Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Nov 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, - VOL. 93--NO,. 272 & he Oshawa Times Authorized as Second Closs Malt Post Office Pepertment payment OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1964 Ottewa ond PARE PS RGN EO IMS HI Weather Report Snow Mixed With Rain Today And To- morrow. Colder. High-42. Low-37. Postage TWENTY-SIX PAGES PLAYER OF THE YEAR MAKES GAIN Calgary fullback Lovell Lov- ell Coleman made this gain during Wednesday night's Western Football Conference final at Empire Stadium but most of the night he was stop- ped cold by British Columbia Lions. But late in the game Coleman broke loose for a 31- yard gain and later scored Calgary's only touchdown to give the Stamps a 14-10 vic- tory over the Lions. --CP Wirephoto School Board To End Segregation * COLCHESTER, Ont. (CP)-- Admitting that School Section 11 has "long suffered segrega- tion", the Colchester. Area B. school board has de- clared its determination to eliminate segregation in its =r Ae ua 10 miles south of Win to improve physical at its all - Negro made after a meet- night of a com- the South Essex ae . Yi Improvements led for in the statement include new light- ing, interior decorations, im- proved janitor service, weather- izing of windows, testing the water for potability, and im- proving the building so it will Curdy, . the associ-|pa ation, issued a it statement.|planned a new 12-room school " . which comes up for tenders in January and which will ready by Sept, 1, 1965. comply with recommendations of the medical officer -of health. The board further agreed that subject to available facilities, it will take 10 pupils from Grade 1 at SS 11 and move them by bus to other schools within the board's jurisdiction, subject to available room in other schools, The board will consult further with the association in the event no room is available. WILL INTEGRATE 4,000 NOW OFF AT FORD DETROIT (AP)--Top officials of the Ford Motor Company and the United: Auto Workers union met today in an attempt to find settlement of local-level strikes which Ford blames for reducing its new car output to Ford And Union Officials Meet On Local Strikes These revolve around local- level working agreements which supplement the national -con- tract. Effectiveness of the over- all pact is contingent on them. Today's top-level meeting fol- lowed by only a few hours a Pontiff sympathized with . the a trickle. In } Goclered lan satantios br ; Rs miegrs Rion or Reetasiiasien on the basis of race, creed, color, na- place of tionality, origin. This the board has been pre- red to do ever since it be The purpose of the new school is to provide modern facilities for all the pupils attending pub- lic school in Colchester South. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Copps Gets Acclamation HAMILTON (CP) -- Victor Kennedy Copps today re- ceived an acclamation for a se of Hamiiton, cond two-year term as mayor Horsburgh Appeal Motion Adjourned TORONTO (CP) -- A mot ion for leave to appeal Rev. Russell D, Horsburgh's conviction on five charges of con- tributing to juvenile delinquency was adjourned today by Mr. Justice E, G. Moorhouse in the Ontario Court of Appeals. t tag; (and at Wayne, Before toaaps pet my Ban- non had told reporters it was why" ali at-the- Plant disputes had not been re- "to find out solved: Ken Bannon, the UAW's Ford department director, and M. M. (Mike) Cummins, Ford's labor pte director, headed the U.S. Beefs Up Force closed today. In Viet Nam WASHINGTON (AP) -- The United States has sent another 1,200 military men and more air transport units to South Viet Nam this month, officials dis- The disclosures came less than 24 hours after it was an- nounced that Ambassador Max- well D. Taylor will fly back to Washington to open a sweeping review of the South Vietnam- ese situation with President Johnson and his military and t diplomatic advisers Nov. 27. ipre-dawn break-off of mara- thon local-level negotiations at the only three plants where no settlements have been reached. These are in Sterling Town- Mich., where rear axles Separate plants assemble auto- mobiles and trucks, OAKVILLE (CP)--Ford-Oak- vills 'reported today that 4,000 men are now off work but that no further layoffs are planned. A company spokesman said there will be work for more than 1,000 employees this week and into next week, on truck assembly. Liquor Chief Is Convicted In Quebec OTTAWA (CP) -- Rosario Le- mire, former head of the Que- bee Liquor Police, was found guilty today by the Supreme Court of Canada on 227 counts of f The court in a 5-to-2 decision reversed a judgment of the Que- bec Appeal Court acquitting Le- mire and restored a decision of he Quebec Superior Court, "MONDAY MORNING QUARTER-BACKING" Warren Blasts Commission WASHINGTON (AP) Director J. Edgar Hoover has blasted the Warren commission as "unfair and unjust" and called Dr. Mar- tin Luther King Jr., win- ner of the Nobel Peace Prize, "the most notorious liar in the country'. Hoover boiled over on these and other matters, in- cluding lenient "bleeding heart judges", in a lengthy interview Wednesday with a group of women reporters. He angrily charged the Warren commission with '"'a classic example of Monday morning quarterbacking"' in discussing its report on the assassination of president John F. Kennedy. The commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl War- ren of the U.S. Supreme Court, has said the FBI failed to notify the Secret Service that Lee Harvey Oswald, was in Dallas last Nov. 22, the day Kennedy was slain. Oswald was charged with the murder of the president but was killed himself by Jack Ruby. Shortly after the commis- sion issued its report Sept. 27, Hoover was. involved in controversy. The Washing- ton Evening Star published Oct. 2 a copyrighted par- tial transcript of the FBI director's testimony, some of which was sharply criti- cal of the state department and some of the security measures taken to protect the president. THERE'S NO JEALOUSY Wednesday Hoover said there is "not a scintilla'? of jealousy between the FBI and the Secret Service, which is charged by law with protecting presidents. Efforts to reach the mem- bers of the Warren commis- sion, some of whom are travelling abroad, were not successful. Hoover let fly his: blast MARTIN LUTHER KING Attacked By Hoover at Dr. King, head of the Southern Christian Leader- ship Conference, in discuss- ing civil rights. He called the Negro integrationist a liar for advising Negroes not io report any civil rights violations to the Albany, Ga., FBI office because the staff members were all sou- therners. When he asked Dr. King to make an appointment so he-e prove that four of the five men in the office were born in the North, Hoover said, Dr. King would not make the appointment. An aide to Dr. King said he was not immediately available for comment, that he was vacationing in The Bahamas. But in Houston Aaron Henry, a Mississippi mem- ber of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored People, say that FBI agents in southern states generally are not in sympathy with civil rights, WEST GERMAN DOCUMENTS ALLEGE: HAMBURG (AP) -- The con- troversy over Pope Pius XII's actions in the Second World War revived today with reports in West Germany. and Britain of Nazi documents alleging the enemy powers. A high Vatican official said the documents were "clearly partisan" because of their source. "They are documents from only one of the interested pa 4 The German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that war- time German foreign policy documents, soon to be published in book form, revealed that Pope Pius tried to persuade the United States and Britain to shift to Germany's side against communization of Europe. Pope's plan called for Hitler's replacement by another leader, probably Heinrich Himmler. Russia. Der Spiegel said the Pontiff believed the Nazi army was the only defence against According to Der Spiegel, the The magazine said the docu- ments also proved the charge, raised last year by West Ger- man playweight Rolf Hochhuth in the controversial play The Deputy, that Pope Pius did lit- tle to save the Jéws from Nazi extermination. REPORTS OVERDONE Der Spiegel said the docu- ments report that the Pontiff told U.S. diplomat Harold H. 1943, that he believed Allied re- ports of the mass gassing of Jews "are a bit overdone for propaganda purposes." "He never threatened Nazis with excommunication the way he did the Communists in 1949 and he never allowed himself to be moved by appeals from the Western Allies to bless the democracies' crusade against Adolf Hitler," the magazine said. The documents show, Der Spiegel continued, that when the Pope did condemn Nazi crimes, he did so "'in his fili- gree-type language and then only in general platitudes" and "he only protested if Catholics Tittmann as early as January, were involved." Pope Favored Axis? The. British government pub- lished excerpts today from cap- tured Nazi documents quoting a German diplomat in Rome as saying in 1941 that the Pope fa- vored the enemy cause. 'In his heart, one is assured time and again, Pius XII stands on the side of the Axis powers," reported Fritz Menshausen, then counsellor of the German em- 'bassy to the Vatican, Der Spiegel said the docu- ments on which it based its story were accidentally discov- ered in the archives of the West German foreign ministry by Swiss historian Saul Fried- laender while he was gathering material on Nazi policy toward the United States. POPE PIUS XII LABELLED HUMAN CARGO "DIPLOMATIC MAIL" ROME (AP) -- Two United expelled from Italy Wednesday for trying to smuggle a chained, drugged prisoner to the foreign ministry in Cairo in a trunk la- belled "diplomatic: mail." They left Rome Wednesday night. Police said_the crated man, | Josef Dahan, 30, had been a spy ltirst for the U.A.R, and later for Israel. They said the Mor- ocean - born, bleached - blonde language expert was an Israeli citizen. The two U.A.R. embassy first secretaries caught trying to ease the crated man_ through customs at Rome's Fiumicino Airport Tuesday night were Ab- del Noneim el Neklawy and. Se- lim Osman el Sayed, Italian foreign minister Giu- seppe Saragat made a. 'most formal and energetic protest'" to U.A.R. Ambassador Ahmed Naguib Hasim. Saragat said the U.A.R. embassy had "ex- ploited" diplomatic . immunity and privilege in "evident infrac- tions of Italian criminal law," ROME (AP) -- Italian police said today the man they res: cued from an Egyptian diplo- matic trunk now says he is an Israeli who fled to Egypt, was jailed for six months and then forced to become a spy for the United Arab Republic. He told police he wound up inthe trunk after he asked his "contact" men at the U.A.R. Embassy in Rome for a raise in pay. When the police pulled him from the trunk Tuesday night, the man said he was Josef Da- han, a native of Morocco. Po- lice said he now admits he is Mordechai ben Masud Louk, born near Tel Aviv. A police spokesman in Tel Aviv had said earlier Dahan ap- peared from his description to be Louk, a 28-year-old carpen- ter who left his wife and four Arab Republic diplomats were UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC diplomats, Abdel Moneim El Neklawy, left, and Selim Osman Fl Sayed, wearing glasses, having been expelled from Italy for trying to smuggle a chained, drugged children in a small village near Tel Aviv in 1961 and crossed il- legally. into the Egyptian-held Gaza Strip. Louk fled after he was called up for service in the Israeli Army. The Italian police sent his photograph and fingerprints to Tel Aviv and said Istael might ask his extradition as a deserter, Louk said he gave a false name when first questioned be- cause he was afraid of reper- cussions for his wife and chil- dren. He told police that after he fled from Israel, the Egyptians questioned him and then put him in jail for six months. He OTTAWA (CP) -- The bulky Canada Pension Plan _legisla- tion was on its way to a joint Senate-Commons committee to- day for detailed study with one Commons member advocating Parliament sit until it comes back to the House, -- Before the lengthy bill was given approval in principle-- second reading -- by a 184-to-0 vote Wednesday, Frank How- ard (NDP -- Skeena) said the present session should be con- tinued as long as mid-1965 if necessary so the plan can be given. final. approval. Mr. Howard ise that if the Pension Plan Goes To Committee For Study present session is ended before the committee concludes its study and hearing of witnesses the bill will be killed, making debate up to now '"'a senseless waste of time." The government could then eall an election and tell voters the plan was almost in effect while quietly assuring private insurance companies it would never be passed, he Said. Past Liberal party behavior indicates this could happen, he said, and only by continuing the present session can the government avoid @ charge of insincerity. prisoner to the foreign min- istry in Cairo, are shown at a Rome airport tonight prio r to their departure. (Ap Wirephoto via cable from Rome.) said that he finally agreed to work for "the organization." Police said he was sent to Europe for economic espionage and worked in The Netherlands, Belgium and West Germany be- fore being sent to Naples early this year. 63,000 To Get Heave WASHINGTON (AP) -- Some 63,000 workers at 95 United States military bases, shipyards and other defence installations learn today that their jobs are to be eliminated eventually by the federal economy axe. Defence Secretary Robert Mc- Namara scheduled a mid-after- noon press conference at which he said he would name the bases in 33 states that are to be closed. In announcing plans for the cut Wednesday, he said it in- cluded facilities of all types-- "air bases, air depots, army arsenals, army terminals, ship- yards"' and so on, Major controversy has cen- tred on the possibility some of the navy's 11 shipyards would be closed McNamara presented his jus- tifications for the closings at a press conference Wednesday at which he made public a book- let showing how defence in- stallations closed earlier have been put to what he called "productive civilian use," ' gians and Britons -- were be- DOCTOR'S FATE IS STILL UNCERTAIN Troops Drive On rebel regime vernment force indu, 250 Su the. rebel capital. 'South Africans, Bel- lieved to be spearheading be- tween 300 and 500. Congolese troops. Rebel leader Christophe Gbenye had announced post- DeGaulle's. Secret Memo Disclosed THE HAGUE (Reuters) -- Dirk Stikker, former secretary- general of NATO, disclosed to- day that French President de Gaulle in a 1958 secret memo threatened to go it alone if the United: States and Britain would not join a triumvirate to decide on world politics. "The threat then uttered has how become a reality," Stikker said. In an address here to Dutch liberals, the former secretary- general said this secret and still unpublished memorandum was the turning point in France's at- -- toward Atlantic co-opera- on. Stikker said de Gaulle was "blind to the concern that many feel about the growing isolation of France," He said de Gaulle needed the Common Market,, NATO and 05 ae American protec- on." i ~ white mercenaries was solutions to. this problem- and hold any kind of talks." a "Trunk Men' Expelled) To Rebel Capital LEOPOLDVILLE (AP)--Con- golese troops ied by white mer- cenaries laynched their drive on ponement of the death sentence given Dr. Carlson, who had been scheduled to die last Monday, following an appeal from Kenya |Prime Minister Ji yatta. Siedetiations-enr aia ae -Ghenye told Kenyatta the ex- ecution would be .carriéd out next Monday if no basis was found for negotiations on' 'the prisoners of past by Weis quick oars from U.S. ne ta G. McMurtrie Godley that the rebels would be held responsible for the safety of more than 60 Americans in the rebel zone. Via Radio Stanleyville, Gbenye said the United States was "held responsible for the deaths of many Congolese, .. ." The rebel radio said ~-- "prepared to consider all A U.S. Embassy spokesman said there was no indication what Gbenye had in mind or how or when negotiations might be started. The embassy has not been in direct contact with the Stanleyville rebels or its own consulate there for months, Carlson, 36, of Rolling Hills, Calif., was sentenced to die for spying. Gbenye claimed he was an American anmy officer. The United States denied the charge. Britons Scott China H-Bomb LONDON (Reuters) -- British officials Wednesday expressed scepticism about reports sug- gesting that- Communist China is close to exploding a hydrogen omb, They said China only recently managed to explode its first nu+ clear device of any sort and it seems unlikely it is close to ex- ploding a more sophisticated weapon. Referring to other reports suggesting China's first atomic blast had come sooner than ex- pected, the officials noted that t had in fact been widely fore- ast some considerable time before it happened. THE TIMES today... Stroud To Run For Board--Page 13 Ajax Public School Board To Build School Addition--Page 7 _ Calgary Ties WFC Final--Page 10 Ann Landers--17 City News--13 Classified--22, 23, 24 Comics--20 District Reports--7 Editorial--4 Financial--25 Obits--25 Sports--10, 11, 12 Television--20 Theatre--19 Whitby News--5, 6 Women's--14, 15, 16,17 Weather--2 On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900 | | | surf e70 | | $128,000! -~ | s164!230| | | | sistfs76.| | | $208,000] | | szadoas.| | sasfoool | | I sore

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