Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Sep 1964, p. 1

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'OSHAWA: SLOWDOWN BEGINS Hope Fading Fo The U.S. strike of the United p tinuing. OSP employs some 100 work-| supplies springs to|at GM was interrupted Tuesday ers and General Motors Houdaille Industries, w hich supplies bumpers and other car' A company spokesman said| patts to GM, said it will con- tinue full production for the present with more than 600 the weekend, when it will take stock and decide on possible layoffs. The company, a large manufacturer of astomobile parts, is a subsidiary of Gen- eral Motons 4 The full production schedule |by material shortages caused by ith U.S, strike. eS BUSH, lit ; e Ye more than $7,000,000 in daily wages. A major stumbling block to ing some 250,000 workers back on. the lines was more than 17,000 local at- the - plant cov such subjects as company-fur- by the union from "|GM's chief competitors--Ford and Chrysler Chrysler. UAW President Walter Reu- * DETROIT: IN-PLANT DEMANDS BLOCK WAY tilement Before Weekend cal issues were moving slowly. workers to remain on the "I hope the tempo will step factories which a td pure THe i The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neig VOL. 93 -- NO. 230 hboring centres, Oshawa Zimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1964 Authorized os Second Class Mail Ottawa and for payment Weather Report Turning a little milder overnight. Mainly -- sunny, Thursday. High-63, low-42. FORTY PAGES Post Office Department of Postage in Cash, A milestone in the history of Ontario County will be mark- ed today when the new County and Administration of Justice Building is opened in Whitby. Hon. John Robarts, premier of Ontario, will formailly de- COUNTY BUILDING OPENS TODAY clare the building open. Rep- resentatives from every mu- nicipality in the county will be present at the ceremonies. Plaques commemorating the dead of both world wars have been moved from the old to the new building and will be rededicated by members of Ontario County's Royal Cana- dian Legion branches. A re- ception at Parkwood, home of Col. R. S. McLaughlin, will follow the afternoon cere- monies, The day will end with a Civic Banquet given by the City of Oshawa at a local hotel, --Oshawa Times Photo B\triumph in the nuclear field NONG Stock Court Hears Of Judge's Share Deals SUDBURY; Ont----(GP)---An}as-a_consideration for help in |statements that he did not know Ontario Securities Commission|getting NONG's Sudbury fran-|/ Who 'ireceived~14,000~shares~of investigator testified Tuesday|chise through city council in|/NONG stock. that Mr, Justice Leo Landre-|1956, and ailso in agreeing to) For nearly three hours of the ville of the Ontario Supremejaccept stock for signing the/hearing, portions of transcribed Court sold 7,500 shames in North- ern Ontario Natural Gas Com-| He is also accused of conspir-|were read in court. This |franchise agreement. jevidence from the Farris trial in- pany for $14 to $20 apiece injing with.Ralph K. Farris of|cluded testimony by John Mc- the spring of 1957. |Vaneouver, president of NONG, Graw, head of the Vancouver Investigator H. R. Huxley, the|to have the franchise agree-|brokerage finm of Continental only witness in the opening day ment adopted. \Investments Company Ltd. of a preliminary hearing on) Mr, Justice Landreville|popaptisn FUND' charges of municipal corruption elected trial by judge allone,| under the Criminal Code against Mr. Justice Landreville, said this would mean a gain of $105,- 000 to $150,000. The 54-year-old judge--mayor of Sudbury from January, 1955, to September, 1956, when he was named to the bench--is. ac- cused of accepting NONG stock and no plea was taken at the preliminary hearing. Farris, who is seriously ill, was convicted of perjury in Toronto in April and was sen- |tenced to nine months 'definite jand three months indefinite. [The conviction, being appealed, was based on Farris's sworn Council Approve Historic Change VATICAN CITY (AP -- The Vatican ecumenical council yoted approval today to two historic measures: The recog- nition of shared authority be- tween Pope and bishops and the creation of a permanent body of married and single deacons. " The approval of the meas- ures came in an over-all vote on the third chapter of the council schema De Ecclesia, on nature of the church. The council voted on __ individual clauses over the past several working session in St. Peter's chapter. However, it still is not 'a full- fledged council decree. Other chapters in the schema have not yet been approved by the council. Once they are voted in working ses- | sion, the council must meet in public session with the Pope and cast oné last ballot on the entire schema But that last public session is largely a formality for. the promulgation of the schema as @ decree. It said that Farris instructed McGraw to establish subscrip- ; tion fund of 14,000 NONG shares jat $2.50 a share in November, 11956. The first of a series of letters jread by Mr. Huxley was from McGraw to Mr. Justice Landre- ville in February, 1957. It men- tioned Farris's instructions to 'buy 10,000 NONG shares at $2.50 apiece, and said this $25,000 chamge had been covered by |selling 2,500 of the shares at |$10 @ share, The remaining 7,500 shares were enclosed in| the letter. A few days later; Mr. Justice Landreville wrote the Vancou-|yersial member of South Viet firm acknowledging the|Nam's ruling military triumvi- Basilica, the assembly estab- |Stock and offering his assist-|rate was reported preparing to lished its final téxt of the |@mce in promoting the company,|leave the country Thursday' as | |Premier Nguyen Khanh sought} ver the previous evidence said. | Poison Hunted | | After Breakin STOCKHOLM (AP) -- Urgent LEO LANDREVILLE By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Blthe war in South Viet Nam in| thi bounds and eventually to win a limited victory there. The chief risk is that Chinese make it much more diffi- TZ China and North Viet problem is preventing a polit- "but rather in inducing it to CHINA HAS BOMB, TEST BLAST S00 NUCLEAR TEETH FOR RED DRAGON New Worry For USS. In Asia Test Set Thursday a limited victory in the con- ict. ical collapse in the country|call off the war it directs amd/ fli which has been rocked by a se-/ supports in South Viet Nam." ries of government crises dur-| Bundy also said that expan- U.S. Hints WASHINGTON (CP - AP) -- ing the last 11 months. for the United States to per-/ crisis i sion of the war beyond South Viet Nam is not a course of & g u a MUNICH (Reuters) -- For- mer SS Gen. Karl Wolff, a high official 'in the Nazi hierarchy, was sentenced to 15 years at jhar@ labor after a West Ger- |man court today. convicted him jon charges of aiding in the war- | bine murder of 300,000 Jews in| Poland. Wolff, 64, was originally changed with complicity but the Munich court found him guilty of aiding in the murders -- legailly, a lesser charge. Wolff had been an adjutant of} Heinrich Him miler, Nazi SS} (elite comps) chief, and liaison) officer to. Hitler before becom-| ing German commander-in-| chief in Italy at the close of | the war. He was found guilty) lof having helped provide the) rolling "stock in which 300,000 |Jews went to their deaths in |Nazi concentration camps. | Throughout the trial, wihiite-| haired Wolff denied knowledge of the Nazi program of the ex- termination of the, Jews. The prosecution changed that he be- longed to the Nazi brain trust Rided Slaughter Of Jews, Nets: 15 Years Hard Labor To the specific change that he |helped in the deportation of] § 300000 Jews from Warsaw's ghetto to extermination camps in Poland, Wolff replied that he believed the Jews were re- moved only for resettlement. Wolff had achteved early post-war fame for his secret ne-| | gotiations with the Allies to ar- range the surrender of German forces in Italy. He was a wit- ness at the Nurenberg war crimes trial, Although eonfined by the Allies for a short time, he was not prosecuted by them. SET UP SURRENDER Wolff had achieved fame for his secret negotiations with the Allies to arrange the surrender of German forces in Italy. _ He..was.a_prosecution witness at the Nuernberg war crimes trials after the war, but was kept under arrest for about four yeas in Italy, Nuernberg, Lon- don and elsewhere. In 1949, a Hamburg denazifi- cation tribunal sentenced him to four years in prison but he |that pl d the exter ition of Jews. Wolffs' defence counsel, Ru- dolf Aschenauer, said after the verdict that there was no ac- j\tual evidence of Wolff's guilt jand announced he would ap- |peal it. was rel d in view of the time the already spent in cus- tody. In January, 1962, the Ger- mans arrested him once more and kept him in pre-trial con- finement until his trial opened last July 13. JUNTA MAN PACKS BAGS Another Coup Looms By JOHN T. WHEELER {throw Khanh on Sept. 13, would| whose refusal to join the nebel- SAIGON (AP) -- to another coup attempt. A high government weeks, ostensibly safeguard himself: against) A contro-|2ccompany Khiem to Europe. |lion saved Khanh. | Khem, a Roman Catholic in| pred ' tly Buddhist Viet! Nam, had been looked on until recently as one of the most} }powerful men in the country. | Repons <reulated early this! month that Khanh was under| Buddhist pressure to get rid of} Sounce)Khiem and that the premier! the offic S. |said Lt.-Gen. Tran Thien Khiem| 2 Piggbsenbien on would go to Europe for-several! wii) tour of Southeast Asia un- to 'thank ti]: feeling subsided. plafined to send him on a good- | |warnings from the Swedish po-|Westeyn governments for sup-| Shontly after, the premier| lice were broadcast today fol-/Porting South Viet Nam's bat-| dropped Khiem as defence min-| lowing: theft of enough poison|tle against the Communist Viefiister and took over the post| from a pharmaceutical labora-| tory to kill at least 25,000 per- sons. \were after-aaneotics. Cong. It also was reported that Col. himself. After the unsuccessful at-| The government source last Saturday said the young of- ficers had demanded again that Khanh exile Khiem and dismiss five other older gener- als; The source said today the young generats had given Khanh until Oct. 25 to purge The government news agency published a communique today, said to be from the young of- ficers, denying that they had given Khanh an ultimatum. But they said they "earnestly hope"' the government will soon sa- tisfy their request "for a purge Pham Ngoc Thao, Khanh's tempt to overthrow Khanh Sept.|of corrupt elements from the It was believed the thieves/press aide and a target of the)13, Khiem came under fire from|leading 'unsuccessful ettempt to ver-|the group of young geerals|and the the military echelon of administration. DAM BURST Cross indicates Macherla, India, where today a reser- voir burst reportedly killing 200 people and 1,000 cattle. The town, about 240 miles north of Madras, is under 10 feet_of water. i U.S. Shows Superplane SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP)--The aiir force planned to- day to show off at nearby Ed- wards Air Force Base its se- cret YF-12A interceptor--and a new bomber-killing rocket car- ried inside the 2,000 miile-an- hour '"'manned missile." The YF-12A,. called the All when President Johnson ne- vealed its existence Feb. 29, is reported capable of 2,200 miles an hour and 100,000-feet aiti- tude. Only official word on its performance is the president's statement that it flies more than three times the speed of sound (over 2,000 m.p.h.), ex- jceeds 70,000 feet and has re- |peatedly broken the 1,665 m.p.h. speed record claimed by the | Russians, | The YF-12A's new. rocket, called Aim 47. is carried inside the 90-foot long fuselage to pro- tect its nuclear warhead from more than triple sonic sfeeds. | East Germany Seeking Credit BONN (AP) --East Ger- many's Communist government has askéd West Germany for a credit of several hundred mil- lion marks, a spokesman for the ministfy of economics said Tuesday. A hundred million marks is $25,000,000, i-/The United 'AP tin | i a recent by US, strategist Peking's preparations 8as8 WON'T SAY U.S. sources declined to Bhs caf iii ti or any prospects for systems of delivery of nuclear weapons." |the information public. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS ~ Quake Hits As DeGaulle Visits Chile SANTIAGA, Chile (Reuters) -- A violent earth tremor shook Santiago and Valparaiso today as President de Gaulle of France, aboard the French cruiser Colbert, sailed down the Chilean coast on a two-day trip to Valparaiso. Court Order Ends Wildcat At Ford CLEVELAND (AP) -- Members of United Auto Workers Local 1250 were returning to their jobs today at Ford Motor Company's two big engine plants and foundry in suburban Brook Park in compliance with a court order to end their wildcat strike. Ford of Canada Goes To Pact Table TORONTO (CP) -- The United Auto Workers of Amert- ca (CLC) today opened contract negotiations with Ford, the last of Canada's Big Three automobile producers to meet with the union. ; Coal Heap Slide' Crushes Six Girls ISTANBUL (AP) -- Six girls aged from eight to 17 years were crushed to death under tons of slag as they attempted to pick coal lumps from a mound in. outlying Istanbul. 'Kiwis' Extend Pledge To Christmas WELLINGTON (AP) -- Prime Minister Keith J. Hol- yoake Wednesday confirmed that the New Zealand police unit serving with the United Nations force would remain in Cyprus until Dec. 26. The extension of the duties of the 20-man unit from Nov, 21 follows the Security Council's renewal of the mandate this week. 70 Canadians Return From Cyprus QUEBEC (CP) -- Some 70 soldiers returned today from United Nations duty on Cyprus in the beginning of a rota- tion of Canadian troops serving on the troubled Mediterran- ean island.

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