REMOVE WIRE' BARRICADE: t Hostile Greeks, Turks: Take Out Barricades -- begin dismantling their bagri- cades first as a gesture of good- will. The Turkish-Cypriots wore expected to follow suit. British troops\and Turkish and Greek National Army conting- ents were to continue their trols under British Maj. - Peter Young, head of force set up on the -- a Christmas Day re. RS » 2

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