Thought For Today | News is often an account of something you hope won't hap- pen to you. VOL. 93 -- NO. 155 he Oshawa Fines - Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy 'Weather Report Clearing overnight. Mainly sunny Saturday. Seasonable tem- " peratures. Winds light. Authorized as Second Closs Mall Post Office Department Ottowa and for payment of Postage in Cash, OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1964 EIGHTEEN PAGES JOHNSON'S PEN WRITES H sane Se @ islation ISTORY ANIER MERCY MOVE STAYS SLAYER'S DEATH Dixie To Fight Week's Reprieve U.S. Rights Law | For Santa Bandit OTTAWA (CP)°'-- A surprise;of MPs headed by Reid Scott, | | federal intervention, reported to|/a lawyer who is NDP member WASHINGTON (AP) -- The,tions to southern chapters for) } |have originated with Governor-|for Toronto Danforth, tele- civil rights bill is the law of the| probing racial policies in places General Vanier, gave con-|phoned Government House to United States today and civil of public accommodations. |demned slayer Georges Mar-\ask for an appointment with rights groups immediately be-| The swiftest test came in the |cotte a one - week reprieve| Governor-General Vanier, They gan testing whether its provi-| north--in Kansas City. One min- | sions can break generations of|ute after the legislation became) © | Thursday night just five hours;wanted to discuss the Marcotte case with him. racial barriers in southern and/ law a CORE sit-in was launched) / northern states. when a young Negro couldn't Three hours after the House) get a haircut in a hotel barber- of Representatives sent the leg- shop. to the White House : i Thursday, President Johnson|the Student Non-violent Co-or- signed it with an appeal to all dinating Committee said inte- - Americans to "join this effort|stated groups were served for National Rail Dispute Settlement In Sight OTTAWA (CP) -- A peaceful} The government is expected settlement of a multi-million-|to pick up part of the cost of dollar .wage dispute between|this wage settlement in recogni- Canada's major railways andition of the fact that the rail- 100,000 rai] workers was in sight|ways are forbidden by govern- today following a series of high-|ment edict from raising their level meetings here .Thursday.| freight rates to raise extra rev- The meetings involved Primejenue to meet the higher labor Minister Pearson, several of his] costs. key cabinet ministers and the} A similar step was taken in Presidents of the two national|1961 when the goverriment--at railways -- Donald Gordon of|that time headed by Conserva- the publicly - owned CNR andi tive prime minister Diefenbaker N. R. Crump of the privately-|--put up a temporary $50,000,-| owned CPR _ |000 subsidy to offset the cost of} All signs pointed to early ac-|a wage settlement that year by the railways of ajwith the non - operating work! 19.1-cent hourly pay increase for! force. their non-Operating work force| The Liberal government is un-| | adding an estimated extra|derstood to have insisted that|°rnment," he said, with CPR) wasHINGTON (AP $57,000.000 to their wage bill|any néw subsidy should also be President Crump standing at his}, parry G over the next two years, itemporary and should be based Bra Ads Taboo CBC Tells Probe OTTAWA (CP) -- The CBC,commercial operations only to has a ban on the advertising of/reduce the amount of public 25 products and services, in-|funds required for its opera- cluding laxatives, girdles, bras-|tions. All CBC: programs, in- sieres and hair restorers, the\cluding sponsored ones, were Commons public accounts com-|produced in keeping with the mittee was told Thursday. jcorporation's policy of providing CBC President Alphonse Oui-|a public service to meet the met tabled a list of the banned|tastes of all segments of the products and services during the|/community. first appearance by OBC offi-| Mr. Harkness said that in the cials at a meeting of this stand-/1962-63 fiscal year the CBC pro- ing committee of the House. He|duced programs at a cost of also tabled a list of programs $26,500,000 which were not spon- that cannot be sponsored on|sored. He said some of these CBC television or radio net-! programs could have been sold works or CBC stations. through a better sales program jon an impartial appraisal of the) j actual cost of raising the wages of the rail workers in freight |sheds, shops and offices of the jrailways, The railway presidents prom- ised a definite reply to the gov- }ernment proposal] within a few days. "We will be in communication with the minister of labor in the} course of the next few days,' said CNR President Gordon, as he emerged smiling from. his second meeting in six hours with Mr. Pearson. "We have had full and exten- sive discussions with ihe gov | side. | A few hours later, Labor Min- ister MacEachen, a key figure in the Ottawa talks, boarded a plane to fly to Geneva to at- tend next week's sessions of the International Labor Organiza- tion. A source said his departure could be interpreted as a firm indication of the government's |hopes of a settlement without any transcontinental strike. PROPOSED BY BOARD The wage increase was pro- posed by a federal conciliation board headed by Mr. Justice Craig Munroe of Vancouver and supported by David Lewis, Tor- onto lawyer nominated to the board by the unions. | A minority report submitted by Halifax lawyer Gordon Cooper proposed a wage in- crease amounting to 12 cents an hour over the two-year contract advertise sleeping tablets, bath- room tissue, corn removers, preparations to keep dentures in The list showed the CBC won't EFFECTIVE NEXT ending Dec. 31, 1965. ri justic ne to alli the first time in at least seven peg by a Albany, Ga., establishments From the South came indica-| Thursday night. : tions the new law's constitution-| Officials charged with enforc- ality will be quickly challenged.|ing the law are hoping for wide- Mississippi Governor Paul John-|spread voluntary compliance. son cautioned that he expects| But the government 1s prepar- "some real trouble' when Ne-|ing for courtroom battles and groes seek to desegregate pub-|the justice department soon will lic accommodations in that\ask Congress for more money Deep-South state. to add more lawyers to its civil Barely was the president's|rights division. a signature dry before civil rights} In his address on signing the organizations revealed plans tojbill, broadcast by radio _ and} see if the law opens to Negroesitelevision, the president the doors of motels, restaurants, stressed that the law first relies theatres that had been closed to}on voluntary compliance to) them. achieve its goal of striking down 'Be ready to make a start--/ racial barriers | in employment, even though a modest one--by|schools, voting, public accom-| July 3," said the Congress of|modations and federaily-aided) Racial Equality in its instruc-|programs. In the south, a spokesman for) ° PATIENT NAESSENS ANABLAST SERUM Leukemia 'Cure' Fails, Boy Dies MONTREAL Guynemer, (CP) Rene| The Canadian Press that his son, the child whose fa-|died at 2:50 a.m. in Montreal's| ther. had hoped would be cured! Ste, Justine Hospital. of leukemia by a French biolo-| Mr. Guynemer, who brought gist's controversial serum, died|/Mr. Naessens to Canada, said early today. his son was confirmed Thurs- The 34-year-old boy began re-|day afternoon by the hospital ceiving injections June 16 of the) chaplain. jserum known as Anablast. On) |before he was to have mounted | the gallows. | Marcotte was scheduled for) execution in Montreal's Bor-| jdeaux jail minutes after mid-| night for shooting down a police | Mr. Scott was told that Gen, Vanier was in a private meet- ing with Prime Minister Pear- son, Later, Mr. Scott said, there j|man in the "Santa Claus gang"|Was a telephone call from Es- bank holdup at Montreal 11 days| mond Butler, Gen. Vanier's sec- before Christmas, 1962. | One of the three bandits in| the $132,000 robbery wore a} Santa Claus costume. Two po-| licemen were shot to death. Yves Mayrand, 28-year-old lawyer for Marcotte, said he will apply in Montreal Superior; Court Monday for a new trial on} the basis of fresh evidence. About 2 p.m. EDT Thursday the federal cabinet announced that it had rejected a second ap- peal to <commute Marcotte's death sentence. It thus ap- peared that the 33-year-old car- penter's last hope for escaping the noose had vanished. e these develop-| ments; ~ Shortly after the Commons began sitting at 2 p.m., Remi Paul, Conservative MP for Berthier - Maskinonge - De- lanaudiere, rose on a question |retary, who reported there was no need for the MPs to call on the Governor-General because a week's stay of execution had | just been granted. A Government House spokes- }man: told The Canadian Press that Gen. Vanier and Mr. Pear- son had spent some time dis- }cussing the Marcotte case. He |said the Governor-General had suggested an examination of the case and Mr. 'Pearson had agreed. This order arrived at the jail shortly after 7 p.m. where it was received by Sheriff L. P, | Caisse. He sent his deputy to advise Marcotte, Sheriff Caisse said he was told that Marcotte received the news calmly, The prisoner would re- main in the death cell pending the new execution date, July 10. Barry Crusades For Race Peace Ports tiniwe' Ii noaiiitatinn atl | Later in the afternoon a groupi chief of the Cuban armed forces, waters n | the Republican national conven- tion in San Francisco. Goldwa- ter hopes this will take some steam out of the civil rights, is- sue. Also, he has said that as president he would enforce the bill "vigorously and impar- tially..." BARRY GOLDWATER | SCHOOL TERM place or such products as toilet bow! cleaners and bathroom de- oderizers. | Advertising plugs for men's and women's underwear, all types of female foundation gar-| ments, funeral parlors and .cem- eteries, health studios and liq-) -- ; uor also fall under the ban. tion mi gpd -- Davis an- Mail order advertisements are "0unced Thursday that in next ocumied only if the sponsor is/Y°#! " schoo! term the content well-established and has a high|f Grade 13 courses in Ontario reputation. No help wanted ad-|high. schocis will be made vertisements may be broadcast lish'er and a student's term and sponsorship of programs by mark will be evaluated in the breweries and wineries is ac- final standing. cepted only in provinces where) The minister said the changes -it is legal to advertise such arc 1ecommended in a 59-page . products. report prepared for him by a CTS COSMETICS special Grade 13 study com- AFFEC SMETICS mites. The ban also applies to week He said his department was tyes eh elisha: eae a'o implementing for next-year as S, shes fae a lotions. Also under the ban is sc somaya = Bn the advertising of professional) © s § { ' nf ened to two from 2% hours by ep by doctor's, dentists and) |, use of fewer questions and awyers. more options. A total ot rot available 'for| The committee, headed by die nsw include new. Frederick Hamilton, director of sponsorship, They mag oa pies education of the Guetph board civic affairs, pie . opt cha of education, included. these ur- pee og aor spine, gent 'recommendations among fart Pe realities, religious sweeping proposa's to "relieve programs, formal education pro- 4 idieiond pressure" on Grade grams, weather and tide fore-|"" e casts and educational programs It says Grade 13 has. de- served "its reputation as a year ag? seyre4 , of undue emotiona! strain and The CBC of unreasonably heavy study load' with the 'main emphasis }on memory of factual material. Complete stress on the final mark in a heavy load of nine departmental. examinations in most cases made it a two-week "cram year' with everything depending on. success in. the FIRE DEPT. 5-6574 June examinations, it says The report favors a gradual HOSPITAL 723-2211 \elimination of the importance of TORONTO (CP) Educa- was engaged ir CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE. 725-1133 723 Grade 13 Grind Eased final examinations and_ their eventual displacement by term work standings. It says such a change "will undoubtedly do a great deal to remove one of the most serious weaknesses of the present system." Mr. Davis reserved decision on a long-term-aspect of the re- port -- eventual. elimination of Grade 13 and establishment of a system of community col- leges across the province. The two-year tommunity col- leges, in addition to providing a new channel of advanced cduca- tion, would offer an additional chance to -high school gradu- ates who failed to qualify for university or-polytechnical studies. The minister said the recom- mendation would have far- reaching effects on Ontario's education system but he would not comment on the attitude of the government except to say a decision will have to be made soon, Mr. Davis said a committee would be established this sum- mer to take steps te remove from each Grade 13° subject topics which at present take up three weeks of teachinz time He roted it was not the inten- tion of the report to shorten the academic year. Teachers would be urged to consider the redue- tion in topics as an opportunity for more intensive study k 1959 examination student's term work will consti tute 25 per cent of his final standing, It wuiil reflect the opinion of the principal ana teachers of his work throughout the year. The actuai examina- tion will repc2sent 75 per cent of the final mark. However, for the 1966 depart- mentals the committee. report recommends that term work make up 35 per cent and -he examination 65 per cent of the final standing. Where no term mark is ayail- able as in the case of a cor respondence course student, the final examination would count for the full standing. The report also emphasizes that the change in the form. of Al of privilege to ask that the goy-|~ pended. | He also saidit was he himself ernment postpone Marcotte's ex- A blood transfusion had been| Who made the decision, after }pend the Anablast treatments. | tigated. 'The serum, pr |to injections of the claimed anti-| 97 Hamilton, only eyewitness to : R presidential campaign ¢ oul d lowing. French medical authorities as | And Thursday, and he was said to be|Que., restaurant ' owner, toid|\"@, Plood condition of the boy' shooting. 0 | kept in touch with the U.S, Cen- | ment. The consulting committee} ' tral groes, seeking counsel on meth-| from the woman's statement | treatment was to be continued) 95 rier in the day before a de- least 200 persons flee Cuba be- : tender for the Republican presi-| The Tuesday. statement by' the Gilles Gregoire, Creditiste MP) 5#Y5- . saying he questioned the con-| A H ] | stitutionality of its accommoda-} t ospita \from 97 per cent. | government to make a complete respondent. Berane t. Gallas. Senator Everett M. Dirksen of| Staff members were stricken began after the Microbiological) -yieq the discussion out of or-|Mexico City June 20 had the Toronto General Hospital's cafe-|}™ and concluded it would office and maintenance employ-! president of the college, said all were treated in the hospital's| . Tornado Kills Boy their condition was satisfactory. germ staphylococcus. He said |the germ could have been car-/Nado cut a narrow path of de- was under way, jday, killing one Newmarket A hospital official said alljyouth and injuring two other) } 5 but added he did not know if|counsellor at the exclusive) covered by six, seven or eight|the 'sandwiches .and dressing|camp for boys and girls between/ the crucial years during which yJaced on an emergency basis|he was struck by flying debris) d |ecution until all the facts of the ordered June 23 when the child's Rapist with doctors, t The Quebec College of Physi-! wy Paul referred to a sworn! ) -- Sena-jsion -- perhaps triggered by educated biologist Gaston Naes- |leukemia serum as a humani-|the slayings, who said she saw PRN oe ; thout therapeutic value. de ild ij eivil ts explo-| The concern of the Arizona|W! It was only on Tuesday that ould not | build into a ciyil righ plo-) but could not say who did the NEW YORK (AP)--Premier was reported to be responding sad galling on clergymen and other| | Solititor - General J. Watson 2 } e | Intelligence Agency for Tainted Food jnamed by the college said this} ods of averting trouble. jagainst the disease, a cancer! cision was reached not to inter-| fore she defected last month, dential nomination, voted | committee said the Leukemia the| A report from Washington by er ' nnyvi« | inquiry into the new facts. ' d tions and employment Pioye TORONTO hey: M | also says Miss Castro's flight to Illinois, a chief architect of the|With food - poisoning Thursday | Institute of the University of der. Clemency was a matter for| Co-operation of her brother, teria. |have no immediate toxic effect. | ces suffered nausea, vomiting, | (hose who have been treated emergency ward. Three were} A doctor said the sickness At Ontario Camp ried in dressing used on the|Struction through a children's) food served in the hospital is|persons. of the present papers. were on the patient's menu. [the ages of 5 and 17, died from) new forms of post - @econdary| and worked throughout the night/as he tried to close shutters on) | | | } | June 26, the injections were sus-- FATHER MADE DECISION sus-/case had been thoroughly inves- condition became worse. |Gians and' Surgeons had agreed) deposition by Mrs. Hona Dallos oldwater fears thelfringe elements in his own fol./S¢Ms, has been described by jtarian act. three men in the bank doorway leonservative was reported). Rene Guynemer, a Duvernay,| | Fidel Castro's sister Juanita us ae or ihem ie jmarkedly to conventional treat- MacNaught said all the facts |were considered by the cabinet|eatly four years and helped at Goldwater, the leading con- Fells Staff condition of the blood. fere with the execution. e New York Herald-Tribune against the civil rights bill after| cells had dropped to 27.per cent|f0r Lapoint, then asked \the paper's Latin Ametican core sions (CP)--Thirty-four|, THe Anablast injections were) Speaker Alan Macnaughton old. after eating ham sandwiches in Montreal had analyzed the se-|the government, not Parliament,|Raul, the deputy premier and A doctor, nine nurses and 23| Dr. Victor Goldbloom, vice-| diarrhea and _ prostration and) With Anablast have died. still being treated today, but ably caused by the| | pi cgirscrend bs cccgdd VARNEY, Ont, (CP) -- A tor- Sandwiches. An investigation|ranching camp near here Thurs-| | |prepared in the same kitchen,| James Raymond Fysh, 17, a The report says 1966-70 will be| The hospital's laboratory was|a broken neck received when} education will become visible. | analyzing food samples. ithe outside of a cabin. For that transition period it KNEES OUT WALKOUT nT that thes Grade 12 graduaé| Sizzly Season Puts New York In Tizzy tion diploma 'continue to be is- The sued and that a certificate of| standings in each subjjejct be is- sued- in the 'matriculation year" (Grade 13); 2. That in September 1966, the present Grade 13 be re- placed by a program called the matriculation year; : | 3. That instruction in the mat-| : : : | § ive riculation year be in two levels bare knees of fiv NEW YORK (AP) -- New a examiantion examinations will result in con- siderable reduction in the time required for marking papers without lowering the validity of the examination. Approximately 42,000 students wrote 240,000 examinations this year. The proposed deletion 'of top- ics, the report says, is a tem porary measure. In. the long run a carefully planned revision in the curriculum will be needed To encourage more penetrat- ing study of high school courses, the report urges universities to review their entrance require-| ments to reduce the number of} subjects required for admission. Currently, Ontario universities require standing in five sub- jects, usually covered by nine! papers. The com mittee hopes this can be duced to three or four subjects) re- --general and advanced--with a student's standing in the ad-| vanced (specialist) level deter-| mined 50 per cent by term work and 50 per cent by a joint uni- versity education department examination and standing at the general level based entirely on term work - 4. That universities consider for "provisional admission' qualified Grade 12 graduates. For at least a decade, the r port states, it will be ne to operate such an interim sys- tem during which it will be) neither practical nor possible to do away with Grade 13: The ideal goal is a system! whereby Grade 12 would be the| final secondary school year, leading to community colleges, polytechnical! - institutes, ers' 'colleges and universities or to immediate employment, y| have teach- off York City's sizzling heat wave has brought Teamsters out in kneepants, 'stranded sightseers on an aerial ride at the world's fair and sparked a rent-strike threat at the Empire State Building. "Distinguished. lawyers" are working in their under- shirts, said a law firm partner whose offices are' in the 39- floor heat belt of the Empire State Building. The floors been without air con- ditioning for a. week, On four .working days of this week the temperature went inte the 90s. On two days it hit 99. Pavements buckled, Motorists' radiators, and tempers, boiled, Iu a few sections, the electricity went temporarily, the heat trippimg automatic ewitches. result of Teamsters Union members-- and management's stern dis- approval -- led to a walkout Thursday of 75 drivers at a railway express agency ter- minal in Brooklyn. | It would not be proper, said | a company spokesman, for housewives to see the knees of the company representa- tives, The drivers, who had the support of their local, said Bermuda shorts were just the thing for the oven-hot cabs of the trucks, -A shop steward said he made a private sur- vey of housewife reaction and got no complaints. At the world's fair a dozen sightseers in two gondolas on the aerial tower ride were trapped in the air for hours when. the electrical brakes locked. 'Officials blamed it on the hot weather. SHOOTING VICTIM Mrs. Rose . Carlson, a 40- year-old mother of three, on the sidewalk in front of a Vancouver hotel her desperate altempt to escape an armed man ended. During where a chase through the hotel, she was, shot at least twice in the abdomen before her assailant was disarmed by a bakery truck driver. Mrs. Carlson is in fair condition in hospital. --(CP Wirephoto)