Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Oct 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, , VOL. 93 -- NO, 233 aah Sa eae ARE, RN Ee Ae Rm OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1964 eae Ria. ll deel dt 5h eit ee EC Me + vey ees The Osharon Times Authorized os Second Class, Ma! (ae ante le d Ottawa and for payment ELGG BEDE GEN OM pry GG Weather Ot et aah alta al ale ala lll al atte tk il A Ba ae Report Sunny with cloudy intervals. Cooler Sun- day. High-62, low-52. it Pest Office pred, gt? sd TWENTY PAGES One of two cars damaged by falling branches on Verdun road following a storm with } i sont potty, ot, someone Pr GALE DAMAGE IN OSHAWA gale force winds which hit branches, also brought down Oshawa Friday night, lies be- wires, cutting off the street to strewn with branches and traffic for over an hour, The leaves. The falling poplar gale, however, was brief and Eighty Perish In Spanish Air Crash TREVELEZ, Spain (AP) Wreckage of a French plane was found early today near the Nevada "The plane is completely de- stroyed and its thousands fragments scattered all over an e@rea of some 600 metres (more than 600 yards)," they reported. "The bodies, horribly muti- lated or bummed, were far be- yond recognition." The civil guard said the wreckage was found around 5 a.m, high on Alecazaba Peak, 11,043 feet above sea level in southern Spain. i the wreckage but no sign of life) could be found anywhere," the civil guard report added. day while flying over the south- erm edge of Spain en route from Palma de Mallora to Tangier on .a Paris-to-Africa passenger flight, All aboard were reported to be French of Mauritanian. HAD WRONG REPORT otlage had been found in the Med- iterranean off coast of later it issued a new statement saying the plane was spotted 8,200 feet up ona peak in the Sierra Nevada, most inaccessible spot, 15 miles north of Tnevelez and near 11,- 411 foot Mulhacen Peak, the! highest in Spain, "Smoke was still coming from| province. leanly Friday they had The plane hit the peak Fri-|buming parts falling from the sky over that area, Othens re- ported flames had been seen for some time and then van- ished. We immediately started to climb the mountains in the hope of finding something posi- tive. This took us many hours of exhuastive work, FIND SUDDENLY "We were about to give up the search when suddenly, near the summit of the Aleazaba Peak, we found it. It was com- pletely destroyed." The air ministry gave no ex- Earlier, the Spanish air min- istry had reported the wréck- the southern Spain. But an hour The wreckage was in an al-|eous report. "This is to ay " first . |note on the finding of the re- es Gree ale of the French plane. At 10:25 a.m, it was }Super - Constellation had located wreckage of plane at a point . . . which cot- responds to the Mulhacen Sierra One civil guard said: learned a "Some villagers had reported seen Twister Kills Hilda Wrecks Town NEW ORLEANS (AP)--Hur-| ricane Hilda's shricking winds/gyardsmen rushed to the area after an emergency cail for ad- death - dealing tornadoes, One | ditional heavy equipment--bull- twister left at least 12 dead atidozers and draglines -- was Larose, the U.S. Coast Guard/made so debris would be re- smashed into the deserted coast today and the storm spun off; [© SOLER aa ioe oe, A navy doctor flown rose by a coast guard helicop-/ RIDE OUT WINDS ter pronounced 12 persons dead} at the scene A Coast 'Guard spokesman _ "an undetermined number of) (pent) arrived. ported at Golden Meadow and) Galliano in the same. general) said civil authorities removed| vicinity, | before the helicopter) Press learned that 14 men rode out Hilda's punishing winds on Coroner Dr. Philip. Robichaux)a floating offshore drilling rig Nevada, about 15 kilometres (nine miles) north of the vil- lage of Ugujar, at an altitude of 2,500 metres (8,200 feet). SEES RESIDENTS "The search plane reported it saw no signs of survivors, But did see in the area residents of nearby villages. "A Spanish search and res- cue helicopter and a second hel- icopter from the joint Spanish- U.S. base at Moron (Sevilla) has left for the scene. Also a group of civil guards and vol- 12, Civil defence and national Fo Ta moved oom --the-town---of-5,000--inteers-are en-route to thre-spot where the. wreckage was lo- cated." The propeller-driven DC-6 Un- ion de Transports Aeriems plane carried a crew of seven and 73 passengers, all reported to be French, The plane was bound for Nouakchott, Atlantic port capi- Other tornadoes were re-| Meanwhile, the Associated said 35 persons injured at La-|in the gulf some 100 miles south|tal of Mauritania in West Af- rose had been taken to Race-|of Morgan City Friday night. | rica. land 'and more are on the way." They reported winds of 105) There was no hint of the miles an hour at 7 p.m. and/cause of the crash. Governor John McKeithen or- since then there was no volo) The airline is privately owned dered .an emergency 200 - bed)radio contact with the ocean) and operated. . civil defence hospital opened up driller, et Raceland to treat the in-/with a drilling derrick in the} centre of its V-shaped hull. outside Paris Thursday night, jured. a $7,000,000 rig oo The four-engine plane took off from Le Bourget Airfield jlanded first at Marseille, then NEWS HIGHLIGHTS |} at Plma de Mallorca in the Bal- |earic Islands off Spain.,It took ist from there before dawn Fri- lay. RCMP Check Queen CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- RCMP officers were on duty at airports and ferry terminals in Prince Edward Island today as security machinery for Queen Elizabeth's visit here next week went into operation. Dock Workers Return To Work NEW YORK (AP) -- Dock federal restraining order, began returning to work Friday night and today after a two- Texas. But there was an indication the International Long- representing 60,000 men, fight the proposed imposition of an 80-day cooling-off period. shoremen's Association, No Safety Panic: J. Edgar Hoover | WASHINGTON (AP) -- FBI | Director J. Edgar Hoover was }quoted Friday as expressing deep concern that "we don't become hysterical and go too far" in setting safeguards for the U.S. President's safety. The Washington Evening Star said he gave as an example to the Warren commission a. visit 's Security In P.E.I. | workers bowing to a 10-day day walkout from Maine to would planation of its original erron-| The air ministry's note said: | search| the! city crews had cleared up wreckage and fallen wires by 10 p.m, --Oshawa Times Photo i ainchlememtictith simian 70th BREAKIN NETS 8 MONTHS OTTAWA (CP) Daniel O'Connell, a 62-year-old tran- sient, has done it again. On Friday--for the 70th- odd time--he was convicted of breaking into the Domini- can Fathers monastery here. Magistrate Joachim Sauve sent him to jail for eight months -- guaranteeing Dan- jel food and shelter over the winter. Daniel has baffled police for years. He's been exam- ined by psychiatrists and s0- cial workers but no one has been able to determine why he heads for the monastery time he completes tence. a sen- 'US On Red Pat 'Says Barry PEORIA, Ill. (AP)--Senator Barry Goldwater wheeled into Stop campaigning with a charge that the Johnson Democratic like a homing pigeon every | DETROIT (CP) Layoffs caused by a United Auto Work- ers strike against General Mot- ors mounted to some 20,000 to- day as negotiations to end the eight-day-old walkout continued at a snail's pace. A spokesman for the com- pany said the layoffs were caused mainly by a lack of warehouse space to handel the| growing backlog of parts and| accessories for GM automobiles. Production of the giant auto- maker's new 1965 models was out off abruptly Sept. 25 when 250,000 UAW members went on strike at plants in 16 states. The walkout was called be- cause of a failure to reach agreement on non-economic is- sues for a national labor con- | tract, | HIT SUPPLIER PLANTS The union ordered workers to continue on the job at plants turning out parts which are sold to GM's chief competitors, Ford and Chrysler. It was these | plants which were being hit by) | the layoffs. | Although. there is still 'no agreement on a national con- tract, negotiators have been concentrating all week long on resolving local plant demands, which have been whittled down from 18,400 to under 17,000. Breaking the log jam of lo- cal problems has been de- scribed by both sides as the key to getting the strikers back) to work and GM into produc-| tion, There still was no reported agreement, however, on such non-economic national issues as GM Strike Toll 20,000 Discussions Continue working conditions, union rep- resentation and production quo- |tas. Bargaining team were sched- = to continue discussions on both the national and local lev- | els during the weekend, but ob- servers felt a settlement would |not be forthcoming until late }next week at the earliest, WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Some}| 90 hourly-rated employees of the McKinnon Industries plant will be laid off Monday because of. affects from the strike against General Motors Corpo- ration in the United States, a plant spokesman said Friday. He said 'the company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Gen- eral Motors Corporation, will also instruct another 300 em- |ployees not to report to work at the two McKinnon plants in St. Catharines. The dislocations follow the an- ticipated curtailment of produc- tion on assembly lines of Gen- eral Motors of Canada Limited at Oshawa. The company spokesman said a decision has been made to operate all divisions of the com- pany as far as possible next week, depending on the supplies available to the plants from al- lied divisions of GM in the United States. Shipments for export and to other General Motors of Can- ada Limited customers will be continued. as material to pro- duce them is available. At present McKinnon Indus- tries has some 6,100 hourly- rated employees at its two St. Catharines plants and some 1,100. workers in Windsor, VICTORIA (CP) -- Acting on| onders from the B.C. attorney-| |general's department, RCMP) arrested the chairman of the} |government's purchasing com- |mission Friday and charged] |him under a section of the} Criminal Code dealing with| | 'frauds upon the government.' Friday afternoon the provin-| cial cabinet, in an emengency| session, ordered that the 53-| jyear - old chairman, George} }duties "until further order." The police also arrested an) B.C. Purchasing Chief Charged With Fraud letting the car firm forgive $1,577 he had owed on purchase of another car. The charges allege the of- fences took place last' Oct. 30 and Feb. 7, They also state that Pacific Ohrysier did business with the government, RCMP said they had been in- vestigating the case for some time. Attorney-General Robert Bonner said the charges were laid on instructions from his de- his final day of Illinois whistle-| EF, P. Jones, be relieved of all) partment. | Both Jones and Hankinson were arrested in their offices. jadministration, by virtue of alofficial of a Victoria car. firm,| Charges against the two were jnewly revealed nuclear treaty proposal, wants. to lead the | United States "on the primrose-|were remanded. to next Tues-| vict Robert red path to recognition of Red China." date for president, said in a Statement that press reports from Britain indicate there is "a new nuclear treaty already drafted and ready for. immedi- ate execution between Great Britain and the United States jand--believe it or not -- Red | China." | albeging he gave a benefit ac-| cepted by the chairman. Both) day on $2,000 bail each. | Jones is alleged to have ac-| a price below cost from Paci- |fic Chrysler Products Limited. | George Hankinson, managing) director of the now - defunct jfirm, is accused of providing 'ones with. Wi consent of the government. | Jones, commission chairman! isince 1956, also is charged with! laid under the same section of the Criminal Code used to con- Sommers, a for-| mer B.C. forests minister sen-| tenced to five years in prison| Goldwater, Republican candi-|cepted a Dodge convertible at|in 1958. Sommers was found guilty of conspiracy to accept bribes and on five specific. charges of ac-| cepting bribes. Other members of' the three- (eighfleeat ate vad are R. G. McKee, deputy for- ests minister, and Arnold Webb, deputy works minister. | HAL BANKS Farm Shooting Kills 3 LEAMINGTON, Ont. (CP) -- Three persons are dead in nearby Mersea Township today, was a double murder and sui- cide. The dead are: Mrs, Marie Greenwood, 30; Paul Gillespie, 31, Reinhard Ludke, 31. All are from Mersea Town- ship. Police said a 30-30 rifle was found beside Ludke's body. The tragedy took place ih Mrs. Greenwiod's home on the Third Concession of Mersea Township, about five miles east of Leamington. Dr. J. A. Taylor, Leamington coroner, ordered the three. hod- jes taken to the Essex County mongue. ing. A 13-year-old girl, who was staying with Mrs, Greenwood's children, and her friend were in the house at the time. Mrs. Greenwood's three children were in bed, Police said they had learned Mrs. Greenwood who was ex- pecting another child, went out |\for a ride with Gillespie. They returned to her home shortly be- fore midnight. FIRES SHOTS While the group was sitting in the living room chatting, Ludke walked in with a .30-30 rifle and fired to shots. One hit Gillespie in the chest.. The other hit Mrs. Greenwood in the back, just below her shoulder blade. Ludke then turned the gun on himself and fired a bul- let into his head. First on the scené was Con- stable Paul Armstrong of the Mersea 'Township police. He summoned assistance from pro-| vincial police. Cpl. Fred Dicker} and Det.-Sgt. Howard Knox of the O.P.P. took charge of the investigation. Ludke lived on the Pointe Pe- lee road. Gillespie is also from the Leamington area. Mrs. Greenwood had been separated from her first husband for a number of years. Her three chil- dren-range from five to three) years. They were taken to a neigh- bor's for the night. | JUSTICE DEPARTMENT MYSTERY NEW YORK (AP) The U.S. justice department, "'in the ! interest of national | has abruptly ended the spy trial |of a mysterious Russian couple, security," § presumably to protect US." |counter-spy secrets. | This dramatic development i came Friday in the fifth day of ° |the trial in U.S. District Court. } |The jury had been chosen, and © |prosecutor John P. Hoey was © about to make his opening statement. | Instead, acting on telephoned © from Washington, © indict- j | instructions Hoey asked that the ments against Alexandre Soko- lov, 40, and his 34-year-old wife be dismissed,. The courtroom was stunned. Sokolov and his wife had time oniy for a quick embrace and kiss, As they left the courtroom immigration officials seized # them. They now face deporta- tion proceedings. Sources in Washington said the dismissal had no connec- Criminal Negligence In Child's Death! TORONTO -(CP) -- A coroner's jury ruled Friday, that "criminal negligence" on the part of three persons was re sponsible for the death of two-year-old Kathy Krac Aug. 25 -- her mother, Mrs, Nancy Krac, her grandmother, Mrs. Elva Musgrove. and her father George A» son which Hoover said resulted/foreign: relations. | in several people who belong to! subversive organizations placed "almost in rest" by local authorites eager|government circles that if the| trial continued, counter-espion- to co-operate with the U.S. Se- oret Service, lage activities of the U.S. gov-l THEIR SPY CA to Chicago by President John-|tion with diplomatic pressure or) ernment would be hindered. -| whose appearances hadn't beén planned in advance by the gov- ernment. Russian Couple Released the constitutional requirement! ° that a defendant be confronted by those levelling charges against him. The couple was accused of a six-year plot to send to Mos- cow secret data on U.S:. rocket- : lauching sites and atomic arms + shipments. They were arrested SE STOPPED One government source, when i Although the justice depart-| Sources said' continuation ofjasked if someone had "goofed,"|treated with top secrecy. until being}ment had.no comment on the) the trial carried the risk of. in-| conceded, house. ar-/development, it was felt-in high) volving addition a 1, witnesses) that." "you might say} Federal Judge John 'F. Dool-| ing praised the government's decision to dron its case, noting July 2, 1963 in a Washington apartment, which the govern- ment said contained a powerful short-wave radio, codes and ci- phers, and recording and pho- tographing apparatus. On the same day, U.S. agents anrested Ivan D. Egorov, a Russian United Nations person- nel 'officer, and his. wife, Alek- sandra, in new York. The two were traded later for two Amer- icans held by the Russians. Kaarlo Rudolph Tuomi, a Finn with top-echelon rank in the, Soviet espionage network, was to have been the key pros- ecution witness in the Sokolov trial, He was described by. the federal government as a double agent and his identity was the trial began in court. The defence succeeded in obtaining his name and home address from the government, despite bitter objections. | by a Toronto shipping firm the result of what police say}, Two witnesses, saw the shoot-| Order Hal Banks Into Federal Court Marshals Board Yacht To Deliver NEW YORK (CP) -- A sub- poena has been served on Hal Banks, former overlord of the Canadian Seafarers, to appear in court in New York in con- nection with a $5,000,000 action against three unions. Frank Connelly, New York lawyer for Upper Lakes Ship- ping Limited, said the subpoena was served on Banks about 6 p.m. Friday. on,a cruiser be- longing to the Seafarers Inter- national Union (Ind.) in Brook- lyn harbor. He said a U.S. federal mar- shal served the summons with- out trouble, ordering Banks to appear within two weeks in fed- eral court in Manhattan to make a deposition in the dam- age suit. The suit, brought as a result of labor trouble on the Great Lakes during the 1962-63 ship- ping seasons, claims damages as a result of loss of business by Upper Lakes. Connelly said Banks has been in New York for "several weeks" as a guest on the SIU yacht generally used by Pres- ident Paul Hall. He said it was '"'remarkable'"' that the RCMP and FBI couldn't find Banks if they wanted him. NO TROUBLE TO FIND "We have no trouble finding him whenever we want him," he said. "I think the answer is that they (the RCMP and FBI) don't want him." Banks' signature on the sub- poena receipt was said to have been followed by the words "'ex- ecutive vice-president" although SIU_ officials. said. earlier this week that Banks had resigned from all SIU offices. The unions have filed counter- suits against Upper Lakes, claiming loss of membership dues, Examination for discov- ery in the Upper Lakes suit, a preliminary to court action, has been under way in camera in New York for about three weeks with Company President J. D. Leitch of Toronto making his deposition during ail that time. Banks disappeared from Can- Subpoena to jail him for 30 days on @ contempt charge for ignoring & court injunction in a ship walk- out. . : On Sept. 15, the Quebec Su- preme Court rejected Banks' appeal from a conviction and @ five-year sentence: for conspif- acy to assault a rival union of- ficial, BAIL FORFEITED When he did not appear for the appeal, his $25,000 bail was forfeited. 3 The suit by Upper Lakes, which was the tanget of a long SIU picketing campaign after its crews ceased to be repre- sented by the union headed 'by Banks, is against the SIU, the International - Longshore- men's Association and the Mar- ine Engineers Beneficial Asso- ciation. After hearing that Banks was aboard the yacht in Brooklyn harbor, a Coast Guard petty of- ficer went aboard Friday, an according to a spokesman, was "given a bit of difficulty in that the people on board were not very co-op- erative." The spokesman said the petty officer reported to his superiors, and a larger party was sent under the command of a com- missioned officer. "They did not try to give the second party any problem," he added. He said the party held all those on board until the ar- rival of immigration and cus- toms officers, but could not say what their mission was. Other Officials could not be reached immediately for details, The an y the Coast Guard had found "one small violation" on the yacht concerning display of registra- tion numbers, He would not give the regis of the craft and said he did not know its name. Banks, an American citizen, faces a bench warrant for his arrest if he ever returns to Canada, However, Canadian au- thorities have said he is not liable for extradition under the ada in July after a civil war- rant was sworn out in Montreal conspiracy charge under which he was convicted in Canada. BELFAST (AP)--Police held 30 Irish nationalists today after the third 'straight night of pre- election rioting in Northern Ire- land. Scores of persons have been injured. ; The fighting flared again Fri- day night in a revival of an old and bitter feud after officers removed the Irish Republic's flag, which is outlawed in the Six counties of Norther Ire) ip land, part of the United King- dom. Aroused republicans, demand- ing Northern Ireland's union Belfast Rioting Takes Ugly' Turn Northern Ireland is predoml- nantly Protestant, and the ree public largely Roman Catholic, The deep political ate tagonism has often led to vio- lence in Northern Ireland but the latest outbreak is the worst in recent years. Reports from Dublin, the re- public's capital, said about 1,000 youths marched o) action in Belfast. The students hurled bottles and stones at guards, No new arrests were. reported, however. with "the 26 counties of the re- public to the south, are running candidates for 10 seats in the British House of Commons in the Oct. 15 general election. Despite appeals for calm, the rioting took an ugly turn. Vio- lence swept downtown Belfast, where Roman Catholic nation- alist sentiment. is strong. BOMBS HURLED . Demonstrators, engaging in a series of running battles' with hundreds of policemen, hurled gasoline bombs at armored cars and set a drug store afire. Fly- ing rocks and bottles filled the air, shattering shop windows. Among the injured was a man attacked with an axe and an ais old woman trampled in a back- street crush, Police at one point sprayed water with twin cannon from an anmored truck, but this proved ineffective against the rioters, who erected barricades to turn back alleys into strongholds. Dam Flood Toll: May Be 100 NEW DELHI (Reuters)The number of dead and missing in recent floods in Aridhra state, South India, may be 100, the Civil War If Queen Killed Chaput Says MONTREAL (CP) -- Chaput, a fonmer Mr. Chaput, who headed the now-defunct Parti du Quebec (Quebec republican party), said in a telephone ine terview that it is impossible to Mr, Chaput was among the first to say that the Queens' life might' be 'in danger if she came to Q " She and Prince Philip are due in the provincial capital Oct. 10 from Charlottetown and will leave Oct. 11 for Ottawa.. Their visit highlights the celebration mbassy to protest . police deputy minister for irrigation and power, S. D. Misra, told the Indian Parliament today. | Confederation. He was contradicting some) Mr. Chaput, speaking from press reports which said 1,000)his Montreal home, said he was people died. The' floods. inun-jnot yet decided whether he wil) dated the town of Macherla. 'go to Quebec City for tthe visit, f A of the 1864 preparations for seein. etic ace Dita o wae snonssrnmssinmnnnene

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