nae eee THE OSHAWA TIMES, 1, February 13, 1965 Co-Operation 'Pipe Dream' -Labor Exec NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) The hope of labor-management co-operation is nothing but a pe dream, says Douglas 'amilton, secretary - treasurer of the Ontario Federation of P. Generally, manage ment's idea of co-operation is to dic- tate to a weak and ineffective union, Mr. Hamilton said in a speech prepared for delivery today to an educational confer- ence sponsored by the feder- ation, s "When our bargaining posi- tion has been weakened by rap- idly - changing events as has too often happened this past year, management has no hesi- tation in putting the boots to us. "If you need any reminder, take a look at the present newspaper strike in Toronto, the National Rubber Strike in Toronto, Wolverine Tube in London, the action of the Town of Perth in the strike by public service workers. What kind of management co-operation did we have at these places?" Unions, win good contracts when they are in strong bar- gaining positions as in the steel and auto industries, he said. - Cargo Plane Explodes, Two Killed MIAMI (AP) A Central American cargo plane with its starboard engine afire crashed and exploded into a Miami in- dustrial area today, narrowly missing residential areas on two sides. It landed partly in an automobile junk yard and partly in the street. A tremendous blast on impact shattered windows in several nearby buildings and scattered toys, outboard motors, bolts of cloth and other cargo from the plane. Capt. Geronimo Diaz Grana- dos and his co-pilot, Jose Raval, were killea. The two-engine C-46 had just taken off from Miami Interna-jitics, Prime Minister Pearson tional Airport on a flight to Eljsaid Friday that the Quebec Salvador, Central America, when one engine caught fire over a densely populated area of northwest Miami. Eyewitnesses said the pilot swung his craft completely around, obviously in an effort to make it back to the runway, before faliing from 300 feet and exploding into flames that leaped two stories high two minutes after takeoff. Bomb Blast Near Paper MONTREAL (CP)--A home- made bomb exploded in a lane behind the Montreal Star build- ing. in downtown Montreal Fri- day night and set off the fire alarm system in the newspaper. A patrolman of a private po- lice agency employed by The Star told police he saw a man place the bomb at a fire exit door and gave chase, but the man got away. i The bomb did only slight damage to the building. Const. Rene Grenier of the Montreal police bomb squad told reporters at the. scene that the bomb contained a liquid ex- plosive, probably gasoline. It was activated by an alarm clock and dry cell batteries. There was no immediate in- dication of the reason for the bombing. The agcncy policeman said he returned to the fire exit door after losing sight of the fugi- tive and found one of his fellow patrolmen had discovered the bomb. | Rights Charge | Warrant Sent DETROIT (AP) -- A warrant for the arrest of Orville L. Hub- bard, mayor of suburban Dear- born, was issued Friday when he failed to appear in federal court for arraignment on civil rights charges. An initial search failed to turn up Hubbard and District Attor- ney Lawrence Gubow said fed- eral marshals will keep looking for him. Hubbard was indicted Tues- day by a federal grand jury. He is charged with violating the original civil rights act of 1870 and with conspiracy to violate it. The indictment also names Safety Director Robert Lewis and Police Chief Robert Lewis ton of Dearborn. The indictment alleges the three officials failed to use their authority to stop a crowd of demonstrators that stoned a Dearborn home on Labor Day, 1963, in the mistaken belief it had been sold or rented to Ne- 95 m.p.h. Gales -- Blast Scotland GLASGOW (Reuters) -- Hur- ricane force gales lashed Scotland today, uprooting trees, causing snowdrifts, and play- ing havoc with shipping on. the west coast. Gusts reached 95 Quebec and if he came back NEGROES LINE sidewalk in front of Dallas County court house as they pray for SELMA, Ala. (AP) -- Dallas county, Aiabama, is one of the most "southern'" areas in the Deep South's 'black belt." This is a term applied to the cotton - growing sections of Georgia, Alabama and Missis- sippi, all heavily populated by Negroes. The median family income in Dallas county is about $3,000, well below the state's average. School education, about nine years, also is less than the state average. About 57 per cent of the 55,000 population are Negroes. What would happen if all of them voted? That question, plus the plan- tation economy and the 100 years of difficult recovery since the town of Selma was burned during the American Civil War, plainly accounts for the tradi- tional unwillingness of the white the recovery of Sheriff Jim Clark who went to hospital Friday with chest pains at population even to seek an answer. SCOFF AT FEARS Negro leaders in Selma's cur- rent registration drive scoff at such an attitude. They insist fear of Negro' political domi- nance is unfounded. "Look at Macon County," said Rev. C. T. Vivian, one of Dr. Martin Luther King's lieuten- ants in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. "It actually has more Ne- zroes than white voters, yet in the last election in Tuskegee they eleeted far more white of- ficials than Negroes. They voted on the basis of ability, not race." However, Selma officials say willingness or unwillingness to have Negroes on the voting rolls is beside the point. They say they have no choice but to en- Selma, Ala. Doctors say the sheriff was suffering from exhaustion. Negroes have been demonstrating at the force existing laws and regis- tration procedures. They cite Monday's demon- stration, which ended in 57 ar- rests, as an indication the Ne- roes have not acted in good faith. Friday, Feb. 5, the Negroes petitioned the registrars to pro- vide a priority sheet for them to sign and so be called in turn to register. The sheet was provided Mon- day but when the Negroes showed up, they refused to sign it. "We're not going to sign no book," said a Negro woman in the crowd just before Sheriff James Clark arrested the group. "Well then," said Clark, "'you're under arrest."' "Thank you," replied the woman. "That's what we came for."" "That's what I thought," said OTTAWA (CP)--Amid grow- ing speculation that Jean Le- sage may return to federal pol- premier would do a "fine job" if he did come to Ottawa. _ "He's doing a fine job in he'd do a fine job here," Mr. Pearson told a press confer- ence. The prime minister faced a series of questions on the possi- bility of Mr. Lesage returning to federal politics after the Que- bec premier had.said he was under pressure to do so. Did the pressure come from Mr. Pearson? "No pressure, of course," said a smiling prime minister. He said he had a "very inter- esting chat" with Mr. Lesage when the two were at nearby vacation resorts in Florida last month. He has been reading "with great interest that Mr. Lesage might come back." SERVED IN CABINET Before entering provincial pol- itics, Mr. Lesage served in the Liberal cabinet of former prime of material for the throne speech. The interim report of the royal commission on bicultural- ism and bilingualism would be tabled shortly, he said. It was lengthy and "very interesting indeed," but Mr. earson did not hint at its contents. The second report of the royal commission on health services would also be tabled, probably Wednesday or Thursday. The Canada Pension Plan, the labor standards code and opt- ing-out legislation would be brought before the current ses- sion, along with some non-con- troversial bills. WILL BE HELD Some other major pieces of legislation, including bills on the railways, a tax on foreign magazines, and the national an- them would be held over until the new session. The government house leader had already met _ opposition house leaders to outline the gov- jernment's legislative plans so | "we can finish the current ses- sion at the earliest date possi-| ble." The prime minister steered minister Louis St. Laurent. The Quebec premier's future plans were among a number of subjects discussed by Mr. Pear- son following the final cabinet meeting before Parliament re- sumes Tuesday. In the course of the question- ing, he said he hopes the cur- rent session will end in about three weeks and a new session can begin. Ministers had al- -ready contributed a great deal away from any protracted dis- |cussion of controversial resolu- |tions passed by the Canadian |University Liberal Federation 'last weekend. One called for |the governor-general, not the) Queen, to be head of state in| ee: The other asked for! the resignation of Edmund| Asselin (L -- Montreal Notre-| Dame-de-Grace). | About the constitutional pro-} posal, he said: "I em quite} SHADES OF 1984 POW Camp FORT GREELY, Alaska (CP) Psychological bombardment in the prisoner-of-war compound here is designed to extract in- formation from the most stub- "The odds are with us," United States Army Col. A. E. Nelson, commander of the POW "cage," said in an interview. The camp. was set up for the current Alaska war game "Po- lar Strike" which ends Feb. 17. Prisoners taken during the sub-arctic exercise, under way over an 8,000-square-mile area running south of Fairbanks, are subjected to the torments in the "cage" under simulated war- time conditions, "See those outdoor loudspeak- ers? Listen,' says Nelson. Wailing babies, barking dogs and distorted music was aired loudly and incessantly. "A man hears that 24 hours a day and he doesn't think straight --that's when we get him." Prisoners are interrogated at least hourly by Russian-speak- ing members of the unit. The interrogations are held in a warm hut. ' "They get to look forward to our chats--and warmth," says Col. Nelson, d in 10- To Extract Information born mind. | K Laboratory welcome the interrogation hut looks, The temperature outside ranges from 12 to 40 degrees below zero. "But in this exercise the guys know we won't let them go over the brink and we won't do any- thing that could bring a law- suit,' the colonel says. "They're shielded--but we're still effec- ive." When a man balks, his cold- weather boots are takan away and he is forced to report to the compound gate clad in his socks at the discretion on the guard. Another quirk of prisoner life is the food. It is good, but cooked with- out seasoning--and it's colored. Potatoes are dyed a fluorescent green, gravy is construction- yellow and the beans are vivid red. "Some of the guys won't eat it no matter how good we tell them it is." The Unit practices. at least once a month by running troops through its interrogation pro- cess, "Polar Strike" involves 12,000 troops, including elements of the Canadian army and- air force. Prisoners are h man floorless tents placed atop the ice and heated by small wood-burning stoves. Each is given enough wood only to last the hour between "chats." The less co-operation shown during the chat the smaller the wood supply becomes and the more a Need Mortgage Money? | CALL WMcGILL "sc Day or Night - 728-4285 || 4 Lesage's Return To Ottawa Would Be Welcomed By PM happy with our present consti- tution -- the Queen, the gov- ernor - generat and Parlia-| ment." He was asked how he recon-| ciled his views on morality with the views of the federation on Mr, Asselin. "I am not going to try to reconcile what I have said and what has been said about a certain member of Parliament, particularly when he is not here." He added: "Mr. Asselin him- self feels there is no irreconcil- ibility in what I have stated and what he has done." The prime minister said that university students, whether Liberal or Conservative, are famous for their frank expres- sion of views. | | court house for the past three weeks for the right to vote. --AF wirephoto Selma: Negroes Earn Less Learn Less, And Vote-Less Clark. "You don't really want to vote at all." Selma Police Commissioner Wilson Baker said he, too, was at wit's end. "When the court gives them what they say they want, then they tell you they want something different, what can you do? The Negroes, their part, say they are not protesting the individual aspects of the regis- tration process, from which the federal courts have granted them some relief, but the entire procedure--and more. "The right to vote is only a symbol," argued Vivian, "a symbol of the ability of people to control their own lives. That's what with," HOW TO DRIVE SELLERS NUTS TORONTO (CP) -- A Unl- versity of Guelph psycholo- gist Friday offered a psycho- logical way of geiiing rid of pesky salesmen, Professor Ralph Dent's ad- vice: Don't step back when the salesman is standing on your welcome mat. Walk to- wards him and he'll back away. Then you can shut the door The salesman will be con- fa ior forming to an unwritten law | that sets the distance be- tween persons engaged in con- versation, Prof. Dent told a Toronto Social Planning Coun- cil seminar. The distance in North America is set at the point where one person can just touch the shoulder of the ether when they are standing face to face, he said. A person moves closer, a salesmai subconsciously ad- justs the distance to this point--at which he feels most comfortable. HERE AND THERE Ernest Howard, of Ajax, will address the St. An- drew's Society at the monthly "smoker," Friday, Feb. 19 at 8 p.m. at the Genosha Hotel. Mr. How- ard,. has travelled exten- sively throughout the world, and. recently returned from a cameta safari in East Africa "Brotherhood night' has been planned by the Knights of Columbus, Oshawa Coun- cil and will be held Feb. 23 at the Knights' Bond street hall. The Oddfellows, B'Nai Brith and Shriners will be guests of the Osh- awa Council. Guest speaker for the evening will be the Most Rev. Charles Leo Nel- ligan, D.D., Titular Bishop of Fenice. The golden anniversary of Kiwanis International was observed by the Bowman- ville Kiwanis Club this week. Lieutenant Governor Henry Reed of Oshawa told of the organizations's many achievements during the half century. Citizens of Bowmanville donated $1,310 to the March of Dimes in the recent can- vass. Mrs, Fred Cole was campaign chairman, as- sisted by Mrs. Douglas Kemp. Two hundred and_ sixty- six pints of blood were donated at the blood clinic held in Bowmanville. The Red Cross executive was particularly pleased with the response from Bowman- ville, Courtice and Clarke High School students. Norman J. Brown, vice- president and comptroller of The Steel Company of Canada, Limited, will ad- dress the Oshawa District Chapter of the Society of In- dustrial and Cost Account- ants' on 'Integrated Ac- counting Control' Thurs- day, Feb. 18 at the Hotel Genosha. The Bowmanville Museum is becoming a major at- traction. During 1964 there was an attendance of 1,875, an increase of 444 over the ' previous year. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck has been posted as a lecturer to the Ontario Provincial Police College in Toronto. He has already lectured there on several occasions. : Congratulations are ex- tended to Mrs, Augusta Ri- zzaccaro and daughter Lynne, of 71 Harmony road south, who are celebrating birthdays today. : An Oshawa man _ was slightly injured early yes- terday morning in a two car accident on Park road south near the junction of Wentworth street: west. Gerard. John Kryger, of 315 Oshawa Boulevard north, received a cut and a bruised lip when his: car was in collision with a car driven by Wayne Arthur Coker, of 729, Lakeview ave- nue Oshawa Fire Department had a quiet night, . There were no fire calls. The am- bulance service answered one routine house call. John Reid, of 258 Quebec Street, pleaded guilty at Oshawa Court yesterday to a drunk charge. He . was fined $50 and costs or 30 days in jail by Magistrate Harry Jermyn. Why Pay More... SAVE!! OW FUEL OIL 16: Phone 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa And District we're really . concerned| |ment would discourage regional Files Were Removed -Sask. A-G By THE CANADIAN PRESS Attorney-General D. V. Heald told the Saskatchewan legisla- ture Friday it appeared a "large number of files were removed from the government finance of- fice' May 22 and delivered to the office of Acting Opposition Leader J. H. Brockelbank. "I am advised by the GFO these were not personal files, but files of the government of- fice," Mr. Heald said. Premier Ross Thatcher has accused the former CCF gov- ernment of having removed gov- ernment documents during the period after the election and the time his Liberal government took office in May. Mr. Brockelbank has denied the charges. In other legislatures in ses- sion Friday: British Columbia--Alan Mac- farlane (L--Oak Bay) said that unless the B.C. government names the author of a letter sent to Prime Minister Pearson over the "phoney" signature of Premier W. A, C. Bennett the opposition will by next Tuesday. Attorney-General Robert Bon- ner told a press conference later he is considering laying charges against the letter writ- r. WANT LIMIT Quebec--Debate continued on a Union National attempt to limit the power of province's elected representatives to change the constitution. UN members argued that government plans to reduce the power of the ap- pointed upper house would give dangerous powers to the lower house. Nova Scotia--Premier Stan- field, in his first major speech to the new session of the Nova Scotia legislature, said his Pro- gressive Conservative govern- and local jealousies. While try- ing to help all areas of the province "we must not hold back those parts which are able to forge ahead." Newfoundland -- Premier Jo- seph Smallwood said he did not think it would be in the public interest for the government to intervene further in a_three- month-old waterfront labor dis- pute. Insurance Man | 'Damns 'Plan' KITCHENER (CP)--Govern- ments should turn their atten- tion to lowering taxes instead of devoting their time to desig- nating new welfare schemes, President E.G. Schafer told shareholders Friday at the an- nual meeting of Dominion Life Assurance Company. Mr. Schafer urged the federal government not to rush into any more "ill - conceived schemes" like the Canada Pen- sion Plan. More welfare schemes will re- sult only in additional taxes and higher costs of production which will work against Canada's drive to remain competitive in world markets, he said. Company reports showed more than $20,000,000 was paid to policy holders and beneficiar- ies during 1964 with business in- creasing by 12 per cent to $170,- 760,695. Dividends totalled al- most $3,000,000. 'Bi-Bi' Report Interesting: PM OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson said Friday that the interim report of the royal com- mission on biculturalism and bi- lingualism is "very interesting indeed" and it will be tabled in the Commons '"'shortly." He told a press conference fol- lowing a cabinet meeting that the interim report of the com- mission was "lengthy," but he didn't give any hint as to what it contained. . He said the second report of the Hall royal commission on health services would be tabled in the House, probably Wednes- day or Thursday. Life Sentence On 'Murder 2' TORONTO (CP) -- George Clark, 18, of Toronto, was sen- tenced Friday to life imprison- ment after an all-male Ontario Supreme Court jury found him guilty on a reduced charge of By THE CANADIAN PRESS Colder weather is easing the threat of flooding in most of On- tario, but some communities still were faced with the fear of rising waters today. More seasonable tempera- tures, coupled with snowflur- ries, were forecast for the southern part of the province that has been beleaguered by floods. Residents along the Grand River from Cayuga to Caledo- nia were warned that flooding could still occur as an ice jam plong some islands backed up' water. i WEATHER FORECAST Warmer TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts, issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: It will be a cold, windy day around the lakes to- day, but in keeping with the recent, rapidly - changing weather picture, this cold out- break will be of short duration as a storm now moving in from the Pacific starts warmer air this way on Sunday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Wind- sor, Toronto, Hamilton: Sunny with cloudy intervals. Cold and windy today. A few flurries of light snow, Sunny Sunday with moderating temperatures, clouding over in the afternoon. Gusty northwesterly winds near 20, becoming light | this evening. Lake Huron, London: Vari- able cloudiness with . snowflur- ries today. A few snowsqualls Winter Rally Underway TORONTO (C)--The 13th an- nual Canadian winter rally got underway Friday night with 140 cars heading off at two-minute intervals on a 1,300-mile, two- day test of driving skill. The weather office forecast dropping temperatures, snow- flurries and winds up to 30 miles an hour for most of the tri- angular route, running east to Kingston, northwest through back to Toronto. Officials of 'the British Em- \pire Motor Club, organizers of the rally, said the event will feature difficult road conditions with routes in some areas made treacherous by mud lying un- derneath snow. Driver-navigator teams com- pete against the clock between checkpoints, losing one point for each minute early or late ar- riving. Teams caught speeding to make up time will be dis- qualified. The team with the lowest number of penalty points wins. ONE CHECKPOINT KNOWN The only checkpoint known to the drivers is at North Bay, where the competitors will be given 10 hours rest Saturday night, Other secret points have been set up along the route by the organizers. Last year's winning team, Lou Lalonde and John Jones, both of Toronto are entered again this year in a Corvair, the same make they won with in 1964. Last car scheduled away Fri- day night was an all-girl team Bancroft to North Bay and then ' Cold, Wind, Snow Sunday with considerable drifting near Lake Huron, Sunny Sunday with moderating temperatures, clouding over in the afternoon. Gusty northwesterly winds near 20, becoming light this evening. Haliburton, Killaloe: Mostly sunny and cold today. Sunny with moderating temperatures Sunday, becoming cloudy late in the day. Gusty northwest winds near 25, becoming light this evening. es Georgian Bay, Algoma, Southern White River, Timag- ami, Cochrane, Sudbury, North Bay: Mostly sunny and cold to- day. Variable cloudiness with snowflurries Sunday becoming overcast. Continuous snow in the afternoon. Milder Sunday. Northerly winds 15 to 25 today. Southerly winds increasing to 25 Sunday. Northern White River: Mostly sunny and cold today. Milder. with snow Sunday. Winds light today, southwest 25 Sunday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Sunday: WE sisscsics | Wingham .......+5 Hamilton ......... St. Catharines. Toronto ...... Peterborough . Kingston ..... TATION sc cacecces Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing .... White River, Moosonee .... THMMING .6.05 0005 Flood Danger Remains Despite Cold Weather A section of Highay 3 in Ca- yuga was under two feet of wa- ter for 100 yards, roads near the river were strewn with ice that broke up at Brantford Thursday and several trailers and homes were abandoned. Floods were still feared in communities such as Chatham and Thamesville along the Thames River, which was 11 feet and one inch above normal for the time of year, PHONES ARE OUT : Thirty men working in shifts were trying to restore e communications Friday night between Kitchener and London. The Nith River tore up 10 poles and calls from both Toronto and London had to be rerouted via Montreal over the micro- wave system. Communications were ex- ee to be back to normal to- y. At Brantford, the Brant county health unit warned Fri- day that wells in the area af- fected by flood waters may be polluted. Lower temperatures brought more than 14 inche of snow in the Timmins area of Northern Ontario in the worst storm of the winter. The temperature Was zero and winds reached 30 miles an hour. All Air Canada flights at the North Bay Airport were can- celled when freezing rain hit that area. SCHOOLS CLOSE Jn the Ottawa area, a freez- ing rainstorm caused most jschools to close and only lim- ited school operations were re- ported in Smith Falls, Corn- wall, Prescott and Brockville. The storm also affected the Peterborough district, where 8,000 children in 24 schools were unable to get to classes, and Bracebridge, north of Orillia, where school buses were halted by road conditions. Fifteen miles southwest of Orillia, the Beaverton bypass on Highway 12 was closed be- cause of flooding. GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 2 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshawe SAVE $ $ ON AUTO INSURANCE $18.00 on your auto "JOHN" DIAL 668-8831 If you are an Abstainer you save up to insurance, RIEGER 218 DUNDAS ST. E., WHITBY le of Dianne Carter and Renni O'Leary of Toronto, winners of the rally's Coupes des. Dames event.in 1964, They were driving a Valiant. LBJ Juggles U.S. Cabinet WASHINGTON (AP)--Presi- dent Johnson announced Friday a high-level shakeup at the state department with Averell Harri- man to be replaced by John- son's old friend, Thomas C. Mann, in the No. 3 post. Mann, now assistant secretary for inter-American affairs, will become undersecretary for eco- nomic affairs. Harriman, who has held this undersecretary- ship, will become an ambassa- dor-at-large. Succeeding Mann in the inter- American assignment will be Jack Hood Vaughn, now ambas- DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M.to 6:00 P.M. 8 King Street East 360 Wilson Road South 1204 Wecker Drive JURY and LOVELL LTD. MeCORDICK'S DRUGS -- LAW PHARMACY Phone 723-2245 Phone 725-8711 Phone 725-3525 sador to Panama. NEWER INSTRUMENT The electric organ first came into being in 1935 and now some yy are in use throughout the S. non-capital murder in the stab- bing of Henry Rusin Aug. 29. Rusin, a night cleaner at a north-end Toronto restaurant, was stabbed about 3 a.m. The. Crown said Clark hid in the building with the intention of robbing the cash register. NEED... FUEL OIL ? Call PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 LLOYD T. J Testimonial Dinner In Honour of OHNSTON Township Clerk 1931-1965 Annandale Golf and Country Club Church Street South Friday, Februa Refreshments 7:00 p.m. For further part of Pickering Village ry 26th, 1965 Dinner 7:30 p.m. iculars contact Noel Marshall, Assistant Clerk. SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. CROWELL'S SHELL STATION 22 BOND ST. EAST SARGANT'S TEXACO STATION 278 PARK ROAD SOUTH MEADE'S SUNOCO STATION 74 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH BRAMLEY MOTOR SALES 1271 SIMCOE ST. NORTH STATHAM B.A. STATION COR. KING ST. £. AND RITSON.ROAD RUSS BOSWELL SERVICE STATION CORNER WILSON RD. & OLIVE '£-UP CENTRE 222 KING STREET WEST OSHAWA TU